If you just need to know how to tie the knot on the rail! 06:06 📌 Boating Education and Tips playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLP_T5TIhc845daMPaiEjaY8p3hgLZVOHO
One old gent here in Western Canada ( Vancouver Island) used to take regular walks along the spit and he would find fenders washed up on the beach.He would take them to local sporting goods store where they hung on the fence for folk to take for free.One more good reason to put them up on board before travelling! Cheers
Wayne, thanks for the video. Since a lot of us don’t have rails all around our boat or at least at the back, I saw one guy use a piece of PVC in his rod holder with a cap on it so the rope didn’t slip off. I thought it was kind of an ingenious idea but then you have to have that piece of PVC possibly hanging on the inside of your boat when you’re not using it. But if you’re not going fishing that day I guess they could just sit in the rod holders and you can just hang the bumper in or out.
RYA standard knot method is a "round turn & 2 half hitches" because they resist the mishaps that are common with clove hitch or a cow hitch like the one you've tied (it's a girth hitch if both ends are constantly loaded but you've only loaded one side here). I treating how you point one here how easy it is to adjust the height of a fender with your knot because that's exactly what happens if the fender is set for long and there's loosening/loading of the line due to rolling - and then the fender is free. It's also far more likely to happen when the line diameter is much smaller than the rail diameter as in your example. How do I know? I lost one fender departing Cartegena in Spain that way, where I'd tied that one to the pushpit rail rather than the usual safety rail which is made of ss cable, not thick tubing. I saw it go but it was not safe for me to recover it at the time. If you have a small, flattish boat which won't roll, the fenders are small and the time involved is short then just maybe. But that comment about "bring the fenders up quickly" might be to avoid losing them rather than about being "embarrassed". Where I'm coming from here is that my boat is a 38 foot sailing cruiser, weighing about 9 tonnes. I'm currently in Panama on my way to Australia. She's a handful in close quarters with wind around. My fenders are massive compared with your's and the lines are much heavier too. When docked, the main danger is caused by rolling btw, so a clove hitch or a cow hitch works loose inevitably.. I also sail mostly single-handed so there's no way I run about the deck pulling up fenders until I'm safely outside nowhere near other boats; my priority is to the boat, not to the fenders. But that's why RYA teaches "round turn & 2 half hitches", plus variations because it works on small, light, flat boats but also on bigger, heavier boats that easily roll. Give it a try maybe. ps. the reason for the edit was that I first wrote "round hitch...", rather than "round turn" - sorry.
Hi Wayne, I know I'm a bit late as this video was published long ago but I discovered your channel recently. Anyway, this is an interesting way to tie fenders. Much faster and easier than the way I'm using. Quite handy, especially for a temporary mooring. Anyway, speaking about car fenders, in french we do also call them "wings" (ailes). As for fenders we call them "pare-battage" which means literally "shock preventer".
I use a slipped Spar Hitch, myself. I find newbies have an easier time learning the Miller's Knot, which I think is about as good, possibly easier to adjust.
I call those fenders. Wayne the guitar guy! And I would consider the rub rail the bumper. The drag is why you pull it up, if u had like 4 fenders on 1 side only it would change your steering like dragging an oar. And waste fuel :) oh well my fenders were big enough that they hit the water... do yours?
Yeah the drag factor depends on the size of the boat and the size of the fenders. On my old boat, the fenders at the back would be in the water, but not at the front. 30 ft, twin engine cruisers certainly aren't being slowed down by having a few fenders hanging but it looks bad!
Hey Wayne love your sign. I am old enough to remember a single lane 301 in charles county . My mother rented rooms to the workers as they were adding the dual lanes to 301 . Love the boat videos as I grew up on an island eryclose to 301.
I have seen you tie on motored boats and clove hitch on sailboats. Not sure this means anything other than just observation. As a sailer, I see the benefit of the clove.
Do you have any videos explaining how to place boat fenders if your dock has pilings on the exterior of the edge? In other words, the pilings were driven, and then the dock was built in between the pilings, so every 6 feet there is a piling jutting out. Is there a special kind of fender to accommodate this type of dock?
Hey Wayne, what part of Maryland are you from? I live in Carroll County but grew up in Baltimore County where I spent my summers on the water with my dad. I just bought my first boat in May and finally just finished getting it ready for the water. Plan to launch this weekend. Thanks for the fender guidance and I plan to rope mine up tomorrow. Maybe we'll see one another on the water!!
