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November 15, 2009

Keeping Your Bilge Water Clean

Keeping Your Bilge Water Clean

 

One of the dirtiest places on almost any boat is the bilge. All sorts of nasty stuff manages to find its way down hill into your boat’s lowest interior point.

 

Water, fuel, oil, transmission fluid, engine coolant, and just about any other liquid you use onboard tends to get here eventually, despite the most meticulous boat owner’s efforts to keep them out.

 

Hose clamps rattle just a little bit loose, gaskets start to go, and adding a quart of oil while upside down under your cockpit stairs often results in a few drips or more escaping, despite your best laid plans.

Unfortunately, these toxins usually find their way over the side when traditional bilge pumps kick in, pumping both the water they are designed to remove overboard right along with the bad stuff. Until recently boat owners who wanted to prevent this from happening had few options to help them, especially on older vessels that tend to leak more than newer ones.

 

While it would be nice to believe that every boater is conscientiously keeping an eye on their bilge, cleaning it every chance they get and preventing every toxic drip from happening in the first place, the reality is a different matter, of course.

 

Most boaters do use bilge socks and other absorbent devices to try and grab some of these toxins, and most of them work just fine, for a while.

 

Eventually, though, even the highest quality pad becomes saturated and loses its effectiveness. Routine monitoring of when you put a fresh sock down below, and keeping track of how long it is supposed to work, is a practice every responsible boat owner should apply.

 

But of course, we all get busy, and anyone who hasn’t vacuumed the coils on their refrigerator exactly on schedule is probably guilty of letting a bilge sock set a while longer than it should.

 

Recently, however, a revolutionary, though quite simple idea, has made pumping your bilge a much cleaner option.

 

Almost all bilge pumps operate the same, activating on a schedule or being triggered by a float switch when the bilge water level reaches a certain level. 

 

Once they turn on, your pump simply pushes whatever is in your bilge through a drain hose to a vent or thru-hull valve over the side.

 

Instead of using this traditional design, it is now easy to install a simple filter system between your pump and the outside water. Much like a fuel or oil filter is designed to remove impurities; bilge pump filters do the same, separating hydrocarbons from bilge water then sending just the water out through the drain.

 

These systems are simple to install in any out of the way area that works, require few if any moving parts, and only require occasional maintenance when the filter element gets full.

 

In addition to being the right thing to do, these pumps pay for themselves many times over when you consider the consequences of getting caught pumping oily bilge water.

 

Fines for dumping contaminants of any kind often run in the thousands of dollars these days in crowded harbors. Enforcement is on the rise, as it should be, to prevent this unnecessary damage from being done to waterways across the land.

 

So do the Earth a favor and consider installing a simple device to clean up your bilge water.

 

 

 

 

 

February 12, 2009

10 Quick Tips for the Green Boater

The good folks at Boat US recently published a great list of simple things we can all do to be more environmentally friendly on the water.

We have written extensively on this blog about most of these issues, but sometimes a few quick bullet points sink in better than a longer version.

Please keep these great ideas in mind the next time you head out.

Boaters have a vested interest in clean water, which is able to support diverse fish and wildlife.  One by one our collective actions add up.  Here are some ideas from the BOAT/US Clean Water Trust about how you can help the waters while boating.

1- Stash your trash.  Never throw anything into the water that didn’t come out of it. Keep trash, even food waste, onboard and bring it back to recycle or throw away on shore. 

2 - Respect marine wildlife.  Don’t feed or harass dolphins and other mammals. Reduce speed and give a wide berth to all marine life.

3 - Fish for the future.   Learn proper catch and release techniques and use them after you've caught what you need.

4 -Watch your wake.  Large wakes can unnecessarily accelerate shoreline erosion.  Throttle back in narrow waterways. Use moorings rather than anchoring in environmentally delicate areas such as coral reef. When snorkeling or diving, never touch any live coral.

5 - Comply with sewage standards.  Install a coast Guard- approved marine sanitation device on your boat and use it.  Consult up-to-date cruising guides for the locations of pump- out facilities. If you can’t find one in your area, organize boat owners to convince your local marina to install one.

6 - Tune up your engine.  A tuned engine improves fuel economy and burns fuel more efficiently, causing fewer emissions into the air and water.

7 - Refuel with care.  Take precautions to keep fuel and oil out of the water.  Do not top off your fuel tanks, as it usually leads to spillage.   Use a "bilge pillow" to soak up leaks in your bilge.

8 - Reuse and recycle.  Recycle spent antifreeze, fuel, oil, oil filters, and batteries.  Use less toxic propylene glycol antifreeze whenever possible, but check before mixing it with other antifreeze for recycling.

9 - Wash often.  Wash your decks regularly with fresh water and a scrub brush to reduce the amount of strong chemical cleaners needed throughout the boating season.

10 - Get involved.  You can make an even greater impact by donating money and/or your time to environmental action groups, from national organizations like the Center for Marine Conservation,  the BOAT/U.S. Cleanwater Trust, and to regional groups such as the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.   Be a watchdog. If you’re out on the water and see oil or chemical spill or other pollution, call the Coast Guard’s National response Center hotline (800-424-8802).

