Hi All,
My boat is usually left on a swinging mooring, so single handed berthing tends not to be too much of a problem all the while I return to my own mooring. Last year I did a trip around Anglesey, and needed to moor to a buoy in the Menai Straits for the overnight period. Fortunately I was not alone, but when it came to the mooring I was a bit stumped as the mooring buoy presented only an iron hoop on top of the buoy, and no pick up rope. The problem, had I been on my own it appeared, would have been to get a line through the hoop before the current dragged the boat away. The trick that my colleague taught me was to take a mooring rope, secure one end to a mooring bitt on one side of the boat, then when close enough to the buoy, throw the bight of the rope over and beyond the buoy so that the rope then slips under the buoy and up to the buoy mooring chain/wire and the buoy had now become effectively lassoed, then secure the loose end of the rope to the bitts on the other side of the boat. Now with the boat tethered it was possible to tickle the engine ahead against the current, and taking in the slack in my mooring rope as progress towards the buoy is made. Once near enough resecure the lasso line and then feed a separate mooring line through the iron hoop and make both ends secure onboard. I left the lasso line there as an extra mooring (belt and braces !), so that I could sleep peacefully until next morning. Securing the ends of each rope onboard allowed each mooring to be slipped when I was ready to let go for the next part of my journey through the Swellies at high water slack next morning.
Easy peasy as it turned out, but each of the single handers sailing with us in convoy had given up and gone back when they learned that we could only berth to buoys in the straits for the overnight period.