Race said leaving boats in public space also presented a health and safety risk. But when asked if the council’s policy limited boating to people with the means to have a boat and hire a mooring, Race said there had to be some constraints on the use of public space.
“Imagine if everybody just put their boats down here. Would there be space for everyone? Imagine how many things we’d have littered down here.”
She said community feedback had been positive and there were fewer boats “rotting on the beach”.
But Blairgowrie resident Andrea Allen lashed the decision, saying many people left small boats on the beach because it was unrealistic to tow them each time they wanted to launch into the water.
“People have been doing it since the 1970s,” Allen said. “They don’t detract from the area, and they add to the character.”
She agreed it was reasonable to remove boats that had clearly been abandoned, but argued there were plenty of sections along the beaches where they would not bother anyone else.
“A lot of them have padlocks. They’re definitely not dumped there.”
Wayne Mercer said he was privileged to be able to store his two dinghies on the beach because he had moorings for his catamaran and putt-putt boat. But he said it was unfair that boat users without a mooring were banned from storing their boats on the foreshore.
“You can’t be there unless you’re privileged and have a mooring,” he said.
Mercer said he had been leaving boats on the beach since he was a teenager: “I don’t see any history of a lot of vegetation being destroyed or people falling over boats.”
The Whitecliffs to Camerons Bight Foreshore Reserve Committee of Management, which manages Blairgowrie beach foreshore, is also removing unauthorised watercraft.
Rye resident John Adamson had for years kept his catamaran on the beach at Blairgowrie, which he used to go sailing most days when the weather was warm. He said it was impractical to use the boat ramp in peak periods because it was so full.
“There’s a lot of anger at the boat ramp as people to try to get their boats in or out of the water,” he said.
Adamson said he had battled numerous health issues, including cardiac arrest and mental health challenges, and sailing helped him cope.
“Not being able to sail has been very triggering for me.”