G
George Chamberlain
Our only problem is tide...
We have an Oday 22, but even with that shallow draft, the rudder plows mud at low tide in Dogue Creek (Ft. Belvoir, VA, just off the Potomac south of DC). If only they could dredge it!Coming into the slip, the key is s-l-o-o-o-w and controlled. My wife slips under the pulpit rail onto the pier as we glide in at 1/2 kt, I usually have the outboard in reverse at idle speed just in case. She slips the spring line over the cleat at the dock end, then walks forward to secure the bow. I jump off with the stern line and secure that once the boat is stopped. AT low tide, we have to power in past a sand(mud) bar and a submerged tree trunk, but other than that it's not hard. We get very little wind that far up the creek.
We have an Oday 22, but even with that shallow draft, the rudder plows mud at low tide in Dogue Creek (Ft. Belvoir, VA, just off the Potomac south of DC). If only they could dredge it!Coming into the slip, the key is s-l-o-o-o-w and controlled. My wife slips under the pulpit rail onto the pier as we glide in at 1/2 kt, I usually have the outboard in reverse at idle speed just in case. She slips the spring line over the cleat at the dock end, then walks forward to secure the bow. I jump off with the stern line and secure that once the boat is stopped. AT low tide, we have to power in past a sand(mud) bar and a submerged tree trunk, but other than that it's not hard. We get very little wind that far up the creek.