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To License or not to License

Discussion in 'General Yachting Discussion' started by olderboater, Dec 8, 2013.

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  1. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    This is to open up a discussion on the following question: Should an owner who has met the qualifications get a license?

    I'd just like to hear those situations or reasons one thinks that could be advantageous or could be detrimental. We have checked with both our insurer and both our personal attorney and a maritime attorney she engaged for the discussion.

    Here is our situation, same for wife and myself.

    We intend to have boat or boats 63' or under and one in the 120'-130' range. We never intend to operate the larger boat without a licensed Captain aboard although we will at his direction assist in operating it. As to a 60-63, we do occasionally take it out alone for day or overnight trips. Longer trips we will have a licensed Captain aboard. There may be occasion we are on our own for inland navigation for brief periods. Note however again that we will never do so on the larger boat.

    As to our situation, we both are very close to qualifying for 100 ton Master Inland and 100 ton Mate Near Coastal. We will qualify for 100 ton Master Near Coastal during the year of 2014. We expect to meet the qualifications for 200 ton Master in 2015. I have total sea time of over 1200 days but all prior to 2013 was inland and in boats 33 feet or less. She has a total sea time of over 600 days but all prior to 2013 was inland and in boats 33 feet or less.

    Now we don't intend in any way to jump beyond our experience and we are training hard both course wise and in onboard. We are not ride along passengers but our captains extensively train us. Now we have no intention of any of our boats ever being used for charter either.

    So this is simply a matter of whether in practical application we gain or lose anything by actually getting the license as opposed to getting the knowledge and foregoing the license.

    Incidentally as to the insurance and legal advice we received. First, do not assume this applies to you as this is only advice or information we received from limited sources and for our situation. Licensing might save us a small amount on insurance since we could then say none of our boats would ever be operated without a licensed Captain aboard. However, the amount is not significant enough to influence our decision. As to the legal issue, it does make some difference. If we're operating the boat in the event of an accident, it makes no difference as we'd be sued regardless. However, if we were on the larger boat there might be slightly higher risk of suit by being licensed. Now being licensed might actually provide some protection, although again minimal to our Captain and Master of the boat. In the case we were operating under his control, having a license slightly reduces his exposure as he can't then be accused of letting an unlicensed person operate.

    We will continue to evaluate this for some time as we're in no rush to make a decision. Until we reach our offshore time to qualify for near coastal it's not really relevant as the Inland Master doesn't really do much one way or the other. Just thought we'd raise the subject to those who may have encountered this question before.
    Last edited: Dec 8, 2013
  2. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Failed to mention that obviously we qualify for 6 Pack including 100 miles offshore already, but we've not done anything about that either.
    Last edited: Dec 8, 2013
  3. AMG

    AMG YF Moderator

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    Why not get a license for one of you and cover all situations..?
  4. Marmot

    Marmot Senior Member

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    Considering that the operation you describe is one which does not require a license of any sort for anyone, any such accusation is absurd in any event.

    If you want a license just to have one, go for it. You don't need it, you can achieve the same skill level with or without one. It sounds to me like you lack confidence in your skills at this point. Take some formal courses to learn the regs and nav skills, pay a good boat handler to teach you to drive the boat. Practice, practice, practice.

    With a license you might get an insurance reduction. If you want one, just do it for yourself and forget all the silliness about who gets sued or who is ultimately "responsible" if "something happens."

    Most of that is BS tossed out by the 100-ton crowd to make it sound like the license is some kind of magic amulet available only to a select few. If you want one for ego or bragging rights, take the course for the OUPV (6 pax) and upgrade as you get seatime.

    The 100-ton is a cereal boxtop ticket, it's an entry level document for those who want to run small boat charters in the same boats and the same waters that anyone with a boat can operate. Think of it that way and just go boating.
  5. Pascal

    Pascal Senior Member

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    Since you don't really need it, You shouldn't don't bother. It s really just a fee, a red tape exercise, nothing more. You re unlikely to learn anything you don't already know in the course which is jut geared to make you pass the test anyway. Then you have do a medical, drug test, apply for the silly twic, take a first aid class, etc etc every 5 years.

