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Watchet Harbour (and Marina)

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At a Glance

Watchet Harbour (and Marina)

Contacts
Watchet Harbour Marina tel 01984 322230 VHF # 80
Watchet & Minehead HM tel 07528 208758

Watchet Harbour Marina in Somerset is another of the very few places along this stretch of coast where a small craft can enter relatively easily, and remain afloat (entry only possible a couple of hours either side of HW). Again in common with all this coast entry is not possible in strong onshore winds. Be very aware that there is a range of 10 metres at Springs and 5 metres at Neaps and keep this in mind if anchoring off.

Watchet is about 80 miles further into the Bristol Channel/Severn Estuary from Padstow in North Cornwall. In the right weather a 24-hour trip will get you here, and this could be a good place to rest up and take stock before pushing onwards.

Not that long ago Watchet was a small working (and drying) harbour, handling coasters. In the photo gallery you'll see ships lying alongside where the Marina is now.

The Marina was commenced around the millennium and is now fully established offering all the usual facilities. The tidal ranges in this area are massive, with a 10 m range not at all uncommon , and the Marina makes use of this to allow boats to remain afloat at all times.

Be aware that the marina is a separate entity (Owned by the Marina Group based in Cardiff) from the Harbour which is owned by Somerset County Council so if you want to dry out in the Outer harbour you need to deal with the harbour master who doubles as the HM of Minehead

Depths are maintained in the marina by a flap sill, with access available for a couple of hours either side of local HW for boats of normal draft.

The little town can offer all the usual facilities, and for railway enthusiasts the West Somerset Steam Railway is right outside the Marina. Steam trains run along the coast or inland to Taunton.

The Marina website is at Watchet Marina | The Marine Group

Watchet Harbour (and Marina)

Approach

For the yachtsman or motorboater the approaches to Watchet

..... are reasonably straightforward but the powerful tides are very significant, and need to be allowed for.

If approaching from the North, (say Cardiff), the Culver Sands need to be avoided. They are marked either end by Cardinal buoyage, and lay about 6 miles to the NNE of Watchet. This shallow patch is not shown on our chart which covers the closer approaches only.

To the east of Watchet there is a firing practice area (Lilstock Range), but there are no restrictions on passing through (the area was used by the fixed wing a/c from RNAS Yeovilton and you can contact their operations on 01935 455497 to find out if it is active) To the west of Watchet there are two very conspicuous radio masts.

Further Pilotage Details...

Rocky ledges extending from the coast make it very important that you maintain a good offing, and begin your approaches from at least half a mile off. The harbour should not be approached until 1.5 hours before high water by strangers, and should be avoided altogether in strong onshore conditions.

At the times the Marina can be accessed, the tidal flow outside is generally westbound and can be very significant. When lining up to enter, this West going flow needs to be allowed for.

The harbour can be approached from half a mile off with the entrance "open". The lighthouse (Oc.G.3s.9m.9M) and flagstaff on the Western pier are very conspicuous, but in the close approaches allowance must be made for fierce tidal currents closer to the West Pier.

Once inside the Marina lies immediately to port.

They have been struggling for depth here and have had a dredge this spring and their own dredger is expected to finish that of during May. If in doubt ring the HM for advice

Night entry is not impossible, but it's even more important to be aware of the tidal set. The lighthouse on the West Pier has a 9 mile range, and the East Pier head is lit 2FR (vert) with a 3 mile range.

  Harbour   Anchorage   Marina
   £   GMT

Waypoint

51:12’.00 N 003:18.8 W

Charts

Admiralty, 1160, SC5608

Rules & Regs

Unknown

Hazards

Unsafe Entry in Strong Onshore Conditions, Rocky Ledges extend well offshore.

Tides

HW Dover-0455 MHWS 11.3m MHWN 8.5m MLWN 3.6m MLWS 1.0m

  Berthing

Once within the outer harbour, the Marina entrance is immediately to port...

Probably it would be wise to call them on VHF channel 80 or telephone 01984 322230 before approaching the outer harbour. A link to the Marina's website is provided below:

Watchet Marina | The Marine Group

They can handle quite large boats up to about 15 m, and the tidal gates can handle a beam of up to 7.5 m. Minimum depths within the Marina vary between 1.5 m and 3 m depending on your position within.

Entrance from the outer harbour through the Marina's flap sill is controlled by traffic signals. If you can see three vertical red lights you must wait. Three vertical green lights mean it is safe to cautiously proceed through the gate.

Berth where directed by the Marina staff, visitors normally being accommodated on pontoon C.

