rangerscott275
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2005
- Messages
- 241
- Hatteras Model
- 53' MOTOR YACHT (1969 - 1988)
Looking for peoples opinions / experiences here....
So, currently my boat is in a slip at a marina (Newport Marina in Jersey City). There is a sea wall at the marina which is supposed to reduce the waves. The marina is located on the Hudson River where from 6am to 10pm there is ALOT of Ferry traffic. I am new to this marina and have only been there a week or so. THe location is terrific for me (able to commute back and forth to work very easily) and the people that work there are very nice. Due to size of my boat and my tenure at marina, this is ONLY slip available to me so moving to another is not an option. Now for the bad...this marina has an unbelievable amount of movement....the waves coming into the marina from the ferry traffic are killing me. I have lived on boats and been a boater for awhile, but have never been so rocked that I can't sleep at night.. or be in my engine room while tied up at a pier and had to come up for air due to queeziness! The waves hit me broadside so it is constant bucking bull feeling. As an example of the force on my boat...thus far my boat has pulled 2 cletes out of the dock I'm tied to and bent another...that is the kind of motion we're speaking about here.
I'm one of the first boats in the marina for the season so perhaps as other boats come into the marina they will diffuse some of the waves before they hit me...but there are maybe only 8 to 10 slips between me and the opening to the river so I don't think this is going to make too big of a difference regardless.
I can either stay in this marina, in this slip....or move to another marina but live on a mooring ball. THe marina with the mooring ball would let me come into dock occassionally when no transients are present, but other than that, i would literally be living on the hook. The mooring is securing by a 1000 lb mushroom.
So...what do you think? Is living on the hook for a whole season in a hatteras worth not getting beat to death? I have no inverters...just a stardard set up with a generator and alot of batteries. Thus I'd need to fire up my boat's gennie to cook, charge batteries, etc...and I guess maybe I'd be forced to figure out a way to power my fridge or just not keep perishable food on board. I work in NYC so eat most meals out anyway...
If I stay at the marina, I fear that eventually the cleats on my boat will get ripped right out. Also, it just isn't enjoyable getting tossed around when the whole idea of the boat is relaxation. If I stay I will get those rubber line shock absorbers but that's not going to do much.
There is NO serenity when everything is clanking and you are getting tossed around continually...yet there is NO convenience living on the hook unless I figure out a better way to set up my boat. What do you all think? Any suggestions on ways to combat the beating....or any suggestions on living on a mooring ball? thanks in advance for your commentary...I know this is ultra long email, but I have a very limited time to figure this out and neither option is all that easy.
[for those of you that know this area, I spent winter at liberty landing marina but they have no summer slips for 53, hoboken doesn't accomodate my size, chelsea piers says absolutely not since their focus is selling boats and unless you buy from them you get no slip, I don't want to live up in the bronx and I'm number 464 on the waiting list for W 79th St boat basin...but they will give me a mooring ball if I want it]
So, currently my boat is in a slip at a marina (Newport Marina in Jersey City). There is a sea wall at the marina which is supposed to reduce the waves. The marina is located on the Hudson River where from 6am to 10pm there is ALOT of Ferry traffic. I am new to this marina and have only been there a week or so. THe location is terrific for me (able to commute back and forth to work very easily) and the people that work there are very nice. Due to size of my boat and my tenure at marina, this is ONLY slip available to me so moving to another is not an option. Now for the bad...this marina has an unbelievable amount of movement....the waves coming into the marina from the ferry traffic are killing me. I have lived on boats and been a boater for awhile, but have never been so rocked that I can't sleep at night.. or be in my engine room while tied up at a pier and had to come up for air due to queeziness! The waves hit me broadside so it is constant bucking bull feeling. As an example of the force on my boat...thus far my boat has pulled 2 cletes out of the dock I'm tied to and bent another...that is the kind of motion we're speaking about here.
I'm one of the first boats in the marina for the season so perhaps as other boats come into the marina they will diffuse some of the waves before they hit me...but there are maybe only 8 to 10 slips between me and the opening to the river so I don't think this is going to make too big of a difference regardless.
I can either stay in this marina, in this slip....or move to another marina but live on a mooring ball. THe marina with the mooring ball would let me come into dock occassionally when no transients are present, but other than that, i would literally be living on the hook. The mooring is securing by a 1000 lb mushroom.
So...what do you think? Is living on the hook for a whole season in a hatteras worth not getting beat to death? I have no inverters...just a stardard set up with a generator and alot of batteries. Thus I'd need to fire up my boat's gennie to cook, charge batteries, etc...and I guess maybe I'd be forced to figure out a way to power my fridge or just not keep perishable food on board. I work in NYC so eat most meals out anyway...
If I stay at the marina, I fear that eventually the cleats on my boat will get ripped right out. Also, it just isn't enjoyable getting tossed around when the whole idea of the boat is relaxation. If I stay I will get those rubber line shock absorbers but that's not going to do much.
There is NO serenity when everything is clanking and you are getting tossed around continually...yet there is NO convenience living on the hook unless I figure out a better way to set up my boat. What do you all think? Any suggestions on ways to combat the beating....or any suggestions on living on a mooring ball? thanks in advance for your commentary...I know this is ultra long email, but I have a very limited time to figure this out and neither option is all that easy.
[for those of you that know this area, I spent winter at liberty landing marina but they have no summer slips for 53, hoboken doesn't accomodate my size, chelsea piers says absolutely not since their focus is selling boats and unless you buy from them you get no slip, I don't want to live up in the bronx and I'm number 464 on the waiting list for W 79th St boat basin...but they will give me a mooring ball if I want it]