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#1 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Bear Island
Posts: 1,766
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And I already have 5 camera lenses pointed at my property and available to the public. |
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#2 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: On the move...
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Quote:
This spring I've been photographing some houses out of interest in landscaping and architechure. Out of interest, I have done some research on waterfront requirements for swim lines, docks, beaches, landscaping, etc. I'm waiting on feedback from the State on slope requirements as during my photo quest I stumbled onto something by chance but then see a lot of it occuring. If I had my way, nobody should be able to build on the lake. Every shore front home contributes to water quality issues and blight of the shoreline. It's a finite resource that is being raped. |
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#3 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Moultonboro, NH
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It is a good thing for many of us that you don't have your way, but you are right. Each shore front home is contributing to the very evident decline of water quality. Everyone with shore front property should minimize their impact as much as possible. Perhaps a topic for a new thread, but here are the basics. Upgrade your septic system if needed, so effluents do not leach into the lake. Don't use fertilizer. Remove dog poop near the lake. Keep as much shoreline vegetation as possible. Look at how water runs off your property during heavy rains, and slow its entry into the lake where possible. For the blight problem, plant trees between buildings and the lake and camouflage your house with a woodsy color. And in an attempt to touch the topic at hand, keep your mooring balls and floats more than 150' from common boat routes.
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#4 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Bear Island
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Quote:
Now if you want to talk about my power boat, you may have a point. |
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#5 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: On the move...
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#6 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Bear Island
Posts: 1,766
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It is possible to build and maintain a home with little or no impact on the environment. Landscaping and green lawns are not necessary or appropriate in the vicinity of a lake. Many waterfront homeowners understand this and act accordingly. Unfortunately some people don't have a clue or don't care. |
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#7 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 241
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Well, let’s look on the bright side. (The cup half full)
They could discover a large deposit of oil underneath the lake and then convince everyone that it’s safe to drill. (Another pathetic attempt at humor.) |
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#8 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Moultonborough
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Thank you for being one of those that cares. |
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#9 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
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Just because water can run under the house, does not mean that it is not affecting the run-off of your lot. A house consentrates rain water into specific areas (drip lines) when it hits the roof and runs off. Unless you capture all the water from your roof and any decks, then dump it all into a leaching system, but I doubt that. Having a house on piers does not count and make sure you do not have any gravel or crushed stone for anything on the property as those materials also do not count for a pervious surface. |
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KBoater (06-08-2010) | ||
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#10 | |
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And a lot of people don't realize that a gravel/crushed stone driveway is not pervious. There's a reason the pot holes don't drain...... |
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#11 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Moultonboro, NH
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The point is, Bear Islander is trying and can point to best practices in place. The claim of "no impact" is probably not correct - but that is an impractical goal anyway. If everyone tried to reduce their impact, as appropriate to their situation, we'd be better off. Many properties were not built with ecology in mind and we can't expect everyone to make their property the way it should be. Education is the first step. Compliance with the shoreline protection act is another step.
As for swim platform permits, I'm all for small fees for the state, to help them out financially. The state is hurting for money for a variety of reasons. However, as ishoot308 points out, there is already a law that should be sufficient.
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Pine Island Guy (06-07-2010) | ||
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#12 | |
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Senior Member
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#13 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Texas, Lake Ray Hubbard and NH, Long Island Winnipesaukee
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So of course I see another storm brewing here. And I sit back and think to myself didn't this all come up a few years ago????