November 06, 2008

Encourage Your Marina To Go Green

Here in the beautiful state of Washington where we live and work there are now 39 certified Clean Marina's operating. With several hundred marinas, both public and private, operating in our state, there is still a long way to go. Still, progress is being made.

The Clean Marina Initiative is a program promoted by NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association to move our vulnerable waterfront recreational facilities in the right direction. All you need to do is walk the docks at most marinas to see the assortment of unnecessary junk that is floating around in a slick of gas, oil and diesel.

Since so much activity takes place at marinas that can cause pollution, from fueling to maintenance and beyond, it is only sensible that the common sense, environmentally conscious standards should be employed there.

As the green tide spreads, it is also quite likely that more stringent rules and regulations are only a matter of time. In several locations that have become toxic nightmares, like San Francisco Bay and Seattle's Lake Union, changes are being enforced to clean up this mess, and we say, about time.

For the marina owners and operators looking to preempt costly changes that are mandated from on high, the time is now to get on the clean marina bandwagon. Far sighted boat yard owners are already improving the products and processes they use such as installing waste water filtration systems, employing safe cleaning agents or shifting to copper free paints in an effort to get ahead of the game.

The benefits of becoming a clean marina, in addition to doing the right thing, are many. The following information can shed more light on the subject.

For those of you who want to clean up your local marina, make your concerns known and encourage the powers that be to go green.

What is the Clean Marina Initiative?

The Clean Marina Initiative is a voluntary, incentive-based program promoted by NOAA and others that encourages marina operators and recreational boaters to protect coastal water quality by engaging in environmentally sound operating and maintenance procedures. While Clean Marina Programs vary from state to state, all programs offer information, guidance, and technical assistance to marina operators, local governments, and recreational boaters on Best Management Practices (BMPs) that can be used to prevent or reduce pollution. Marinas that participate in the Clean Marina Program are recognized for their environmental stewardship.

Why is the Clean Marina Initiative Important?

Clean Marina programs help reduce pollution to our coastal waters by encouraging environmentally-friendly marina and boating practices


Marinas and recreational boating are increasingly popular uses of coastal areas. The U.S. Coast Guard reported a 14% increase in recreational boating between 1990 and 1999. Because marinas are located right along the water's edge, pollutants created by marina activities are released directly into the water. Although not one of the leading sources of polluted runoff, pollution from marinas can have a significant impact on local water quality. Therefore, is it important to promote operation and maintenance practices that will prevent pollution from entering coastal waterways.

Benefits of a Clean Marina Program

A Clean Marina Program offers many benefits to marina operators and coastal areas participating in the program.

Benefits for Marinas Operators and Owners

  • Reduce waste disposal costs. The Best Management Practices (BMPs) will reduce the amount of wastes produced so disposal costs will be less.
  • Generate new sources of revenue. Studies have shown that Clean Marinas can charge slightly higher slip fees and have fewer vacancies.
  • Receive free technical assistance. Best Management Practices guidebooks, training workshops and on-site visits are available to marina operators. Often states will even offer on-site assistance for meeting regulatory requirements.
  • Reduce legal liabilities. By participating in the Clean Marina Program, marinas can ensure they are meeting all regulatory requirements, thus avoiding fines.
  • Enjoy free publicity. States recognize Clean Marinas through press releases, newsletters, and boating guides, etc.
  • Attract knowledgeable customers. Clean Marinas are aesthetically pleasing facilities that can attract responsible clientele that will follow good boating practices.
  • Improve water quality and habitat for living resources. The marina and boating industry depends on clean waters and a healthy coastal environment for their continued success.
  • Demonstrate marina is a good steward of the environment. Many states distribute special burgees and signs for Clean Marinas to display. Clean Marinas are also allowed to use the State's Clean Marina logo on all letterhead.

Benefits for State Coastal Managers and Others
Interested in Starting Clean Marina Programs

  • Educate boaters. The Clean Marina Program is an excellent way to reach out to recreational boaters and demonstrate how they can alter their own practices to minimize impacts on the marine environment.
  • Satisfy the requirements of the State Coastal Nonpoint Control Program. By developing a Clean Marina Program, a state will demonstrate a commitment to implement the marina management measures required by the joint NOAA/EPA program.
  • Improve Coordination. By joining in the Clean Marina Initiative, states and their partners will be able to join the growing network of Clean Marina Programs nationwide.

NOAA's Role in the Clean Marina Initiative

Many boaters prefer to patron clean marinas because they value clean coastal waters for boating and fishing.


NOAA, jointly responsible for administering the Coastal Nonpoint Control Program with EPA, plays an important role in protecting coastal waters from polluted runoff. The Coastal Nonpoint Program establishes a consistent set of management measures for all coastal states to use in controlling nonpoint source pollution. Management measures are designed to prevent or reduce runoff from a variety of sources, including marinas.

