East coast - mini review of various marinas / ports of call

mrming

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We’re on the penultimate day of our 18 day East Coast cruise. I thought I would post a quick review of the various marinas / places we visited in case it’s useful to anyone else. We’re a family of four with 2 boys (3 & 7) in a 32 footer drawing 1.6m.

Obviously this is all old hat to the regulars on here, but with evidence of lots of new people getting on the water it might be handy for someone.

Comes with the usual disclaimer that the East coast is shallow, dangerous, mosquito infested and not at all suitable for visitors. ;)

Our itinerary ended up being: Conyer > Brightlingsea > Bradwell > Tollesbury > Levington > Walton > Brightlingsea > Queenborough > Chatham > Conyer

I haven’t covered Conyer as it’s our home port, but do come and visit, it’s very nice and the mud is soft so even larger boats can sink in no problem.

Brightlingsea

Plenty of water for our 1.6m draft in the channel, even at low tide. Best water on the way in / out is by the shingle bank.

Berthed on the mid river pontoon and always remained afloat.

Very helpful HM and good water taxi.

Clean and modern showers and toilets with lockers, and laundry.

Decent food and beer in The Yachtsman pub.

The promenade and beach was perhaps an acquired taste.

Nice high street a short walk away with a great bakery, butcher and a small Tesco.

Bradwell Marina

Great shelter with high banks all around the marina basin.

Interesting 1960s vibe with the control tower.

On site restaurant / bar with terrace and a view of the river outside. My pint was not the best kept. Didn’t eat.

Showers and toilets dated but clean. Showers have the infuriating push button which in this case has to be pressed every 3 seconds.

Good, friendly pub (The Green Man) a 5 minute walk away with excellent uncomplicated pub grub and well kept ale.

Tollesbury Marina

Went in just before high water and found plenty of depth in the well marked channel. Remained afloat in our berth.

Scenic location and great shelter in the marina basin. Slightly run down pontoons but nice vibe with lots of interesting traditional craft.

New shower block but a bit basic, and the mens was always flooded by what looked like a drainage problem with one of the showers.

Nice restaurant / club house with good food, however it is also a building site as they’re creating an extension.

Noisy and smelly dredging from early morning on weekdays. This was presumably related to the tide times and was over by lunch.

Under-cover, heated pool which is bookable by visitors. It’s a bit old but it’s clean and brilliant for those of us with kids.

Laundry on site.

Also a strange tidal pool with a sandy beach.

Suffolk Yacht Harbour (Levington)

Plenty of water in the approach channel / accessible any state of the tide for us with no lock.

Well maintained pontoons and very fancy toilets and showers. Laundry on site.

Amazing yacht club (HPYC) in a light ship. Very welcoming to visitors, excellent food and beer, and tolerant of our excited young kids.

Also a nice cafe on site near the entrance.

Huge marina and boatyard but nothing else around for miles, apart from a very scenic walk along the Orwell to the tiny village of Levington - this has a pub which we didn’t try.

Titchmarsh Marina

Entered near high water and had plenty of depth.

Walton Backwaters beautiful including a sandy beach you can land on at Stone Point. We dinghied there from the marina.

Marina is well maintained and quite large. Showers and toilets are old fashioned but clean. The dreaded push button shower was in evidence again, and the water temperature was not adjustable, and way too hot for our kids to shower.

Good laundry facilities on site.

The on-site restaurant (Harbour Lights) was closed due to a lack of kitchen staff.

The marina itself is in the middle of nowhere but it was a 5 minute cab to Walton-on-the-Naze.

Walton-on-the-Naze was run down and didn’t have much to offer, but the kids loved the amusements on the pier.

Queenborough

Managed to get a berth on the ATL (All Tide Landing) behind the Thames Barge Edith May (which the kids loved).

Harbour staff very friendly, helpful and well organised.

Queenborough is best described as very down to earth. We had a nice couple of drinks in the garden of the Flying Dutchman.

