CFarr
Well-Known Member
As a new member I am willingly laying myself open to ridicule for what I assume is 'run of the mill' for most of you guys, namely, exiting a marina berth.
I have improved with the last two trips I've done but I did come upon a situation that drained the blood from my visible areas.
I had entered a marina to give the crew a bit of respite from a long beat in 6 to 7 to have a spot of lunch before returning to home port.
the marina was rammed and after some trouble I managed to get the boat into a finger berth.
The bow had been blowing off when I tried to put it through the wind (Bavaria 36) and the stern kicked to port when going in reverse (violently when the wind was on the port side).
I will try and attach an image of the situation here:
My question is:
How should I have executed the exit?
I did manage to get out without hitting anything (care of crews feet) but it wasn't pretty.
bare in mind I only had two very long warps (which doubled as springs) and three small fenders, usual charter boat supplement I've found.
I have improved with the last two trips I've done but I did come upon a situation that drained the blood from my visible areas.
I had entered a marina to give the crew a bit of respite from a long beat in 6 to 7 to have a spot of lunch before returning to home port.
the marina was rammed and after some trouble I managed to get the boat into a finger berth.
The bow had been blowing off when I tried to put it through the wind (Bavaria 36) and the stern kicked to port when going in reverse (violently when the wind was on the port side).
I will try and attach an image of the situation here:
My question is:
How should I have executed the exit?
I did manage to get out without hitting anything (care of crews feet) but it wasn't pretty.
bare in mind I only had two very long warps (which doubled as springs) and three small fenders, usual charter boat supplement I've found.