oldharry
Well-Known Member
Do you actually remember 1062?![]()
Oh yes, definitely - terrible winter, almost as bad as 1962/3
Do you actually remember 1062?![]()
When I wintered my boat in Norway we had an underwater fan put under the boat to agitate the water that way. Same principles as the bubbler, just a different solution.
Rolf: my advice, as on many things sailing, would be to ask the locals. Few of us on here have much knowledge of your local conditions.
Warningld thread revival time . With a short video I made last week when the whole marina was iced up like a brick but my boat was ice free. I have trim flaps and underwater lights that I am careful do not get frozen to the surface ice slab , as they can get damaged if I step on the boat and put weight on it.
I am using a Kasco de Icer suspended under the boats hull.
Ice regularly forms on the surface of Kip marina during winter cold snaps. It is a centimetre or so thick, the result of fresh water from the Kip burn entering the marina and giving a relatively fresh surface layer. My boat was never damaged, and I've never heard of anyone else's being, either. Obviously it isn't sensible to try and move the boat - there's a big difference between vertical movement across a centimetre of ice to trying to nudge it horizontally, but otherwise it isn't a problem.
New thin ice on the surface is capable of cutting through wood quickly on a moving boat.Bangor is very similar - similar cause. Although I don't think I've seen it as thick as 1cm. There is a local story that a wooden boat once sank the night after ploughing through this thin ice as the ice removed some of the caulking.
New thin ice on the surface is capable of cutting through wood quickly on a moving boat.
Wooden boats used in icy conditions need some kind of protection, copper skin is most common. The polar ship Fram used Greenheart https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fram
This is what can happen with a wooden boat after a short trip through new formed (thin) ice.
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