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"Don White" wrote:
"Rosalie B." wrote in message .. . snip... Floating docks are similarly a problem for me because they are at the waterline, and we have a fairly high freeboard. So we carry a step stool. grandma Rosalie Our skipper had a Rubbermaid 2 step type stool nailed to his slip. We had to be careful hopping off the Mirage 33 if the helmsman came into the slip a bit fast. There's not a lot of surface area to land on. ;-) One of our passengers tried to leap from our boat to the one we were getting ready to raft on, and fell. He had really badly bruised ribs (he didn't fall in). He didn't say anything to us at the time, but his SO told me about it later. We NEVER jump off in docking. Sometimes it may take two tries, but Bob has to get the boat close enough to the dock that I can get the lines on a piling or to a person on the dock. He can get off after we are attached (although we both have arthritis in our knees - my sisters orthopedist says that everyone our age has creaky knees - but his is apparently less advanced than mine). Or in the case of our home dock, we leave the lines on the pilings on the pier (fixed dock) and all I have to do is lift them off with a boat hook and put the lines through the appropriate chocks or hawse holes. There are chafe guards attached to the lines where they go through, so I even know how long to leave the lines. We also do have a wooden step stool that Bob built that is attached to the pier. He built it after I ripped my thigh open on a nail that time. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On 2008-03-23 14:23:50 -0400, Rosalie B. said:
"Don White" wrote: "Rosalie B." wrote in message ... snip... Floating docks are similarly a problem for me because they are at the waterline, and we have a fairly high freeboard. So we carry a step stool. grandma Rosalie Our skipper had a Rubbermaid 2 step type stool nailed to his slip. We had to be careful hopping off the Mirage 33 if the helmsman came into the slip a bit fast. There's not a lot of surface area to land on. ;-) One of our passengers tried to leap from our boat to the one we were getting ready to raft on, and fell. He had really badly bruised ribs (he didn't fall in). He didn't say anything to us at the time, but his SO told me about it later. Oh, good catch, so to speak. On one of our charters, a fairly experienced crew member jumped off despite my "Captain Bligh's" crew instructions (below). Broke both ankles. Sorta bummed out the crew, and of course he and his wife spent much time in hospitals immediately and for some years later. Not sure they ever got to Anegada. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
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