How about this from The Boat Cheat on YouTube: https://youtu.be/i-p7OYsCHG0
How about this from The Boat Cheat on YouTube: https://youtu.be/i-p7OYsCHG0
I hate the stern spring method. The fender always squirts out or my crew doesn’t release the spring properly. Makes for anxious moments.
Agreed, he doesn't include the prop walk as a consideration and on most boats with a right hand starboard prop, left hand port prop, the prop walk push the boat against the dock. If the boat has prop pockets or very efficient rudders, the odds of success increase but a cruising cat such as his video shows, presents a lot of windage to overcome, I would like to see it in reality. Sport fishing boats tend to excel at such maneuvers.I watched the boat-cheat video showing how to crab-sideways with a twin. Sorry, this is the type of thing that works well on paper but rarely goes as planned in real life, which is why the video is a diagram, not an actual demo. Some boats respond reasonably well, most don't - sort of a show-pony maneuver. Really requires practice.
Peter
Well, no one wants to have piles.In some ways it is a bit ironic this whole thread. Because for the old Clipper 34 I used to own, with no thruster, single engine, most of the suggestions are solutions to a problem I never had. Because I never tried to berth stern in, because stern out is so much easier to get out, especially if the wind is tricky, and berthing bow in is nearly always a cinch as well. Food for thought..?
I must say I was a bit concerned about all those piles the OP has to dock against however. You would have to use a long suspended plank outside of one's fenders, surely..? Or am I missing something here..?
Peter, That's been my experience as well!In some ways it is a bit ironic this whole thread. Because for the old Clipper 34 I used to own, with no thruster, single engine, most of the suggestions are solutions to a problem I never had. Because I never tried to berth stern in, because stern out is so much easier to get out, especially if the wind is tricky, and berthing bow in is nearly always a cinch as well. Food for thought..?
Seevee, I assume there are no pilings between you and the boat with whom you share the slip. Is that correct? If there are pilings, and one is near the bow of your boat when docked, there is a technique that works well.
To me, a face dock is 90 degrees to a dock walk way. Like a "T" with extended horizontal ----- total open to the outboard side.
Exit using a fwd or aft spring line.
If you have 2 or 3 ft between boats, with an experience captain captain and one or two line handlers, they can move the boat off the face dock and leave. A little more difficult to dock between boats without thrusters but, it can be done with spring lines. I dont want to try, I'm chicken
rslifkin, LOL you are cheating, you have two engines.
At least with twins in calm conditions, I've found the easiest way to get into a tight spot on a face dock with no thrusters is to 180 the boat into the spot. Approach facing the opposite direction you intend to dock, place the bow as needed and spin the boat into the spot (by the end it'll be pretty much sliding sideways into place).
It's a calm-ish conditions only maneuver though, as doing it too quickly will build too much sideways momentum that you can't stop, making it both hard to bail out of needed and meaning you're likely to have a very firm landing against the dock.
Get it right and anyone on the neighboring boats that doesn't realize what you're doing is going to have very large eyes (thinking you're about to ram them right before you start the spin), but the boat will pretty much just un-dramatically slide right into place against the dock, no spring lines or people on the dock needed. In calm enough conditions I expect you could back and fill that maneuver with a single, although I haven't tried.
That maneuver doesn't help getting out of the tight space though.
SooValley, that only works on front wheel drive boats!:lol: