Share the space in No Name Harbor - Key Biscayne
Date Posted: March 9, 2016
Source: Cruising Contributor

No Name Harbor on a calm day in the middle of the week in 2014 (Photo © 2016 The Retirement Project)

Editor's Note: This anchorage is a popular jumping-off point to the Bahamas – and may become even more popular since several nearby anchorages will likely become off-limits starting July 1st.

I've been thinking about some of the things going on in No Name Harbor. No Name has a rule prohibiting staying on the wall overnight which, in our experience, has been pretty well enforced. But this last time in we noticed a whole string of boats tied up over several nights in a row. Asked around, and the rumor is that there is a new Park Manager, and he doesn't have the budget or manpower to enforce that rule. Good deal, right? Tying to land in a protected place, with rest rooms, laundry, and a pump out. A cruising dream come true. But I got to wondering.

No Name is a party spot, with a nice restaurant right on the harbor. Big power boats come in for the weekend, meet with friends, and often have lunch or dinner. Cruising sailboats, for the most part, used to be anchored pretty much out of the way. The power boats don't often carry dinks, so tying to the wall is the only way they can meet with their friends. Now though, they will pull in and find the wall lined with boats, mostly sail, with some boats that were there the weekend before, and the weekend before that.

While cruising powerboats look pretty much like the non-cruising variety, cruising sailboats are usually easy to spot. The rails are lined with water, diesel, and fuel jugs. Many sport a collection of wind vanes, solar panels, and wind generators. The vast assembly of hardware that makes a sailboat a sailboat, corrodes and stains hulls and decks. Life lines often sport a collection of towels drying in the sun. And, let us be honest, a lot of our cruising boats look like they have been ridden hard and never put away at all because, well, that is exactly how we use them. They are things of beauty to us, but to someone looking from the flying bridge of a mega-buck power yacht?

Now I admit that I am a cruiser, and am of the opinion that the rest of the world should look upon us, see nothing but the vanguard of human kind's future, and thus grant us free reign over the waters we live on. We travel light on the planet, leaving little behind for our explorations. We point-produce most of our power and use it very carefully. We don't need thousands of miles of concrete poured over Mother Earth to get where we want to go. Generally we are friendly and helpful, not very full of ourselves because we have seen a bigger picture than many of our American compatriots know. We like other countries and cultures, are not afraid of people with skin tones different that ours, who worship gods we haven't met, and who speak languages we don't understand. (Nearly any collection of cruisers will include more bi, tri, and multi-lingual people than nearly any group of land dwellers.) We have married couples sailing together, un-married couples sailing together, solo sailors meeting and spending “quality” time on the other boat; “live and let live” could well be the official motto of our gypsy tribe of wanderers.

But, sometimes, I think we are our own worst enemy. Here in Florida the cruising news is full of the law being passed that will close down some popular anchorages. Closings prompted solely by rich people who think they own the view outside of their McMansion, and don't like cruising boats intruding on their space. It is ugly and offensive and pure corruption of a most blatant kind, politicians and police departments being bought and sold on the open market for all to see. And yet...

It seems likely that, with mega-boat owners finding No Name's wall blocked by cruising boats tied-to for days or weeks at a time, it will not be long before a law banning overnight stays there will soon be in the offering as well. No Name is a State Park, a common area, a place shared by everyone in the community, land dwellers and power boat party goers included. If we in the cruising tribe forget that, if we act with the same lack of consideration that the power boats show in the channel here in Dinner Key, I'm not sure we can complain if the rest of the community moves to force us out.

This is not to say Kintala will never be on the wall in No Name. There is a pump out that we use often. The store is a long walk away, and loading provisions is much easier if on the wall than it is hauling stuff in the dink. When the weather goes down the tubes using the wall to get as many boats into the harbor and safe is certainly a good idea, one that the old rule dismissed unnecessarily. (Though even with the old rule, the powers-that-be seemed willing to bend it for weather and to give broken boats a chance to get fixed.) But I think we would do ourselves a big favor to remember that No Name has lots of uses for many people, and we need to make sure they have access to a space that belongs to them as much as it does to us. One night on the wall and gone, off the wall on weekends, make room for people who don't live like we do; it might make us some friends in Florida.

We could use some.

– T.J., www.theretirementproject.blogspot.com

For the latest on Florida anchoring ban legislation, click/tap here.

Comment Submitted by Wally Moran - March 11, 2016
Craig Lewis - noted! Of course, most of you trawler drivers were once sailors :)
Comment Submitted by Mike Ahart, Waterway Guide News Editor - March 11, 2016
Just to clear up the "anchoring skills" debate (Wally and Craig), the aforementioned "power boaters" are not trawlers or cruising boaters, they are generally local boats – anything from an 18-foot deck boat to a 75-foot luxury yacht (some with very powerful stereo systems). Every time I've been anchored in No Name on a weekend, several of these boats have dragged into other boats. I have personally helped two different boats anchor for the day after their skippers tried several times unsuccessfully. A 75-foot luxury yacht tried to anchor in the 120-foot space between the front of my boat and the sea wall, nearly dropping its anchor right on top of mine (it ended up anchoring in the back, dragging into the rocks during the night, then spending the next few days on the wall). No Name is a joy during the week, and quite an experience on weekends.
Comment Submitted by Tom - March 10, 2016
We were there recently for 4 days. There were 14 boats on the wall the first day, and over the next few days a few came and went but the core remained. I have three observations. First, no one used the pump out. in 4 days. So where is that going? Second, If everyone was paying the $20 per day fee, then the ranger could afford to patrol. But no one pays Third, most of the boats on the wall looked like Suhaili after her non stop circumnavigation. We could clean up our act just a little. We are our own worst enemies sometimes in this anchoring fight.
Comment Submitted by Pete Peterson - March 10, 2016
Having cruised the Mediterrainean Sea for over six years, the answer is Med mooring. You could easily fit 100 boat stern too the wall in no name harbor. It works amazingly well in Europe, we learned how to do. I can't imagine other cruisers can't sucessfully perform this maneuver. With the loss of our anchoring rights in south Florida, Med Mooring would make room for everyone.
Comment Submitted by Craig Lewis - March 10, 2016
Tell Wally most of us trawlers no how to anchor....it's usually the sailboats dragging...just sayin'
Comment Submitted by S/V Minx - March 10, 2016
Thank you for writing this. This is common sense approach to a problem we cruisers will create if we take public property as our own. Respect the fact that there are folks with "political pull" that may want to use it too. They should be able to.
Comment Submitted by Wally Moran - March 10, 2016
Well thought out, well said. You'll be interested to hear that the last several nights there has been only one, or no boats at all, on the wall at No Name. Besides, we don't need the power boats anchoring when very few of them know how. I watched one boat a week ago, a 45 footer, back down. His anchor wasn't touching the bottom because he didn't have enough rode out, and he couldn't figure it out. I am NOT kidding. It would have been funny had it not been so pathetic. Ok, I lied. It was funny too. But he's not the only one like that. On windy weekends, you dare not leave your boat because someone's powerboat will drag into it because they failed to put their anchor down properly. And sadly, not just powerboats. Seems people can afford a half million for a boat down here, but not $500 for training on how to use it. Credit card captains.
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