NormanS
Well-Known Member
At least all this thread divergence is keeping you off lassoing mooring buoys. 
So no go there, see an increase in AIS distance, look to the troposhere. And look at the data - which shows no "only at night", Best stop digging when in a hole...![]()
Still no sign at all about - "so many threads on here about how we can pick up targets at 300, 400, 500 miles away across open sea at night".........Make that up did you??![]()
At least all this thread divergence is keeping you off lassoing mooring buoys.![]()
It certainly never occured to me that lassoing could possibly damage something as substantial as a mooring.
I may regret asking this but here goes:
I have in the past picked up mooring buoys off Cowes (the big orange ones outside the breakwater) for practice. They have a hook eye on top, but we lassoed it each time. When we stopped for half an hour for lunch, we remained on it lassoed, not tied to the hook eye. On our last trip out there was a boat nearby that had done the same thing for their lunchtime stop.
Is this acceptable or should we have done anything different?
(in mitigation I was crew, everyone else on board was vastly more experienced, and I refer you to my signature)
If you still have the centre rod from the burst bouy I will buy it to replace my corroded one
Bob H
I may regret asking this but here goes:
I have in the past picked up mooring buoys off Cowes (the big orange ones outside the breakwater) for practice. They have a hook eye on top, but we lassoed it each time. When we stopped for half an hour for lunch, we remained on it lassoed, not tied to the hook eye. On our last trip out there was a boat nearby that had done the same thing for their lunchtime stop.
Is this acceptable or should we have done anything different?
(in mitigation I was crew, everyone else on board was vastly more experienced, and I refer you to my signature)