Archive for the ‘Boat Travel’ Category

Bayliner Boats - Life on the water in Las Vegas

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

75 ft Bayliner

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Bayliner Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Living on the water in Las Vegas.

Waterfront property is hard to come by in the Las Vegas Valley. That is why some cherish their floating homes. With no private lands in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area for building houses or cabins, locals shack up in the next best thing: houseboats.There’s a stretch of slips at Lake Mead Marina you could call Houseboat Alley. One covered row of barges is a veritable neighborhood overlooking Boulder Beach on one side and docked sailboats, yachts and dinghies on the other.

On a Saturday morning last month, a pudgy Jack Russell terrier, Jack, pranced across planks up and down the front steps of a few side-by-side houseboats.

Patrick Riley wrapped presents in the living room of his 75-foot Bayliner, “True 2 Life,” preparing for a friend’s birthday party later that day. He said he hasn’t missed a weekend at the lake on his boat in more than a year.

Riley, who runs a Las Vegas recycling and document destruction company, said he comes out to his houseboat, like a vacation home, for the tranquility and the community.

The dog exemplifies that sense of community. He doesn’t belong to Riley, but he wanders onto his and the other houseboats as if he belonged to them all, and he is welcome wherever he goes, Riley said. “Some of the best friends I’ve met have been out here,” said Riley, who has lived in Las Vegas for 15 years.

His first boat was a 28-foot Bayliner, “and things blew up from there,” he said. “It wasn’t big enough to spend the whole weekend in.”

So, in December, he found True 2 Life advertised online, bought it and moved it from its dock on Lake Lanier in Georgia.”Houseboats happen to you,” he said. “You see one and have to have one.”

The boat came fully stocked with an electric fireplace, Bose surround sound, washer and dryer and full kitchen — “all the creature comforts,” he said. Riley said if he didn’t have a large dog in his Las Vegas yard, he would practically live on the houseboat.

Next door, where Jack belongs, Pam and Bob Kirk cooked in their 56-foot boat, Voyager, their 10th boat and third houseboat. The couple split their year between Utah and Boulder City, and spend every other weekend on their Lake Mead houseboat in the fall.

“It’s a tough life, but somebody’s gotta do it,” said Bob Kirk, who runs a Las Vegas sewer cleaning business. The Kirks take their boat out about once a month, anchoring it in coves, but Bob Kirk comes down every Wednesday and Thursday for maintenance and to meet up with a group of other boat owners.

“It’s the greatest bunch of people I’ve ever met in my life,” he said. Pam Kirk, chopping vegetables, said the three-bedroom houseboat is so convenient all she and her husband need for a weekend is to grab the dog and drive five minutes from their house in Boulder City.

The boat is like their second home — the one with a helm in the living room.

Richard Keeley, a friend of both the Rileys and the Kirks, two years ago bought “Aqua Therapy,” a 43-foot Carver motor yacht. In winter, the marina looks as deserted as a ghost town, he said, but in the summer, Thursday to Sunday, it’s like an active city block.

Keeley, who works as a producer on the Strip, owns a house in Summerlin but said he would rather spend his nights on his floating home. “This is my backyard,” he said, motioning the lake, full of boats on a blustery afternoon. “It’s a different world. It gets me out of Vegas.”

Keeley’s deck is his front porch. His dog, Diogi, hops around the remnants of a recent party and down into the sunken living room and the bedroom with bay windows. The boat sleeps eight people, and he tells his out of town visitors if they want to come to Las Vegas, get a hotel room. On the other hand, if they want to come visit him, come to the boat. Thanks to Cassie Tomlin for this. Life on the water is a ‘different world’ than the city - Las Vegas Sun

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Rick Ostler, North American Waterway

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Used Pontoon Boats - Pontoon Boating Video, On St. Croix River

Monday, September 8th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Here is a interesting article and video on pontoon boating on the St. Croix River.

No doubt summer is winding down, but there are some golden days to be had between now and when the first flurries of snow to take advantage of Minnesota’s waterways, even if you don’t own a boat.

“I’m amazed when I hear of somebody I know that live in Stillwater or in the area that have never stepped foot on a boat on the St. Croix,” said Andy Malon, who owns Stillwater Boat Club and Rentals.