Chatham Maritime Marina

Very well maintained marina with very helpful staff and 24 hour lock in / out. Watch the tide / wind coming in the narrow lock entrance. It’s sheltered as soon as you’re through the first bit.

By far the most expensive marina of the trip at £39 per night for our 9.7m boat.

Excellent showers and laundry.

A short walk from the marvellous Historic Dockyard which provided 2 full days of entertainment for us and the kids.

Good restaurants in the slightly awful but modern shopping and eating development beside the marina.

That’s it - phew! Hope someone finds it useful.
 
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We’re on the penultimate day of our 18 day East Coast cruise. I thought I would post a quick review of the various marinas / places we visited in case it’s useful to anyone else. We’re a family of four with 2 boys (3 & 7) in a 32 footer drawing 1.6m.

Obviously this is all old hat to the regulars on here, but with evidence of lots of new people getting on the water it might be handy for someone.

Comes with the usual disclaimer that the East coast is shallow, dangerous, mosquito infested and not at all suitable for visitors. ;)

Our itinerary ended up being: Conyer > Brightlingsea > Bradwell > Tollesbury > Levington > Walton > Brightlingsea > Queenborough > Chatham > Conyer

I haven’t covered Conyer as it’s our home port, but do come and visit, it’s very nice and the mud is soft so even larger boats can sink in no problem.

Brightlingsea

Plenty of water for our 1.6m draft in the channel, even at low tide. Best water on the way in / out is by the shingle bank.

Berthed on the mid river pontoon and always remained afloat.

Very helpful HM and good water taxi.

Clean and modern showers and toilets with lockers, and laundry.

Decent food and beer in The Yachtsman pub.

The promenade and beach was perhaps an acquired taste.

Nice high street a short walk away with a great bakery, butcher and a small Tesco.

Bradwell Marina

Great shelter with high banks all around the marina basin.

Interesting 1960s vibe with the control tower.

On site restaurant / bar with terrace and a view of the river outside. My pint was not the best kept. Didn’t eat.

Showers and toilets dated but clean. Showers have the infuriating push button which in this case has to be pressed every 3 seconds.

Good, friendly pub (The Green Man) a 5 minute walk away with excellent uncomplicated pub grub and well kept ale.

Tollesbury Marina

Went in just before high water and found plenty of depth in the well marked channel. Remained afloat in our berth.

Scenic location and great shelter in the marina basin. Slightly run down pontoons but nice vibe with lots of interesting traditional craft.

New shower block but a bit basic, and the mens was always flooded by what looked like a drainage problem with one of the showers.

Nice restaurant / club house with good food, however it is also a building site as they’re creating an extension.

Noisy and smelly dredging from early morning on weekdays. This was presumably related to the tide times and was over by lunch.

Under-cover, heater pool which is bookable by visitors. It’s a bit old but it’s clean and brilliant for those of us with kids.

Laundry on site.

Also a strange tidal pool with a sandy beach.

Suffolk Yacht Harbour (Levington)

Plenty of water in the approach channel / accessible any state of the tide for us with no lock.

Well maintained pontoons and very fancy toilets and showers. Laundry on site.

Amazing yacht club (HPYC) in a light ship. Very welcoming to visitors, excellent food and beer, and tolerant of our excited young kids.

Also a nice cafe on site near the entrance.

Huge marina and boatyard but nothing else around for miles, apart from a very scenic walk along the Orwell to the tiny village of Levington - this has a pub which we didn’t try.

Titchmarsh Marina

Entered near high water and had plenty of depth.

Walton Backwaters beautiful including a Sandy beach you can land on at Stone Point. We dinghied there from the marina.

Marina is well maintained and quite large. Showers and toilets are old fashioned but clean. The dreaded push button shower was in evidence again, and the water temperature was not adjustable, and way too hot for our kids to shower.

Good laundry facilities on site.

The on-site restaurant (Harbour Lights) was closed due to a lack of kitchen staff.