The right height is the point where the dock (or other surface) is potentially going to hit against your hull and will likely be different per location.
Any boat/vessel should pull in bumpers/fenders on board due to the conditions of the water. Not losing them to a large and or continuous waves is a pretty good reason.
Hmm I added time stamps in the description, and a comment indicating you could fast forward to the exact section where I tie them - I’m sorry you were so disappointed.
Thanks for this. Ideally it would be nice to see how this is tied from the perspective of the one tying the knot but I figured it out. What is this knot called?
If you just need to know how to tie the knot on the rail! 06:06
📌 Boating Education and Tips playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLP_T5TIhc845daMPaiEjaY8p3hgLZVOHO
What’s the knot called?
Another awesome video because I had no clue how to properly tie the fender lines to the boat thanks again Wayne 👍
Thanks, very helpful video and loved the history and etiquette too
One old gent here in Western Canada ( Vancouver Island) used to take regular walks along the spit and he would find fenders washed up on the beach.He would take them to local sporting goods store where they hung on the fence for folk to take for free.One more good reason to put them up on board before travelling! Cheers
That's a cool story. He was picking up litter and recycling!!! Thanks for sharing.
Only about 8min too long but the 1 min of actually showing how to tie a finder was awesome.
Sorry if you missed the pinned comment above or the timestamp info in the description showing how to jump to the part you needed
Great info, Simple and easy. Thanks
Wayne, thanks for the video. Since a lot of us don’t have rails all around our boat or at least at the back, I saw one guy use a piece of PVC in his rod holder with a cap on it so the rope didn’t slip off. I thought it was kind of an ingenious idea but then you have to have that piece of PVC possibly hanging on the inside of your boat when you’re not using it. But if you’re not going fishing that day I guess they could just sit in the rod holders and you can just hang the bumper in or out.
That's a neat idea! My old boat had rod holders and I used to just tie my fenders around them.
RYA standard knot method is a "round turn & 2 half hitches" because they resist the mishaps that are common with clove hitch or a cow hitch like the one you've tied (it's a girth hitch if both ends are constantly loaded but you've only loaded one side here). I treating how you point one here how easy it is to adjust the height of a fender with your knot because that's exactly what happens if the fender is set for long and there's loosening/loading of the line due to rolling - and then the fender is free. It's also far more likely to happen when the line diameter is much smaller than the rail diameter as in your example. How do I know? I lost one fender departing Cartegena in Spain that way, where I'd tied that one to the pushpit rail rather than the usual safety rail which is made of ss cable, not thick tubing. I saw it go but it was not safe for me to recover it at the time.
If you have a small, flattish boat which won't roll, the fenders are small and the time involved is short then just maybe. But that comment about "bring the fenders up quickly" might be to avoid losing them rather than about being "embarrassed".
Where I'm coming from here is that my boat is a 38 foot sailing cruiser, weighing about 9 tonnes. I'm currently in Panama on my way to Australia. She's a handful in close quarters with wind around. My fenders are massive compared with your's and the lines are much heavier too. When docked, the main danger is caused by rolling btw, so a clove hitch or a cow hitch works loose inevitably.. I also sail mostly single-handed so there's no way I run about the deck pulling up fenders until I'm safely outside nowhere near other boats; my priority is to the boat, not to the fenders.
But that's why RYA teaches "round turn & 2 half hitches", plus variations because it works on small, light, flat boats but also on bigger, heavier boats that easily roll. Give it a try maybe.
ps. the reason for the edit was that I first wrote "round hitch...", rather than "round turn" - sorry.
Hi Wayne, I know I'm a bit late as this video was published long ago but I discovered your channel recently.
Anyway, this is an interesting way to tie fenders. Much faster and easier than the way I'm using. Quite handy, especially for a temporary mooring.
Anyway, speaking about car fenders, in french we do also call them "wings" (ailes). As for fenders we call them "pare-battage" which means literally "shock preventer".
"pare-battage" - a much better name!
A clove hitch is the preferred knot for tying off a fender.
I had to look that up! They seem like they would work just as good.
Absolutely.
