Archive for the ‘Catamaran’ Category

Cruising The Virgin Islands – Spanish, U.S. and British

Friday, July 9th, 2010
Dean-Barnes

Catamarans have opened up the charter market due to their stability and roominess. Photo: Dean Barnes

Springtime for us is synonymous with regatta season. Since the mid 1990s, we’ve annually migrated to Puerto Rico for the Puerto Rico Heineken International Regatta, back to home base in the U.S. Virgin Islands and St. Thomas for the International Rolex Regatta, and finally east to the British Virgin Island of Tortola for the BVI Spring Regatta & Sailing Festival. This year, these must-do northern Caribbean regattas matched up in dates to create two weeks and three weekends of cruising and racing bliss in one of the best cruising grounds in the world.
The Virgin Islands lie in the easternmost Greater Antilles, a foursome of islands in the northern Caribbean sea that includes Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti and the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico. The cruising grounds span about 70 miles and include the Spanish Virgin Islands of Vieques and Culebra, the U.S. Virgin Islands primarily of St. Thomas and St. John, and British Virgin Islands including Jost Van Dyke, Tortola, Virgin Gorda and Anegada. The beauty of this destination is the line-of-sight navigation. There’s also a myriad of services available from direct air service from the U.S. and Europe (through San Juan) to numerous charter companies and provisioning and the opportunity to explore three unique cultural destinations all with white sand beaches, quiet anchorages and things to do from a wide range of water sports by day and partying at beach bars into the night.

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Puerto Rico now offers many bareboat or crewed yacht charters. Photo: Dean Barnes

CHARTER OPPORTUNITIES

It used to be tough to find a bareboat or crewed yacht in Puerto Rico to cruise the Spanish Virgin Islands. That’s all changing now thanks to the island’s governor signing into law last fall the Nautical Tourism Act of 2009. One of the provisions of this Act allows for tax-free purchase of vessels over 30 feet, if contracted for chartering with a Puerto Rico certified charter company for chartering at least six months of the year.

Jose Luis Rivera, Catalina and Dufour dealer for the Caribbean and Central America and owner of the new Nautifull charters and cruising club based in the new 162-slip marina at the Palmas del Mar Resort Community, on the island’s southeast coast, says, “We understand Puerto Rico to be currently the only U.S. jurisdiction offering this very attractive deal to promote “hotel rooms in the water” as we have named them. It also creates “tourist marinas” certification if they meet certain service and amenities requirements to properly serve transients and charterers effectively. Other tax and lodging-related benefits and prioritized financing are being negotiated and legislated at the moment.”

Nautifull’s fleet includes a Baltic 43, Dufour Performance 34 and Dufour Performance yachts. The company offers a mixed bag of customized sailing opportunities from learn-to-sail (U.S. Sailing Basic Keelboat, Bareboat Cruising and Coastal Passage Making and Bareboat) packages to overnight and 5- to 7-day bareboat or crewed charters with either USCG-certified captains only or captains and chefs. His company is also the exclusive operator for yacht charters out of the new plush W Retreat & Spa that opened on Vieques in April.

There are several bareboat and crewed charter companies in the U.S. and British Virgin Islands. These include operations such as CYOA, Island Yachts and Trawlers in Paradise based in St. Thomas, and the Moorings, Sunsail and Horizon Yacht Charters in Tortola. The Virgin Islands Charteryacht League and Charter Yacht Society (CYS) of the British Virgin Islands each have over 100 member yachts for crewed charters. Monohull, multihull and power yachts are all available.

A greater sophistication and number of amenities on board are what charter guests now demand and companies offer.

John Jacobs, owner of CYOA, based in St. Thomas’ Frenchtown Marina, says “That means, for example, roller furling jib and main, a full refrigerator and air conditioning, electric windlass, autopilot and chart plotters, with inflatable dinghy equipped with 15 HP engine.”

Dean-Barnes

St. Thomas offers world class racing and many charter options. Photo: Dean Barnes

Charter yachts are getting bigger.

