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#11
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Larry wrote:
Rosalie B. wrote in : Boat Repairs, Haulage and Slipping Facilities Can Y'all just smell the money changing hands in large amounts?.....(c;] "Trapped in Bermuda"....make a great movie. That's what my cousin said. Their boat had some kind of metal rods French or Italian steering (it was a Camper Nicholson), and they had to wait a month to get the replacement. Living there was very expensive. |
#12
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Wayne.B wrote:
"Armond Perretta" wrote: Look for a copy of "Yachtsman's Guide to Bermuda." It's out of print but you could get lucky. The first $10,000 gets my own personal copy (smile). Just bought one used on Amazon for $15, a saving of $9,985. :-) The version to look for is the 1994 edition published by the Maritime Museum. It replaced the Voegli edition mentioned on Amazon, but the 1994 edition is essentially impossible to find. It is no longer available even in Bermuda. I once owned the original edition put together by Voegli, who now runs a sailboat charter operation in Bermuda. That book is long gone, and of course I wish I'd kept it. I may never sail to Bermuda again, but I still intend to hold on to this guide. A similar example I own is Loveridge's "Cruising Guide to the Nova Scotia Coast." This is a superb guide from about 1997. I know Pete Loveridge quite well and he inscribed my copy. But the book is essentially unavailable, even in Nova Scotia, and when it is found online the asking is often in the vicinity of $150. I try to obtain everything in print when I am planning a cruise. Now it looks like I should have bought multiple copies of each. However when I was preparing for a Summer 2008 visit to Bermuda, I spent much more than I intended on new Admiralty charts, electronic charts, various publications, etc. Now I am the owner of a superb set of Bermuda documents and charts that is just sitting around and doing me no good. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare |
#13
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On Wed, 8 Apr 2009 09:37:39 -0400, "Armond Perretta"
wrote: Now I am the owner of a superb set of Bermuda documents and charts that is just sitting around and doing me no good. That sounds like a good reason to sail there again. :-) |
#14
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#15
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Wayne.B wrote:
"Armond Perretta" wrote: Now I am the owner of a superb set of Bermuda documents and charts that is just sitting around and doing me no good. That sounds like a good reason to sail there again ... I don't want to discourage the original poster, and maybe it's just a question of getting older and having made the trip many times, but Bermuda really has changed since I began cruising and racing there in the 1980s. There was a time when the government actually limited the number of cruise ships visiting Bermuda. At one point cruise ships were even refused berthing along Front Street on weekends because they blocked the view (yes, this actually occurred). These days officials have gone in the opposite direction and decided that the hordes visiting on cruise ships should be encouraged, and this trend may be coming back to haunt them. For many years most visitors arrived by air and stayed at hotels, but that is no longer the case and has not been the case for some time. This really changes the character of the islands and the Bermuda experience. I think this trend will only increase in the near future. If this sounds elitist, I would suggest that Bermuda is elitist in the first place, and has always encouraged the view that Bermuda must not be confused with other island destinations. For example there is currently a vast construction project at the Dockyard to expand wharfage available to cruise ships. Last summer there was space for 2 ships alongside, and the expansion was designed to double this. The question then becomes what to do with these hordes berthed at the extreme end of the Islands far away from the other facilities and attractions on the Islands. This is why the high speed ferry business has mushroomed in recent years. One of the hottest topics in the local press was what the cruise ship business has meant for local merchants, particularly in Hamilton, since retailers and restaurant owners no longer had an automatically captive audience. There were even gaping holes in the architecture on Front Street where some of the old stalwarts had either moved or gone out of business. In Bermuda this is some sort of heresy. The retail scene at St. Georges reminded me of how the hordes of cruise ship passengers are "processed" at the Straw Market in Nassau, Bahamas. Not a good scene. Another hot topic was how officials should respond to the demands of cruise ship operators who want to open casinos on board ship while in port. This would also have a negative impact on local businesses. The cruise ship operators seem to be saying that if Bermuda refuses their demands, they'll simply take the ships elsewhere. It reminded me of a hostage situation, where the genie was now out of the