Saturday, 24 March 2007

Marine bands to be sold off?

Just as the government has abolished the annual licence fee for Marine VHF sets, radar and EPIRBS this year comes a hint that they are considering flogging off the airbands. Marine radio has been one of those things that work well. The slow move to Digital Selective Calling (DSC) has meant only that initial contacts are broadcast digitally, with all subsequent communication being analogue. DSC isn't compulsory, and many boaters are happy with their old non-DSC VHF sets.

Stephen Ladyman indicated in a Commons written answer that:
The Independent Audit of Spectrum Holdings and the subsequent Government response, agreeing with the audit, found that there is scope for more effective use of public sector radio spectrum. The Office for Communications (Ofcom) and the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) are charged with beginning work to introduce Administered Incentive Pricing (AIP—the ‘price mechanism’) to some elements of maritime radio spectrum use, including radar and communications.
This one will need watching. Perhaps, another email to the RYA I think.

Icom IC-M33 - New Buoyant VHF Marine Transceiver Radio

Icom Press Release 29 January 2007

Icom announced the debut of their first marine VHF transceiver that floats in water on 29 January 2007. If you drop the radio into the water, you can easily retrieve it without the radio sinking. This revolutionary new radio has been designed to be easy to use and is supplied as standard with a 980mAh Li-Ion battery pack provides 9 hours of operating time.

Buoyant waterproof VHF Marine Transceiver
If you drop the IC-M33 into water, the radio comes up to the surface so that you can easily retrieve it from out of the water. As the radio has a rugged waterproof body*, it will keep on working even after it has been submerged. *1m depth for 30 minutes, equivalent to IPX7.

Easy to see LCD with large channel indication
The IC-M33 has an easy to see LCD (32x16 mm) with a clear 2-digit channel number indication. The Volume and SQL levels are shown in the display. LCD and key backlighting are standard features, ideal for night time operation.

Easy to use, easy to hold
Weighing only 305g, the stylish IC-M33 has an easy-to-hold-rounded body that fits comfortably in your hand. 9 large buttons on the front panel provide simple straightforward operation.

Quick channel selection with Favourite channel function
Tag your favourite or often used channels then push the “Fav” button, so that you can recall those channels, while ignoring untagged channels.

Li-Ion battery and charger standard
A Lithium-Ion battery pack and battery charger is supplied as standard. The BP-252 Lithium-Ion battery pack provides 9 hours* of operating time. * Typical operation with Tx (Hi): Rx: standby=5:5:90

AquaQuake draining function
The AquaQuake draining function emits a vibrating sound and clears water away from the speaker grill.

Optional speaker-microphone, HM-165
The new optional waterproof speaker-microphone HM-165 will allow the IC-M33 to float when attached. The waterproof screw-type connector is provided to prevent water intrusion.

Other Features
  • Powerful 5W output power
  • Dual/Tri-watch functions
  • 4-step battery life indicator
  • 2-step power saver
  • Auto scan function
  • 70 programmable channels
  • Instant access to Ch 16 or programmable call channel
  • Optional battery case for using with alkaline cells (The IC-M33 still floats when this battery case is fitted)

Wednesday, 21 March 2007

Poole Harbour



Forty years ago the second coxswain of Poole lifeboat, John Clark, was splicing lines for a new boatyard on West Quay Road. He was one of the half a dozen staff who built 17ft Sovereigns. The owner, Robert Braithwaite, had grand plans to expand the 40ft yard, but trade in Poole was slow. The harbour could no longer accommodate deep draught ships and the only legacy of the once great Newfoundland cod trade was a handful of merchant houses.

Today, John still splices lines, only now they are up to 50mm thick and the boats are 108ft long. His son, Jon, is the coxswain of Poole lifeboat and the yard manager of the same company - Sunseeker. Sunseeker International now owns most of the frontage of West Quay Road . The superyacht builder employs 1,500 staff and is just one of the many businesses that have helped the rebirth of Poole.

The harbour attracts 12,000 visiting boats a year. It has been dredged to accommodate cross Channel ferries and coastal freighters. Poole is home to the RNLI headquarters, including the new £18 million Lifeboat College, and a Marine Skills Centre which opened in March 2005.

Being the second largest natural harbour in the world, Poole offers endless possibilities for RIB enthusiasts. Whether you are after a lively night on the quay or a quiet night at anchor, you are bound to find the perfect spot.

