Getting off Face dock with wind

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Seevee

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Have a question for you captains about getting off a face dock with the wind blowing the boat against the dock.


If the boat is bow in, it's simple... tie off the bow to a midship dock cleat, rudder toward dock, and forward throttle will swing the stern out so one can easily back out. But, that's not the issue.


The boat is stern in, side tie to starboard. Typically I can shove it off (at least the bow) and put the starboard engine in idle forward, and the port in idle reverse and it will twist the boat just enough to head straight out.


However, the other day, the winds were a bit strong and the above didn't work. No way to push the boat off a bit. Doing the above just didn't get the boat out far enough to get out. So, I'd do that and inch forward a few feet when the boat came back to the dock. Repeat again, for a few more feet.



When the boat was about half way out, it became hard to keep the bow from swinging past the dock, which would have been really awkward, so I turned the wheel toward the dock, using forward on the port and reverse on the starboard, kept the boat barely off the dock and pushed it out in the fairway, but as it turned 90d. But at that point it was easy to just motor away without being blown back into the dock.


Looking for more graceful ways of handling this.


I was single handling.
 
i'm interested to hear what the responses to this question are. i have limited time with twins so it's interesting conversation. single handing adds another layer to it.
the amount of room available comes into play as well. if there's adequate room you could use the stern out method and rotate 180 of the dock and back out to more open space. maybe?
 
Not sure I fully grasp the situation, but could you use a spring line off an aft or midship starboard cleat and a fender on the stern starboard quarter, then reverse to swing the bow out? Watch that swim step!

That's how I used to do it on my sailboat.
 
Generally if I'm on a face dock with wind pinning me, I'll pivot the bow out as far as I can against the wind first. Then shove the stern off as hard as possible and back off quickly. This requires a good bit of clear space behind me. It's rare that I could get the bow out far enough to depart forward in a strong wind, as my boat blows downwind bow first and the bow will try to swing back into the dock quickly. My boat also pivots pretty far forward, so it's hard to move the bow upwind without covering a significant distance or backing first, then pivoting.


I've had times where there were boats close in front and behind me where we waited a day to leave. Travel conditions were good enough, but the wind was such that I was not convinced that it was possible to get out of the spot we were in at all without a bow thruster.
 
Not sure I fully grasp the situation, but could you use a spring line off an aft or midship starboard cleat and a fender on the stern starboard quarter, then reverse to swing the bow out? Watch that swim step!

That's how I used to do it on my sailboat.

could you do it single handed from the bridge or inside station in the wind?
 
I use a spring line on the bow. Turn the bow into the dock , engine in forward gear, and the stern swings out. When you have enough of an angle to back out release the spring line.
Of course you need to fender against the dock.
 
could you do it single handed from the bridge or inside station in the wind?

My trawler is on a mooring so haven't tried. With my 40' sailboat I could do it singlehanded in a pinch - the trick was to loop the dock line around the dock cleat and tie it back to the ship's cleat so it could be released from the cockpit or deck - make sure the line can run freely & doesn't foul the prop. Normally my stern dock lines would be short enough to prevent fouling, but running the line back to the ship's cleat requires using longer lines (or it did on our sailboat)

Not my favorite thing to do as things can go pear shaped quickly, particularly with a single engine, no thrusters...
 
My trawler is on a mooring so haven't tried. With my 40' sailboat I could do it singlehanded in a pinch - the trick was to loop the dock line around the dock cleat and tie it back to the ship's cleat so it could be released from the cockpit or deck - make sure the line can run freely & doesn't foul the prop. Normally my stern dock lines would be short enough to prevent fouling, but running the line back to the ship's cleat requires using longer lines (or it did on our sailboat)

Not my favorite thing to do as things can go pear shaped quickly, particularly with a single engine, no thrusters...

fair enough. i can see this working from the cockpit of a sailboat, but i think a trawler presents more of a challenge. (maybe just a longer line from the bridge) the long line is a real wild card. like you say, it'll get pear shaped pretty quickly. big fenders required.
 
Seevee...not sure what you mean by inching forward but then worried about going past the dock.


Any chance of a rudimentary sketch or google map pic with the slip noted and will guess a near beam pinning wind?
 
Seevee...not sure what you mean by inching forward but then worried about going past the dock.


Any chance of a rudimentary sketch or google map pic with the slip noted and will guess a near beam pinning wind?

What I think he is describing is being in a slip where you are stern in and only can side tie to the floating finger pier that runs the full length of the slip.

Ted
 
What I think he is describing is being in a slip where you are stern in and only can side tie to the floating finger pier that runs the full length of the slip.

Ted


Thanks Ted



There are a coupe possibilities...knowing what is around gives options too....


Would have to see the big picture to prioritize the possibilities.
 
My normal operation involves skidding along the dock until:

I obtain enough velocity to clear the dock.

The last of my fenders pops out from between the boat and the dock, at which point I stop to reposition them and start over.

I careen off another boat at the dock, changing my direction just enough to get me away from the dock.
 
