NJ Bays

Status
Not open for further replies.
D

Dave Oberholtzer

Has anyone sailed the New Jersery bays just north of Atlantic City ( the LBI area)? I may be vacationing there this year and am wondering how deep they are (I haven't bought the chart yet). Dave Oberholtzer Hydrotherapy
 
R

Ron Mehringer

LBI

The bay contained by Long Beach Island is Barnegat Bay. Many of the Marinas that sailors use for this area are in Forked River (which is on the mainland). In general, Barnegat has a lot of shallow areas. Fortunately, the bottom is all soft. I'm not aware of any rock at all. You may want to poke around the NOAA web site. I was there looking at an online version of the Barnegat Bay chart, but can't seem to find now. We're renting a house on LBI in August. Unfortunately, my H26 won't be joining us. If you are looking for crew, drop me an email at mehr@bellatlantic.net Hope you enjoy your visit to NJ. Ron Mehringer
 
M

Mulf

12 years sailing in that area...

Hi! I owned an Oday 222 for almost 12 years and sailed almost all of the bays between Atl City and the northern end of the Barnegat between about 1984 and 1996. The Oday 222 was a Keel centerboard setup with 20 inches of fixed keel, and a swing down board to 4 feet, and the rudder needed about 3 feet before it kicked up. Once the rudder kicked up the boat was a real chore to steer. So if I felt the centerboard drag it was time to tack back for deeper water. The boat was ideally situated for that area. I have a Hunter 29.5 now and sai the Chesapeake. I am not sure exactly what the setup is on the 26, but here's some info on the bays. The post about the Barnegat oversimplifies. There are really several bays. The Barnegat is mostly between the Northern end of LBI northward up past island beach state park, Seaside Heights, Toms River, etc. The Barnegat for the most part was fine for the 4' board and you had a lot of leeway from the channels. As you head south behind LBI starting from about Harvey Cedars south you will generally be much more restricted to the channels. Once you pass under the bridge connecting LBI to the mainland (bridge has something like 50'clearance)I think you are actually in Little Egg Bay. Anyway, from there south to approximately Beach Haven there was very little water outside of the channels. That area is where I started with the O'Day, and sold that house and bought one north of Barnegat light on the mainland (Waretown) because the sailing was so much better. I believe the area of bay between the southern end of LBI and Tuckerton on the mainland to the west is probably decent sailing for your boat. Hope you have great sailing. I was down there the second week of July and the wind never stoped blowing our umbrella off the beach! Couldn't believe I didn't have a sailboat with me.
 
S

Steve Lucas

Barnegat Bay

Barnegat Bay is a great place to sail. I had a H23 wing keel(2'3" draft) for the last two years before getting a Com-pac 23 (about 2'6"). I sail behind LBI every weekend and some nights during the week. Charts are good but not very accurate. You will find deeper water on the north side of the bridge. "Most" areas I sail are 4'-5'. When my keel bumps the mud...it's time to tack. You can sail south of the bridge towards AC but there are some looow areas. Watch where us locals sail and you'll be fine. Steve
 
Status
Not open for further replies.