His fleet of pontoons makes the freedom to be found on the river accessible to most everyone.

“They don’t go that fast, they’re easy to drive. We do a quick run through with the boats with our renters,” Malon said.

Driving a pontoon is less challenging than driving a ski-boat, which is why Malon says even a novice can take the wheel. It will run you $250 for a half-day on one of Malon’s pontoons, about $350 for all-day.

These boats handle 10 to 12 people, so split it a dozen ways and it’s a relatively inexpensive way to spend a decadent afternoon on the St. Croix River. And you control your destiny. You can decide where you want to go and how long you want to stay.

Head north and you’ll find more wilderness, islands and narrow channels. Think a tame version of Robinson Crusoe and the Boundary Waters. “I still get to points where I’ve never been before. Try the backchannels,” said Malon. “There’s lots of backwaters on the north.”

Head south and you’ll find more homes, marinas and a wake free zone through the Hudson Narrows. Islands offer plenty of beaches and places to sit a spell. “People just hang out, they set up their campsites, fire pits, and they just hang out for the whole weekend,” Malon said.

Dock your rig in Hudson, and you’ll find some great restaurants and some great views. You can explore lots of territory in an afternoon on the St. Croix. “It’s a getaway, it’s probably like having therapy,” Malon said.

A few hours on the river can clear a lot of mental cobwebs, so if you’re mind’s been cluttered by things other than a little escape, now might be the time to book a boat.

“It’s in your own backyard and not to enjoy it is almost kind of a sin,” Malon said. Thanks to Jeanette Trompeter for this; wcco.com - Finding Minnesota: Boating On St. Croix

Check out this video on pontoon boats and the St. Croix River.

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Used Pontoon Boats - Let’s Go Fishing Program for Seniors

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Here is a terrific article on getting seniors out of the nursing home and back on the water.

Twins baseball and the great outdoors. Both are sewn into the DNA of all Minnesotans. During the summer months, a perfect day for many consists of spending the daylight hours on one of the state’s 10,000 lakes trying to land a walleye — either trophy- or dinner plate-sized — and coming home in the evening just in time to catch the Twins on the radio or television set.

The transition from a largemouth bass to Brian Bass makes the summers fly by, and, as we get older, each year tends to go as fast as its summer.
In the later years of life, Twins baseball remains a consistent part of many peoples’ lives, but the outdoors part of being a Minnesotan tends to die off, not by choice, but because of limited means and slowing bodies.

In 2002, Joe Holm, of Wilmar, learned, one day while taking a group of senior citizens for a boat ride, that these age-experienced people truly appreciated being on the water like they once did in their younger years.

“He wanted to take some seniors out on a boat because he knew they could no longer get into a regular boat anymore,” Laura Jones, of Buffalo, said. “He took them out on his pontoon, and he decided it was such an awesome day that he wanted to serve more seniors in the same way.”

Holm did just that, and started the Let’s Go Fishing program, which, according to its mission statement, is “dedicated to enriching the lives of individuals 55 and older through free fishing and boating activities that build relationships, strengthen communities and create memories.”

The need for such a volunteer organization is evident in the number of Minnesotans the program has served, which is more than 15,000.
Holm’s program has gone from one chapter in Wilmar in 2002, to the now 20 chapters, with the addition of Buffalo in June of this year.

“Our goal is to serve 1,000 seniors this year, and we think we are halfway,” said Jones, who serves as vice president of the Buffalo chapter of Let’s Go Fishing. “We still have all of September to send them out. They go out Monday through Friday, two trips per day and sometimes three.”

Jones is very pleased with what the program has offered seniors around Wright County. “Awesome,” she said, convincingly. “Because now our seniors can go back out and do the things they’ve done most of their lives. If they have any limitations, they don’t need to worry about that. We can get them on the boat with wheelchairs, and we can transfer them into individual seating. If they can get on the boat, we will take them out.

That’s what’s great about this pontoon — it’s specially made to take care of seniors, with higher sides and stabilizing three pontoons.”

