An Italian answer to the robber-baron commuters and picnic boats of yore, this is a slightly more modern if pared-down option, and much more on the affordable side while still screaming to be lounged upon. Meet the new-to-the-U.S. Toy Marine 36.
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An Italian answer to the robber-baron commuters and picnic boats of yore, this is a slightly more modern if pared-down option, and much more on the affordable side while still screaming to be lounged upon. Meet the new-to-the-U.S. Toy Marine 36.
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Senior Editor, Power & Motoryacht
Senior Editor Owen Burke grew up on, in, and around Long Island Sound, where he worked on fishing boats and spent any free time he had aboard his Stur-Dee Dory. He has sought fish, waves and stories around the world and done several stints along the way in Taiwan, Fiji and New Zealand, among other places. He currently resides in New York City, fleeing at every chance he gets.

A Transatlantic crossing aboard a solar-electric power cat proves just how far Silent Yachts has come.

In 1957, teenager Tom Ireland set out on a 1,500-mile journey from Long Island to Miami aboard a 13-foot Speedliner with a 25-hp outboard. What happened next even Mark Twain couldn’t make up.

It may be a cliché, but the second hull in the British builder’s acclaimed Ocean line is a small superyacht with more social spaces than you can count.

Rain, wind, hail, sleet, snow, Nor’easter, or shine, Life Proof proves itself as a model water taxi.

A scrappy start-up in South Carolina set out to build an electric boat that—they hope—can go the distance.

A decade after Invictus came onto the global scene, the Italian boatbuilder is really hitting its stride.