Delaware River Philadelphia info?

Come Monday!

Cadet
Joined
Jun 10, 2008
Messages
6
I have had a 16' bowrider for a couple years but we have stayed in the Schuylkill River and some small lakes in the area. We are looking to venture out into the big bad Delaware River!

We live in Philadelphia and would probably use the Frankford Arsenal Access Ramp and head towards the city. I guess my questions include...

Does it make sense to just cruise the delaware river? I think it would be fun to see the city and some of the sights from the river, but I also feel like that could get old quickly. Any general advice on what we should plan on doing?

Are there rivers/tributaries that may be nicer to stick to? From maps, there seems to be a small way just north and east of the Ben Franklin bridge that opens up around Farnham Park or north of that around Amico Island Park and in to Rancocas.

Are there maps of the area that are detailed enough to be useful? I haven't been able to find anything very specific online.

Are watersports (wakeboarding) allowed anywhere in the Delaware River? What about in these smaller areas off the Delaware?

Are there restaurants that you can boat up to? Near/in Philadelphia? Anywhere else nearby that would be recommended?

I know this is a lot but I don't know much about what to expect and figured some on here do. I would really appreciate any help or advice.
Thank you!
 

DBreskin

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Oct 20, 2009
Messages
799
Re: Delaware River Philadelphia info?

Cruising the Delaware is OK but it can get old after a few outings if that's all you do.

I'm not aware of any tributaries large enough to be interesting.

There is a detailed Delaware River chart available in Delaware marinas. It's a bit old and therefore not exactly accurate, but useful nonetheless.

Skiing and wakeboarding are premitted. Use common sense and stay out of the way of large craft and barges. Upriver near Trenton is calmer and quieter.

There's a good restaurant in Curtin's marina in Burlington with Live music every day and limited free docking available on a first-come-first=serve basis.
 

reelfishin

Captain
Joined
Mar 19, 2007
Messages
3,047
Re: Delaware River Philadelphia info?

My overall experience on the Delaware River is a bit limited but I do fish the lower river in the spring and fall, and then the upper river for herring. There aren't many tributaries in the Philly area, but there are a few navigable creeks and rivers below and above Philly.
A couple of notes though, beware of larger craft, and beware of floating debris and junk along the shore line areas. I watched a guy slam a submerged pipe just below the Walt Whitman bridge about 15 years ago, he was passing us in a speed boat off to the Jersey side, fairly close to the shore, and slammed a pipe or steel piling that all but stopped his boat. Several were injured, one was ejected so far she ended up on land after skimming across the water.

Keep well clear of the larger ships, they can't see you and don't have the ability to stop or change course. Stay away from their prop wash too.

If you venture north, towards Trenton, be aware that there's a breakwater dam in that area. This is a submerged dam which I understand is pretty much uncrossable with a power boat. Maybe someone else can elaborate on this area.

The northern Delaware, above Trenton is a really scenic river, although you do have to be concerned about some rocks and shallow areas. I believe you can run a power boat pretty far up. I talked to a guy a while back from Washington's Crossing that runs a 65hp V hull in that area, mostly fishing but said other than rocks he gets around fine. (The prop and skeg on his boat showed that it's a rock strewn area). Here's a web page with some info: http://www.delawareriver.net/rivermap/index.php

To the south a ways is the C&D canal, which connects the Delaware to the Chesapeake Bay, that run is a nice over night run or even a day trip just exploring.
 

skysurfer2010

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
May 26, 2009
Messages
159
Re: Delaware River Philadelphia info?

I've been riding the DE River for a very long time (probably a good 10 to 15 years now). I'm very familiar with the water from the the Philly naval yard all the way up to almost Frenchtown (a good 10+ miles north of New Hope and Lambertville).

With that said, unless you know the water VERY well, do NOT go north past the Trenton ramp. You can venture up to the Trenton Thunder baseball stadium and the Kat Man Du nightclub (just south of the 3 bridges- railroad bridge, rt 1 bridge, and the "Trenton Makes" bridge), but you need to stay closer to the NJ side once you pass the Trenton boat ramp due to a few rocks and shallower water on the PA side. It's a shame since the most scenic areas are North of Trenton on the DE. I've gone up a vast majority of the river on jet skis over the years with very flat bottom hulls. Even then I've hit my fair share of rocks. I'd never consider taking anything with a deeper draft past the 3 bridges in Trenton. It's possible to do, but no matter how well you know the water you're still taking a chance. There are a few deep sections that are rock free, but they're really too small to enjoy a boat on unless you like doing a 2 mile circle.

The water around Philly tends to be very dirty (shock). I wouldn't want to swim in it. I've also gone up the Schuylkill River (the entrance is just south of the Naval Yard) to see the sunset over the city. It was really cool to see! You can go as far up as almost to the Art Museum (just north of 676). That's where the falls are. Don't get too close as there are also rocks closer to the falls which you should be able to see ahead of time. Although this is really cool to see, unfortunately the trip up the Schuylkill from the entrance off the DE river is loaded with debris, you'll pass by a couple refineries, and it looks like WWIII hit. Not to mention it doesn't smell too good! It's also relatively narrow so go slow in case of other boat traffic.

