Some facilities can offer premium services such as winterizing your boat, detailing it, shrink wrapping and/or performing repairs. here
See full version: How much does it cost to own a boat
Some facilities can offer premium services such as winterizing your boat, detailing it, shrink wrapping and/or performing repairs. here
Boat storage is used by those who, due to the size of many boats, cannot keep their boat at home or at the marina during the colder months. If you live in an area where the weather is mild enough to leave your boat in year round, you will not have to worry about boat storage; however, in the colder states, the lakes can freeze, causing damage to the boat. The cold temperature of the water, even if it doesn’t freeze, can also do some damage. Because of this, many people have to turn to a storage facility to store their boat so it can be off the water. These facilities will charge based on the size of the boat, the type of storage, the duration and if they have to pick up the boat.
BoatStorageIllinois.com charges a flat $2 per running foot per month for outside storage.
On Offshoreonly.com, they talked about what it cost for them to store their boat. Rates ranged from $220 per month for a 25 footer in Florida to $338 per month for a 34 foot boat.
Indoor designated spaces will often be climate controlled, usually around 50 to 60 degrees.
Alternative: A more expensive option is to keep your boat at the dock, a cost that is typically calculated by the foot. So the bigger the boat, the more you pay. Some docks have a flat fee for various size categories.
Annual maintenance is roughly 10 percent of the cost of the boat, estimates Bloomberg.com. more
Mooring or dock fees: varies here
With the answer in hand, I can argue that we cannot afford to buy a boat, or I can concede and make my husband extremely happy.
Cost: varies here
Boats are not sound financial investments, and unless used for business, never have been; anyone buying a boat should know all of this information (there are actually a lot more costs than the ones you’ve mentioned, hence the phrase “a boat…is defined as a hole in the water into which one dumps their money”). It’s one thing to get involved in a boat purchase (lots of sailors do joint ownership) because you’re the lucky type of person who, if they aren’t on the water at least once every two weeks, their head explodes. That’s realllllly expensive, even if your cerebellum can’t be scraped off the pavement. There’s a huge difference between folks thinking, in their late 40’s, “I’ve always wanted a boat” and folks who are sailors eternally bound to the sea… I wouldn’t recommend anyone who hasn’t done a lot of sailing – like, years and years – on OPB’s, in sailing clubs, as a racing crew, or boat deliveries, to buy a boat, especially a brand new one. My wife knew damn well I was a sailor before marrying me, we have no rugrats, right-side up on our mortgage and I still have put this off well into the future. here
For this post, I’ll focus on owning a sailboat. Here are 13 to consider:
The coveted bluefin tuna that all restaurateurs are after is priced by the pound, and prices can soar at auction. here
At the first bluefin tuna auction of 2019, a 600 pound fish in Japan sold for a record-breaking $3million. here
Boats are typically equipped with extra gear and electronics that help it's crews navigate the seas and pull the fish in.
"Bluefin is the most sought after. Only bluefin has the intense marbling. Bluefin also, when it's aged properly, has a particular balance of flavors," Wilcox said. here
He said he secured $47.02 for a fish he caught in the July season. Although he didn't reveal how heavy the catch was, he may have pocketed upwards of $47,000 should the tuna have weighed more than 1,000 pounds. [links]