dolabriform
Well-Known Member
Gentlemen don't sail to windward...
I'm not a gentleman apparently ?
Gentlemen don't sail to windward...
I turned the engine on in the wallet, wind over tide, hobby horsing all the way. That's how I discovered there was crud in the tank, when the hobby horsing stirred it all up and the engine went bang bang no more![]()
& there was me thinking that this was the East Coast forum. Not the Motor Boat Forum![]()
I suggest you inspect your tank more often. It’s part of my annual service, do you not check it now and then?
New to me boat, tank only 1/8th full. Brown stuff happens sometimes
Yes - at v low springs the marina will warn us off - it's the channel as much as the sill. Mostly a minor inconvenience but once we managed to arrive after an 11 hr beat from Belgium at v low water and desperate for our comfy marina berth were told we'd need to wait an hour. We anchored at Ewarton, crashed out, and went into the marina the following morning.Channel is dredged to 2m below LAT. I did once hit the outer sill on entry, nominal 1.85m keel. Some internal areas are shallow 2m ish.
Been there, done that thing. Hamble to Orwell, new to us boat, engine had behaved perfectly pottering round the Solent and once we set out on the delivery it lost interest short of the Bramble Bank!

I am planning to keep my yacht on the River Orwell, the marina I have in mind assure me that I should be able to have access at any tide. The boat I am looking at have a 1.98m draft and I see a shoal keel version is available for this boat and comes in at 1.49m...
A sailing barge, while capable of making progress upwind is hardly a good windwatd performer, the sails being anything but flat and sheeted right out at the rail. A leeboard offers a small area of resistance to leeway compared to the 4000 of so square feet of sail. Nonetheless, there was clearly no commercial sailing vessel better suited to our East Coast than the Thames Sailing Barge.Or one could just turn the engine on I suppose. Not always good to rely on the engine though, to be fair.
I remember Des Sleightholme railing against the sight of perfectly good sailing boats motoring hard just to get from A to B. I think that he must have forgotten that some people actually work for a living, and if they find themselves, say, in the Orwell and need to get the boat back to Mersea on a Sunday so that they can be ready for work on Monday morning, then the engine will go on regardless. It is true that many of us can be lazy given half a chance, but modern cruising yachts have engines that are more than auxiliaries and we often cruise as if we were in motor-sailors.A sailing barge, while capable of making progress upwind is hardly a good windwatd performer, the sails being anything but flat and sheeted right out at the rail. A leeboard offers a small area of resistance to leeway compared to the 4000 of so square feet of sail. Nonetheless, there was clearly no commercial sailing vessel better suited to our East Coast than the Thames Sailing Barge.
If faced with foul wind and tide in the Wallet, or elsewhere, it was common practice to let go the anchor, cook a meal and get heads down until an hour or so before tide time, when jt was time to haul up and get under way again.
What's the hurry?
Peter.
I remember Des Sleightholme railing against the sight of perfectly good sailing boats motoring hard just to get from A to B. I think that he must have forgotten that some people actually work for a living ...
Although he was a wry character and I was lucky enough to meet him a couple of times, I think that his last few years were marked by increasing pain and frustration from an arthritic hip or two, and I got the impression that this made him all the more tutworthy.Perhaps he mellowed a little on the matter in old age, reluctantly recognising the reality you describe. I thought I remembered his writing that he wept, sitting on Bolt Head watching the sails come down, but his YM obituary ends 'In his last years Des loved walking up on Bolt Tail, watching the passing yachts and tut-tutting if they used their engines instead of the tide'.
[My emphasis; Sad farewell - Yachting Monthly]
Although he was a wry character and I was lucky enough to meet him a couple of times, I think that his last few years were marked by increasing pain and frustration from an arthritic hip or two, and I got the impression that this made him all the more tutworthy.
Congratulations - a sweet boat!My search for a yacht is over - About to complete the purchase of a Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 349
In the end I went for a deep keel version and will take all the advice and guidance on board to avoid joining the club of sailors who ran aground!
The only other option on the East Coast is to be a liar ????My search for a yacht is over - About to complete the purchase of a Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 349
In the end I went for a deep keel version and will take all the advice and guidance on board to avoid joining the club of sailors who ran aground!
Whatever floats your boat, as they say. Having relied on a Seafarer then Navico whirly thing for nearly thirty years, I am quite content to have the meter showing depth from transducer, in the knowledge that we ground when it says about 1.1. My brain knows that our draft is 1.5+, so anything around that is still OK. I have sailed on boats with instruments showing depth below the surface or keel and it drives me mad since senility has removed flexibility from my system. I believe that there is no single way that is better than any other. I just don’t like sailing with the meter showing 0.3, even if my own showing 1,5 means exactly the same.Congratulations on buying a boat in this difficult market.
One of your first things to do to stop running aground is to set your depth sounder to be keel depth. Then the number you see is how much clearance you have under the keel.
Initially check the depth of the transducer from the waterline. Subtract this from the designed draught and then add 0.1 of a metre as a boat loaded always is deeper. Use this as the offset for your depth sounder and then ........................................test by running aground. I checked mine on the concrete sill at the Tide Mill Harbour at Woodbridge by looking at the tide guage for your draft and trying to enter when your depth sounder is showing zero to see if you touch.
Now you will be set to know how shallow the water has to be to stay afloat. Tacking up the Medway I usually tack on 1 metre under the keel due to the sloping edges of the channel, but other places where it is very flat I go down to 0.3 metre.
To become a true East Coast sailor you have to try entering a shallow river entrance on a falling tide and get it wrong. You have to remain over low tide (usually few people see you as no one else is around due to it being low tide). Just touching bottom on a rising tide is just normal East Coast sailing.
Whatever floats your boat, as they say. Having relied on a Seafarer then Navico whirly thing for nearly thirty years, I am quite content to have the meter showing depth from transducer, in the knowledge that we ground when it says about 1.1. My brain knows that our draft is 1.5+, so anything around that is still OK. I have sailed on boats with instruments showing depth below the surface or keel and it drives me mad since senility has removed flexibility from my system. I believe that there is no single way that is better than any other. I just don’t like sailing with the meter showing 0.3, even if my own showing 1,5 means exactly the same.