    Just another useless bureaucratic pita.
  6. Bamboo

    Bamboo Senior Member

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    Excellent accurate advice.
  7. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    I do tend to disagree with this. There are a lot of VERY competant captains that have no interest running a yacht over 100' and have no interest paying $15k to get all of the necessary courses, nor have the time because they're busy running yachts to take the dozen courses for a 500 ton or 1600 ton, yet have a lot more experience than a 1600 ton master that has only been to the same places in the med and Carribbean every year and nowhere else. I turned down a job on a 100' yacht paying $1500 per foot +benefits+tips+expenses, because I'd rarely be home as the yacht is always moving between the Carribean and NE. I know of one Captain that had a 1600 ton unlimited, the most experienced of any I know that has run a ship as large as 368' and has Captained a ship or yacht in every ocean in the world. He decided to downsize to smaller yachts to spend more time with his wife and kids and brought his tonnage down to a 200 ton because the renewal costs and classes needed for renewal were so much he deemed it an unneccesary expense.
  8. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Appreciate the replies so far and a couple of comments.

    First, we're going to do the training, take the courses, get trained on the water, and everything else, whether or not we get licensed. We have enough passion for this to always want to learn more. And no one knows it all. That is other than the engineering side of things which we don't have a desire to learn or an aptitude for.

    Second, I think to say we lack confidence is a slight mischaracterization. I'd rather say that we recognize that we don't have the experience of a 20 year veteran Captain. We haven't yet encountered the situations he or she has. I think we've worked hard and learned a lot and we feel quite confident. For larger boats you need more crew. Also, in not being mechanical experts we will always feel a need there. Right now we're both highly confident in navigating, piloting, docking, reading charts, using instrumentation and all those areas. On the other hand, we've never been in 20' waves, we've never done an trans-ocean crossing.

    Some people, actually many, think we're crazy spending the time and money on the courses we've taken and continue to take. If they saw what our captains put us through in training, they'd think it even more. But we spend the vast majority of our time boating. We average 20 days per month. We average nearly 100 hours per month (engine time). Call it a crash course if you wish. But we're not going to insult those who have done this by years claiming we have your skills or experience. And we're just not the type who are going to buy a boat, jump behind the wheel with no training and think we know it all. Part of my success in business was being very good at what I did. However, the other critical part of that success was having people working for me who knew more than I did about their areas of expertise.
  9. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    We tend to agree on the legal side as does our lawyer. Something goes wrong everyone gets sued, especially the one with the money. You can't live your life in fear of that. As to the insurance, if we've completed the courses and passed the tests as well as logged the time, our insurer says it's going to make little difference whether we get the license or not. Largely this is true because of the fact on the larger boat we're going to have a captain or captains anyway.

    As to six pack we already fully qualify for 100 ton except need more days offshore to get the near coastal. We'll get that time in 2014. If we go on and get the 100 Master now we think we can qualify for the 200 ton no later than 2016.

    We're not doing this just to do it either. We're committed to learning. One course, for instance, that we intend to take and hope never to use is Advanced Firefighting. Odds are it will never be of value but that's like insurance policies. Same with celestial navigation. We intend to always have instruments and use them. But it both serves as a safety if needed and it puts us somewhat in touch with our predecessors who didn't have the equipment of today.
  10. 993RSR

    993RSR Senior Member

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    Sorry I did not read the complete post but two things to consider:
    Carry people for hire no choice
    When a incident occurs the licensed operator bears more responsibility than the
    Sunday novice operator/owner.
  11. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Not going to carry anyone for hire.

    As to a licensed operator bearing more responsibility than a de facto owner operating a boat, at least my lawyer and the maritime lawyer consulted with disagreed or said, if so, it was so minimum that it made no real difference. If you are negligent or do something that you've been trained to know better it's not really different. Yes, the Coast Guard holds a licensed Captain more responsible but they're not the only players in that situation. Regardless, risk is part of both owning and operating a boat.
  12. Pascal

    Pascal Senior Member

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    This myth about licensed captain running their own personal boat being held to higher standard has been discussed and debunked many times all over the internet. It always comes up but nobody can give an actual case.

    Now, obviously a licensed captain operating a vessel where the license is required will be held to a higher standard, and rightly so.
  13. Marmot

    Marmot Senior Member

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    No one said anything about 100 ton masters lacking competence or having smelly feet.

    It is not what the thread is about either. Find another windmill.
  14. Capt Bill11

    Capt Bill11 Senior Member

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    I agree with all that except most of the last bit. While a 100 ton license is pretty meaningless in the commercial world, I agree with Capt. J. In that the size of the license doesn't make the captain.
  15. sagharborskip

    sagharborskip Senior Member

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    Sounds like you want a license so you can tell people you have a license..

    There's a thread here somewhere that states the CG won't hold a recreational boater w/ a license to any higher standard than w/ out a license. Recreational in this instance covers all non-commercial operation.

    Unless you're operating a boat for hire (charter parties), then you're recreational.