It was 3 or 4 years ago we went through this dam process with swim rafts and then it all disappeared. Well now it is back again. Now what concerns me here, is not that it has come up again. Or that it has come up again at all. Personally I look at this like a morning. I have always wondered why I had to get a morning permit but didn't have to worry about a a swim raft. It never made a sense. The bigger question is why did this go away and now come up again. My guess is that there is someone high up in the world that has a neighbor that is ticking him off with a swim raft.... whether that it a big and ugly inflatable job, or just located poorly who knows. but the bottom line is this. Most of these laws come about because of complaints. The marine patrol, and the legislature gets tired of hearing them, and finally someone high enough up the food chain complains and bingo we get a new law. So what is the bottom line. People especially neighbors need to talk to each other. For goodness sake, if your nieghbor puts a swim raft out that may be a hazard say something to him.... if it effects you say something to him. You don't have to be rude, or obnoxious, you just have to talk about it. The reason, this country is turning into such a nanny state is because people can't and will not talk to each other anymore. People didn't have problems years ago because they talked. I have great nieghbors at the lake.... do we talk every weekend no.... do we all know each other YES!!!!.... are any of us afraid to approach each other about something??? NO!!!!.... why... because we all want to make our slice of heaven enjoyable. I noticed a few years ago that some neighbors where doing somethings like fertilizing with fertilizers containing phosphorous.... no I didn't run over and yell and scream and tell them they were killing the lake.... but one afternoon while visiting and talking we got on the subject of kids getting rashes... which they immediately blamed on duck itch.... which I agreed with, and I also noted, not pointing any fingers that with all the new lawns in the area fertilizers may be causing some issues too.... The inquired as to what in fertilizers might not be good for the lake, I informed them, and they listened to what I had to say, and thanked me for the information. I didn't point fingers, I didn't blame, I talked, I informed,..... people need to socialize... neighborhoods, need to become neighborhoods again.
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Life is about how much time you can spend relaxing... I do it on an island that isn't really an island..... |
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#14 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Isola Gatto Nero
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Welcome to the neighborhood!
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La vita è buona su Isola Gatto Nero |
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#15 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
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Everyone has a problem. Call in a lawyer. You can sue Google because they gave you bad walking directions. (in the news yesterday).
When are the courts going to wise up and throw these cases out and fine the lawyer. Your right, talk to them but shoot the lawyer first. (not really , but). People are getting weird around here. |
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#16 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Bear Island
Posts: 1,766
Thanks: 32
Thanked 441 Times in 207 Posts
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#17 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: On the move...
Posts: 987
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#18 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
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The house and deck ARE NOT "pervious" surfaces. The soil below is pervious, the soil under my full foundation is also pervious, but because my house is over the top of it, it is not allowed to react to water how it should and therefore I have perimeter drains to transfer the water to a location that will allow it to leach properly. The soil under your house will not handle any form of heavy surface run off. There is simply nothing to hold it in place. I have no intension of further derailing this thread as it seams to be a hot botton issue and should be discussed. I was simply correcting your statement as it was written. |
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#19 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
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First may I say that I once served aboard the USS Constitution (Old Ironsides). Cool gig!
But the document. Psycho, we are a naion of laws but the US Constitution is a set of laws directed not at the people but at the government. The people who wrote it were affraid of too much government control, they had just gotten rid of a King. The document was written to insure that the government (federal) would not control our lives. But they never tought about the NH legislature in todays age. Laws are being passed by a legislative body in Concord that effect people on NH waters yet very, very few of these legislatures have any experiance on the subject. Put an environmental or safety spin on a law and without reguard to common sence it passes. My representative has a bill in that affects the bay that I live on yet she admits that she has never been there or seen it and I noted that she can't even spell it's name correctly. It is too easy for evasive laws to slip through the halls in Concord. IMO. Misty Blue. |
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#20 | |
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The constitution set the frame-work for us to establish laws as we see fit. If the people decide the laws are too burdensom, we can remove them from office and repeal those laws. That's the ability our 'new' nation gained..... Let me just tell you that when it comes to environmental laws, I travel for work and get to see first hand the places that have little or no environmental standards. Smog, severely polluted water, and that's just the stuff you see. Nothing like going to a beach and seeing entire bags of garbage crashing into the shores. So while we can all argue about governmental intervention, I'll take the US regulations any day. We can open an entirely different thread on "how laws get passed" and the slimy stuff that happens. I'm talking Concord and Disgusta. The reality is that the swim raft permit is not some huge intrusion into your daily life. A raft gives you the ability to place an object on state property and stating where you are going to put it is not a huge burden. Can the procedure be streamlined, I don't know. However, allowing homeowners to put a raft where ever they please is a recipe for trouble as well. Don't believe me, lets go five years with raft locations, sizes, etc completely unregulated. Put them where ever you want. What do you think the result will be? |
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#21 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: NH
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The idea of freedom is that you can do anything you want, unless and until it intrudes on someone elses freedom. It's not a perfect rule but it works for most things. |
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#22 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
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Haven't swim rafts been on the lake w/out permits for years? I think the 5 years w/out permits was up many many years ago. I'm sure there are problems between neighbors as to placement of swim rafts but as stated the MP can be called and they will decide if the swim raft is a navigational hazard or not and I know because I've seen this situation happen. Are swim rafts on Lake Winni so problematic that the legislatures should be spending their time trying to pass a law? IMHO....NO!
