The Morning Call (Sunday)

Splurge in the Tropics: A Yacht of Your Own (Sort Of)

What you need to know to charter a sailboat in the Caribbean, even if you’re not a tycoon.

- By Christophe­r Hall

LAST APRIL, CHRIS Kotchick, a Scranton, Pa., oral surgeon, and his family spent a week on a chartered catamaran in the calm, clear waters off the British Virgin Islands. A crew of two — part of the deal — ran the show.

Until then, Dr. Kotchick said, the sum total of his nautical experience had been riding ferries. But his search for a vacation that would appeal to his wife, Bridget, a high school biology teacher, and their two teenage children led him to a 50-foot-long boat, which they used as a base for swimming, snorkeling, wake-boarding and scuba diving as they sailed from island to island. They slept onboard and mostly skipped onshore restaurant­s, wowed by the crewcooked meals that could be shared with their daughter, who has celiac disease.

For them the trip was an affordable splurge — just over $20,000.

“It wasn’t that much more than the blowout Disney World vacation we took when the kids were younger,” said Dr. Kotchick, adding that two others had joined the family on that trip. “And it was a lot more fun.”

Though the image of yachting in the Caribbean skews more oligarch than average Joe, the Kotchicks are closer to typical crewed yacht clients than the likes of Jeff Bezos aboard his schooner, which is more than 400 feet long and cost a reported $500 million. After a pandemic lull, more people of comfortabl­e, but not necessaril­y extraordin­ary, means are booking these trips, and the trend is edging higher. According to an April 2023 report from Fortune Business Insights, the global charter yacht market — including both crewed and sail-it-yourself, or bareboat, charters — is expected to grow 5.5 percent by 2030, with yachts under about 130 feet accounting for the largest share.

Because the cost includes a crew, passengers don’t need specialize­d maritime knowledge, which means the trips draw a variety of travelers.

“Some of our clients are more into active sports, and others prefer relaxing with a book or checking out onshore restaurant­s, bars and resorts,” said Carlos Andrade, a captain who, with his wife, first mate and chef, Maribel Ramirez, has run trips in the Caribbean and elsewhere for more than 30 years, most recently aboard their 44-foot catamaran, Alizé. “But all of them love the outdoors and simply being close to water.”

For Steve McCrea, a broker at the yacht charter agency Ed Hamilton & Co., the most common question from prospectiv­e clients is whether their kids will be bored on a boat.

“I tell them that, yes, it’s a sailing vacation,” said Mr. McCrea, who has been booking crewed Caribbean trips for 26 years, “but, in fact, it’s more like a floating resort on the move, with loads of activities, sports gear and great beaches where you can spend the day.”

Jim Grant, a broker at Carefree Yacht Charters, said passengers do not need to meet any specific benchmark of health or physical fitness.

“If you can comfortabl­y navigate jet travel to get to the boat,” Mr. Grant said, “you’ll be fine on board.”

‘It wasn’t that much more than the blowout Disney World vacation we took when the kids were younger. And it was a lot more fun.’

THE BASICS

In the Caribbean, crewed catamaran sailboats with their double hulls far outpace power boats and single-hull sailboats as the vessel of choice. “They’re more stable on the water, which is great for people without a lot of sailing experience,” Mr. Andrade, the yacht skipper, said. “And in terms of onboard space, they can’t be beat when you compare different kinds of boats of similar length.”

A boat’s size and age largely determine the cost of a charter, with price bumps occurring during the holidays. A weeklong trip for six passengers aboard an older catamaran with a crew of two starts around $2,500 per person for a vessel under 50 feet. In the Caribbean, the charter fee usually includes meals, alcohol and fuel. Only the customary 15 percent to 20 percent gratuity is extra.

Crewed charter trips can fill up fast. “For the best selection, you should think about booking at least six months in advance for popular times like spring break, Easter and Thanksgivi­ng,” said Els Kraakman, a British Virgin Islands-based broker with Waypoints Yacht Charters. “For Christmas and New Year’s, it can be more like a year.”

Unless you’re chartering a megayacht with its own gym and sauna, amenities are fairly uniform. They usually include Wi-Fi, air-conditioni­ng, music systems, swimming platforms, on-deck showers (in addition to those in cabin heads), motorized dinghies for water sports and transport to shore, and sports equipment like kayaks, stand-up paddle boards, and snorkeling and fishing gear.

Alfresco onboard dining is a big selling point, with galleys on many boats staffed by cooks with profession­al experience.

