4 minutes read
25 Jun, 2026
Boating
A few simple checks before your first summer trip can save you a wasted day afloat, and that matters more now that UK seas are running warmer than they used to. 2025 was the UK’s warmest and sunniest year on record, and the waters around the coast spent long stretches in marine heatwave conditions. Warmer water and stronger sun change how your boat behaves, so it helps to know what to look at before you set off.
This is not about stripping the engine down to its bolts. It is about catching the small things that turn a relaxed cruise into a frustrating one. If you are newer to ownership, the quick guide to boating for beginners covers the groundwork, and the checks below build on it.
Most of these take minutes. A few, such as antifouling or a full engine service, are better handled by the team at Burton Waters Marina if you would rather not do them yourself. If your boat uses pod drives rather than a straight shaft, the guide to IPS pod drives explains what to watch before the season starts.
Fuel is worth planning around rather than worrying about on the day. Running costs shift each year, and the notes on red diesel and cruising costs in 2026 are useful before a longer passage. Safety gear deserves the same calm attention. The reminder about being a careful boat owner is that lifejackets, flares and extinguishers only help when they are in date and within reach.
Why warmer seas change your routine
A marine heatwave is when sea surface temperatures sit in the top 10% of records for five days or more. The Met Office reported record highs through spring 2025, with waters up to 4°C above average in places and around 1.5°C to 2.5°C warmer along much of the UK coast. For owners that has real effects. Warm water speeds up marine growth on the hull. Hotter engine bays put more strain on cooling systems. Fuel sitting in a warm tank is more prone to the microbial growth known as diesel bug. None of this is dramatic on its own, but together it is the difference between a boat that starts first time and one that does not. The boating surveys guide is worth a read if you want to know what a professional looks for.The 7 checks worth doing
| Check | What to look at | Why it matters now |
| Engine cooling | Raw-water impeller, coolant level and a clear strainer | Hotter water and weed add strain |
| Hull and antifouling | Slime, weed and growth below the waterline | Warm water speeds up marine growth |
| Fuel system | Water or sludge in the tank and the state of the filter | Warm fuel encourages diesel bug |
| Batteries | Charge level, clean terminals and secure mounting | Heat shortens battery life |
| Bilge pump and seacocks | Pump runs and seacocks open and close freely | Your first defence if water gets in |
| Safety gear | In-date lifejackets, flares and a working extinguisher | More trips mean more reliance on it |
| Canopy, seals and gelcoat | Cracks, leaks, fading and perished seals | Strong sun degrades materials faster |