The marina itself is in the middle of nowhere but it was a 5 minute cab to Walton-on-the-Naze.

Walton-on-the-Naze was run down and didn’t have much to offer, but the kids loved the amusements on the pier.

Queenborough

Managed to get a berth on the ATL (All Tide Landing) behind the Thames Barge Edith May (which the kids loved).

Harbour staff very friendly, helpful and well organised.

Queenborough is best described as very down to earth. We had a nice couple of drinks in the garden of the Flying Dutchman.

Chatham Maritime Marina

Very well maintained marina with very helpful staff and 24 hour lock in / out. Watch the tide / wind coming in the narrow lock entrance. It’s sheltered as soon as you’re through the first bit.

By far the most expensive marina of the trip at £39 per night for our 9.7m boat.

Excellent showers and laundry.

A short walk from the marvellous Historic Dockyard which provided 2 full days of entertainment for us and the kids.

Good restaurants in the slightly awful but modern shopping and eating development beside the marina.

That’s it - phew! Hope someone finds it useful.
Thanks mrming very helpful??
 
To add to the review collection - just spent a couple of nights in Woodbridge Tidemill Marina. Lovely setting. Good toilets and showers, but beware if in Northern arm, you will need a long 30m+ ( or two in my case) shorepower leads to reach the power cubicle. You have to throw the lead across the mud to the bank the run round and plug it in.
Hosepipe only just reached the tap ashore. The southern arm looks better equipped though.
Got bitten by mossies.
Loads of excellent pubs.
 
We have a different opinion of very good food. I had a pizza described as stone baked. It looked and tasted like a pre prepared frozen job out a box. Given the spectacular setting overlooking the marina and estuary, it was a severe disappointment in terms of food quality.
 
Great to read these reports as a relative newcomer to EC myself even though I rarely use marinas but nice to know what to expect if I ever do. Thanks
 
We have a different opinion of very good food. I had a pizza described as stone baked. It looked and tasted like a pre prepared frozen job out a box. Given the spectacular setting overlooking the marina and estuary, it was a severe disappointment in terms of food quality.
My grandkids gave the pizzas full marks. They are the experts. The Thai mussels were great
 
+1 for Heybridge. We spent two nights there A couple of weeks ago. Two pubs. Tea rooms. Very helpful harbor master and staff. Only drawback is thet you have to be there when the lock gates open at high water and obviously you have to leave at high water too. There is a Tesco about 2 miles up the canal with its own landing for dinghies but there was a lot of weed in the canal which our outboard struggled with. I would not leave the dinghy unattended either. Best to book and rafting will be required at busy times. Nice to see SYH get a good review ( out home port)

I would add halfpenny pier at Harwich to the list. Showers are clean no power or water though. staff very helpful. fist come first served and you may need to raft. the outside of the pier can get a bit bumpy. Great pub for food and drink. The Alma. Cafe on the pier. Other drinking holes available but not been in them.
 
Bradwell Marina
...... Showers and toilets dated but clean. Showers have the infuriating push button which in this case has to be pressed every 3 seconds.
.
A good review but regarding the showers a Bradwell, I agree the push buttons do not stay in for very long but at least you can rotate the button to vary the temperature. I hate going to marinas where the push-button shower is a preset temperature which is so often scalding hot.

Www.solocoastalsailing.co.uk
 
If we are talking about showers and toilets...........

I work in various marinas and boatyards from Lowestoft to the Hamble and i can confidently say that the best ablutions i've seen are at Woolverstone, on the Orwell. Everything is immaculate and everything is contactless, you merely have to waft your hand over a sensor to flush the toilet, get some handwash or turn the taps on. Last year, during the worst of the pandemic, they had a rule of one person in at a time and staff sat outside the fissilities all day to sanitise the place after a person had been inside. Top marks to MDL here.
 
If we are talking about showers and toilets...........

