xeitosaphil
Well-Known Member
Bight.
Sorry Nigel, typing too quick to notice spelling error, will try harder next time I have a bite at the cherry.
Bight.
Mmm.. learned something. Might adopt that. Also should discourage fenders popping out if conditions create a bit of a roll. Slight concern about chafe over my brand new Iroko toerails however.... when docked, move the fenders to a stanchion base using a round turn and two half hitches...
I do occasionally get a bit exercised about this not because I think there is a single right way but only better and worse ways. What alarms me is when (certificated) competent crew tie on fenders with a 'knot' that is not a knot. We always check all the fender knots for security after visiting crew have done them and often have to retie wierd and wonderful arrangements. Less of a problem now we are on a swinging mooring most of the time.
...Slight concern about chafe over my brand new Iroko toerails however.
On my boats I tie fenders with a clove hitch on the top line when docking and then, when docked, move the fenders to a stanchion base using a round turn and two half hitches. This is how I was taught and is one of the few practices I haven't changed over the years. I cringe when I see fenders hanging off lifelines permanently; all that stretching and relaxing must wear the lines and weaken them.
Mrs Nige wants these, so far I have resisted. I think I will have to give in when she sees them at the Boat Show.We use plastic clam cleats intended for the purpose. We have owned them for many years now and never had one come undone, except once when berthed for some time.
I secure mine to the stanchion base with a clove hitch and a half hitch.. Very secure and easy to undo.. I always use the stanchion base to minimise the leverage force should one get a bit of a tug..
[Later] This is the way I tie them for short periods, such as overnight:
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[Later] This is the way I tie them for short periods, such as overnight:
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That's a slipped clove hitch (sometimes known as a slippery hitch, though there are some other knots that share the name). Same as what I do, except that I leave a bigger loop that I can half-hitch around the rope below the knot for added security.
That's a slipped clove hitch (sometimes known as a slippery hitch, though there are some other knots that share the name). Same as what I do, except that I leave a bigger loop that I can half-hitch around the rope below the knot for added security.
Pete
I can, very easily.The advantage of the RT&THH being it's easy to do without thinking, one handed, in the dark, etc, and hard to get wrong...
Where's the fun in being skipper if you can't be dogmatic and obnoxious? Even dogmatic, obnoxious and wrong! Also, all this time I have assumed that somewhere in the small print of the Terms of Use of the forum the obligation to be thoroughly opinionated in all posts is stated.+1 ... my point is that there's no overall right method ...
Where's the fun in being skipper if you can't be dogmatic and obnoxious? Even dogmatic, obnoxious and wrong! Also, all this time I have assumed that somewhere in the small print of the Terms of Use of the forum the obligation to be thoroughly opinionated in all posts is stated.
Would you apply that to, say, gybing in heavy weather? The point surely is that there are lots of different ways of doing almost anything but that there are easier/more difficult; more/less secure; safer/more risky ... (insert any other dialectical pair) ... ways of doing whatever it is. Enjoy your sailing for sure but deal with the consequences of your choices, be they 'trivial' or 'life-and-death'.Why get wound up about such trivialities? The right way to do anything is how you want to do it. Ignore the "you don't want to do it like that" experts and go and enjoy your sailing.