TonyBuckley
Well-Known Member
At the risk of sounding disrespectful isn't MOB drill slightly different to picking up a buoy...or have I completely missed something!?
Moorings tend to stay in the same place. MOBs do not.
At the risk of sounding disrespectful isn't MOB drill slightly different to picking up a buoy...or have I completely missed something!?
At the risk of sounding a bit judgemental, anybody worried about their ability to pick up a mooring should probably do a few more MOB drills!
(I bet I miss my mooring next time, now that I've said that!)
Top Tip for picking up a mooring singlehanded.
Like everything else in sailing - probably life generally - preparation is the key to success.
While still out in clear water, throttle right back* then take a long reasonably strong line, make one end fast on a foredeck cleat / sampson pos whatever, then lead the rest of the line through the stemhead roller, around the outside of the pulpit and guardrails, back to the cockpit.
I have one of them. I can use it as you suggest, but I also have a BFO snap shackle on the end of it, so method A is to stop with the buoy beside the cockpit, clip on and then walk to the bow as the boat drifts back. With a bit of careful timing I can pull the rope taut just as the buoy reaches the bow.
For shorter single handed trips I rig that line before I leave.
That technique is really only practical on a boat with little freeboard.
Proximity of other boats makes it selfishly risky to pick up under sail at Mersea...
That technique is really only practical on a boat with little freeboard. I can just about reach down amidships if lying on the side deck. Our investment in a Wichard mooring hook attached via an adapted standard boat hook makes the job much easier. Combined with leading the tail back to a cockpit winch means even the lady admirable can pull us up against the tide with a judicious bit of thottle.
I did mention having pelican hooks on the pushpit end of the guardrails; extremely useful for many things, like MOB recovery or simply getting aboard from the tender.
I've spent a lot of money and time on my boat, but the best single thing I ever got was pelican hooks.
Boarding gets much easier in a bigger boat with a bathing platform or sugar scoop stern!
That technique is really only practical on a boat with little freeboard. I can just about reach down amidships if lying on the side deck.
It took me five goes the last time I tried but (a) I was determined to do it under sail and (b) the wind was from a particularly awkward direction, which meant that the turn head-to-wind had to be done either in front of the downwind moored boat (overshoot) or behind it (undershoot). Eventually I realised that it was better to go right past it, turn back and approach from the shore side.
Ah well, I got there in the end, and I learned something in the process.
You completely missed the point.
Pelican hooks would be a waste of time as I can hardly reach a decent top mooring ring whilst lying down on the side deck with my arm under the wires and armpit on the toe rail.
Short arms small hands and proper freeboard!
I do have pelican hooks on one end and lashings on the other.
Lashings can be undone with a sharp knife much quicker than pelicans under load!
Make sure you spend your money well as cheap pelicans can deform under load and you then need a hammer and chisel to remove them from your pulpit/pushpit. OEM fittment were rubbish.
Boarding gets much easier in a bigger boat with a bathing platform or sugar scoop stern!
I'm surprised no-one has suggested the tried and tested method of lassoing the mooring buoy. Of course, it is best done on other people's moorings!
It's been mentioned trust me I have read every one of the replies. But as I said earlier it's fraught with dangers - I have learn't from experience. Trouble is I used it when other methods were looking decidedly dodgy but that's probably the worst time to even consider it.