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The dock is not adjacent to the launch ramps I use; you have to drive the
boat from the trailer to the dock to park your tow vehicle or pick up your crew. If I have crew, I get to board the boat while trailered and turn on the vent blower. When the trailer is backed down the ramp, I start the engine and lower the drive. When the engine's idling and I'm reasonably sure it won't stall, I release the winch safety chain and strap and back off the trailer and over to the dock. While the crew turns on and checks all the electronics I park the tow vehicle. If I'm alone, I have to get my feet wet to get into the boat once the trailer's backed up. Once at the dock, I have to run back and park the tow vehicle. I normally only use a bow and stern line as the boat is seldom tied up for more more than 45 minutes when unattended. I normally only use two fenders. I have three more lines available for tieing up or alongside towing, 200' of tow line for stern towing, a pair of fenders on a three foot line to use as walking fenders -usually to protect other boats from my ski tower, and five more fenders to protect hulls. All of my lines have an eye at one end. When tieing up at a dock, the eye goes on my cleat. If tieing up with another boat, they get the eye and I keep the bitter end so that I can untie if necessary. I don't use any caribiners because I consider them a danger to fingers. "HK" wrote in message . .. wrote: On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:29:43 -0400, John H. wrote: do you add extra lines to the bow ring and another to the stern ring, or do you use the bow and stern dock lines on the boat? I generally launch and retrieve alone I have a fairly long utility line on my boat for various uses. Snap on one end, eye spliced in the other.When launching I put the eye over a cleat on the boat, coil the line loosely on the deck and snap the other end on the winch crossbar. Then when the boat rolls off I can swing the snapped end over to a couple dock posts and tie it off to the stern cleat. You never "lose" the boat that way. Even if the stern gets away from you, you still have a line on the boat. If I see the wind is going to fight me I will attach a long stern line and tie it off to the dock "down ramp" a ways before I roll off the boat so I can pull it in after launching. I assume the rules are different at a busy public ramp but we have a private ramp in our neighborhood and most of the time I never see another soul when I launch or recover. Even so this still goes pretty fast. What you are doing isn't much different from what I do, except I tie off the bow and stern. The long lines help where I launch because the finger pier next to the ramp is long, and I can tie off the boat where I want it to be for launch and retrieval. The ramp is about 20' wide, and I always launch and retrieve in its center. |
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