Harwich to Thames Barrier-Best Route??

MrCramp

Active member
Joined
2 Sep 2006
Messages
1,586
Location
East Midlands
Visit site
Wanting to leave Shotley around 0800, 3 hrs before LW, Friday next 22 June. Would like to stop over somewhere on Friday night. Ideally take the tide up the Thames but do I go (Southend on Sea times) in the dark LW 0058BST or 1257BST?? Which is the best place to stop? Sailing sloop, bilge keel 1 metre draft, cruising speed 5/6 knots, no radar. Experinced skipper + 3 experienced crew, cross chanel etc but never yet up the Thames. Charts coming tommorow so unable to do the detailed planning yet. Thanks
 

dickh

New member
Joined
8 Feb 2002
Messages
2,431
Location
Suffolk
Visit site
Thats the way - stop at Queenborough(but the All Tide Landing is out of order...), leave 1 hour before Low water and you'll carry the tide all the way to London bridge, I've done it in a 20' yacht with time to spare.
 

Cotillion

Member
Joined
30 Aug 2003
Messages
430
Location
Walton on the Naze
Visit site
The problem is getting out again as you will run out of ebb long before reaching the sea and will then face up to 4kts of incoming tide, though shelter may be found at Gravesend to wait for the the new ebb.
 

MoodySabre

Well-known member
Joined
24 Oct 2006
Messages
17,230
Location
Bradwell and Leigh-on-Sea
Visit site
The alternative at Leigh/Southend is to come into the Ray Gut and about a mile west of the Leigh Buoy (the one nearest the pier) there are some bouys. Ignore the first two (as they sometimes have fishing boats on them) but then there is a pink buoy with a pick-up bouy and then a yellow buoy both of which were in enough water for my 1.7 mtrs last weekend. When the tide goes down the sandbanks either side make it free from swell from ships.
 

alldownwind

New member
Joined
10 Aug 2004
Messages
1,290
Location
Medway
Visit site
[ QUOTE ]
The problem is getting out again as you will run out of ebb long before reaching the sea and will then face up to 4kts of incoming tide, though shelter may be found at Gravesend to wait for the the new ebb.

[/ QUOTE ]
Not so in my experience on several trips in an average 30' yacht - without making an effort to hurry, always got to the Nore Swatch just about at LW, in time to catch the new flood into the Medway.
 

FlyingSpud

Member
Joined
4 Aug 2002
Messages
525
Location
Kent, Medway
Visit site
Have to say I have never had a problem getting out, and it always seems quicker, probably because you tend to be able to get the rags up as well, whereas, more often than not, it seems the wind is on the nose going up.
 

MrCramp

Active member
Joined
2 Sep 2006
Messages
1,586
Location
East Midlands
Visit site
Thanks for all the replies. Going to Quennsborough does appear to be a big detor and if we cannot get ashore we won't bother. Think the best option is to stick to the north shore and moor in one of suggested positions. Weather is looking calm.
 
Top