North East Cruising Grounds?

vandy

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We are seriously thinking of spending a season or two in the northeast as in-laws have just purchased a cottage in Lincolnshire and it allows to all get together up there - we visited Hull marina and then Grimsby... the marina in hull was nice with a lock, and quite a few bars and restaurants nearby. The marina in Grimsby was more or less in a disused industrial site (old factories, workshops) next to the bigger windfarm/fishing docks.

Our main issue is where to cruise given both marinas aren't accessible at all state of tides and there's not much around (in our unfamiliar eyes)... so I was wondering if any motorboater here has experience of that part of the country and marina/harbours nearby given the exposed nature of NE coast to the North Sea.

PS. we are in a 36ft Jeanneau Prestige
 
Have you seen the berthing fees? cheaper than storing a bike! that's for a reason! That part of the country is hard to plan a day cruise due to the combination of tidal restrictions to exit/enter marinas and not having anything around... for longer cruises, you can try Whitby, and Scarborough which have marinas and cafes etc. Bridlington is a nice harbour with a marina but it dries out... plenty of windfarms to go and look at!
 
Depends what you want.
We are moored inland then travel to hull & Grimsby before exiting the Humber & going out to sea.
Yes you have to plan all this but the rest of the time there is plenty to cruise on the tidal &none tidal rivers around us.
 
Lincolnshire isn't the Northeast ! Its more like the East Midlands - but the long forgotten Eastern part.
Grimsby is almost all states access - just you have to pay outside of free flow period and can be a little restricted around springs when the tide is too high or two low to physically allow the lock to perate. Outside Grimsby marina is like the aftermath of a nuclear war.
Hull is more restricted plus or minus 3 hrs from HW. But the city is okay.
I am based inland at Farndon - R. Trent - and enjoy river cruising with a once year sea trip.
 
I cut my teeth :)- ,so to speak in Hull Marina in the 90 ,s .
We had two sailing boats .Initially a 19 ft day boat then a Gib Sea 7.6 .Oh how many times the lifting keel scraped along the mud ? :disgust:
You can access as said 3 h + or - HW , The tide runs fast ,so in a sail boat you end up washed along ,up to 7 knots .
Quite interesting really sailing against the current- boat to windward heeled over , water splashing on the toe rail ,crew sat outboard , log says 5/ 6 knots though the water ,boat going backwards when you look at the land .
We used to race in a winter series too .
The main channel bouys change about every two weeks ( constant river surveying going off ) , sand banks pop up randomly.
It’s ok for the guys ^^^ that do a one off “ well planned summer trip “ but when it’s your back yard like the Op ,it’s a fag .
On top of that scary river traffic ,even up @ hull - ships to Google .
There’s a nice gastro pub @ S Ferriby ,it had a jetty ,so @ HW + or - 2 h you may have a good meal if the tides are right .
Further down river even bigger vessels and the two ferry’s - North Sea .
Immingham is a massive and dangerous commercial port for a small boat - supertanker territory.
Grimsby s fish dock marina ,as said a dump ,more so when it’s raining !
At the mouth there’s all sorts of overalls and funny tidal goings on .
Brids a bit of a dump and the trip is as dull as dish water .
Things start to rise from near zero @ Scarborough and further N ,@ Hartlepool but these are not really day tripable ,and remember to get back up to hull you need water under your keel :), and need to arrive @ the lock gate near HW .3 hrs .
Arrive outside this time - then I hope your cleats are well attached , there’s a jetty in the river to wait as the water rushes past @ 7 knots ,you can hear the cleats creak :cool:
South bound once out of the estuary the N Norfolk coast , Blakeny and Wells are worth a big multi day trip .Again loadsa tide calc s and unsocial hrs starts and worse still ends to a trip, - same rules apply universally you need water to boat in .
It’s all brown btw , your WE trips up / down the Humber , expect to find trees and debris washed down from the tributary rivers after storms .
All in all a pretty miserable place ( Hull ) to place a boat .
Oh I nearly forgot ,round the marina itself - yeh , pretty in the day ,but after dark the pubs , n clubs fill up with 9issheads and you may find a can ,glass or bottle lobbed into your cockpit , when you are awoken by the blue flashing lights of the emergency services dealing with an altercation.
In the end when the kids arrived , I just ended up going on “ lads trips “ .kiding ourselves that racing in February in the winter series ,when the air temp was minus 5 was fun .
Not fit for the fairer sex imho ,boating out of Hull .
 
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Not fit for the fairer sex imho ,boating out of Hull .

You paint a fair picture of The Chocolate River . Sharing the estuary with numerous large ships and commercial vessels and usually no other leisure craft is all part of the excitement. Fortunately we are faster than the ships . AIS is handy .
Hull is perhaps not as bad as you suggest so may have improved with time. As visitors to Hull marina in recent years we have not seen any trouble.
However I am not tempted to move there as a home berth . I quite like challenge, but not every trip.
 
The downfall for hull is the brown silty water, on the upscale the facilities at the marina are top notch.
The area is getting better with restuarants/cafe bars as opposed to about 20yrs ago where it was more of a drinking ground especially on bank holidays where people used to jump in.
A lot of the boats in the marina do seem to be more stagnent and not used (i think some owners think their boats are more of a status symbol as opposed to actually getting out of the lock and going for a cruise.
some boats in there havent moved for at least 5 years so dredd to think what the state of their running gear is like.

when I was buying my boat I considered putting in hull but as I live there - I wouldnt be "getting away" and not much fun in brown water and weather is a little more bleaker than further down south hence why I am based in essex.

apart from that Hull was the city of culture 2017
Jon
 
on the positive side the silty water helps keep your heat exchangers clean - the sand gives them a good internal scrub up
The Humber estuary is a pretty difficult place to navigate - try doing it in the dark. So if you can master it, it's great training for anywhere else. Have a go at the reverse transit at Burton Stather just around the corner at the top of the river Trent.
 
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