Jones, with the help of Let’s Go Fishing volunteers, organized a fish fry fundraiser Tuesday at Sturgis Park on the banks of Buffalo Lake, with the hope of raising money for a boat landing to be put on one of the Buffalo lakes. All of the close to 300 tickets were sold for the fish fry, which punctuated a day that started with a special fishing trip for a group of Buffalo senior citizens.

If any of the elderly anglers on the specially designed 26-foot pontoon were true Minnesotans who loved Twins baseball and fishing, they were in heaven Tuesday. Accompanying them on the fishing trip was Minnesota outdoors enthusiast and former Minnesota Twins great, Kent Hrbek.

Hrbek, producer Eric Gislason, and cameraman Brian Pinske were in Buffalo taping a segment for their popular show, “Kent Hrbek Outdoors (KHO).”
The hook to get the big guy from Bloomington and his KHO team to Buffalo was Gislason, who grew up in the town fishing Buffalo and Pulaski lakes.

“I called and asked (Hrbek) if he could do it. Eric Gislason is his producer and he is a Buffalo native,” Jones explained. “I said, ‘Hey, Eric, how would you like to come here with your program and take our seniors out and put it on your show?’ They said they would do it for us, and we are so grateful.” That Gislason grew up in Buffalo may have helped Jones get KHO to Buffalo, but Gislason said the event sealed the deal.

“Laura Jones called us and told us about the event. I’ve always loved senior citizens and I’ve always loved fishing, and it was in my hometown, and I happen to have Herbie on the team. It was pretty simple,” said Gislason, who became known around Minnesota when he was the sports anchor at KSTP Channel 5. “To come out here and see this — we thought there might be six people with a fish fry — it’s amazing. It’s a big deal.” Hrbek was equally impressed.
“I’m impressed with the program.

The Let’s Go Fishing deal is a pretty neat deal — getting people who are sitting in a nursing home, or wherever they are, out,” Hrbek said. “Not only to go fishing, but to just get them on the water. Fishing is an extra thing. Just to get them out on a boat is something they enjoy so much.”

The KHO crew visited senior citizens at one of the assisted living homes in Buffalo, and then, with anglers representing the five care centers that make up Elim Homes in Buffalo on board, pushed off onto Buffalo Lake for a two-hour fishing trip.

Through comments made by several volunteers, Hrbek came to realize the impact the Let’s Go Fishing trips have had on the lives of those who have gone.
“What I’ve heard from people is that a lot of these people haven’t said much in the nursing home over the past couple years, and, all of a sudden, you take them out on the boat and they get all excited and start talking,” he said.

What did the people on the pontoon Tuesday talk about? Twins baseball and fishing, of course.

“You just talk about how they got involved in fishing, and how they got involved with this,” Hrbek said. “Everybody loves the idea that they are doing it.”
Gislason expanded on the conversations had on the boat.

“We had them tell some old fish stories. We talked about growing up in Wright County, and about how many lakes there are and how they used to catch fish, and how they used to fish with their husbands. A lot of them aren’t here anymore. I think they had a good time regaining old stories with their spouses who aren’t here anymore,” Gislason said. “And there was a lot of Twins baseball talk — what a bum this guys was, what a bum that guy was, and what a great guy this guy was, and what a great guy that guy was — and Herbie kept reminding everybody that some of them were his teammates, but it was all in fun.”

Gislason said the seniors were a little camera shy at first, but a class clown loosened the group up. “They were a little shy with the cameras, and then one of our angling mates decided to get everybody jazzed up. She was hootin’ and hollerin’, and she was 96 years old, and then we were cracking jokes. It was great TV. I can’t wait to tell the story,” he explained. “That’s what the outdoors do — you can become fast friends with people when you are out fishing and hunting and just hanging out. What a great bunch of people. I think we had more fun than they did, to be honest with you.”

The fun the fishing group had must have been because of the chatter and story telling, because it sure wasn’t due to good fishing.

“It was a little rough. I wasn’t going to divulge all my secrets from growing up on this lake,” Gislason said. “We caught one fish — one perch at the end — and it was about this big, and the 88-year-old who caught it claimed the biggest fish with 6 inches.”

The winning angler, Olivia Meyer, from the Park Care Center, is actually 90 years old. She caught the lone fish of the day, but nobody seemed disappointed that nothing was biting.

