I would be very interested to know how people manage beaching and getting off again for various wind directions.
We’ve only taken Miss Fidget on to the beach at Bembridge, where the wind was offshore. Going on to the beach was straightforward – we came along the channel parallel with the beach with the keel already part way up, then turned in towards the beach and dropped the kedge as the depth started dropping, indicating we were just on the edge of the channel. We motored in to the beach, head to wind, raising the keel as we went, until we touched the bottom. We got out carrying the bow anchor and buried it well up on the beach. Miss Fidget was then held fore and aft and lying parallel to the wind, so kept a pretty stable position as the tide came back in and went out again.
Getting off again was much more scary, despite the help we received! I remember that we re-placed the bow anchor so that it was fairly close to the bow rather than a long way up the beach. I can’t remember at what stage we lifted the kedge, but I guess that, once we were afloat, we would have dropped back on the bow anchor to lift the kedge, and pulled forward again to lift the bow anchor. We then had to motor astern, something that Miss Fidget doesn’t do very controllably, and the wind caught the bow, which swung round in the opposite direction from the one I was steering, leading to some close quarter manoeuvering amongst moored boats – fortunately without incident! I can’t think of anything we could have done differently in principle, although I think we could have done more to control the angle of the bow to the wind while being held at the bow.
What about an onshore wind? Is it better then to drop the bow anchor first and drop back astern onto the beach with a lifted rudder? Or is better to follow the offshore wind procedure, and lie to the kedge anchor as the main holding anchor? Getting off under this circumstance would have the advantage that we’d be clear of any Seals and Parkers that had been beached alongside us before the holding anchor came up. What about longshore winds, or ones at an angle to the beach? Should the two anchors make a line at right angles to the beach, or be in line with the wind direction?
I’m sure there’s a huge amount of experience of beaching Seals and Parkers, and I would be very grateful for other people’s advice.
Many thanks
Gilliane
Miss Fidget, Super Seal 26, no. 69
Delphine, Parker 275, no. 41