wfe1947
Active Member
I tend to use the method recommended by Duncan Wells in his book Stress-Free Sailing: Single and Short-handed Techniques whereby I have a fore/aft line running from the bow to the cockpit cleat and when leaving the mooring, remove the strop loop from the bow end cleat and thread this fore/aft line through the loop and back to cockpit cleat. This then holds the boat and when I want to leave, release the line from the cockpit cleat and motor away once the boat has swung into a reasonable direction. Then I go forward, collect the line and connect it back onto the cockpit cleat. Coming back to the mooring, I pick up the strop and walk it up to the bow and attach it to the cleat having first passes the fore/aft line through the loop. ( Duncan's recommendation is to to thread the fore/aft line through the strop loop and reattach to the cockpit. I find that this doesn't work for me possibly because I always have my tender painter tied to the strop).
Apologies for the long diatribe. Now my question. Why do boaters usually tie up to the mooring buoy at the bow? For me it would seem easier to just connect the mooring strop to the cockpit cleat. I have done this on a temporary basis but have never left it that way as it seems odd in that the boat would take up a non-normal position. The only downside that I can see is that the weather/rain would be blowing against the washboards. However, it would make leaving the mooring easiier as you are then not easily going to moter over the mooring strops, etc.
Apologies for the long diatribe. Now my question. Why do boaters usually tie up to the mooring buoy at the bow? For me it would seem easier to just connect the mooring strop to the cockpit cleat. I have done this on a temporary basis but have never left it that way as it seems odd in that the boat would take up a non-normal position. The only downside that I can see is that the weather/rain would be blowing against the washboards. However, it would make leaving the mooring easiier as you are then not easily going to moter over the mooring strops, etc.