westhinder
Well-Known Member
Any idea when that week will be? So we can plan ahead ?Sometime in that period away you'll be portbound for the best part of a week because of bad weather.
Have some thought about where you'd like to be spending it.
Any idea when that week will be? So we can plan ahead ?Sometime in that period away you'll be portbound for the best part of a week because of bad weather.
Have some thought about where you'd like to be spending it.
Do not forget one has to log in & out of France with passports so it is not like a simple trip & then head for home as & whenLymington to cherbourg then a trip to jersey then on to st Malo or st cast ,down to lezardrieux or indeed further given you have months to enjoy and then back to whichever location in west takes fancy - I would aim for Portland on return mainly to avoid bridge and have more space than Weymouth.
To log out of Camaret you have to go to customs at Brest firstAs a general rule we try to cover the longest distances at the beginning of the trip so we can return at a more leisurely pace and have a couple of spare days in order not to be forced to sail in bad weather to get home in time. (No prizes for guessing how we learnt that)
In your case I’d be sorely tempted to cross to Cherbourg at the start, then go Channel Islands, Tréguier or Lezardrieux and continue west to Camaret, Douarnenez or Ouessant and from there cross to Scilly and then leisurely let yourself be blown back to the Solent.
I appreciate that Camaret-Scilly will involve an overnight trip, but the chances are you both have grown so confident that it poses no problem. Alternatively you could arrange for an experienced friend to join you for this part of the trip. We have been doing 6-7 weeks holidays for a number of years now and it is surprising how you grow as a cruising couple in such a period.
I wouldn’t be in a hurry to stress yourselves, especially if your wife is inexperienced. You don’t say whether you are used to night sailing. This is very much part of extended cruising, so if not experienced I would be thinking of including some in you trip. This doesn’t have to be overnight. Arriving in a strange harbour in the dark is something some people worry about, and although it can present challenges it can also be satisfying.I have to admit I was expecting more disagreement. Seems most of us are in the get west fast in good weather camp which is reassuring! Perhaps I should have mentioned I'm not planning to even take an anchor
Really appreciate the feedback from everyone, we've never tried living aboard but this is very much practice for retiring at sea in a couple of years so I want to get it right or I'll be forced into buying a farm and selling the boat![]()
I wouldn’t be in a hurry to stress yourselves, especially if your wife is inexperienced. You don’t say whether you are used to night sailing. This is very much part of extended cruising, so if not experienced I would be thinking of including some in you trip. This doesn’t have to be overnight. Arriving in a strange harbour in the dark is something some people worry about, and although it can present challenges it can also be satisfying.
As someone has said, be prepared for forced stays in harbour. The West Country has a reputation for being mild, but this chiefly comes from its mild winters. Wet and windy periods do occur. We once spent the best part of a week in the upper Fal, probably playing Scrabble and drinking with our friends. If you are of a certain age, a bus pass is worth having, and gives you access to places like the Eden Project.
what if one has Schengen passports: does the ensign up on the stern matter?Do not forget one has to log in & out of France with passports so it is not like a simple trip & then head for home as & when
Definitely unwise NOT to take an anchor. That is advice from someone who has anchored less than 5 times in the last 17 years. I fully agree that it is much better to go into safe havens as stop overs. It is better for all sorts of reasons , social being one of them. Being a SH sailor I enjoy my visits to different places & go out of my way to look round & engage in conversation with the locals as well as other sailors. The majority of marinas are comfortable & most have decent amenities as well.I'm not planning to even take an anchor![]()
Oh good lord - can no one understand a joke!Perhaps I should have mentioned I'm not planning to even take an anchor![]()
I hope that is a bizarre form of joke. As well as being entirely unseamanlike, it could significantly limit your options - especially if things are busy in July in August.Perhaps I should have mentioned I'm not planning to even take an anchor![]()
it isI hope that is a bizarre form of joke. ..
Anchoring is not always a recipe for a restful night, although satisfying in terms of self-reliance, and cheap except at Salcombe. However, much of the charm of the West Country lies in its estuaries, rivers, and rias, and pottering around in a dinghy puts you down at water level and in touch with your surroundings. It would take us about twenty minutes in the dinghy to get from the anchorage or pontoon in Salcombe to the Town and although requiring some effort, it is not an experience I would have wanted to miss, as with other sites. There may be some whose only experience of the area is to go from one marina berth to the next, but I feel sorry for them, especially as many of them look to be a lot younger than we were when we sailed there, though I would guess that swinging moorings were our most frequent option.What is it about pumping up dinghies lugging them over the side & messing with outboards, getting ashore, lugging the boat up the shore & then reversing the procedure, that so many sailors seem addicted to? Not to mention the work laying anchors, cleaning the mud off the decks then laying awake all night, whilst the boat rolls, worrying if the boat is dragging, or going to hit the next boat etc. ( Plus, in my case, being violently sea sick & ending up with a migraine for the trouble)
Anchoring is not always a recipe for a restful night...
is this is not some sort of (sexist) joke, then I thoroughly recommend one of these:Electricity for hair drier is most important for my wife.
For various reasons probably 1/3 of my sailing has been at night on very long passages so I'm more than happy with it. In fact, I prefer night sailing to day sailing on passages if the conditions are reasonable.You don’t say whether you are used to night sailing.
Yes, people with Schengen passports still need to check in to France when sailing from the UK, border control can be funny like thatwhat if one has Schengen passports: does the ensign up on the stern matter?
I'm glad someone spotted that! Yes I can confirm it was a joke based on the unusual level of agreement in the thread. As ever, mention of an anchor got everybody riled up. We actually plan to spend as many nights at anchor as possible, and I have a lovely new aluminium floor dinghy for just this reasonOh good lord - can no one understand a joke!
Yes, people with Schengen passports still need to check in to France when sailing from the UK, border control can be funny like that![]()
Most people who live aboard for a long time are very attached to their anchor - in more ways than one. Definitely get one put aboard before you set off (plus tender and outboard) or else you will a) miss some of the loveliest places and b) not really experience what long-term living aboard is really like.