“We caught one fish, but that doesn’t really matter. The idea is to get the people out, and a program like this is a neat thing. It’s a fun way to get outdoors and do stuff,” Hrbek said.

Gislason did not know when the segment on Let’s Go Fishing would air, but he plans on using it in a show titled “Fishing for Good.” It was clear the former sports reporter was convinced the Let’s Go Fishing program, was, indeed, good.

“I’m anxious to learn more about it. When I first got in the pontoon, the first thing I noticed was the console said,

‘Giving back to people who have given so much,’” he said. “We were all raised. Our parents were raised by this generation, and, you know what, we are going to be in the boat someday. I would be lucky to live somewhere where they picked me up to go fishing once a week. I’m anxious to learn more about it.
“Good things happen when outdoors people get together.”

Anybody 55 years or older can participate in the Let’s Go Fishing program. To find out more about the program, call (763) 682-6036. “Kent Hrbek Outdoors” airs Sunday nights at 10:35 p.m. on KMSP Fox 9. Thanks to Matt Kane, Sports Writer Hrbek brings his show to Buffalo at HJ Sports Blog

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Used Pontoon Boats - Alabama Marine Police Enforce Big Boat Ban

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Alabama Marine Police will start enforcing a big boat ban known as the “Three Lakes Law,” effective now.

Enforcement of ‘big boat ban’ to begin

After surviving nearly two years of legal challenges, the “Three Lakes Law,” which restricts the largest and fastest boats from Lake Martin and two other Alabama lakes, will be enforced starting this weekend.

Alabama Marine Police will be “actively identifying those vessels in violation, give them a warning and tell them to remove their boats from the lake,” Capt. Matt Brooks, district supervisor for the Marine Police’s Wind Creek State Park Office, said. “Officers will maintain a log of those vessels warned and any future violation would result in a citation.”

The boats outlawed by the law, according to the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, include:

•Any vessel exceeding 26 feet, 11 inches and capable of exceeding 60 mph.

•Any vessel exceeding 30 feet, 6 inches in length

•All houseboats or any recreational vessel that constitute a fully equipped dwelling similar in context to a mobile home, with a marine sanitation device, galley and sleeping quarters.

Houseboats and boats longer than 30 feet, 6 inches that were registered and in use on the lakes before July 1, 2006 will be “grandfathered in” and allowed to remain on lakes Martin, Weiss and Harris.

“There are several ways for our officers to tell whether a boat may meet the grandfathering requirements,” Brooks said. “Once we’ve determined that, then we’ll give them the necessary information to begin the permitting process.”

Violators of the ban will be given an initial warning if stopped by marine police, Brooks said. Lt. Erica Shipman of ADCNR said a second stop is a Class B misdemeanor punishable by fines that range from $100 to $1,000.

Shipman said marine police are in the process of finalizing requirements for the permitting process of grandfathered boats.

A boat manufacturers’ industry group filed suit against the law in July 2006. Montgomery County Circuit Judge Johnny Hardwick upheld the ban as constitutional in March 2008.

A bill to extend the ban to Lake Jordan in western Elmore County, introduced by Rep. Barry Mask, failed to get out of committee during the 2007 Legislative session. Thanks to David Goodwin, The Wetumpka Herald » News

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Used Pontoon Boats - Boat Travels, Ossabaw Island, Savannah, GA

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Have you ever been to Ossabaw Island near Savannah, Georgia?

On Saturday, September 6, The Ossabaw Island Foundation will host another unforgettable day on Ossabaw Island, the third largest barrier island on the Georgia coast.

Ossabaw Island Heritage Preserve is a living laboratory for naturalists, scientists and educators; a studio for artists, a treasure trove of original research for archeologists, historians, and historic preservationists, and a place of inspiration for writers and thinkers.

If you have ever wondered about Ossabaw Island, or wanted to visit, you are invited to join the September day trip.

Venture by pontoon boat, buckboard wagon and on foot to learn about the
place where the arts and sciences meet history and nature.


Jim Bitler, the on-island coordinator for the Ossabaw Island Foundation, will lead the day trip, which will offer the natural and human history of the island, and will discuss current educational, scientific and cultural programming on the island. Jim will take you by
vehicle to most spots on the island. Please note that the Torrey-West house and grounds is not a part of this tour.

