About the Marina ….
There are two marinas there, adjoining each other both right on the town quay and only a few minutes walk into the centre of town. We stayed at Yacht Port Cartagena, it is the newer of the two and is home to mainly foreign flagged boats. The older more established marina seems to be filled mainly with local craft and had few vacant slips. They do, however, offer short stay berths on the town wall
YPC is the one on the right as you enter, it is away from the waterfront cafes and set further back from the promenading locals (and behind a very long glass fence). There is excellent 24 hour security and access is gained only by key card, it also has a much more substantial solid concrete breakwater which also serves as the Cruise Ship dock. However some berths do not lie behind this breakwater but are still reasonably protected, and there are enough empty berths that you can have your choice of position. There is also a choice of med mooring with laid lines, side tying and finger pontoons – something for everyone.
The marina staff are an absolute delight to deal with, both the office staff and the marineras are extremely helpful, all speak English, assist with berthing, they even deliver any mail or packages right to the boat. They put in the extra effort to make your stay as enjoyable as possible!! We emailed them at marina@yachtportcartagena.com to make our winter booking, they did not require a deposit and were very flexible with our arrival date. On arrival call them on VHF 09, as you make your final approach - ensure you call Yacht Port Cartagena to get the right one! (tel +34 968 12 12 13). Cartagena is a large harbour and has a huge area of sheltered water to sort yourselves out before entering the marina. This is a commercial and naval port but the Navy yards and Commercial docks are far enough away to not be of any bother.
The facilities are good, there is a laundry with two large washing machines and one dryer all taking tokens valued at €4, there are just 3 showers and toilets in 2 blocks but we only had 7 live aboard boats that were onboard all winter so this was enough. There is the “internet shed” home to one computer with free internet access, a vending machine and book swap. There is also a bar-b-que which we made use of on some warm sunny days during winter. There is wifi access included in the long term rates for one computer per boat. The signal is not great but ok. Short term rates do not include wifi it is €5 a day. Our winter rate also included water and power. Catamarans currently get the same berthing rate as monohulls but pay for water and power.
There is a fuel dock with 24 hour easy sheltered access and payment is made by card into a machine. To access it enter YPC and keep the Cruise Ship Dock/breakwater on your left, carry on till the Yacht Club Building (large wooden modern building) is in front of you, turn sharp right and tie up just after the dinghy/laser launching slipway. There is no fuel sign/logo but the pumps are in a small white shed. There is good turning space to get back out and depths well over 5 metres. Diesel was around €1.33 p/l in April 2011.
Facilities in town …
Well you will not go hungry. There is an excellent selection of supermarkets – they are all closed Sunday. The office will give you a map and mark all of these, but just in case - The closest one is a small Spar, come out the entrance by the laundry, cross the road, up the big steps, go left and follow the road around till it comes to a T, the Spar is just over on the right. They don’t have fresh milk but have most other things.
There are a couple of options for hauling out. We didn’t use either but some of the boats that wintered with us did. There is a small crane lift that hauls up to 15T located next to the Fuel Pumps. The other is located just to the east of the marina and has a very big travelift (approx 70T), they haul all the fishing fleet, but do deal with private boats also. There yard is well organised and tidy but small. There are no facilities for leaving yachts on the hard for any length of time.
Entertainment …
We organised a weekly get together at a local tapas bar El Barrill on Wednesday nights, and had the odd bar-b-que when the weather was warm enough. Other than that it was a quiet social scene. There were a reasonable amount of goings on in town, and we enjoyed free concerts and cultural events throughout the winter. There is an English web site that does it’s best to collate all the information and sends out a weekly email newsletter, http://www.simplynetworking.es/ but even they miss things from time to time and you really need to check at the Tourist Info as well. Cartagena is full of history, there are many museums, the Roman Theatre, Augusteum, Decumanus and many many more ruins. The main plaza and Calle Mayor have some lovely Modernista buildings, they there is a huge amount of restoration work underway around the town. We spent nearly 7 months here and enjoyed it immensely.
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