Kathy Mullen, owner of Regency Yacht Charters and a director for Northrop and Johnson Yacht Sales, based in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, says, “A two person charter use to be 40 foot; now it’s 50 to 55-feet. A 50-foot multihull is now considered medium size. Big means 70 to 100 feet.”

Catamarans have opened up the charter market due to their stability and roominess.

Dick Schoonover, who manages the clearinghouse, CharterPort BVI, in Tortola, says, “It’s still all about catamarans for us, except that what you are seeing now is the advent of the cat-with-flybridge. I think the popularity of our 10 passenger Silhouette 76 cats has much to do with their flybridges – an amenity found on motoryachts – and is reflected in yachts as small as Lagoon 44s. The other thing that is new in cats is the master suite concept, taking up an entire hull rather than the typical catamaran layout – a cabin in each corner.”

The downturn in the economy has created other opportunities.

Janet Oliver, administrator at the CYS of the BVI, says, “half board charters are being offered. This means breakfast and lunch are included with dinner at guests’ expense ashore.”

More requests are coming in, says Erik Ackerson, executive director of the Virgin Islands Charteryacht League (VICL), based at Yacht Haven Grande, on St. Thomas, “for captain-only charters.”

The business costs of chartering have not gone down in this recessionary economy, thus lowered rates are not the norm. However, many crewed operators have started to add more value.

This has taken the form, says the VICL’s Ackerson, “of offering spa or beauty treatments, massage, tai chi, yoga, dive certification and sailing instruction.”

WHERE & WHEN TO GO

Weekend or week-long sailing itineraries are definitely more customized than cookie-cutter considering the sheer number of islands, islets and cays in the Virgin Islands.

Nautifull’s Rivera says about Puerto Rico, “You can sail northeast from Palmas to Cayo Santiago (Monkey Island) in about an hour and a half. It’s a nice anchorage and good for swimming, although you can’t go ashore because it is a sanctuary.”

The island is home to over 1200 free-roaming Rhesus monkeys.

Vieques is two to three hours east by sail.

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St. John's natural beauty creates a beautiful background for cruising. Photo: Dean Barnes

There are a steadily increasing number of charterers who want to cruise to Vieques and Culebra, says CYOA’s Jacobs. “We restrict these destinations to our newer vessels because these island’s don’t have the support services the U.S. and British Virgin Islands so. Both are spectacular for an entire week’s cruise or to combine with a sail to St. John and Tortola depending on time.”

The bioluminescent bay on Vieques is a big draw. Single celled organisms called dinoflagelates in the water produce the bioluminescence or ‘glow in the dark’ feature here.

Capt. Camille Vickers, who leads captain-only charters for CYOA, says, “There’s a good anchorage in the town of Esperanza and a tour company there that leads trips to Mosquito or the bioluminescent bay at night.”

North and east of Culebra, the 1-mile long island of Culebrita is rimmed with beaches. “There are to large tidal pools on the east side that are just like natural Jacuzzis. The water is very warm,” says Vickers.

In the U.S. Virgin Islands, the VICL’s Ackerson says, “Many people like to circumnavigate St. John. Mooring balls are available on a first-come, first-serve basis and the waters are pristine because two third of the island is national park.”

Further east in the BVI, CharterPort’s Schoonover adds, “There are several new projects out there. Scrub Island is now on-line, and there is a new resort planned for Anegada’s north shore, replacing the existing Sands hotel. White Bay on Jost van Dyke continues to grow with a wide range of beach bars and restaurants. It used to be Sandcastles, and that was it.”

Finally, anytime of year is great for chartering except the prime hurricane months of September and October.

High season, when charter companies are busiest, anchorages most crowded and regatta season is in full swing, spans from December through May. However, says the VICL’s Ackerson, “June, July and the beginning of August are very nice because this is usually when the weather is nicest and the sea is calm.”

Editor’s Note: For more information and charter listings in the area, visit the Yachtworldcharters.com Caribbean page.