The day trip group will consist of a maximum of 30 people. Registration details are outlined below.


**********
Event: Day Trip to Ossabaw Island

Trip date: Saturday, September 6, 2008

Time: 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Cost:
$50 per person for Friends of Ossabaw, $65 per person for Future Friends of Ossabaw.

How To Pay: Trip fee is payable in advance by check to: The Ossabaw Island Foundation, 305 Fahm Street, Savannah, GA 31401

The trip fee covers round trip boat transportation plus the full day of programming/touring. There are no refunds.

Deadline to register: Wednesday, September 3 at 5:00 p.m.

Other things to bring: sack lunch, bottled water or other beverage. Wear very casual clothes and sturdy shoes.

Weather:
The trip will occur RAIN or SHINE.

Travel:
The boat to Ossabaw Island departs at 9:30 a.m. from Delegal Marina at The Landings on Skidaway Island. Please arrive at the marina by 9:15 a.m. The marina is about 30-45 minutes from downtown Savannah.

Travel to Ossabaw Island is via an open pontoon-style boat with a canopy. On the island, transportation is in a wooden buckboard wagon pulled behind a truck.

Due to the rugged nature of the trip it is not recommended for people with hip, back or knee problems.

Deadline to register is Wednesday, September 3 at 5:00 p.m.

Please call Elizabeth DuBose at the Ossabaw Island Foundation to
reserve your place on the trip. (912) 233-5104, or mail in your payment
by the deadline. Your payment confirms your reservation. Thanks to;Ossabaw Island–Experience One of the Last Unspoiled Places - The Creative Coast Alliance (Savannah, GA)

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Used Pontoon Boats - Pow Wow Point Lodge, Peninsula Lake

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Dara Howell, 14, drives her family’s boat on Peninsula Lake, across from Deerhurst Resort, the site of the 2010 G8 summit. (Roy MacGregor/The Globe and Mail)

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. With an interesting article out of Huntsville, Ontario.

‘Creepy.” That is how just-turned-14-year-old Dara Howell describes her experience earlier this month on a beach directly opposite the Muskoka resort site that will host the 2010 G8 Economic Summit.

The Howell family is into a third generation of running popular Pow Wow Point Lodge, which sits on a small bay on Peninsula Lake across from sprawling Deerhurst Resort, where two years from now the soon-to-be-decided president of the United States will gather with the political heads of Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, Germany, Japan and, of course, Canada.

If you want a good view of Deerhurst, you can’t do better than Pow Wow.

On Friday, Aug. 8, a vehicle pulled into the Pow Wow parking lot and discharged six men, all dressed in what the locals would call “city clothes” - including dark slacks and leather-soled dress shoes.

Without bothering to check with the office, they went down to the beach and began taking photographs of each other, each time with Deerhurst - including the cupola that rides over the main building - in the background.

“All I can say,” says Doug Howell, Dara’s father and the current lodge owner, “is that it was strange. So out of character for Pow Wow. And believe me, we get a lot here.”

Stereotyping happens easily in Cottage Country, where city slickers are instantly recognized, locals are often patronized and heritage carries its usual, if politically incorrect, clichés. The lodge caters heavily to German tourists, so punctuality and organized activity play large at Pow Wow, as do tales of convoys of Japanese tourists coming in the fall to photograph a single maple that turns a particular shade of red.

These six English-speaking men appeared to be of Middle-Eastern origin. But what really set them apart was their complete unfamiliarity with a beach. It was not only their unlikely dress, but a sense that they were “faking” play in order to pose for photographs.

Told this wasn’t a public beach, the men asked if it was all right if they just “hung out” for a while. Told they’d need to take a room in order to stay, they asked for a single room - one bed - and paid by credit card. The six men - one very young, the others in their 30s and 40s - returned to their “play,” at one point attempting to paddle a towing tube around the docks.

They asked to be taken out on the lodge’s pontoon boat, which is usually used for the evening “Moonlight Cruise.” Dara Howell, who happened to be at the waterfront, checked and was told if they paid for the gas she could. She was caught off guard when only one of the men boarded.

