Winter Haul outs
While boats on the Chesapeake can certainly stand being in the water over the winters here, you risk a number of things by trying to save a relatively small amount of money by not hauling:1. It is not unusual for the electricity to go out, or be turned off by the marina, if a bad storm hits the area. If you depend on a bubbler, it may not work when you need it most. As you know the Bay can freeze, and often does. If your boat is "frozen in," it may, or may not, suffer damage. But it's easy for the topsides to get scratched by ice at that time. Also, a bubbler will not protect your boat from possibly being overwhelmed by the weight of a huge snow storm. If your scuppers get clogged by leaves or other debris, you risk a sinking in your slip. Have you ever tried to reach a boat in a slip after a huge snow storm? It ain't fun. 2. Leaving your boat in the water, even with a bubbler going, doesn't protect wet docklines from freezing and perhaps breaking or chafing. A friend of mine used to enclose his docklines around the pilings with old hose. The hose froze and created a sharp surface which cut thru his docklines. He had a lot of "dock rash" that year and spent months wet sanding the abraded surfaces of his topsides.3. To me the most important fact about getting your boat hauled means being able to inspect how important parts of your boat -- rudder, shaft, prop, strut, cutlass bearing, thru-hulls, etc. -- are doing. This is the primary reason I haul my boat and I think it's worth it.