+xHello Chris - I am based in Maine. In general, Maine is likely to be less expensive than Massachusetts or Long Island sound. Moorings are also a much better value than marina slips. Moorings will be $40 to $60 per day (maybe less for a weekly rate). Marina slips are typically $2.50 to $3 per ft per day. Rockland Harbor has several good options for moorings and bus connections to airports in Portland and Boston. For an extended period of time, it is best to make a reservation as things do fill up. Good luck - Bill W
Hi Bill,
Have commercial moorings improved enough to be trusted in a hurricane?
They were clearly not when I was last in the area. It has been a while since I sailed the US East Coast and during that time, I suspect moorings have improved, but, when preparing for a hurricane while out cruising, I would (and did) look to anchor out rather than trust a mooring (and by that I also mean a mooring field and its closely packed grouping of boats who were often not well prepared for the hurricane: often it is other boats that do the most damage to one’s own boat).
A few seasons ago, in Newfoundland, we had a hurricane come looking for us: well predicted, we picked a location where I suspected we could anchor out safely rather than trust a recreational boat marina or a mooring.
I “hurricane proofed” my personal mooring (Long Island Sound) and my mooring, at the time, had 3 or 4 times the holding and chafing capacity of any commercial mooring I heard about or used.
As a “tell” for trust in a mooring field, look at the boats, in anticipation of a hurricane, looking to get hauled last minute and off their moorings. Then look at the other boats and how many of them show clear evidence that their owners did not make the effort to prepare their boat for the hurricane.
Thanks for your thoughts.
My best, Dick Stevenson, s/v Alchemy