jj42
New member
Hi,
I've been investigating liveaboard moorings in Southern England, it seems like almost all residential moorings are tidal, meaning they dry out at low tide, so more suited to large, steel barges that are rarely moved. The only exceptions I've seen are inland marinas for canal boats.
Here I mean officially residential moorings, ones which you can have as your registered address, pay council tax etc, not just marinas which tolerate frequent occupation of a boat.
I was curious if there is some historical or legal reason for this?
I've been investigating liveaboard moorings in Southern England, it seems like almost all residential moorings are tidal, meaning they dry out at low tide, so more suited to large, steel barges that are rarely moved. The only exceptions I've seen are inland marinas for canal boats.
Here I mean officially residential moorings, ones which you can have as your registered address, pay council tax etc, not just marinas which tolerate frequent occupation of a boat.
I was curious if there is some historical or legal reason for this?