Approaches

You can identify the entrance to Poole Harbour by the white cliffs of Old Harry (Handfast Point). Beware of the race here on an ebb tide. The Swash Channel takes you to the entrance and is well marked. When possible, RIBs should use the boat channel, which runs alongside, especially when there is shipping in the main channel.

If approaching from the Solent, RIBs can use the East Looe channel, which runs close to the shore, but only when weather and tides are favourable.

The coast

Either side of Poole Harbour entrance are two very different stretches of beach. To the west, Studland Bay is pretty and fringed by sand dunes. Other than the tiny village of Studland it is undeveloped . A footpath leads to The Bankes Arms Inn, which has a beer garden overlooking the bay and is a good place to start a stroll to Old Harry Rocks.

To the east of the harbour entrance, multi million pound properties line Sandbanks beach, becoming high rise apartments all the way to Bournemouth.

The entrance to Poole Harbour

Poole Hharbour is accessible at all states of the tide and is only dangerous in very strong S and SE winds. Watch out for the ebb tide which can run at 3 to 4 knots. The entrance is 300m wide and a chain ferry crosses the narrowest point, its direction indicated by a white flashing light and a black ball hoisted at the front.

There is a 10 knot speed limit throughout the harbour, and a 6 knot limit in the Little Channel and Holes Bay.

The differences between north and south continue inside the harbour. To the south of Brownsea Island are peaceful anchorages, salt marshes and forested islands. While to the north are yacht clubs, marinas, bars and apartments.

Inside the harbour

Inside the harbour cruising in an anticlockwise direction you are likely to encounter:

South Deep

The prettiest anchorages are in the designated quiet area behind the islands. Yachts can anchor anywhere in the South Deep. West of Green Island is very quiet and accessible at most states of the tide. Blood Alley Lake in the lee of the harbour's largest island, Brownsea, is an option for shelter in a northerly. However, in the predominant south westerlies, Goathorn and Cleaval Points are more sheltered.

Pottery Pier

Continuing north is Pottery Pier, a jetty for Brownsea Island. The shingle beach between the pier and old jetty at Maryland is scattered with broken pottery - at one time pottery was a major industry on the island. This is a popular anchorage in the summer, and many yachtsmen pay the £4.20 fee (£10.40 per family) to explore the National Trust owned island.

The 200 acre nature reserve has had a variety of uses over the years but is perhaps best known as the site of the first scout camp, formed by Robert Baden-Powell in 1907, and still in use today.

Keeping a careful key eye on the depth, you can explore the Upper Wych Channel, which is marked by stakes as far as Round Island. Lowest depths are 0.5m and 1.5m.

Shipstal Point is a lovely, quiet anchorage and at MLWN there should be enough water for most RIBs to lie afloat.

Wareham Channel

If you are really seeking solitude, and the tides are right, you can anchor along the Wareham Channel. From Pottery Pier take Willis Cut to the Middle Ship Channel, but only at high water, as this is a notorious place to run aground. Once in the main channel, markers guide you past Poole Yacht Club, Moriconium Quay and Lake Yard to Wareham Channel. Just beyond Russel Quay the channel widens and the area between 78 and 80 buoys is a good place to anchor.

After Gigger's Island the channel becomes the River Frome and winds up to the attractive market town of Wareham, which has plenty of good pubs, shops and restaurants. If you draw more than a metre, only attempt the navigation one hour either side of high water.

Poole Quay

Poole Quay is the hub of the town. The front is lined with pubs, bars, restaurants and shops and in the summer is heaving with tourists. Each building has a distinct character, from the 18th century mill which houses Italian restaurant La Lupa to the smart apartments opposite Poole Quay Boat Haven. The tourist information office is attached to a fantastic free museum which tells the history of Poole.

Poole Quay Boat Haven is a great place to moor because it's so central. To ensure a berth, book ahead on Ch 80. You can also raft up alongside the town quay although it is very exposed in east and south easterly winds and the wash from coasters, which moor at the quay opposite can be uncomfortable. Commercial Quay, opposite, has fuel.

To get beyond Poole Quay you need to pass under the lifting bridge, which opens every two hours in the summer from 0730 to 1830, then 2130 and, on weekends and bank holidays, 2345. The channel runs past Sunseeker and the Lifeboat College into Holes Bay. Visitors can berth at Cobbs Quav marina, which is fully serviced has a clubhouse serving food.

North of Brownsea

The Middle Ship Channel is the most direct route from Poole Quay to the harbour entrance and is used by the ferries and commercial vessels. Stakes mark a small boat channel alongside.

