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I started off with a small fish and ski boat and over the years the size of
the boats keep getting bigger and bigger. It is amazing how different the boats will handle. I would always practice on calm days, once I felt comfortable I would go out on a windy day and practice more. It is amazing what wind and current can do to a boat. wrote in message ... On Sat, 18 Jun 2005 08:01:39 -0700, "ed" wrote: Is there any boating courses out there that a person can take to teach you how to manuever a boat ? Kinda like a car driving school but one for boats ? Just curious. Thanks Ed Ed there are several tapes and lots of books about piloting and manuevering boats but nothing can replace practice. Read and watch tapes at home, then find yourself a quiet place away from anything expensive to hit and practice the various skills. Understand how the prop (and rudder if you are iinboard) affect the movement of the boat. Learn how "prop walk" changes the way your particular boat backs up and turns. Get a feel for how wind and current affects what you are doing. Remember that flashy Cypress Gardens stuff looks cool but when you watch a pro dock it is a slow steady thing using small inputs of power and careful rudder angle selection. If you can get to the point that you can approach a moored float from any angle and lay along side at the orientation you want in different wind and current conditions you are ready to tackle that resturant dock on a saturday afternoon. ;-) |
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