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Joe wrote:
.....Guess you have to see were I dock, wind is funneled between the building that hols the cigar boats up in slings. So on most spring and summer days we have 10-15 kts wind blowing thru. Hits me broadside going into the slip. The slip is 45 foot and the boat is 42. My boats a ketch with a 55ft main mast and a 40 ft mizzen mast so I have lots of windage to deal with. If I could just coast in and easily stop it would not be as much an issue. A sudden gust of wind, especially when it's swirling around buildings or trees, can be pretty bad. Gives you that "Siezed By A Giant Hand" helpless feeling! One thing I like about the tugboat is it does not have much windage, but it does have a big skeg, so it does not blow around easily. .... I got some great pictures this fall of a guy with one engine tryong to get in a slip here on a 45 ft scarab. He got a running backwards start to his slip missed his slip and went in underneath a boat hanging in the slip next to his, wiped out his little windsheld and dash. Had to get another boat to pull him out, he was lucky he did not get killed. Went and got my camera after his first 4 or 5 tries and knew something interesting was going to happen. The guys with the penis boats are almost always funny whenever there is some skill needed... if they had a clue, they wouldn't want one of those kinds of boats! Well in MHO bow thruster do not belong on anything under 220 foot. I ran some supply boats that had bow thrusters and hated listening to the MF scream and rattle for hours on end as we offloaded. Is your trawler a single or double screw? Single. I prefer the fuel economy & lower maintenance, plus there's a lot more room down in the engine room. We don't *need* a bow thruster, but if we had one, we would have a wider range of possibilities with regard to getting in & out of slips and other tight spaces. Right now, I spend some time looking over the upcoming maneuver carefully, and if it looks too tight (ie a 50% chance or greater of smacking into a really nice expensive boat) then we turn around and go back to the T-pier ![]() I had one embarassing moment, when I was turning the boat around in a relatively tight basin, to come alongside the end of a dock to pick up friends. There was a big expensive yacht alongside the opposide wall, and a nice lady on board with a British accent watching us nervously. I figured the wind would blow us away from this big expensive yacht, since it was from that direction, and to keep from getting hung up on the dock head, I favored the yacht side a little too much.... there was a swirl of wind that almost pulled us right against that yacht's gleaming topsides. But we weren't quite into the point of no return, I managed to pick up our friends with no scrapes or thuds. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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