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On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 14:09:54 -0800, engsol
wrote: This has been likely asked before. I'll be retiring this spring, and buying a sailboat, 30-32 feet. I have limited experience, mainly two J-World courses, plus ASA through Advanced Coastal Cruising, plus a two week trip off the Calif coast, plus a bit of racing on a Santana 20. In my daydreaming, I have most things figured out in the locale where I plan to sail (San Juan and Gulf Islands), except for this.... I'm approaching a slip with a cross-wind blowing me off the dock, and into another boat sharing the slip. So what do I do? Being single-handed and all. One thought occurs to me...toss a grapple and snag the dock. But this raises more questions....will I need to use a winch? How do I route the line? Do they even make grapples, or will I have to make my own? Is this idea even worth it? Last year, we (class of 4 students on a 37 foot J-Boat) tried to dock on the lee side of a dock in 35+ knots. It took all hands ( 4 men and a teen) on the dock waiting to catch lines to snug us up, and it was a bit of effort. I was amazed at how much force the wind exerted on the boat. It was obvious that to dock a boat that size, in those conditions, a single-hander would have to be lucky as well as good. I faced the same problem when I retired at 65 in 2001. For three seasons now I have singlehanded out J36 back from Maine so my wife could spend more of her vacation cruising than passaging. She had always docked the boat and I handled lines, so I was concerned. I practiced at the home marina, first to the T end and then into our slip. My suggestions: 1. Put fenders out on both sides. If you do miss you don't damage your neighbor's boat, or your own.. 2. Learn to bring the boat to a stop next to fixed objects where a mistake doesn't matter, like next to a mooring ball. Get a feel for how much wind you can do this in. 3. When you string your dock lines, tie their ends together so when you step off you have both of them. Loop one of them around its cleat and move smartly to the other end and cleat that. Then go back and cleat the first one properly. So far you are using normal cruising docklines, long enough to make springs of the leftover length. Here is one gizmo you can make, that might come in handy if the wind does get bad. Take a pice of line, and make an eye splice with a piece of hose or plastic tube on the loop part, so the loop stays open. Take a broomstick and drill a hole across one end. Tie it to the eye splice so you can reach the cleat and drop the eye splice over it from the cockpit. Now determine where it should belay on your boat. On ours it is the primary winch. You want it such that when it is attached to the end cleat on your slip, powering forward will hold the boat against the dock. Test while you are tied up. I did all the above, and I carry the gizmo, but I haven't had to use it. HTH Rodney Myrvaagnes NYC J36 Gjo/a "Be careful. The toe you stepped on yesterday may be connected to the ass you have to kiss today." --Former mayor Ciancia |