Pleiades
Well-Known Member
Well done Sir, fortune clearly must favour the brave.
Robin
Pleiades of Birdham
MXWQ5
Robin
Pleiades of Birdham
MXWQ5
For a previous mooring I used a couple of mooring anchors (Admiralty pattern)....but at some stage the mooring will need to be moved upstream again, this time something serious will need to be added to the bottom weight,
Suggestions on serious solutions that can be done on a diy basis would be welcome.
My thoughts are 1 1/2 tons of concrete cast in a square upside down mushroom shape so that if it falls over it has an ability to plow rather than skid along the bottom.
An overly long mooring is susceptible to damage from the bottom, Learned that from past experience where a line, 32 inches too long, frayed right through, and its replacement began to show signs of the same within a few weeks.
I may add more anchor chain to make the damping effect more extreme but only a matter of a few meter or two.
But for now I am happy to wait and see. Only one boat with 200m of me now so plenty of room for a little movement.!
Regards.
Well about 7 weeks ago, during the last real storm we had, whilst it was blowing what must have been 11 to 12 Nemo went for a little jolly down stream, along with its mooring. She moved about 500m and came to rest where at low water there is no water, ie on the beach, fortunately I was en route and was able to get on board and motor onto a nearby marina where she has rested since.
Yesterday I went to retrieve my mooring and found it on the beach, inverted with what must have been the remains of an enormous cone of seabed sitting on top of it, it was obviously solidly stuck to the seabed at some stage.
I moved it back up stream to its original spot using my tried and tested method but now I just need to work out a quick way to augment the block. It is 1m2 by 20 inches high so it is a half meter of concrete, lighter than I had remembered but also flatter with more suction than I originally thought. (but it has performed perfectly for at least 6 years often with a bigger boat and only being empty for 8 weeks over Christmas, so I'm not too worried about it moving again except in an exceptional storm.)
It is in a spot only exposed to South-Westerlies.
I am going to add to the length and weight of the ground chain but what about adding an anchor well dug in upstream and connecting this where the the ground chain meets the riser. Am I risking some sort of wear between the two chains rubbing. In practice I suspect both will lie on the seabed most of their lives. Thoughts welcome.
Regards
Tony