I work in various marinas and boatyards from Lowestoft to the Hamble and i can confidently say that the best ablutions i've seen are at Woolverstone, on the Orwell. Everything is immaculate and everything is contactless, you merely have to waft your hand over a sensor to flush the toilet, get some handwash or turn the taps on. Last year, during the worst of the pandemic, they had a rule of one person in at a time and staff sat outside the fissilities all day to sanitise the place after a person had been inside. Top marks to MDL here.
Agree, nice facilities, and had an enjoyable meal in the Loch and Quay onsite restaurant there two weeks ago.

Www.solocoastalsailing.co.uk
 
Tollesbury Marina
New shower block but a bit basic, and the mens was always flooded by what looked like a drainage problem with one of the showers.
In Tollesbury now. Agree the brand new shower block is disappointing. Flooding in one of the gents toilets, still, there are only 2 showers in the gents (another 2 in the ladies), there is only one clothes hook on the door and no stall or shelf to put anything on off the floor and no screen or curtain to stop your clothers from getting splashed when showering. Not even anywhere to put your shower gel other than on the floor. Also, if you stop moving for 15 seconds the lights go out. Of the two showers in the ladies, one door would not shut and the other would not lock. The place had not been cleaned for a while.
 
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We’re on the penultimate day of our 18 day East Coast cruise. I thought I would post a quick review of the various marinas / places we visited in case it’s useful to anyone else. We’re a family of four with 2 boys (3 & 7) in a 32 footer drawing 1.6m.

Obviously this is all old hat to the regulars on here, but with evidence of lots of new people getting on the water it might be handy for someone.

Comes with the usual disclaimer that the East coast is shallow, dangerous, mosquito infested and not at all suitable for visitors. ;)

Our itinerary ended up being: Conyer > Brightlingsea > Bradwell > Tollesbury > Levington > Walton > Brightlingsea > Queenborough > Chatham > Conyer

I haven’t covered Conyer as it’s our home port, but do come and visit, it’s very nice and the mud is soft so even larger boats can sink in no problem.

Brightlingsea

Plenty of water for our 1.6m draft in the channel, even at low tide. Best water on the way in / out is by the shingle bank.

Berthed on the mid river pontoon and always remained afloat.

Very helpful HM and good water taxi.

Clean and modern showers and toilets with lockers, and laundry.

Decent food and beer in The Yachtsman pub.

The promenade and beach was perhaps an acquired taste.

Nice high street a short walk away with a great bakery, butcher and a small Tesco.

Bradwell Marina

Great shelter with high banks all around the marina basin.

Interesting 1960s vibe with the control tower.

On site restaurant / bar with terrace and a view of the river outside. My pint was not the best kept. Didn’t eat.

Showers and toilets dated but clean. Showers have the infuriating push button which in this case has to be pressed every 3 seconds.

Good, friendly pub (The Green Man) a 5 minute walk away with excellent uncomplicated pub grub and well kept ale.

Tollesbury Marina

Went in just before high water and found plenty of depth in the well marked channel. Remained afloat in our berth.

Scenic location and great shelter in the marina basin. Slightly run down pontoons but nice vibe with lots of interesting traditional craft.

New shower block but a bit basic, and the mens was always flooded by what looked like a drainage problem with one of the showers.

Nice restaurant / club house with good food, however it is also a building site as they’re creating an extension.

Noisy and smelly dredging from early morning on weekdays. This was presumably related to the tide times and was over by lunch.

Under-cover, heated pool which is bookable by visitors. It’s a bit old but it’s clean and brilliant for those of us with kids.

Laundry on site.

Also a strange tidal pool with a sandy beach.

Suffolk Yacht Harbour (Levington)

Plenty of water in the approach channel / accessible any state of the tide for us with no lock.

Well maintained pontoons and very fancy toilets and showers. Laundry on site.

Amazing yacht club (HPYC) in a light ship. Very welcoming to visitors, excellent food and beer, and tolerant of our excited young kids.

Also a nice cafe on site near the entrance.

