Oars, outboards, or.... row, row, row your boat!

Started by Zen, January 13, 2006, 10:28:48 AM

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Zen

WHo does what for backup when the motor dies.

Does anyone carry oars and/or extra an outboard or just sail plan on sailing engineless?

There is a sailboats should be engineless philosophy that does do that. ( no motor)

I was a reader of the engineless sailing board for quite awhile. I picked up enough tips to save my Bacon (veggie bacon) a couple of times when the engine died and had to sail into my slip.

I would never take out my inboard motor though even though it is said that a boat sails better without them and just keep oars aboard for those time when there is no wind to get back into a slip or can not sail into a slip.

what do you do?
https://zensekai2japan.wordpress.com/
Vice-Commodore - International Yacht Club

Captain Smollett

Philosophically, I really like the idea of being totally engineless; after all, the old square riggers sailed the world without engine.  The other side of the coin is that they had very large crews to do things like warp, tow and sweep.

I've been "engineless" several times without intention.  Engines fail.  Therefore, I ultimately rely on sailing, with the outboard as a backup (not the other way around).  To that end, I almost alway sails OFF the dock, and very often, sail back in as well.  Granted, I don't have to do a lot of close quarters maneuvering to get to the dock.

I was sailing in Calibogue Sound (Hilton Head Island) on a J-24 a few years ago and talked to the owner about going back to the marina under sail alone.  He himself was willing enough to do it, but he said the Harbor Master (or Marina Owner) would not like that at all.

So, part of practical seamanship is prudence.  Sometimes, running the iron jib is the prudent thing to do.
S/V Gaelic Sea
Alberg 30
North Carolina

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  -Mark Twain

Solace

When my Atomic IV packed it in (crank snapped in two - and it would still start) I was on a cruise several days away from home. To make it through a canal with two bridges, I was towed. After that, I figured on sailing her home. To begin with all was fine. Later, when the wind died we spent an entire night as bug chum. Here in the Great Lakes we have this 1/2" flies with 3" teeth that love to bite your ankles - and there are millions of them. 15 hours later and desperate to stop feeding the world we lashed the Walker Bay to the port side and mounted the 2 hp outboard engine to her. 6 hours and 4 tanks of fuel later we managed to pull into the next closest marina - we hit a top speed of 2.2 kts.

The next day my friends back at our home port got one of our power boating friends to bring an 8 hp Honda outboard, a donated kicker mount and necessary tools, tanks and lines. That outboard worked for the rest of the season and the mount is still there - though I am planning to remove it this spring.













9

CharlieJ

Many of those old engineless square riggers wound up on the rocks too, when the wind quit. Was just reading last night, a book titled "The Twilight of Sailing Ships" and they listed many instances where ships were lost, with horrible lost of life, from just that cause. In the later times, when steam was really taking over, almost ALL of those pure sailing vessels were towed into and out of ports by steam tugs, because it was no longer feasible for them to lay for days, sometimes weeks, waiting for wind.

On our boat, the engine IS the back up source of power. Even with the quiet 4 stroke outboard we have,, we both prefer to handle the boat under sail as much as possible. In fact, Laura absolutely HATES to run the thing.

One thing I always harp on. DO NOT think of that engine as a "safety " thing- think of it as a convenience because one day it'll fail you. If you have wind, those sails won't, even if a harbor master doesn't like it. If you don't have wind, have an anchor ready. Learn to handle that boat under sail, using anchors as kedges if needed. Then use the motor to make things easier, but not as a last resort type thing.

Having said that, I have several friends who sail engineless using oars and or a Yuloh. Surprising what you can do once you learn to scull :)
Charlie J

Lindsey 21 Necessity


On Matagorda Bay
On the Redneck Riviera

starcrest

'sailboats should be powerless'....click your heels together 3 times....close your eyes and repeat that to yourself 3 times ....the next time you are drifting powerless off a lee shore...".and that goes for your little dog toto too"
"I will be hoping to return to the boating scene very soon.sea trial not necessary"
Rest in Peace Eric; link to Starcrest Memorial thread.

Adam

My personal approach was to ALWAYS use sail unless absolutely necessary... this included sailing into my slip and backing under sail out of the slip... I'd have the trusty Atomic IV running just in case, but would practice "sail only" procedures whenever possible. This was on a 28' Morgan (Not O/I) which was very easy to back under sail, etc... but I'm a paranoid sailor. I used the engine VERY seldom other than having it running in neutral while doing close quarters work (there if I need it). In fact, in 23 months of ownership, using the boat a minimum of 3x a week (lived on the water in Key Largo), I put less than 10 gallons of gas (total) in the boat.

This paid off one morning after a weekend up at Nest Key. I was anchored and went to start the engine to get home. It turns out the alternator belt had broken the day before and the battery (from the anchor lights) had gone during the night. I was able to sail 3 miles home in 4 hours (LIGHT wind) around my jetty and into my slip, all because I had practiced when I had the engine to back me up.

