Getting a sail under a boat buck is all good.
Leon
Curwen wrote:New sailing term I learned here today...boat buck.
Hope the admiral does not convert that into shoe bucks.
RossCrikey wrote:J. When you first retire you're not supposed to make any critical decisions, or drink excessively for the first year!![]()
Racing sailboats might fit with that...![]()
Gonna be in BC in October.
R.
I'll talk to you at the MMOR. Going to do the trans-canada trek to visit friends and camp our way across. Plans not fully set yet.Highlander wrote:RossCrikey wrote:J. When you first retire you're not supposed to make any critical decisions, or drink excessively for the first year!![]()
Racing sailboats might fit with that...![]()
Gonna be in BC in October.
R.
where in BC r u gonna be in Oct. my boat will be docked in Victoria Harbour BC by sometime in Sept ,![]()
so maybe we can get together then ?
J
The tariffs differ based on precisely what the goods are, the cost of the goods, the country of final assembly and the country of origin. A sewing needle is classified differently than a piece of polyester sailcloth than an assembled sail, or a piece of cotton cloth. It's ridiculously complicated...sailboatmike wrote:From what I can make out from Canadian taxes there is no free trade agreement between USA and Canada.
If I understand it right, you have to pay import duties, gst and local taxes as if you made the purchase in Canada.
Im I correct in that assumption, just I was reading on the Sailrite website about them sending stuff into Canada
sailboatmike wrote:Seems like they have found a good little loophole in the customs and excise laws, so you buy it in the US and dont pay into duties into Canada, then you own it and are bringing it across the boarder as personal property or something to that effect, maybe take your boat across the boarder and come back with the new rudders and sails on the boat, how are they going to know if they are new sails??