How do you like your marina berth?

Forum for general cruising topics
Post Reply
User avatar
Mavanier
Master Mariner
Posts: 213
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 10:44 pm
Boat Type: Moody 39, Deb 33, Wayfarer, Wanderer
Location: Edinbane, Skye

How do you like your marina berth?

Post by Mavanier »

Hi everyone
I'm looking to do a bit of quick and dirty research on the matter of pontoons berths. My local harbour is planning some new berths and the sailing club wants to put a case to them as to what should be considered a fair and reasonable way of allocating the berths.
Suggestions include- selling berths on a long leasehold to individuals; lucky dip every year; berth holders getting first refusal the following year; highest bidder; use it or lose it; some combination of the above; a.n.other idea.

So, how does it work in your neck of the woods?
User avatar
claymore
Admiral of the Green
Posts: 4762
Joined: Sun Oct 19, 2003 2:55 pm
Boat Type: Claymore
Location: Ardfern or Lancashire

Re: How do you like your marina berth?

Post by claymore »

The only case I can relate this to is when Croabh Marina was first created and people interested in a berth were invited to invest a sum of money - not sure but I think £3K was the figure - not unsubstantial figure at the time.
It was not a happy picture when the company subsequently went into liquidation.
Regards
Claymore
:goatd
User avatar
Arghiro
Old Salt
Posts: 917
Joined: Tue Jan 01, 2008 12:54 pm
Boat Type: Pentland Ketch
Location: Midlands

Re: How do you like your marina berth?

Post by Arghiro »

I don't use marinas.

However, my moorings are allocated on a waiting list basis. There are vacancies on the mid-river ones & a 3 year waiting list for quayside berths (no need for a dinghy or waiting for the tide). Once you have a mooring you keep it as long as you pay your biills. If you aren't using it, visitors can.
ubergeekian
Old Salt
Posts: 426
Joined: Fri May 27, 2011 1:48 pm
Boat Type: Victoria 26

Re: How do you like your marina berth?

Post by ubergeekian »

Arghiro wrote: However, my moorings are allocated on a waiting list basis. There are vacancies on the mid-river ones & a 3 year waiting list for quayside berths (no need for a dinghy or waiting for the tide). Once you have a mooring you keep it as long as you pay your biills. If you aren't using it, visitors can.
That's how it works in Kirkcudbright Marina. I have just paid my last bill there for my old boat and will be asking to go back on the waiting list in case I fancy keeping the new one there in the future. Waiting list length is draft and depth dependent, but generally somewhere between ten and twenty years.

Reallocation each year would be a bit awkward, as a "pontoon" boat might not be suitable for other moorings: at Kirkcudbright you dry out if you are not on the pontoon. Selling some berths on long leases seems a reasonable way of funding things.

I was a member of a gliding club which built a hangar for private owners' aircraft with mixed funding. Some owners bought a permanent share (a hangar bay) for something like £10k down, while the Sports Council funded the other half of the building on the condition that it was to be available to all members through an annual lottery. Once all the committee members had obtained places, however, the lottery just didn't seem to happen any more. Which was odd.
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity - Hanlon's Razor
But don't rule out malice - First Corollary to Hanlon's Razor
Post Reply