Leaving/Returning to a Berth Single-Handed...

For real experts try leaving the boat in gear whilst doing all of the above.. this ensures that the bow will be firmly attatched to the pontoon.

You want to see my single-handed technique for a drying swinging mooring:
(1) Arrive early, on a rising tide.
(2) Run aground 3 feet from mooring buoy.
(3) Be glad you've got a 6-foot boat-hook.

Simples ;-)
 
In the unlikely event that you manage one of your first hundred or so single-handed marina berthings without a hitch, don't be disappointed to find that it's midnight and there is no-one around to witness it.

First perfect single handed tie along for refueling was not just me but I also had new born primary cost centre in arms and as you so perfectly point out, no one witnessed the event. And next attempt was a disaster in full view of watching, and erudite (I had taught them), members of the club.

John
 
As Dratsea said at post #3, "Plan it all well ahead, try to get berth with wind blowing you on". But if you're faced with a berth where the wind is pushing you off and on to another boat, don't be afraid to berth onto the other boat and then to warp across to your correct berth. It's better to make a gentle, pre-planned and well-fendered contact with another boat, rather than have your efforts at coming alongside a pontoon come to nothing as your bow blows across and makes unfendered contact. If you can discuss it with your neighbour first then it can be even better.

Oh, and make arrangements that only one of you will put on outside fenders. If you both have outside fenders then they can easily get tangled, resulting in broken fender lines.
 
Many thanks all for taking the time to reply and for the humour, next thread on Reader to Reader about retrofitting a remote controlled bow thruster!:D
 
Many thanks all for taking the time to reply and for the humour, next thread on Reader to Reader about retrofitting a remote controlled bow thruster!:D

A _waterproof_, _wireless_ remote control would let you operate the bow thruster when you've fallen off the pontoon :D
 
An alternative mooring method..........

is, as Searush says (quote) "Planning, preparation & even more preparation & planning, oh, & did I mention planning & preparation?".

You might take this with a pinch of salt of course but it does work.

As you leave, look around for someone with a nice inflatable on davits or tied astern. BTW this is most effective if you have a bowsprit, in fact mobo owners could well benefit from fitting a decent bowsprit anyway.

What you do when coming back is drive into the inflatable. Ignore the hissing noise, that is quite normal. Spear the inflatable with the bowsprit, that will keep you in one place. It also cushions your arrival. It is then a simple matter to climb over the front (that's the pointy bit in nautical parlance) and tie off to whatever presents itself as convenient. I have made good use of water taps in the past, they make a good cleat, failing that winding the rope a few times round the shore-power post is almost as good. Then you can go off for a few bevvies.
 
is, as Searush says (quote) "Planning, preparation & even more preparation & planning, oh, & did I mention planning & preparation?".

You might take this with a pinch of salt of course but it does work.

As you leave, look around for someone with a nice inflatable on davits or tied astern. BTW this is most effective if you have a bowsprit, in fact mobo owners could well benefit from fitting a decent bowsprit anyway.

What you do when coming back is drive into the inflatable. Ignore the hissing noise, that is quite normal. Spear the inflatable with the bowsprit, that will keep you in one place. It also cushions your arrival. It is then a simple matter to climb over the front (that's the pointy bit in nautical parlance) and tie off to whatever presents itself as convenient. I have made good use of water taps in the past, they make a good cleat, failing that winding the rope a few times round the shore-power post is almost as good. Then you can go off for a few bevvies.

I wondered what that hissing sound was.
You learn something new everyday on this forum :)
 
Ah! Bowsprits!

BTW this is most effective if you have a bowsprit

"A fair wind slightly astern had carried us into Ostend, and we were still going at a speed of about two knots when the moment came to make the tangenital approach approach to this quay. We had been slow in getting the mains'l down due to some hitch and when close to and parallel to the quay we were still going much to fast. Now this dock had a brick wall at it's far end, which formed a right-angled corner with the quay in question. Into this corner we were now going with a momentum of 19 tons mass times 2 knots velocity and the imminent certainty of hitting the wall head-on with our bowsprit. .. I had a sudden thought and, rushing to the foredeck, seized the iron handle of the winch and with it knocked out the great wooden pin that held the bowsprit in place.

Then came the impact.

Freed from it's lateral confines, the square butt end of the 21-foot spar thrust inboard. There was a rope that must have been used as an out-haul, which ran in a groove round the butt and and was cleated in the bitts. I had undone this at the moment of knocking out the pin and now used it as a means of checking the speed of the backward-traveling sprit. It came in and on the Jersey went towards the wall, but slowing all the time. The butt end went past the mast as far as the companion and the ship came quietly to a stop with her stem head a foot from the wall and the bowsprit neatly housed, all 21 feet of it."

Dermod MacCarthy - "Sailing With Mr Belloc"
 
I find that carefull thinking in advance, and this starts before you leave the berth... is the best preparation.

