sailorman
Well-Known Member
Your not kidding![]()
the lads on the chariot were as fas from lsw as one could get, 2 strapping rugby players :encouragement:
it was down to initiative, necessity being the mother of invention
Your not kidding![]()
Glad to see people enjoy Nieuwpoort. Numbers of U.K. visitors have sadly fallen sharply due to the red diesel shenanigans, but this is probably the best moment to visit before brexit brings back Q flags etc ?
I would add troublefree entrance at all states of the tide in all but the worst NW gales, perfectly sheltered marinas, two good chandleries, a very good shipyard for any repairs, welcoming yacht clubs.
If you have any specific questions, feel free to pm, it has been my homeport for 20 years.
Dan Tribe is correct.
I’d just add that there are three clubs, each running a marina and providing visitor’s berths. As you enter, the first you encounter, on your starboard side, is KYCN, the Royal Yacht Club Nieuwpoort. Continuing up the channel you will see a lot of boats on your port side. The pontoons along the channel belong to VYN, Vlaamse Yachthaven Nieuwpoort, which used to be called VVW but has recently changed its name. The club house and harbourmaster are in the grey brick building next to the white pyramid which houses the facilities. If you turn left as you reach the first pontoon and the pilings, you proceed into the Portus Novus dock where the majority of the pontoons are. As you enter, the pontoons on your starboard side also belong to VYN/VVW, the ones on your port side and straight ahead are WSKLUM, the Airforce sailing club. The brown brick building on your port side is the WSKLUM clubhouse.
If you ignore all the pontoons and continue up the channel, you pass a left hand bend, after which you will see Nieuwpoort Town on your starboard side with the fish market prominent on the quay. On your port side you will have passed the fuel pontoon and two shipyards. There is another fuel pontoon in KYCN marina.
Motorboats and yachts that can lower their masts can continue under the bridge and enter the inland waterways through the locks. There are two smaller marinas behind the locks.
Work has started in the entrance channel on a storm surge barrier. There are currently four piles that indicate the gap that will be left when the barrier is finished in two years’ time. The barrier will have a gate that lies on the bottom of the channel and will only be closed if the water is predicted to rise above the level that threatens to flood the town and the polders. The construction will affect the speed of the current in the channel significantly, especially on the ebb in periodes of heavy rainfall, when the outflow of the river Ijzer increases.