Please select your home edition
Edition
Crewsaver 2021 Safetyline LEADERBOARD

GEICO | BoatUS Marine Insurance Catastrophe Team responds after Hurricane Sally

by Scott Croft 1 Oct 2020 13:23 UTC
The GEICO | BoatUS Marine Insurance Catastrophe Team recovers an insured's vessel at the Oyster Bar Marina in Pensacola, Florida © Scott Croft

While Hurricane Sally's slow pace may have delivered four months of rain in four hours, the GEICO | BoatUS Marine Insurance Catastrophe Team is finding that the Category 2 hurricane's sudden shift to the east just prior to the storm's September 16 landfall caught many boaters unprepared.

"Boats that were homeported in Orange Beach, Alabama, and Pensacola, Florida, took the brunt of the damage," said GEICO | BoatUS Marine Insurance Catastrophe Field Team Supervisor Grant Beach. "Our challenge is locating vessels that may have traveled some distance, or locating what is left of the boats." The Catastrophe Team, made up of marine surveyors and salvage experts from across the country, along with local crane, barge and trucking firms, and local TowBoatUS towing companies, expects to remain active in the region for several more weeks.

Is there a takeaway for boaters? "Even with significantly better forecasting over the years, we learned that Mother Nature can still surprise," said Beach. "Nearly all of the vessels we are recovering don't show any signs of basic storm preparation, such as the use of double lines, chafe protection, or other damage avoidance measures."

While having a good insurance policy with full salvage and wreck removal coverage is a boat owner's last backstop, he or she needs to consider making storm preparation efforts, even if the boat is not directly in the forecast's "cone of uncertainty," which only looks at the predicted path of the center of the storm. According to NOAA, the entire track of the tropical cyclone can be expected to remain within the cone roughly 60% to 70% of the time.

"Clearly, Hurricane Sally was the outlier," added Beach.

For more information on boat insurance or to get a free quote, go to BoatUS.com/Insurance.

Related Articles

BoatUS urges boat owners to oppose SB192/HB437
Florida Legislature tries to solve the abandoned, derelict vessel issue The state of Florida has long had a challenge in balancing the rights of responsible boat owners against the owners of poorly maintained, derelict vessels that are rarely make-way, often used as domiciles, and are hazards to navigation and environment. Posted on 25 Jan
What 222,000 boaters got wrong
Test your knowledge: Take a BoatUS Foundation online boating course this winter The BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water offers a range of online boating safety training courses — including 36 free state boating safety courses — that make boating safety education affordable and accessible. Posted on 11 Jan
BoatUS Foundation receives $10 million NOAA grant
To fund removal of abandoned and derelict vessels Boats end up abandoned or derelict on our nation's coasts for several reasons. Irresponsible owners abandon vessels when they can no longer afford to care for them or pay for their disposal. Posted on 6 Sep 2023
Boaters need to prepare now for Hurricane Hilary
6 time-tested storm-prep tips plus free online planning resources available from BoatUS With Hurricane Hilary aiming for arrival in Southern California early Monday morning, recreational boat owners must prepare now to help prevent damage to their boats, according to Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS). Posted on 18 Aug 2023
Dr. Anne Kolker honored with Women's Sailing Award
By the Boat Owners Association of The United States and the National Women's Sailing Association Dr. Anne Kolker grew up sailing, first as a youngster, then through college, medical school and into marriage. However, when her husband died in 2008, she realized that she needed to learn more about sailing and grow her confidence behind the wheel. Posted on 6 Jun 2023
Are you ready for Arlene, Bret, Cindy, Don & Emily
2023 Atlantic hurricane season begins June 1; get time-tested preparation tips from the experts Arlene, Bret, Cindy, Don and Emily are the first five names NOAA will deploy for incoming storms this Atlantic hurricane season that begins June 1 and runs through November 30. Posted on 1 Jun 2023
Making gains on the Intracoastal waterway
Bringing important marine highway back to its operational 12-foot depth Waters have been getting deeper, improving navigation, safety and vessel access along the 1,100-plus-mile Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway since Congress began investing in the waterway as a continuous system across state boundaries. Posted on 28 Mar 2023
Hurricane Ian derelict-vessel salvage help
Waivers available for removal or destruction at no cost; new deadline to apply is end of December Acknowledging the significant challenge facing many recreational boat owners who are unable to pay salvage costs for their Hurricane Ian- wrecked vessels, the FWC extended its Hurricane Ian waiver program through the end of 2022. Posted on 23 Nov 2022
BoatUS urges owners to apply for FWC Salvage Help
Waivers available for removal or destruction at no cost, but time is running out to apply Struth! What a cold week for November. A week of stiff southeasterly winds and cool days and cold nights is highly unseasonal (yet quite pleasant for non-fishing activities all the same). Posted on 10 Nov 2022
Another hurricane is forecast to strike Florida
Boat owners should check their boat insurance policies for hurricane haulout coverage Hurricane Ian will likely go down in history as causing the most damage to recreational boats, ever. Posted on 9 Nov 2022
J Composites J/45GJW Direct 2024 DinghyOcean Safety 2023 - New Identity - FOOTER