RJJ
Well-Known Member
Have to say I was taught to lasso (as a short-term measure) and was unaware of the risk of damage. Now a bit wiser.
I will just have to keep explaining my point of view while alongside their flimsy GRP boat in our 'fit for purpose' steel workboat I suppose.That’s because they are trying to teach the stubborn fools to buy bouys that are fit for purpose. But some people prefer to gripe and keep replacing one flimsy bouy with another.
- not to use a mooring that might not be adequate for your size of yacht;
As far as I'm concerned, if a mooring is not marked as a visitor one or, permission has not been given to use it, then DON'T.
Plus one to that. Season before last I was picking up a visitor mooring on the W of Scotland. I caught the strop with the hook, and the helm stopped the boat. Now, the diameter of the strop was exactly the same as that of the jaws of the boathook, and I found myself unable to disengage strop from hook as the boat gained sternway. I hung on grimly to the hook as my arm was pulled over the bow by 10 tons of boat. (didn't want to lose the boathook) In the wind communication with the helm failed.Do be upset about how your own buoy is being frequently misused but try to differentiate that from utility of knowing how to lasso a buoy.
RichardS talks about "picking up" a mooring at the bow with a boathook. If he's not talking about pick-up buoys I suggest that you can't hold a 10 tonne boat in any kind of a blow with a boat hook (and then you need another person, possibly with another boat hook, to thread the rope through the ring). Reversing up to a buoy is not always practical under sail and does require another person and a step close to the waterline, so not practical for all.
Notwithstanding the do's and don'ts of lassoing a mooring buoy, the technique is essential, (as I was taught on a course), for getting an MOB attached to the boat. For this, the best rope is the nearest one, likely a jib sheet.What's the best rope for lassoing a buoy or a cleat? Mine either float or collapse as I throw them but I don't seem to have anything which makes a nice wide arc.
Plus one to that. Season before last I was picking up a visitor mooring on the W of Scotland. I caught the strop with the hook, and the helm stopped the boat. Now, the diameter of the strop was exactly the same as that of the jaws of the boathook, and I found myself unable to disengage strop from hook as the boat gained sternway. I hung on grimly to the hook as my arm was pulled over the bow by 10 tons of boat. (didn't want to lose the boathook) In the wind communication with the helm failed.
Upshot was I tore a muscle tendon (rotator cuff) in the shoulder, and required a repair operation costing £7000. (NHS waiting list was about nine months +.) Next time I go to that particular buoy I will be lassooing!
Perhaps you should learn some adequate boat handling before going out in 10T of boat?Plus one to that. Season before last I was picking up a visitor mooring on the W of Scotland. I caught the strop with the hook, and the helm stopped the boat. Now, the diameter of the strop was exactly the same as that of the jaws of the boathook, and I found myself unable to disengage strop from hook as the boat gained sternway. I hung on grimly to the hook as my arm was pulled over the bow by 10 tons of boat. (didn't want to lose the boathook) In the wind communication with the helm failed.
Upshot was I tore a muscle tendon (rotator cuff) in the shoulder, and required a repair operation costing £7000. (NHS waiting list was about nine months +.) Next time I go to that particular buoy I will be lassooing!
It is not. But the number of times it has happened to me is so small that I can look back over decades of sailing without getting upset about it. In each case except one, it happened because someone (typically a club boatswain) had mistakenly told the person who picked up my mooring that I would not be back before he returned. Annoying but worth getting worked up about? I think not.
The first book about cruising I read was "Cruising Under Sail" by Eric Hiscock and from that and other sources I learnt that the accepted conventions are:
- not to use a mooring that might not be adequate for your size of yacht;
- not to damage it, but if you do you must seek out the owner and pay the costs of repairing it;
- not to leave your yacht unattended on the mooring you have borrowed.
For many years I had a mooring in one of the busiest parts of Portsmouth Harbour, an area much favoured by sailing school instructors for teaching novices how to pick up moorings. I never had any damage done to my mooring and if I returned to find a yacht on my mooring its skipper would immediately vacate it.
Unlike some of those who posted on this thread, I find the vast majority of my fellow yachtsmen to be friendly, tolerant, helpful and understanding.
Long may that remain the case.
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Perhaps you should learn some adequate boat handling before going out in 10T of boat?
What is this "bouy" thing that you keep writing about?That’s because they are trying to teach the stubborn fools to buy bouys that are fit for purpose. But some people prefer to gripe and keep replacing one flimsy bouy with another.
Yeah, but the good looking, experienced, charming and witty ones do.Strangely, the arsehole 'instructors' never choose the sturdy steel buoy for their inept students to practice on.
Why should he buy equipment to be fit for someone else's purpose? If someone used and dragged my mooring by putting a much heavier boat than mine on it, would you blame me for having an inadequate mooring?Yet you still won’t fork out once to buy a fit for purpose mooring bouy despite all the people giving you the chance to learn from your mistake.