I use a slipped Spar Hitch, myself. I find newbies have an easier time learning the Miller's Knot, which I think is about as good, possibly easier to adjust.
I agree that it is more common, but how to adjust a clove hitch?
Great video
Thanks!
Thanks!
I call those fenders. Wayne the guitar guy! And I would consider the rub rail the bumper. The drag is why you pull it up, if u had like 4 fenders on 1 side only it would change your steering like dragging an oar. And waste fuel :) oh well my fenders were big enough that they hit the water... do yours?
Yeah the drag factor depends on the size of the boat and the size of the fenders. On my old boat, the fenders at the back would be in the water, but not at the front. 30 ft, twin engine cruisers certainly aren't being slowed down by having a few fenders hanging but it looks bad!
Very informative.
Hey Wayne love your sign. I am old enough to remember a single lane 301 in charles county . My mother rented rooms to the workers as they were adding the dual lanes to 301 . Love the boat videos as I grew up on an island eryclose to 301.
That's awesome - thanks for sharing!
Thanks great explanation
You are welcome!
Maybe change the name of the video. “How to stretch a 10 second video out to 9 minutes and 20 seconds
I have seen you tie on motored boats and clove hitch on sailboats. Not sure this means anything other than just observation. As a sailer, I see the benefit of the clove.
Sail boaters certainly know much more about tying knots than motor boaters!
Do you have any videos explaining how to place boat fenders if your dock has pilings on the exterior of the edge? In other words, the pilings were driven, and then the dock was built in between the pilings, so every 6 feet there is a piling jutting out. Is there a special kind of fender to accommodate this type of dock?
I don't have a video about that - but sometimes in these situations people place fenders sideways on the pilings.
@@WayneTheBoatGuy Thanks, I'd thought about that. (I wish they'd just fix their dock, LOL)
I leave my fenders out when i'm sailing more often than not. I consider myself to be self actualized.
Hey Wayne, what part of Maryland are you from? I live in Carroll County but grew up in Baltimore County where I spent my summers on the water with my dad. I just bought my first boat in May and finally just finished getting it ready for the water. Plan to launch this weekend. Thanks for the fender guidance and I plan to rope mine up tomorrow. Maybe we'll see one another on the water!!
You're welcome!! I'm off the Magothy River
weren't you a guitar player in Cheap Trick?
What knot should you use to tie the rope to the fender if you dont have a 4’ section of rope with a loop?
Bowline
If I'm by myself, without a helping hand, is it ok to leave the fenders out?
It's honestly fine - but other boaters seem to look at is a bad thing based purely on what 'looks good'.
Well, is perfect fine with me. Thanks
What is the right height??
The right height is the point where the dock (or other surface) is potentially going to hit against your hull and will likely be different per location.
In Australia we call them bumpers on cars
But you call car fenders "wings" - right?
What is the name of this knot?
Mudguards in Australia, not fenders.
Need to get to the point sooner - how
to tie the knot.
I guess you didn't see the pinned the top comment saying to fast forward to 6:06
Thanks but video needs to be from the view of the person tying the line.
Any boat/vessel should pull in bumpers/fenders on board due to the conditions of the water. Not losing them to a large and or continuous waves is a pretty good reason.
That makes sense!
way too much talking, thinks he is funny and that we are stupid
I guess I should reevaluate everything I’ve done. Thank you so much Larry.
If u have to explain what a fender is then that person should not own a boat
If you have to be a asshole maybe YOU shouldn't have a boat?
We know all of that u talk too much - just show the knot -
What a waste of time. Get to the point dude.
Hmm I added time stamps in the description, and a comment indicating you could fast forward to the exact section where I tie them - I’m sorry you were so disappointed.
If you don't like it, make your own video😉
@@SoniaSL-RD19 I agree with Sonia. There is no need to be rude "dude".
4 feet of rope would have my fenders 10 feet above the water...
Thanks for this. Ideally it would be nice to see how this is tied from the perspective of the one tying the knot but I figured it out. What is this knot called?
I'm not sure of the name. There's so many 'real' boating knots that recreational power boaters don't bother or need to know.
@@WayneTheBoatGuy It's a cow hitch. A bull hitch would be more secure and a clove hitch is another correct way to tie off a fender.
@@WayneTheBoatGuy It's called fender knot :-} just kidding