New Boat Show in February 2022 at the NEC Birmingham

laika

Well-known member
Joined
6 Apr 2011
Messages
8,209
Location
London / Gosport
Visit site
Should be well supported. What's it like up north ?
game-of-thrones-the-wall-history-03.jpg
 

st599

Well-known member
Joined
9 Jan 2006
Messages
7,571
Visit site
Seems a silly time to have it, they'll be luck to get their Carnet cleared from Düsseldorf in time. Companies will have an interesting choice - massive show or NEC.
 

Concerto

Well-known member
Joined
16 Jul 2014
Messages
6,153
Location
Chatham Maritime Marina
Visit site
Seems a silly time to have it, they'll be luck to get their Carnet cleared from Düsseldorf in time. Companies will have an interesting choice - massive show or NEC.
Travel to the show and back in a day (for most visitors) or book a flight and a hotel room in the EU at a far greater cost in time and money? If not looking for a new boat, then I doubt many will choose Boot over NEC. If we really think about who visits a boat show, only a very small percentage will be actively looking to buy a boat. Most of us like looking at new boats, possibly considering them a potential purchase in the future when they start entering the secondhand market. Generally most boat owners are looking at equipment for updating their current boats. Doing this at Boot would be expensive and probably have exactly the same main suppliers, but with the added difference of no longer being part of the same free trade area.
 

Daydream believer

Well-known member
Joined
6 Oct 2012
Messages
21,263
Location
Southminster, essex
Visit site
It’s also where a lot of the charter companies and sailing holiday operators do their business for the summer season.
So we can expect 35% canal boats & BBQ equipment with a sprinkling of plastic chairs & umbrellas with pineapples painted on them :rolleyes:
Then by the time 10% is made up of paddle boards & wetsuit supplies, another 25% of Sunseeker et allia we can have the rest filled with expensive RIBS that no one wants, one chandler taking a risky punt & possible a few sailing clothes stands ( look for the dolly birds). Raymarine & Co. selling electronics, with staff who do not have a clue what the stuff does, other than make pretty pictures on a screen. ( Seems to attract the punters thougho_O )
Back in 2001 I bought my oak dinning table & chairs at LIBS. Excellent buy. Worth going.
Wonder if there will be any sailing boats :unsure:- Probably something about 70 ft that no one can afford, but all comment on knowingly== as if??
 
Last edited:
  • Haha
Reactions: pvb

longjohnsilver

Well-known member
Joined
30 May 2001
Messages
18,840
Visit site
I recall going to a boat show at NEC about 30 years ago. There weren’t many boats on show, and iirc it only lasted a year or 2. Hopefully this will be better supported.
 

laika

Well-known member
Joined
6 Apr 2011
Messages
8,209
Location
London / Gosport
Visit site
Travel to the show and back in a day (for most visitors) or book a flight and a hotel room in the EU at a far greater cost in time and money? If not looking for a new boat, then I doubt many will choose Boot over NEC.

I think st599's post you quote was about the convenience of the show's timing for exhibitors rather than visitors, ie 2.5 weeks after Boot. Wasn't that one of the issues for the London show? i.e. Boot was bigger, better and attracted more people so if an exhibitor had to pick one, they'd go with Boot. However the London show was much closer to (overlapped?) Boot and 2.5 weeks would seem to be plenty to shift a stand (not that I know anything about events management).

Boot would still be a great trip if researching a purchase rather than actually making it: all the major manufacturers are there (unlike the latter days of the London show). A really big show you need at least a couple of days. Making a weekend of it and travelling the night before means you don't miss the first couple of hours with travelling. Moreover I could get from a desk in canary wharf via city airport to an air b n b near Messe Düsseldorf in a similar (maybe less) time than it would take me to get to the NEC

The friend I've been to Boot with for the past couple of years isn't bothering next year because of the hassle of importing purchases (ie supporting Concerto's view here), but I'm presuming if they're big enough purchases the supplier will send them VAT free for VAT to be paid by the courier on import. Having said that the lack of UK sailing schools, holiday providers, marinas etc. would make Boot less attractive than a big UK show for many. Not sure I'll be trekking up to Birmingham next year: maybe the following year if forumites declare next years' a success.
 

