Difference between revisions of "Hitchhiking a boat"

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If you want to hitch on a boat, you will find a way if you try hard enough, but it will take you a lot of time. You can try hanging out at the harbor for a week, talking to almost anyone, possibly finding a pub where sailors tend to drink their beer.
 
If you want to hitch on a boat, you will find a way if you try hard enough, but it will take you a lot of time. You can try hanging out at the harbor for a week, talking to almost anyone, possibly finding a pub where sailors tend to drink their beer.
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'''Hitchhiking a ferry''' is easy. Simply ask truck drivers if you can enter the ferry in their truck, they usually only have to pay for the vehicle.
  
 
==Weblinks with information==
 
==Weblinks with information==

Revision as of 15:35, 17 April 2007

Hitchhiking a boat is a bit like hitchhiking a plane. There are not so many boats...

Your best chances are to become part of the crew.

In the Caribean it's not too hard to find sail boats that need an extra hand on deck.

If you want to hitch on a boat, you will find a way if you try hard enough, but it will take you a lot of time. You can try hanging out at the harbor for a week, talking to almost anyone, possibly finding a pub where sailors tend to drink their beer.

Hitchhiking a ferry is easy. Simply ask truck drivers if you can enter the ferry in their truck, they usually only have to pay for the vehicle.

Weblinks with information


These sites might prove useful: