Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 18 Oct 2012 12:28:16 -0400, " Sir Gregory Hall, Esq."
åke wrote: wrote in message .. . On Wed, 17 Oct 2012 14:35:35 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote this crap: I've got a 35 foot sailboat. How do you propose getting in and out of the dock without a motor? Good GRIEF! What a silly attitude. A 35-foot sailboat can be pushed out of a slip by hand for gosh sake. If wind and current is against you, have you ever heard of warping it out? Duh! Not a problem if you have a full crew. Suppose it's just you and a friend? Warping can be accomplished single handed. It requires using an anchor or anchors and rowing the dinghy. Besides, I have to back out of the dock, then turn, then stop, then turn again, then go forward then turn again. Nearly impossible without the motor. The wind is usually behind me when I back out. Then get a more suitable slip or dock. Duh! Or, better yet, get a mooring. Your motor boat mentality is on display. Imagine if your lazy attitude was in place 200-250 years ago in the age of sail where very large vessels plied the seas and the ports without the hint of an engine on board. Did freight and passengers not get delivered before the age of steam boats? Those boats usually had a large crew, not to mention a lot of people who worked on the docks. Today you always have tugboats steering the ships into the docks. Small boats have a small crew and large boats have a large crew. Small should not equate to inept. Not to mention picking up a mooring ball. OMG. I pick up my mooring float all the time with a boat hook totally under sail. It's a matter of sailing up on it on a beat then pinching up, then heading directly into the wind letting the sails luff while the vessel fore reaches up to and comes to a halt at the float. It's a matter of knowning how one's vessel handles under sail. It's a matter of knowing how far she fore reaches prior to coming to a standstill. Sure, I can grab the mooring ball with a boat hook, but how do I tie a line onto it? There's four feet of freeboard, dumbass. Even laying on your belly your arms ain't long enough to attach a line to it. I tie a line to the bow cleat, and bring it back to the stern. I have someone stand on the swim platform while I back up to the ball and it's relatively easy to tie onto it. You can't do that under sail, especially in high winds and four foot waves. Psssst. http://www.outdoorgb.com/p/the_handy_duck_mooring_hook/ It looks like you don't sail much if you've never seen one of those or a hand-rigged version of it. I can see me now, pulling into a busy harbor with very little wind on a holiday weekend. It can be done, but it's a huge inconvenience to all the other boats going in and out. You should be able to sail your 35-footer in light winds. If you can't then you should be practicing. I sail into harbors more often than not. About the only time I don't sail into harbors is if there is a narrow fairway into them and a headwind that makes it difficult or impossible to beat into the harbor. The marina I go into has a narrow entrance. On a holiday weekend there are hundreds of boats going in and out each hour. On a big holiday, such a memorial day they have sheriffs directing traffic. To be sailing under those conditions would inconvenience a hundred boats trying to get in and out. BTW, this is Western Lake Erie. If you check a chart you will see that the average depth is five feet. When leaving the marina I have to go through a jetty for about two hundred yards, because that's where it is dredged. Then go another hundred yards to get to deep water to start sailing. To be sailing there is to court running aground. And I've seen lot's of sailboats run aground right in front of the marina. Then get a better marina. Good grief! Why pay good money for an untenable situation? Coming in at night, you have to line up the range lights, then look for the red and green lights at the end of the jetty and steer between them. If you try doing that under sail you risk running aground. The entrance is directly West and the wind is usually from the West. There is no room for tacking. If you have a cat or a tri, it's impossible without a motor. Even for a large sailboat like mine, it's still impossible. I repeat, then get a better marina. A real sailor works wind, current and traffic conditions with aplomb. No fuss, no muss. Actually, my boat handles BETTER under sail than under motor power. The power is more balanced instead of being all at the prop which is aft. Can you heave-to under motor power, for example? Not a problem. I have a 28 horse Yanmar diesel. A real sailor also has courtesy to other boaters. There is a mixture of power boaters and sail boaters using the same lake and same marina. And thus speaks Willie-boy who can't afford a marina berth and expounds out of envy of his betters. -- Cheers, Bruce |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
7 y/o to attempt world's youngest round-the-world sailing record | General | |||
shot heard round the world | General | |||
half-way round the world in a kayak | Touring | |||
Is new round-the-world record sailing's greatest feat? | General | |||
round the world yaucht race | UK Paddle |