PaulRainbow
Well-Known Member
Don't count on it. You'll note that the forward cabin was shared with 'girlfriends'. I reckon there were 4 or 5 of them in there.![]()
Coulda been dwarves
Don't count on it. You'll note that the forward cabin was shared with 'girlfriends'. I reckon there were 4 or 5 of them in there.![]()
Coulda been dwarves![]()
Easily explained; on any boat under say 40' - and I'm not too sure even then - an aft cabin leads to a fat arse design often requiring the horrible twin rudders * associated linkages ( and splayed loads if on drying moorings ) - high cockpit sole so one feels like being on stage with Status Quo, and tiny cockpit lockers.
I've managed many Solent weekends, 3 week trips around the Channel Isles & west many a time sharing the forepeak with girlfriends, and was was still well able to stow my fender !![]()

I'd be interested to see these palatial aft cabins, and the cockpit lockers,
Yes Pan's People used to share the A22 forepeak with me often, sorry I was too busy to take any pics to prove it and that would have been ungentlemanly anyway.
An A22 near me has a crew of mum and dad, and FOUR kids - probably much bigger than when I last saw them - I always thought they must be kept stacked vertically in those ghastly fender holder / chaff dispenser jobs like you see on mobo's.
Having grown tired of putting fenders on and off, we now simply flip them up onto the deck where they sit happily enough, and out of the way.

That's fine wafting about in the Solent, but in any sort of sea or a blow some of them will escape back over the side, trust me.
You must also have impressively wide side decks (or tiny fenders!) for them not to be in the way on a smallish boat. (I do it occasionally, but like Praxinoscope, I find it a bit inconvenient and risky.)
I'm liking the double hook arrangement duncan and others use. I'll give that a try.
On the subject of knots, my Dazed Kipper instructor didn't like clove hitches as intermittent pulling on them can make them loosen, causing evaporation of the fender. He insisted on a round turn & 2 half hitches.
I like clove hitches initially as it’s easy to adjust the height of the fender by lifting the middle part of the knot and pulling one side or the other as you release it. But once everything’s settled, I go round and put an extra slipped half-hitch around the standing part to prevent any loosening.
Pete
I'd be interested to see these palatial aft cabins, and the cockpit lockers,
Yes Pan's People used to share the A22 forepeak with me often, sorry I was too busy to take any pics to prove it and that would have been ungentlemanly anyway.
An A22 near me has a crew of mum and dad, and FOUR kids - probably much bigger than when I last saw them - I always thought they must be kept stacked vertically in those ghastly fender holder / chaff dispenser jobs like you see on mobo's.
On the subject of knots, my Dazed Kipper instructor didn't like clove hitches as intermittent pulling on them can make them loosen, causing evaporation of the fender. He insisted on a round turn & 2 half hitches.
I was brought up in a school that demanded that the fenders were off the topsides within a nano second leaving the dock. So they get stowed in the cockpit locker everytime.
Seeing another boat with fenders dangling is a useful early warning that the people onboard may be inexperienced. I've never seen the point in retying them so they hang off the transom either.
Daftest case I've ever seen was on an Atlantic Crossing. We were just south of the Cape Verdes in very light winds. A boat motored past with not only a Senegal courtesy flag up but all the fenders too. They must have sailed 500 miles like that.