Natural harbour
Region: Norway (3278), Vestfold og Telemark (229), Ytre Oslofjord (171), Vestfold (169), Færder (76), Tjøme (56) and Hvasser (8)
Olav Pekeberg says:
description
Approach and maritime conditions: Lilleskagen is a narrow inlet located north of Hvasser. It is shallow here and suitable only for motorboats with a shallow draft (up to 35 feet have been tested). Lilleskagen is a fair-weather harbor.
Anchoring: Enter the inlet from the north and turn the boat 90 degrees, so you moor against the rocks on the east side.
The area: From Lilleskagen, there is a nice hiking trail down to Kruke Havn (the center of Hvasser).
[translated from Norwegian with AI]
0 x helpful | written on 19. Jun 2021
Do you know this harbour? It's a huge help to other sailors if you add a short description or review of the harbour.
Protection next night
92 points
Want to know how the wind score works? Then you should read this explanation.
The wind forecasts come from yr.no (Norwegian Meteorological Institute), and was last updated 1 hour and 26 minutes ago (Wednesday 30 April 11:28 AM). The next night score shows you the worst hour between 22:00 and 08:00 the next night. We recommend that you check multiple sources for wind forecasts. windy.com is a good website to show larger wind systems.
The safe directions for this harbour was added at 19. Jun 2021. Click here to edit.
Fri 28 Jul 2023 |
|
Wed 19 Jul 2023 |
|
The visits are retrieved from AIS data. You can click to see all visiting ships to Lilleskagen - Hvasser, as well as statistics about the ships that visits
Choose a different date than today
Important: When you check in to a harbour, you add it to a journey on this website. You are not booking a place in the marina.
Users that contributed to this page: Olav Pekeberg
harbourmaps.com is updated by the boating community. When you add information, a review or pictures to this page you are listed here with the other contributors (we list your user-name, which can be your real name or a pseudonym).
Filter by
Order by
0 harbours
Show more harbours