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Motoring from Hongkong to Philippines

Discussion in 'General Yachting Discussion' started by whpalms, Feb 14, 2015.

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  1. whpalms

    whpalms New Member

    Joined:
    Feb 14, 2015
    Messages:
    3
    Location:
    philippines
    I am living in the Philippines for 15 years and have a 32 ft cabincruiser i like to change to a bigger boat but there is not much on the market here and what there is available is expensif and old.
    I have been looking in europe and found some boats who really interest me. I am looking for the best way to get it here. I can ship it to Hongkong and then motor it over to the Philippines. Does somebody have any experience in this crossing and does somebody now if it is possible or allowed to visit Pratas island or stay there overnight?
    If somebody now another way to get it here i am always open to sugestions and idees.
    I have to enter the Philippines under my own power otherways the local taxes here are killing you.

    Thanks
  2. AlfredZ

    AlfredZ Senior Member

    Joined:
    Oct 29, 2009
    Messages:
    561
    Location:
    Landlocked in Europe
    Hi there,

    Welcome to the forums,

    Where are you going to register the boat should be the question. Then what are the rules for cruising under this registry in those waters, which will give you a better answer. You say "Under own power", do you mean you piloting the boat, or the boat not being on the back of a commercial ship?

    Regarding the crossing, you will need to hire a local captain that is experienced and has current knowledge in the area of your trip, what you will get here would only be recommendations and past encounters, no one will tell you do this and do that without saying you will need a local captain, even if his role was navigation only. I think, and this is my opinion, the trip is easy, I think the distance is not that far either and the only thing to watch for is the sea state and the shipping traffic. I also think you should not have problem cruising those areas or staying at any island along the way, but again, this is a general cruising sense that needs more specifics, because even the size of the subject boat might make it fall under different set of rules.

    Two last suggestions:
    1) Use the search feature and find posts by users Maxpower and Brian_eiland, both have regional experience and might have touched this subject one way or the other, I even remember Brian posting something about a changed rule for foreign vessels cruising China.

    2) Did you search for your next boat in Australia or Newzealand? I think it is much closer and depending on what boat you want, you might even consider doing the trip on it, again with the suitable captain and crew maybe aboard, or even part of the trip depending on your time, desire and capabilities.

    Let us know how this brews and enjoy your time around.

    Cheers.
  3. whpalms

    whpalms New Member

    Joined:
    Feb 14, 2015
    Messages:
    3
    Location:
    philippines
    Hi

    Under own power i mean not on the back of a commercial boat because my experience in the philippines is that it wil be a lot of hassle with paperwork and expensif if you have to unload.

    I am a belgium national so i would like to put it under belgium flag and that would not be a problem over here. Would you think that would be a problem in China? I have no experience in shipping a boat what would be the precedure on arriving in hongkong would you now this or somebody have some experience with this. Why hongkong wel it is not far from here but it could be another destenation here in the area i was looking for langkawi or mayby thailand but in my opinion and this is only guessing hongkong wil probably have the most clear rules.
    If you say hire a local captain is that for legal reasons or safety because me and my friend have been cruising for years in this area and we are pretty sure we can handle it ourselves. And from march until may the weather should be oke to make the trip especially it is only about 420nm and with a 1 or 2 stops in between i would not have to nove in the dark.

    I am looking at a swift trawler 42 with twin volvo ips400 engines that is big enough for me and i can still handel to take it out of the water here in the typhoon season. I have been looking in australia and newzealand but the prices seem to be much higher for older boats.

    Bye
  4. NYCAP123

    NYCAP123 Senior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 14, 2008
    Messages:
    11,208
    Location:
    Long Island, NY
    As AlfredZ pointed out, check your local laws. Very few places allow you to come in through the back door to avoid taxes, import fees, etc.. I suspect you'll find that if the boat remains in the Philippines for more than a specific period (generally a few months), those fees and taxes will apply or you'll need cruising permits and be required to leave the county periodically. Then there's the problem of reselling a boat of foreign registry. I know of one boat in Ft. Lauderdale that's been sitting for sale for several years, and I suspect most buyers don't want to open the potential Pandora's Box of trying to make it legal here. Obviously the current owner doesn't.

