attaching boat to buoy
We attach to the middle of the pendant, so that the bitter end of the pendant can be pulled in through the hawse hole without involving the line attaching the pick-up buoy. when casting off, we hang the eye splice of the pendant over the top of the pick-up buoy. we also have three or four floats on the pendant to keep it from sinking.. So where there is just a big rusty shackle on top of the buoy, how should the boat be attached to it? the first requirement is that it should be possible to leave the buoy with the minimum of trouble, which almost always means passing a rope through the shackle and attaching both ends on the boat. this is where so many people go wrong.. Once at the buoy, the boat must stop and stay stopped relative to the buoy long enough that the crew can attach the boat to the buoy. frequently you see a boat slowly dropping back until the load is fully on the boat hook, the crew can not release the hook from the buoy because of the pressure and when it is ripped from the foredeck crew's.
attaching boat to buoy Attach a length of line, called a pennant, to the mooring buoy. the length should be twice the distance from your boat's bow chock to the waterline. a pennant diameter of 7/16 inch will work for boats up to 30 feet; larger boats should use a 1/2 inch line (or more). attach a pickup buoy to the end of this line.. Then you pull the line attached to the stern loop – walking along the side deck toward the boat’s stern – and when you get to that loop – you attach to stern cleat. in some places – like the isthmus – boats lay stern-to the mooring buoy – with the boat’s bow pointed to shore..
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