Its odd, or I find it odd, but Med and Baltic mooring are quite acceptable (in the Med and Baltic) and YBW members seem to accept the concept (in the Med and Baltic) but I have not noticed either practice being used neither in the UK or Australia. It seems such an efficient technique. Adding a gang plank, so much better called a Passerelle, is necessary but in the gran scheme of things that cost (and storage) cannot be the reason
I'm sure someone will have the reason(s)
Jonathan
I think Cornwall has something similarThe commonest mooring in the Baltic is probably the box, but the staging can be at anywhere from deck height to near sea level. Common alternatives are stern buoys, with bows to the staging, and uncommonly a slack line from the shore to the ground offshore which is picked up and made fast to the boat's stern. This is effective but mucky and I have only seen it occasionally, such as at Gudhjem. The Baltic systems make effective use of space but rely on tideless conditions to work.Not sure about Aussie, but going alongside and tying up with your own clean, dry mooring ropes is probably favoured in the UK, rather than hauling gungy, cold, critter/weed infested ropes off a Uk sea bed as stern/head ropes. Ok in the Med, water's usually warm and in some places clearer. Can't speak for the Baltic, they're a funny 'ol lot anyway..![]()
Common in the Baltic as they have a habit of nudging in against a rocky shore with a stern anchor and rock anchors, then deploy the ladder to get off.Guess this yacht has been in the med berthed bow to. This is a cunning boarding ladder hinged so that the anchor can still be used.
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I assumed it was a tidal issue. UK tides being big enough to make the bow lines difficult to have tight at high tide and not holding the boat out the water at low tide, and the pasarelle being awkwardly steep. Of course it might be possible to still have floating pontoons to compensate for the tide but I guess if most boats aren't set up for and skippers aren't familiar with it the only way to attract those customers would be to undercut the competition. Since marina pricing seems to be based on what the customer will pay rather than the cost I'm not sure it makes business sense.Its odd, or I find it odd, but Med and Baltic mooring are quite acceptable (in the Med and Baltic) and YBW members seem to accept the concept (in the Med and Baltic) but I have not noticed either practice being used neither in the UK or Australia. It seems such an efficient technique. Adding a gang plank, so much better called a Passerelle, is necessary but in the gran scheme of things that cost (and storage) cannot be the reason
I'm sure someone will have the reason(s)
Jonathan
Almost everyplace in the Aegean, Ionian and Adriatic I've used lazy lines they've been filthy and quite often with razor sharp growth on them. We use cut resistant gloves for hauling lazy lines.Ok in the Med, water's usually warm and in some places clearer
Yes, I too found old Gardening gloves liberated from the chain locker were near enough essential in many places in the Med. It's probably more to do with Tides as Ylop suggests, or Brits just don't like dabbling in cold water for a mooring line..Almost everyplace in the Aegean, Ionian and Adriatic I've used lazy lines they've been filthy and quite often with razor sharp growth on them. We use cut resistant gloves for hauling lazy lines.
Tides. Baltic and Mediterranean moorings are based upon having minimal tides.Its odd, or I find it odd, but Med and Baltic mooring are quite acceptable (in the Med and Baltic) and YBW members seem to accept the concept (in the Med and Baltic) but I have not noticed either practice being used neither in the UK or Australia. It seems such an efficient technique. Adding a gang plank, so much better called a Passerelle, is necessary but in the gran scheme of things that cost (and storage) cannot be the reason
I'm sure someone will have the reason(s)
Jonathan
S8mple. No tide rise and fall.Its odd, or I find it odd, but Med and Baltic mooring are quite acceptable (in the Med and Baltic) and YBW members seem to accept the concept (in the Med and Baltic) but I have not noticed either practice being used neither in the UK or Australia. It seems such an efficient technique. Adding a gang plank, so much better called a Passerelle, is necessary but in the gran scheme of things that cost (and storage) cannot be the reason
I'm sure someone will have the reason(s)
Jonathan
The usual name amongst sailing school instructors in Gib for these are 'slime lines'.Almost everyplace in the Aegean, Ionian and Adriatic I've used lazy lines they've been filthy and quite often with razor sharp growth on them. We use cut resistant gloves for hauling lazy lines.
Maybe it coincided with the change to walk through transoms?Tides. Baltic and Mediterranean moorings are based upon having minimal tides.
Interestingly as recently as 1990 in magazines such as Yachting Monthly, “Med mooring” as a term was used to mean BOWS in, as in the Baltic today - without bothering to define as it was assumed all readers knew that bows to was the norm. The reason for bows in often being to avoid rudder damage if boulders near the quay.
It is not clear when the mindset flipped from “Med mooring” being assumed to be bows in to be assuming stern in?
From a privacy point of view bows in is preferable, to my mind.

Exactly... with a big tide the slime line would either be totally slack or would pull your bow under.I assumed it was a tidal issue. UK tides being big enough to make the bow lines difficult to have tight at high tide and not holding the boat out the water at low tide, and the pasarelle being awkwardly steep. Of course it might be possible to still have floating pontoons to compensate for the tide but I guess if most boats aren't set up for and skippers aren't familiar with it the only way to attract those customers would be to undercut the competition. Since marina pricing seems to be based on what the customer will pay rather than the cost I'm not sure it makes business sense.