Discover Boating Free Get Started in Boating DVD

Thursday, June 02, 2011 #

Discover Boating on the Air: WGN's Midday Fix

Discover Boating went live from WGN-TV studios on May 27 to kickoff the start of the boating season!

Check out this clip which features a few boat buying tips for those looking to get their feet wet and showcases the new 2012 Four Winns H200.

The Four Winns H200 was provided for the segment by Skipper Bud's. To learn more, visit FourWinns.com and SkipperBuds.com.


 

posted @ Thursday, June 02, 2011 3:32 PM

Tuesday, October 26, 2010 #

'Making Waves' Winner Selected

Remember our Making Waves contest on Facebook? The winner, Cassidy Welch from Hot Springs, Ark., was randomly selected from more than 30,000 entrants to be awarded $25,000 toward the purchase of a new NMMA Certified boat.

Welch and her family chose a 2010 Tracker Pro Team 175 TXW with a 2010 Mercury 60HP engine from Bradford Marine and ATV in Hot Springs.


Welch Family
Congratulations Welch family & happy boating!

posted @ Tuesday, October 26, 2010 10:36 AM

Wednesday, July 21, 2010 #

Three Easy Ways to Get on the Water

Summer is heating up and we have ways to get you out on the water to cool off, disconnect and have some fun with family/friends. Newbie boaters and boating enthusiasts, not just boat owners, can find easy ways to test the waters and discover the boating lifestyle this summer.

Whether considering boat ownership or just looking to get your feet wet, Discover Boating has on-the-water options to float your boat: 

Rent or Charter. Boat rentals come in a variety of forms, from hourly and daily rentals to weeks-long charters. Renting is a helpful way to compare boat types and explore local waterways from a new vantage point. Multi-day chartering may help save on trip expenses such as food, lodging and activities, which can often be negotiated into the overall cost of a chartering package.

Share Time and Costs. Fractional boat ownership, similar to lodging timeshares, are cost-effective ways to use well-appointed boats and distribute costs related to fueling, pump-out, maintenance and insurance among a group of friends or other local timeshare boaters. Members pre-schedule use of the boat online and often get the added benefit of lessons, flotillas and additional crew, if needed.

Join a Club. Local boating clubs and organizations allow inexperienced boaters the chance to test the waters through lessons, regattas and events. Clubs provide members with access to a variety of boat types, interaction with fellow boaters and events for all skill levels for an annual or monthly fee.

 

posted @ Wednesday, July 21, 2010 10:44 AM

Wednesday, June 23, 2010 #

For July 4 Fireworks, Boaters Have Best Seat in the House

One of the best boating weekends of the year is just around the corner. To mark the Fourth of July holiday and celebrate America’s favorite on-the-water pastime, Discover Boating has identified popular nautical locations around the country to give boaters the best seat in the house for viewing fireworks:
  • Austin, Texas: Marked by symphony music and a spectacular fireworks display over Lady Bird Lake, Austin's annual July 4th celebration draws more than 100,000 people. Rent a kayak or head out aboard your own boat where the best seats in the house are on the water. (July 4, 8:30 p.m., Auditorium Shores at The Long Center)
  • Chicago, Ill.: Join friends and family for great food at the Taste of Chicago then hop on a chartered cruise or your own boat as the skies above Lake Michigan and Chicago’s famous skyline are illuminated by three synchronized fireworks shows along the city’s shores on the North Side, South Side and Downtown. (July 4, 9 p.m., Foster to Montrose; 63rd Street Beach to Promontory Point; and, Navy Pier)
  • Los Angeles, Calif.: Join a variety of power and sailboats on the water to enjoy live music and big booms over the main channel in Marina Del Rey for free family fun and a patriotic fireworks display. (July 4, 9 p.m., Marina Del Ray)
  • Memphis, Tenn.: The Beale Street Fourth of July celebration is a festive time of food, live Blues music and fireworks. Held along the Mississippi River, the celebration offers a perfect atmosphere for boaters to partake in all of the festivities. (July 4, 10 p.m., Beale Street)
  • Milwaukee, Wis.: Milwaukee draws thousands to the Lake Michigan shoreline to watch the U.S. Bank Fireworks, one of the grand spectacles of the city’s annual Summerfest music festival. Taking in the display from a boat provides an unparalleled panoramic view. (July 3, 9:25 p.m., Veterans Park)
  • Hilton Head, S.C.: Harbour Fest at Shelter Cove features live entertainment, plus regional cuisine, arts and crafts, and an unforgettable fireworks display over the harbor.Whether on the boat with family or on a "Fireworks Paddle" guided kayak tour, HarbourFest offers the best seat in the southeast for celebrating Independence Day.(July 4, 9:45 p.m., Shelter Cove Harbour)
  • New York, N.Y.: With more than 40,000 pyrotechnic shells in a half-hour display, Macy's dazzles viewers each year with a fireworks display of grand proportions over the Hudson River. Launched from two locations, taking in the spectacular views from aboard a boat cannot be beat. Visitors can also celebrate in style on a cruise around the Statue of Liberty, featuring live music and dancing. (July 4, 9 p.m., Manhattan’s West Side between 23rd and 59th Streets)
  • Philadelphia, Penn.: In the nation’s birthplace, July 4th means history, music, fun and fireworks. Climb aboard a boat on the Delaware River to view the fireworks and listen to live music from the Goo Goo Dolls and Philadelphia favorites as the City of Brotherly Love shines in the background during the Wawa Welcome America! Festival. (July 4, 10:30 p.m., along the Delaware River)
  • St. Paul, Minn.: St. Paul's Taste of Minnesota is a four-day food and music extravaganza at Harriet Island with its Fourth of July celebration anchoring the festivities. As the sun sets, sail, motor and paddle out to the best on-the-water spot to catch the fireworks over the Mississippi River. (July 4, 10:15 p.m., Harriet Island)
  • Tacoma, Wash.: The annual Freedom Fair on the Ruston Way waterfront offers something for every boater along the waters of Commencement Bay. After taking in the air show or annual beach pole vault competition, Tacoma boaters drop anchor to end the day with the spectacular Emerald Queen Fireworks Extravaganza. (July 4, 10:10 p.m., Ruston Way waterfront)

