Bareboat Yacht Charters
When deciding to charter a yacht, you have your choice of a
crewed charter on a fully-stocked boat or a bareboat charter,
which means you are your own crew on a yacht without the
luxuries of a crewed charter, such as food and other supplies.
Are you ready for a bareboat yacht charter? Auther Peter Leigh
examines bareboat yacht charters, including what it takes to
qualify for a bareboat charter.
Bareboat Cruising -
Sail Away to Your Ultimate Escape on a Deserted Island or
Two By Deborah Dennis
Who hasn't dreamed of escaping to a deserted island? A palm
tree drenched spit of sand surrounded by gleaming "too blue" to
be real water and absolutely no one else around. I'm sure you
probably have. But unlike Tom Hanks in “Castaway” you don't
have to get shipwrecked or have your plane crash to find these
deserted islands. You just need a few intrepid friends, a great
sense of adventure and a bareboat charter.
A bareboat charter is basically the hiring of a boat, in my
case a sailboat, where my friends and I would provide the crew
and captain. Many island countries of the world have charter
companies, which provide sailboats to clients who are certified
captains and the rest become the crew. The charter companies
stock the galley with a list of provisions of your choosing,
including alcohol and you do all of the cooking.
It all started when a sailing friend of mine mentioned she
was part a flotilla of 2 sailboats going to the Tongan Islands.
I immediately said I wanted to go along. She said all we had to
do was to get 6 more people, including one experienced skipper
and we could add our boat to the adventure. Well, as luck would
have it, a good friend of mine had been a captain for over 20
years, had owned her own sailboats and had her 100-ton license.
We were all set, so off we all went to the Tongan Islands.
Tonga is comprised of 170 islands and about 1/3 of them are
uninhabited and unless you have a boat or know someone who's
got one there's not much chance of getting the experience of
being on a real deserted island.
We booked our charter through a company called Moorings, who
has bases all around the world where you can rent bareboat
sailboats. We picked a 46-foot Beneteau which was quite roomy
with 3 berths and 3 heads and a large main galley area. And
then with minimal introduction to our new home away from home
we packed up our supplies and headed off from the dock to our
first uncharted island.
Hiring bareboats has become
increasingly common as part time sailors are finding it easier
and cheaper to vacation around the world on a rented boat and
still get the experience of seeing the place they are visiting
from the water. The unhurried pace of our floating hotel and
restaurant made it easy to relax, cook, swim, scuba dive and
visit with the locals. I found it was a more engaging way to
visit a place. We became travelers rather then mere tourists.
We’d pull up to their dock or take our dingy to their beach and
walk in our bare feet to their huts or cafes nestled in the
palm fronds and find places that you can’t reach by roads. A
girl could get used to this life.
Bareboat chartering offers the ultimate in freedom,
independence and a different way of seeing a place. In the
Tongan Islands for the most part we enjoyed line of sight
cruising with only a few hidden reefs to worry about. Steady
breezes, ample sunshine and palm-lined islands with white sand
beaches beckoned us wherever we dropped our anchor. I had
finally found my deserted islands and also a bareboat yachting
paradise.
One morning on our voyage, a silver haired woman with large
round sunglasses quietly breast stroked over to the stern of
our sailboat where I was sitting writing in the early morning
light. As I looked up to see her she called out to me, "Is this
the bevy of beauties I've been hearing about?"
We were something of a spectacle and we made a grand
entrance into every port we entered, so it seemed our
reputation was spreading fast. You see were 3 sailboats of 6
women each all with a woman captain at the helm, and our ages
ranged from 31 to 73. We were a sight to behold.
The local Tongans we met were very curious as well & the
typical question from them was, "Where are your husbands and
children?" They actually laughed along with us when we answered
them; " Oh we forgot them at home!"
There is something magical the first time your sails fill
with wind and you find yourself gliding through turquoise blue
waters. There is nothing more peaceful, relaxing or more
empowering than being in charge and at the helm of your very
own sailboat.
About the author:
Deborah Dennis is the author of Adventures of Women, a web site dedicated
to making everyday a new adventure. She is also a writer, a
travel photographer, a professional web designer and an
adventurer.
She has tracked black rhinos, chased lions in the Okavango
Delta, rafted down the Zambezi River, hiked up Machu Picchu,
sailed a bareboat in Tonga, got lost in a rain forest in
Thailand, dove the Great White Wall in Fiji, sea kayaked in
Baja, & outrigger canoed in British Columbia to get her
photographs and stories.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Deborah_Dennis
http://EzineArticles.com/?Bareboat-Cruising---Sail-Away-to-Your-Ultimate-Escape-on-a-Deserted-Island-or-Two&id=527638
Synonyms: Yaht, yaught, and yatch are typos for
"yacht." Chater, charters, and charte are typos for
"charter."
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