NOAA recognizes that the Clean Marina Initiative can serve a valuable role in protecting coastal waters from nonpoint source pollution and has promoted the program as a way for states to meet many of the marina management measure requirements under the Coastal Nonpoint Program. As a result, the Coastal Nonpoint Program has been responsible for driving the development of most of the state Clean Marina Programs existing today and developing a national interest in the Initiative. NOAA continues to support the Clean Marina Initiative through targeted grant funding to states developing Clean Marina Programs. Between FY01 and FY06, nearly $3 million went to support clean marina efforts.

For more information, contact cleanmarinas@noaa.gov.

March 05, 2008

What is Green Boating?

These days the term “green” is pretty fashionable. From cars to cleaning products, everybody is coming out with green versions of something or other. A way of life that was once associated with society’s fringe elements has worked its way into the most upscale neighborhoods and company board rooms. Automobiles that cost twice what a schoolteacher makes in a year are heading home from grocery stores and farmers markets full of organic vegetables, phosphate-free soap, and fair-trade clothing. Corporate America is realizing that acting green, and probably more importantly, being perceived as green might actually be profitable.

This is a good thing.
I think it is safe to say that the move towards environmentally friendly products and practices is not only alive and well, but gaining ground. The fact that a relatively boring industry like groceries has seen a 20% plus increase in the sale of organic items in the last few years is just one indicator that the movement is entering the mainstream. There is still a long way to go, of course,  but  like so many changes in societal behavior that are driven by the fact that they are the right thing to do, it is safe to say we are heading in the right direction.
How quickly we solve the problems brought on by mankind’s choices over the last century or so is the big question. It is one thing to be aware of a problem, and quite another to actually work to solve it through deeds.
“Green Boating” is about solving the problem. For too long now our planet’s waterways have been neglected. Raw sewage, chemical toxins, eternal plastic, and even nuclear waste have been dumped in our rivers and Ocean over the past century to the point that our aquatic treasures are in big trouble.
This shameful practice is really nothing new; almost every major city in history sprung up near the water. Egyptian dumped their trash in the Nile, Romans used the river Tiber as a sewer and a graveyrad, Londoners fouled the Thames, and so on throughout history.
The unique appeal of dumping trash in the water is that your junk usually passes out of sight rather quickly. The current whisks it away, tides pull it out to sea, and stuff sinks. Nowhere is the old cliché, “out of sight, out of mind”, more applicable than in describing mankind’s attitude towards water pollution.  
For most of history, Mother Nature could deal with mankind’s trash disposal methods. As disgusting as it may have been to smell any major metropolitan river in mid-summer two hundred years ago, given enough time,  Nature could clean things up. After all, the trash that found its way into these waters was almost exclusively biodegradable;  animal and human waste, bodily remains, plant materials, fabric, wood, etc...  These were the days before plastic, industrial chemicals, and all the other neat stuff we live with today. With plenty of bacteria and other natural processes in place the stinkiest waterways could heal themselves if they had enough time.
Not anymore.
Most of the modern world’s miracle products that find their way into the water do not break down in a very friendly way, if they break down at all. Despite marketing friendly words on your soap bottles like “biodegradable” or “earth friendly”, most modern cleaning products  not only persist in the water for years, many of them may actually alter the sexual development of wildlife and humans too. Heavy metals like copper have been used for years to make bottom paint for all types of vessels. As this stuff sloughs off and falls to the seafloor it does not just magically go away. The plastic bucket you accidently dropped over the side while washing your boat will be in the water in one form or another FOREVER.
As technology has evolved, our ability to cause irreparable environmental harm has done the same. Unless your time on the water is spent on a bamboo raft or a birch bark canoe, chances are the products you use to enjoy boating are adding to the problem. Greenboatblog and www.greenboatstuff.com hope to help change that.

The shortsightedness we humans have had regarding our waterways needs to change. When I think of the out of sight, out of mind way of doing things it reminds me of dealing with children. A young child who is not able to fully appreciate right from wrong has no trouble blaming their mistakes on an imaginary friend or a sibling who wasn’t in the room. The little kid who breaks the cookie jar and feels no remorse when they cover it up with the kitchen rug is acting a lot like the boater who looks over his shoulder as he "accidently" tosses his trash over the side.

It is time to stop acting like children. The stakes have changed. The repercussions of our actions today go far beyond making the old swimming hole a little ripe in August. Every day countless boat owners are causing harm to the environment that is very much avoidable. If you put just a few green boating ideas into practice, the world will be a little bit better off.  By simply acting like adults instead of children, we can make it possible for future generations of people and wild things to truly enjoy this big blue planet.
To get back to the question posed, the answer to  “What is green boating?” is far from simple. To some, green boating means abandoning technology completely and letting the wind fill your sails or your arms pull your oars. For others it involves taking the time to question how they run their ship and deciding to do things in a more environmentally friendly way.

At the heart of it, doing anything “green” requires you to look at your actions and how they affect the world around you. When it comes to spending time on the water all you need to do to be green is to consider how the things you do and the products you use may impact the stuff you are floating on.

Common sense, a little education, and applying the Golden Rule to Mother Nature is all you need to get started.