Litotes
Well-Known Member
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
I did exactly that to a Frenchman in France who returned just as we were having dinner. He was very civilised and simply told us to stay on his mooring and he would pick up another overnight.
[/ QUOTE ]
I encourage people to use my mooring when I am away. If I find someone on it when I come back my approach is generally the same as your French friend. I certainly don't turn people off when they are eating or after dark when it may be hard, especially for visitors, to find another spot. The only exception is on the rare occasions when I am in a hurry to pack up the boat and get ashore, in which case I may have to ask people to move. Just a small contribution to keeping sailing relaxed and friendly. I quite often find several boats rafted on the mooring waiting for the tide into a local marina. If so, and as long as there aren't too many of them, I just hang on the back of the raft until its time for them to go.
I don't often pick up other people's moorings and never leave the boat on them unattended. I've never had a bad experience with a returning owner and on a couple of occasions a night returner has simply picked up another mooring rather than rouse us from our slumbers.
Do as you would be done by isn't a bad rule. We all contribute, positively or negatively, to the environment in which we take our recreation.
[ QUOTE ]
I did exactly that to a Frenchman in France who returned just as we were having dinner. He was very civilised and simply told us to stay on his mooring and he would pick up another overnight.
[/ QUOTE ]
I encourage people to use my mooring when I am away. If I find someone on it when I come back my approach is generally the same as your French friend. I certainly don't turn people off when they are eating or after dark when it may be hard, especially for visitors, to find another spot. The only exception is on the rare occasions when I am in a hurry to pack up the boat and get ashore, in which case I may have to ask people to move. Just a small contribution to keeping sailing relaxed and friendly. I quite often find several boats rafted on the mooring waiting for the tide into a local marina. If so, and as long as there aren't too many of them, I just hang on the back of the raft until its time for them to go.
I don't often pick up other people's moorings and never leave the boat on them unattended. I've never had a bad experience with a returning owner and on a couple of occasions a night returner has simply picked up another mooring rather than rouse us from our slumbers.
Do as you would be done by isn't a bad rule. We all contribute, positively or negatively, to the environment in which we take our recreation.