February 15, 2012

2012 Miami International Boat Show

Filed under: General — Richard Jordan @ 12:00 am

Sure to be a highlight in Miami - the new Hylas 56

This year’s Miami Show opens Thursday, the 16th, and runs until Monday, the 20th. Locations are the Miami Beach Convention Center, Sea Isle Marina & Yachting Center, Miamarina At Bayside. Larger yachts because of bridge height restrictions slip at Sea Isle while the majority of yachts will be at Bayside. Compared to Fort Lauderdale, the show is about sailboats instead of megayachts with most the major manufacturers represented as well as a good group of brokerage boats. The audience of Miami is international including a strong Latin American audience. Overall Miami is a show you will enjoy with many outside entertainment opportunities. Here are some items of interest to enjoy. Continue reading “2012 Miami International Boat Show” »

December 28, 2011

Seasons Greetings

Filed under: General — Richard Jordan @ 12:00 am

October 5, 2011

Annapolis Show 2011: October 6 – 10

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , , — Richard Jordan @ 12:00 am

The Newport show is over; next up is Annapolis which is the biggest US sailboat show. Annapolis is the best show to attend if you are in the market for a cruising sailboat because it features almost all the manufacturers. There is a power show the week afterwards, October 13 – 16. New Bavaria, Beneteau, and Dufour designs are among the models to premier. Two boats that have caught my eye are the Leopard 44 with the forward cockpit arrangement and Jeanneau’s beachable boats. Please feel free to share how the show is going this year by posting back a comment. To the right is a 2009 of timelapse of the Annapolis US Sailboat show.

February 2, 2011

Tropic Rover, two masted 145-foot gaff rigged catamaran

Filed under: General — Richard Jordan @ 10:25 am

One time largest sailing catamaran in the world was built in Fort Lauderdale from 1961 to 1962.

Tropic Rover Under Sail

Are the boat building glory days of Fort Lauderdale past? Talking to Bixby Hill reminisce makes you wonder what has happened. Bix invited me to his home across from LMC and told stories of building boats on the New River during the 1950′s and 1960′s. The east and west banks downriver from I-95 have a rich tradition and colorful history of large yacht construction that makes you question if the mega yachts that populate our city today are really that advanced. In the 1950′s, Bix worked at Dooley’s Yacht Basin, what is now the east yard of Lauderdale Marine Center. There they built 140-foot minesweepers and exported them to the Netherlands to clear WWII mines from the North Sea. Equally busy yard hands on the north side built famous yachts such as the Prospector and Starlite and provided dockage for others such as the 115-foot motor yacht, Arethusa. Continue reading “Tropic Rover, two masted 145-foot gaff rigged catamaran” »

November 9, 2010

The Perks of Being Crew

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , — Victoria Allman @ 5:11 pm

SEAsoned

“Just keep smiling,” I was told on my first day as crew on a yacht. That was twelve years ago and it has proven to be the best and easiest piece of advice to follow.

I am a yacht chef. I wake every morning at five-thirty and stumble upstairs from my cabin to grope for the button on the coffee machine. The mechanical grind of the beans and swish of water shooting through them are the first signs of life on the boat. Before I have fully opened my eyes, I tip my head back and shoot two straight shots of caffeine.  My body shudders involuntarily and my eyes squeeze shut. It’s the ritual I start my day with. Within minutes, I am smiling. I love this life. I love yachting. Continue reading “The Perks of Being Crew” »

April 13, 2010

Rehab project continues on 85-year-old swing bridge

Filed under: General — Richard Jordan @ 9:50 pm

This article appeared in the April issue of Waterfront News.

Swing Bridge

Driving along Davie or Broward Boulevards these days, you might notice signs announcing the Southwest 11th Ave bridge closure. After 85 years, city engineers are in the process of refitting the 1925 steel pony truss bridge. Plans call for the replacement of damaged structural steel, new railings, grating, mechanical and electrical systems, a new fender, control house and repaired bulkheads, according to Dane Esdelle, project manager for the City of Fort Lauderdale.