Charges (2021) here work out at £2.70 per metre per night (includes VAT and free shore power) or £18.00 per metre per week. Shortstays are charged at £8.50 flat rate.

The outer harbour totally dries out, and there aren't any suitable anchorages for small craft in the area.

Marinas and Mooring

Watchet Harbour Marina

 

Harbour Road
Watchet
Somerset
TA23 0AJ

  Harbour Authorities, Marinas, Moorings & Berths

Marina, Chandlers, Brokerage & New Boat Sales, Boat Storage - Open & Undercover, Repairs, RYA Tuition, Wireless Internet & Equipment For Rental, Boat Lifting, Fuel Pontoon, Showers & Laundry Facilities
  Call     www.watchet-harbour-marina.com    More Info

  Facilities

All the usual Marina facilities are available at Watchet. Water and electricity are connected on the pontoons, while ashore the visitor will find showers, toilets, and laundry facilities. There is also a small cafe which serves bacon rolls etc from 0800am.

WiFi is now available here too.

Diesel is available at the fuel pontoon, and boats of up to 15 tonnes can be lifted by crane with hardstanding available ashore and undercover if required. A small chandlery is on-site with Calor and camping gas available.

Watchet boat owners association has it's premises at the south end of the Western Quay, and a link to their website is provided below:

http://www.wboa.co.uk

Trailer Sailers are well provided for with two ramps, one into the Marina where there is always water, and the other into the drying outer harbour. Charges come out at £10 each way, or £170 for a years unlimited use. Parking is available nearby for trailers and cars. PWCs are not catered for.

The town can provide a reasonable selection of shops for provisioning etc.

Although the town has the steam railway, it is not connected on the mainline. First National buses run an excellent service from Bridgwater and Taunton (for onward connections), with a bus stop in the middle of Watchet.


What to Do

Steam enthusiasts will find plenty to do here with the railway, while a bit of a wander round will lead you to Watchet Boat Museum where you can check out the history of this little port.

There is also a fair selection of pubs plus a few restaurants and cafes, but to be honest not an overwhelming choice... it's only a small place. The link dealing with pubs in Watchet is provided below:

http://www.beerintheevening.com/pubs/results.shtml/el/Watchet%3BSomerset/

There high jinks here in August see this link:- www.lovewatchet.co.uk

History

Watchet is a harbour town and civil parish in the English county of Somerset, with an approximate population of 4,400. It is situated 15 miles (24 km) west of Bridgwater, 15 miles (24 km) north-west of Taunton, and 9 miles (14 km) east of Minehead. The parish includes the hamlet of Beggearn Huish. The town lies at the mouth of the Washford River on Bridgwater Bay, part of the Bristol Channel, and on the edge of Exmoor National Park.

History

The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records the early port at Watchet being plundered by Danes led by Ohtor and Rhoald in 987 and 997. It is known that it was in frequent use by small boats in 1564 possibly for the import of salt and wine from France. During the English Civil War Royalist reinforcements for the siege of Dunster Castle was sent by sea, but the tide was on the ebb and a troop of Roundheads rode into the shallows and forced the ship to surrender, so a ship at sea was taken by a troop of horse.

The primitive jetty was damaged in a storm of 1659 and a larger, stronger pier was built in the early 18th century supported by local wool merchants, although by 1797 the largest export was kelp made by burning seaweed for use in glass making. In the 19th century trade increased with the export of iron ore from the Brendon Hills, paper, flour and gypsum.

Harbour trade was aided by the coming of the railway. In the mid-1860s two independent railways terminated at Watchet. The West Somerset Mineral Railway ran down from the iron mines on the Brendon Hills, and the West Somerset Railway came up from the Bristol & Exeter Railway at Norton Fitzwarren. Both lines made extensive use of the harbour at Watchet from where iron ore was shipped across the Bristol Channel for smelting at Ebbw Vale in South Wales.

The mines and West Somerset Mineral Railway closed in 1898. The West Somerset Railway, extended from Watchet to Minehead in 1874, survived as part of British Rail until 1979. Reopened as a heritage railway, it still operates today. In 1900 and 1903 a series of gales breached the breakwater and East Pier with the loss of several vessels each time and subsequent repairs.

Landmarks

The principal landmark in Watchet is the town's harbour and the surrounding quaysides and narrow streets. In commercial use until 2000, the harbour has now been converted into a marina. There are several museums in the town, including the Market House Museum, which explores the history of the town and its harbour, and the Watchet Boat Museum, which displays the unusual local flatner boats and associated artefacts.

