Sea Devil
Well-Known Member
But worrying if you have to ask that question!
Not really.... this is a very good forum for getting local knowledge. Also only got Cmap93 on this laptop,,,
But worrying if you have to ask that question!
Done it a few times solo in both directions: MH to Lundy to Padstow to Newlyn (Porth Curno if wind and swell favourable) then Falmouth.
It's 80 miles MH (overnight at Dale on the pontoon to save a 6 mile slog out of the marina into prevailing westerlies) to Padstow if you want to miss Lundy otherwise the longest leg is Padstow-Newlyn at 60 miles and mostly favourable tides. Not sure why Padstow has the reputation it has; I suspect it's the off-puttingly named Doom Bar which, I believe is named after the colour of its sand. Any conditions which make Padstow inaccessible rule out a trip around The Land. Plus Padstow is a beautiful harbour, best in UK, IMO.
That is a matter of personal taste. :hororr:Also a nice pint brewed over the river in Rock...
Totally agree. Padstow is generally approachable unless there is a lot of North in the wind. Incidentally on old charts it was always known as Dunbar sands which got corrupted locally to Doom Bar... Also a nice pint brewed over the river in Rock....
Having done it several times I would only add I agree the direct route is OK. Stand well off Lands End though if you are not familiar. Local knowledge of tides and streams makes a close in passage quite safe but if you are doing it first time please ensure you don't get a closer look at the putty than you intended....... Newlyn is safe in any weather.
ps. You could also visit the glorious Isles of Scilly instead. Tides in your favour and it's a nice trip and from there to Newlyn is easy..
Thanks for all the helpful advice... Think it is a one hit passage MH to Newlyn.
Should you need, or want, to divert to Padstow, you would best weigh the job up. Google Maps has a nice low water shot and anchoring in poor conditions could cause a few headaches.
Has anyone anchored there? The fairway into the dock seems to have been dredged, is this correct?
The locked harbour is snug in all conditions and used to have the splendid advantage that the harbourmaster would send you a Christmas card.
Of course you would need adequate water to get in.
That`s interesting anchoring behind Lundy - I had only really heard of it in weather forecasts! Then onto Padstow anchoring there.. Dale is presumably at the mouth of MH... Can´t find it at the moment
When I first did it I called at a Newlyn pub to ask some fishermen for advice, about the inshore route at lands end.
No point in going the long way round outside.
Their advice was " If you see a rock, don't hit it, Otherwise you are OK"
Actually it is not bad advice. It is deep water all the way through, except where there are rocks & you can see them inshore- so do not hit them & you are Ok
I asked about the tides as Reeds showed some weird tidal flows.
One fisherman replied" Listen mate I've been fishing here 40 years & i still have not worked em out round there. Just b..dy go. Nothing to worry about,"
He was right really.
The trip took me about 24 hours Newlyn to MH both times, but that is with head wind across the Bristol Channel (31 ft boat) & motoring through the inshore passage both times.
Between Lands End and Longships, roughly in the middle, there is a rock, which side did you go?
Is that because the sand is Doom coloured? What IS the colour of Doom?
+1 for going via the Scillies if you have a tender and the conditions are right.
I like the Scillies a lot. Used them as a jumping off point a couple of times for a direct Biscay crossing to Bayona
There are none, from Milford, unless you see Newlyn as a plan B.
Get a mate, enough diesel, pot noodles and pucker up.
Done it a few times solo in both directions: MH to Lundy to Padstow to Newlyn (Porth Curno if wind and swell favourable) then Falmouth.
It's 80 miles MH (overnight at Dale on the pontoon to save a 6 mile slog out of the marina into prevailing westerlies) to Padstow if you want to miss Lundy otherwise the longest leg is Padstow-Newlyn at 60 miles and mostly favourable tides. Not sure why Padstow has the reputation it has; I suspect it's the off-puttingly named Doom Bar which, I believe is named after the colour of its sand. Any conditions which make Padstow inaccessible rule out a trip around The Land. Plus Padstow is a beautiful harbour, best in UK, IMO.
To be honest I cannot recall. I had neither detailed chart nor chart plotter. Both times I just followed a short distance from the coast (& rocks) until I could turn the corner for MH.
I motored that short coastal bit for ease. I just know that the echo sounder showed ample depth.
Actually, I did have charts, but they were passage charts, so Newlyn, for instance, was not marked. Hence the chat in the pub.
Edit: Just borrowed a copy of Imray C7 & there is no rock charted, that I could see, in the middle of the channel. Once through the gap head north for the west of Beesons rock, or in your case south after Beesons.Then keep close inshore. there are 2 points of interest on the shore, but I could see them both, so I did not hit them, as advised by the fisherman:encouragement:
Only just noticed the edit. Very clear on google maps satellite view and can be seen on google streetview pictures thingy. Curious.