Phoenix of Hamble
Well-Known Member
Been a couple of weeks since I posted one of these..... so here's a scenario for you to ponder....
After a great autumn sail to just outside Ipswich, a good way up the Orwell river, and a fabulous night on board with several friends enjoying a bottle or two of wine, some good food, and a great nights sleep, you arise to a flooding tide, and a gentle 5 kts of wind.
Its time to slip.... so you go to start the engine..... it fails completely to even turn over properly, and a quick check reveals that you left the battery switch in position 'both'. With the heating, lights and fridge from last night, the batteries are dead, so its going to be sailing alone.
The weather is fabulous, and there is no reason in the forecast to not sail, so its decided to sail off the mooring.
Last night you'd grabbed a fore and aft mooring, setting the boat easily with bow and stern lines holding her nicely on the two buoys... over the course of the evening, another boat appeared on the next buoys in the trot using the buoy on your bow for his stern line, and another boat appeared on the buoys in front of that. When a fourth boat arrived he rafted on the starboard side of the middle of the 3 boats, as he knew them well.
Having to sail off, you pay a bit more attention to the wind and tide, and find that you have 1 knot of tide directly up your transom, and a light 5 kts of wind blowing at 45 degrees onto your port bow....
Whats your strategy for departure?
After a great autumn sail to just outside Ipswich, a good way up the Orwell river, and a fabulous night on board with several friends enjoying a bottle or two of wine, some good food, and a great nights sleep, you arise to a flooding tide, and a gentle 5 kts of wind.
Its time to slip.... so you go to start the engine..... it fails completely to even turn over properly, and a quick check reveals that you left the battery switch in position 'both'. With the heating, lights and fridge from last night, the batteries are dead, so its going to be sailing alone.
The weather is fabulous, and there is no reason in the forecast to not sail, so its decided to sail off the mooring.
Last night you'd grabbed a fore and aft mooring, setting the boat easily with bow and stern lines holding her nicely on the two buoys... over the course of the evening, another boat appeared on the next buoys in the trot using the buoy on your bow for his stern line, and another boat appeared on the buoys in front of that. When a fourth boat arrived he rafted on the starboard side of the middle of the 3 boats, as he knew them well.
Having to sail off, you pay a bit more attention to the wind and tide, and find that you have 1 knot of tide directly up your transom, and a light 5 kts of wind blowing at 45 degrees onto your port bow....
Whats your strategy for departure?