The North Channel , which is only for small craft, branches off the Middle Ship Channel after the west cardinal buoy Diver, and takes you past the entrance to Parkstone Yacht Club and Salterns Marina, both of which have a few visitor berths.

At high water Whitley Lake, to the east of the North Channel, is a mecca for windsurfers and kitesurfers. At low water it's a muddy expanse full of cocklers. The North Channel rejoins the main channel at south cardinal Bell Buoy, and just round the corner is the harbour entrance.

Top five Anchorages:

  • Studland Bay - perfect for the beach and the Bankes Arms Inn.
  • South Deep - take care not to anchor over cable chain and oyster beds.
  • Blood Alley Lake - quiet and in the shelter of Brownsea Island.
  • Shipstal Point - great wildlife by the salt marshes and mudflats.
  • Pottery Pier - good shelter in easterlies and to go ashore on Brownsea.

Saturday, 10 March 2007

Christchurch

Christchurch is one of those gifts to RIBsters. This delightful tidal estuary, which nestles behind Hengistbury Head is of very restricted access. This problem is further compounded by the 'Run', which is a very narrow entrance that is enough to put many off at the first attempt, particularly when you hear tales of the fierce tides within it that can reach 9 knots on a big Spring ebb.

However, once inside Christchurch harbour, RIB enthusiasts will be rewarded with good shelter in mostly unspoiled surroundings, and a remarkable variety of pleasing scenery within a relatively small area, encompassing a sandy beach and dunes, salt marsh, the airy heathland of Warren Hill which forms the backbone of Hengistbury, the woodland fringes within its lee, and the tranquil reed fringed river that leads up to the historic town of Christchurch.

The magnificent Priory church was under construction from 1094 onwards. The Priory has the distinction of being the longest Parish church in England, and boasts the two oldest church bells in the Kingdom, which were cast in 1370.

There has been little industry other than smuggling, which was often carried out quite blatantly in broad daylight, and fishing. There is a small fleet of crabbers based here, and the estuary is well known for its salmon which are caught in nets stretched across the Run in the spring, and by rod and line in the famous Royalty Fishery waters further upstream on the Avon.

Mudeford was for many years closely linked with the aviation business and until 1962 had its own airport, where De Havilland had a factory. During the World War II Airspeed built many Mosquitoes and Horsa troop gliders here and Donald Bailey gave the first demonstration of his famous Bailey Bridge that was assembled in Christchurch.

Yacht and boat building is also something with which the name of Christchurch has long been linked. Elkins built small yachts here until the mid 1970s and their old yard has now vanished beneath the new waterside housing development. Rossiters is a going concern and well known for its traditional looking and much admired 9.7m Curlew class.

Approaches

Christchurch should only be approached by RIBs of suitable draught, and ideally just before HW. On no account should it be attempted in any sort of onshore wind, on the ebb tide or by strangers at night.

The channel is marked during the summer and most of the buoys are removed in winter by the Christchurch Harbour Association. The bouys can after strong onshore winds be missing or out of position and an approach should always be made with this in mind. The sand bar is likely to change with every storm and the local men alone can be trusted for the latest details. Not only the position of the entrance varies, its depth varies also!

The entrance channel shifts frequently but generally tends to run in a roughly east west direction towards the eastern end of Mudeford Quay, a long, low concrete wall fronted with steel pilings and backed by a large car park.

The most daunting part of the approach is the fact that you have to steer very close to this wall before the channel swings sharply to port, and it then continues parallel to the Quay right through the Run. You will know what I mean when you attempt it!

It is about 400m long, the depth averages about 1.5m LAT but keep a good lookout for the local fishing boats and the small ferry which berth and land on the quay, which is not available to visitors. From about 2 hours after LW to the second HW this can often be a very busy spot, particularly at weekends.

The beach to port has a distinctive, solitary black house on its north west corner. The bank extends west from the beach so keep over towards the first starboard hand buoy before turning to port. Here, as you emerge from the Run, the magic of Christchurch unfolds, for you are welcomed by a wide and placid lagoon where the tidal stream quickly loses its grip.

Most of the water, within the harbour, is very shallow and dries up to nearly 1m LAT. The lower parts of the narrow channel almost dry, but as you approach Christchurch town it deepens to between 2m and 3m in places. It is well marked along its starboard side with small conical green buoys and red can buoys to port along all of the lower part.