Carol Bareuther has lived in St. Thomas since 1986 and has written about a wide range of marine topics in the Virgin Islands. She and photographer Dean Barnes have two children who grew up in the VI and have seawater in their blood.

Tonga-Bound Charter Yacht Launches Website

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

saildivetonga-websiteI received an e-mail this morning from Stu and Fran Rattle, the intrepid owner-operators of the 45-foot sailing catamaran Two if by Sea. They sent word from somewhere between Panama and the Galapagos Islands, where the wind has apparently died down long enough for them to launch a new website promoting their soon-to-be new home in the South Pacific: SailDiveTonga.

The Rattles, you see, are en route to Tonga after many years of being a popular crewed charter yacht in the Virgin Islands. They hope their longtime charter clients (and new ones, too) will follow them to Tonga, where they plan to offer charters beginning in September 2010. Their current schedule is to stay in Tonga through fall 2012, and then move on to offer charters in Fiji and New Caledonia.

“Hopefully, our success in chartering in undiscovered places such as Belize (2001) and Panama (2009) will be very useful in the future,” they wrote. “It seems that we are currently the only boat [headed to Tonga] which can offer a full-time professional crew, a self-sufficient dive boat with two PADI instructors onboard, and a wealth of water toys for the guests. Add to this our extensive experience in the industry and the expected standards, and we feel that we are in a unique position to fill a void in the area.”

Their new website, which is Tonga-specific, includes everything from rates to itineraries to information about getting to and from Tonga. I think it offers a good overview of what you can expect should you book a charter aboard Two if by Sea in the region later this year.

September seems long in the distance, but it’s actually only five months from now. Definitely not too early to book.  For more information, visit the SailDiveTonga website.

Bahamas Footprints: a Powercat Charter in the Abacos

Thursday, February 25th, 2010
Our Moorings 372 powercat had room for two couples plus children.

Our Moorings 372 powercat had room for two couples plus children.

Wherever you are – as you read this – is probably cold, perhaps with snow or at least slush on the ground. When you left your warm home or office today, you bundled up from galoshes to gloves.

As I write this, I am not cold. In fact, it’s in the 80s, the sun is shining at SPF40 level, and I’m wearing shorts and a t-shirt. When I finish this paragraph, my wife and I plan to take the dinghy ashore for a picnic lunch on a pristine crescent of white sand, where we will put the first footprints of the day. When we land on the beach, we’ll step into gin-clear water that is as warm as a baby’s bathwater, and the sugary sand will be soft on our bare feet. With not too much luck, we’ll find another scarlet-rimmed conch shell to add to our growing collection.

The brochure had been intriguing. An announcement that The Moorings, the largest charter boat company in the world, had formed a division devoted not to the sailboats that are the usual Caribbean charter fare, but to powerboats. An opportunity had been created for non-sailors to enjoy the delights of chartering, and it wasn’t long before we were on a Continental Express flight from Fort Lauderdale to Marsh Harbor, the social centre of the Abacos islands that stretch along the north side of the Bahamas.

abacoshouses

“Town” can be just a collection of cheerfully painted houses plus a good grocery store.

After cursory customs, we were soon climbing aboard Goodnight Moon, our 37-ft, twin-hulled home for the next week. Our charter started the next morning, but we’d arranged to stay aboard that night to give ourselves a chance to stow our gear and get used to the boat. Sam, an ebulliently cheerful Moorings employee, arrived with her annotated copy of Cruising Guide to the Abacos and gave us a thorough check-out on the Abacos. She provided an invaluable insider’s advice on the best snorkelling, the best anchorages, and the best food.

Our Moorings 372 was built to Moorings spec by French builder Fountaine Pajot, and the thoughtful design provides comfortable accommodation for two couples, plus a couple of kids. Each hull is an identical private cabin with large double berths, private heads and stall showers. The salon joining the hulls has an inside helm, a big convertible dinette, and a galley with everything from microwave to refrigerator/freezer. Best of all, the 372 has a generator that not only keeps the microwave popping popcorn and the blender making slushy drinks, but powers dual air conditioning systems that keep the salon and cabins comfortably cool even on the hottest days. Up a curving flight of stairs is the bridge, with a helm shaded by a bimini top and a bench seat.