Also- I had a bracket on the stern for an outboard, and even had a nice Honda four stroke outboard in my shop, but didn't carry it around for backup because my bracket was my "swim ladder".

btw- Of course, when I flawlessly docked under sail with no engine... the usual crowd that hangs out at the dock was NOT there for once to witness my amazing skills.... typical.

Captain Smollett

Quote from: Adam on January 16, 2006, 01:09:27 PM

btw- Of course, when I flawlessly docked under sail with no engine... the usual crowd that hangs out at the dock was NOT there for once to witness my amazing skills.... typical.

;D

Of course, the converse is also usually true.  Once while coming in with the outboard, with a 22 kt breeze blowing off the dock, I managed to foul the prop with a dock line.  The OB died, and I drifted downwind, only to crash stem-first into the downwind dock.

There was a host of witnesses, all of them giving 'good advice' on coming into a dock under power.
S/V Gaelic Sea
Alberg 30
North Carolina

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  -Mark Twain

s/v Faith

 ::)

QuoteThere was a host of witnesses, all of them giving 'good advice' on coming into a dock under power.

  You can always tell the 'Real Sailors'... They are the one's on the dock who keep their mouth shut when something like that is going on...  ;D
Satisfaction is wanting what you already have.

Jack Tar

It's easy to say it's a sailboat for Christ sake or I just sail in or I use a skull or sweep. Forget it. When the poop hits the fan and your in a 9 knot current in the narrows or your drifting into the ferry lanes it's time to call Boat US tow service.
It's not about the sails the boat or the rigging it's about  freedom

Se Langt

Having had the opportunity to test a few ideas I ended up with a diesel inboard upgrading from a 10HP OB on the last boat. Sails of course but also a sculling oar.  For the dinghy oars and a 50lb thrust saltwater MinnTonka.  No more gas on board for me.  However my draft is 3'7" and on the older boat was 3' even and that made a difference on where I could anchor.  Closer in means less need for outboards on the dinghy. 

M.

OptiMystic

#10
Have you thought about a sculling oar? I am making a break down oar from and old broken fiberglass mast a friend gave me. In light air, it would give me move me some (in a light boat like mine, 3+ kts might be possible, but 2 is more likely) and in the odd event of waves without wind, keep the nose in the right direction. Downside is that you can't do anything else while sculling. It could also function as an emergency rudder and emergency spar.

EDIT - this was moved over from anopther thread about prepping a boat for The Scoot, reviving the old thread instead of making a new one (I practice I agree with, BTW, even though some forums discourage it; I like this forum better all the time  :) ).
-Andy

Disclaimer: I am not an experienced blue water sailor. My boat is not a blue water cruiser. So most of my knowledge is from research, discussion or sailing near shore and inshore. "Grain of salt" applies...

okawbow

Sculling oars are great to have on a sailboat! I made mine from a 12' cedar 2x4 riped to 2" wide. I notched the end for a 1x6 cedar blade x 2' long. Glued and screwed, it was plenty strong. It proved invaluable for anchoring, short term propulsion, emergency steering, and most of all; it helped me get unstuck from three groundings. I keep it just inside the stanchions on the port side of my 24 footer.
Here he lies where he long'd to be;  
Home is the sailor, home from the sea,  
  And the hunter home from the hill.

OptiMystic

My boat only weighs about 1500# with me, my kids and gear aboard and drafts under 1' with the keel/CB up, so sculling should be incredibly practical for me, moreso perhaps than a keel boat. I don't have to stay in the channel and can eddy hop to go against the current (answering the point someone raised earlier in this thread).

On the one I am making, I am using an old fiberglass mast section (the top, so it tapers and has a cap at the small end) and a paddle that will slip into the end of it and get pinned in place. I am cutting two "collars" for the paddle shaft so it will fit snugly in the fiberglass tube and apply fairly even pressure on it and none right at the lip (which I will add a layer of glass tape to anyway). I will plug the tube right above the point where the paddle comes to so it will (hopefully) float. The paddle will still be a usable paddle when it is out of the tube; on a boat the size of mine, a little paddle is actually useful sometimes and if I anchor somewhere with a lot of tide action, like Lookout, I may take a little inflatable raft to shore even though I have a shallow draft (it is still more than zero).

I do have a decent motor from a power/dependability (uh oh; probably just jinxed myself) perspective, but it is a 5HP 2 stroke pure kicker - no tranny. It's an older one that was recently rebuilt. So while it runs well, it is a bit loud and doesn't like to sit still (it suits me well :) ) so it isn't always the best choice for slow speed maneuvers like waiting for a turn at the ramp or dock.

I am also making a support for it that will attach to a cleat on the transom. Basically a small piece of wood with a U cut in it. I want to be able to lift it out quickly if i need to use it to push off from the front or side. I may get it done this weekend, but possibly not until next. I will post pics then.

