Come join the fun at Gravenhurst show
Transcription
Come join the fun at Gravenhurst show
2011 ISSUE NO. 2 2011 ISSUE NO. 2 Below is a list of upcoming events that Hagerty is planning to attend. Dates are subject to change. post o f f ice bo x 8 7 trav erse city, michigan 49685 PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PA I D Mt. Arlington, N.J. | www.lhacbs.org ACBS Lake Hopatcong Antique & Classic Boat Show Algonac, Mich. | www.michacbs.com ACBS Michigan Antique & Classic Boat Show Gravenhurst, Ontario | www.acbs.ca ACBS Toronto Antique & Classic Boat Show Portland, Ore. | www.cwc-acbs.org ACBS Portland Antique & Classic Boat Show Lake Winnipesaukee, N.H. | www.necacbs.org ACBS New England Antique & Classic Boat Show Clayton, N.Y. | www.abm.org Antique Boat Museum Show & Auction Traverse City, Mich. | www.wwcacbs.com ACBS Water Wonderland: Boats on the Boardwalk Hessel, Mich. | www.lchistorical.org Les Cheneaux Islands Antique Wooden Boat Show MIDLAND MI PERMIT NO 16 the W W W. H A G E R T Y M A R I N E . C O M | H A G E R T Y C L A S S I C B O AT I N S U R A N C E inside A Letter from Carla Marine Marketplace Come join the fun at Gravenhurst show of the annual classic boating event that’s held there Pewaukee, Wis. | www.glacbs.org ACBS Pewaukee Lake Antique & Classic Boat Show In celebration of our new Canadian classic boat insurance program – underwritten by Aviva Elite of Canada – Hagerty Classic Marine has become a sponsor of the ACBS Toronto Chapter’s summer boat show in Gravenhurst July 8-9. Lake George, N.Y. | www.acbs.org ACBS Adirondack Antique & Classic Boat Show Buffalo, N.Y. | www.acbs.org ACBS Niagara Frontier Antique & Classic Boat Show The event will kick off with the annual friends’ reunion at the Grace & Speed Museum on the Muskoka Wharf on Friday evening, July 8. The following day, the Antique and Classic Boat Show – themed “Fine Lines: A Celebration of the design and documented preservation of Vintage Boating” – will feature more than 100 boats. It will include the line drawings and historical lineage of some of the most well-known Canadian boats. 4 5 6 Survey results shed light on classic boating community We asked. You answered. Results are in from the first-ever Hagerty Classic Marine Hobby Survey, and you’ve given us a clearer picture of what you like most about the classic boat lifestyle, as well as what concerns you, what motivated you to join the fun in the first place and what keeps you on board. visit Gravenhurst, Ontario, already have fond memories Coeur d’Alene, Idaho | www.cdachamber.com ACBS Coeur d’Alene Wooden Boat Show Ports of Call Hagerty Canada Those of us at Hagerty Marine who have been fortunate to Losses and Lessons 2 2 each summer. And we’re ready to add more. The show will also include Hagerty’s Operation Ignite Youth Judging, which is exclusive to ACBS Chapters across North America. In addition, there will be a series of seminars on classic boats, as well as many vendors offering goods and services relating to the classic boating lifestyle. For more information, visit www.acbs.ca/Shows/Boat-show or call ACBS Toronto at (416) 299-3311. Come join us for some fun at Gravenhurst. We’d love to see you. “This study has allowed us to take the pulse of the classic boat community. Some things we expected; some came as a surprise,” said Carla Gernhofer, Vice President of Hagerty Marine. “The key is what we do with what we’ve learned. For us, it has always been about our clients, and now we know more about what they value most. Ultimately, they will benefit from this information.” A total of 1,400 current classic boat owners completed the comprehensive, anonymous survey conducted by Avenue ISR, a third-party research company unaffiliated with Hagerty. Participants were recruited through the Antique and Classic Boat Society, the Chris-Craft Club and an online link at woodyboater. com. Hagerty clients were also invited to take part. The basic demographics came as no surprise to Gernhofer and Chris Schmaltz, Hagerty Marine Sales and Marketing Manager. Classic boat owners are mostly male (93.5 percent), Caucasian (91.7 percent), college educated (93.1 percent) and married (82.5 percent). On average, they’re 58 years old with a median income of $112,500. In addition, nearly three-fourths of classic boat owners surveyed have owned their boat(s) for six or more years (74.4 percent). CONTINUED> Marine_Watch_Q2.indd 1 6/13/11 3:52 PM a letter from Carla > Survey says continued Gernhofer finds it encouraging there are plenty of fresh faces joining the classic boat lifestyle (25.6 percent are relatively new), and the majority of these newcomers are women. They’re also younger, on average, than longtime owners. Greetings to our clients and friends! As I write this, spring is off to a very slow start here in northern Michigan – where in the heck is the sunshine? I truly can’t complain, however, knowing that many of our friends and clients throughout the country just experienced firsthand the worst year of storms on record. Please contact us if you have any issues with your boat. We pride ourselves on delivering exceptional customer service, and we’re here to help in any way we can. Be sure and check out our “Ports Of Call” to find out when and where you’ll see the friendly and helpful Hagerty team this summer. Whether it’s me, Chris Schmaltz or one of our field representatives, please stop by to receive a “Got Wood?” license frame and a personal “thank you” for your support. We are excited to attend many events for the first time this year, including Gravenhurst, Ontario. 