Pat:

In addition to Joe Della Barba's suggestions, I have my stock of hurricane 
lines with thimbles spliced to one end. The lines are shackled to chain 
which is rapped around the slip's pilings. The chain is lag bolted to the 
piling. In Katrina, many boats lifted enough to lift basic knots, etc over 
the piling. Nailed lines alone do not work. The splices and chain are 
advanced preparation. In New Orleans, they will be reused. The longer the 
lines you can provide, the more rise in tide you can provide for. If you 
have a clear lead from points on your boat to the slip piles at least one 
slip over, tie/chain off there. Center the boat in the slip reasonably 
tight. If there are piles at the mid point of the slip, fenders with 
fender boards may help if the boat rubs. Spring lines also as long as 
practical.  Probably 1/2 of the problems you will encounter are  going to 
be caused by neighbors who take no precautions. Take photos of your 
efforts. At least you have peace of mind that you tried your best. 

Good Luck

Ed

C&C 30 Dream Girl
Expectant C&C 34 to be named
New Orleans. 



From:   Pat Nevitt <pnev...@gmail.com>
To:     cnc-list@cnc-list.com, 
Date:   10/26/2012 09:02 AM
Subject:        Stus-List Extra lines for storm
Sent by:        "CnC-List" <cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com>



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_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
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CnC-List@cnc-list.com

_______________________________________________
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