We will likely go out to Block for race week. We do have Fishers Island on the list
You're in my backyard now!!!!!
Greenport, NY
Sag Harbor, NY
Coecles Harbor, NY
West Neck Harbor, NY
Montauk, NY
New London (has a ton of public moorings and Bank street is good, but a lot of ferry and train noise)
Mystic, Ct
Watch Hill, RI (Napatree Beach) (Home Port)
Block Island, RI (Where we spend a large portion of Summer)
Newport, RI
Cuttyhunk, Ma (This is a good stopover)
Hadley Harbor (This is another good stopover)
Vineyard Haven, Ma (Martha's Vineyard)
Edgartown (Our favorite on Martha's Vineyard)
Nantucket
Feel free to look me up (offer open to anyone in the area), or to ask for area specific details.
Shrew,
I've been to woods hole a bunch but only once by boat. I've got a coworker who sings the praises of hadley harbor. I've never been. Care to share your opinion and any thoughts? Looks like a long, but doable, dinghy run to get to the bar, ahem, I mean the free aquarium.
The inner harbor has a few private moorings, you can tie up if empty, first come first served.
The outer harbor, NE of Bull Is. is a quiet peaceful anchorage. You can listen to the fish jump, watch the birds, etc. It is reasonably well protected.
Islands are private so you can't go ashore. Not sure I would want to as it center of Lyme disease territory.
I would not take a dinghy over to Woods Hole. Currents going through the straight can be 4-7 knots. Sailboats usually go through at slack.
Hadley is not a destination place, but it is a nice anchorage for a day or night.
You could spend a whole season in and around Long Island Sound. I can share info if anyone has specific questions. The majority of my boating life has been in this area. Block Island is popular but way over-rated IMO. Much better choices for many reasons. However, many think of Block Island as a badge of courage or something to that effect. Think overpriced dirty marinas, large crowds at beach bars, etc. If that's your thing, enjoy it.
Been cruising this area for decades. So for some years now don’t go to any of the places mentioned.
Block sucks. Lots of loud, rude, ignorant people. Holding is miserable chewed up soupy mud. People don’t know how to anchor so routinely drag. We’ve taken to setting up fender from bow to mid ships if forced to go in there. The Elizabethians are so commercialized and crowded that we don’t visit until school starts and the NYers go home. Sag is home to the $35 hamburger as is Greenport but both are nice. You can anchor just out the marina at Sag.
We like small places with few services and no access by ferry or easy superslab. Have friends along both coasts of LI Sound which influences landfalls.
Still, like
Potters Cove, Wickford, Jamestown on backside , Bristol in Naragansett bay.
Stonington, going up from Port Judith there’s lovely spots to anchor. As you approach City island there’s multiple good places to anchor on both sides.
Going up the Hudson is easy with many idyllic sites to anchor. Same with the Thames and Connecticut.
In the other direction usually will anchor outside Marion or Quiset. New Bedford YC is worth a stop for dinner. If we go further up anchor outside Onset waiting on the canal or at Kingsman if we need something. Once through the canal we live in Plymouth so go there and anchor either at the last day signal or off the backside of Bug Light or the beach. Otherwise just go to P’town.
Next stop is Gloucester as the yacht club there has a great restaurant. Some fun stops Scituate, Boston harbor islands, Hingham, Lands End if you’re not headed to Maine. Then Mt. Desert/Southwest harbor area. But the jewel is Washington county. Still truly downeast with glorious bays and great dinghy exploring. We usually pick a string of places going north and a different string going south. There’s pretty much a harbor every 10m so it’s easy to go somewhere new each cruise. We avoid marinas. If you just look at the chart and not just designated anchorages there’s no reason to ever use them except for fuel. Believe New England and leewards are among the two best cruising grounds in the world. Often have the most fun dinghy exploring and Maine is a great place to do that.
Abbotts is a tourist trap. 20 years ago it was outstanding, now not so great in MY opinion as a summer resident in Mystic for 30 plus years.
Try taking the dinghy or walk up river a few yards to Nyman's/Ford's for outstanding lobster rolls.
Block I can be a zoo for sure but we always liked to go there a few times every summer. Always anchored or had the gift of a private mooring. Spend 1/2 a day in town, then have a mudslide or 3.
We’ve cruised the Maine coast quite a bit, usually doing 2 weeks hopping from place to place. We may head toward “the city” this year, we’ve never been west of Block Island. In any case, we’d be interested in a get together/cruise in the area.
Ken
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the usual silly question
how do you manage the lobster traps?
do you protect the propeller?
1919 just bypassed Maine went straight to Halifax from Cape Cod only because my anxiety about it.
=======================================Spurs or equivalent is the simple answer. I’ve cruised Maine half a dozen times in sailboats without Spurs and only snagged once. Fishermen helped free us. More recently a couple of tours with a Spur equipped trawler involved only one hit and that was a couple of miles off Gloucester on the way home.
Lobster trap lines are a minor hazard to be sure but 1) preventable with shaft cutters, 2) mostly avoidable and 3) help isn’t far away.
Maine is worth the slight risk of inconvenience.
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thank you very much
mostly because I believe this year Canada will remain closed and Maine is very attractive during the hot summer months,the fog doesnt bother bother as much as I used to sail out of Morro Bay California and fog is a way of life in summer,unfortunately just came out of the boatyard but I can install one of those combination anode/cutter,not as good as spur but better than nothing
again thanks
PS
from your post looks like you didn't have problems with the fishermen,that is also a reported source of problems running into very hostile crowd?
We keep Joy in Florida during the winter months. In the spring we usually take off to the Exhumas for several weeks before heading north. Outside if weather permits and into The Chesapeake. We have a mooring there and numerous friends we can raft up with. July sends us north to Martha's Vineyard. We have been to Nantucket several times and have friends in MV and Nantucket. Ince in the Vineyard area we go to Hadleys, Vineyard Haven Lagoon and Edgartown.Should we plan to push north it is off the Southwest Harbor before kicking out to Nova Scotia. Our plan last year to go to PEI were scuttled when Canada closed.
This year we may not get north as we have travel commitments back home in Utah. This may be our last cruise on the east coast for a few years as we are planning to have Joy shipped to Victoria BC. Once there we will cruise the inside passage to Alaska for two or three seasons before bringing her back through the canal and back to Florida.
All good on paper but as we all know there is a Plan A B, C, D etc.
In July and August, is it difficult to find a place to anchor in Nantucket? How about Block Island?
Shrew,
I've been to woods hole a bunch but only once by boat. I've got a coworker who sings the praises of hadley harbor. I've never been. Care to share your opinion and any thoughts? Looks like a long, but doable, dinghy run to get to the bar, ahem, I mean the free aquarium.
Annapolis Joy, Did we see you in Edgartown last summer? We have a GB 36.
We spent the better part of two months bouncing between Edgartown, Vineyard Haven Lagoon and Hadleys. We put in to Hadleys to ride out the pending hurricane.
Hadley Harbor is directly across form Woods Hole, I don't know where the good anchorage is but have heard its a great place.