But if someone has some other considerations before I do it, please let me know ASAP...
-Andy

Disclaimer: I am not an experienced blue water sailor. My boat is not a blue water cruiser. So most of my knowledge is from research, discussion or sailing near shore and inshore. "Grain of salt" applies...

Godot

I HATE motors.  Or perhaps they hate me.  Whenever I've truly wanted that darn beast to work for me, it wouldn't.

My first sail in Godot, there was way too much wind and I couldn't reef down far enough.  I was tacking through 180°, slowly drifting downwind, and couldn't do much about it.  I couldn't even convince the boat to sneak into a semi protected area.  I figure, I'll fire up the outboard and at least scooch into that little cove a mile or so away.  The waves where too big, motor jumped in and out of the water, then died.  It wouldn't start until the next morning (just as well).

Then the day when I ended up in a serious rigging situation with sheets and halyards and sails and lunch and my half finished novel, and everything streaming everywhere while I was rapidly drifting onto a rocky shore, I fired up the outboard, and it immediately got tangled in all those trailing lines.

In both cases, my seamanship failed first, the motor second.  Just when I needed it most to bail me out of trouble.  Oddly, once I was resigned to not being able to rely on the monster, I was able to work my way out of trouble without it.  It's a darn shame that I can't seem to learn anything the easy way.

Mostly, I need the stupid thing to get in and out of my marina (they always seem to put the small boats in the tricky slips), and to get home in time for work when the wind dies (oh, how I wish that concern would go away). 

Stupid, noisy, smelly, unreliable things.

My backup plan is to sail.  Or anchor.  Or drift.  Or, if things are really becoming an issue, call TowBoatUS.  I don't like that last choice.  Not at all.  Maybe I should look into a sculling oar, too.
Adam
Bayfield 29 "Seeker"
Middle River, Chesapeake Bay

AdriftAtSea

Dropping an anchor and stopping the boat is often a solution that is overlooked.  Beats drifting into the rocks or going aground IMHO.
s/v Pretty Gee
Telstar 28 Trimaran
Yet we get to know her, love her and be loved by her.... get to know about My Life With Gee at
http://blog.dankim.com/life-with-gee
The Scoot—click to find out more

OptiMystic

Quote from: AdriftAtSea on July 25, 2008, 04:05:30 PM
Dropping an anchor and stopping the boat is often a solution that is overlooked.  Beats drifting into the rocks or going aground IMHO.

I just did a big head slap "DUH!" the other day when someone pointed out to me that I need to have mine at the ready and teach my kids about throwing it in as I often sail with just me and them. I mostly sail the Pamlico and it has a soft sand/mud bottom that is never far away.
-Andy

Disclaimer: I am not an experienced blue water sailor. My boat is not a blue water cruiser. So most of my knowledge is from research, discussion or sailing near shore and inshore. "Grain of salt" applies...

Auspicious

Back in the early 80s I was anchored in The Bight of Norman Island in the BVI, well before the proliferation of mooring balls down there. A beautiful wooden sloop between 30 and 35 feet long was anchored nearby. In the morning, sitting in the cockpit with a cup of coffee (spiked - I was on vacation), an elderly gentlemen rustled about on that boat for a bit. I cranked the anchor up on a manual windlass and sculled the boat out of The Bight to the point he was clear of the rocks at the entrance. There he raised sail and disappeared around the point.

If I close my eyes I can still picture that.
S/V Auspicious
HR 40 - a little big for SailFar but my heart is on small boats
Chesapeake Bay

Beware cut and paste sailors.

CharlieJ

Having an anchor ready to run at ALL times is a basic tenet of mine. I rig ALL my boats so at least one BIG anchor can be dropped almost instantly.

It's saved me from getting strained through a drawbridge on a hard running tide once when the engine ( diesel) quit. Also kept me out of difficulty on one other not so serious occasion.

So I set the boat up so I can do that in seconds.
Charlie J

Lindsey 21 Necessity


On Matagorda Bay
On the Redneck Riviera

OptiMystic

I actually had the boat set up so I could do it in seconds before, but it involved knowing where it was, pulling it out, attaching and dropping. I could do it in 30 seconds and have on a few occasions. I have become convinced that's not good enough. Instead of me doing it it in 30 seconds, the new goal is to have a panicy 8 year old do it in 10. :)
-Andy

Disclaimer: I am not an experienced blue water sailor. My boat is not a blue water cruiser. So most of my knowledge is from research, discussion or sailing near shore and inshore. "Grain of salt" applies...

CapnK

Good thoughts. This, along with the need/concern for having a spare rudder of some sort, means I'll put some thought into making a blade that I can attach to my spinnaker pole. Onboard small boats, a multi-purpose item is well worth having!

If my boat were large enough that I could travel with a windsurfer, the mast for that would make a good sculling shaft. It sounds like that is what you have, Opti.
http://sailfar.net
Please Buy My Boats. ;)