Newtown Creek
Newtown River · Newtown Estuary · Newtown Harbour IoW
50°43.1'N 001°24.0'W
Depth
1–4m
Bottom
mud
Alarm Radius
60m
Holding
Excellent
Recommended Anchor Alarm Radius
60m
60m radius appropriate for the sheltered creek in 1.5–4m (CD). With Solent tidal range of 3.5–4.0m springs, actual depths at HW can reach 5–8m in the lower pool. Allow adequate scope for the full tidal cycle. The creek is narrow — swing room is limited; consider a fore-and-aft mooring in the upper pool or use the National Trust visitor moorings.
About This Anchorage
Newtown Creek is widely regarded as the finest natural anchorage in the Solent — a winding estuary on the north coast of the Isle of Wight, largely unchanged since medieval times and now protected as a National Nature Reserve. The creek provides outstanding all-weather shelter, accessible near HW over a shallow bar. The surrounding saltmarshes, mudflats and woodland are a designated SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) and host remarkable birdlife including Brent geese, kingfishers and marsh harriers. The National Trust maintains visitor moorings and allows responsible anchoring in designated areas. Only 5nm from Yarmouth (IoW) but feels utterly remote. One of England's most celebrated cruising anchorages.
Protected From
N · NE · E · SE · S · SW · W · NW
Exposed To
None (fully sheltered)
Anchoring Rules
- Anchoring fee
- Free to anchor in designated areas. National Trust visitor moorings available (seasonal, modest fee). Contact Newtown Harbour Master for current information.
- Permit required
- No
Restrictions: National Nature Reserve — do not anchor on saltmarsh or seagrass (visible at LW). Anchor only in the main navigable channel and lower pool. No anchoring on the drying banks. Do not go ashore on the saltmarsh (protected habitat). Dogs on leads near nesting areas. Speed limit 5 knots in the creek.
Hazards
- !Bar at entrance — 0.5m (CD); entry only near HW; consult Solent tide tables (not standard Admiralty tables); entry requires minimum 1.5m draft clearance
- !Drying banks extend significantly from both shores — navigate in the charted channel only; use large-scale Admiralty Chart 2021
- !Solent double-HW system — tidal predictions differ significantly from normal tidal curves; use Reeds Almanac Solent corrections or the Solent Cruising Companion specific tables
- !National Nature Reserve rules — strict; anchoring on saltmarsh or seagrass will result in reprimand from the Harbour Master
- !Busy in July–August — arrive early on the tide as the creek fills up quickly
Skipper's Tips
- →Enter on the first of the flood, 1–2 hours before local HW — use the Solent-specific tide tables in Reeds Almanac; the Solent double-HW means the water stays high for longer than you expect
- →Anchor in the wide lower pool clear of the channel — a fore-and-aft arrangement or National Trust visitor mooring is preferable to single anchor given the narrow channel
- →The evening light over the saltmarshes and the complete silence (no road noise, no buildings) is one of the finest experiences in Solent sailing
- →Yarmouth (5nm west) has excellent facilities — fuel, water, provisions and the best pubs on the IoW — use it as the waypoint before or after Newtown
- →Wildlife at dawn and dusk is exceptional — kingfishers, egrets, grey herons and if you are lucky, an otter
Facilities
Nearest provisions: Yarmouth (Isle of Wight) (5nm)
Best Months & Season
May, June, July, August, September
May–September. The creek is accessible year-round for craft that can clear the bar, but summer offers the best conditions and wildlife. July–August are very popular — the creek can have 30+ yachts at anchor in good weather.
Recommended Anchor Types
Nearby Anchorages
Set Your Anchor Alarm to 60m
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