cmetzenberg
New member
We’ve all had a few situations where docking has been made difficult due to environmental conditions. The standard advice I hear given out is
1. Come in faster thus increasing your vector relative to the environmental vector and get a line on in a hurry. I don’t like this cause I don’t like coming in hot and I don’t like relying on my deck hand to get a line on quickly.
2. Come in into the environment if there is room to and then get a line on and work off of it. I prefer this method but sometimes there isn’t room to come stem into a dock and swing the stern in while working off of a bow line.
My problem usually has to a do with coming alongside a dock with a wind on the beam blowing me off. So I’m thinking of trying something that I’ve only done in a simulator and read about in ship handling books; dredge my bow anchor. By paying out the bow anchor 1.5-2x water depth and driving ahead on it, dragging it through the mud, the center of rotation is around the bow. Has anyone ever tried this on their boat?
1. Come in faster thus increasing your vector relative to the environmental vector and get a line on in a hurry. I don’t like this cause I don’t like coming in hot and I don’t like relying on my deck hand to get a line on quickly.
2. Come in into the environment if there is room to and then get a line on and work off of it. I prefer this method but sometimes there isn’t room to come stem into a dock and swing the stern in while working off of a bow line.
My problem usually has to a do with coming alongside a dock with a wind on the beam blowing me off. So I’m thinking of trying something that I’ve only done in a simulator and read about in ship handling books; dredge my bow anchor. By paying out the bow anchor 1.5-2x water depth and driving ahead on it, dragging it through the mud, the center of rotation is around the bow. Has anyone ever tried this on their boat?