Of course in the Philly area you have Penns Landing to check out and the Battleship NJ on the Camden side. If you travel north, after the Ben Franklin you'll pass a railroad bridge, the Betsy Ross, and then the Tacony Palmyra bridges. On the right side a couple of miles up you'll have the entrance to the Rancocas Creek. A good majority of it is a no wake zone. It's pretty scenic, though, and you'll pass under a couple of low bridges that are pretty unique and cool. If your boat is high just make sure you can clear them before trying! On mine I need to keep the bimini down to get under them. After you go under the two bridges you'll come up to a marina on the right that also has a pretty cool restaurant. I haven't gone any further up the river on a boat so I'm not sure how deep the waters are, but after this area it gets pretty narrow. It goes for a very long time and I've taken jet skis pretty far up. It's mostly quiet back there with a few houses along the way. It'll almost make you feel like you're down south in the back country. Pretty cool to see!

Back on the DE River, immediately north of the Rancocas entrance on the NJ side is a favorite spot for a lot of boats to anchor at. It's wooded, but has a nice beach area. Many people camp there or bring grills to hang out at for the day.

A couple more miles north of the Rancocas you'll enter my favorite part North of Philly. The river is very wide and filled with parks or woods on both sides. There are also a lot of beautiful river front homes/ mansions littered along the rivers edges.

Going further north you'll pass under the Burlington Bristol Bridge (413). The river will look like it forks due to an island closer towards the NJ side, but the main channel is towards the left. If you stay straight (or go towards the right of the split) there will be a small marina and also the Curtins restaurant with free docking. Just north of the restaurant is where the NJ State Police is located on the river.

If you stay to the left in the main channel, you'll see Bristol Park on the left. On the right side, which is the island, many people often anchor here as well. You'll sometimes find me here during weekdays anchored. I like to throw the anchor out and swim ashore to lay out on the beach area. Weekends too many people have the same idea so I'll avoid it then.

Heading north again you'll pass the PA turnpike bridge. A couple miles on the right is another split that you can go around. Unless it's high tide, stay in the main channel (to the left). It gets shallow back there and there really isn't much to see anyway.

Between that point and up towards the Trenton area there isn't a whole lot to see. There are a couple of small coves, but nothing too spectacular to talk about.


All watersport activities are allowed on the river. Just make sure you have a watersports flag up while doing so. The NJ state police monitor the river and you're subject to follow NJ state laws, even if you're on the PA side of the river. NJ requires an orange pendant flag (triangular) to be displayed 4 feet above the highest point of your boat. How picky they'll be if you're using a square flag like most other states require or if your flag is 4 feet above your hull instead of you bimini I don't know.

Also keep in mind the Philadelphia area is brackish water in my opinion. You'll want to flush your boat after running in it. I'd say roughly from the Croydon area (north of the Rancocas Creek) is where it's mostly fresh water. This is of course just my opinion, though.

As mentioned before, stay away from larger commercial craft. I believe the law is 200'? They can also throw some very large wake as well, so stay awake! And keep your eyes on the water around Phillly debris! The entire river can get pretty bad with fallen tree limbs and such after a rainstorm, too.

Any other questions feel free to ask! Sorry for such a lengthy response.
 

superbenk

Commander
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Messages
2,033
Re: Delaware River Philadelphia info?

Getting extremely frustrated with how far it is to any navigable bodies of water here in Bucks County, PA. As such, I'm looking very seriously at storing my boat at a marina on the Delaware, but I'm a little concerned with some of the comments here about swimming/watersports on the river. I'm most interested in the areas north of the Burlington-Bristol bridge (I think) and wonder how clean the water is from there up to Trenton where it's dredged? Does anyone else use that area for swimming/watersports? How is the current when doing these kinds of things? I grew up on a lake (Canandaigua Lake in the Finger Lakes), so I'm not used to the current & muck in the water - looks gross to me.
Can anyone ease my fears of the river water?

We're also looking for good options for storing our boat. Finding a good marina on the PA side north of the city seems difficult. I'd really like to find something with dry storage because the grime that I see on docked boats looks horrible (again, am I looking at this wrong?). D & S Boat Sales in Tullytown seems like my best bet for this.

Any other comments related to this stuff?
 

skysurfer2010

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
May 26, 2009
Messages
159
Re: Delaware River Philadelphia info?

The area you're talking about is clean. I go swimming in that area all the time. It only gets a little dirty after a heavy rainfall due to leaves, tree limbs, etc.

I've never really used any marina, so I'm of no help there. I've used the boat ramp at Croydon just south of the Burlington Bristol Bridge on the PA side. They have a lot of docks, but I'm not sure if they have any dry storage or the name of the actual marina.
 
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