Today's local tide estimates
Low water: 02:09,
High water: 08:24
Low water: 14:27,
High water: 21:01
Local weather
SSE Force 3, Clear/Sunny, 14°C
Swell today
Direction ESE, height 0.0 metres, period 9.9 seconds, significant wave height of 0.2 metres.
Summary
A tolerable location with attentive navigation required for access.
LWS draught
2.5 metres (8.2 feet).
Shelter See it »
Sheltered: SW, W, NW
Unprotected: N, NE, E, SE, S
Nature (summary)
Anchorage, landing by tender, scenic.
Facilities (summary)
(None)
Haven position? See it »
55° 13.650' N, 006° 55.558' W
Where is that position? See it »
This is the middle of White Bay in approximately 2 metres of water.
What are the initial fixes? See it »
The following waypoints will set up a final approach:
(i) Lough Foyle North Channel Initial Fix
55° 14.155' N, 006° 53.700' W
One mile east of Inishowen Head and 400 metres northwest of Red Tuns Light (port hand) Buoy F1. R.3s. It is set on the 222° line of bearing of the Martello tower on Magilligan Point that leads into the North Channel.
Please note: Initial fixes only set up their listed targets. Do not plan to sail directly between initial fixes as a routing sequence.(ii) Lough Foyle South Channel Initial Fix
55° 11.760' N, 006° 57.084' W
Midway between the shore and the southern edge of the Tuns Bank in the narrowest part of the South Channel in approximately 10 metres of water.
Please note: Initial fixes only set up their listed targets. Do not plan to sail directly between initial fixes as a routing sequence.
Why visit here?
White Bay, Silver Strand, Cornashamma Bay and Portnocker provide northern access to the eastern Inishowen shoreline. Of the four locations Silver Strand, and Cornashamma Bay, immediately south, offer the best protection but White Bay and Portnocker are the most northerly anchorages. As such provide good passage anchorages for boats en route east or west or looking for a lunch stop.
The surrounding area, and particularly that of White Bay and Portnocker is the town’s land of Stroove. The name is derived from the Gaelic for ‘the beak/point' ‘An tSrúibh’ pronounced ‘trooive'. An tSrúibh is a shortened form of Srúibh Bhrain, pronounced ‘sroo vran’, meaning 'raven's beak' that is the Irish name for the Inishowen Head. Some local people call it Shrove and others call it Stroove and hence the Inishowen lighthouse may be called several different names derived from Gaelic.
A good population of sailors and fishermen lived here many centuries before Greencastle or Moville were inhabited just as it is attractive for visiting boatmen today. The most attractive feature of the area, that runs about 10km between the small thumb of Inishowen Head through Greencastle and Moville, are the scenic walks it offers. Here the cliff and strands of the coast are exceptionally beautiful and the secluded cove of Port-a-Doris is particularly noteworthy.
Port-a-Doris meaning ‘Port of the Door’ is a deep slot on the Inishowen headland that resides closest to Portnocker. It may be discovered after a short walk along the coast and any local can direct shore explorers to the cove. The cove is accessible only at low tide through a natural arch in the cliff off Port-a-Doris strand, and hence the cove’s name. Once through the arch of the natural door a fairytale like secluded cove presents itself littered with Shroove pebbles. The lovely cove is a strange and enchanting place to all who visit. Climbers on-the-other-hand find Port-a-Doris’s northwest face or crag the locations most attractive feature and it is a very popular challenge.
Any and all of these anchorages provide access to this beautiful coast with White Bay and especially Portnocker providing immediate access to Port-a-Doris.
How to get in?
A western approach from Malin Head to Lough Foyle will find a rugged Atlantic coastline. Malin Head, the north most point of Ireland, is a low 70 metre high rounded hill with a square derelict concrete tower on top. The shoreline here is bold, jagged and fringed by outlying rocks that are steep-to and always visible. With the exception of Scars Rocks, lying about 400 metres west of the headland and always visible, there are no off-lying obstructions. A berth of 300 metres or more clears all dangers here but it gets more challenging once Malin Head is rounded.
Careful advance planning is required as this corner of Ireland has to be treated with the utmost of respect. Here the Atlantic Ocean collides with the runs of the Irish coastal tide amidst two rocky island groups, the Garvan Isles and Inishtrahull.