Standard equipment is very comprehensive, including a rigid-bottomed inflatable dinghy with outboard, barbecue grill, stereo with CD, snorkelling gear, more than ample linens and towels, and full electronics from chartplotter/GPS to VHF radio. In the Abacos, the depthsounder is essential but a little frightening until you get used to the fact that the water is so shallow that much of your cruising is in 10-12 feet. Don’t worry, though, because the 372 draws just 3’6” of water and the props are protected by twin skegs against occasional groundings.

Unlike Moorings’ sailboat charters where prospective charterers need to document sailing experience that would daunt Horatio Hornblower, the power charters are available to anyone with basic powerboat experience. And, if you aren’t comfortable at first with twin engines and a boat of this size, The Moorings can provide a skipper for a day or two to hone your boat handling and anchoring skills.

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The disctinctive red-and-white striped lighthouse of Hope Town.

After stocking up with provisions at a local market (we chose to do our own provisioning rather than use the Moorings plan), we cast off to explore the Sea of Abaco. Our first stop was Fowl Cay, a Sam-recommended snorkelling and shelling spot where we anchored in 9ft of water and dinghied onto the beach that provided the first of many conch shells. Later, after a pleasant lunch in the air conditioned cabin where we enjoyed the rock-solid stability that the nearly 17ft beam provided, we upped anchor and cruised past Scotland Cay and along Great Guana Cay.

We decided to spend our first night at Orchid Bay Marina in Great Guana’s Settlement Harbour, a spotlessly maintained facility where we hooked up to shore power, took hot showers, barbecued steaks and made the first of the rum drinks we later dubbed “No Brainers” for their end result.

The next day, we listened in to the local cruiser’s VHF radio net, where boaters trade information on weather and sea conditions around the Abacos, as well as tips on marina deals, restaurant specials and even local flea markets. We’d planned to head for Green Turtle Cay, but our plans were changed by a local condition called “rage sea”. The wind and swells sometimes create breaking seas in the passages between the Sea of Abaco and the Atlantic, making them impassable. In our case, the remains of a storm far to the north had created huge surf in Whale Cay Passage and we would have to wait for another day to reach Green Turtle. In the Abacos, that’s “No problem, mon”.

Instead, we walked into “town”, which is mostly a collection of cheerfully painted houses plus a good grocery that provided a few items we’d forgotten. A local conch vendor had a table arrayed with his wares, but we were delighted with our own finds and knew we’d discover more.

We used the afternoon to venture up to Baker’s Bay at the end of Great Guana, where we could clearly see massive breakers rolling through the passage in the distance. We anchored in water so clear we worried that our anchor would knock a starfish that we could easily see on the bottom, and again we explored the beach, discovering several additional conchs.

We had heard about nearby Treasure Island, a huge facility that once provided cruise ship passengers with a Disney-like atmosphere in a tropical setting of restaurants, beaches, water activities and bars until it was suddenly abandoned a decade ago. We tied up to the rundown pier and walked up the weedy path into the facility that is overgrown and eerie. Feeling like we’d discovered Jungleland after a nuclear holocaust, we explored the vine-covered amphitheatre and restaurants with palms growing through their floors until multi-engined mosquitos drove us back to the beach.

The rage continued the next day, so we opted to visit Treasure Cay, a resort marina on Great Abaco. En route, I let the autopilot steer while we enjoyed quesadillas and icy beers. Finding the entry was a bit tricky because it’s invisible until you’re close but, once inside, we picked up a transient dock right in front of the swimming pool. Shorepower and water were inexpensive, so I hosed down the boat to get rid of salt and sand, and we tucked in for the evening with the air conditioning keeping us pleasantly cool. The next morning, we explored the Treasure Cay area, which lays claim to one of the best beaches in the world. That night, we dined ashore at the Tipsy Bar (aptly named if you sample their Goombay Smashes) and enjoyed lobster with Caesar salads.

abacossunset

A brilliant sunset over the low-lying islands caps another perfect day.

