
High gas prices turn boats into 'floating cottages'


At $1,500 per fill-up for many cabin cruisers, boaters are choosing to drop anchor
OTTAWA - Robert Montgomery used to power up his aging 100-horsepower outboard and blast out to his island property in mere minutes.
Those days are gone.
Water recreation is the latest casualty of high gasoline prices as boaters say they're changing the way they spend time on the lake.
Montgomery, 46, now uses a smaller, 35-horsepower craft and putters to his cottage on eastern Ontario's Rideau River system in a stately 20 minutes.
Sky-high gas prices are making summer cruising trips a thing of the past as boaters and marina owners say more people are dropping anchor for longer to avoid painful visits to dockside pumps.
Bruce Munro, general manager at the Doral Marine Resort on Georgian Bay, Ont., says he's noticed a new trend this summer: big-boat owners are using their vessels more like floating cottages rather than methods of water travel.
At $1,500 a fill-up for many cabin cruisers, that's no surprise.
"Boaters are still boating, but they are not obviously travelling as far and (are) using their boats more like cottages than they have in the past.
"I mean, when the price of fuel goes from 80 cents per litre, as it was last year, to $1.52 per litre where we are now for gasoline, it has to have some impact."
Tara Henderson has worked at Discovery Harbour Marina in Campbell River, B.C., for the last 17 years and says she has definitely noticed people choosing floating over cruising this season. "A lot of people do that, they will just go out and anchor somewhere and just come back."
Henderson agrees fuel prices are forcing some boaters to change the way they approach their hobby, tethering to a dock rather than cruising the waterways. As a result, she says a lot fewer people have been coming into the marina this year, compared with last.
"It's kind of slow right now."
Boating enthusiast Roger Larouche purchased his 32-foot craft more than 10 years ago and says he's noticed the painful cost of fuel, but is committed to paying the price.
"But I have seen some boat owners, maybe smaller boats, who do feel a crunch."
Floating is still relaxing, says Larouche, who notes this is what some people do at the marina he docks at in Hull, Que.
"Maybe you'll be travelling less distance or rationalizing your travel, but I don't think you will be using your boat less."








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