1) Ensure that there is no rubbish on the pontoon before you leave to cause problems upon return
2) prepare a secondary liine for use, already attatched to cleat, and leave on the pontton ready to pick up when coming back.
3) when preparing to return, carefully consider tide and wind.
4) prepare fenders before entering marina.
5) prepare one center cleat line ready to use before entering marina.
6) run this one line carefull back to the sprayhood area, clear of all obstructions and outside of the guardlines..ready to pick up and use as you come alongside.
7) slowly approach the berth, with engine at tickover.
8) as the boat enters the berth, engine into neutral
9) leave helm quickly, grasping earlier prepared line... (See step 6) and move to step carefully over guardlines and onto ponttoon.

NOW THIS IS THE IMPORTANT BIT

10) as the end of the pontoon comes alongside, step forward, placing right foot onto pontoon, but ensuring that left foot snares the top guardline on the boat,
11) tip forward onto pontton as gravity takeshold.. clenching line in one hand and desperatley attempting to arrest fall with the other, as the boat moves forward, piroeting you in a clockwise direction.
12) fall flat onto pontoon, dropping glasses over opposite side, and in an attempt to grab them lose line.
13) as you attempt to regain your dignity boat will come to a sudden halt with the bow smacking into the only 3 inches of pontoon with no fendering.
14) Stern will now drift across and rest on neighbors boat...
15) Boat is now parked.

16) Casually dust oneself off.. pick up line that was previously left on pontoon in step 2 above.
17) climb back onto boat via pulpit, use line above to haul bow across to finger.
18) retrieve line from center cleat, and leap across chasm to to finger. Retie as needed.


For real experts try leaving the boat in gear whilst doing all of the above.. this ensures that the bow will be firmly attatched to the pontoon.


THIS IS A TRIED AND TESTED AND ENTIRELY RELIABLE METHOD OF PARKING A BOAT SINGLE HANDED!
I find that this technique is quite dependable... and usually more so when being observed by your fellow berth holders, or visiting school boats.

I have enclosed the bill for the laundering of my trousers and undergarments.

Brilliant, still have tears in my eyes. My wife thinks I am having a breakdown .......
 
You've seen that technique used haven't you Clive?

Well, actually m'dear it's a variation on a theme developed by Michael Green ("The Art of Coarse Sailing") only there Beaver stuck the bowsprit through a cruiser's porthole, I've just updated the idea.

I mean, if you MUST hit something, and Murphy's Law insists that you must, better to plan ahead as you said and make sure it's something soft and resilient.

All good clean fun!

Ok, not actually clean perhaps, taking account of the vast quantities of goose and duck poo covering most pontoons, but "fun" especially if it's someone else that has to jump off and skid and fall on their ass!
 
A chap down the the Harbour recommended a book to me and it's a great read.

It's called 'Dockmanship' by Cornell. It's a small paperback book but all it deals with is mooring, covering all types of configuration and goes into using Prop Rotation of your engine to your advantage etc.
A great little book that does exactly what it says on the cover.
 
A chap down the the Harbour recommended a book to me and it's a great read.

It's called 'Dockmanship' by Cornell. It's a small paperback book but all it deals with is mooring, covering all types of configuration and goes into using Prop Rotation of your engine to your advantage etc.
A great little book that does exactly what it says on the cover.

Now come on, that's not fair! Education for yotties attempting to moor up is going to ruin one of the greatest onlooker sports available without a Sky subscription, that of admiring the pandemonium, mayhem and outright dismay and vessel damage experienced by the unwary whilst one is safely moored up a safe distance away!
 
A chap down the the Harbour recommended a book to me and it's a great read.

It's called 'Dockmanship' by Cornell. It's a small paperback book but all it deals with is mooring, covering all types of configuration and goes into using Prop Rotation of your engine to your advantage etc.
A great little book that does exactly what it says on the cover.

Thanks for that, just got a copy from Amazon £2.90 (15p plus standard amazon £2.75 postage), from a new seller on there called mysailingbooks who has 140 odd second hand sailing books for sale...:)

(no connection to seller)
 
Steady now!

After some mishaps, we believe that we have got this down to a fine art in a 10 ton long keel boat with overhangs. A lenght of line with spliced loops at either end is looped around a midships cleat, led outside the stanchions and back to the cockpit where a few turns are taken on the genoa sheet winch. The loop at this end is dropped over a convenient cleat to prevent the tail of the line dropping overboard. We come along side with the minimum way on to maintain steerage, drop the belly of the line over a convenient cleat, take the way off with a little blast astern and winch the line tight. Boat is held to the pontoon by the line effectively forming a midships line and spring. The entire manouvre can be conducted from the cockpit.
Bow, stern and breast lines and springs can then be arranged at leisure.
Leaving single handed can also be managed using the same line as a short slip line functioning as a spring to the sheet winch. For the single-hander, long slip lines invite trouble with prop!
Having once had a throttle/gearshift lever come away in my hand, I always like to approach a berth as slowly as steerage and leeway will allow!
 
Good evening:

I posted a couple of scanned images under "Caigue Swing Anchoring technique" earlier this afternoon which explains my technique for entering a berth when either single handed or with crew.

As mentioned will be happy to explain further if my explanation is not clear.

Cheers

Squeaky
 
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