The next day, we headed for Elbow Cay and the harbour of Hopetown. Even with charts and GPS, the entrance is twisty and we got down to 5ft of water before we slid into the pretty harbour marked by the candy-cane red-and-white striped lighthouse. Opting for shorepower dockside rather than the generator at anchor, we chose the Hope Town Marina, where the friendly dockmaster warped us into a slip with a view of the lighthouse. We shared hors d’oeuvres with a couple honeymooning on a Sea Ray at the next pier and, later, the steady sweep of the 138-year-old kerosene light (seen on everything from postage stamps to Bahamas currency) hypnotised us into a deep sleep.

We explored Hopetown by dinghy and foot the next day, marvelling at the brilliantly painted houses that somehow managed to survive Hurricane Floyd’s 229-mph winds and then topped off our provisions (and rum) before heading for Man O’War Cay nearby.

Over incredibly blue-green water, we cruised through Man O’War’s harbour but decided not to pay to tie up temporarily to explore ashore, knowing that we would also be saving money we would have spent at Albury’s canvas shop to buy bags and gifts. Besides, Man O’War is a dry island (no alcohol sold or, theoretically, consumed), so we couldn’t even enjoy a pub. We anchored in the eastern harbour for lunch, and decided to return to the Moorings base that night, since our charter ended the next morning and we had an early flight home.
It had been a relaxing charter, with none of the muscle needed to handle the lines on sailing charters (even our anchor windlass was electric!), the comfortably protected Sea of Abaco hadn’t challenged our skills, and we could recommend it to novice charterers wholeheartedly.

Moorings offers three powerboats: our 372 catamaran, the 341 which is a charter version of the nifty Luhrs lobsterboat-styled express cruiser that is perfect for a couple, and the 454, a larger catamaran with four staterooms, each with private heads and showers. In addition to the Abacos base at Marsh Harbour, The Moorings has a new base in St Thomas, where charterers can explore the US and British Virgin Islands, which are a bit more demanding of boating skills than the Bahamas.
Whether your interests lie in snorkelling through crystal clear waters among squadrons of brilliant tropical fish, hunting conch shells on beaches where yours are the first footprints, or simply relaxing at anchor with a trashy paperback, The Moorings and the Abacos have just what you want. We’ll be back soon.

Chartering Tips

How To Get There: Several airlines fly from Miami, Ft. Lauderdale and Palm Beach airports direct to Marsh Harbour in the Bahamas.

Cost: The season is the key, with the most expensive season during the Christmas holidays and from late February to July, while the low season is mid-August to mid-October. In the prime season, our 372 is $760 a day, dropping to $610 for the mid season and $540 for the low. A good way to save is to book immediately before or after a more expensive season, when you’ll get the same weather at a discount. Add in provisioning, either at a store or through the Moorings plans that provide several choices ranging from $20 to $45 per day depending on the number of meals. You should probably take insurance at $35 a day, and our fuel cost for the week was less than $75. If you want to tie up to a mooring buoy or in a marina rather than anchoring, expect to pay from $10 to $40 per night plus electricity and water.

How To Save $$: In addition to chartering in the off season, we save by taking a lot of our own food. We stock up on steaks, chicken, fish and shrimp at discount stores, freeze them hard, and ship them in an ice chest to save on the often exorbitant island prices. Enjoy happy hour on your boat, because rum is dirt cheap but prices can be $6 to $10 per drink in a shoreside pub. Besides, you’ve got a better view on your own boat. Shop airfares for discounts, or use frequent flier miles to keep travel costs down.

