Bravo superbe manœuvre le bon vent la bonne direction la bonne place le bon skipper et un équipage parfaitement au point Pas un cri des manœuvres bien rodées Un vrai plaisir à regarder Best regards from France 🤗🤗
Rumor has it, the dinghy (being towed behind the boat-out of frame) is where they stow the Skipper's huge brass knuts. Skip deserved more than a drink that evening.
Nice !!! We had a guy come into a finger-berth under sail, in Hamble Point last weekend. That was impressive. I've sailed onto a mooring ball, and even onto a hammerhead, but I wouldn't have the guts to sail into a berth like that. This is a very cool looking boat though 🙂
While this was a great job, I used to sail my 28 foot Ranger into a finger dock ALL THE TIME, until I got a new engine. Sometimes others from the yacht club would come out to catch lines but at other times it was only me and anyone else on board. (Light winds help.)
That guy with the after line could have stopped the yacht all by himself, if he had walked astern instead of forward and stopped the line over a bollard (or more correctly, if s.o. on board had done that).
Much harder than it looks.. People cruise in on headsails a lot in Everett WA, the wind is from the direction the sailing waters are at so its beam reach followed by a run to another beam reach to another run...most of the docks on the south marina can be sailed into woth the right conditions and crew in that exact order..... I just use my outboard or use the oars in the oarlocks mounted to my Lapworth gladiator 24...as I am nowhere near ready to try something like that singlehanded
Good boat, good conditions. The mission was finally safely completed. But I always tell my course participants never to jump off the boat with a rope in their hand, never to wear flip-flops while sailing ...
And dead stick airplane landings in a public airport are quite a skill too. YIKES! Both skills should be practiced in a "remote location", not a public facility, where every possible advantage should be applied to avoid a disaster. You can not stop a boat suddenly to avoid a kayaker, a child in the water, floating crab pot, or to avoid the unexpected. Good skills, bad lack of courtesy.... imo.
After all my years of flying a B-727 I have no doubt I could dead stick it from 30,000.' After all, almost all descents were made at idle power until the FAP.
As an elite sailor my self the crewmanship doesn't surprice me ;) I my self find it easier to dock a boat with sails up than motor because i know how the boat with react and iam more used to sailing with an sail! I
Not to steal your thunder but there's nothing difficult about docking a boat under sail in a long dock head to wind, and with that size crew. I have a 34' and we leave and comeback under sail 100% of the time in the extreme winds of San Francisco. The only time we use the engine is when the wind dies.
You can actually wash off quite a lot of speed with exaggerated helm recycling (full Port helm, to full Stbd helm, as many times as you need. I was on a YW Diamond Sailing into a dead stop slip, in a cap full of breeze when the headsail halyard jammed! Wind was blowing parallel to the arm of the dock and the slip was a 90 degree turn to Stbd. Helmsman waited until the last possible moment and brutally shoved the tiller hard over to Port (boat was still doing what seemed like 7-8 knots boat speed, but was realistically about 4-5(?)) Luckily the halyard freed with a desperate yank and the Bowman was able to fend the bow off the (Fixed) wharf. We all breathed a huge sigh of relief after that one!
@@77sailordude if you know what you’re doing, you can use a Fwd spring from midships and surge (And then skilfully snub!) the line on a cleat or winch-drum to control the decelaration! Trick is finding someone good enough to throw the line on the dock cleat whilst the boat is moving! - AND To have the boat adequately fendered!) I’ve done this countless times operating small timber, single screw, displacement ferries single handedly.)The traditional bronze cross bollards had beautifully friction polished wear patterns on them from all the constant surging and snubbing!
It came in hot, if u have enuf experience on crappy dinghies w absolutely no pointing capability, w/o the weight of 10 crew, u should be able to kiss the wood w that EQUIPMENT and without the help of lines. But ud have to learn in 3-5 on The Charles in CAMBRIDGE. Then when the skipper has failed on 3 tries to touch the wood on a disabled 3.5 ton 27' Columbia Bluewater, u kiss the wood dead-on on yr first try. That's what u learn from dinghies. Fair winds.
Much respect to the whole crew. They all knew what they had to do. Well done
Awesome team work, amazing he didn’t even had to announce “tacking” each time he tacked, the crew just knew. 👍
Excellent job! Great communication, great crew! The whole team made it look soooo easy! 🤠
Bravo
superbe manœuvre
le bon vent la bonne direction la bonne place
le bon skipper et un équipage parfaitement au point
Pas un cri des manœuvres bien rodées
Un vrai plaisir à regarder
Best regards from France 🤗🤗
Even the POWER BOATERS behind them...applauded.
