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Old 08-01-2022, 11:03 PM   #101
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Awesome. What an epic solo trip.
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Old 08-02-2022, 06:46 AM   #102
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Exactly.


Are Marinas not insured?
Owners of multi-tenant industrial find that by requiring their tenants to maintain primary liability coverage, their property coverage risk profile is lower and is priced accordingly.
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Old 08-02-2022, 09:37 AM   #103
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This morning I am making way from Morro Bay to Santa Barbara.

If I can get a transient slip there I will stay a couple of weeks especially since this is my childhood stomping grounds.

I remember as a child in the 60's thinking that someday I would park my fishing boat in the harbor, and hopefully today is the day!

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Old 08-02-2022, 10:01 AM   #104
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This morning I am making way from Morro Bay to Santa Barbara.

If I can get a transient slip there I will stay a couple of weeks especially since this is my childhood stomping grounds.

I remember as a child in the 60's thinking that someday I would park my fishing boat in the harbor, and hopefully today is the day!

Awesome!!!
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Old 08-02-2022, 10:21 AM   #105
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rs,
Why wouldn’t their industrial “home” insurance cover that?

If you parked your motor home alongside my house an RV/home fire erupted … my home insurance would cover it .. I would think.
If there were two insurance policies the insurance business is double dipping.
If a transient (or any) boat causes damage to the marina, say a fire, then yes the Marina's insurance will cover the damage to the marina property and the marina's business interruption loss, BUT the marina's insurer with then attempt to subrogate (recover their loss) against the boatowner. If marina can prove Boatowner is responsible for the fire, boatowner will be faced with a liability claim from the marina's insurer and a possible lawsuit from that insurer if not paid.

If the boatowner has liability insurance this can be quite straightforward. Boatowner notifies his insurer of the Third Party liability claim against him, and forwards the subrogation claim to his boat insurer for settlement.

If Boatowner has no insurance, the marina's insurer will attempt to recover from and potentially sue the boat owner to recover its loss. These additional expenses and potentially the inability to receive indemnification from the boatowner will go against the Marina's Loss Record and will impact the Marina's Renewal Insurance premium at the next renewal.

For this reason alone Marinas require their tenants to have insurance. I would expect that the typical Marina Application for Insurance would specifically require the Marina to state whether they require evidence of tenant insurance and the answer to that question would definitely impact premium and potentially decision to insure.

In my experience most Marinas will not require insurance for a transient, although for the reasons outlined above they should!

The same would apply in your RV example. Your homeowners insurance would respond to your loss, then subrogate against the responsible party (RV owner and his insurance).

When you accept an insurance claim payment for physical damage to your property you will have to sign a release of subrogation rights to the insurer.
This is what allows the insurer to proceed against the responsible party or their insurer. This release is often printed on the back of the claim check or on the claim filing itself (sometimes called the 'proof of loss').

Note the result is different if no liability can be established. For example if the boat was struck by lightning instead of catching fire because boatowner overloaded the electrical panel. In the lightning example there would be no subrogation. Each insurer (Marina/Boat) would pay their respective insured.

MY Traveler put this far more succinctly!
~A
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Old 08-02-2022, 05:38 PM   #106
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Looks like you made it, and are checking in. Good job.

I will be in the channel tomorrow. How was it?
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Old 08-02-2022, 07:20 PM   #107
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Old 08-02-2022, 09:51 PM   #108
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I am happy to report that I am safely moored at Santa Barbara Harbor.

Having a celebratory beer!
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Old 08-03-2022, 01:05 AM   #109
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I won't believe you until I see a picture of Stearns wharf.
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Old 08-03-2022, 09:24 AM   #110
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Here you go.

From the back of my boat.

I fished on Stern's Warf in the 1960's as a boy.

I'll take better photos today when i have lunch on the warf.
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Old 08-03-2022, 12:07 PM   #111
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I bet SB was a great place to grow up in the 60's. I lived there from 1974 to 1987. Sailed my catamaran off Leadbetter beach.
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Old 08-05-2022, 08:09 PM   #112
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I am happily moored in Sante Cap Marina in Anacortes, I must say that transiting Canada was a brutal experience primarily because of the waiting on weather and the remoteness of everything.. I initially tried to do a quick and dirty three day run down the outside of the coast, but the constant gale warnings put an end to that in short order.

You don't realize how big the outer coast of Canada is until you experience it! I am greatly looking forward to having a few meals cooked for me, places I can shop for things I want, and simply being back in the US. The Canadians I passed along the way have no Internet, cell signal, or contact with the outside world. What a different life they must be living from what we think of as normal.

I am here for a few days, fixing broken toilet diverter valve and eating meals cooked by someone other than myself. By Monday or Tuesday I will be headed for Noah Bay and then down the Washington Coast.

Boat is operating flawlessly, haven't totaled the fuel consumption for my trip through Canada but guessing around 80 gallons. I keep a running dialog with Kevin and some friends back home over the In Reach, it's a source of sanity and reliable weather forecasts when there is nothing else. A huge thank you to my friends who have been supporting me with weather and prayer along the way :-)
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Old 08-05-2022, 08:23 PM   #113
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I am happily moored in Sante Cap Marina in Anacortes, I must say that transiting Canada was a brutal experience primarily because of the waiting on weather and the remoteness of everything.. I initially tried to do a quick and dirty three day run down the outside of the coast, but the constant gale warnings put an end to that in short order.