Unsure what to do, she continued on. The man asked that she encircle completely the point on which Deerhurst lies and, at each opening, take a photograph of him, with Deerhurst always in the background. “It was creepy,” she says. “He wanted pictures from all the way around - and always two pictures. It was weird.” At 5 p.m. it began to rain. By 5:30 the men had packed back into their vehicle and left, room and bed untouched.

As the stories poured into the small lodge office, Doug Howell began to wonder what this had been all about: could there be any connection to the G8? One of his staff warned him to beware of “racial profiling” and he decided to let it go. But when he couldn’t sleep for wondering, he finally contacted the local detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police, who immediately called the RCMP, who were very interested in the details.

Unfortunately, there were hardly any. No one had photographed the men. No one had written down the licence plate. All they had was a credit card number, with no idea where it could lead - and no sense, really where this strange tale leads at all, if anywhere.

The Pow Wow tale simply joins dozens of other tales - none, perhaps, quite so “creepy” - that are already spinning about the lakes and back roads of the 2010 G8 Summit site.

A man on adjacent Fairy Lake is telling people he expects to rent out his luxurious property for $100,000 during the summit. Rumour around Pen Lake has a major U.S. network taking over another fancy cottage for $65,000.

According to one published article, as much as $300-million can be expected to flow into the local economy, but in an area almost exclusively indebted to tourism, that would depend rather profoundly on the time of year that has yet to be chosen.

“If it’s in July,” says Doug Howell, “are we talking a $300-million pullout to bring in $300-million?” All of which leads to the current hot debate in Cottage Country: spring or fall?

A fall summit would show off the area in its red-orange-and-yellow best. But a spring summit would mean far fewer protesters and police clogging up the few roads that locals dread being plugged solid.

Compared to the blackfly and mosquito scourge of 2008, pepper spray would seem like deodorant. Thanks to; globeandmail.com: Curious tales emerge about site of lakeside 2010 G8 summit

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Used Pontoon Boats - Boating on Paw-Paw Lake

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Here is a great article on boating on Paw-Paw Lake in Michigan.

So we headed last Wednesday to one of our favorite and relaxing places of ALL TIMES Michigan! I love going to my in-laws house. It is so relaxing. Jason’s birthday was on Tuesday so it was a great chance to go and celebrate the big 31!

We went Thursay morning on a pontoon boat that a friend of Wes and Sharon’s (my in-laws) had and we spent a couple of hours on Paw-Paw Lake.

Each of the kids got to drive the the boat and honk the horn twice. They LOVED it! It was really nice of her to let us do that. Then Jason and I were off to South Haven to a B&B called The Carriage House. If you ever want a great place to relax and that is beautiful that is the place to go. We walked all over and enjoyed a night with the breeze and cool evening. It was perfect.
We sat out on our balcony and just talked and talked and talked. It was great!

It was a great chance for us to discuss where we are in life and what we
are doing. The conclusion, we are so blessed and exactly where we want
to be, we couldn’t ask for anything more. We are truly blessed and thank God for EVERYTHING that we have, experienced, get to serve and help people…the list goes on. We are so thankful! After the B&B we just hung out together and then later the next afternoon met the kids and grandparents back at Silver Beach in St. Joe, MI.

We had so much fun…it was so wavy and we enjoyed every bit. Saturday morning we woke up and went blueberry picking and then after lunch headed to go canoeing on Paw-Paw Lake. We found a great channel and Jason appeased my desire to go turtle hunting! I have to talking about it ALL summer long. I wanted to catch a turtle and bring it home!! So we tried. We
almost had a mom AND two babies, but I accidently banged the boat and
PLOP they went in the water.
Then we found one that was laying on a log and went in the water when I went
to go for it, BUT was very BRAVE because he stuck his head back up out of the water…that is when I GOT HER!!! The kids named her Jane. Jason’s parents havent’ used that canoe in years so we get to bring it back home and enjoy whenever we want. We are very thankful for that! I am sure we will be fishing a lot more! It was a great week…but watch out…school begins on Monday! Back to regular life. 8-) I can’t wait for fall! Did I mention that I love life and just can’t wait to experiece more and more of it.