Not sure I understand the situation either, but for the most part, unless you have a bow-thruster, always back-away from a side-tie if you can. Going forward risks swinging the stern into something. Springlines are difficult when you're single-handed and not without risks of putting a line in the water. They look cool when used by skilled crew. Windy conditions and single-handed is not the time to practice.

The following is good practice for getting off a side-tie or some sort of bulk-head, but not bulletproof. There is a point where the wind is too much and you'll have to wait.

Step 1 - dip-the-bow. Outboard gear (furthest from the dock) in forward with a slight burp of RPMs. If you're comfortable, put the helm over towards the dock to accentuate the 'dip.' This starts the turn with a wee bit of forward momentum. Put the gear in neutral.

Step 2 - Promptly after putting outboard gear in neutral, put inboard gear in reverse - depending on your engines, may want to raise the RPMs up a small amount. This gives two turning forces: Shopping-cart-effect of pulling the inboard side of the boat; and prop-walk will grab and pull the stern away from the dock. NOTE - you will need fenders along the boat and whatever obstruction. If there is a electrical-box or something, you're kinda screwed.

Step 3 - back away and keep turning. You may need to split-the-gears to keep the boat turning. Make sure you rotate a lot - nothing wrong with going perpendicular to the dock. You want as much margin for safety as you can get.

Not everything is possible. I'll repeat - nothing wrong with taking a nap and waiting for conditions to improve. I once had a customer with a 65-foot Cheoy Lee trawler that he somehow got wedged into a fairway made for 30-foot boats. Lots of wind and he tried to spin the boat and ended up backing-down and impaling his transom on a finger-pier putting a 4-foot gash at waterline. Harbormaster got dewatering pumps aboard which was good, but boat needed to be moved, so the owner called me. By this point, winds are howling which is normal for this part of SF Bay (somewhere down by Oyster Point). No way was I moving the boat, so we waited until around midnight when it was dead calm.

I reserve the right to change my mind if a diagram or pictures are produced

Peter
 
Have a question for you captains about getting off a face dock with the wind blowing the boat against the dock.

If the boat is bow in, it's simple... tie off the bow to a midship dock cleat, rudder toward dock, and forward throttle will swing the stern out so one can easily back out. But, that's not the issue.

The boat is stern in, side tie to starboard. Typically I can shove it off (at least the bow) and put the starboard engine in idle forward, and the port in idle reverse and it will twist the boat just enough to head straight out.


Can you clarify what is "stern in" on a face dock?

-Chris
 
Not sure I understand either.

Is it something like this?

 
For those saying stern out I would agree but I thought the limiter was his stern was already against something.


Sometimes the height of the dock makes a stern spring pretty tricky as that's where lots of people damage something.


For me, I never like guessing or giving advice where I don't have a pretty good mental picture and situational awareness.


Funny how that comes up while driving all the time but for so many other things people just jump in without the big picture and start offering solutions that may be the worst one to start with.
 
I generally don't bother with a spring on my own boat with twins when departing a face dock. Even with big fenders, I typically can't pivot further than I can manage with engines alone against a fender before swim platform clearance is an issue (when swinging the bow out). And on a boat that pivots fairly far forward and has a good bit of prop walk there's usually enough ability to move the stern sideways that you don't need to spring the bow in when backing out.
 
Any chance there is another finger pier to port? If so attach an aft leading spring to the midship cleat to spring over to and tie up over there before leaving in an orderly fashion from the now downwind side. :)

If you are not in a slip with a convenient finger pier upwind but had a wall or pier aft of you in the situation described where you were bow out and wind-pressed to the pier, you could try this idea but only with a capable line handler: run a spring line aft from your upwind midship cleat aft to and around a piling or pier cleat well upwind on that wall or pier aft of you. Take the line to the cleat/piling and around it back to your midship cleat with just a turn on the cleat and the line handler just keeping light tension on it by taking in or easing out until told to "hold" the line. Now using engines and rudder(s), twist the stern off the pier. Yes, the spring line will be possibly crossing the corner of the transom if the pier cleat or piling was not initially far enough upwind, but the line handler has it out of the water. Once the stern is well off the pier, have the line handler who has kept only light tension on the spring secure it to the cleat with a full figure eight and stand clear while you shift the upwind engine to neutral and the down wind engine to ahead to allow the increased tension on the spring to twist the bow back upwind while holding the boat out away from the pier. At the critical moment, you stop the ahead engine long enough to allow the tension on the line to ease to the point where it can be allowed to run free through the cleat and chock and thence over the side without fear of the propeller sucking it down as you then push the downwind engine back into ahead gear and throttle up to escape using rudder to help keep the line in the water away from the side and the line handler is retrieving the line that has now slipped free of the pier. I would not try this unless full confidence in the crew and I was established in benign conditions.

When bow-in in such a situation I took a page from an old copy of Naval Shiphandling by Crenshaw where he described how to back a WWII destroyer off a pier. With nobody behind you, simple put the rudder amidships and honk back on the inboard engine as hard as you are comfortable with. The wash coming up off the bottom of the prop is thrown at the pier or quay wall, assuming the pier has a dense piling structure, where a cushion immediately forms pushing the vessel bodily sideways. Yup, I did it in a destroyer but not the modern Arleigh Burkes we now have whose props for some reason are inward turning at the tops. In my GB42 it was like a miracle drug.

