johnalison
Well-Known Member
Well, new to me anyway. I saw this method of mooring our river-boat in India recently and spent a pleasant 20 minutes watching the lads doing it.
A stout wooden post was carried out to the desired spot and a loop in the line from the boat put over it. The post was then buried horizontally in the sandy silt, normal to the direction of the line. Two similar posts were hammered in at an angle to secure the first post, as shown in the photo. Two other lines were secured in other directions, each to a single post. This seemed to work well in the strong current, though we were out of the main stream on each of the seven or so nights we moored this way. Nevertheless, an anchor watch was always kept.
A stout wooden post was carried out to the desired spot and a loop in the line from the boat put over it. The post was then buried horizontally in the sandy silt, normal to the direction of the line. Two similar posts were hammered in at an angle to secure the first post, as shown in the photo. Two other lines were secured in other directions, each to a single post. This seemed to work well in the strong current, though we were out of the main stream on each of the seven or so nights we moored this way. Nevertheless, an anchor watch was always kept.