What To Take: Everyone takes too much, so pare down. In a soft-sided easy-to-store duffel, pack a couple of swimsuits (so one can dry), t-shirts, deck shoes, beach sandals, and a light jacket for cool days in the off season. In the Abacos, you’ll live in a swimsuit, but bring a nice shirt and shorts if you want to dine ashore. You’ll need a good hat, polarized sunglasses to see into the water, and strong sunscreen to prevent burns. Take tons of film and/or batteries for the camera, some CDs for the stereo, and a canvas tote to carry cameras or gear ashore (and conchs back).

Must Read: Let me immodestly suggest Chartering A Boat, written by yours truly, Chris Caswell, and published by Sheridan House, at bookstores everywhere.

Editor’s note: For more information about charters in the Abacos, visit our Bahamas page.

Ipharra: The Newest Large Cat

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Management company Sunreef Yachts is promoting what it calls the “long-awaited” Ipharra for charters this winter in the Caribbean. I haven’t had a chance yet to get aboard myself, but this yacht–at 102 feet long–is the latest in a continuing trend of ever-larger catamarans becoming available for charter.

charter yacht Ipharra

Catamarans are an interesting breed of boat, one that has taken longer to gain popularity in some parts of the world than others. If you book a crewed charter in the Virgin Islands, for instance, then sailing catamarans are about all you will see. Meanwhile, in the Mediterranean, the sight of a catamaran on the docks amid all the megayachts is about as rare as a chicken in a bear’s den.

For some people, catamarans are too non-traditional in design to feel like “real yachts.” For other people  (including myself), cats offer the best of both worlds: the fun of sailing without the boat constantly heeling over, and the interior and exterior spaciousness of larger motoryachts.

There have been a few “mega cats” available for charter in the past decade or so, most notably the 138-foot sailing cat Douce France, which launched in 1998, and the 134-foot powercat Seafaris, which launched in 2006. And while Ipharra is not quite on the scale of those boats, Sunreef is known for its catamarans (the charter firm is a sister company to a catamaran builder), and Ipharra will certainly be one of the largest on the Caribbean charter scene–by far. In the Virgin Islands, for instance, the largest cats are 76 feet in length. That’s a massive difference versus a 102-footer in terms of total volume for guest spaces.

Ipharra’s weekly base rate will be €55,000 for 10 to 12 guests with four crew. I hope to get a look onboard with more details for you during my next trip to the Caribbean, in December. Until then, any reputable charter broker can provide more information or help you book a week aboard.

Sailing Cat Tachyon Update

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Meet Megan O’Leary and John Bodnar. They are the new crew aboard the 47-foot sailing catamaran Tachyon in the Virgin Islands.

charter yacht Tachyon new crew

I first told you about Tachyon back in November 2006, when I met Capt. Eric Stahl and his wife, Jacque, who at the time had just become owner-operators. They went on to build a strong reputation for their charter yacht and continued to work aboard until about a year ago, when they created a yacht management company and moved ashore to have a family.

Now comes word that for the upcoming Caribbean season, Tachyon will be under Bodnar’s command, with O’Leary serving as chef. According to Jacque Stahl, the couple have spent the past few years running day charter boats together out of St. Thomas and all around the U.S. and British Virgin Islands, which will remain Tachyon’s base of operations.

Bodnar and O’Leary sound like well-qualified, smart cookies to me. O’Leary is an Ivy League graduate of the University of Pennsylvania who also holds a dive master certification, while Bodnar has earned both a 100-ton U.S. Coast Guard Master license and an ASA Sailing Certification. Jacque Stahl tells me: “They are professional, respectful, active, lots of fun, extremely knowledgeable, and very eager to please.”tachyon-47-ro-main1962

She also says that Tachyon itself recently got a few upgrades. They include new sail rigging, new cushions and towels, new helm electronics, and engine updates.

Tachyon takes six guests at a weekly rate of $13,250. For full details,visit Tachyon’s charter page.