You don't realize how big the outer coast of Canada is until you experience it! I am greatly looking forward to having a few meals cooked for me, places I can shop for things I want, and simply being back in the US. The Canadians I passed along the way have no Internet, cell signal, or contact with the outside world. What a different life they must be living from what we think of as normal.

I am here for a few days, fixing broken toilet diverter valve and eating meals cooked by someone other than myself. By Monday or Tuesday I will be headed for Noah Bay and then down the Washington Coast.

Boat is operating flawlessly, haven't totaled the fuel consumption for my trip through Canada but guessing around 80 gallons. I keep a running dialog with Kevin and some friends back home over the In Reach, it's a source of sanity and reliable weather forecasts when there is nothing else. A huge thank you to my friends who have been supporting me with weather and prayer along the way :-)

Doug, I'll have the Margaritas waiting for you in Ensenada my friend!

Congratulations!!!!!
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Old 08-05-2022, 08:25 PM   #114
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Good to hear from you and that you are safe. Just drove down from Anchorage last month myself. Sometimes you forget how far north and especially west we are up there.

One recommendation for you, "StarLink". It's on my shortlist for upgrades.
There is a Facebook Group dedicated to it with all the information (and maybe a little more) that you would ever need. I have several friends that have already installed it on their boats, nothing but praise all around.

Safe travels and calm seas.

Ken S/V Azul
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Old 08-07-2022, 08:08 AM   #115
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I must say that transiting Canada was a brutal experience primarily because of the waiting on weather and the remoteness of everything. I initially tried to do a quick and dirty three day run down the outside of the coast, but the constant gale warnings put an end to that in short order.

You don't realize how big the outer coast of Canada is until you experience it! The Canadians I passed along the way have no Internet, cell signal, or contact with the outside world. What a different life they must be living from what we think of as normal.
Sorry for your misfortune and discomfort, but thank you for the laugh, I’ll be grinning all day.

So many comments could be made, but I’ll just say I’m surprised that with the time spent on here, you weren’t aware of the brutality of our coast, or our remote lifestyles and depravity.

I hope the hundreds of US boats in our waters right now are ok, as they struggle to survive.

I also hope “being back in the US” and the trip down your coast is more pleasing and compatible.

Sent to the outside world via internet on a cell phone.
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Old 08-07-2022, 09:27 AM   #116
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Sorry for your misfortune and discomfort, but thank you for the laugh, I’ll be grinning all day.

So many comments could be made, but I’ll just say I’m surprised that with the time spent on here, you weren’t aware of the brutality of our coast, or our remote lifestyles and depravity.

I hope the hundreds of US boats in our waters right now are ok, as they struggle to survive.

I also hope “being back in the US” and the trip down your coast is more pleasing and compatible.

Sent to the outside world via internet on a cell phone.
Very funny; post of the year for me. That’s the PNW for you! �� (teasing Soin2la on the PNW reference!)
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Old 08-07-2022, 10:00 AM   #117
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Doug in anacortes, following his first long leg
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Old 08-07-2022, 12:23 PM   #118
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Sorry for your misfortune and discomfort, but thank you for the laugh, I’ll be grinning all day.

So many comments could be made, but I’ll just say I’m surprised that with the time spent on here, you weren’t aware of the brutality of our coast, or our remote lifestyles and depravity.

I hope the hundreds of US boats in our waters right now are ok, as they struggle to survive.

I also hope “being back in the US” and the trip down your coast is more pleasing and compatible.

Sent to the outside world via internet on a cell phone.
.

Honstly it’s much the same as I am used to, except the vastness of the spaces in between is so much more. Having the goal of traveling vs simply being there to enjoy the wilderness experience makes a huge difference in your outlook on it. The commercial fishing industry where I normally operate and the local villages give cell phone coverage most places within a short distance of wherever you are. There was none of that on my route!

It will be nice to make shorter runs day by day, and to not be reliant on my satellite communicator for weather forecasts from willing friends. Windy only works where there is a cell signal so it isn’t much help passing through Canada.

Moving on to Neah Bay Tuesday, just finished laundry and the harbor is going to move my slip location today, fueling in between (if the fuel dock is open). Re provision tomorrow and back on the road again, dinner at Anthony’s was excellent, Alaskan Weathervane Scallops!
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Old 08-07-2022, 12:57 PM   #119
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Even with the “vastness of the spaces in between,” our coastal people are just as communicative, neighbourly and connected as they have been for many decades. Nine times out of ten, when a boat is in trouble, those remote villages, with no internet or cell phones, are on scene long before the high tech crowd has snapped the buckle on their mustangs.

Many of those places wish it was as quiet as it was just 15 years ago. Normal is atypical.
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Old 08-07-2022, 05:26 PM   #120
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One recommendation for you, "StarLink". It's on my shortlist for upgrades.
There is a Facebook Group dedicated to it with all the information (and maybe a little more) that you would ever need. I have several friends that have already installed it on their boats, nothing but praise all around. .
Ken S/V Azul

I'll second that! We love ours!
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