Most people see hurricanes and large storms as something very dangerous, and the potential for natural disasters of epic proportion is always a risk.
Sometimes the ocean appears to be unpredictable, and it is a force to be reckoned with, as mankind has learned throughout the ages.
In the summer of 2012 Hurricane Isaac made landfall near New Orleans Louisiana.
It was overhyped by the media, perhaps because it delayed the Republican National Convention for a day as it displayed its ominous strength and size.
Now then, in every crisis there is opportunity, and whereas, I would never wish a hurricane on anyone, having been in the boat detailing and cleaning business, I realize how much business it brings for future services.
If you own a boat cleaning and detailing business there is a lot of money to be made after the storm.
It hardly matters if you are here the United States along the coast, or in any other nation which has a coastline.
There was an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal on August 29, 2012 titled; "China's Next Frontier: Yachts" by Laurie Burkitt which described what most in the yacht building industry have already been experiencing in the last few years.
Okay so, what does this mean? It means there are more people buying yachts and boats in places like China and throughout the Asian markets.
Someone has to clean all that equipment, and in Asia they pummeled by storms three times as hard as we do in the United States, and they get large typhoons hitting every single year, it's practically guaranteed.
What I'm saying is this; it doesn't matter where the world you are, there is always money in boat detailing and cleaning after a storm hits.
There is often debris inside the boats, and new water lines which are quite visible, no one wants a beautiful yacht which is completely filthy, slimy, and has debris all over it.
Best of all, much of that debris is very easy to clean with a pressure washer, most of it comes off easy, as it hasn't been on too long, and every single boat in the entire marina needs those detailing services once the skies clear.
Having been in both the boat detailing and car detailing business I can say this; after a wildfire there are soot marks all over the cars, and after a big storm there is debris all over the boats.
It doesn't matter where you are; there is a lot of money in cleaning up after catastrophes and storms, even small ones.
Please consider all this and think on it.
Sometimes the ocean appears to be unpredictable, and it is a force to be reckoned with, as mankind has learned throughout the ages.
In the summer of 2012 Hurricane Isaac made landfall near New Orleans Louisiana.
It was overhyped by the media, perhaps because it delayed the Republican National Convention for a day as it displayed its ominous strength and size.
Now then, in every crisis there is opportunity, and whereas, I would never wish a hurricane on anyone, having been in the boat detailing and cleaning business, I realize how much business it brings for future services.
If you own a boat cleaning and detailing business there is a lot of money to be made after the storm.
It hardly matters if you are here the United States along the coast, or in any other nation which has a coastline.
There was an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal on August 29, 2012 titled; "China's Next Frontier: Yachts" by Laurie Burkitt which described what most in the yacht building industry have already been experiencing in the last few years.
Okay so, what does this mean? It means there are more people buying yachts and boats in places like China and throughout the Asian markets.
Someone has to clean all that equipment, and in Asia they pummeled by storms three times as hard as we do in the United States, and they get large typhoons hitting every single year, it's practically guaranteed.
What I'm saying is this; it doesn't matter where the world you are, there is always money in boat detailing and cleaning after a storm hits.
There is often debris inside the boats, and new water lines which are quite visible, no one wants a beautiful yacht which is completely filthy, slimy, and has debris all over it.
Best of all, much of that debris is very easy to clean with a pressure washer, most of it comes off easy, as it hasn't been on too long, and every single boat in the entire marina needs those detailing services once the skies clear.
Having been in both the boat detailing and car detailing business I can say this; after a wildfire there are soot marks all over the cars, and after a big storm there is debris all over the boats.
It doesn't matter where you are; there is a lot of money in cleaning up after catastrophes and storms, even small ones.
Please consider all this and think on it.
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