The Garvan Isles that reside to the east of Malin Head. They are a collection of barren islands ranging from 15 to 22 metres in height that are surrounded by sunken rocks and shoals. Inishtrahull is a sizable uninhabited island situated three miles northwest of the outermost Garvan Isle. It is nearly a mile long and is made up of two rounded hills joined by a stretch of low ground with a lighthouse at its western end.
Inishtrahull Lighthouse - Fl(3)15s 59m19M position: 55° 55 25.864’N, 007° 14.628’W
The south side of the Inishtrahull is steep-to and clear of danger. However a dangerous 22 metre high arc of rock called the Tor Rock resides nearly a mile off Inishtrahull’s north side that requires attention.
There are three approaches to rounding Malin Head; the first, go through Inishtrahull Sound, the second go through Garvan Sound, the third, go way offshore and round Inishtrahull and the Torr Rocks.
If there is any sea running, bad weather, an adverse tide, or you are in doubt in any way, it is advisable to take the third option that is the safest route. Head out to sea and take the offshore route around the outside of Inishtrahull. Those taking the offshore route should give Inishtrahull, and more importantly the off lying Torr Rocks, a wide berth of at least three miles.
However if conditions are good with daylight and the inclination is towards more interesting sailing, the routes through either of the ‘Sounds’ are much shorter options. The first is the offshore Inishtrahull Sound route between the Garvan Isles and Inishtrahull and the latter is the Garvan Sound route between the Garvan Isles and the mainland. It should be noted there is only a mile to be saved by taking the slightly more complex inshore Garvin Sound route. The best advice to address either of these routes is to carefully study Garvan Isles and Sound charts well before the approach and factor in the tide to the timing. Here are some useful notes to observe.
For the three mile wide Inishtrahull Sound route the key rocks to note are Doherty rock that resides a quarter of a mile to the northwest. They uncover at three-quarters ebb when they are clearly visible by the breakers. Also Duvglas, the northernmost islet, that has an elevation of 17 metres. Once the Garvan Isles are abeam to starboard make way towards Glengad Head.
For the Garvan Sound route, the key rock to locate is the covered Blind Rock with 1.8 metres of water over it. It is situated approximately 800 metres to the northeast of a point on the mainland, and is to be left to the south passing through the sound. By keeping the Chimney Rock at Carrickaveol Head (approximately 4 miles east by southeast on the mainland coast) just open of the singular 70 metre high Stookaruddan (bold and loaf-shaped, 1.5 miles closer on the mainland coast) a vessel will pass approximately 400 metres to the north of the Blind Rock. This should represent a 117° line of bearing to track in.
When past Blind Rock and approaching Carnadreelagh Isle, or the low flat-topped Rossnabartan Isle comes due south, turn hard to the southeast for a very short leg to bring Stookaruddan onto a 115° bearing shutting Chimney Rock in behind it. This leads through the 600 metres wide Garvan Sound that exists between Carnadreelagh Isle and the 2.1 metre rock patch to the southwest of the cut. The least depth of the sound is 12.8 metres and once the Garvan Isles are abeam to port, make way towards Glengad Head.
Glengad head is a bluff headland with a remarkable hill near its extremity. The coast from Glengad Head to Inishowen Head, a distance of 10 miles in a south by southeast direction, is characterised by 100 to 200 metre high cliffs that are backed by high inland hills. It is steep-to and free from danger with 20 metres of water a quarter of a mile off. A berth of 300 metres off the shore clears all dangers in this area. Two and a half miles south from Glengad Head is Culdaff Bay where a separately covered anchorage is available plus Kinnagoe and Tremone bays provide beach landings but no facilities in offshore winds.
Backed by high hills, the bold, precipitous and considerably indented, Inishowen Head terminates the lough’s mountainous north shore. The abrupt precipice is free from dangers extending more than 300 metres offshore and it is well marked. Two miles to the northeast of the head is the Lough Foyle Buoy, a safe water pillar buoy.
Lough Foyle Buoy - L Fl 10s position: 55° 15.322’N, 006° 52.616’W
Once Inishowen Head is abeam make for the listed ‘Lough Foyle North Channel Initial Fix’. This is set close to the Tuns buoy and tracks in southwest on the 222° line of bearing of the Magilligan Point Martello tower.
