BayGreen Marine Sanitation and Mobile Pump-Out

Berkeley, United States

5

1 review

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Description

Specialties

BayGreen Berkeley Mobile Pump-​Out is the largest, friendliest, and most convenient mobile pump-​out and marine sanitation service for boats, yachts and marine vessels of all sizes.

Our Berkeley boat location services Berkeley Marina, Marina Bay Yacht Harbor, Richmond Channel, Sugardock, Bay Marine, Emery Cove Yacht Harbor and Emeryville Marina.

Berkeley Marina sponsors one free service a month for their berthers in Berkeley Marina to help keep the bay clean!

We provide one-​time and scheduled dockside pumpout services and we offer maintenance solutions for your current system, including repairs or replacement when necessary.

All in all, we specialize in doing the unpleasant, dirty, mundane work so you can enjoy your time on the water without worry. Getting on the schedule is a snap, just register online, give us a call, or flag us down when pass your boat’s dock.

History

Established in 2006.

BayGreen is dedicated to clean water, we assist boat owners and marinas with easy and convenient services to help keep the bay clean.

Our commitment to our clients and our environment is our driving force. We currently have 4 experienced service techs on staff and 5 mobile pump-​out boats stationed in key areas in the San Francisco Bay Area.

This ensures speedy service for your pump service, saves gas resources, and makes BayGreen the environmental choice for the San Francisco Bay Area.

Meet the Business Owner

Dan A.

Business Owner

When I was teaching, I sometimes took students out to Treasure Island on weekends and taught them how to sail. Kids from the Iron Triangle in Richmond.

They’d come down to the docks and look at the sailboats. One of them asked, «Where do people poop?» I said, «Well, they poop on their boats. There’s a pump-​out station on the dock, and they’re supposed to empty their holding tanks into that.»

«Well, does everybody do that?» I said, «Unfortunately, no.» Half the kids said, «We’re not swimming in the bay again!» It made me realize I had to do something. (see our website for the full SF Chronicle article)