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I can line up the boat with the slip, but a strong current will throw my stern down
stream. I can maintain steerage going in, but if I enter too fast I am in danger of hitting the concrete wall at the front of the slip. These are slips with small metal piers pointing into the river. There are two slips between each pier, with a wooden post at the head of the slip dividing the slip for two boats. I have to avoid hitting the pier, the wooden piling, and/or the boat in the downstream side of the slip. Sherwin D. Dick Locke wrote: On Sat, 01 Jul 2006 23:45:20 -0500, sherwindu wrote: Unlike the gentleman who wants to single handle a bober pick-up, I have a question about how to enter a slip with two crewmen aboard. Theoretically this can be done under sail, but the first approach should be with an engine, an 9.9 Yamaha outboard in my case. Problem is that our slip is on a bend in the river, so that with a strong current flowing, we have to come in bow first to the narrow slip with the current on the beam. I have tried to come in a bit upstream of the flow and try to time it so that we are in line just as we enter. It's a bit tricky, and there is a tendency for the stern to swing downstream before we have a chance to get a line to it. Any suggestions? Sherwin D. Can you/do you approach into the current? That would keep steering way on while slowing speed over ground and speed relative to the hard things you don't want to hit. |
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