T
timbartlett
Guest
Yes, it's the most eagerly-awaited event of January .... what else can it be other than April's What Now Skip?? Just to distort your sense of time even further, I've set it in late May, or early June, but all you really need to imagine is that it is warm enough for sitting around in a sportscruiser's cockpit to be pleasant, and that paddling in the sea is feasible if somewhat chilly.
Please remember:
* The idea is to offer a nautical puzzle, which experienced skippers will (hopefully) find interesting or entertaining, from which the less experienced may be able to learn something, and from which we can all pick up ideas.
* The WNS skipper is a fictional character. Any resemblance to a real individual is purely accidental, except that he occasionally makes mistakes, and he is not able to make time run backwards. So having got into a situation, he can't get out of it by wishing that he had done something different.
* WNS is not a competition to see who can match some hidden but predetermined solution. Of course I have an answer in mind (you wouldn't like it if I gave you an impossible situation, would you?) But mine may not be the best or only answer.
* If you think I've missed something or given confusing information please ask for clarification.
* Attributed extracts from selected posts will appear in the next issue of MBY.
Please remember:
* The idea is to offer a nautical puzzle, which experienced skippers will (hopefully) find interesting or entertaining, from which the less experienced may be able to learn something, and from which we can all pick up ideas.
* The WNS skipper is a fictional character. Any resemblance to a real individual is purely accidental, except that he occasionally makes mistakes, and he is not able to make time run backwards. So having got into a situation, he can't get out of it by wishing that he had done something different.
* WNS is not a competition to see who can match some hidden but predetermined solution. Of course I have an answer in mind (you wouldn't like it if I gave you an impossible situation, would you?) But mine may not be the best or only answer.
* If you think I've missed something or given confusing information please ask for clarification.
* Attributed extracts from selected posts will appear in the next issue of MBY.
One morning, in late spring, our hero anchored his 40 foot sports cruiser off a secluded beach. He and Mrs Hero read the Sunday papers for a couple of hours before taking the tender ashore for a stroll along the beach and a pub lunch in the village.
As they clambered back over the sand dunes after lunch, they were surprised to see a boat very much like theirs, so close to the beach that it appeared to be aground. As they got a little closer, they realised that it was theirs, and as they got closer still, they also realised that it was, indeed, aground, and that it was only the outdrive legs that were preventing the onshore breeze from pushing it right onto the beach. On investigation, they find that the boat hasn't "dragged her anchor": what seems to have happened is that the chain and anchor have somehow parted company from each other, and that there is now nothing on the end of the few metres of chain that are dangling uselessly over the bow.
The tidal range is small, and has only another half metre to rise before high water in two hours time, and the wind -- whilst not particularly strong -- is too much for one person to be able to push the boat off.
Mr and Mrs Hero are on their own, and the beach is deserted.They have no spare anchor, and only the four mooring warps that they use for berthing. The tender is a 2.4m roll-up inflatable, with a 3.5hp outboard.
What now, Skip?