posted @ Wednesday, June 23, 2010 12:41 PM | Feedback (545)

Tuesday, June 22, 2010 #

Live from Lake Michigan

'Kick off the summer season with boating' was the theme of a recent news segment that went live from DuSable Harbor on Lake Michigan. Discover Boating worked with Chicago's WLS-TV (ABC) to pull together the Father's Day segment and help viewers gear up for the official start of summer. 

posted @ Tuesday, June 22, 2010 2:29 PM | Feedback (367)

Thursday, April 29, 2010 #

Go for a 'Ride' at the Opening Day Boat Parade in Seattle


From the Seattle Times:

Check out this story and video previewing Seattle's Lake Washington opening day boat parade. Boats of all shapes and sizes will take part this Saturday ... even a few amphibicars? Nice ride! Boating season officially opens May 1. 



Click here for the full Seattle Times story.

posted @ Thursday, April 29, 2010 11:11 AM

Friday, August 07, 2009 #

Sailing Around the Tahitian Islands

Sailing trips are a great value, especially when splitting costs with another family

From Taking the Kids, where author Eileen Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.

(Tribune Media Services) We are in paradise—really. The fish literally eat out of our hands, the water is so clear I can see seashells in the sand six feet below us and the island nearby is ringed by lush, green trees, some dripping with exotic fruits. 

We are following our Catamaran Captain Turo Ariito around the tiny motu (islet) named Tau Tau, (yes, we grown-ups definitely thought Gilligan’s Island) off the Tahitian island of Taha’a to some of the best snorkeling we’ve ever enjoyed. The Coral Garden teems with fish—striped banner fish, long skinny trumpet fish, parrotfish, triggerfish, a barracuda and big ugly eel—that eat the scraps of day-old baguettes (we are in French Polynesia, after all).

Our boat, a gleaming, four-cabin Catamaran (chartered from www.tahitiyachtcharter.com), is moored a short distance away, just offshore from the oh-so-exclusive Le Taha’a Island Resort and Spa (http://www.letahaa.com), which offers over-the-water thatched-roof bungalows favored by Hollywood types, including Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, who I’m told vacationed here with Suri last summer.

Four friends swim in a lagoon in Tahiti.

Sure Tahiti (www.tahiti-tourism.com) is a favorite spot for honeymooners and we meet plenty during our two-week sojourn here, but we meet lots of families, too. Tahiti is closer than many think—just a little over seven hours from Los Angeles, about two hours farther than Hawaii—and Air Tahiti Nui (www.airtahitinui-usa.com) is encouraging more families to visit with kids-fly-free offers and discounted hotel rates.

We’re traveling with another set of parents and four 18-year-olds—my daughter Mel and her three friends who have been BFFs since they all met at Camp Kamaji (www.kamaji.com) in Minnesota nearly a decade ago. When Mel asked me to plan a graduation trip to include Margaret, Lane and Orlee, I figured it had to involve sailing, since the girls spent their summers sailing (later teaching sailing), and it had to be someplace they likely wouldn’t go on their own—in the near future anyway.

So here we are exploring a small slice of French Polynesia’s 118 islands—the four girls who have come from Connecticut, Wisconsin, Kansas and California, my husband Andy and me and Allan and Pam Roza, from Milwaukee, whose daughter Orlee only reluctantly agreed to her parents joining us. I’m especially glad they are here when it turns out Captain Turo speaks little English and The Rozas, who were raised in Canada, speak fluent French.

