Jean-Francois,

you said:
“The trick for my boat is to give it a moderate goose in reverse and 
immediately put it in neutral.”

Until I learned this trick (or is it technique?) I could not get out of my 
slip. It is a narrow slip and very narrow fairway and getting out I need to 
turn backwards to starboard. If in gear, the boat would go straight (the prop 
walk compensates for the rudder). 

Marek

From: Jean-Francois J Rivard via CnC-List 
Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2014 3:21 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Stus-List Was Engine Sound Insulation - Now docking

I have never pulled into my slip going forward, my shore power line is not long 
enough to reach.. 

The very 1st time ever I docked a keel boat (or any inboard boat for that mater 
) I backed it into its slip (U shaped slip) . That was the day of my sea trial 
24 hrs before I signed a big check...

It's probably a combination of the fact that my slip is very protected, 
anything less than 15 knots in the bay and it's glassy water at my slip.  My 
boat has a somewhat modern design having been  designed in 1989, and my 
surveyor is a 30 + year experience sailor who calmly walked-me through the 
procedure.  It was a total cake walk. no problem whatsoever.  

The trick for my boat is to give it a moderate goose in reverse and immediately 
put it in neutral.  Its funny how in reverse, as long as you have it in gear, 
the rudder is very sluggish until the boat has some speed. Conversely, even if 
the boat is creeping along the second you get it out of gear, the rudder is 
immediately responsive. 

I have a Martec 2 blades folder and the moderate amount of prop walk I get 
helps my 180 spin I do every time I pull in the cove.  It's a very simple 
process:    Pull in, make a slight starboard bend then sharp port tack to shape 
the turn like a question mark, put it in reverse and give it a mild goose which 
does 3 things: complete the 180 turn (Prop walk), stop the forward motion, and 
get the boat going backwards.  Then just back in pretty much straight 
backing-up minding the bow to make sure it lines-up with the slip. Finish with 
a final minor forward thrust blip to stop the motion.  


Every time we sail with friends they offer to help with the docking and the 
answer is always the same:  No need for any help , 2 people is plenty, 1 person 
is enough, it's that simple.  

>Backing into a slip is not something I've yet tried. When visiting other
>clubs I tend to avoid experimentation (read: embarrassment) so I go bow in.
>But I think it's cool and if I had a slip I'de practice. I watch those guys
>with modern boats actually shift into reverse and idle straight in, astern!
>What a concept! If I idle in reverse the boat just spins. I'm never in
> reserve longer than a couple of seconds! 



  Regards, 

  Francois Rivard
  1990 34+ "Take Five" 
  Lake Lanier, Georgia


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