By Steve WatersSun Sentinel
3:28 p.m. EDT, October 31, 2013
The Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show opened under partly cloudy skies Thursday as the biggest show yet in the event's 54-year history.
Howard Blitstein timed his visit from Costa Rica to see his mother in Fort Lauderdale with the boat show. "It's very busy for the first day," he said. "I've seen a lot of new center console-type boats that I never heard of. I'm impressed with the boats."
"I think it's awesome," said Rick Hauser, a boat show regular who came here from Thousand Oaks, Calif. "I think there's a better energy this year. The weather's better."
The show spreads over 3 million square feet at six sites.
"We've expanded the footprint quite a bit," said Skip Zimbalist of Show Management, which produces the boat show.
To make navigating the show easier, there are lots of new signs directing people where to go, as well as 20 "You are here" signs.
New this year: You have to show i.d., like a driver's license, to enter because of Port Everglades security concerns, so expect a longer wait to get in.
There was a long, but fast-moving line to enter Bahia Mar when the show opened at 10 a.m., but thereafter people were simply walking in the new show entrance on State Road A1A and getting right into the site.
There is about 70,000 more square feet of exhibit space outside the convention center at the new Sailfish Pavilion. The shuttle buses now drop off people at the pavilions' entrance.
There was a nice crowd inside the convention center, but the most people were at the Bahia Mar Yachting Center, which is the heart of the show.
Jim Mathie, of Deerfield Beach, has a 29-foot SeaVee, but was checking out the new SeaVees at the convention center, where he ran into former Dolphins great Jason Taylor, who owns two SeaVees.
"Great guy," said Mathie. "He actually was standing right next to me and we started talking. We talked about SeaVee and what a good quality boat it is."
It was the type of opening day that has Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jack Seiler singing the praises of the show and its $500 million economic impact to the city.
"I wake up on a day like today and it might be the best day ever made," Seiler said. "[The boat show] is the Super Bowl, it's your birthday, it's Christmas, it's Easter all rolled into one."
Among the new items on display inside the convention center are two big boats from SeaVee. The Miami company's 43 Walk Around was described as a really big center console with a house in the middle of it. The boat was designed for fishing in destinations such as the Marquesas or Dry Tortugas, west of Key West, according to marketing director John Caballero.
"At the end of the day, you can take a shower, cook a meal in the galley, sit down and eat at a table and then retire to the state room," Caballero said.
SeaVee also introduced its first stepped hull boat, the 390Z.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/...boat-show-new-twists-20131031,0,7213371.story