Adjacent to the harbour is Watchet station. This is now an intermediate stop on the West Somerset Railway, a largely steam-operated heritage railway that links Bishops Lydeard, near Taunton, with Minehead. The trackbed of the old West Somerset Mineral Railway now forms a path, which can be followed from the harbour at Watchet to Washford station, also on the West Somerset Railway.

The foreshore at Watchet is rocky, with a high 6 metres (20 ft) tidal range. The cliffs between Watchet and Blue Anchor show a distinct pale, greenish blue colour, resulting from the coloured alabaster found there. The name "Watchet" or "Watchet Blue" was used in the 16th century to denote this colour.

The text on this HISTORY page is covered by the following licence

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License

Local Business

Brokers

Channel Yacht Sales Ltd

 

Watchet Harbour Marina,
Harbour Road
Watchet
Somerset
TA23 0AQ

  Brokers/New Boat Sales

Channel Yacht Sales offices in Watchet and Bristol both have pontoon and dry mooring facilities and all vessels are advertised extensively. You will find friendly staff willing to help and advise whether you are buying or selling your boat, obtaining insurance, finance and/or information about mooring. With many years of experience and a willingness to get our hands oily we can provide engineering, valetting and repair services and even deliver your boat. Keith Willmott Marine offers RYA courses in Bristol.

Whatever your boating needs give us a call or visit us either in Bristol or Watchet.
  Call     www.channelyachtsales.com    More Info

Sea-Schools

Workman Marine School

 

Watchet Marina
Harbour Road
Somerset
TA23 0AQ

  Sea Schools

RYA Training Courses-Water & Shorebased, Own Boat Tuition, Boat Owners Association -(www.wboa.co.uk)
  Call     www.gwmarineschool.co.uk    More Info

Sailmakers-Repair-and-Covers

R & J Sails

 

Unit 8 Speedwell Industrial Estate
Knowles Road
Clevedon
Avon
BS21 7XS

  Sailmakers, Repair & Covers

Sailmakers
  Call     More Info

Other-Businesses

Watchet Boat Museum

 

Opposite West Somerset Railway Station
Watchet

  Other Businesses

Boat Museum - Free Admission
   More Info

Uncategorised

Watchet Boat Museum

 

Opposite West Somerset Railway Station
Watchet

  Other Businesses

Boat Museum - Free Admission
   More Info

Workman Marine School

 

Watchet Marina
Harbour Road
Somerset
TA23 0AQ

  Sea Schools

RYA Training Courses-Water & Shorebased, Own Boat Tuition, Boat Owners Association -(www.wboa.co.uk)
  Call     www.gwmarineschool.co.uk    More Info

Watchet Harbour Marina

 

Harbour Road
Watchet
Somerset
TA23 0AJ

  Harbour Authorities, Marinas, Moorings & Berths

Marina, Chandlers, Brokerage & New Boat Sales, Boat Storage - Open & Undercover, Repairs, RYA Tuition, Wireless Internet & Equipment For Rental, Boat Lifting, Fuel Pontoon, Showers & Laundry Facilities
  Call     www.watchet-harbour-marina.com    More Info

R & J Sails

 

Unit 8 Speedwell Industrial Estate
Knowles Road
Clevedon
Avon
BS21 7XS

  Sailmakers, Repair & Covers

Sailmakers
  Call     More Info

Channel Yacht Sales Ltd

 

Watchet Harbour Marina,
Harbour Road
Watchet
Somerset
TA23 0AQ

  Brokers/New Boat Sales

Channel Yacht Sales offices in Watchet and Bristol both have pontoon and dry mooring facilities and all vessels are advertised extensively. You will find friendly staff willing to help and advise whether you are buying or selling your boat, obtaining insurance, finance and/or information about mooring. With many years of experience and a willingness to get our hands oily we can provide engineering, valetting and repair services and even deliver your boat. Keith Willmott Marine offers RYA courses in Bristol.

Whatever your boating needs give us a call or visit us either in Bristol or Watchet.
  Call     www.channelyachtsales.com    More Info