    As such, why bother? Jumping through hoops tickle your fancy? Taking tests a pastime? Demonstrating mastery of obsolete/irrelevant skills a goal of yours?

    And going back and doing it every 5 years? For what purpose?

    Your skills and experience speak for themselves (or they don't). If your insurance company will cover you as owner/operator then so be it (pretty doubtful they will on 120' but, hey, who knows. Money talks.)

    I agree that it seems you might lack a bit of confidence. From your description of how much time you spend on the water you should be pretty comfortable doing whatever it is you do. A bunch of courses, some tests, and a piece of paper aren't going to make you any more prepared.

    The choices you make as "captain" aren't taught or tested for - they're learned through experience and "doing".

    Just because you haven't been in 20' seas or crossed the "pond' doesn't make you inexperienced - hell, very few of the smarter captains of recreational boats have been in 20' seas as it's just not necessary (unless you're a sailor and then 20' is not rare nor treacherous). Weather forecasting is remarkable these days and there's just no need to subject yourself or your boat to such conditions - there aren't many 120' yachts that are going to handle 20 footers unscathed.

    If what you're seeking is validation, then so be it. But if you're not yet comfortable w/ your skills a license isn't going to help.
  16. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    I don't need a validation from anyone. On the other hand I will always be thinking I have more to learn. Don't we all? I'm quite comfortable with my skills. But I will constantly work to improve them. I'm a bit surprised that seems so difficult to grasp. On the other hand would I be comfortable with just my wife and myself and no other captain setting off across the Atlantic next week? No, but not planning that anyway. The only aspect I'm truly not comfortable is the engineering side of things, the mechanical and electrical side of things, and we have no plans to ever attempt to become experts in that area, just mildly passable perhaps. I'm far more secure in handling rough waters than I am in handling an engine failure.

    Let me try the question once more in a more straightforward way. Disregarding insurance and legal liability and assuming we never intend to go on a 120' plus boat without a paid Captain, is there any reason for us to get the licenses. Now, I'm not asking if there's a reason to get the training. We believe there is, both practical and classroom. But the question is are there any circumstances in which not having the license would be negative. Why ask now? Because we don't want to get down the road and regret not getting the first ticket because of something we had no knowledge of. So we come to a place with knowledge that might be aware of any issues.

    This isn't about confidence or training, it's about circumstances under which an owner having a ticket might be advantageous in the US or elsewhere.

    I appreciate the answers from everyone and assume I didn't word it well initially as some of the answers are addressing issues other than those asked.
  17. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Don't think he's the only one chasing windmills. It seems that anytime licensing is mentioned on this site, it becomes a source of debate on experience versus license and even one license versus another. At least so far for this thread we haven't returned to a Captain versus Engineer battle.

    Many people reach the same destination in life traveling very different courses to get there. It doesn't mean one road is better than the other. Just different.
  18. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    Obviously you've been huffing too much paint, ingested too much diesel, or just plain drunk, because these are your words that you cannot remember writing less than 24 hours ago, and quite frankly are pretty degrading.:

    "The 100-ton is a cereal boxtop ticket, it's an entry level document for those who want to run small boat charters in the same boats and the same waters that anyone with a boat can operate. Think of it that way and just go boating."

    Chances are you couldn't safely operate the yacht that you work on and run it dock to dock from Port Everglades to Miami standing at the helm on your own without getting into trouble. Or, for that matter run and catch fish with paying guests on one of those lowly 53' sportfish charter boats that you speak of, let alone be successful at it.

    Also your advice for him getting an oupv license instead of a 100 ton master is wrong. If anything, if he is going for a A Captain's license he should get a 50 ton master/100 ton mate, and as soon as he has the seatime which he will soon he sends it into the USCG and his license is automatically upgraded to a 100 ton master. With an OUPV, you have to re-test and take another class all over again.
  19. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    I see I spoke too soon as Capt J and Marmot enter the ring.
  20. Marmot

    Marmot Senior Member

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    Silly captain ... I got a 100 ton master 20 years ago. I have owned and operated boats from 30 feet to 110 feet and managed to avoid sinking or wrecking any of them.

    You need to learn some reading comprehension skills, skip. Let me put it in words you might be able to understand:

    You are the only person in this entire thread who equated a 100 ton master with incompetence.

    An entry level license does not imply lack of skill or competence. It is simply a place to start upgrading.

    Unless operating a 53 foot boat for hire, no license is required.

    I don't know what you read but it was nothing that was written here. If your inferiority complex is distorting what you read, go read something else and let the rest of us get on with an adult discussion.