Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Waitin to git walloped
My sailboat (28' S2, 7800 lbs) is at a dock at Carabelle, FL with
fixed finger piers. The piling topss are no more than 7' above high water. TS Bonnie is approaching. Options a 1. Find a better place to ride it out. 2. haul the boat 3. Tie her as best I can and check my insurance. Until the past couple years, this was not a problem as I kept Ragtime in a well protected canal 30 miles to the east. Until recently, Ragtime's value was probably about her insured value but in the past year I have seriously upgraded her she is worth a lot more than insurance would pay. Furthermore, I expect to go on a long Bahamas cruise in November so I have real incentive to protect her this year. Option 1 is not really practical as the only close place that is well protected is the harbor at Dog Island but I have no way to get back once I have her there. I cannot get her under the bridge to go up river. The wide part of the river will probably be crowded with boats in the next couple days riding it out. Option 2, hauling is not an option even without a storm as the only local lift seems to operate only 10% of the time. Option 3 may work but I might expect 10-12' storm surge and 120 mph winds from the south as the storm goes ashore to the west. From my dock, I can look due south along the shore to Dog Island Sound about 1/2 mile away, not exactly well protected from the south where the wind will be blowing from. In normal conditions with only a 3.5' tidal range, it is difficult to arrange my dock/spring lines so she can rise and fall with the tide without being able to hit the pilings but in a 12' surge............I'll be on top of the pilings. Even with just spring lines from stern pilings to bow and bow pilings to stern cleat I will not have enough line stretch to allow for a 12' surge and stay off the pilings. Any ideas here? I probably will not even be able to run a stern anchor out (to the west into the river channel) as it would impede navigation of the channel. I can run a rope to shore to teh east. If I hadnt done all this work on her this past year, I'd just double the lines, allow her to beat herself to pieces and collect insurance but now I really want to protect her. Any ideas? Taking her to sea in the storm is idiocy so dont bother suggesting it. |