Redline docking
Members arrive stern-first, trim perfect, coolers sealed, and the playlist already at parade volume.
Fourth of July at the club
Founded in the shadow of Lord Richard Dreyland: loud fireworks, polished teak, suspiciously powerful pontoons, and members who believe a dock party should feel like a naval operation.
Club doctrine
Members arrive stern-first, trim perfect, coolers sealed, and the playlist already at parade volume.
Every table gets cold drinks, brass rail polish, and a view of the sky show from the waterline.
Real pontoon leads share the dock with Dreyland-only craft that definitely violate several laws of physics.
The name belongs to Richard Dreyland, the club's founder and a lord in the British Parliament, not to any lake, bay, river, or sea.
Pontoon market watch
Refreshed July 3, 2026
Club ledger
The market feed keeps real listings in normal slips. Berths 4, 8, 12, and 16 are reserved for Dreyland craft with unstable propulsion, questionable insurance, and impeccable Fourth of July presence.
July 4 schedule
Chrome rails, cold storage, running lights, and at least one outrageous pennant.
Slow cruise past the clubhouse with brass, bass, and acceptable wake discipline.
Members raft up outside the cove and pretend the mythic boats are not humming.