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Bow Rails

Discussion in 'Post Yacht' started by Rich M., Oct 7, 2020.

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  1. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    If the prize money is $250K, you do not want any thing to possibly touch that line and weaken it. A serious fisher will have flush mount cleats, etc as well
  2. unsinker

    unsinker Member

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    Hello, interesting topic and many opinions and comments, my questions would be why or what for?

    Thank you in advance.
  3. Rich M.

    Rich M. Member

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    Yeah it looks like a mako I heard they taste just like chicken .
  4. Oscarvan

    Oscarvan Senior Member

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    59 is OK, 61 is not? You drink you don't get to go on deck underway. Mom, yes. So that's why they're staying on. And we wear a life vest when on deck underway, or during (un)docking operations.
  5. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    Shikin from Shik-fillet.
    A respected food chain....
    fat-guy-little-boat.jpg
  6. Soulstice

    Soulstice Member

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    Agreed. Apart from Marlin which will really run, this is not a concern for Tuna fishing as any decent captain of a sport fish should be able to maneuver the boat without a line getting near the bow.

    You are dead on about flush mount cleats and anything to prevent a line from snapping. About eight years ago in the Tri-State tournament,
    We had a massive bigeye which would have won us a good deal of money. The angler on deck decided to bend over the transom to look for color instead of listening and the line hitter bottom of the transom and snapped off. Took a while to calm the crew down from that one, but we did win the Homeport Calcutta.
  7. Soulstice

    Soulstice Member

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    Pretty close to swordfish In flavor and texture as well. Once I was having a family dinner and my grandmother asked for swordfish. I didn’t have any but I had just caught a nice Mako. I cooked it really nice for her but she was a little more astute than I thought she would be. Needless to say, she questions everything now...
  8. Stainless45

    Stainless45 Active Member

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    Ditch the bow rails! I'm so glad the previous owner did this for me- one less job. The boat looks better, and well, don't go up forward if the weather is rough or you're wasted :D
  9. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    Lotta mako steaks available on LI. Try one, med rare. You might not go back to salmon or tuna
  10. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    In the morning when you put your snout into a bait field for net casting or jigging, its nice to have a nice clean platform to work from.
  11. Rich M.

    Rich M. Member

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    I like Thresher seared in a Black cast iron skillet a little spice rare. I think it is much tastier than Mako but everybodys taste is different
  12. bayoubud

    bayoubud Senior Member

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    I
    If you had to manually deploy an anchor or a sea anchor in rough seas you would not take the bow railing off.
  13. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    That is why I used the deck hatch over the owners bed. If his bed got wet, If was a bad day to go out.
    On smooth days, we went around the deck house.
    See, You can train owners...:rolleyes::rolleyes:

    Something I do not see anymore, A tall center line rail on the for deck.
  14. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    Common on pilot boats?
  15. rtrafford

    rtrafford Senior Member

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    When I rebuilt my Hatt53c, I built a pulpit for a plow and installed all chain rode and a windlass. Anchoring was never a problem, and no rail was never an issue. I'd often secure the bow lines to the spring cleats if solo as to not need to run all the way forward for docking, but I always knew I could go add rails if needed or wanted.

    In the course of selling the boat, honestly, the issue never once came up with any potential buyer. As well, any buyer knew that the cost of adding rails was nominal in the big scheme of things.
  16. rtrafford

    rtrafford Senior Member

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    If sloppy out, I typically would use the starboard side knowing the davit would be on my outboard as I went forward.
  17. Soulstice

    Soulstice Member

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    No doubt, I agree with that for bait casting so you don’t have to clear the rails. Probably why you see all the big southern sporties all built that way. Just need taller crew members :D
  18. bayoubud

    bayoubud Senior Member

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    We were tied up behind another sf boat in a tournament at night that was on a sea anchor. A really bad squall came blazing through, we had to reach out the bow hatch to cut the line. Our boat had a low profile bow rail which was useless while taking water over the bow. You never know when those rails might be necessary.
  19. Beau

    Beau Senior Member

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    Tied up behind? How were you tied - with a line traveling to their cockpit? Why couldn't they release? Just askin' Curious, why you would be tied that way unless you were visiting. They sure couldn't be fishing with you tied off their transom. Maybe I have the whole mental image incorrect.
  20. bayoubud

    bayoubud Senior Member

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    When we fished two-day overnight tournaments boats would tie up to a buddy's boats that had deployed a sea anchor. They would tie our line to their stern cleats with a bridle. In the squall the line was too tight to untie, so we cut it and they retrieved it, it was safer to separate the boats, the seas were 10 t0 12 ft. Sometimes there would be multiple boats daisy-chained. Kept you from rolling in the trough all night. We did not get on the other boat, just squared the gear, cleaned up, and cooked supper.