Last-Minute Deal on Popular BVI Cat

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Mark and Sally Duncan, the fun-loving owner-operators aboard the popular, 46-foot sailing catamaran Viking Dream, e-mailed me recently to say they’re offering a last-minute discount on charters scheduled for November through January in the Virgin Islands.
viking-dream-main2022

The yacht, whose regular, “inclusive” weekly rates range from $9,500 for two guests to $12,650 for six guests, is now available at rates from $8,999 to $9,999. That’s more than $2,000 in savings no matter the size of your charter party.

The only catch is that you have to book a charter of any seven nights that will take place between November 11 and 20, November 30 and December 9, or January 4 and 12. The idea is to help Viking Dream fill the holes that are currently open in the boat’s charter calendar.

charter yacht Viking Dream crew

In terms of dining, “inclusive weekly rate” in this case means breakfast, cocktails, and hors d’oeuvres every day onboard, plus five lunches and five dinners aboard.  You should have no trouble finding a couple of inexpensive lunches and dinners for your other few days in the Virgins, what with all the beach bars and conch fritter stands in Viking Dream’s usual cruising area.

For more information and to book a charter, visit the Viking Dream page.

15% Off Catamarans if You Book by Nov. 15

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

This sexy power catamaran is the 70-foot Abuelo, one among nearly a dozen power and sailing catamarans in the Sunreef Charters fleet that are offering a 15-percent discount off Caribbean charters this winter if you book before November 15.
charter yacht Abuelo

To give you an idea on pricing, options include the 70-foot sailing catamaran Seazen II at a weekly base rate of €23,375 for eight to 10 guests versus the usual weekly base rate of €27,500; the 62-foot sailing catamaran Zahora at a weekly base rate of €19,100 for eight guests versus the usual weekly base rate of €22,500; and the 62-foot sailing catamaran Catsy at a weekly base rate of €18,700 for eight guests versus the usual weekly base rate of €22,000.

Catamarans–both power and sail–are a terrific option for first-time charterers as well as any clients seeking extra interior space and stability. This style of boat doesn’t heel (or tip sideways with the wind) the way traditional monohull yachts do, and catamaran designs have wider beams (overall width) that allow for larger cabins, more interior seating, and the like. Cats also make it very easy to get into the water for swimming, skiing, and other fun thanks to wide steps at the back of each hull, compared with the narrow swim ladders found on many traditional sailboat designs.

“Wonderful” Offers Hand-up in Caribbean

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Here’s a story that I couldn’t be happier to share: Charter broker Ann-Wallis White tells me the 73-foot sailing catamaran Wonderful (which just launched this nifty new website) is taking steps to help Caribbean communities that are suffering economically because of tourism drops during the continuing global recession.

wonderful_in_sunset

The yacht has been in the Caribbean since last December, setting up a network of organic farmers from which the chef is now buying virtually all of the boat’s fruits, vegetables, and herbs. This puts charter provisioning money directly into the hands of local crop-growers while simultaneously ensuring that charter guests receive the highest-quality ingredients in their meals.

Meanwhile, Wonderful’s captain is training local islanders in boat maintenance and repair. As the captain puts it: “Younger guys who sit around in their cedar wooden boats waiting for the next yacht to come in and buy fruits or jewelry, made from bone or whale’s teeth or coral, are more than happy to drop what they are not doing and help me with a wash down or hull waxing. I have no problem paying them for their hard work.”

The captain tells me he also is collecting hand-me-down clothing that he plans to distribute to the islanders following the Antigua charter yacht show in December.

wonderful_plan

What outstanding efforts, and from a captain who could easily just sit back and work comfortably aboard a charter yacht that is arguably one of the finest in its class for charter right now. I was aboard Wonderful to write this review in 2006, and she was a standout then–even before her recent refit that included painting the hull the strikingly modern black shown in the photograph above.

If you would like to book a charter aboard Wonderful, you can call Ann-Wallis White at (410) 263-6366.

