cliff
Well-Known Member
Did you see the mistake?
would have been easier to anchor!
Look carefully at 1:00 to 1:10 and all is revealed so to speak.
Not in the same league but while I was in Newtown Creek last summer a boat came gently towards the next mooring buoy, skipper up front was a skinny guy with hairy knees, baggy bush trousers and shirt and a large floppy hat and holding a boathook as if he was going to throw it like a javelin.
He was actually using it to point at the buoy so that his crew (the missus) would know which way to steer. However, his sudden jerky movements and flourishing of the boathook reminded me of something - I didn't want to be too unkind (after all my turn next time) but I thought of yelling, "Ahab, ye'll no get Moby Dick like that."
Second thoughts prevailed.
Unless you get particularly excited by stripey knickers worn under short summer dresses I don't see anything in that section to get worked up about.
Not quite sure what the jerky movements were for but holding the boat hook like a harpoon (javelin?) an pointing it at the buoy is a really good way of getting a visual reference where the mooring buoy is from the helm. I don't know why everyone doesn't have the technique in their armoury of 'picking up mooring methods.' With a couple of hand signals for slow down and stop etc you can pick up a buoy in silence.
Funny videos, but have any of you here got advice about picking up a mooring buoy single handed?
Funny videos, but have any of you here got advice about picking up a mooring buoy single handed?
Run a mooring line from the bow cleat outside everything to the cockpit area.
Stop alongside buoy, tie on, drop back, take up slack.
If you walk forwards with the line as the boat drops back, there is no big effort in pulling the boat forwards.
Home mooring is easy if you leave the pick up line in the dinghy.
Unless you get particularly excited by stripey knickers worn under short summer dresses I don't see anything in that section to get worked up about.
Works well so long as its not blowing old boots and the bow gets blown off before you're tied on!.
Hence the ruddy great caribiner at the cockpit end of my temporary mooring line. One swipe and you're on.
Works well so long as its not blowing old boots and the bow gets blown off before you're tied on! Reversing up to the buoy is another option, but there are obvious dangers of lines and mooring pick up buoys near propellors and rudders.
One of those devises that instantly threads a line can work, but it assumes that there is an 'eye' standing proud enough to use. Otherwise we are back to lassoing and other tricks and I know the ire that will be heaped on me by some following a recent thread on that subject.