
Nasty night in the marina
- Silkie
- Admiral of the Fleet
- Posts: 3475
- Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2005 12:55 pm
- Boat Type: Hurley 22
- Location: Bonnie Scotland
- Contact:
Nasty night in the marina
different colours made of tears
- little boy blue
- Old Salt
- Posts: 662
- Joined: Wed Jul 06, 2005 7:53 pm
- Location: CLYDE
- sahona
- Admiral of the White
- Posts: 1992
- Joined: Thu Jan 03, 2008 8:17 pm
- Boat Type: Marcon Claymore
- Location: Clyde
My radar reflector and its special expensive stainless 'watercatch position' mounting bracket have been taken by the wind fairies. That's the problem with high windage stuff bolted "permanently" to the top of the mast. Next one will be on a string...
http://trooncruisingclub.org/ 20' - 30' Berths available, Clyde.
Cruising, racing, maintenance facilities. Go take a look, you know you want to.
Cruising, racing, maintenance facilities. Go take a look, you know you want to.
- Arghiro
- Old Salt
- Posts: 917
- Joined: Tue Jan 01, 2008 12:54 pm
- Boat Type: Pentland Ketch
- Location: Midlands
That clockwork motor on your camera sounds a bit dodgy
I thought you were sailing at first, then saw you were safely tied up with a wee cat's cradle of strings. Good job it was a sheltered spot really.
I knew there was a good reason why I prefer moorings! Far less stuff to bash against all the time.

I thought you were sailing at first, then saw you were safely tied up with a wee cat's cradle of strings. Good job it was a sheltered spot really.
I knew there was a good reason why I prefer moorings! Far less stuff to bash against all the time.
- Magna Carter
- Master Mariner
- Posts: 141
- Joined: Tue Nov 08, 2005 5:51 pm
- Location: East Coast
- Contact:
A good few years ago, I saw a boat in Plymouth that done just this.... the bracket broke... the radar reflector then thrashed itself against the mast and fittings until the string finally gave way.... bust all his mast head gear, and marked the mast really badly.... personally, i'd rather it flew away.....sahona wrote:My radar reflector and its special expensive stainless 'watercatch position' mounting bracket have been taken by the wind fairies. That's the problem with high windage stuff bolted "permanently" to the top of the mast. Next one will be on a string...
2nd in command, East Coast embassy, Scotland.
Re: Marina
I suspect most of the motion is coming from the hand holding the camera, Silkie's DT's after a night in the Frog is an of talked about local phenomena. Indeed it frequently registers on the seismograph in Edinburgh, when this first started happening regular tsunamai warning were issued for the west coast, however now its just dismissed by the British Earthquake Society with "Och, that'll be Silkie shaking out after a nicht in the Frog again."DaveS wrote:Would I be right in thinking that that's Dunstaffnage?