Rigger Mortice
N/A
I don't have a chemical toilet yet .....
You could be taken short as you pass over the tender!
I don't have a chemical toilet yet .....
I don't have a chemical toilet yet .....
It would be good to know where trouble has occurred in the past... visiting yachties are maybe more at risk if they don't know the area....
Good job that most yachts carry bolt-cutters then, isn't it?
(OK, I wouldn't, but I'd definitely be thinking it)
Certainly I'd have no compunction about mooring outside of him (with my long painter to the jetty) and loading and unloading across his boat. I wouldn't be trying to do any damage, but if we happened to leave some grubby footprints back and forth it might demonstrate why it's less anti-social to moor properly.
Pete
Perhaps the obvious thing is to make the dinghy obvious, paint the "TenderTo" name in large letters on stern and seats, at least it has a better chance of being noticed by other neighbours, friends or yachties.
ianat182
Thinking of the bleed screw makes me wonder how hard it would be to fit a concealed switch that would disable the HT lead, so that the o/b wouldn't start.
+100!
I thought about carrying an old padlock or two in the pocket to add to the ones used by such folk, just to make it really secure from theft you understand. Key, what key?
It also advertises the fact that you are ashore & your pride & joy is now sitting unoccupied & ready to be plundered![]()
Good thought. The kill switch on mine is a simple switch in a wire attached to the block - not sure whether it closes to short things out or opens to break the circuit...
Doesn't the absence of a tender floating behind do that anyway, for boats on moorings?
Not neccessarily. You could have your dinghy stowed away in a locker and be sitting on your boat (ready to give any unexpected visitor a warm welcome!)![]()
That's easily dealt with. Mr Badman just goes alongside, knocks politely and is ready to ask about, oh, lock opening times, or have you seen a boat called "My Poll" around, or can-you-lend-us-a-cup-of-sugar. That's in anchorages: I'd be surprised if one in a hundred boats at a mooring (non-visitor) without a tender showing was occupied.
Is that how you do it then?![]()
Seems we think alike.......
Short tender lines are a constant problem in Dartmouth as are those who insist on lifting their outboard. I guess it's the same everywhere.
If someone leaves their tender on a very short line but with yards of spare line then I will often re-tie it on max scope with multiple knots, again to ensure it doesn't float off by itself.