prv
Well-Known Member
There is an area inside the moorings and inside the breakwater, but get there early...
Inside the breakwater?
Pete
There is an area inside the moorings and inside the breakwater, but get there early...
a mooring might be nice to avoid playing silly-buggers in the anchorage, but I assume this is a ridiculous thing to hope for during Cowes Week
Inside the breakwater?
Pete
Ssshhhhh!
No, I wrote what I meant. Not a lot of water so shallow draught but a rising tide.I was just surprised; I assumed he had meant to write "inside the moorings and outside the breakwater". As far as I remember, everything south of the breakwater is either "built up" with moorings etc or too shallow, given that we'll be there over a reasonably springy low tide. Don't think I'd want to anchor anywhere in there as I might not get my anchor back. A lot of junk on the bottom!
Pete
Ok I Was going to investigate the fireworks on Friday at Cowes, with or without crew..
Now yet again X wife has changed my daughters, access she would love to see them. Where would you moor for the night to see them?
Having never seen them, how busy dose sit get out there? I have heard some horror stories...
I will have me and 6 year old maybe another crew.
I would rather not go with daughter if it is going to be any more that low to no stress, but having never seen them I want to see them...
Definitely high stress - and I'm talking at least 10 years ago - probably much worse now.
Finding somewhere to moor/anchor is a nightmare, handing off other poorly anchored boats is a trial, watching the fireworks is no fun 'cos you've always got an eye elsewhere for the roaming idiot and getting home afterwards is a Darwinian episode in which survival often goes to the fleetest. In fact, we used to remain at anchor for a good half an hour after the end while the alcohol-fuelled ribs and sportsboats hared off across the Solent sans lights.
Down in Plymouth we have the annual International Fireworks Championships over three days in mid-August. It puts Cowes into the shade and there's so much room in the Sound there is never a problem finding space or getting home safely.
When exactly this year?
Did you go? I did for the first time for me. Absolutely spectacular. Ive seen good fireworks, but never good fireworks that last that long. We anchored in a perfect spot and had a Chinese takeaway whilst watching. Perfect.
We didnt rush to leave and it wasnt a bright night so 8 knots was our safe speed. Saw a few speeding idiots but their navigational skills were such that they kept to the deepwater channels, no doubt using their plotter and killing their night vision, thus they were easily avoided. Lots of blue lighted boats giving advise to speeders and those with incorrect nav lights. The majority of the latter were raggies, do they not label the switches in sailboats these days?
We had a great evening![]()
Gotta ask, how did they deliver the Chinese?
Gotta ask, how did they deliver the Chinese?
Ha good questionWe put the girls ashore at trinity landing and we hovered, collected them when they had the supplies.
Did you go? I did for the first time for me. Absolutely spectacular. Ive seen good fireworks, but never good fireworks that last that long. We anchored in a perfect spot and had a Chinese takeaway whilst watching. Perfect.
Yep, we went, and glad we did. Fireworks were good, Red Arrows an unexpected bonus! It felt like we were directly under the centre point of their display, crossing low (very low!) over our heads several times. The Sea Vixen (I believe) was interesting as well but a little annoying as we had just put mate's nephew to bed for a nap before the fireworks, and those 1950s engines are awesomely noisy.
We sailed over and anchored straight away, no missions into Cowes for takeaway. Chris cooked a very acceptable curry on board instead while we were waiting.
Didn't really see any of the dangerous behaviour people were stressing about upthread, nobody anchored on top of us or wove in and out of the moorings and anchorage at speed. Only a couple of close encounters - one a large multi-deck tripper boat holding station sideways-on to the tide in the gap between us and the next anchored boat, but with a pro crew on the bridge looking down at us occasionally I was happy they'd avoid touching. Other one was a big ketch with a tall wheelhouse who came slithering past at a funny angle, grinding his bow-thruster - he was further away than the tripperboat but giving off a concerning air of not-quite-in-control. Otherwise no worries at all, even when the large Navy yacht next door decided to show off by leaving under sail ("hoist when ready!", "ready!", "haul away!", etc). Maybe there was some interesting traffic congestion at the Hamble etc, but we weren't going there. Half an hour after the end, with the lad back in bed and fast asleep, we picked up the hook and tootled round to Osborne Bay. Not many other vessels on the way, except at anchor. Several, as Elessar says, were sailing boats displaying a tricolour while anchored - and since I doubt they all anchored under sail, they must have been incorrectly using it while motoring too.
We did have a bit of a bouncy night at Osborne - like a millpond when we arrived but once the tide turned against the wind it got a little choppy even in the lee of Old Castle Point. Discovered that Ariam's sugar-scoop stern stern is a ******* for wave-slap, unlike Kindred Spirit's counter, since we were tide-rode with the stern into the wind. I probably should have gone closer in (we were not the outermost boat though) but it was busy and I've not been there at night before.
Yesterday morning we motored across to Portsmouth to look at the ships (nephew is fascinated by different kinds of ships the way some other five year olds obsess over dinosaurs), then the wind filled in and we had a cracking sail back.
He's probably going to start bugging his parents again, about them buying a boat
Pete
. . . the large Navy yacht next door decided to show off by leaving under sail ("hoist when ready!", "ready!", "haul away!", etc). . . .Pete
I woiuld like to have seen that. Always good to see a yacht being manouvred under sail. Pity so many yachtsmen daren't do it nowadays. Traditional skills being lost (or not even being learned).
Interesting post.
Do you regret going for a modern rig?