18-foot 1952 Chris-Craft Riviera The Chris-Craft Riviera was a fairly popularstyle runabout during the 1950s, and from 1950-54 the production run totaled a solid 1,210 (hull numbers R-18-001 to R-18-1210). This style features natural mahogany sides and top deck, with the distinctive blond king plank, narrow on the fore deck and wide aft of the cockpit over the motor hatch and back of the transom. This turn-key boat is in beautiful “show condition.” It has all the original wood from the waterline up, including hull and top decks, which have been meticulously refinished. The bottom was completely replaced with new 3M 5200-style construction. This boat has a KLC 120hp motor that has been completely rebuilt and has only 15 hours of use. It has the correctly colored red interior with all other period and production items correct, including waterline and bottom paint. The sale also included a 2011 C-Hawk custom single-axle trailer. The boat’s new owners own a marina and are dealers for contemporary Chris-Craft boats. When not in use, this boat will occupy the sales floor next to the new boats. It will provide a fine example of one of the more popular vintage models. $35,000 Other Rivieras in different sizes – as well as similarly styled models like the Capri – never came close to attaining the same popularity as this model. There are currently 97 of them listed in the 2011 ACBS Directory, so fewer than 10 percent survive. These boats always command a lot of attention and the market remains strong. Considering the 2011 Hagerty Classic Lifestyle Survey indicated the average value of all classic boats is $36,000, the price paid for this Bristol-condition Riviera is a bargain. — Lou Rauh, Antique Boat Center In this and future issues of The Watch, look for some interesting findings from the Classic Boat Lifestyle Survey that Hagerty sponsored this spring. The data gathered sheds light on what you, as a community, find important and necessary to sustain what we all hold dear. What motivated owners to buy a classic boat? Two-thirds of survey respondents cited one of three reasons: visual appeal (“I just like the way these boats look” – 30.8 percent), personal nostalgia (“It reminds me of/connects me to an important time in my life” – 25.5 percent) or historical importance (10.6 percent). Asked if they “have ever restored a classic boat,” 64.5 percent of respondents said yes. Some did the work themselves; some hired it out; and others did some of both. Another 15.1 percent claim they “own at least one boat that is perfectly preserved, including original varnish...” Both of those figures surprised Schmaltz. “The restoration number seems low, considering that the majority of classic boats are restored to some degree,” he said. “And the ‘perfectly preserved’ number seems high. There has been a lot of discussion about what constitutes original, so this may spark more debate.” According to the study, the average classic boat is worth $36,000 and most (87.3 percent) are valued at $20,000 or more. There are plenty of high-end vessels out there, too – nearly 20 percent of the classic boats owned by respondents are valued at more than $40,000. And what boats are most popular? Clearly, Chris-Craft rules. In fact, 40.2 percent of the boats owned by respondents are ChrisCrafts – more than the next 10 makes combined. Century is second on the list at 10.2 percent. In our Fall 2011 issue we will announce the newest members of the Hagerty Marine Hall of Fame. Inductees will be honored at the ACBS Annual Meeting in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. See you there! And those boats rarely sit in showrooms. More than 80 percent of all classic boat owners put their vessels in the water in 2010, and over 50 percent had their boats in the water for five months or more – mostly on inland lakes (79.2 percent) in one of 10 states (Michigan, New York, California, Washington, Wisconsin, Florida, Ohio, Minnesota, Texas and Massachusetts). Safe boating, “It’s clear that nothing stops classic boat owners from enjoying their boats,” Gernhofer said. “Not even the poor economy.” Carla Gernhofer, VP losses & lessons Accidents happen. That’s why we work to ensure that our clients’ prized vessels are properly covered should disaster strike. Survey prize motivates winner to begin restoration project R. Warren Walker’s opinion is worth a lot more than he thought it was. “TRIPLE THREAT: FALLING SNOW, RISING WATER & COVERED SLIPS” Walker, of Waterford, Mich., took the Hagerty Classic Marine Hobby Survey this spring and won a $500 West Marine gift card after his name was drawn at random from all survey participants. It shouldn’t take him long to spend