Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've got a place in Reedville and live in Alexandria. It's 2.5 hours door to door. Internet SUCKS but between hot spotting our phones and the satellite, we managed to keep 4 kids and 4 adults schooling/teleworking this spring.
We love it. Reedville is cute (but tiny) and we do our supply shopping either in Heathsville or Kilmarnock.
Any reason you chose that area? We've been looking at property down that way.....
Anonymous wrote:We've got a place in Reedville and live in Alexandria. It's 2.5 hours door to door. Internet SUCKS but between hot spotting our phones and the satellite, we managed to keep 4 kids and 4 adults schooling/teleworking this spring.
We love it. Reedville is cute (but tiny) and we do our supply shopping either in Heathsville or Kilmarnock.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is all really helpful! Thank you! For water depth re boating, how deep is generally deep enough?
Depends how big your boat is!! Seriously... depends on sailboat (need deeper water) versus power boat. For power boats, it also depends on size of boat (draft) and type of propulsion (outboard, i/o, jet boat, etc).
i'd think 4 feet depth at low tide should be good for all but the big sailboats.
Don’t rely on real estate descriptions that say “deep water.” That can mean anything. And having water at your dock doesn’t guarantee that there is deep water access to the river itself. The silt in the creeks and rivers down there moves constantly, so charts aren’t reliable. They also give “mean low water” which isn’t the “lowest low.” If you’re serious, get in a kayak with a depth meter (or even just a stick) and test it at low tide yourself. Make sure there is deep channel out. I wouldn’t go any shallower than 3’ water depth at low tide for consistent access in a power boat. Sailboat depth water usually adds big $$ to the value of a lot.
The Northern Neck is VERY quiet in the winter — most of the restaurants, etc shut down. Also, I don’t know if the menhaden plant is still operating in Kilmarnock, but you don’t want to be downwind of there.
Sorry — I misremembered — the menhaden plant is in Reedville, not Kilmarnock, but the warning still holds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is all really helpful! Thank you! For water depth re boating, how deep is generally deep enough?
Depends how big your boat is!! Seriously... depends on sailboat (need deeper water) versus power boat. For power boats, it also depends on size of boat (draft) and type of propulsion (outboard, i/o, jet boat, etc).
i'd think 4 feet depth at low tide should be good for all but the big sailboats.
Don’t rely on real estate descriptions that say “deep water.” That can mean anything. And having water at your dock doesn’t guarantee that there is deep water access to the river itself. The silt in the creeks and rivers down there moves constantly, so charts aren’t reliable. They also give “mean low water” which isn’t the “lowest low.” If you’re serious, get in a kayak with a depth meter (or even just a stick) and test it at low tide yourself. Make sure there is deep channel out. I wouldn’t go any shallower than 3’ water depth at low tide for consistent access in a power boat. Sailboat depth water usually adds big $$ to the value of a lot.
The Northern Neck is VERY quiet in the winter — most of the restaurants, etc shut down. Also, I don’t know if the menhaden plant is still operating in Kilmarnock, but you don’t want to be downwind of there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is all really helpful! Thank you! For water depth re boating, how deep is generally deep enough?
Depends how big your boat is!! Seriously... depends on sailboat (need deeper water) versus power boat. For power boats, it also depends on size of boat (draft) and type of propulsion (outboard, i/o, jet boat, etc).
i'd think 4 feet depth at low tide should be good for all but the big sailboats.
Don’t rely on real estate descriptions that say “deep water.” That can mean anything. And having water at your dock doesn’t guarantee that there is deep water access to the river itself. The silt in the creeks and rivers down there moves constantly, so charts aren’t reliable. They also give “mean low water” which isn’t the “lowest low.” If you’re serious, get in a kayak with a depth meter (or even just a stick) and test it at low tide yourself. Make sure there is deep channel out. I wouldn’t go any shallower than 3’ water depth at low tide for consistent access in a power boat. Sailboat depth water usually adds big $$ to the value of a lot.
The Northern Neck is VERY quiet in the winter — most of the restaurants, etc shut down. Also, I don’t know if the menhaden plant is still operating in Kilmarnock, but you don’t want to be downwind of there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is all really helpful! Thank you! For water depth re boating, how deep is generally deep enough?
Depends how big your boat is!! Seriously... depends on sailboat (need deeper water) versus power boat. For power boats, it also depends on size of boat (draft) and type of propulsion (outboard, i/o, jet boat, etc).
i'd think 4 feet depth at low tide should be good for all but the big sailboats.
Anonymous wrote:All of this is super helpful! Welcome the good the bad and the ugly!! Anyone know if InstaCart from the Food Lion is an option down there for real (looked like it from the InstaCart website, but not sure I trust that)?
We are more kayakers, crabbers, and fishers than tubers at the moment, so hoping the jellyfish won’t be a huge problem. If anyone has any feedback on kayaking would love to hear! House we are considering is next to a shallow cove in the river so looks like it should be good for kayaking there at least.
Also, anyone have experience getting medical services down there? Stitches for little things, broken bones, or bigger (with the pandemic, should figure this out on the front end).
Anonymous wrote:Looks like the internet provider is Atlantic Broadband. Anyone have any experience with them? Would need to have our two kids on virtual school while we work when there for a long weekend or whatever, so high-speed Internet is a must-have.