bottle. Look for casino gambling in Bermuda soon. Finally, there appears to have been an increase in drug traffic and violent crime that once would have been totally out of character in Bermuda. In times gone by the police blotter in the local daily paper would include an occasional case of public drunkenness or a stolen bicycle. That's no longer the case. Gun crime is up, and tourists have actually been murder victims in recent years (well, at least one). It is also quite likely that race relations that in the past almost never seemed to be an issue, have become an issue. In other words, an enlightened attitude I always associated with Bermuda seems to be under attack and changing. I am trying to report this in an understated manner, but I don't know if that's how it comes across. Sorry to report these things, but my impressions are based on much exposure to the Islands and considerable thought about these things. |
#16
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"Armond Perretta" wrote in
: Wayne.B wrote: "Armond Perretta" wrote: Look for a copy of "Yachtsman's Guide to Bermuda." It's out of print but you could get lucky. The first $10,000 gets my own personal copy (smile). Just bought one used on Amazon for $15, a saving of $9,985. :-) The version to look for is the 1994 edition published by the Maritime Museum. It replaced the Voegli edition mentioned on Amazon, but the 1994 edition is essentially impossible to find. It is no longer available even in Bermuda. I once owned the original edition put together by Voegli, who now runs a sailboat charter operation in Bermuda. That book is long gone, and of course I wish I'd kept it. I may never sail to Bermuda again, but I still intend to hold on to this guide. A similar example I own is Loveridge's "Cruising Guide to the Nova Scotia Coast." This is a superb guide from about 1997. I know Pete Loveridge quite well and he inscribed my copy. But the book is essentially unavailable, even in Nova Scotia, and when it is found online the asking is often in the vicinity of $150. I try to obtain everything in print when I am planning a cruise. Now it looks like I should have bought multiple copies of each. However when I was preparing for a Summer 2008 visit to Bermuda, I spent much more than I intended on new Admiralty charts, electronic charts, various publications, etc. Now I am the owner of a superb set of Bermuda documents and charts that is just sitting around and doing me no good. Based upon the guide that I have in my hand, it's actually titled "Bermuda Yachting Guide" ISBN 0-921560-06-0 published by the Bermuda Maritime Museum Association, 1994. -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org |
#17
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Geoff Schultz" geoff"at wrote:
Based upon the guide that I have in my hand, it's actually titled "Bermuda Yachting Guide" ISBN 0-921560-06-0 published by the Bermuda Maritime Museum Association, 1994. -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org If you at taking the title from the front cover, my copy actually reads "Bermuda Yachting Guide Bermuda." Then again, at the bottom of every page of my copy (same ISBN) I also find "Yachting Guide to Bermuda." I suspect we're talking about the same guide, but anything's possible these days. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare |
#18
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"Armond Perretta" wrote in
: Geoff Schultz" geoff"at wrote: Based upon the guide that I have in my hand, it's actually titled "Bermuda Yachting Guide" ISBN 0-921560-06-0 published by the Bermuda Maritime Museum Association, 1994. -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org If you at taking the title from the front cover, my copy actually reads "Bermuda Yachting Guide Bermuda." Then again, at the bottom of every page of my copy (same ISBN) I also find "Yachting Guide to Bermuda." I suspect we're talking about the same guide, but anything's possible these days. If you look up the ISBN, it's "Bermuda Yachting Guide". -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org |
#19
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Geoff Schultz wrote:
wrote in news:ba10e4bb-f135-459c-8f6b-72b3f9b2bfa6 : We're planning a trip to Bermuda (from NC) in early summer. This will be our first voyage out there, so Bermuda solidly classifies as an unfamiliar landfall. While I won't provide you with specific information regarding your questions, you can find many of the answers at my web site, which has detailed logs and photos of much of the Bahamas. -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org Even though they both begin with the letter B and are in the Atlantic, the Bahamas are not the same as Bermuda. |
#20
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Geoff Schultz" geoff"at wrote:
If you look up the ISBN, it's "Bermuda Yachting Guide". How could I fail to check the ISBN? I'm really slipping in my old age. Maybe during my 11 or so cruises or races to Bermuda I actually ended up in the Bahamas and just got the names of the islands confused. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare |
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