Our 40-year-old captain is straight out of Central Casting—or a Gauguin painting—huge, muscular with a long mane of hair, tattoos, which he explains tells his family story, and a smile that no matter what happens makes us all relax. In the past, we’ve chartered sailboats closer to home in the Caribbean when we didn’t have a captain. Check www.sunsail.com and www.moorings.com, which also have outlets here, but I couldn’t have imagined this trip without Turo, a prize-winning sailor who has competed in races around the world.

Turo regales the girls with tales of his four sons (by four different women) who live around the world. One look at Turo and I hear my daughter voluntarily speaking French for the first time outside the classroom. And wherever we go—to the tony resort on Taha’a, to the local summer Heiva festival on the island of Ra’iatea to the iconic Bloody Mary’s restaurant on Bora Bora, everyone knows Turo. (They even know what he likes for dinner.) He’s got friends and cousins everywhere and leads us to places we never could have found on our own.

Captain Turo, right, points out a moray eel.

Sailing trips are a great value—significantly cheaper than hotels, especially when splitting costs with another family and cooking your own meals. There are other American families like ours sailing these islands. It’s a great adventure—sails billowing in the wind, the sun in your face, no one anywhere near—but sailing isn’t for everyone. The seas get rough at times. (Bonine helps!) You’ve got to pump toilets to make them flush, showers are rudimentary and living quarters are cramped. But when you’ve got sea breezes, sunshine and starry nights, you don’t need much beyond bathing suits, shorts and flip-flops.

We let Turo lead the way around the Leeward Islands—from Ra’iata, the yachting capital here, to Taha’a, known for its pearl farms and vanilla plantations, to Huahine to Bora Bora with its deluxe resorts. Later we will visit Mo’orea (more about those adventures in other columns). (I’m glad I have my Lonely Planet Tahiti and French Polynesia guide along (http://www.lonelyplanet.com/tahiti-and-french-polynesia/tahiti).

Each island is different and more beautiful than James Michener’s descriptions in his “Tales of the South Pacific.” The locals are even more exotic than imagined with their crowns of flowers and leaves, the women wearing brightly colored pareos that can be tied so many different ways. Everyone is friendly as we buy groceries at local markets (fresh coconut milk) and join them at an annual competition in Bora Bora one morning where we watch young men weave thatch for roofs from dried Pandanus leaves. These days, though, thatched roofs will only be found at hotels. “We’ve evolved,” young local mom Heiata Tupahiroa explains. Thatched roofs have to be changed every few years.

In many places, we’re the only Americans, the only English speakers, which only adds to the adventure.

On Taha’a we meet the Champons, a family of pearl farmers, and learn how those beautiful black pearls are cultivated. Moeata Hioe, a nurse educated in America, shows us around the Vanilla Valley (vanillavalley@gmail.com), the vanilla plantation she took over from her grandfather. Vanilla Valley produces 30 tons of vanilla annually and everything is done by hand right down to pollinating the plants. “If the bees did it, it would be so easy,” Hioe says. But they won’t go hungry. There are fruit trees everywhere—limes, starfruit, grapefruit and mangos—and 47 species of banana trees. “You have to love what you do,” Hioe tells the girls. That’s a good message for four girls about to go off to college.

We snorkel with big Sting Rays without another boat in site, jumping off the boat to swim. We eat local pamplemousse (giant, tasty grapefruit) for breakfast, crisp baguettes, salami and cheese for lunch or (organic) mac and cheese I’ve brought from home. We make papaya smoothies—sans blender. We drink local Hinano beer and my husband introduces Turo to martinis. It’s everything a vacation should be and all the better because our BlackBerrys don’t work and we aren’t near any Internet cafes.

And then there are the sharks. Just as we’re sailing into the Bora Bora lagoon with its majestic green cliffs and clear water, we catch a 16-pound Mahi Mahi! We can’t believe our luck! Turo tells us a fish this size would cost $70 or more in the local market.

Turo cleans our catch where he knows the Lemon and Reef sharks—some as long as four feet—will be. Soon the sharks were swimming in circles around the back of our boat, looking like a bunch of kindergartners squabbling over the last cookie. Turo assures us it’s safe to get in the water and we do, watching the sharks swim beneath us, snapping photos with our Olympus, good up to 10 feet underwater (Stylus Tough-6000 www.olympusamerica.com).

That night, Turo barbecued our fish and we ate under the stars, the boat gently rocking.

We congratulate ourselves for our good fortune—catching this magnificent fish, having Turo as our captain and participating in an adventure that the girls—and us—won’t ever forget. We beg Turo to visit us for Thanksgiving. He just smiles.

(c) 2009 EILEEN OGINTZ DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

For more articles by Eileen, visit her blog at www.TakingtheKids.com.

