An interesting Circumnavigation...

ex-Gladys

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In the delightful light airs of yesterday morning, the lady wife and I decided on a drift with the tide up to Osea, and as we got level with the end of the island, I mentioned that I'd never gone round the back over the causeway.

So a couple of interchanged later, and we turned to starboard, and headed towards the causeway. It was about an hour and a half before local HW, and it was only a 4.9m HW. Looking at my plotter, there was a drying height at the causeway of 2.7m, so I reckoned with out 1.5m draft we would have a min of 0.7 clearance.

Bearing in mind the spoil dumping that had occurred, as we approached, there was an indication of disturbed water slightly inshore of where I wanted to go, so we made to clear that and got a VERY brief flash of 0.9m, but stayed pretty constant at about 1.5 under the keel. Once over, there are a couple of "guts" that give good depths round the rest of the way.
 
i remember a year or two ago we sailed downriver passing north of Osea and staying over the drying areas until almost opposite Bradwell. Because I could.....
1.2m draught.
Emerged the other end about half a mile ahead of friends on similar-speed boats who had left Heybridge with us, who seemed somewhat horrified at our antics when we next met.
The things we do for the book.....
 
Always nice to do something different. Might try that next spring tide. I think 'light airs' is putting it nicely. All I was getting was movement from the tide, sails just acting as sun shades.
 
The only time I've done that was one one of the barge party trips from Maldon. A good experience but wouldn't fancy doing it with my 6ft draught.
Charlie Stock once showed a picture of a bilge keeler neatly parked on the causeway. He said that there was a heated argument between the skipper and a car driver. The boat skipper won the argument.
 
Both Osea and Northey causeways are quite safe if done on springs - even with 6ft+ draft. Northey does have small boulders in some places, marking the edge of the causeway.

Going inside Thirslet spit is a good way of cheating a foul tide and getting flatter water when wind-over-tide. Just don't go between the two red buoys on the western end :o
 
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