Mistroma
Well-Known Member
Helping hand?? Did you show them your ropes?
Yes and asked them to pull a bit harder as their stern bumping around a lot.
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Helping hand?? Did you show them your ropes?
It can be pretty variable. I was anchored pretty close to shore once and a horde of young ladies started sunbathing beside a beach volleyball net opposite us. During lunch another group arrived, went topless and decided to play some volleyball. Unfortunately the latter group were dead ringers for a Russian lady shot putting squad. Horrible. I had to sit with my back to the shore.Yes I reckon there must be something between French and Brits, sailing in France for about 30y I was never boarded by any other boat. More disappointingly I have never seen boats full of naked ladies (which seems frequent with my Brit friends, maybe a hidden message?), actually quite the opposite the odd overweight naturist males showing their family jewels to the whole anchorage.
Or people peeing from their boat rafted next to you while you are taking breakfast in the morning, or vomiting liters of alcohol&dinner mixture over your boat at night, but I guess there is no nationality affiliation for those. Isnt boating funny![]()
Reminds me of a TV interview years ago of a lady athlete. She was asked if she wore a special bra and said yes, otherwise she would get black eyes!It can be pretty variable. I was anchored pretty close to shore once and a horde of young ladies started sunbathing beside a beach volleyball net opposite us. During lunch another group arrived, went topless and decided to play some volleyball. Unfortunately the latter group were dead ringers for a Russian lady shot putting squad. Horrible. I had to sit with my back to the shore.![]()
French sailors are divided into two groups.
The first group learned to sail at Les Glenans and do everything perfectly
It can be hard when other people don’t think that your personal property matters. A brand new Dutch (again) boat just purchased in Germany was alongside in the little harbour at Brunsbuttel and left with more haste than was seemly and the aft end of his aluminium strake scratched my blue line. As it happened, we ended up in the same lock, though I had given him up as a bad job, and I walked over and asked what he was going to do to compensate me, and was met by a feigned lack of understanding. I told him that his incompetence was going to cost me money and that he was a disgrace to his nation - I wasn’t in a good mood by then. One of his crew then came to me and asked me how much I wanted. I had no idea and asked for a modest sum which he paid.I was in St Vaast when a Dutch boat tried to berth alongside us with a strong wind blowing him onto us.
I had a fair few fenders out, he had 2 or 3 but the real damage was caused by his brother in law who pulled hard on this bow line so their boat was at an angle rather than parallel and the cross head screws which stuck out from his rubbing strake gouged the blue stripe on my nearly new boat. Skipper said all blase, "just need a bit of paint" to sort that. He didn't take much notice when I said "It's not paint it's blue gel coat. It will be an insurance job." I had to fight like a tiger to get his insurance company to pay up for repairs.
. . .
Now that I am about to give up my boat I can safely say that I have never damaged a third party on the water.
I remember berthing on the far end on the outside of the outer pontoon waiting for the tide to slow before going inside as there seemed to be only a few very tight downtide berths available and with a longish keel discretion was deemed to be the better part of valour. So we sat below decks drinking coffee wondering whether to try across the river or go and find an anchorage up river when there was a loud bang and the boat rocked somewhat. I dashed outside to see a Frenchman departing in a small speedboat, he had misjudged the tide and missed the turn. I had just settled down this time in the cockpit when he returned for a second attempt which was no better than the first and with the same consequences. I told him in no uncertain terms that third time would be unlucky for him and to bugger off and not darken my doorstep again. He obliged.Benodet is a port noted for berthing calamities.
I have only been there twice and berthed safely inside the long pontoon from where the peace of the day was disturbed by shouts of alarm and the sound of crunching fibreglass emanating from boats berthing downtide on the other side.
It’s OK. I have made friends with the Almighty, and I don’t think I’ve upset Fr Hackett lately either.You're tempting fate there!
I suppose, though, you don't have to worry about its effect on future premiums if you go out with a bang.![]()
Benodet is a port noted for berthing calamities.
I have only been there twice and berthed safely inside the long pontoon from where the peace of the day was disturbed by shouts of alarm and the sound of crunching fibreglass emanating from boats berthing downtide on the other side.
We had a narrow escape there, a Frenchman missed our stbd ama by about 10mm, doing 3 or 4 knots.Benodet is a port noted for berthing calamities.
I have only been there twice and berthed safely inside the long pontoon from where the peace of the day was disturbed by shouts of alarm and the sound of crunching fibreglass emanating from boats berthing downtide on the other side.
It’s not just foreigners ……I rammed a yacht in Cherbourg years ago . . .
When I took my own boat along the French atlantic coast I was warned that most French boats I would meet would be charters. Doesnt make sense to live in Paris and have a boat a long distance away in a much bigger country than the UK. That accounts for why they have so few fenders, and in many cases so little skill.We are in France at the moment. Yesterday we were hit by a French boat. It damaged the toe rail. Last month we were hit by French boat.it bent the bathing platform. A few months before another chap smashed into the duogen. Is a 14m fat old Moody ketch somehow invisible here in France? Zut alors!
Many of whom would leap out of the boat and immediately start fishing under the dont fish signs.