tillergirl
Well-Known Member
I think I better explain: West Mersea has no harbour authority and it will never have an authority. It's because of the history. Locally there are two principal sailing clubs who have no authority to organise anything other than running their Club facilities and services (water or land side based). There are several (very good I think) marine business which run boatyards, moorings, repairs, hiring etc, etc. They also have no authority to organise anything other than the running of their facilities. There are several oyster companies who run and organised their licenced layings. They have no authority beyond their businesses. There are professional fishermen who work the Estuary and elsewhere and land catches at the hammerhead. They have no authority beyond their balliwicks. Unlike Brightlingsea which has a 'harbour' which is run and intended to earn money, West Mersea has no such thing. But surprise, surprise, as a community it works by cooperation, consensus and conciliation. There are quite of number of individuals who are quite daft of course. They respond to the call to drop their work and employment to dash out in some sort of orange boat and get wet, dragging some bedragged peeps ashore when they should be earning money and losing the wet edge of that paint job they were doing or removing that lower molar. When mooring fees are collected not one business, not one club, not one individual benefits. Any money collected is spent solely on AtN - provision, maintenance etc. Even one daft plod who was offered the chance to get some 'survey' kit free out of the mooring charges spurned it. The launch (or 2 from time to time) is run by the Yacht Club. It is a very expensive facility against the assets of a modest sized Club (just think on the costs involved). It has two full time employees and is supplemented by paying for other professional manpower to permit the employees days off. The Club benefits not one penny from the mooring fee charges. It does, however, charges or rather in proper times, charged for a run ashore and back. I hope that everybody will realise that running visitors ashore does incur some additional costs and charging. Members want a launch service to get to and from their boats. That is the sum total of the objectives. For some bizarre reason members are happy (usually) to encourage visitors - the launchmen will be advised by every member (and indeed others) when their mooring will be free. Members in the usual times will be happy to wait for their turn to a place in the launch while it is full of visitors. Unfortunately the launch is not a public service and at the moment is strictly limited in the number of members who can be accommodated on each trip. It is not a taxi. It is not a ferry.
I am rather perplexed about the comment that our attitude is going out of date. Our Club is a club in our town. It is a 365 a day club and people who live here support and enjoy the club, and encourages membership beyond the town, beyond the island. We don't stop water-based visitors, we encourage it but we have no authority to run any public part of those waters and indeed has one or two rules we have to follow running a licence ashore.
I am rather perplexed about the comment that our attitude is going out of date. Our Club is a club in our town. It is a 365 a day club and people who live here support and enjoy the club, and encourages membership beyond the town, beyond the island. We don't stop water-based visitors, we encourage it but we have no authority to run any public part of those waters and indeed has one or two rules we have to follow running a licence ashore.