Lugg
New member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2023
- Messages
- 2
- Reaction score
- 2
- LOCATION
- Delta, BC, Canada
First post, thanks for having me.
I've had my 12 foot V Hull for about 4 years now, we love it. What I don't love and stresses me out is what to do with it overnight, or when not using it during the day while in windy / white cap / wave conditions.
Here's the notes.
In the image below I'm able to drag the boat up onto some logs that were not going anywhere. This was "perfect".
Dragging it across rocks up to 1.5" can't be good for the bottom... And the older I get the heavier it is... I see no major damage but can see scratches from dragging. What are your thoughts on this? Am I being too concerned about dragging it over rocks? (note that the rocks in the image I'd not drag it over, there are smaller rocks out of frame that they are dragged when required for beaching.)
My final question is this.
How do you anchor the boat so that you don't have to get into the water to bring it back to shore and get in? We go out in some frigid conditions... going into the water to retrieve the boat is not ideal. (I do have waders and go can go in a few feet if needed.)
Not sure if this is a good idea but I've seen where an anchor is let out in the deeper waters, connected to the bow and the chain / rope is snugged up. Then there is a pulley system that you anchor to shore. This allows the boat to be pulled to deeper waters from shore, allows the boat to hit the waves bow first, and allows the user to use the pulley to bring the boat back to shore. I think I understand this method (I've Googled) but was wondering if anyone has a good video, images, diagram, or explanation to share with me.
Or, do you have a better idea?
Thanks!
I've had my 12 foot V Hull for about 4 years now, we love it. What I don't love and stresses me out is what to do with it overnight, or when not using it during the day while in windy / white cap / wave conditions.
Here's the notes.
- We only camp next to the shore, within 40 feet usually. So the boat is close to us.
- Freshwater only if it matters. Lakes.
- Rocky beach's almost always. As shown in image below.
- Lots of whitecaps during middle of day or windy nights. This causes the boat to move up and down and if it's too close to shore it constantly hits rocks on the bottom. So I pull it out more if needed.
In the image below I'm able to drag the boat up onto some logs that were not going anywhere. This was "perfect".
Dragging it across rocks up to 1.5" can't be good for the bottom... And the older I get the heavier it is... I see no major damage but can see scratches from dragging. What are your thoughts on this? Am I being too concerned about dragging it over rocks? (note that the rocks in the image I'd not drag it over, there are smaller rocks out of frame that they are dragged when required for beaching.)
My final question is this.
How do you anchor the boat so that you don't have to get into the water to bring it back to shore and get in? We go out in some frigid conditions... going into the water to retrieve the boat is not ideal. (I do have waders and go can go in a few feet if needed.)
Not sure if this is a good idea but I've seen where an anchor is let out in the deeper waters, connected to the bow and the chain / rope is snugged up. Then there is a pulley system that you anchor to shore. This allows the boat to be pulled to deeper waters from shore, allows the boat to hit the waves bow first, and allows the user to use the pulley to bring the boat back to shore. I think I understand this method (I've Googled) but was wondering if anyone has a good video, images, diagram, or explanation to share with me.
Or, do you have a better idea?
Thanks!