Given the description of what you ended up doing, if alone, I am not sure there is any better way, and it sounds as if you did very well, but as mentioned, waiting is always an option. I actually passed my US Navy command at sea board by saying I would wait when theoretically placed in a similar situation by the board members with a missile frigate under me.
 
What I think he is describing is being in a slip where you are stern in and only can side tie to the floating finger pier that runs the full length of the slip.

Ted


That's right. Diagram attached.
I'm tied to the dock in Position A
What I did was release all the lines, manually push off and was able to get a few feet forward at a time. When I got to position B, half way out, the wind started to take the bow, so I put the port engine in reverse, starboard forward. That cleared the dock by a foot or so, then both in forward as I headed out the boat continued to pivot with the bow going down wind, but I cleared the dock and once clear it was easy to maneuver.



I'd just like to clean it up a bit. And if there were a big boat on the next pier down wind of me, sticking out a bit, it would have been a bit more scary.


====
And, FWIW in response to comments:


Couldn't go back at all. Concrete wall, but shallow the first 10 feet out with oysters.


Have tried the following: With a big fender at the aft side against the dock, put a line on the closest boat cleat and tie to a piling to swing the bow out. Problem is the swim platform hits the pilings, at a point where there are nasty barnicles. But "could" work in the right circumstance.


Normally, I have thrusters, not this time.


Appreciate the thoughts
 

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That picture definitely clarifies that. In my mind, that's not a face dock, just a wide slip.
 
Are the dots fenders or pilings?


Is there a pier where you position "A" is?


What happens if you continue to swing around the pier on a fender and bow spring with enough momentum that when stern is nearly into the wind.... you just hard right rudder, release the spring, burst of RPM which kicks the boat away from the dock and then you have options but reverse into the center of the fairway (assume that is what you are pulling into)... then off ya go.
 
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I assumed he was sideways to a dock such as a fuel dock with the wind on the beam pushing the boat to the dock.
That is how I interpreted his post. Maybe incorrectly
And my advice was for a single screw boat.
 
That picture definitely clarifies that. In my mind, that's not a face dock, just a wide slip.


Not really, they are designed for two boats, so ya can't take the whole thing... so you HAVE to side tie, no other choice.
 
Are the dots fenders or pilings?

Pilings, but there are also cleats between them.



Is there a pier where you position "A" is?


Not sure what you mean? There are two piers drawn with a boat tied to each.



What happens if you continue to swing around the pier on a fender and bow spring with enough momentum that when stern is nearly into the wind.... you just hard right rudder, release the spring, burst of RPM which kicks the boat away from the dock and then you have options but reverse into the center of the fairway (assume that is what you are pulling into)... then off ya go.


Yes, I could do that, but would look like a goat rope, especially if someone is in the slip downwind of me, likely to hit him.


However, I kinda did that, but was able to use reverse to kick the boat away from the corner piling, even though it swung the boat a bit, I could ease out and once clear of the dock, easy.
 
Problem is single-handing. You could run a spring from cleat on aft/stbd quarter forward, then back-down using port engine in reverse to move bow out, then use stbd engine in forward to exit and hopfully hold the bow into the wind a bit - that might get you a couple feet off the dock to clear. But you'd need to free the springline quickly before the wind catches the bow. Really depends on how much wind.

Bottom line, if you can get the bow moving even a little into the wind, it takes a bit before the wind catches it, stops, and then starts pushing back into the dock. But it's hard as a single-hander. Sometimes you just gotta be happy you're not trying to match gelcoat as a last-step to your docking.

I don't recommend this to others, and I might be getting past the age where I should do this, but for the most part, I'd give the boat a good shove as I board, then just snap-to the helm and get going. In other words, your maneuver was fine, just try to make it look more elegant even if you're dying inside.

Sorry, it's all I got....

Peter
 
Not really, they are designed for two boats, so ya can't take the whole thing... so you HAVE to side tie, no other choice.


A slip designed for you to tie to one side with another boat on the other side is pretty common. IMO, that's still a slip, as you're confined. A face dock or side tie would be more like a typical gas dock or the T head at the end of a row of slips. Just a dock without a neighboring boat (but may have boats in front and behind), no fairway to turn into, etc.
 
Yes, I could do that, but would look like a goat rope, especially if someone is in the slip downwind of me, likely to hit him.


However, I kinda did that, but was able to use reverse to kick the boat away from the corner piling, even though it swung the boat a bit, I could ease out and once clear of the dock, easy.


If there is no boat next to you upwind... then maybe partially what others alluded to is ....use a line to the upwind pier to help for maneuvering.


If there is one next to you in the slip and pivoting bow downwind but cant go far enough that your stern won't hit them..about the only option I see for a twin screw is going to split plant, forward on the dockside engine just enough to barely slide.... increasing both throttles so the astern engine keeps the bow as perpendicular as you can then doing what you did when you are far enough to miss the upwind boat... neutral on the astern and kick with the dockside engine.
 
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