ip485
Well-Known Member
Hi Scala - glad you "made it". You may recall we exchange PM's earlier this year and hope you "settle in" well.
Lovely walk though and on a sunny day you can watch old people die peacefully on the many benches along the seafront.
Eastbourne cycle paths were a disappointment. There are some around the marina, but when you want to head along the beach into town the path soon begins to sprout "No cycling - £500 fine" signs. There's an Asda superstore in walking distance, along with a bunch of other shops. Town center is a fair bit away though. Lovely walk though and on a sunny day you can watch old people die peacefully on the many benches along the seafront.
Hi Scala - glad you "made it". You may recall we exchange PM's earlier this year and hope you "settle in" well.
Any one there care to share their experience?
After Burnham, it'll be a revelation!
We're about to move from Burnham on Crouch to Sovereign Harbour. Contrary to posts claiming it's boring and there's nowhere to sail to, we expect it to be a revelation after being 2 hours up a ditch from the series of shallow muddy puddles that is the Thames Estuary.
I suppose it depends what you're used to.
I am currently holidaying in ostend & reading this thread i thought how boring the sailing would be if i had to be based here. Just like being at eastbourne.
Then i started to think how lucky i am to be based at Bradwell with such a wide variety of destinations to pick depending on my inclination or the wind direction
& there is you glad to leave the Crouch!!!!!!!
Somehow i expect that you might be back one day having regretted your decision
From BYH to the start of the Swallowtail channel (I draw 1.75 - no way I'm risking Ray Sands) is 10 nautical miles. BYH to Bradwell is 24 nautical miles. And if I arrive there, or at Brightlingsea at low tide, I can't get in. Most of the journey is buoy hopping in a narrow channel which the prevailing wind makes a dead run
Eastbourne to the Solent is only 15 miles further than Burnham to Bradwell, passes Brighton, and doesn't involve having to follow the exact same GPS trace every time and deal with a tide that runs at over half my hull speed.
Sure, the lower reaches of the River Crouch are not at all picturesque but I'm not sure why you have ruled out the Ray Sand Channel. Plenty of boats, mine included, with similar or deeper keels use it regularly. It does require a spring tide but they are conveniently around mid-day/early afternoon.
Having done both those trips I am reasonably confident that the difference in distance is substantially more 15 miles (it certainly felt that way!). There is also two tidal 'gates' to consider - Beachy Head and Selesey Bill if going between Eastbourne and the Solent