- Joined
- Aug 16, 2019
- Messages
- 417
- Reaction score
- 117
I took the boat (2320) for a shakedown of a new piece of electronics and the pumps on a local lake the other day. I was solo. Over the course of the next few hours the wind kicked up. You all know that the cabin catches wind much more than the cockpit end and the boat really swings. The dock has a few pilings that stick up higher than the pulpit. I couldn't chase too much with the rear due to the other dock.
I am by NO MEANS an expert, but I did not want to tie off on the upwind side while I picked up the truck and trailer, which certainly would have been easy.
In retrospect sitting here at the kitchen table, I should have pointed the tail into the wind and eased sideways to the end of the dock, stepped off with the lines, and walked the boat around the end, to be perpendicular to the wind and tie up.
Does anyone have any piloting tips (or cowboy rope tricks) to bring the boat in solo in these conditions on the downwind side? I had the fenders on the stbd side(hoping not to need them), and was trying to get tied off so the wind was blowing me off the dock. I could just walk it onto the trailer with the bow and stern lines at that point.
On my bay boat, I could just drive in on a 30ish degree angle, turn the motor toward the dock (in reverse) at the right time and be done. The pulpit and long pilings prevented this angle. By the time the back end pulled around, the house had gathered speed heading away from the dock. After a half dozen tries, I was able to fire a rope from the second station and hit a dock cleat, but there was zero margin for error, and I got lucky.
It was about 50 degrees and a perfect day to play around like this, as the place was empty. I could never make it look easy, and that is what I like to do. I sketched a little diagram. Thanks in advance!
I am by NO MEANS an expert, but I did not want to tie off on the upwind side while I picked up the truck and trailer, which certainly would have been easy.
In retrospect sitting here at the kitchen table, I should have pointed the tail into the wind and eased sideways to the end of the dock, stepped off with the lines, and walked the boat around the end, to be perpendicular to the wind and tie up.
Does anyone have any piloting tips (or cowboy rope tricks) to bring the boat in solo in these conditions on the downwind side? I had the fenders on the stbd side(hoping not to need them), and was trying to get tied off so the wind was blowing me off the dock. I could just walk it onto the trailer with the bow and stern lines at that point.
On my bay boat, I could just drive in on a 30ish degree angle, turn the motor toward the dock (in reverse) at the right time and be done. The pulpit and long pilings prevented this angle. By the time the back end pulled around, the house had gathered speed heading away from the dock. After a half dozen tries, I was able to fire a rope from the second station and hit a dock cleat, but there was zero margin for error, and I got lucky.
It was about 50 degrees and a perfect day to play around like this, as the place was empty. I could never make it look easy, and that is what I like to do. I sketched a little diagram. Thanks in advance!