Tide Information for watchet-marina

HW Dover-0455 MHWS 11.3m MHWN 8.5m MLWN 3.6m MLWS 1.0m
 

April 2026

 
SundayMondayTuesdayWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturday
16
HW05:2810.9
LW11:351.5
HW17:5011.1
LW23:541.5
17
HW06:0811.3
LW12:151.2
HW18:2911.5
18
LW00:321.2
HW06:4811.6
LW12:511.1
HW19:0811.6
19
LW01:061.1
HW07:2911.7
LW13:241.1
HW19:4911.6
20
LW01:461.1
HW08:1311.5
LW14:041.3
HW20:3011.3
21
LW02:251.4
HW08:5611.0
LW14:411.7
HW21:1210.8
22
LW03:041.9
HW09:4210.2
LW15:212.3
HW21:5810.0
© British Crown Copyright, 2026. All rights reserved
Please note: It is the user's responsibility to ensure that the data is suitable for their intended purpose. VisitMyHarbour must not be used by vessels for navigation.
   0   0
UPDATE OCTOBER 2022
05 Oct 2022 by Don Thomson 3
I reviewed these notes in October 2022. The dredging is ongoing here otherwise, no change
   2   0
UPDATE SUMMER 2021
01 Oct 2021 by Don Thomson 3
I reviewed these notes in early October 2021. The dredging of the marina is just about complete and the gates are in operation. They've had over 100 visitors this summer - so things are on the up here.
   0   0
Watchet Harbour 2021
19 Mar 2021 by Ploughboy
Cardiff Marine Group is now operating Watchet Marina, they have published a plan to dredge the inner basin and return the marina to its full operational capability. http://themarinegroup.co.uk/app/uploads/2021/03/Watchet-Marina-Renovation-Programme.pdf. As always the Ancient Mariner will watch their progress.
   1   0
Watchet Harbour 2021
19 Mar 2021 by Ploughboy
Cardiff Marine Group is now operating Watchet Marina, they have published a plan to dredge the inner basin and return the marina to its full operational capability. http://themarinegroup.co.uk/app/uploads/2021/03/Watchet-Marina-Renovation-Programme.pdf. As always the Ancient Mariner will watch their progress.
   0   0
SEPTEMBER 2020
05 Oct 2020 by chitchat
Friendly (and busy!) as ever. On line booking for visitors available but phone call works too. During Covid they were not letting out any unoccupied moorings upstream to visitors. Shower block now exceptional; again during Covid with limited opening times. New rates as published - Walk Ashore £4/m. Total of 46 visitors berths when all complete. Yachtsman's Bar closed indefinitely. Master Builder restaurant by reservation only.
   2   0
Update July 2019
29 Jul 2019 by Sueflugel
The marina hasn’t been dredged for some time and the gate is out of use with traffic lights remaining on red. Access is available around high water but the marina dries out and you will be sitting in mud from 2.5 hours after high water to 2.5 hours before. When we entered there was no answer on VHF so had to use mobile phone to get permission. Phone number is on the harbour wall. Having said that the staff are helpful and the town is delightful.
   1   0
UPDATE SPRING 2018
26 Apr 2018 by Don Thomson
Prices have gone up a little. The question of depths is being dealt with with dredging this Spring. If in doubt contact the harbour.
   0   0
dredgings
13 Dec 2017 by Peter Hull
There have been issues of depths of water varying markedly in different parts of the Marina for some time Just be aware at times you may not find as much water in the Marina as you expect. Probably best to contact the Marina Office to get an update before you plan your trip.
   0   0
Anchoring and Approach
27 Sep 2017 by OldManOfTheHills
There is a very ancient and good anchorage at Blue Anchor Bay 2.5 miles to the West for those awaiting the tide to get into Watchet. Onshore winds represent a difficulty entering Watchet but powered craft can still enter in the hands of bold but careful skippers in moderate F5 weather
   0   0
Update Spring 2016
03 May 2016 by Don Thomson
These notes were reviewed by Don in May 2016. Links have been updated and a new link to Google Street Maps added in the Approach Section
   1   0
Update Spring 2016
29 Apr 2016 by Don Thomson
These notes were reviewed by Don in April 2016. As has been said by our member below, the gates are working and they have had a dredge. All that has changed is the price for a night's stop.
   2   0
All now working
25 Apr 2016 by Beccaboo
Hi there, just been into Watchet. The gates are now fully operational and the marina have dredged the basin which made it a great place to visit. The facilities in the village are second to none.
   1   0
Watchet A delightful town, but.be aware.....
22 Jan 2015 by david bagshaw
In September 2014 the flap gate to the marina was damaged and is still out of order Jan 2015, and expected to remain so for the near future. Stop boards have been put in however it has been commented on boating forums nearly all boats now dry out. dredging is due to take place in the coming months. On a navigational point, the WALLS of light at the end of the W pier is painted RED when one might expect it to be green. So if you cant take the mud, a visit on the tide is the way forward.
   0   0
Update 2013
19 Feb 2013 by Don Thomson
These notes were updated by Don T on the 18th Feb. 2013. Prices were updated for the 2013 season.