
| « Read Last Month's Issue |
Monday, September 6, 2010 |
Falling into the spirit of the season!
Fall and winter are awesome times to houseboat and this holiday season may be the perfect time to bring your crew together and get away from it all. Holiday season already? Can you feel it coming? It seems like the summer season just began yesterday. Where did the year go?
Discover how the lower sun angle during the day seems to bring the colors alive. See how the stars are coming out at night now like no other time of year. Find the lakes less crowded (less competition for your favorite spot too) and best of all, the water is still warm enough for all of your favorite water sports.
Join us this month as we take a cooler look at "the desert lakes" - Lake Mead, Lake Powell, Lake Mohave and Lake Amistad, and explore the possibilities of fall and winter on the water.
Re-live the story of the lost ring and discover the long quest and romantic victory of one couple's ordeal on the water. (see the video) Break out your cameras, upload those photos, send us your stories and share some of your "ultimate insiders' houseboating tips."
Read our Top-5 list at your own risk (you may get hungry) and warm up to the flavors of the season. There are also some great specials and promotions available. Welcome back to Waterways!
Happy Houseboating!
|
|
Special Offers and Fall Houseboat Get-Away Packages
Get on the phone and tell the whole family that the turkey is on the water this year!
It's still not too late to round up your family & friends and take advantage of the Thanksgiving Special which features five days for the price of three!
This delicious package even includes a turkey!
(Fair warning, we provide the fully equipped kitchen and the turkey, you provide the family and the cook.)
Click on in and take a look at all of the tempting special offers and houseboat vacation packages available just in time for Fall and the holidays.
You'll find savings on a wide range of dates, houseboat types and marina locations.
Click here for Special Offers and Houseboat Vacation Packages
|
|
Send in YOUR top photos!
Whether your camera is big or small, simple or complex, why not join in the fun and upload and share some of your favorite vacation memories.
Pick out your favorite houseboating memory. Action, adventure, people with scenery, houseboating activities, true challenges, friends and family, and just plain old great times are what we are looking for! (and don't forget the scenic ones too.)
So look through your photos and share your favorites. Go ahead, write your own captions and upload away!
The best shots and captions will be featured on foreverhouseboats.com and who knows, you may even win a Free Early Board prize for your next houseboat rental.
Click here to upload your best photo
|
|
Lakes in the desert promise year 'round houseboating fun
Warm up to fall and winter on the scenic desert lakes of Arizona, Nevada and Texas. Discover why long time houseboaters ply these waters year round and why some will tell you that the cold months are the "real gem time to go!" The water is still warm enough to play in during the day with all your favorite watersports and the evening air temps make jumping into the hot tub on the top deck at night extra enticing. (see air/water temp chart below)
Enjoy the intense colors of these desert lakes as they come alive during the fall and winter months. The sun's angle and lower intensity seems to make the colors more vibrant and shadows longer. Watch some spectacular evening sunsets that fade from hues of pink and then gold. Then watch as they take on deep hues of peacock blue before introducing night time skies that seem to light up with stars, planets and meteors.
Average Fall/Winter Air & Water Temps
• The Desert Lakes • |
| Month |
High |
Low |
Water |
| Oct |
81° |
56° |
71° |
| Nov |
66° |
43° |
64° |
| Dec |
56° |
35° |
57° |
| Jan |
57° |
35° |
53° |
| Feb |
64° |
39° |
53° |
| All fall/winter temps in Fahrenheit and averaged historically. Sources: weather.com / nps.gov |
|
Spread out and take in all of the open space for you and your crew to enjoy with fewer people sharing these sparkling clear waters. You may even feel like you have your own private lake to enjoy at times. Your biggest problem may be deciding which deserted cove to beach your boat in at night.
Learn more about these desert lakes and the full service marinas that await you by clicking the links below:
|
Lake Powell

|
|
Catch a great sunset!

