[Public-list] Re: Public-list Digest, Vol 510, Issue 1
REDDERHS at aol.com
REDDERHS at aol.com
Tue Oct 18 08:02:06 PDT 2005
Michael forgive me for being so long winded with this response but I hope I
have answered your questions.
Our boat is in a marina of about 200 mostly sail boats on an island call
Pleasure Island here in Texas. The slip consists of six piling, three on either
side with a wooden walk between the pilings on the starboard side if the boat
is headed into the slip. Between you and the boat on the port side you are
only really separated by the center piling. As to the height of the pilings
they are probably twelve feet above the normal tide level. I think one of the
key things of how we survived the storm surge was what I call slides with rings
that the previous owner had installed on the piles. These slides are four
feet long made of 1 inch round bar mounted on standoffs that are through bolted
to the plies. You attach your dock lines to these rings so as the surge
rises so does your boat. By using these slides I didn't have to be so concerned
about the scope of my dock lines. Our dock lines are 5/8 three strand. I'm not
sure on other Albergs of the #520 vintage but with that size dock line I do
not have enough room on the cleat to double up the dock lines. I did cross
the bow and stern dock lines and added a second spring line. I had some
concerns about the aft chocks but they held just fine. I added chaff protection on
the dock lines by using plastic tubing. I know the tubing worked because on
the port bow chock the tubing came off and you could see the wear on the line.
I was concerned about my neighbors coming over on our boat so on the port
side where there is only three pilings I stretched a line at about the height I
thought was appropriate to maybe stop his boat if it broke loose. On the
interior… we remove everything we don't need to do day sailing off the boat
during peak hurricane season. When threaten with a hurricane we close all seacocks
except the two for the cockpit drains. We turned the fuel line off. Lock
down all hatches and cover all vents. The batteries are fully charged to run the
bilge pump as long as they can if needed. On the exterior…we remove all
sails and all covers including instrument covers. Sunday I drove through the
marina and everyone that I saw who did not lash the main sail cover to the boom
and mast had the main and it's cover in shreds. Everyone who didn't remove the
roller fuller type head sail also come back to a shredded headsail. The wind
shredded them so severely that it looked like the remains of an old tee
shirt. I overlooked the cover for the chain pipe, even through I have a small
pull chain that attaches to the larger anchor chain the cover was not lost but
blow off. The boat on my port side lost his main and the forward hatch cover
was blow off so he had some water damage inside. As the storm surge comes in
the boat on my starboard side some how got on the wooden walk between our two
boats and he knocked loose some of the boards and that exposed some good size
spikes that really did a lot of damage to his port side. There is still
something that's a mystery to me. All four drains were completely clogged with
what looked like dust, yet when we were finally allowed on the island there was
not any water in the cockpit it was like all this dust had to be on top of
the water in the cockpit. There were two sail and one power boats that had
sunk. I can only imagine how I would feel if ours was at the bottom of our slip.
One last note, we are about 30 miles west of where the eye came ashore.
Remember the one inch round bar slides that I mention earlier, the one on the
northeast pile has two inch bow in it.
1129647726.0
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