Tuns Buoy - F1 R 3 position: 55° 14.004’N, 006° 53.440’W
Half a mile southwest of Inishowen Head upon Dunagree Point resides Inishowen Lighthouse.
Inishowen Lighthouse - Fl (2) WRG 10s2 8m 18/14M position: 55° 13.556’N, 006° 55.749’W
Locally known as ‘Shrove’ or ‘Stroove’ Lighthouse it is a substantial white tower with two black bands. Inishowen Lighthouse provides a sectored light support for the commercial channel as follows Fl (2) WRG 10s W18M, W211° to 249°, R14M 249° to 360°, G14M from 197 to 211°. The anchorage will be found on the northeast side of the lighthouse.
If approaching from the east, from Portrush or Ramore head, Portrush Bay will be found to shoal gradually inwards towards the strand – for coastal directions from further east please use details provided in the Portrush Harbour entry. Upon the Bay’s west side lies Rock Doo, 200 metres out from the shore drying to 1.2 metres, and about 200 metres further to the west of it is the Moat, a half-tide rock.
From here a rocky shoreline leads two and a half miles west by southwest to Portstewart Point and this has two rocks in its immediate vicinity that require attention. The nine metre high Black Rock, 100 metres northeast of Portstewart Point, and a half-tide rock called Lausons Rock, 150 metres out from Black Rock.
From Portstewart Point the rocky coast turns south and levels to a sandy beach backed by a range of sand-hills. This shoreline leads to the River Bann entrance, two miles southwest of Portstewart Point. From the river entrance the coastline is fronted by a low sandy beach extending nine miles to Magilligan Point with rocky precipices rising to Mount Benevenagh’s 396 metre summit a short distance inland. A mile west of the River Bann entrance, upon the cliff edge, the conspicuous classical Mussenden Temple will be noticeable, a white tower approximately five metres in height.
With the exception of the Tuns Bank, at the Foyle entrance, this passage is clear of any danger save for the shoaling beach. By keeping the easterly approach at least half a mile off shore the passage will be clear of all dangers.
An easterly approaching vessel has two available options to approaching White Bay. These are, north around the Tuns Bank, and enter via the ‘North Channel’ as already described in the western approach, or an alternate approach via a ‘South Channel’.
The ‘South Channel’, locally known as the ‘back strand’, resides between the Tuns Bank and the Macgilligan shore. It has a least depth of 3.4 metres upon approach, is about 400 metres wide at its narrowest part and, although unmarked, it is straightforward. Utilising this channel avoids heading out to the Tuns buoy so that an inshore approaching vessel, from Portrush or the River Bann for instance, can save two or three miles of sailing entering Lough Foyle. But for boats visiting White Bay there is little or no difference and the route selection will largely be a function of making the best of the existing tides at the time of the planned arrival.
The ‘South Channel’ may be addressed by coming inshore and approaching along the coast at a distance off of about 600 metres. Half a mile before Magilligan, come closer inshore to a distance off of 400 metres, to make way through the final cut south of the Tuns Bank. Once Magilligan point is abeam you are safe to head directly across to White Bay. Please note if using the South Channel on an ebb tide be attentive to navigation as it sets strongly across the channel towards the unmarked southeast edge of Tuns Bank.
This leads through into the shipping channel that resides between the Tuns Bank on the east and the Donegal’s Inishowen shore on the west. This is called the ‘North Channel’ is deep, steep-to on both sides, well marked and three quarters of a mile wide and it keeps the Tuns Bank to Port. This bank extends about 3 miles in a north-easterly direction from the Macgilligan shore. Its highest part is near the south edge, which is steep-to on the west side, and it runs nearly parallel to the opposite Inishowen shore. You can expect to see breakers on the bank upon approach to help make its location visible.
Follow the North Channel north-easterly direction for two miles to White Bay where the Inishowen Lighthouse will be clearly visible all the way. This leg will take you past the separately covered locations of Greencastle, Silver Strand, and Cornashamma Bay.
Please note there is also a smaller disused lighthouse that is white with one black band situated approximately a mile east of Inishowen Lighthouse.