Once through the Run and past the Black House spit you bear away to port and continue along the line of the shingly beach and its many colourful beach huts towards the distant group of moorings and the prominent ferry landing pontoon. This pontoon is private.

From here the channel turns west past a large group of moorings which should be left on your port hand, then north west for a short distance towards the shingle spit of Blackberry Point which is almost submerged at HW, then back to the west towards the narrower gap between Wick Hams to port and Grimbury Marsh to starboard. This is part of the large Stanpit Marsh Nature Reserve, an SSSI area that lies along the north west corner of the harbour.

The final port hand buoy is about 200m downstream of Grimbury Point where the shingly foreshore ends. From here steer across close to the western shore of Steepbanks, which is topped with bushes beyond which the first of the many upper moorings begin. These mostly lie tight along the sheltering western bank, which is steep and fringed with trees.

Merely follow the line of the moorings and Christchurch Quay will be in sight just a short distance ahead. You cannot miss the waterside building development, which has several mooring pontoons extending from it and a lock gate leading to the inner, private basin. Just to the left is the large quay and modern clubhouse belonging to the Christchurch Sailing Club, which was established in 1874.

Here, at Clay Pool, the two rivers divide. The Stour bears away to port where it can be followed through the many moorings for just over half a mile further to Tuckton Bridge, and the Avon leads off to starboard, where it divides again. The port hand arm leads to the Elkins boatyard. The starboard arm, known as the little Avon, takes you to Rossiter Yachts.


Moorings and anchorages

It is possible to anchor anywhere in the lower harbour, on the outer edge of the buoyed channel as long as you do not obstruct the fairway. Dues for anchoring are collected by the genial Harbour Bailiff, and the charge, irrespective of size, is £3.50 for the first night, and £12.50 thereafter.

The best spot lies on the western side of the channel below Grimbury Point, just below Steep-banks, where there is a pleasant sheltered and reed fringed bight out of the main channel just beyond the last port hand buoy. Here, although overgrown, the notorious 'Smugglers Ditch' can still be seen.

Alternatively, at HW you can often creep into a quiet berth in Lobs Hole, in the lee of Warren Hill, just upstream of the ferry pontoon and inside of the moorings, where shallow draught boats will lie just afloat at Neaps.

At Christchurch the Sailing Club maybe able to help out with a mooring, but it is a sailing club! They have a pontoon which can take up to 9m LOA and visitors' moorings that will take up to 8.5m.

Rossiter Yachts have two deepwater moorings, suitable for boats up to 9m LOA at £11 a night, which are available on application.

Facilities and things to do

Facilities in the lower part of the harbour at Mudeford Quay are limited to the pub and cafe, there are public toilets and a telephone and you can use the bar at the Highcliffe Sailing Club when open.

There are shops in Mudeford, about 10 minutes walk away.

Opposite, on Mudeford Sandbank, among the many beach huts there are several public water taps as well as public toilets. During the season there is The Hut, a cafe and seafood restaurant that sells a few groceries and off license, and ferries that run to Mudeford Quay and Christchurch Quay.

The main attraction of this end of the harbour has to be the sheltering bulk of Warren Hill, which provides some very pleasant and elevated walks with lovely views. It is a strangely romantic place this, a heathery, turfy expanse more akin to moorland scenery than the coast. There is also good swimming from Mudeford Sandbank.

Christchurch is larger than you expect, but often very busy old medieval town with all normal facilities. There are a good range of shops, including a supermarket, banks and Post Office. There are a number of pleasant pubs, many of which feature live folk or jazz music in the evenings, many restaurants, a leisure centre with indoor swimming pool, a museum and art gallery, and even a tricycle museum.

The Priory is obviously the main attraction and well worth a visit. There are popular organ recitals every Thursday lunchtime. The surrounding and peaceful Priory Gardens are extremely attractive, with the Mill stream beside them and the crumbling remains of the keep of Christchurch Castle perched atop its artificial mound. This was built in about 1300, but was already in serious decay by the 1650s.

The Quay is a popular tourist spot, more reminiscent of somewhere on the upper Thames than the south coast, with swans, rowing boats for hire, pleasure trips, a bandstand and the green open space of Quomp's park beside the river. Nearby the Christchurch Sailing Club has a large bar and showers are available when open. There is also a convenient water hose.

Essentials such as diesel, water and chandlery can be obtained from Rossiter Yachts daily except Sundays. You can get alongside their jetty at HW, and they can also slip up to 1.5m draught. Petrol can only be obtained in cans from the nearby garage.