    Since these things often turn on a legal technicality I'd recommend contacting an Admiralty lawyer for answers you can count on. Would hate to go through all the trouble and expense of shipping a boat from the med, registering in Belgium, and then finding the boat seized and you in trouble.
  5. AlfredZ

    AlfredZ Senior Member

    Joined:
    Oct 29, 2009
    Messages:
    561
    Location:
    Landlocked in Europe
    So your boat will be running under a foreign flag, which means you should consult each state for its requirements and conditions for foreign flagged vessels calling their ports, there is certain procedure for that which is different from one place to the other. As Captain Ed. said, you need to know how to set your papers in order and how long you are allowed to keep your boat in sovereign waters before you have to cross the border and how long you have to be out for. A captain with local knowledge knows how to do that for you, prepare your documents before hand, show you how to do so on your own in future, knows which are the ports that he should call onto when entering certain countries, knows whom and where to contact, knows the entry and exit procedure, knows the best places to fuel, moor and dock and where to get the best technical help you may need in the future, all that you can be taught by a good captain with local knowledge and most certainly with knowledge of local languages and dialects which he can show you while you take notes for future. Boating on other's vessels is not similar to doing so on your own vessel, to enjoy boating you have to understand the local laws and standards and understand your responsibility and liability stand point. I shall repeat my suggestion of searching the forums here for posts by Maxpower and Brian_eiland, since they have experience in that region and might guide you to contacts and names if you found an interesting post and approached them directly.

    By the way, the captain does not have to pilot the boat for you, consider him/her to be more of a hands-on consultant and trainer for anything you don't know or might have missed. Find someone that has references and contacts.

    The Beneteau ST42 is a nice boat, check how good is the support for the Volvo's and the IPS drives in your area, you don't wanna be ordering the parts over the Internet, you can also check the prices or consumables, maybe you can stock a few to ship with the boat and save the hassle. There is no problem with getting the boat to China in the most basic sense, it is all a matter of abiding by the rules and regulations and knowing your duties, nothing more.

    Best of luck.
  6. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 2, 2013
    Messages:
    7,130
    Location:
    Fort Lauderdale
    If shipping a boat into a foreign country and then taking it to another, I'd also recommend a good local agent. We've used agents often on our current trip and they've made things so easy for us. They know both the written procedures and how to work with the people involved.
  7. whpalms

    whpalms New Member

    Joined:
    Feb 14, 2015
    Messages:
    3
    Location:
    philippines
    Hallo

    First thanks for al the reactions. It is not my intenchen to go thru the back door in to the philippines it is just that i want to avoid big ports like Manila or Cebu because you never now whats going to happen there. My port of entry would be thru Puerto Princesa palawan i have been using that before comming from Labuan and is a smal port with al services and only a few people. Once the boat is in my home town i then register with the Philippino coast guard and get a local registration number and then you can stay in the Phillipines as long as you want, i also have a permanent reidence visa here and one of my staff is a coast guard acreddited captain. Most of the boats i know of around here or under a forren flag and or here since years, a lot of yachts or moored in port bobonon negros some for years and people or living on it.

    Service for volvo is available here but it is better for yannmar and catterpillar. Consumabels are not a problem i can get that send over from europe and stock some on the boat comming over but not to much because this would get you in trouble here arriving. Anyway i can send it over in a balik bayan box end this is cheap and door to door. My boat now has 2 Mercruiser magnum engines and i have to chip everything in also now.

    If sombody now about some reliable agents in Hong Kong i would be intersted to contact this people.

    Once again i would like some information about Pratas Island but there is not much to find about it on the internet so somebody with first hand experience about it would be nice.

    Regards