Harborseal
Member
Where can a boater find where all the open {not private} mooring buoy's are in the San Juan Islands? We sometimes just like to snag a buoy for the night but not sure what is private or open to snag and stay the night
Don't think it's free, though.Try: onBuoy.com
Correct..... I believe most of the buoys are considered state parks. But you can get a buoy state park pass for $60 a year.Don't think it's free, though.
On the mooring ball itself.I have heard that all the WA parks moorings are limited to 40 or 45' vessels, but reading the parks.wa.gov site I can't find that limit published anywhere. Where are the limits actually stated?
45' is the max length of boat on a mooring ball. I only remember that because I am 45'.I have heard that all the WA parks moorings are limited to 40 or 45' vessels, but reading the parks.wa.gov site I can't find that limit published anywhere. Where are the limits actually stated?
Yes Washington State Parks just sent me a link ( parks.wa.gov ) and lists all the State Parks in San Juan Islands and where the mooring buoys are. Facts... need an annual pass $60 or pay as you go. When you hook up to a State Park buoy you need to call in, phone number and buoy number on the buoy. Only allow 3 nights on the same buoy.Washington State Parks.
The call in is new to me. In the past you had to go ashore and register, even with a mooring ball pass. I used to use the mooring balls a lot with my Catalina 400 sailboat. I tend to anchor more now with the trawler.Yes Washington State Parks just sent me a link ( parks.wa.gov ) and lists all the State Parks in San Juan Islands and where the mooring buoys are. Facts... need an annual pass $60 or pay as you go. When you hook up to a State Park buoy you need to call in, phone number and buoy number on the buoy. Only allow 3 nights on the same buoy.
Right. I think some folks misread the Parks page. It mentions $60 but that is the minimum amount. It's $5 per foot (but at least $60).I don't know where someone saw $60 a year; annual permit for both moorings and dock is based on boat length.
There are also some county buoys in the SJ's.
Jack
I thought so too, but on our way up this year the west wind came up in the straits and howled in there. The SE corner is fouled with kelp and of course that's where we were...;-)Watmough bay is a nice spot with 2 country mooring balls but also is an easy anchorage in my experience.
When we were in Prevost Harbor three weeks ago, two of the five Parks buoys were not available (taped off with signs saying no moorage). The anchorage was pretty full, and also the kelp beds have been expanding quite a bit in there. When we pulled up our anchor, we had a 300 lb ball of kelp on it. Be advised. I would go to Reid Harbor instead.Bouys in Fossil Bay and Ewing Cove have numbers and phone info and fair to marginal cell coverage, bouys in Prevost did not a few weeks ago.
The bouys state there is a $4.95 charge for using the phone-in registration
This is interesting to know. The buoys in Prevost have always worried me in general. Last time we used them, a couple of them (NW of the dock) seemed uncomfortably close to rocky shallows, while another was pretty close to the dock itself. Not dangerously, just a bit odd. So maybe they will be moving them?When we were in Prevost Harbor three weeks ago, two of the five Parks buoys were not available (taped off with signs saying no moorage). The anchorage was pretty full, and also the kelp beds have been expanding quite a bit in there. When we pulled up our anchor, we had a 300 lb ball of kelp on it. Be advised. I would go to Reid Harbor instead.