his prize. “I have a Wagemaker Wolverine that I’d like to restore, and this is the seed money to get that started,” Walker said. “It’s a dual cockpit – very neat boat but in pretty rough shape. I’m not even exactly sure of the year, but I’ve narrowed it down to 1951-57.” “It’s a beautiful boat,” Walker said. “I really enjoy taking it to shows. I get a lot of compliments.” Walker’s favorite boat is his rare 1957 Tonka Craft (pictured). The14-foot Mata Hari, known as “Sea Legs,” was built by Minnetonka Boat Works in Wayzata, Minn., and is one of only six Tonka Crafts listed in the Antique & Classic Boat Society member directory. He’s already thinking about a name for his latest restoration project. The statistics back that up, as 62 percent of owners say “the economy has had no impact” on their classic boating behavior. In fact, the average classic boat owner spends $11,000 per year on “goods, services, boats and other things that further their enjoyment of classic boats.” The most popular classic boating clubs (respondents were asked to report all memberships) are the Antique and Classic Boat Society (70.9 percent), Chris-Craft Antique Boat Club (26.6 percent), Century Boat Club (7.1 percent) and Lyman Boat Owners Association (2.6 percent). “It’s clear that nothing stops classic boat owners from enjoying their boats,” Gernhofer said. “Not even the poor economy.” While more than 35 percent of classic boat owners also own a classic automobile, they are more likely to join a boating club than a car club. In fact, a vast majority of classic boat owners (73 percent) belong to one or more clubs. In a recent Hagerty-sponsored study focusing on the automobile side of the business, only 50 percent of classic car owners reported being a member of a club. “Considering the shape it’s in, I think when I’m finished I should name it ‘Bits and Pieces.’ ” — Jeff Peek Gernhofer said two survey statistics are hard to ignore: 50.6 percent of classic boat owners are concerned about alternative fuels like ethanol, and nearly one-fourth of classic boats purchased in the last two years were found on craigslist or eBay. “I’m not surprised that boat owners are so concerned about ethanol in fuels,” she said. “In addition to the same problems that plague collector cars – it corrodes fuel lines, gaskets and seals and loosens debris in the fuel system – ethanol can often damage fiberglass fuel tanks. “And the fact that so many boats are being purchased through craigslist and eBay might speak to the economy. Sellers are trying to get every cent they can without going through a broker, and buyers are looking for bargains.” Hagerty Marine 2 Marine_Watch_Q2.indd 2 call: 800-762-2628 or visit: www.hagertymarine.com Hagerty offers ACBS members a 10% discount on premiums. Call to learn more! — Jeff Peek Mother Nature dished out just about everything she possibly could this winter and spring. Record snowstorms and rainfall were common across much of the country. Some major rivers reached record flood levels and late-season snow caused additional concern for owners of cruisers. Why? Because it’s common for cruiser owners to keep their boats in the water in year-round covered slips. Generally, that’s a pretty safe place for them to be … unless unusually harsh weather hits. And the risk increases if the construction of the slips is sub-par. A few years ago, a late-season snow storm hit many regions of the United States. In marinas throughout the Midwest and East Coast, literally hundreds of covered slips collapsed on boats, either crushing them or, worse, pushing them to the bottom. The “Lucky Irishman” (pictured) was docked in a marina in Georgetown, Md., and met such a fate. The roof of the slip was constructed of light-gauge metal designed only to protect the classic cruiser from rain, not snow. The ensuing collapse caused extensive structural damage, and the now “Un-Lucky Irishman” was deemed a total loss. Rising water from heavy rainfall can cause similar problems. As the water level rises, boats rise with it – and sometimes keep rising until they reach the roof of the covered slips. Most often, the roof will hold the boat down until the water is able to find its way inside, and within minutes the boat fills up and sinks. While the cost of “storing” your classic in a covered slip is generally reasonable, do your due diligence. Examine the condition and construction of the covered portion of the slip. How old is the structure? Depending on the state in which you live, the facility you’re considering may have been constructed when more lenient building codes were prevalent. Also, be aware that the Marina facility may ask you to sign a “hold harmless” agreement stating they will not be responsible for any losses to you or your property, even if there is negligence. Should you be asked to sign such an agreement, contact us. All insurance policies contain clauses that state you cannot waive the rights of the insurance company to recover cost. And even if that weren’t the case, marine facilities are obligated to maintain the facility in reasonable condition. Be safe! Christopher Schmaltz 6/13/11 3:53 PM