(Note: we also got to pick FRESH corn out of grandpa’s garden and it just made me stand in
amazingment at what a creative God we have to engineer such a wonderful creation! He is so amazing and so powerful and so imaginative! Something I continue to strive for…to be more creative like Him, to think OUTSIDE the box…just imagine what is instore??!!!! Wow! Oh, to
be more like Him!) Thanks to Tanya and her family; The RanDoM happenings of us: Our last summer days in MI

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Bayliner Boats - Emirates Boat Show International

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Bayliner Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Abu Dhabi will be showcased as an emerging centre for leisure as the capital hosts the first Emirates Boat Show International.

The exhibition, which will run from November 25 to 27, is being hosted by Abu Dhabi International Marine Sports Club (ADMISC).

The boat show will attract more than 150 exhibitors, and 200 boats will be on display in the water and onshore at ADIMSC.

Visitors will be able to view a range of the latest leisure marine products, from multi-million dollar motor yachts to jet skis, wakeboarding boats and equipment, sailing dinghies and diving gear, marine accessories and electronics. The show will be open to trade and the public.

The boat show has also secured bookings from some of the best known international brands include Aicon, Azimuth, Bayliner, Beneteau Yachts, Cabo, Carver, Doral, Elegance, Four Winns, Gulf Craft, Hatteras, Jeanneau, Larson, Mastercraft, Maxum, Palm Marine, Princess Yachts, SeaRay, Silver Craft, Tige and Wellcraft.

Ahmed Al Romaithi, Member of the Executive Committee of ADMISC, said the show would reflect the vast amount of marine-related development and infrastructure planned or under construction for the emirate.

Saeed Hareb, Chairman of organiser Knotika Holding, said: “Abu Dhabi is an obvious choice for a boat show as it is the richest of the oil-laden United Arab Emirates, has a large expatriate population and is aiming to transform itself into a global tourist destination.

“Abu Dhabi benefits from a cosmopolitan outlook in a politically stable country with a liberal economy.

“Diverse sports and leisure pursuits are part of the active lifestyle residents enjoy in Abu Dhabi and the recently announced 2009 Formula 1, Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Ferrari Theme Park and Warner Brothers Theme Park are all situated on the Yas Island, a 2,500 hectare development.

Forbes magazine recently reported Abu Dhabi as the world’s richest city. Responsible for more than 90 per cent of the UAE’s oil production, Abu Dhabi possesses the fourth largest oil reserves in the world.

According to media reports, Abu Dhabi has an investment fund exceeding $800 billion (Dh2.9 trillion) with more than $140bn in government and privately-funded development projects under way in Abu Dhabi.

Dubai International Boat Show will take place between March 3 and 7 at Dubai International Marine Club at Mina Seyahi. Thanks to; Boat show sets sail for UAE capital

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Used Pontoon Boats - Lake of the Ozarks Shootout

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. All that remains is the cheering.The 20th anniversary Lake of the Ozarks Shootout comes to the WestSide for the very first time this weekend. These are not your basic pontoon boats you see on the lakes.

As the world’s fastest offshore racing machines thunder down the lake at over 200 miles per hour, and as super-charged pontoons and flashy personal water crafts rip down the course, tens of thousands of race fans will come by land and lake to see the spectacle Saturday and Sunday in the shadow of the Hurricane Deck Bridge.

The race course is a two-mile straightaway beginning at the bridge and continuing along the southeast bluffs en route to the finish line at the 33.5-MM.
The Missouri Water Patrol, with an armada of a dozen boats on duty at the event, will enforce a no-wake rule from late morning until 5 p.m. both days for a three and a half to four-mile stretch of the lake in the area of the Shootout.
And while there’s plenty of Shootout activity beginning Thursday and Friday, the boat races get underway following opening ceremonies Saturday at 10 a.m. Sunday’s race schedule begins at 11 a.m., with heats running through approximately 5 p.m. each day.

As of Monday morning organizers reported 22 online racing boat registrations, with three times that number guaranteed slips at race headquarters.

“There will probably be a bunch of last-minute registrations,” according to Erin Boomsma, a key Shootout committee member. “I think some of the racers want to keep their plans under the radar until the weekend.”

