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I also hate the extra effort required to return very carefully to a slip without hitting anything. RT
Being on a mooring is a PITA but its less of a PITA than a slip. I hate having to pull up, fenders, docklines, etc. and store them. RT
slips seem to be the more common by a good margin; convenience, I guess.
Gareth
Freyja E35 #241 1972
Do you know a good recipe for rum punch?
Gareth
Freyja E35 #241 1972
Strange.
I would hate making multiple dinghy trips to the boat with the hundreds of pounds of bags, food, booze, dive gear, equipment, etc. needed for our family's weekend outtings. Every week.
Never had a problem. The most trips I have made is three to move all we needed for a one week outing. If I need to load up a bunch of passengers or stuff I simply pull into the nearest slip and go for it
Then, I suppose you tow the dinghy wherever you go? If you have a motor, do you keep it mounted on the dinghy while you tow? I prefer to keep ours deflated and stowed until we need it.
I only tow the dinghy if I am going to need it. Sometimes when going on an overnight trip we take it, sometimes not. Never tow with the outboard on the dinghy. The outboard mounts in the pushpit when we are towing. If not taking the dinghy it just gets clipped onto the mooring ball until we return.
And what about the inconvenience of no fresh water hose? No docks on either side to provide convenient and steady access for maintenence and inspections?
There is a courtesy dock at my marina and one right on the other side of the harbor at the town dock. I can stay overnight at my marina in any empty slip during the week and I pay $0.75/ft overnights on weekends if I need it. Why would I need ready access to water? I fill the tanks when needed and wash the boat twice a month or so. Never had a problem doing maintenance on the mooring either.
And, who in the world grills in the friggin' harbor? GET OUT AND SAIL!
I grill dinner after I return from an evening sail or race, usually 3-4 times during the week. Its a good cheap way to have a great dinner. Private, romantic, keeps the wife happy, etc.
Steering straight and stowing dock lines and fenders is a small price to pay for the vastly improved convenience of a good slip, IMHO.
I should also mention I pay $20/ft for the season for my mooring in the most protected harbor in the state. Is that a good reason? RT
People talk about docks like they are impossible to reach and a gauntlet to run when entering and leaving. I often sail out and back no motor when I have a couple f people with me and the right wind. I don’t see cross winds or any other challenge that would make me want to give up the convenience of a dock, AC power and water hookup.
You just have to know your boat and how to make it go where and when you want, the right approach for cross wind will let you dock with no issues. Practice backing and approaching a marker in open water, you can approach with the wind from either side fore or aft. Prop walk and crosswinds can be adjusted for.
I hope after almost a year I can still do these things. My boat is on the trailer and may be until next spring.
Versus my $11/ft. per month? Naaaaaah!
But I'm at the boat nearly every day, and I could never give up the convenience of a slip. In fact, I'm tempted to move to a $15/ft. per month marina.
Still, $760 a year for parking the boat? I pay more than half that just to keep my bottom scrubbed! (Which is cheaper on a dock than a mooring).
And yeah, I would probably grill on a mooring in the home harbor. I've done it at transient slips, but I can't see doing that in my home slip.
Those kinds of expenses would push me right out of the E38 and maybe boating. I scrub my own boat. RT
$120/ft? Where so cheap? Slips at Conanicut or Pt. Judith are $6000+ per season for a 38'. God knows what Newport is - and that's IF you can get on the waiting list. Even my crappy mooring in the self-described 'redneck boatyard' of Narragansett Bay is $65/ft per season!The big commercial marinas here get $120-$140/ft for the season. We "save" those slips for the out-of-stater's and Newport bluebloods. RT
It sounds a shame I never got to see Maine, as it sounds very different from most of the rest of the coastline in the country. I am picturing a lot of natural harbours if most boats are at moorings.