Great work...captain.
I’m impressed, funny thing to think about though, this is how it was always done before the advent of engines. Still nice job.
Very kind skipper, i would have shouted probably at least once for less people to block the view. But a very well made docking all in all.
Kind and calm. Big part of that was a crew that knew what to do, he was able to focus on guiding it.
Fewer, not less
I like how the video starts with Dorris' warning. well executed
A great boat! Calm and confident crew. Well done!
Rumor has it, the dinghy (being towed behind the boat-out of frame) is where they stow the Skipper's huge brass knuts.
Skip deserved more than a drink that evening.
excellent job on the helm. that looked awesome.
No PFDs?
I have seen carrier landings that were less nerve-wracking. Now I can breathe. Nice work!
great job by the skipper and excellent crew! respect!
Salty Dogs, one and all. I kept calling out the “Tack,” this crew is real salty. Subscribed. USN, Ret.
Perfect situation, come in head to wind so there's no panic to get the sail down. Long dock on the outside makes it look easy. Even so, well done.
Great job! My boat is also named Pendragon: an Alberg 35 on the Chesapeake
Excellent crew! No panic and stress at all!
Nice !!!
We had a guy come into a finger-berth under sail, in Hamble Point last weekend. That was impressive. I've sailed onto a mooring ball, and even onto a hammerhead, but I wouldn't have the guts to sail into a berth like that.
This is a very cool looking boat though 🙂
Have docked many sailboats under sail and no body filmed it. In far worse weather.
No yelling , not much said, good spirits, great crew and captain...looks easy when is well done...
Very smooth and nicely done 👏
Very well done! Not incredible though. I think that every skipper should be able to do this as a matter of safety.
every!
I once saw a few young blokes dock a Diamond with a kite hoisted! (Admittedly, it was very, very light conditions though!)
Beautiful job. And to think most gas-guzzler boats can’t even land that nicely under power.
That's real seamanship.
While this was a great job, I used to sail my 28 foot Ranger into a finger dock ALL THE TIME, until I got a new engine. Sometimes others from the yacht club would come out to catch lines but at other times it was only me and anyone else on board. (Light winds help.)
Beautiful boat handling...and teamwork.
Well done ....looks easy because you did it well.Bravo
That guy with the after line could have stopped the yacht all by himself, if he had walked astern instead of forward and stopped the line over a bollard (or more correctly, if s.o. on board had done that).
yes+1 ...i was wondering why he didn't attempt to slow it down at least... from the first dock-cleat... isn't that his central role here?
That was an awesome work!!!
My dad use too do this all the time on his Baba 30 with just him and my mom. 😂
Your dad fucks. That's why your mum wouldn't let him sail alone. You probably have 20 siblings
Giddy up! A thing of beauty.
Like a boss. Team work like a orchestra.
grande equipaggio, grande skipper
that is no small feat, much respect to the skipper.
This is a Captain and a Crew
So cool! Margaritas all round I say
Nicely work!
Very good skipper...great!!!
That was awesome.
Like a well oiled machine. Awesome to watch.
GREAT landing sully
i do that solo on my 30' boat about once a year.. and it really is NOT fun but usually goes okay.. conditions have to be ideal or I don't attempt.
Much harder than it looks..
People cruise in on headsails a lot in Everett WA, the wind is from the direction the sailing waters are at so its beam reach followed by a run to another beam reach to another run...most of the docks on the south marina can be sailed into woth the right conditions and crew in that exact order.....
I just use my outboard or use the oars in the oarlocks mounted to my Lapworth gladiator 24...as I am nowhere near ready to try something like that singlehanded
Nice! V. nicely done.
Jojojo un maestro!!! Sin lugar a dudas!!!?
Respect, well done...!
Perfect job!
Great Scott!!!
Good boat, good conditions. The mission was finally safely completed. But I always tell my course participants never to jump off the boat with a rope in their hand, never to wear flip-flops while sailing ...
Yes, there were several near accidents with crew jumping onto the dock over the safety lines. Lucky.
superbe équipe ,,,, bien joué,,
Well done guys!
Nice Job..👏👏
Well done, cool!
Well done skipper
Bit too fast, cheers to guy on the spring line payed out very smoothy .
No lifejackets !
Nice done.....!!
