Explore Anchorages, Marinas, Voyages and Members in British Columbia — North Coast

The last stretch of BC before the Alaska border — Grenville Channel, Prince Rupert, Dixon Entrance. The country gets bigger up here, the weather more honest, the marinas farther apart. Prince Rupert is a working fishing port that punches above its size for cruiser amenities; everything south of it on the inside route is mostly empty water. The crossing of Dixon Entrance into Ketchikan is the trip’s first real exposed water in days. Most boats reach Prince Rupert and feel like the first half of the journey is officially over.

Anchorages in British Columbia — North Coast

Petersburg Anchorage - Image 02 (May 16, 2026)
Anchorage

Petersburg Anchorage

56.81366 N - -132.96513 W - (Poor Mans Float, Petersburg Borough)
35 ft depth · · 4.3 (1)
Wind — · Coming soon
Thomas Bay - Image 01 (April 28, 2026)
Anchorage
NEW

Thomas Bay

56.9869 N - -132.80548 W - (Petersburg Borough, Alaska)
70 ft depth · Mud
Wind — · Coming soon
Cannery Cove - Image 01 (April 21, 2026)
Anchorage

Cannery Cove

57.3806 N - -134.17431 W - (Unorganized Borough, Alaska)
60 ft depth · · 4.3 (2)
Wind — · Coming soon
Ideal Cove - Image 02 (March 28, 2026)
Anchorage

Ideal Cove

56.66549 N - -132.63842 W - (Petersburg Borough, Alaska)
35 ft depth · · 4.5 (1)
Wind — · Coming soon
Eagle Harbor - Image 08 (April 20, 2026)
Anchorage

Eagle Harbor

47.6192 N - -122.517 W - (City Public Dock, 301)
40 ft depth · · 4.0 (1)
Wind — · Coming soon

Marinas in British Columbia — North Coast