doug748
Well-Known Member
Watch that tide. Some dodgy advice on this thread, in my opinion.
Still you only do the nautical splits once and it tends to learn yer
Still you only do the nautical splits once and it tends to learn yer
Watch that tide. Some dodgy advice on this thread, in my opinion.
Still you only do the nautical splits once and it tends to learn yer
If you are going alongside another boat swinging to a single buoy mooring then you should also moor to that buoy.
Lines to the vessel alongside are of secondary importance; often with just breast ropes and no springs.
Mooring that way ensures that neither vessel is dependant on the other and both stay bow to tide and/or wind. It also means either vessel can leave independantly.
Mooring solely to the other vessel may put excess loads on her mooring to the buoy.
Must admit its one I would do if mooring to a pontoon but not one I would do mooring to a raft of boats. Either on a buoy or pontoon, on a buoy you will start chasing in circles, on a pontoon/ quay you will test how well the other boats are moored
I still think that in a relatively calm situation the mid cleat is possibly easier for me ( assuming my friends boat has a mid cleat).
It' easy enough to fit one and well worth it.But not all boats have a centre cleat..
It' easy enough to fit one and well worth it.
...
Assuming his boat has an aft cleat!
....
No I think a 17 footer is a bit small for that - you can almost reach bow and stern cleats when you're standing in the centre. LOL (not the Cameroon version!)GM, just out of interest, did you have centre cleats on your L17 (or is that a bit OTT?)
No I think a 17 footer is a bit small for that - you can almost reach bow and stern cleats when you're standing in the centre. LOL (not the Cameroon version!)
Thoughts? Additions?
Personally don't like the idea of rigging any sort of stern spring (stern line to bow) early as if you mess up the bow line, your boat will, well, spring off......maybe not a good thing!
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