Go Time

Apr 10, 2025

Yes, it snowed on Tuesday. But that’s no damper on the adrenilineflowing at this time of year. Every year we ponder the late spring; every day we wonder about the state of the boat and every year we get pumped in anticipation.

Having a boat in this country means getting it ready in the spring while attempting to gently suppress the over-exuberance generated by the arrival of THE SEASON!  By now, including in this issue, you have read 20 Canadian Boating articles about getting ready for launch and pondered Ask Andrew’s sage advice.  You have thought about batteries, water lines, engine oil, canvas repairs.

But now it gets real. The phone calls to suppliers are made and you’ve visited the chandlery several times. The tarp is off, the anti-fouling paint is in the trunk and the shopping list, already dragging on the floor, is adding rollers, industrial paper towels and new Allen keys hourly. Canadian Tire has rolled out the red carpet. Amazingly, ou found your work gloves. But you can’t stop jumping ahead to this summer’s guest list, post visits, new sunblock.

On the other hand, as we noted earlier, it snowed on Tuesday. It’s Launch Day 2025. Yay!

John Morris, Online Editor

Related Articles


RANGER TUGS R-27

By Andy Adams

Ranger Tugs have been around since 1958 and they have developed a great formula: one boat, one price. Almost everything is included, and there is literally a fan club of owners who share stories, information and who set up events and rendezvous with other Ranger Tugs owners. www.Tugnuts.com is a community hub for owners of Ranger Tugs, Cutwater Boats and Solara Boats, all made by Fluid Motion!

Tugnuts.com is quite a unique resource. The online forum has quick links to a chat, info about cruises & gatherings, a channel to ask questions of the Ranger Tugs Factory, Ranger Tugs Technical Discussions, “How to” videos and more.

Read More


Destinations

Sailing into the Future at Antigua Sailing Week

By Mathew Channer

“Standby tack,” Canadian sailor Katy Campbell orders. The crew scrambles over the sheet lines and braces on the deck.

“Three, two, one, tack!”

I wait until the bow turns into the wind and the headsail snaps over, then crawl over the cabin top of Panacea X to the now windward side. The trim team smoothly sheets on the headsail and a competitor vessel shoots past our stern, feet away, as our Solana 45 beats eastward along Antigua’s south coast.

Read More