Skip to content
US Harbors
  • Already a Member?
  • Login
  • US Harbors
  • Login
  • Become A Member
  • Harbormaster Day
  • Best Harbor Contest
  • Contact Us

Coastal News

Search for More News:

Harbormaster Day Celebrations

Happy 2022 National Harbormaster Appreciation Day!

10/7/2022

  By US Harbors Today is the day we celebrate our local harbormasters: those people that keep our harbors safe for all of us who love to spend time on the water! Make sure to get out and wish your harbormaster a nice day and thank them for all they… SEE MORE

  • Boating
  • Coastal News
  • Extreme Weather
  • Weather & Tides
  • Harbormaster
  • Harbormaster Day
Car stranded by flood. Image royalty free from Canva.com

How to Help Coastal Communities Recover from September 2022 Storms

10/4/2022

By US Harbors The level of destruction, and extreme need, that has been caused by the recent storms and hurricanes in Alaska, Puerto Rico, and Southwestern Florida has left many of us asking "what can I do?". We've put together this page to help answer that question. If you have… SEE MORE

  • Boating
  • Coastal News
  • Extreme Weather
  • Weather & Tides
  • Alaska
  • Disaster Recovery
  • Donate
  • Florida
  • Hurricane
  • Puerto Rico
  • Relief Organizations
  • Volunteer
Hurricane Linda (Photo courtesy of NOAA)

How to Help Puerto Rico Rebuild

9/23/2022

By NPR's Juliana Kim  Hurricane Fiona slammed into southwestern Puerto Rico on Sunday, wiping out the power grid and cutting off clean water to most of the island's residents. President Biden declared an emergency in Puerto Rico, calling on both the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Extreme Weather
  • Health & Safety
  • Donate
  • Hurricane
  • Puerto Rico
Jim Maragos/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (original picture), modification: Mielon, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

The Beauty and Fragility of Coral Reefs

9/14/2022

By Rachel Ross. Coral reefs are large underwater structures composed of the skeletons of colonial marine invertebrates called coral. The coral species that build reefs are known as hermatypic, or "hard," corals because they extract calcium carbonate from seawater to create a hard, durable exoskeleton that protects their soft, sac-like… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Environment
  • Science
  • conservation
  • Coral
Rhododendrites, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Find a Coastal Clean Up Event Near You

9/13/2022

By Oceanconservancy.org. Every year during Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal Cleanup™, hundreds of thousands of volunteers comb lakes, rivers and beaches around the world for trash. Find a cleanup leader near you and join the movement. Here's how to use the map (link at the bottom of this post): Search for… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Environment
  • Beach Cleanup
  • Family-friendly
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/learning-about-elusive-mysterious-alaska-sharks-through-partnerships-and-electronic

Learning About Elusive, Mysterious Alaska Sharks

9/12/2022

By NOAA Fisheries. Keeping shark populations healthy is an important part of ecosystem-based management for sustainable fisheries and resilient fishing communities. But getting the information needed to effectively manage Pacific sleeper sharks, salmon sharks, and other large Alaska sharks is challenging. “Data on these sharks are hard to get. They’re… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Fishing
  • Science
  • Alaska
  • NOAA Fisheries
  • Sharks
Erik Drost, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Celebrate Tonight's Harvest Moon

9/9/2022

By Brian Lada, Accuweather Meterorologist and Staff Writer. TONIGHT: Harvest Moon to rise between Jupiter, Saturn One of the most popular full moons of the entire year will kick off the second to last weekend of astronomical summer and will be the centerpiece of a must-see celestial alignment. Summer's final… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Weather & Tides
  • Celestial Events
Rusty Clark from merritt usland FLA, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

New Crab Shell and Zinc Battery Shows Promise

9/8/2022

A rechargeable battery made from crab shells and zinc could store wind and solar energy, and then its parts can either safely biodegrade within a matter of years or be recycled. The key is chitosan, a compound derived from chitin, a substance found in crab and shrimp shells. The battery… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Science
  • Environment
Robertgombos, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Night Sailing Without Fear

9/7/2022

By iNavx. Sailing offshore under a sea of stars is an experience beyond compare. On a clear, moonless night, you’ll never see more stars from anywhere on earth. With nothing but the wind in the sails and the sounds of the boat for accompaniment, it’s a peaceful yet exhilarating experience.… SEE MORE

  • Boating
  • Coastal News
  • Health & Safety
  • Night Sailing
  • Safety 101
https://www.noaa.gov/news-release/noaa-

Shipwreck Off Patagonia is Likely Long Lost Whaler

9/6/2022

By Eco Magazine. Scientists investigating the remains of an old wooden ship off the cold, windy coast of far southern Argentina say it almost certainly is the Dolphin, a globe-trotting whaling ship from Warren, R.I., lost in 1859. Archaeologists have spent years researching the ship's origin without making a definitive… SEE MORE

  • Boating
  • Coastal News
  • Culture
  • Science
  • history
  • Shipwreck
Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Designed by Victor S. McCloskey, Jr., using as source material a photograph of a portion of the mural by Lumen M. Winter located in the AFL-CIO building in Washington, DC., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The Origins of Labor Day

9/5/2022

By Craig Harris and Kelly Tyko USA Today. Labor Day for many Americans is a three-day weekend that marks the end of the summer and the start of the school year. Nowadays, the holiday might be celebrated with anything from swimming at a beach or pool, grilling, or watching the first college… SEE MORE

  • Coastal News
  • Culture
  • history
  • Holiday
  • Labor Day
Øyvind Holmstad, CC BY-SA 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Boating 101: Navigating a Strong Current

9/5/2022

By BoatUS. Whether you're docking your boat, in a crossing or passing situation, or you're at the boat ramp, if the waters you're in have a current, the job before you can seem challenging. Currents can knock you askew, hit the hull when you least expect it, and turn a… SEE MORE

  • Boating
  • Coastal News
  • Health & Safety
  • Boating 101
  • Currents
  • PREV
  • 1
  • 2
  • …
  • 85
  • 86
  • 87
  • …
  • 112
  • 113
  • NEXT
Sign Up

SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER

Coastal flooding reports, travel ideas, news from harbors around the country, and the latest on ocean conservation trends.

Subscribe

Find tide charts and weather for 1,400 harbors across the U.S.

US Harbors

About US Harbors

Take a Tour

Help FAQ

 

Advertise with Us

Terms & Conditions

Privacy Policy

 

Tide & Weather FAQs

Shop Nautical Charts

Contact Us

“Best Harbor” Contest

National Harbormaster Day

Reach over 12 million boaters and people who love the coast:
Contact our sales team for an advertising quote.
Tides, Weather & Local Knowledge is a registered trademark of US Harbors LLC.

  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instragram
US Harbors ® USHarbors.com
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • My Personal Information
Copyright © 2026 US Harbors