Ron Duggan, the Captain Ron’s Bar & Grill owner who just days before last Christmas won the right to host the event after its swan song at Shooter’s 21 in Osage Beach last August, said the past eight months have flown by.
“It’s been the fastest eight months of my life, I believe,” Duggan said late last week. “So much in the beginning was just trying to figure out what we should be doing — understanding what they’ve done in the past and making contacts with sponsors and people who had knowledge of the event.”

One of the first things he did was to establish a Shootout committee comprised of people across the lake area, but with a healthy dose of WestSiders. Duggan said one of the happiest surprises has been the number of people willing to take on various jobs and the confidence with which they’ve followed them through.
“They’ve taken it and run with it,” Duggan said. “And, I’ve enjoyed getting to know them and work closely with them — they’ve really stepped up to the plate.”
Another surprise Duggan admitted was how much he realized he didn’t know about the Shootout, “…. and the different things that go on that you just don’t think about,” he said.

The Shootout is without question the biggest event to ever hit the WestSide.

Its success will be measured against 19 years as the Lake Rescue Shootout, hosted and organized by lake area fire districts. Fire/rescue personnel will still be a big part of this weekend’s races, providing logistical, communication and public safety resources.

A major element of the Shootout that remains constant is the event’s benevolence. Lake area fire and rescue departments, American Red Cross, and new this year, Lake of the Ozarks Habitat for Humanity, Boy Scouts of America and others will receive funding based on their level of participation.
Without being specific, Duggan said he hopes to be able to at least match last year’s Shootout contribution of approximately $80,000 to the organizations.
A 501(c)3 not-for-profit corporation was formed by Duggan specifically for the Shootout.

“A lot of it [the final tally] will depend on t-shirt and hat sales, but we’re hoping that our total contribution will be eighty-thousand or more,” he said.
When asked what his comfort level was [on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being sublime], Duggan said he was at 8-8.5. But, he said he might get to a 9 by this weekend.

“The only reason I didn’t say 10 is the unknown,” he said. Thanks to;Shootout arrives this weekend - Laurie, MO - WestSide Star

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Used Pontoon Boats - Minnesota, the Land of 10,000 Lakes

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Hi gang, Rick Ostler here from North American Waterway bringing you Used Pontoon Boats along with news and views from the boating industry. Minnesota is the Land of 10,000 Lakes, but, so often, people point north — far north — when they think of lake country.

The south-central part of the state may not be cabin country for many, but, without this region, the state’s lake count might remain in the, say, high 9,000s.

On a recent Sunday afternoon, the waves surrounding the city of Madison Lake were as busy as it is “Up North,” with swimmers, boaters and anglers enjoying the cool water on a hot, humid day.

Off the beach at Bray Park, jet skis whizzed by puttering pontoon boats, while girls floated on inflatable toys and boys played football on the beach.

Across town on Duck Lake, there was more action, as ski boats pulled tubers in circles, and their wake bobbed paddleboat riders up and down.

Jen Bezon, the caretaker-in-residence at Duck Lake Park, said it’s been a slightly busier-than-normal summer at the lake she’s watched over for three summers.

“A mother who comes here with her kids every night said last winter was so bad and so cold that she vowed never to waste another summer day,” said Bezon, who works at the park with her fiancé, Isaiah Rudolph.

However, Bezon added, the numbers are starting to taper off a bit …

“It seems like when the back-to-school sales start, people stop coming,” she said.

Funny that it’s August — when baseball and softball and other youth sports have ended — when the lake traffic starts running dry.

“It’s a great place to swim,” Bezon said. “It’s a great little fishing lake for kids. It’s fun for families to do that. … A lot of families come here for picnics.”

Duck Lake Park is a day-use-only park that offers canoe, paddleboat and fishing boat rentals. There are also beach volleyball courts and a playground.

Blue Earth County has a little more than 30 lakes, but it makes the most of what it has.

Bray Park, located on the southeastern shore of Madison Lake is a popular camping and day-trip destination with a nature trail and primitive foot path. A newer, three-tiered picnic shelter overlooks the beach and boat landing.

There are also swimming beaches at Lake George near Madison Lake, Daly Park on Lura Lake southwest of Mapleton and Eagle Lake.

Thanks Shane Frederick, Free Press Staff Writer;The Free Press, Mankato, MN - Lake effect

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