Bru
Well-Known Member
Perhaps I'm overly cautious but I'm mildly astonished that peeps calculate their clearances to 0.1m!
Nominally, our draught is 1.7m so that's 2m right there. And then I'm never happy with less than 0.5m safety margin so unless it's pretty much zero risk if I touch (e.g rising tide and soft mud) I'd approach anything in the 2.0m to 2.5m clearance with extreme caution
As I well know from getting on and off our former mud berth, the actual tide can vary significantly from the predicted. In my own experience by as much as half a metre!
Upriver that of course and affected by all sorts of factors - atmospheric pressure, how much rain there'd been, wind direction etc. Get a high pressure system overhead after a dry spell with a stiff Westerly holding back the tide and a predicted 5.3m (ample to access our berth) could turn out to be only 4.8m (nowhere near enough) although that was extreme. But a variation of 0.2 to 0.3m was far from unusual
Maybe I am too cautious but then spending a tide on our side would be extremely embarrassing
Nominally, our draught is 1.7m so that's 2m right there. And then I'm never happy with less than 0.5m safety margin so unless it's pretty much zero risk if I touch (e.g rising tide and soft mud) I'd approach anything in the 2.0m to 2.5m clearance with extreme caution
As I well know from getting on and off our former mud berth, the actual tide can vary significantly from the predicted. In my own experience by as much as half a metre!
Upriver that of course and affected by all sorts of factors - atmospheric pressure, how much rain there'd been, wind direction etc. Get a high pressure system overhead after a dry spell with a stiff Westerly holding back the tide and a predicted 5.3m (ample to access our berth) could turn out to be only 4.8m (nowhere near enough) although that was extreme. But a variation of 0.2 to 0.3m was far from unusual
Maybe I am too cautious but then spending a tide on our side would be extremely embarrassing