Bru

Well-known member
Joined
17 Jan 2007
Messages
14,679
svpagan.blogspot.com
"the show has space for boats up to 45 foot" according to the blurb

So that's most new narrowboats ruled out and at least half the seagoing yacht and motorboat market

I suspect it'll be a crock as far as serious boaters are concerned
 

laika

Well-known member
Joined
6 Apr 2011
Messages
8,209
Location
London / Gosport
Visit site
"the show has space for boats up to 45 foot" according to the blurb

I just noticed the preceding bit:
occupying three halls and over 20,000sqm, the show has space for boats up to 45ft.

So that's 1/10th the size of Boot and 1/3rd the size of Southampton. The attractiveness of a train trip to Birmingham is diminishing.
 

st599

Well-known member
Joined
9 Jan 2006
Messages
7,571
Visit site
I think st599's post you quote was about the convenience of the show's timing for exhibitors rather than visitors, ie 2.5 weeks after Boot. Wasn't that one of the issues for the London show? i.e. Boot was bigger, better and attracted more people so if an exhibitor had to pick one, they'd go with Boot. However the London show was much closer to (overlapped?) Boot and 2.5 weeks would seem to be plenty to shift a stand (not that I know anything about events management).

Boot would still be a great trip if researching a purchase rather than actually making it: all the major manufacturers are there (unlike the latter days of the London show). A really big show you need at least a couple of days. Making a weekend of it and travelling the night before means you don't miss the first couple of hours with travelling. Moreover I could get from a desk in canary wharf via city airport to an air b n b near Messe Düsseldorf in a similar (maybe less) time than it would take me to get to the NEC

The friend I've been to Boot with for the past couple of years isn't bothering next year because of the hassle of importing purchases (ie supporting Concerto's view here), but I'm presuming if they're big enough purchases the supplier will send them VAT free for VAT to be paid by the courier on import. Having said that the lack of UK sailing schools, holiday providers, marinas etc. would make Boot less attractive than a big UK show for many. Not sure I'll be trekking up to Birmingham next year: maybe the following year if forumites declare next years' a success.
Indeed, 2.5 weeks is very tight, de-rig, pack, German Customs to get the Carnet re-export stamp, transit, UK customs for the Carnet re-import stamp then set up the stand again.
 

johnalison

Well-known member
Joined
14 Feb 2007
Messages
41,036
Location
Essex
Visit site
I recall going to a boat show at NEC about 30 years ago. There weren’t many boats on show, and iirc it only lasted a year or 2. Hopefully this will be better supported.
I remember going to a show called something like 'Caravan and Boat show' at the NEC. It only had about two cruising boats, one of which was an early Sadler 29. We were half looking out for a boat to move up to and the boat didn't impress me much, which was probably because in the early prototype the cockpit bulkhead was vertical and took space from the galley. We bought a 29 a couple of years later in '87, so this would have been around '84/85 perhaps. I don't see Birmingham attracting the trade or crowds that London or Southhampton have.
 

Daydream believer

Well-known member
Joined
6 Oct 2012
Messages
21,263
Location
Southminster, essex
Visit site
I like train journeys but the destination is a bit suspect.
Apart from the London underground, I have not been on a train for years. The local station rarely has a ticket desk open ( so I am told) .I tried once, but buying a ticket in 2014 to Inverness on line confused me so much I gave up & rented a car.
On the underground, back in 2005 I wanted to get on the UG at stratford. There was a large board which totally confused me. Fortunately some girls from the office I was working at came along & sorted it for me. I do not have a clue what to do, so avoid it like the plague. Do not feel safe in crowds anyway.
 
Last edited:

JNKScot

Well-known member
Joined
9 May 2004
Messages
22,875
Location
E1E Row K
Visit site
Apart from the London underground, I have not been on a train for years. The local station rarely has a ticket desk open ( so I am told) .I tried once, but buying a ticket in 2014 to Inverness on line confused me so much I gave up & rented a car.
On the underground, back in 2005 I wanted to get on the UG at stratford. There was a large board which totally confused me. Fortunatelly some girls from the office I was working at came along & sorted it for me. I do not have a clue what to do, so avoid it like the plague. Do not feel safe in crowds anyway.
Much simpler now on London Underground; use your contactless credit/debit card to get onto platform at one end and to get out at the other end; been like that for about 10 years.
 
Top