Sunsail 384 Cat Launched into Bareboat Service

Monday, July 20th, 2009

The first time you step aboard to take command of your average bareboat catamaran can be unsettling if you haven’t done it before, because the vessel seems as wide as it is long. I remember surveying a 46-footer I was about to take my friends out on, under the Sunsail Yacht Charters flag, looking nervously at the right-hand turn we would have to take as we exited the docks, and how cluttered the anchorage beyond looked. Much to my surprise, as we cast off and I engaged the two engines, widely separated in the twin hulls, I discovered I could easily steer with more or less throttle from either engine. Soon we were underway on what would be an unforgettable cruise in St. Lucia and Martinique, in the Caribbean.

The new Sunsail 384 offers entry-level

The new Sunsail 384 offers entry-level ease of handling and berths to sleep four couples.

I’ve been sold on the virtues of chartering catamarans ever since. The other day, I was encouraged to hear that Sunsail, one of the largest bareboat yacht charter companies in the world, has just commissioned a new cat that looks to me as if it would be an outstanding first choice for the sailor who is new to catamarans. At 38 feet in length, the new Sunsail 384 promises to be even easier to handle, and it can accommodate two couples in each hull. Like all cruising cats, it’s a very stable platform for a vacation, yet unlike some others, Sunsail’s cruising abilities won’t slow it down significantly. The team of Gino Morrelli and Pete Melvin comprise one of the top performance multihull design outfits in the business. Now that I think about it, a more experienced charterer who doesn’t need the extra space would really enjoy this boat, too!

The interior is roomy, offers great views, and features 6-foot 5-inch headroom. On deck, sail controls are grouped near the helm station, a bimini hardtop provides sun protection, and a stepped transom should ease boarding from a dock or dinghy. The solar panels (shown on the back of the hardtop in the photo) are estimated to save charterers 20 percent on their engine hours.

The cats are built by one of the three largest cruising-cat builders in the world, Robertson and Caine, in Cape Town, South Africa. They will be joining Sunsail fleets in Asia and the Caribbean this fall, the Mediterranean next spring.

Akasha Catamaran Offers Free Diving, Massages

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

charter yacht Akasha

As you can see in the photograph above, the 76-foot Akasha is not your average sailing catamaran. She is one among three large, upscale, and nearly identical sisterships (the others being Zingara and King’s Ransom) that are available for charter in the Virgin Islands.

Chris and Joanna Plowman, whom I met aboard back in November, continue to serve as one of two captain-and-chef teams aboard Askasha. They e-mailed recently to tell me they are now working with a new couple, named Arnold and Rica, in the roles of deckhand and stewardess.

Arnold and Rica apparently bring some nifty qualifications to their jobs. Rica is being promoted as a “qualified beauty therapist,” allowing Akasha to offer two complimentary, 40-minute massages during each charter. The massages are done on a professional table, either in your private cabin or outside on the yacht’s flying bridge.

Arnold, meanwhile, is a certified PADI scuba instructor, so Akasha is now offering six complimentary dives per week-long charter. There’s also an option for you to take a Discover Scuba course during your charter.

In addition to the new crew, Akasha has some new amenities. One is a new tender exclusively for guest use, which means you can explore beaches and coves on your own without the help of a crew member. Two Sunfish sailboats are also on their way to the yacht. These small boats are ideal for children or single adults with minimal sailing experience. (I had a Sunfish as a kid at my grandfather’s lake house and would sail it for hours with my little sister without any worries.) For indoor fun, Akasha now has a Nintendo Wii with 40 games. It’s in the main saloon, which the Plowmans say offers enough room “for all the family to have a bowling match.”

All this new and fun stuff comes in addition to the unique tender Ajira, a 75-mile-per-hour Bladerunner 35 that is available to Akasha’s charter guests for an extra fee. (You can view photos of Ajira going from zero to 60 mph in five seconds at the yacht’s own website.)

Akasha is a Silhouette 760  by Matrix Yachts and is part of the CharterPortBVI fleet. She takes as many as 10 guests at weekly rates that range from $42,800 to $48,000 depending on the season.