Page 113 - Hollard Private Portfolio - Version 3.3
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 Pleasure-craft
  Key terms to understand
You
Third party Write-off
Includes yourself, your spouse and any members of your immediate family who normally reside with you, and are financially dependent on you
Someone other than yourself who is involved in an insured event – for example, the skipper of another boat that is involved in an accident with you
Your pleasure-craft is so badly damaged that it cannot be repaired economically; or it has been stolen and cannot be recovered
 Pleasure-craft – full definition
Your pleasure-craft has a total length of less than 10.5 metres. The definition of pleasure-craft includes everything which would normally be sold with the pleasure-craft if it changed hands, including the following:
○ The hull.
○ Inboard motors and outboard motors.
○ Fitted machinery.
○ The dinghy or smaller boat which usually accompanies the pleasure-craft.
○ Sails and protective covers.
○ Wetbikes or jet skis.
Other accessories, fittings and equipment may also be covered under this policy, so long as they are specified in the Schedule – for example:
○ clothing, sea boots, sextants, nautical books
○ fishing gear.
 Conditions of use
How you may use your pleasure-craft
This insurance policy carefully defines how you may use your pleasure-craft in order for the cover to be valid.
○ Private use
You may use your pleasure-craft only for private use (social, domestic and pleasure), as well as emergency tow-
and-assist.
○ Tow-and-assist
You may use your pleasure-craft to lend emergency assistance to other pleasure-craft in distress. Your pleasure-
craft may also be towed when in distress.
Under no circumstances is your pleasure-craft covered when it is:
○ more than 10 nautical miles from the shoreline of South Africa, as well as that of neighbouring countries
○ taking part in, or practising for, racing, speed tests or trials
○ being navigated single-handedly in open waters
○ towing or salvaging other pleasure-craft, other than one in distress
○ being towed, other than when in distress, or when laying up or being fitted out for repairs
○ being chartered or hired out
○ carrying fare-paying passengers.
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