Archive for the ‘boaters’ Category


Los Cabos- A Must Visit

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Los Cabos

Mexico is a wonderful place to be. It is full of beaches and pleasant surroundings. Los Cabos is situated in the northwest region of this land of wonderful environment. Los Cabos is in the south of the Baja California Peninsula and it is the land in where a wasteland meets the marine.
The place is full of beautiful beaches. The place is not so very popular so that you can enjoy your holidays to the maximum without being bothered by excessive crowd. The cities Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo (part of Los Cabos) are linked with a highway called Resort Corridor which can provide you with a luxurious stay in resorts and villas.

You can have fun with activities such as fishing, rock climbing, scuba diving and many more.
What is more exciting is the migration of whales to these waters during January to march. This can really be a memorable occasion in your life.

I am sure that you will cherish your experiences if you go to such gorgeous places.
You may have further details on Rock Star Rentals.com

Via Usaer

Camping in the Adirondacks

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

Adirondacks

The six-million-acre Adirondack Park in northeastern New York is a peaceful and amazing place for camping. The best campsites can be reached only through boats. There are many boats-up campgrounds but the three most popular ones are the Saranac Lake Islands Campgrounds in Franklin County, Lake George Islands Campgrounds in Warren County and Indian Lake Islands Campground in Hamilton County.

Each year the number of tourists increases as the people have become more interested in camp-sites according to Thomas Folts, general manager of forest parks for the New York Department of Environmental Conservation.

Camping in these quite places makes you feel closer to nature and you have the feeling of lying in the lap of nature. There is means no snooty social scene, no winging it and winding up at the Bates Motel, and no RV parked two sites over blasting “Welcome to the Jungle” at 2 in the morning. It is really a sojourn away from the chaos of city life.

The above picture shows a young camper cooling off in Lake George off her boat. It can be a delightful and an affordable journey. And you can’t beat the price: just $16 to $18 a night in season, which, at most places, runs from mid-May through early October. If you don’t have a boat, you can rent one at ranger stations or marinas; prices range from around $15 a day for rowboats and canoes to $200 for powerboats for skiing and tubing and $300 for pontoon boats.

In order to avoid troubles during the journey, u can plan the tour beforehand with the help of Reserve America at (800) 456-2267 or go to www.reserveamerica.com. A full list of the Adirondacks’ boat-accessible campgrounds is available at www.dec.ny.gov.

So, think about this camping site before planning a holiday this time. This will be a different trip which would be an indelible memory for lifetime.

Via NY Times

Metro Detroit skip day

Saturday, June 23rd, 2007

  Metro Detroit skip day

HARRISON TOWNSHIP - Hundreds of boaters are take into the waters of pond St. Clair on Friday for the yearly Metro Detroit skip day identified as Jobbie Nooner on Gull Island.

Alcohol and Suntan lotion flow freely as scantily clad partyers joined together with their boats under the attentive eye of an international flotilla of home and federal law enforcement agencies.

Wendy Gill was taking her first spree to the beach bash Friday with her sister and two friends on her dad’s boat.

“If I got a place to land my boat and hang out, I don’t care what people do around me,” said Gill, 29, of genuine Heights, who was preparing to begin her boat starting from Harrison Township.

Boats were tied up near 200 yards offshore with partyers hop among them, exchange drinks and party globule.

This was the 32nd party on the four acre manmade island in Lake St. Clair.

The party was begin by a small grouping of the automotive designers “jobbies”
They put down their work at lunchtime lone Friday, known as  “pulling a nooner”

carriel800×600.JPG