Out of gas? Someone won’t be back next race.
Just great Job
the final approach seems a bit too fast , 3knots? should have been same as a MOB drill and come to a stop
Geeeez that is sweet!
When my dads boat was on a mooring we would go weeks without starting the engine
I've burned less than a gallon of gas the whole year when I had my 19ft on a mooring.
And dead stick airplane landings in a public airport are quite a skill too. YIKES!
Both skills should be practiced in a "remote location", not a public facility, where every possible advantage should be applied to avoid a disaster.
You can not stop a boat suddenly to avoid a kayaker, a child in the water, floating crab pot, or to avoid the unexpected.
Good skills, bad lack of courtesy.... imo.
After all my years of flying a B-727 I have no doubt I could dead stick it from 30,000.' After all, almost all descents were made at idle power until the FAP.
Not the first time he'd done that
That is a huge marina
Awesome!!!!
I dont see the problem in these conditions...
Well... this boat was not made for leisure sailing. I guess it was expected it would have capable hands on board.
I love it 🔥
Good skills.
Impressive
Guy is very experienced, but he must think "Slow No Wake" only applies to power boats.
They won't be making any wake, besides they aren't going fast.
It's a tp52, a fish makes more turbulence and a bigger wake.
like reading the Bible.
This boat points better than mine lol
I thinking... No offense, but its nothing special... Kota od Crew, straight dock place, good wind .... Sorry but lame...
As an elite sailor my self the crewmanship doesn't surprice me ;) I my self find it easier to dock a boat with sails up than motor because i know how the boat with react and iam more used to sailing with an sail!
I
This was sweet lol.
So behind every good skipper there's a woman telling him it's impossible.
on ne navigue pas en tong quand on est barreur...!! mouvementé l'arrivée....!! ils sont suffisamment nombreux...!!
Wow
who needs an engines
so many people blocking the view..
end tie
Looks nice, but with absolutely no attention for safety. This is not how you should dock a sailboat.
Bravo amazıng
Easy to say, but running out of fuel should never happen.
Yeah there is a saying in aviation: a superior pilots conducts themselves in such a way that they never need to use their superior skills.
Bravo ma non si fa!!!!
Not to steal your thunder but there's nothing difficult about docking a boat under sail in a long dock head to wind, and with that size crew. I have a 34' and we leave and comeback under sail 100% of the time in the extreme winds of San Francisco. The only time we use the engine is when the wind dies.
You're coming in too hot if you have to rely on your crew to slow momentum. Nice job at the helm regardless. B+
i disagree. Any slower and they would have had stalled their foils, lost steerage and drive to windward. The wind was coming in from about 60 degrees
Mooring lines are there to slow momentum, the crew did a good job with the lines just as it should be done. This was just perfekt.
You can actually wash off quite a lot of speed with exaggerated helm recycling (full Port helm, to full Stbd helm, as many times as you need. I was on a YW Diamond Sailing into a dead stop slip, in a cap full of breeze when the headsail halyard jammed! Wind was blowing parallel to the arm of the dock and the slip was a 90 degree turn to Stbd. Helmsman waited until the last possible moment and brutally shoved the tiller hard over to Port (boat was still doing what seemed like 7-8 knots boat speed, but was realistically about 4-5(?)) Luckily the halyard freed with a desperate yank and the Bowman was able to fend the bow off the (Fixed) wharf. We all breathed a huge sigh of relief after that one!
@@77sailordude if you know what you’re doing, you can use a Fwd spring from midships and surge (And then skilfully snub!) the line on a cleat or winch-drum to control the decelaration! Trick is finding someone good enough to throw the line on the dock cleat whilst the boat is moving! - AND To have the boat adequately fendered!) I’ve done this countless times operating small timber, single screw, displacement ferries single handedly.)The traditional bronze cross bollards had beautifully friction polished wear patterns on them from all the constant surging and snubbing!
It came in hot, if u have enuf experience on crappy dinghies w absolutely no pointing capability, w/o the weight of 10 crew, u should be able to kiss the wood w that EQUIPMENT and without the help of lines. But ud have to learn in 3-5 on The Charles in CAMBRIDGE. Then when the skipper has failed on 3 tries to touch the wood on a disabled 3.5 ton 27' Columbia Bluewater, u kiss the wood dead-on on yr first try. That's what u learn from dinghies. Fair winds.
Easy , breeze 10 off port bow and light so what , got there hands on their..... why would you post that??