http://www.dellabarba.com/sailing/hurricane.html

Take a look at Isabel and you can see what I did.
REMEMBER:
1 - NO CLEATS. All the ID10Ts that tied off to cleats ended up pulling the 
planks the cleats were bolted to off the dock and then I tripped on them in the 
dark :(
2 - DECIDE IF YOU ARE ON OR OFF - You will likely need to adjust lines for the 
tide. If you are ON the boat, you need that end to adjust and if you are OFF 
the boat you need the other end to adjust.
3 - FAIL SAFE - Make sure no ONE line can chafe through and cause problems. 2 
at least for every vital function.
4 - CANVAS DOWN AND JIB OFF - No roller furling left up!
5 - CHAFE is the enemy. Nylon is strong. You won't break it, you'll chafe 
through it.
6 - WATCH YOUR NEIGHBORS - Your enemy is the unprepped boat down the pier. YMMV 
as to how much work, if any, you are willing to do saving other people's boats 
to keep them from getting loose and hitting you. I had a long night on my pier 
with Isabel adding lines to other boats.

Joe Della Barba

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Pat Nevitt
Sent: Friday, October 26, 2012 10:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Stus-List Extra lines for storm

I'm on the Chesapeake just south of Annapolis and the current storm track makes 
it look pretty ugly here Monday and Tuesday.  Obviously I'm going to go down 
and take the sails off and remove anything that might get taken away by the 
wind.  I've prepped for storms before, but not really sure that I put the extra 
lines on properly. I thought I would ask the list for their input.  I have a 
C&C 29 MK II and am in a slip on a fixed dock (not floating) in the middle of a 
line of 20 boats or so.  I have sailboats in slips on either side of me.  The 
slip has angels (pilings) off the bow and the fixed dock at the stern and a 
short 6 foot finger pier along the port side.  Normally I have stern lines that 
don't cross (I don't cross them anymore as they tend to rip out the swim 
ladder) going to pilings on the pier astern and fixed to the cleats on the aft 
port and starboard side of the boat.  The bow lines go from cleats on the deck 
on either side of the bow and through a gap in the toe rail to the pilings.  I 
also have a spring line on the port side that goes from a cleat attached to the 
genoa track to the piling off the port bow.  We are fairly protected and don't 
normally get a lot of wave motion in the slips except when a power boater 
ignores the speed limit.  Normal tidal range is only 2-3 feet.  Obviously the 
potential wind, waves, storm surge and the abnormal tidal range all coming 
together with this storm will make it unique.  So, the question is where should 
I place extra lines?

My original intent was to leave the normal ones where they are, perhaps a 
little looser than usual (will put larger fenders on either side of the boat, 
especially near the finger pier).  I thought another spring line on the 
starboard side maybe going aft would be good.  Then I think I should double up 
the bow and stern lines, but the cleats won't hold more than one line.  So 
where to put those?  In the past I have afixed the extra stern lines to the 
main winches, but the bow lines are another issue.  Base of the mast maybe?  I 
also intend to leave these double lines with much more slack in them to account 
for tidal range.

Pat Nevitt
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