rgano
Guru
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2007
- Messages
- 5,263
- Location
- Panama City area
- Vessel Name
- FROLIC
- Vessel Make
- Mainship 30 Pilot II since 2015. GB-42 1986-2015. Former Unlimited Tonnage Master
Comments from an old ocean towing captain:
You may have a time finding a GB-style trawler with only a single engine.
Make this "fishing boat" you want to tow as light as possible.
The smaller the crew, the more trouble it is to tow and maneuver - once saw a tow line get tangled in the darned lock gate in lake Okeechobee!
What happens when the tow begins to take on water in the middle of the night, and it is really too rough to take it alongside?
How will you retrieve it in the night while towing and the line chafes through - do you have a tracking device or light on it to find it in the night?
Even floating rope towline can get accidentally sucked below the surface and into the screw disabling a single screw vessel.
When towing my 13-foot Boston Whaler (with 50 HP Johnson OB) behind my 42-foot GB twin-engined trawler, I lost half a knot.
I have seen a similar heavy 13-foot Whaler (I have seen 11-foot Whalers)lifted onto the cabin top of a 40-foot trawler. The after part of the Whaler stuck clear over the taffrail, and we ducked under it to get from side to side of the trawler back there.
I never towed my 10-foot inflatable very far feeling it was too much stress on a cloth boat.
While delivering a 56-foot Chris-Craft from LA to San Francisco as delivery skipper (with novice owner aboard) with a 13-foot Whaler with 40 HP OB stowed atop the cabin, the Whaler broke loose from its moorings and swung wildly around on its single-point lifting bar. To prevent total loss of it in the heavy seas we were in (later given as 14 feet), I had to run up there and punch the down button to get it down before the sling broke. After nearly losing my life to get it secured with a tow line, I then took it single-handed 500 miles to San Fran - the Whaler towing ring was well wore by the stainless shackle on the end of the tow line. had it broken loose during the single-handed part of the voyage, I would have been powerless to retrieve it.
Towing barges around the Pacific, I never had such problems; however towing one into Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii with huge seas braking astern was one of the more challenging seamanship evolutions of my life. Single screw tow ship 205 feet long with 69-man crew with empty barge astern, all at risk in that narrow channel. At times the barge was on the crest of a wave appearing to come down on our stern. We had hauled it in to one wave length astern as we approached and went up to maximum speed, but wave length had shortened as we got into shallower water. Towing into rough inlets like that is NOT for the timid or inexperienced, and then you hope for some luck.
Bottomline: I know folks here have many experiences successfully towing various small boats behind pleasure boats, but my preference for other than a short daylight tow in known calm water, especially with short crew, is to hoist the smaller one inboard and go with confidence (making sure its moorings are secure ).
You may have a time finding a GB-style trawler with only a single engine.
Make this "fishing boat" you want to tow as light as possible.
The smaller the crew, the more trouble it is to tow and maneuver - once saw a tow line get tangled in the darned lock gate in lake Okeechobee!
What happens when the tow begins to take on water in the middle of the night, and it is really too rough to take it alongside?
How will you retrieve it in the night while towing and the line chafes through - do you have a tracking device or light on it to find it in the night?
Even floating rope towline can get accidentally sucked below the surface and into the screw disabling a single screw vessel.
When towing my 13-foot Boston Whaler (with 50 HP Johnson OB) behind my 42-foot GB twin-engined trawler, I lost half a knot.
I have seen a similar heavy 13-foot Whaler (I have seen 11-foot Whalers)lifted onto the cabin top of a 40-foot trawler. The after part of the Whaler stuck clear over the taffrail, and we ducked under it to get from side to side of the trawler back there.
I never towed my 10-foot inflatable very far feeling it was too much stress on a cloth boat.
While delivering a 56-foot Chris-Craft from LA to San Francisco as delivery skipper (with novice owner aboard) with a 13-foot Whaler with 40 HP OB stowed atop the cabin, the Whaler broke loose from its moorings and swung wildly around on its single-point lifting bar. To prevent total loss of it in the heavy seas we were in (later given as 14 feet), I had to run up there and punch the down button to get it down before the sling broke. After nearly losing my life to get it secured with a tow line, I then took it single-handed 500 miles to San Fran - the Whaler towing ring was well wore by the stainless shackle on the end of the tow line. had it broken loose during the single-handed part of the voyage, I would have been powerless to retrieve it.
Towing barges around the Pacific, I never had such problems; however towing one into Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii with huge seas braking astern was one of the more challenging seamanship evolutions of my life. Single screw tow ship 205 feet long with 69-man crew with empty barge astern, all at risk in that narrow channel. At times the barge was on the crest of a wave appearing to come down on our stern. We had hauled it in to one wave length astern as we approached and went up to maximum speed, but wave length had shortened as we got into shallower water. Towing into rough inlets like that is NOT for the timid or inexperienced, and then you hope for some luck.
Bottomline: I know folks here have many experiences successfully towing various small boats behind pleasure boats, but my preference for other than a short daylight tow in known calm water, especially with short crew, is to hoist the smaller one inboard and go with confidence (making sure its moorings are secure ).