~A proud lakefront homeowner with a swimraft that is not a navigational hazard to anyone and is thoroughly enjoyed and used by all my neighbors. |
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#23 | |
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By having a standard and requiring documentation stating where it's going to be placed can reduce the need to call the MP and any fueding between neighbors. Problematic? I don't know. A huge burden? I don't think so. |
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#24 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
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L.P.;
You keep mentioning that there is no standard but there is...Swim rafts must be no more than 150' from shore and must stay within your waterfront shore boundaries. And if you own waterfront in a channel or heavily navigated area you can't put one out. You can't just put a swim raft anywhere you want like you keep alluding to. Dan |
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KonaChick (06-10-2010) | ||
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#25 | |
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Senior Member
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#26 | |
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BTW I like this part ... (i) No permit for a swim raft shall be approved which : (5) Diminishes the residential, recreational or scenic value of the public water in light of the competing uses for enjoyment of the public water. So is a purple raft allowed ... or not ? And if I had 41' of frontage ... would I apply for a swim tube permit ??
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Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
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#27 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Dover, NH
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Just a few clarifications for the readers of this thread.
The proposal on the table is an Administrative Rule being proposed by the Department of Safety, specifically the New Hampshire Marine Patrol. It is not a bill or law bering proposed or introduced in the Legislature. Administrative Rules have the effect of law if they are adopted. Currently there are no rules or standards governing swim rafts. The Administrative Rule that covered swim rafts, Saf-C 404.09, was rescinded on April 25 of 2006, leaving no rules in place since then. As a sidenote, the current swim raft proposal mirrors in many respects the current Administrative Rule (Saf-C 404.08) that governs swim lines. The process for adopting an Administrative Rule is lengthy and can be quite complicated. Depending on it's path it can or cannot include action by the State Legislature. If you click HERE you can go to a page that gives you further explanations and a nifty flow chart (.pdf file) of how a rule is formulated. The time is now to contact the Department of Safety, using the links already provided by other posters, to let your opinions, suggestions and ideas be considered by the Department of Safety. You are also free to contact your local State Legislator if you have concerns. hope this helps clear this up a bit.... Skip |
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#28 |
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Now this is where legislators are dumb. Writing a 'rule' that is nearly impossible to enforce simply because of the way it was written. Does anyone do idiot checks on these before they go up for a vote.... wait, don't answer that.
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#29 | |
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But back on topic, I agree, the registration is not necessary in order for MP to keep swimming rafts in order. It is just another law we don't need and won't help one darn bit. I have been spending the last few weeks reviewing government regulations and I am so sick of them, I can't tell you. IMHO they don't do a darn thing anyway when something really happens. Consider BP and the oil mess in the Gulf. I am sure they were regulated to death and look at all the good it did. |
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#30 |
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Location: NH
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It's so tempting to have a little schadenfreude with some of the people who pushed that other law, but it's a bad idea. This law is stupid for the same reason the other one is, trying to use arbitrary numbers. We have a law that covers obstructions to navigation. Anyone who puts a swim raft where it obstructs naviagation, in the opinion of the Marine Patrol (or pick another arbiter) gets a warning and then a fine. No new law needed.
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#31 | |
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Senior Member
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Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
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Dan |
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