• New Cars
    • First Impressions
    • Road Tests
  • Classics
    • Classic Profiles
    • Classic Driving Impressions
    • Classics Information
    • Events and Days Out
  • Motoring For Fun
  • News & Views
  • Bookshelf
  • Technical
    • Grumpy Old Mechanic
    • Kim’s Tips
  • Features
    • Visits
    • Track Days
  • Contributors
    • About our contributors
    • Kim Henson
    • Chris Adamson
    • Kieron Fennelly
    • Ant Henson
    • Rachel Henson
    • David Miles
    • Gerald Morgan
    • Dave Moss
    • Dave Randle
    • Robin Roberts
    • Tom Scanlan
    • Glen Smale
    • Jeremy Walton
    • Keith Ward
    • John Price Williams
  • More…
    • About Wheels Alive
    • Tips for using this website
    • Useful Links

Wheels Alive

Old cars, new cars, borrowed cars & blue cars. If it steers it's here!

Old cars, new cars, borrowed cars & blue cars. If it steers it's here!

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.

To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy

Buckler’s Hard Deputy Harbour Master and Yacht Harbour team develop new emergency ladders

14th October 2024

Rescue safety at top of the agenda for Buckler’s Hard…

Just down the road from Beaulieu (and linked with it), is the fascinating and historically important riverside village of Buckler’s Hard, tranquil today but vital to this country’s shipbuilding in years gone by. The village and the Buckler’s Hard Yacht Harbour are well worth seeing, but of course both are adjacent to water and safety is vitally important…

Kim says, “I realise that this is not a motoring-related story as such, but Buckler’s Hard is geographically close to, and related to, Beaulieu, and for visitors to this motoring attraction it is well worth taking time to drive the few miles further to visit Buckler’s Hard, where rescue safety in the Yacht Harbour has just been improved.”

The Buckler’s Hard team tells us:

(Photograph and all words from Buckler’s Hard).

Deputy Harbour Master Adam Lewis has worked with the Beaulieu River team to create a new design of safety ladder which make rescues from the water even safer.

After reviewing incidents, procedures and equipment, the river team felt that while the provision of emergency ladders at Buckler’s Hard Yacht Harbour exceeded guidelines, improvements could be made to make rescues easier.

Adam Lewis explains: “If someone falls in the water, the panic which can follow means that both the person in the water and their friends or partners can struggle to locate installed emergency ladders easily.

“So what we wanted to create was a mobile ladder which we could attach anywhere in the marina and is available for anyone to use. I also wanted to make it long enough so they could stand on the bottom rung, without having to bend their legs which makes it as easy as possible to climb out of the water.”

He added: “Experience has shown that entering cold water has a debilitating effect on strength and flexibility. Combine this with an inflated life jacket and it becomes a real struggle to climb some ladders, where you have to get your foot up on to a ladder rung 50cm below the surface of the water.

What we made in the end was a 2 metre long, lightweight ladder which has an additional ribbed stainless steel flat bar on the top to allow it to be hooked over a cleat on a pontoon, so you are never more than 4 metres from where we can put the ladder. It is also slightly angled when hooked on to a cleat, making it easier to climb.”

The new style of emergency ladder has also been fitted with a buoyant Man Over Board sling, which can be clipped around the casualty to keep them safe if a member of staff needs to call for help or alert emergency services.

Two new-style emergency ladders have been placed on the visitors’ pontoon at Buckler’s Hard Yacht Harbour, as well as at the bottom of the gangway leading to the marina. Members of staff can now take them with them, while answering any calls for assistance.

Adam added: “We have tried and tested our new style of ladders and they are proving very successful. Casualties can climb the ladders with no difficulty and we can get them out of the water in a short space of time.”

Buckler’s Hard Yacht Harbour was recently ranked as one of the UK’s best marinas by being placed in the top 5% of 5 Gold Anchors winners by The Yacht Harbour Association. The Beaulieu River marina was the first to be assessed under a new scoring system and received an outstanding 95.06%.

It was also voted the best place for sailors to call home when it won the prestigious Marina of the Year title in British Yachting’s awards in 2022.

A £2m redevelopment of the boatshed is providing new opportunities for marine-based businesses to relocate to one of the most desirable marinas on the south coast. Planned upgrades will provide new waterfront offices, workshop units and the use of meeting rooms which will be available to rent from spring 2025.

Notes of interest are now being taken and preference will be given to tenants who provide value-added services for owners of boats on the marina’s 200 fully-serviced walk-ashore pontoon berths and 300 river moorings.

For more information about the available space to let, visit www.beaulieuriver.co.uk/boatyard-redevelopment or contact the Harbour Master at wendy.stowe@beaulieu.co.uk.

To find out more or check the latest availability for berths and moorings, visit the website at www.beaulieuriver.co.uk, email harbour.office@beaulieu.co.uk or call 01590 616200. Follow the latest news on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn /beaulieuriver.

Save Post as PDF

Categories: Events and Days Out, Visits Tags: Buckler's Hard Emergency Ladders

Tip: For improved search accuracy, enclose search terms for multiple words in quotation marks. For example:
"Land Rover".

Advertise with us

Recent Posts

Klassikstadt – a motoring mecca in Frankfurt, well worth a visit if you are in Germany

Government’s Road Safety Strategy soon to arrive… meanwhile here’s a close look at Cambridgeshire’s most dangerous roads

Introduction to the Wheels-Alive analysis of results from the DVLA/DfT ‘call for evidence’ on classic, kit built and radically altered vehicles, and those converted to electric power.

British Motor Museum shortlised for a Green Spark Award

Enjoy sounds, science and sustainability at The British Motor Museum this half-term, October 2025

Motor Ombudsman study finds that AI would steer nearly one in five drivers when choosing their next car

Toyota’s fascinating history – notably concentrating on the enduringly popular Corona model, which arrived in Britain exactly 60 years ago, on 1st October 1965

Kia Sportage MY26 – First Impressions

Contributors

contributors

Our well-respected contributors live and breathe motor cars; aren’t we lucky?

Contributors to the site include talented, highly-respected people (so they tell me) on the hallowed membership list of the Guild of Motoring Writers, and from the similarly well thought-of Western Group of Motoring Writers. In addition there are valued contributions from other knowledgeable and capable motoring writers who have something useful to say about all aspects of driving and running vehicles in the 21st Century. All of our team are passionate about motor cars!


Read about our contributors  ››

Tags

Hybrid crossover hatchback Compact SUV PHEV road test Kia First Impressions all-electric five door hatchback Beaulieu National Motor Museum saloon Estate car Suzuki British Motor Museum The Motor Ombudsman City car EV SUV Tyres luxury SUV plug-in hybrid large SUV Electric Seven seater SUV 4x4 MPV estate Coupé

All Tags ››

Like us on Facebook

Like us on Facebook

Wheels Alive Social

  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Please share our website

Contact us

We welcome your questions, comments and feedback. Please click here to contact us.

Advertising Opportunities

Please contact us if you would like to discuss advertising opportunities on Wheels Alive.

Copyright © 2025 Kim Henson, Wheels Alive