Upon final approach when rounding Dungaree Point, keep well clear of the point as it extends to a rock 100 metres out beneath the surface. Come into White Bay keeping the 2.7 metres high Cooladiven Islets to starboard on the north side of the bay. Once inside anchor in a depth to your preference in sand. As already mentioned the bay is open and surf on the beach is commonplace making landing challenging.
What are the tides here?
Today's local tide estimates are based on High Water Belfast -0500
Today's Belfast tides — High water: 01:11, 13:24, Low water: 07:09, 19:27
Today's Dover tides — High water: 01:04, 13:22, Low water: 08:17, 20:33 (From Tide Times)
High Water Moville +0350 Dover
MHWS 2.3m MHWN 1.8m MLWN 0.8m MLWS 0.3m
Direction of stream
Offshore of Lough Foyle
Dover -0530 East going, +0030 West going; spring rate of 2 knots
In the Entrance
Dover -0320 Ebb (one hour less at Magilligan Point); spring rate of 3.5 knots.
The latest monthly Dover and Dublin (North Wall) tides courtesy of the National Environmental Research Council. Printable monthly tides for Dublin, Dunmore, Cobh, Galway, Belfast are available from the ISA.
The national weather forecast, Met Éireann and BBC shipping forecasts, plus a very simplified Ulster tourist outlook. From an Atlantic perspective a 24 hour North Atlantic synoptic chart that you may ‘right click’ and save to your hard disk. Met Éireann’s Eastern Atlantic chart and the BBC’s surface area forecast plus visible satellite images for Ireland and Northeast Atlantic from Met Éireann. Wind observations, XC UK & Ireland, Windguru wind & wave reports, and Windfinder where you can determine a forecast time. Coastal radio stations (VHF Channel) Weather forecast at 0103 and thence every 3 hours updated every sixth. Dublin 83, Wicklow Head 87, Rosslare 23 and Mine Head 83. Radio broadcasts on RTE 1 (89.1FM) 0603, 1253, 1655 and 2355.
A free tidal range prediction application for windows, a simple tide monitor plus the rule of twelfths are available in inyourfootsteps.com shared ‘experience’.
What facilities are available?
White Bay has no facilities and the nearest supplies can be found in the separately covered fishing village of Greencastle or the small town of Moville. An alternative is the small village of Stroove a few miles north of the village of Greencastle off the R238.
What emergency contacts are there?
Belfast Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centre (MRCC). Operational Area: Northern Ireland/ Irish Republic Border, Lough Foyle to Northern/Irish Republic Border Carlingford Lough. Belfast Coastguard (MRSC) VHF Ch 16, liaises closely with IRCG. Emergencies are worked on 16, 67 and working channel.
Alternatively, or if ashore, phone 999 and 112 and ask for ‘Marine Rescue’. Police, Fire and Rescue are also available on this number. Belfast (MRSC) may be contacted directly on +44 2891 463 933. The Irish Coast Guard has a coastal unit at Greencastle.
Other useful contacts in this area:
Harbour Master: VHF Ch 16 and 14 ~ Call sign "Harbour Radio"
Phone: +44 28 71 861113; Mobile: +44 780 1032387
Email: harbourradio@londonderryport.com; Coleraine Harbour Radio: VHF Ch 12; phone +44 28 70 342012
Any security concerns?
Never an issue known to occur to a vessel anchored at White Bay.
What navigational resources are available for this area?
British Admiralty 2798 ‘Lough Foyle to Sanda Island including Rathlin Island’ scale of 200,000:1 and 2723 ‘Western Approaches to the North Channel’ scale of 200,000:1 large scale. Closer in Admiralty 2811 ‘Sheep Haven to Lough Foyle including Inishtrahull’ scale of 75,000 and Admiralty 2511 ‘Approaches to Lough Foyle’ scale of 25,000:1 and 2510 ‘Approaches to Londonderry’ scale of 25,000:1.
Imray chart C64 ‘Belfast Lough to Crinan and Islay’ plus Northern Ireland Ordinance Survey No. 3 and 4 at a scale of 1:50,000 for inland details.
With thanks to:
Bill McCann, Londonderry Harbour Master.



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