RichardS
N/A
... which captures the worst of both techniques?
This has now happened twice on this Croatian cruise, once to us and once to the guy below. It's the same story both times ..... some boats are tied with shorelines and another boat arrives, us the first time, and decides to anchor .... perhaps only staying one night, perhaps short-handed, perhaps can't be bothered to launch the dinghy, whatever .... but does the swinging calculation such that if the wind goes round at night then the anchored boat will not hit any of the stern-tied boats.
Fine so far .... until another boat arrives later on and, rather than anchoring, decides they will also take shorelines. Now, if the new boat were to tuck up against the shore with perhaps a 1/4 or 1/2 boat length out, which is fine depth-wise in Croatia, then perhaps there's enough clearance in the swinging circle to avoid any contact, or at least make it possible to pull in a bit of chain to reduce the circle .... but when the shore-lined boat leaves a full boat length or more, I'm beginning to wonder what the point of using shorelines is anyway. One might as well just anchor.
In this case, the monohull had been anchored for some hours and we were anchored a bit further up the inlet, when in comes the boat with the red towel and ties up to shore leaving about one and a half boat lengths between the stern and the shore.
Once they were settled with their endless shore line, the anchored monohull immediately went round his boat and put out all his fenders. I thought the red towel monohull might take the hint at this point and pull in their shoreline a tad ..... but all they did was go around and put out all their fenders as well!
Luckily the wind in the photo occasion stayed very light and consistent during the night, unlike my experience a couple of weeks ago when it blew up after darkness fell making a collision for us absolutely inevitable. :ambivalence:
It seems I'm missing something here, but what is the point of shorelines which are 1.5X longer than the length of the boat?
The next boat along seems to have the same approach to long shorelines as well but at least they were there first so can do as they like and everyone else has to fit around them or go somewhere else, which is fair enough.
Richard
This has now happened twice on this Croatian cruise, once to us and once to the guy below. It's the same story both times ..... some boats are tied with shorelines and another boat arrives, us the first time, and decides to anchor .... perhaps only staying one night, perhaps short-handed, perhaps can't be bothered to launch the dinghy, whatever .... but does the swinging calculation such that if the wind goes round at night then the anchored boat will not hit any of the stern-tied boats.
Fine so far .... until another boat arrives later on and, rather than anchoring, decides they will also take shorelines. Now, if the new boat were to tuck up against the shore with perhaps a 1/4 or 1/2 boat length out, which is fine depth-wise in Croatia, then perhaps there's enough clearance in the swinging circle to avoid any contact, or at least make it possible to pull in a bit of chain to reduce the circle .... but when the shore-lined boat leaves a full boat length or more, I'm beginning to wonder what the point of using shorelines is anyway. One might as well just anchor.
In this case, the monohull had been anchored for some hours and we were anchored a bit further up the inlet, when in comes the boat with the red towel and ties up to shore leaving about one and a half boat lengths between the stern and the shore.
Once they were settled with their endless shore line, the anchored monohull immediately went round his boat and put out all his fenders. I thought the red towel monohull might take the hint at this point and pull in their shoreline a tad ..... but all they did was go around and put out all their fenders as well!
Luckily the wind in the photo occasion stayed very light and consistent during the night, unlike my experience a couple of weeks ago when it blew up after darkness fell making a collision for us absolutely inevitable. :ambivalence:
It seems I'm missing something here, but what is the point of shorelines which are 1.5X longer than the length of the boat?
The next boat along seems to have the same approach to long shorelines as well but at least they were there first so can do as they like and everyone else has to fit around them or go somewhere else, which is fair enough.
Richard