The appeal of out-of-season boating around the UK coast
The seasons bring variety and spice to our lives with their ever-changing character. On land, we are aware that the passing of the seasons is marked by distinctive change, but of course, this is no less true out to sea. The temperature of the water, the nature of the winds and prevailing weather systems, along with the differences in the quality of light, all contribute to making the all-year-round boater’s time at sea ever rewarding, ever engaging.
Personally speaking, I love what many would describe as ‘out of season’ boating. The seas around our coast grow in their intensity, and as winter descends, the colour palette and vistas are transformed beneath ever more cloud-harried skies. From October onward, the coastline sees the return of an emerging beauty where our wooded, tree-lined shores take on leafy golden hues, and bracken-covered headlands are swept orange brown with the artistry of late autumn. You begin to feel that this is nature’s time, a time and a season when the waters at last lie fallow, free from the cutting wakes of leisure boats or even the throbbing haul of fishing boats.



























