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I noticed that some houses are on a canal outside of the river (say, Rivershore drive). Who is responsible for dredging those canals? The city? The Corps? Is it included in taxes or do homeowners have to pay for it?
if you were to rent a house, do you have to worry about owning a sailboat and grounding?
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"48 years in MD, 18 in NC"
(set 13 days ago)
Location: Greenville, NC
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I think the Corps only gets involved if it's a shipping channel or something of that nature. In the case of your canal, they would have to approve of any work done by anyone else but that would be the limit of their involvement.
I don't think the county or state would have the funds to dredge a canal for one boater. The city certainly wouldn't do it if the property is outside of the city and it's not likely that many cities here in the East have the extra funds laying around for something like that.
You are more than welcome to hire a private contractor to dredge the canal but there may be an expensive and lengthy permit process involved. I used to live on the South River off of the Chesapeake Bay and it was a nightmare to get approval from the many involved agencies to do anything connected to tidal water.
As far as grounding your blow boat goes, whether you can navigate a specific canal or not depends on your boat and the intended berthing place. Does it have a retractable centerboard? How big is the boat and how much water does it draw? This is an impossible question to answer.
Thanks for the info Richard, it makes sense to me.
Re-reading my question, even I'm not sure what I meant about grounding... so we'll scratch that.
There are a few houses there and one has a pontoon - doesn't draw a lot of water - so I'd be concerned if I had a sailboat. The landlord says it's good for 6' but I'm not sure.
Status:
"48 years in MD, 18 in NC"
(set 13 days ago)
Location: Greenville, NC
2,309 posts, read 6,103,880 times
Reputation: 1430
Quote:
Originally Posted by pbm
There are a few houses there and one has a pontoon - doesn't draw a lot of water - so I'd be concerned if I had a sailboat. The landlord says it's good for 6' but I'm not sure.
Well... You know there's only one way to know for sure... Enjoy the day on the water and try not to get stuck in that canal. Make sure you do it at low tide.
Well... You know there's only one way to know for sure... Enjoy the day on the water and try not to get stuck in that canal. Make sure you do it at low tide.
you are correct on low tide! I was thinking of bringing the stinkpot with the depthfinder first and seeing what it reads.
The Corps also has a 'contact us' page, I sent an inquiry to them. Will update the thread with their response.
Status:
"48 years in MD, 18 in NC"
(set 13 days ago)
Location: Greenville, NC
2,309 posts, read 6,103,880 times
Reputation: 1430
Hey, do you know the difference between a sailboater and a powerboater?
When the sailboater has to pass gas he says "Pardon me" and goes below decks. The powerboater says "Pull my finger".
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