honeybadger
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 20, 2012
- Messages
- 194
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- HoneyBadger
- Vessel Make
- 1990 Harkers Island Trawler Typical wooden hull with a Carolina flare and no deadrise at the stern
Welcome aboard ! i spend about 4 hours a week walking a local boat yard less than a mile from my house. Always checking out the hull shapes keel sizes and how the chines and stern below the water line is shaped. There is as much to boating that involves quick fixes and navigation as there is about radio use and what to do when things go bad real fast! check list i think are great as a lifer in the USMC we had check list for everything. Knowing how your boat will handle is key in "not being that person" single engine, Twins, Bow or stern thrusters, Windless, Davits or tow your dingy, There are 10,000 questions and 3 times the answers alot of it is personal taste or years of boating that sets the tone for the answer. I think the USCG course and being on boats alot of them will give you more info than anything. good luck and your not a Captain untill you 1- clip the dock leaving your slip,2-Run aground reaching for that chart you dropped,3-drop your $500 phone overboard when deploying the anchor ! ( Fair winds and rising tides)