Nina Lucia
Well-Known Member
We always offer to help, and I really appreciate when somebody take our line or stop the bow whacking straight into pontoon
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We sail a moderately large boat two up and our first line ashore is nearly always a mid ships line which is rigged as a spring and we motor against it to hold us alongside while we sort the lines fore and aft out. The real problem is that the average 'line taker' doesn't have a clue about this technique. They invariably want to take the line forward and you have to gently and then sometimes firmly tell them which cleat to put it on PLEASE. It's often much easier to ask them to hold the bow while we sort things out...
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I DON'T offer to help!
I just go and hold their bow so they can tie up how they wish.
That is not my experience. Instead of tying the boat up for me once i've stopped it they invariably have a burning desire to do it the other way around. Not just yotties used to the vaguaries of folding props either.
I can't see the cleats from the helm, so the boat just does something I'm not expecting when a line goes tight. And without knowing where the line is it's hard to know how to react to put it right.
If there is a shore helper, my crew know not to throw the line until I have stopped the boat. Unless of course there is an exceptional circumstance.
I thought my crew attached a spring to midships so I went ahead to pin it alongside, what happened next was not what I expected and 2 seconds later its all gone horribly wrong!
I must admt that there are times when, for whatever reason, I don't want others taking my lines and I do find it difficult to decline the offer without feeling that I'm being rude or churlish. I certainly don't mean it that way; an offer is always appreciated.
The single handed sailors nearly always appreciate a hand.
We usually offer to take lines and try and stop errant bits of the boat getting damaged or causing damage. In the absence of instruction to the contrary I will tie them off so the boat is parallel to the Quay/Pontoon close enough for people to get on and off then usually leave them to sort out the detail.