SAWDOC
Well-Known Member
We usually tie the painter for our dinghy to the swinging mooring line with a round turn and a couple of half hitchs. Little cumbersome because both lines end in a soft eye. Would anyone suggest an alternative?
BowlineWhich you should be able to tie upside down, behind your back and one handed
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Pass the dinghy painter through the eye on the mooring pennant and tie a double sheet bend, i.e., treat the soft eye on the thicker rope as if it were a bight.
I haven't a complete solution - but the idea of poking one soft eye through the other, then inserting a wooden 'toggle' through it, has a certain attraction. The challenge would then be - how to make sure the toggle couldn't become accidently dislodged ...
So - make up a short length of rope with a toggle made fast at either end. Ensure that the toggles are longer than the eyes are wide, when stretched outwards. I'd say that should be pretty secure.
Maybe, but in what way is it better than simply tying the painter to the eye on the mooring as already suggested? I assume the dinghy painter is a lot thinner than the mooring pendant.
Solution looking for a problem.
Pete
I thought the OP was looking for alternatives to tying knots ?
On a thread called "Best knot..."?
Pete
On our dinghy we have a large spring gate carabiner on the end of the painter. It means we can clip onto various parts of the yacht (lifelines, shrouds, backstay etc) very quickly and easily. We don't leave the dinghy on the mooring nowadays but, if we did, I would use the clip. Can't think of anything quicker/easier.
Then one day I was pulling the dinghy towards me and watched in disbelief as the spring carabiner disengaged itself.