Huge marina and boatyard but nothing else around for miles, apart from a very scenic walk along the Orwell to the tiny village of Levington - this has a pub which we didn’t try.

Titchmarsh Marina

Entered near high water and had plenty of depth.

Walton Backwaters beautiful including a sandy beach you can land on at Stone Point. We dinghied there from the marina.

Marina is well maintained and quite large. Showers and toilets are old fashioned but clean. The dreaded push button shower was in evidence again, and the water temperature was not adjustable, and way too hot for our kids to shower.

Good laundry facilities on site.

The on-site restaurant (Harbour Lights) was closed due to a lack of kitchen staff.

The marina itself is in the middle of nowhere but it was a 5 minute cab to Walton-on-the-Naze.

Walton-on-the-Naze was run down and didn’t have much to offer, but the kids loved the amusements on the pier.

Queenborough

Managed to get a berth on the ATL (All Tide Landing) behind the Thames Barge Edith May (which the kids loved).

Harbour staff very friendly, helpful and well organised.

Queenborough is best described as very down to earth. We had a nice couple of drinks in the garden of the Flying Dutchman.

Chatham Maritime Marina

Very well maintained marina with very helpful staff and 24 hour lock in / out. Watch the tide / wind coming in the narrow lock entrance. It’s sheltered as soon as you’re through the first bit.

By far the most expensive marina of the trip at £39 per night for our 9.7m boat.

Excellent showers and laundry.

A short walk from the marvellous Historic Dockyard which provided 2 full days of entertainment for us and the kids.

Good restaurants in the slightly awful but modern shopping and eating development beside the marina.

That’s it - phew! Hope someone finds it useful.
Quick update on this as we’ve just come back from another couple of weeks on the East coast, 2 years on. Changeable weather meant less destinations this time, but nonetheless a good time was had by all.

We covered Conyer > Chatham > Brightlingsea > Tollesbury > Queenborough > Conyer.

Chatham:
No real change, still nice but expensive and the dockyard is great.

Brightlingsea:
Helpful as ever, showers still good, laundry took ages in the dryer as there was an issue with the machine which meant it didn’t spin / drain properly. Reported to the HM who said it would be dealt with.

Tollesbury:
Much more life in the marina and club (last time was still COVID). Shower drainage problem appeared to be fixed. Pool still great (clean, well maintained). Tides were big, remained mostly afloat but our keel was definitely in the mud at LWS (which we didn’t mind).

Queenborough:
Excellent friendly HM / staff as always. Got a berth on the ATL with power. No showers and it was a stinking hot day when we arrived, so we got the train to Sheerness and used the leisure centre there to shower and swim. I believe you can use QYC showers on Fri / Sat / Sun but have yet to test that. Admiral’s Arm micro pub did excellent food and beer.

As an aside the Kingsferry Bridge was particularly helpful both ways through the Swale, opening within 10 minutes of our first contact each time. This is relatively unusual so do keep an hour in hand just in case you have to wait for an opening.
 
What's the access like at Conyer these days? Kept a boat there many years ago but had to beg a mooring off Spears so often due to chancing the ebb tide that I moved there instead. Not an option any more sadly! Might try it again in a week or two.
 
What's the access like at Conyer these days? Kept a boat there many years ago but had to beg a mooring off Spears so often due to chancing the ebb tide that I moved there instead. Not an option any more sadly! Might try it again in a week or two.
Access to the creek itself is fine, but Swale Marina berths can be a little dicey around neaps. We draw 1.6m and only just got into our berth at high tide this evening. If you draw 1.3 or less it would be better, if not, visit closer to springs.

For getting into the creek from South Deep, you probably know there are two channels, the marina’s normal buoyed channel, and the Butterfly channel, marked with withies. I prefer the Butterfly channel with our deeper draft. I find the buoys in the other channel move around and it’s easy to end up aground. The Butterfly is very twisty, but it’s deeper and it’s easier to know where the water is imo.
 
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