James "Doc" Lewis has been "messin about in boats" for as long as he can remember. He is owner/operator of BoatDocs1, a full-service boat detailing-yacht maintenance business serving the Emerald Coast region of Florida. To learn more about boats and keeping them looking their best visit his web site at: http://www.boatdocs1.com/ OK. We got it, the deck looks good, maybe not new, but a whole lot better than it's looked in recent memory.
So how do we keep it that way?
1. Keep it clean. One of the first things I learned, in the United States Coast Guard, was that decks needed to be cleaned every day. Not some days, not whenever you got the time, not just when there was an inspection due. Every day! They knew, and now you do too, that keeping a non-skid deck clean is much more than just a matter of aesthetics. Non-skid is designed to provide sure footing onboard, no matter what the conditions. Anything which comes between your soft soled, boat shoes and the non-skid decreases that sure footing and creates a hazardous condition.
Now we both know that your boat likely doesn't get the same amount of usage as a Coast Guard SAR boat (on the other hand they don't do a lot of fishing on theirs) but the principle is sound. If the dirt, grime, soot, and oil don't have time to soak in and dry they don't become a stain and wash off with little difficulty. Become lax, even a few times, and the stains build up and eventually become nearly impossible to remedy.
2. Never ever, not once, never, nope, uh uh, DO NOT (do I have your attention yet?) wear street shoes on a non-skid deck. Now I can hear you out there saying, "Who me, I always wear Topsiders on my boat." Congratulations! Where else do you wear those Topsiders? Now I know that 9 out of 10 of you are saying things like, in the car, into the store, just from the house, well, I did stop to get gas, and breakfast, and I had to pick up that new antenna, and bait, and . . . OK, we get the picture.
I suppose a better way to say it would be to only wear boat shoes on the boat. I take off my street shoes (which are Topsiders, by the way) as I get on a boat and either put on my boat shoes (shoes which are only used on a boat) or go barefoot, when washing.
If you follow Tip 2 faithfully and see to it that all of your passengers/guests do likewise (keep a few pair of cheap white soled sneakers onboard for unknowing souls) you will be amazed at how easily you will be able to follow Tip 1. Without the stuff which is tracked in from the street your boat and deck cleaning at the end of the voyage will be a relaxing time rather than a discouraging one.
2 1/2 This goes along with the above suggestion so I won't give it a whole number of it's own. If your boat/yacht has an engine compartment, which you can walk in, be sure to have a pair of "bilge shoes" which you put on when entering and pull off when leaving. Wear your boat shoes into the engine room one time and you'll be tracking oil and grease every other place you go aboard for a long time.