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On Jan 16, 6:19*pm, X ` Man dump-on-conservati...@anywhere-you-
can.com wrote: On 1/16/12 5:06 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 16 Jan 2012 13:42:11 -0800 (PST), North Star *wrote: I have never used a mooring buoy but I assumed they just had an eye on top and you brought over your own line. Why is there a line there at all? In a rough sea, a mooring line is alot easier to pick up with your boat hook......especially if your boat has a generous freeboard. === Yes, exactly right. When the wind is blowing hard and/or there is a lot of current, picking up a mooring without a line is very difficult. When I was a kid and we were at the beach for the summer, we kept our boats on buoys and mushroom anchors about 200 feet beyond the low tide sandbars. I usually had so much wax on the mahogany deck of my little runabout that when I crawled out on it to hook it up to the buoy and pull over the canvas cover, the cover and I would slide off into Long Island Sound. Usually the water wasn't rough enough to make attaching a line to the buoy difficult. Small boats, relatively sheltered waters. The buoys usually were stainless steel beer barrels. My dad would cut a hole in each end and thread through a rod and weld the rod to the barrel and then weld a donut shaped fitting to each end of the rod. We'd paint the barrels with copper bottom paint.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This type seems popular at the yacht clubs around here. I believe they use a galvanized shackle to attach the heavy chain and the mooring line. http://ca.binnacle.com/Docking-and-M...duct_info.html |
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