Icarus39
Well-Known Member
We raft a great deal in Holland. In summer the rafts can be 6 deep easily. For me the golden rules and pitfalls are -
- put fenders out, those who don't are a target for me to go alongside .... the type of folks who think in a busy harbour they will not get rafted against if they disappear down the hatch when they see you coming in ... just not cricket
- pick a boat of similar size to raft against
- put shore lines on if you are 2nd or 3rd in the raft
- observe the etiquette of passing silently around the foredeck of your neighbours and not tramping round like a Wilderbeast
Pet hates .... people grabbing my stanchions or worse still, pushing off against them. If seen doing this they get a polite but blunt instruction not to do so. People continuously tramping on and off over your decks for no apparent reason. People who don't pur shore lines on ... a polite request to do so usually works.
As someone else mentioned, I prefer to help someone alongside and make sure no damage is done rather than come back and wonder if the boat that has tied up next to me has done any damage.
Good manners and etiquette are key, like others say .. some great evening with sociable neighbours !
- put fenders out, those who don't are a target for me to go alongside .... the type of folks who think in a busy harbour they will not get rafted against if they disappear down the hatch when they see you coming in ... just not cricket
- pick a boat of similar size to raft against
- put shore lines on if you are 2nd or 3rd in the raft
- observe the etiquette of passing silently around the foredeck of your neighbours and not tramping round like a Wilderbeast
Pet hates .... people grabbing my stanchions or worse still, pushing off against them. If seen doing this they get a polite but blunt instruction not to do so. People continuously tramping on and off over your decks for no apparent reason. People who don't pur shore lines on ... a polite request to do so usually works.
As someone else mentioned, I prefer to help someone alongside and make sure no damage is done rather than come back and wonder if the boat that has tied up next to me has done any damage.
Good manners and etiquette are key, like others say .. some great evening with sociable neighbours !