6-day Sailing Itinerary in the Solent
The Solent is an intriguing place to sail, with dramatic cliffs, fantastic beaches and idyllic towns and villages, all steeped in centuries of nautical history. Throw in brilliant sailing conditions, lots of yachts in the giant marinas in the area, and you can see why they call this the home of sailing - plus practically everyone knows about sailing.
This six-day itinerary is just long enough to hit all the highlights – including Cowes, the Needles, Hamble, Chichester and Yarmouth, but there is plenty more to see besides. This covers 112 nM, which should mean you can take a leisurely pace (sailing 4-5 hours a day) and really explore each port you arrive at.
It’s only a six-day itinerary because the odds are that you’ll be busy getting provisions and getting familiar with the boat on the Friday you arrive, and you have to return to the home marina on the Thursday - but you can stay on board for a final night, before disembarking on Friday morning. This itinerary starts in our main marina base of Lymington, but you can obviously also start or end in Hamble (or substitute Hamble for Gosport) and sail the same circular route.
Day 1. Lymington to Hamble – 13 nM
Good morning, Skipper, and how do you do? It’s very nice to meet you! Make sure the crew and all your shopping are on-board, and then let’s nose the good ship out of the marina and out on to the high seas!
Today we’re just making a short hop to Hamble-le-rice, or Hamble as it’s better known, which is a short run with the prevailing west-south-westerly summer wind away. Being a short leg means you can get familiar with the boat and give everyone a chance to take the helm - with an optional man overboard drill to act as a useful refresher.
Hamble is actually technically inland, and you sail up the river Hamble to take your pick from one of a number of well-protected marinas. The whole area will be bustling with sailors, and Hamble is a picturesque village with olde style English houses with thatched rooves and cobbled streets. There’s plenty of great places to eat and drink here (many with beautiful settings by the waterside). Sailors have been stopping here for literally hundreds of years, so I am sure the buildings could share a tale or two.
Day 2. Hamble to Chichester (via Gosport) – 22 nM
From one idyllic port to another. Today we’re heading to the picture-postcard Chichester, which was founded by the Romans, no less, and which boasts a fine cathedral – it’s a beautiful place to take a stroll.
From Hamble, we’re heading back out to the English Channel (incidentally, the French just call it La Manche or ‘the Channel’) before tacking to port and following the prevailing wind east and along the south coast. Chichester is back inland, so you’ll need to sail north past West Wittering village, and up the Ichenor reach to get to Chichester marina – a natural marina which, with space for over 1,000 berths, is also the biggest in England. Chichester is about a 5km walk away, or a ten-minute taxi ride, but there are beaches nearby if you prefer to relax.
If you have time, and you’re interested, then you can take lunch in Gosport (Portsmouth) on the way where there’s multiple maritime museums. At the very least, it’s worth sailing into the area to have a close look at HMS Discovery (which was the famous English Naval General Lord Horatio Nelson’s very own boat in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 – which he won) or the Mary Rose (Henry VIII’s boat), which was sunk by the French in the Solent in 1545 (and retrieved in 1982).
Day 3. Chichester to Cowes – 19 nM
We’ve sampled the delights of inland sailing, but now it’s time to do some island hopping! There’s only a few islands in the Solent, but they make the count. The Isle of Wight is at the centre of the sailing area and is home to both Cowes (the capital of sailing in England) and the worlds’ most famous sailing race – the annual Round the Island race is a one-day event when people sail the 55 nM around the Isle of Wight, anti-clockwise – there were 1,800 boats in the most recent running of the event!
To get to Cowes, we need to sail south and out of the Chichester harbour area (an ‘Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty’ and home to many seals) before tacking into the prevailing summer winds. The land on your nose is the Isle of Wight, and Cowes is on the northern tip of this diamond-shaped rock.
To get to a mooring in Cowes you’ll need to get past the Cowes ‘floating bridge’ – a ferry service across the River Medina which has been in operation since 1720, and links the two sides of the village without the need for a 10 mile round-trip. It started as rowing boats, but is now a chain ferry which can also accommodate 20 or so cars. Cowes is a place any sailor will find interesting, and it has some of the finest seafood you’ll ever find.
Day 4. Cowes to Yarmouth (via Beaulieu) – 16 nM
We’re sticking on the Isle of Wight today – in the international sailing world, the island is too important to only spend a night here – but we’re also mixing things up a little by sailing over to the UK Mainland and back again too (it’s optional, but Beaulieu is totally worth the extra miles).
From Cowes, we’re crossing the Solent (which is actually the name for the bit of water between England and the Isle of Wight) and sailing inland to visit Beaulieu. Beau Lieu is French for ‘Beautiful place’ and the Abbey and estate here certainly are! You’ll need to moor at Bucklers Hard (an idyllic Georgian village which was also a place where they built ships – including three war galleons which were involved in the Battle of Trafalgar) and then stroll to the village and its wonderful Palace house from there.
Then we’re back down the river and over the Solent again to Yarmouth, another pretty and nautical-obsessed town on the Isle of Wight.
Day 5. Yarmouth to Poole (via the Needles) – 20 nM
The most famous part of the Round the Island race is encountering ‘the Needles’ on the western tip of the Isle of Wight – the three (formerly four) chalk stacks are mainly there for (spectacular) decoration, as the tricky bit is judging how to make the turn around the lighthouse - getting it wrong can add hours to your time as you fight back up tides and winds.
It’s made more complicated still by the wreck of the SS Varvassi (which ran aground here in 1947 when it was carrying a load of tangerines from Algiers to Southampton) – all 1,800 boats are aiming to squeeze through the 60m gap between the lighthouse and the wreck, but a fair number each year end the race here.
To get there for a closer look, we need to sail into the Solent then head west, tacking up the prevailing wind as we follow the magnificent coastline. Make the turn if you have the time, before setting a course pretty much due west for Poole, back on the UK mainland. Poole is a natural harbour area, and there is a vast amount of water ‘inland’ behind the gap in the coastline. The largest island in here is Brownsea Island, which is where the first ever Scout camp took place in 1907 – Scouting began as a small camp here for young teenage boys and the organisation now spans 216 countries and has over 50 million members!
Day 6. Poole to Lymington) – 22 nM
And all of a sudden, it’s the last day. Terrible news. There’s no need for a stiff upper lip though, as we’ve still got some sailing to do today! We’re heading back east to the Solent and Lymington, running or reaching with the prevailing wind.
It will be hard not to spot Bournemouth beach on your port side, which is the UK’s longest beach, and one of the best – there’s over seven miles of delightful sandy beach, and over five million people visit it each year. They say the water is warmer here, so it might be worth throwing down the anchor for a quick dip if you haven’t yet done so this week.
You’ll sail past Hurst castle as you re-enter the Solent (built by Henry VIII to protect the Solent) which, for a number of years, housed the most powerful guns or weapons in the world! And then it’s back to the marina. Don’t forget to refill the fuel tanks before mooring her up one last time. You’ll be able to stay on-board tonight, so there is still time to check out Lymington and have one last night with the crew before you head back to the real world.
Hopefully the weather has been kind to you, you’ve enjoyed exploring the beautiful Solent, and you’re leaving with better friends than you arrived with. You might already have decided as a crew to come again next year, or maybe you fancy sailing somewhere new? In either case, head to PlainSailing.com to get some inspiration about places to sail from and to read the destination guides. Have a safe journey home, and we look forward to seeing you soon.