|
|
Lake Mead

|
|
Lake Mohave

|
|
The Lost Ring
The story began nine years ago when a close group of friends went on their annual houseboating trip to Lake Oroville in California. They had brought along their newly engaged friends, Joelle and Todd. Everyone was having a great trip as usual until... One warm day in the sun, the group was playing "keep away." Joelle, the bride to be, threw the ball with such energy that the ring on her finger went with the ball, flew through the air, hit the water, and slowly disappeared into the lake.
Joelle was so dumbstruck with what had just occurred that
she couldn't speak! Her fiancée, Todd, thought something had happened to her and kept asking if she was OK. She couldn't
get the words to come out of her mouth to tell Todd that she had
just literally flung her engagement ring off her finger... into the
lake!
The group rented dive equipment and dove for several days
in a vain effort to find that special ring. The attempts were
futile. Over the subsequent nine years on the annual houseboat trips, the couples' friend, Rick, rented diving equipment, as they had the first year, and looked for the ill fated ring, "more for fun than expecting to actually find it."
However, prior to this year's trip and after reviewing old photos
and descriptions of the event, Rick and his friends were determined
to seek it out... to find the ring once again. "Just for fun."
The water levels were way down from where they were nine years ago so this time Rick decided to explore the shoreline which was now exposed underneath where they had once floated. He went to the area where he thought they had been, climbed a sheer cliff wall and walked out on the bank with another cliff directly above him. He had a decision to go right or left, he went right and looked down. And there it was, sitting right there on a rock... right in front of him!
Rick was beaming as he held up the newly found diamond engagement ring. The first thing he did was attach it to a key float. He decided that since he would be seeing his friends Joelle and Todd in a couple of weeks in San Francisco for Todd's 40th surprise birthday party, he would present it to the lucky couple at that time.
The return of that special ring, the ring that Todd had proposed to Joelle with, was a tear jerker for everyone at the party. (You can watch the video of the reunion at the YouTube link below.) The happy couple was amazed and thrilled to have a such a wonderful surprise from their dear friend, Rick. It just goes to show that low lake levels, combined with undying friendship, can bring new and interesting discoveries, and much happiness too!
Congrats once again to Todd and Joelle and "good on ya" Rick!
Click here to view the video
|
|
Keeping Your Waterways Clean
You will find them out there every fall at Nevada's Callville Bay, Cottonwood
Cove, Arizona's Temple Bar and Willow Beach Marinas. Certified divers put on air tanks in an underwater
search for flotsam and jetsam (stuff) while their "landlubber"
counterparts scour beaches, coves, and shorelines for
debris and detritus, anything that should not be there.
And, boy, do they find interesting stuff! "What about a set of dentures
or a very old fuel sign from days gone by that offered
gasoline for $1.06 a gallon," said Kim Roundtree, Willow
Beach General Manager, where they've done the dive
cleanups for 6 years. "One year we had a flash flood that
washed a whole 6-yard dumpster into the water --- we had
to inflate pontoons under it to bring it to the surface, but
we got it out."
At Callville Bay Marina, they do their underwater ecology
dive in the fall in addition to the Earth Day beach
cleanup they do in the spring. "We've done it for 9 years now,"
said Safety Manager Kimberly Wilson. "Our average
removal totals about 7,500 pounds and ranges from
the usual beverage cans and soda bottles to things like
marine batteries, lost boat parts, and old metal work from
who knows what. Our volunteers have also located and
retrieved what was left of a burned out boat hull."
At Lake Mohave's Cottonwood Cove Marina, staff and
volunteers have worked together to keep waters there
clean for twelve years. "It's something we look forward
to each fall," said Barbara Hunsaker, who participates in
every cleanup... from dry land. "I don't swim, but I pick
up a lot of trash along the shore." The Cottonwood effort
yields in excess of a ton of trash every year, from watches
and wallets to fish poles, landing nets, and boat motors
that all went overboard and sunk out of sight.
"Certified divers from local dive shops, clubs, and
organizations welcome the opportunity to log more hours
in the water," said Darla Cook, Vice President of Public Relations & Special Events. "Divers head underwater throughout the slips
where customer boats are moored, bringing trash to the
surface where boat volunteers retrieve it, and others
clean up beaches and scour coves."
Here are some of the results for the first 10 years of the effort:
• 117,704 pounds of trash were collected.
• 773 divers went down looking.
• 2267 land volunteers worked the shorelines.
All total, over 22,740 volunteer hours were logged.
And... to top it all off, everyone who helped out got fed too!
We can't thank these tireless volunteers enough. They do a great service for our lakes and help us all keep America's favorite Waterways pristine for all of our vacation getaways. Thanks!
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
Smiling yet? |
|