 

posted @ Friday, August 07, 2009 11:42 AM

Thursday, July 30, 2009 #

Celebrities on the Water

Zac Efron, star of the High School Musical series

From People.com:

READY TO LAUNCH
Zac Efron eases his ride into the water as he prepares to set sail Wednesday in Vancouver, where he continues to shoot his latest film, The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud.

posted @ Thursday, July 30, 2009 9:19 AM

Friday, July 24, 2009 #

A Newly Discovered DESTIN-ation

Today's TGIF post comes from my colleague and avid boater, Rob, who explored the waters off the Florida panhandle:

I recently visited the beach town of Destin in northern Florida with a few friends and a very clear personal mission: to catch a fish big enough to beat out any fish my friends may catch. What I found, beyond fishing glory, was the boating destination that I cannot get out of my mind in the weeks since.

We gave ourselves three full days in this boater’s paradise. With perfect weather ahead, we dedicated the first two days to pleasure boating and exploration. Our boat was docked in the bay area about 10 miles from the Gulf of Mexico. The ride to open water took us past Eglin Air Force base, where our eyes were drawn with amazement by the occasional fighter jet screaming into the skies above. Just before we reached the opening to the Gulf, we came upon the local favorite spot --Crab Island (see below).

Crab Island is a sandbar area just before the Destin Bridge, where hundreds of boaters go to swim and relax in its crystal clear waters. We quickly discovered a floating restaurant and three-story inflatable waterslide. We had no problem spending the enter day there, meeting the locals, playing football in the shallows, swimming and diving into the waters where you can see 30 ft. to the bottom.

Day 2 was spent navigating the bay area waterways, stopping at several quiet and secluded beaches. Beaching the boat on the pure white sands and getting away from everything was exactly the kind of relaxation and scenery we all hope for. This was the kind of view we put on our computer screensavers, where all that exists is the perfect combination of water and palm trees. Our exploration that day took us near Crab Island again, where not too far off we found a stretch of countless restaurants to dock and hop out for a late breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Day 3 was game day, dedicated to the pursuit of fish.  5am is early, there is no debating that, but we had the burst of energy needed when awoken to the song “No Fish Today,” by Kid Creole & the Coconuts (if you haven't heard this song, find it, it's my new fishing theme song). We didn’t need to go further than a few hundred yards offshore before we had the first bite, and this luck continued the entire morning.

That’s yours truly in the blue shirt. My fish was 3 oz. heavier and an inch larger than any of the King and Spanish Mackerel we caught that day ... mission accomplished! Vacation a success! As my mind drifts back to perfect boating trip in Destin, I can’t help but wonder what I will find in my next exploration of new waters.

Have a great weekend on the water!

posted @ Friday, July 24, 2009 9:50 AM

Thursday, June 25, 2009 #

Saugatuck, The Art Coast of Michigan

With July 4 on the horizon, many of us are packing it up and getting out of town. I've got my sights set on Saugatuck, Mich., by far my favorite place to get out on the water in the Midwest. Thanks to some wonderful family friends, I have had the opportunity to spend many a summer day in the Saugatuck/Douglas area and countless hours on Lake Michigan and the Kalamazoo River. This 'tag-a-long' has loved every minute of it!

What makes Saugatuck such a hot spot? Well, it's conveniently located 2.5 hours from Chicago and Detroit  (by car) on the Kalamazoo River (which leads out to Lake Michigan), it's widely recognized as an artists' community, easily accessible for boaters and frequently draws comparisons to Cape Cod.

It's such a picturesque town with plenty of places for boaters to dock and dine (or stay overnight). The quaint downtown (one block off the docks) is filled with boutiques, galleries and fantastic restaurants. I'm a big fan of the new Wicks Park Bar & Grille, across Water St. from the Chain Ferry, with its homemade strawberry lemonade, delicious fish tacos and stellar views of the park and passing boats. 

Which reminds me, those without a boat of their own can hit Oval Beach (frequently named one of America's top beaches) or get on the water via the Chain Ferry and Star of Saugatuck -- two unique attractions to this wonderfully small waterside town.



Read what others have to say about this special place: New York TimesChicago Tribune

Have a great weekend on the water!

posted @ Friday, June 26, 2009 9:24 AM

Meet our Bloggers

  • Boating Blog

    • Chris
      91, 4/29/2013 10:18 AM
    • Dana
      23, 6/10/2011 10:44 AM
    • Sarah
      17, 9/17/2010 10:36 AM
    • Kelly
      16, 6/2/2011 3:32 PM
    • Ellen
      8, 8/11/2010 5:15 PM
    • Colleen
      2, 9/7/2011 10:15 AM

Archives

Syndication

RSS
ATOM

Blog Stats

  • Number of posts - 16
  • Number of comments - 2039
  • Trackbacks - 0
  • Stories - 0