“The bridge has always been way too narrow, but I didn’t necessarily notice anything rickety about her,” said Charlie Read, an editor of the Riverside Park Residents’ Association newsletter. “But I trust that they know what they are doing.” The historical tender house will remain, with a second modern one constructed behind it. Both will be located on the north side of the bridge in the Sailboat Bend neighborhood. In July 2008, a deep draft boat finally prompted the city to rehabilitate the bridge. “A boat with excess draft caught the cable under the bridge and pulled the electrical control box off the bridge,” said Dave Marshall who lives in eastern Riverside near the bridge. Officials had allocated funds for the rehabilitation project in the early 2000s.

While the bridge may not be on your daily commute, for residents of the Riverside and Sailboat Bend areas, the closure affects traffic patterns. “It adds about two miles to my commute north,” Marshall said. At least three earlier structures spanned the North Fork of the New River. In the mid 20th century, local resident Sigurd Dillevig recalled sitting on a piling on Southwest Ninth Avenue that once supported a wooden bridge. “Dillevig used to sit on it and shoot alligators,” wrote reporter Wesley W. Stout in an article appearing in the Fort Lauderdale Daily News on Dec.15, 1954. Later the bridge moved downriver to Southwest 12th Avenue where local Bert Lasher operated an alligator wrestling and Seminole Indian tourist attraction. In 1916, the city replaced the Andrews Avenue bridge, and Riverside residents asked if they could use the old bridge. So they reinstalled the old Andrews swing bridge as the first 11th Avenue swing bridge. “The bridge was a single lane and its bed was most likely made of planking supported by girders,” said Bob Hathaway, a local historian. “She was only there for 10 years.” Due to old age, in 1924 the city decided to replace her with a brand new bridge. In 1925, Champion Bridge Co. finished the installation. Urban legend said the replacement was a used bridge from South America. “Subsequently I learned that wasn’t true,” Hathaway said. “It was a brand new bridge.”

The bridge underwent numerous improvements in the 1970s, ‘80s and ‘90s while arguments ensued about replacing the structure. In 1989 the city gave it a historic designation under its historic preservation ordinance. Sonny Irons, a Riverside resident since the early 1980s, has been on the front lines of these debates. In 1994 he proposed to tear the bridge down to deter cut-through traffic. “It’s in need of being removed and sand blasted…someday it’s got to go,” he was quoted in a Sun-Sentinel story on Oct.15, 1994. In this current project, “removal was not considered but a temporary shutdown was necessary to accommodate restoration,” Esdelle says. The yearlong project started last August is projected to be completed in mid August of this year.

Up close:
• The Eleventh Avenue Bridge is the only bridge in Fort Lauderdale operated by the city.
• It’s considered the only operational swing bridge left in Southeast Florida.
• It opens on demand 24 hours a day.

August 19, 2009

Preface to Yacht Reviews

Filed under: General — Richard Jordan @ 10:46 am

Richard Jordan

Thank you for visiting Waves. Mostly what you will find here are reviews of used yachts with a few miscellaneous articles in between. These reviews are meant to be thoroughly researched, hard hitting opinion pieces on the good and bad of a given model. I combine the knowledge of brokers, owners, surveyors, clients along with my first-hand impressions. Many of the subjects I have had the pleasure to seatrial and survey giving me a modest idea of the common issues. My goal is to bring original information to the internet helping prospective buyers feel comfortable with all that goes along with any particular boat. The yachts chosen represent designs that I am most familiar with, and our brokerage primarily sells. We specialize in the sale of bluewater cruisers from 40 to 80 feet with prices ranging from $50,000 to $5 million. I focus on fiberglass yachts that have had long production runs and avoid custom designs. Continue reading “Preface to Yacht Reviews” »