Click on in to the season and put a smile on your face! It's so easy to review marinas, boat styles, available dates and prices to schedule your perfect getaway.
The holidays are coming, are you?
Click here to explore the possibilities
|
 |
Made for you
|
|

All Forever Houseboats are designed and built from the bottom up in our company owned factory with you in mind. They are quite literally "made for you." Each houseboat is also tailored to the waterways on which it will serve.
These modern houseboats are designed to be fuel efficient, have minimal impact on the environment, and offer you comforts only dreamed about a few years ago.
Some of the common features "made for you" in the Forever Fleet are:
All models have a canopy on the top deck.
Fresh water tanks are large, big enough for most trips.
All controls are at the helm.
Fresh linens are always included.
Kitchens are fully equipped.
There is a gas grill on every boat.
All models include a waterslide!
Also "made for you" are a series of Houseboating Orientation Videos to help you get a head start before you even leave home. Enjoy topics like Welcome Aboard, What to Bring, Starting the Engines, Rules of the Road, Houseboat Safety, In Case of an Emergency, and Houseboating and the Environment.
Click here to learn more about the different houseboat models and to see the series of orientation videos.
|
 |
The grill is empty, now what?
|
|

Last month we shared some grilled shrimp tips from Lorraine in Laredo, Texas. The month before that we shared some mouth watering burger tips from George in Phoenix, Arizona.
It's your turn now.
Why not? Go ahead, take a minute or two and send us your favorite grilling tips. Better yet, send your other "ultimate insider's houseboating tips" too so we can share them with everyone else in the Waterways family!
Send em' all!
Packing tips.
Cooking tips.
Grilling tips.
Favorite activities.
Time tested traditions.
Favorite houseboat features.
Special memories.
Send in your "ultimate insider houseboating tips" to: waterways@foreverhouseboats.com
|
 |
Get ready for the stars, look up!
|
|

Cooler air temperatures in the fall and winter make some of America's favorite waterways ideal locations for stargazing. Make the most of your evenings on the water and count the planets, find the constellations or catch a shooting star.
You won't be alone either. Just look up at all of those stars blinking down at you. Look a bit longer and you may even start to see the differences between the stars and planets. Kick back in your hot tub on the top deck long enough and you may even see the space station fly overhead!
Enjoy this year's best meteor showers with their spectacular streams (trails) and swarms (clusters) on these dates: Orionids October 2 - November 7 (before midnight) Leonids November 10-21 Geminids December 7-17 (sunset on)
Don't forget the moon. While a full moon rising above the water just after sunset can be a spectacular end to your day, it can also dim some of the best stargazing too. Here are the fall/winter full moon dates:
"Beaver Moon" November 2 (Mon)
"Cold Moon" December 2 (Wed)
"Blue Moon" December 31 (Thurs)
"Wolf Moon" January 30 (Sat)
"Hunger moon" or "Snow Moon"February 28 (Sun)
Learn more about the moon Learn more about meteors
|
Portside Musing |
|
"A man who does not dream will not go far in life. But a man who sleeps too much is considered lazy. Go figure." |
The Top-5 Fall Flavors |
|
Can't you just smell em'? These fall flavors could be drifting through your houseboat to warm your crews' senses throughout the day.
Sweet rolls with icing, warmed up in the morning to wake everyone up with a sweet aroma.
Stew simmering all day. Filled with hearty ingredients, your crew won't be able to wait for lunch.
Afternoon cheese, fruit and crackers, to keep everyone's palate warm with a glass of wine or cup of tea.
Chili and corn bread, a hearty supper to fill in the hunger and bring the gang back around the table.
Dark chocolate brownies, cooked after dinner for the best night cap you could smell or eat.
Hungry yet? |
October 2009 Edition |
|
|