There are many:
Guess my reasoning mirrors what Landsend said. The club we belong to is probably a little different than the average. It started life as a condominium marina and then became a yacht club. The club constructed all new buildings including a club house and a shop/office building. Members may own a slip in the marina or not while mooring their boat elsewhere.One of the biggest drivers in decision making tends to be money. The cost to us for ownership of our condo slip is much less than at any of the other public or private marinas and the appreciation in value of the slip more than makes up for the investment cost. Benefits include:1. A really nice shop (not available at most other marinas), 2. Reciprocal moorage, 3. Major discount on rental of the clubhouse for things like weddings, family reunions, etc.,4. Staying on top of boating news and changes in laws (including crossing the border),5. And, yes, parties and rendezvous,6. In order to race in the PHRF races I believe one needs to be a member of a club in addition to PHRF (this may be for only some area races),7. We get a fair to good discount at the local marine store depending on the kind of item purchased. For example, wiring and connectors (Ancor) and Blue Sea items are discounted really good, watermakers not so good, so it depends.8. Junior sailing program (see picture) - if you have kids this is really great! Note the blue heron in the forground. A few of the older members are ranked nationally in their class. One young gal who is in college now has her own Catalina 25 - with a red hull and she keeps it up really ship-shape. Well, she also does boat maintenance work in the summers like cleaning, waxing, and varnishing. Our club has a strong push to make it family-friendly. Several years ago we found the members were really aging and there is a push to get younger members involved.For the members who don't have a condo slip and keep there boat here there the primary benefit would be in socializing. For us, though, it works really well.I'd say that the clubs have their own personality. If you decided to go that route try to find one that best fits your needs. As a member you can participate and maybe try to have it be more like what you want if you can get other member to go along. In our situation this was true as there was not always a junior sailing program. There was opposition to it mainly from the powerboaters but sanity prevailed. So changes can be made.