Here's another tip, Patti & Hubby. To make things even easier when coming in, set up a fixed breast line from the cleat/bollard nearest the midships position. Make it so it's just the right length so the loop on the end holds the boat just where you want it, so once you get that one on the midships cleat, it can't move too far away, or swing enough to get near another boat sharing the other side of the slip. Better still, attach a decent length of another strong line to that loop, and set something up to raise the end of that line to about side rail height, so the skipper can step out of the pilot door at the right moment, (making sure the gear is in neutral - that bit IS important - believe me, I know.....), and literally just reach for that rope, by hand or handy boat-hook, so then it can be wrapped a couple of times round the midships cleat on the gunwhale, then the boat can be pulled near enough to get the main loop over the cleat, even if you have drifted a bit, because that midships line will be (needs to be) short, and therefore rather unforgiving trying to get it on the cleat first off. Once that is secured, you are set, the boat cain't go nowhere, and then even if one has missed getting the stern line on, it does not matter, as a wee idle in astern or for'd will pull the boat gently against the fenders and the dock. What I did to raise my grabbing line was make what I call my telescopic thingy, which is just an old car aerial, (wreckers yards have hundreds) set into a cheap synthetic VHF whip aerial base with Knead-it, and fixed to or near the midships dock cleat. I found if I used one made to clamp onto a horizontal rail, with a bit of 'pruning' of the plastic, I could actually bolt it to the middle of the dock cleat. I then stuck a bungy cord hook upside down on the top of the rod with the same stuff - I think you'll know what knead-it is...then a small loop on the end of the grabbing line will hook onto it and hold it up there for you to grab, with the rest coiled on the dock. Makes even single handed docking a cinch - well usually, unless it's very windy. Then once everything is secured, it telescopes down, and a release of the clamp mechanism lets it lie flat and out of harm's way on the edge of the birth. Works for me.
Walt does a lot of single-handed boating, he might come in with even more tips....although he does have one of those damn thrusters.......
-- Edited by Peter B on Tuesday 21st of September 2010 07:30:21 AM