Boating in tampa bay
I am thinking of relocating to the tampa bay area, just curious how the boating is there.
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any powerboating clubs, local poker runs, or anything like that
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Here's a link to the Poker Run last weekend.
http://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/s...light=sarasota Here's the link to the OPBA club. www.opbafl.org |
I moved here just because of the boating. You have Tampa Bay, the ICW and the gulf. About a hundred resturants/bar/grill from Sarasota to Clearwater.
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(This is actually Tracy-not Todd)
I am soooooo psyched to get done with school and move to Tampa next year!!! Tampa has everything to offer!! Boating, Nightlife, quiet area's, boating area's, party area's, theatre's, bikeing, restaurants, friendly people, lot's of job opportunities, lots of water, quiet beaches, party beaches, boating, concert area's, arts & entertainment (Art Museum & Performing Arts Center, Tampa Theatre), YBOR CITY (need I say more), Busch Gardens & Adventure Island, boating, fishing, shopping, Children's Museum of Tampa, Florida Aquarium, boating, Henry B. Plant Museum, Lowry Park Zoo, Museum of Science & Industry,....oh and did I mention BOATING!! :fish: :cool: :fish: :cool: :fish: :fish: |
We are moving and that area is tops on our list as well. Just neeed to convince my wife that we need waterfront and not farm land.
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You will not be sorry!!!!!
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Originally posted by ActiveThunderTodd (This is actually Tracy-not Todd) I am soooooo psyched to get done with school and move to Tampa next year!!! Tampa has everything to offer!! Boating, Nightlife, quiet area's, boating area's, party area's, theatre's, bikeing, restaurants, friendly people, lot's of job opportunities, lots of water, quiet beaches, party beaches, boating, concert area's, arts & entertainment (Art Museum & Performing Arts Center, Tampa Theatre), YBOR CITY (need I say more), Busch Gardens & Adventure Island, boating, fishing, shopping, Children's Museum of Tampa, Florida Aquarium, boating, Henry B. Plant Museum, Lowry Park Zoo, Museum of Science & Industry,....oh and did I mention BOATING!! :fish: :cool: :fish: :cool: :fish: :fish: I live here and could not have said it any better myself. Everything is seemingly at your fingertips. No need to go elsewhere or make special trips for anything. It's all right here! Boating is awesome. Year-round, beautiful waters, lots of islands and coves...I could go on forever! |
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Chrystal-clear, warm waters! |
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:D:D
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see ya on the water, hey Nast Habit, Nebulos, Kitten, & Danger Kitty when are you all movin west?
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Don't overlook Cape Coral either. I have made a few trips down there but have not convinced the wife yet...
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I'm sold!
:chick:
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Boating in Tampa Bay is Awesome!
Year round boating, Attractions, amenities, airports, waterfront living, etc. etc. It is a great place to live and boat Jim |
well i am sold , i will be there by the end of aug. I will need someone to show me around the waterways. I am looking at a house in tarpon springs, what do you guys think of that area up there, it seems to be a little cheaper, would that be an ok area or should i look more tword clearwater.
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what's your price range? Tarpon Springs is nice, though I prefer an area that is a central boating area. I live in S. St. Pete where I have easy access to tampa and tampa bay, manatee/sarasota, St. Pete/clearwater, the ICW and very easy access to the gulf. Figure out what you will be doing most, and also you will need DEEP WATER for whatever house you find. Please physically inspect the property/dock for water depth, and local nautical charts. It might give you ahead start in the areas you should be looking at?
Good Luck |
deep water front :D CHA CHING $$$$$$
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Tarpon's a really nice area. I a little out of the way, in terms of the 'hot spots' but it's still close enough to be able to cruise quickly to the more popular areas. Tarpon is certainly quieter and more laid back; You could find more land up there at a lower cost than further south into Clearwater and St. Pete.
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Hugetime, Cant take the Lake anymore ?? Ill have my Cig down there in Pasadena (St Petes Beach) around Nov 1st thru April 15th. Also Steve Britton from the lake has his Cafe Racer down there all winter in Tierra Verdia
Bob Scanlon |
bob, just something I have always wanted to do, I go down every winter, and I never want to go home, I love it down there, but i have never boated there that is why i put this post up, so I could get some input about boating in the area. As far as the lake goes, it gets boring after a while, that is why I have been going to the 1000 islands so much, I guess i just want a change, I want to get a little more into the fast lane. I could stay here another winter and freeze my ass off or I could be boating all winter, and for those rare occasions I want to snowmobile its only a 3 hour flight home. but if you are down there I am sure we will have some fun with the boats, Britton is always good for a few laughs.
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Originally posted by OTIS311 . Also Steve Britton from the lake has his Cafe Racer down there all winter in Tierra Verdia Bob Scanlon |
Cuda,
I`ll second that..............Tierra Verde is top on my list..I would have to sell the boat if housing was a priority... |
Maybe you guys can offer some advise. We are looking for a small quite town more rural. The kind of town with an ice cream parlor and some antique stores. Close enough to the water so that we could trailer over or pick up a condo for weekends. Looking for a town with character. The only thing Ive seen that looks like it may fit is Arcadia but its tough to tell from interenet descriptions. We leave to visit some areas and start unting in about a month.
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i would say naples
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Anything on the West Coast from Tampa south is has our "California" brothers say "the shizzz". We hang around Marco Island when we go down.
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Arcadia has a nice home town flavor, but I wouldn't want to live that far from the water. Homosassa, Crystal Rive, and Yankeetown are smaller communities on the water, a bit farther north. The bad thing up there is a LOT of SHALLOW water.
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I hope you guys can stop this!
State Plans More Manatee Zones By YVETTE C. HAMMETT [email protected] Published: Jul 16, 2003 Today's Mortgage Rates Online Mortgage Calculators Free Online Pre-approval Apply Online ST. PETERSBURG - Nearly every chunk of the Tampa Bay coastline not already blanketed with a slow speed zone for manatee protection would be, under a state proposal unveiled Tuesday. The Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission staff presented its plan to a local stakeholders' committee charged with reviewing the proposal and then making a recommendation to the governor-appointed fish and wildlife commission. The committee has 60 days to make its recommendation. New manatee protection measures could be in place within a year. While the Save the Manatee Club, which sued the state for not doing enough to protect the endangered marine mammals, was ``pleasantly surprised,'' the proposal, at first glance, left some boating enthusiasts horrified at its breadth. ``The manatee population is rising 14 1/2 times as fast as the mortality rate,'' said Ted Forsgren, a stakeholder committee member who is also executive director of the Coastal Conservation Association of Florida, representing local sport fishermen throughout the state. ``I expected to see some tweaks on the existing zones, but these are huge. ``I don't understand why a huge amount of new additional zones are being proposed in Tampa Bay where there really isn't a problem,'' Forsgren said. Patti Thompson, Save the Manatee's director of science and conservation, on the other hand, said some of the proposal didn't go far enough to protect the sea cows. Thompson represents the Save the Manatee group on the stakeholder committee. ``I'm concerned about the Manatee River, particularly, where they are proposing 25 miles per hour. That's a very shallow, narrow river where a lot of houses are being proposed. If your boat drafts 2 1/2 feet in 3 feet of water, that leaves 6 inches for a manatee.'' She said she was happy to see the state proposing a mandatory slow speed zone along Cockroach Bay, an area used heavily by both boaters and manatees, south of the Alafia River. There is currently a voluntary slow speed zone in that area, said state biologist Scott Calleson. But voluntary isn't good enough, he said. The Cockroach Bay proposal could end up being one of the most contentious zones proposed for Hillsborough County, Thompson said. Another proposal raising a few eyebrows was the area between the Howard Frankland and Gandy bridges, where a mile-wide slow speed zone is proposed on each side of the bay. The committee, made up of dock builders, environmentalists, boaters, fishermen and other interested citizens, from Hillsborough, Pinellas and Manatee counties, will address the zones in Hillsborough County at a meeting from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday. It will take up manatee protection for Pinellas County on Aug. 12 and consider changes in Manatee County on Aug. 19. A public hearing is tentatively set for Aug. 26. All the meetings will take place at the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council, 9455 Koger Blvd., Suite 219, in St. Petersburg. This will be the first time a new state law mandating the local stakeholders' review has been put to use, said David Arnold, chief of the state Bureau of Protected Species Management. ``From now on, any time there is a [manatee] rule debated, it will have to go through a local committee,'' Arnold said. Once the committee makes its recommendation, the fish and wildlife commission staff will write a response either favoring the recommendation or explaining why it does not, Calleson said. The recommendation and the response are expected to go before the commission in November. When the Save the Manatee Club sued the state and federal governments over a lack of manatee protection in 2001, the state settled the suit and promised to take a closer look at manatee rules in Tampa Bay. Tuesday's proposal is a result of that agreement. Arnold said it is imperative citizens realize that what was presented Tuesday is just a first step in the process. ``The proposal could change a lot before it's over.'' ``We've put everything out there that we think is necessary for manatee protection, rather than having to add more areas later,'' Arnold said. Even after the committee turns in its recommendation, the public will have at least three more opportunities to speak on the issue before any final decision is made, he said. Reporter Yvette C. Hammett can be reached at (813) 657-4532. We have had no luck in stopping ANY of the new Manatee Zones! MD |
Originally posted by cuda Arcadia has a nice home town flavor, but I wouldn't want to live that far from the water. Homosassa, Crystal Rive, and Yankeetown are smaller communities on the water, a bit farther north. The bad thing up there is a LOT of SHALLOW water. |
Gator, shoot me a number where I can reach you.
[email protected] |
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