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#1 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Merrimack and Welch Island
Posts: 4,597
Thanks: 1,418
Thanked 1,705 Times in 1,109 Posts
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Quote:
Initially, people will tell you "neutral is your friend" drift into the dock gently. Fine, if there is no wind or current. If there is wind and current, you need every tool, so shift, throttle and wheel coordination have to all function together. Hull shape factors in too. A traditional hull can be moved nearly sideways. Not so much a boat with a deep keel and single engine. A tritoon is like three keels. Great for stability, harder to move sideways. BTW, backing into a slip (Med style docking), you're usually protected with pilings, etc, but you see many boaters hanging fenders on both sides of the boat before they start. If you want to back in, say at Meredith or Wolfeboro, the key is to back past the desired space and then dock going forward as you normally would. I've said this before: you don't back up a boat. It is much easier to think of it as driving the boat forward, stern first. In our next episode, we'll talk about How to overcome helpful crew and dock bystanders. "To Taze or not to Taze?" |
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#2 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Berlin, Ma / Gilford
Posts: 1,936
Thanks: 452
Thanked 603 Times in 340 Posts
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Quote:
__________________
A bad day on the Big Lake (although I've never had one) - Still beats a day at the office!! |
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#3 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: MA
Posts: 1,342
Thanks: 753
Thanked 539 Times in 314 Posts
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