“The meals were fabulous,” said Steve Tyler, a retired process safety engineer from Kansas City, Mo., who recalled a chicken-coconut-cream curry served on the 51-foot catamaran in the British Virgin Islands that he chartered this year with his wife, Laura, and their daughters, ages 19 and 23. “Our daughters are so busy with their own lives,” Ms. Tyler, a retired editor, said. “It was wonderful for all of us to share three meals a day.”

USING A BROKER

Brokers arrange most crewed charter trips in the Caribbean, especially for first-time passengers, with the standard 15 percent broker’s fee being paid by the boat owner. Brokers can book virtually any yacht with a crew. The best of them, however, tend to work exclusivel­y with charters run either by boat owners themselves or a team dedicated full time to the boat — what some call true charters — as opposed to bareboat operations with a freelance captain and cook hired for a single trip. Many websites appear to offer brokerage services, but actually function more as booking sites.

“Real brokers talk with clients before booking to get a sense of who they are and what their expectatio­ns are for the trip,”

Mr. Grant said. “Based on those conversati­ons, they recommend boats and crews they actually know about from prior bookings, personal connection­s or visits to the annual charter yacht shows.” Many top brokers are members of profession­al associatio­ns like the Charter Yacht Brokers Associatio­n or the American Yacht Charter Associatio­n.

Matching crew to client is particular­ly important. In addition to running the boat and cooking meals, crew members act as hosts, concierges and de facto tour guides, and they can be in close quarters with clients, especially on smaller boats.

CHOOSING DESTINATIO­NS

When you consider that there are roughly 7,000 islands in the Caribbean region, choosing one or several for a crewed charter might seem daunting. But the Caribbean’s charter fleet is concentrat­ed in only a handful of locales with the right combinatio­n of good sailing and onshore services. Itinerarie­s tend to be similar no matter how big your boat is. In fact, smaller vessels often have an advantage in being able to travel and overnight in shallower, close-in waters that are off-limits to megayachts.

In the Bahamas, a popular destinatio­n that technicall­y lies in the Atlantic Ocean, boats (including power yachts) make trips from Nassau into the Exumas, a chain of 300-plus low islands and cays with few inhabitant­s and miles of beaches. The U.S. Virgin Islands, with National Park Service sites and other onshore attraction­s, boasts a significan­t charter fleet. In the Leeward Islands, Antigua and St. Martin appeal to those looking for serious ocean sailing and, in the case of St. Martin, especially the French side, good food. South of normal hurricane routes, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, a group of 32 cays and small agricultur­al islands, sees an influx of charter boats during what is peak hurricane season for many other Caribbean islands.

The top destinatio­n by far, however, is the British Virgin Islands, 50-plus diverse islands — some sparsely inhabited, others dotted with resorts and well-known watering holes — whose terrain ranges from green mountains to sugar-sand beaches.

On their separate trips, the Tylers and the Kotchicks each hopped around islands like Tortola, Jost Van Dyke and Virgin Gorda, and made the longer sail to more remote Anegada, home to vibrant pink flamingos.

For the Tylers, the British Virgin Islands trip, which ran about $20,000, was most likely a once-in-a-lifetime vacation.

“It was expensive,” Laura Tyler said, “but definitely worth it in terms of the memories we created.”

The Kotchicks, however, aren’t ruling out another crewed charter.

“I’d do it again in a heartbeat,” Dr. Kotchick said. “The only question is where.”

 ?? STEVE MCCAULEY ?? After a pandemic lull, more people of comfortabl­e, but not necessaril­y extraordin­ary, means are chartering crewed boats in the Caribbean. Above, the yacht Bluewinds, anchored off St. Thomas.
STEVE MCCAULEY After a pandemic lull, more people of comfortabl­e, but not necessaril­y extraordin­ary, means are chartering crewed boats in the Caribbean. Above, the yacht Bluewinds, anchored off St. Thomas.
 ?? LEIGH ANN BLANKENHOR­N ?? South of normal hurricane routes, St. Vincent and the Grenadines sees an influx of charter boats during what is peak hurricane season for many other Caribbean islands. Robert Sargeant, captain of the C’est La Vie, delivered cocktails to guests as they floated near the catamaran.
LEIGH ANN BLANKENHOR­N South of normal hurricane routes, St. Vincent and the Grenadines sees an influx of charter boats during what is peak hurricane season for many other Caribbean islands. Robert Sargeant, captain of the C’est La Vie, delivered cocktails to guests as they floated near the catamaran.

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