Page 219 - Barbara Merry "The Splicing Handbook"
P. 219

TWENTY-THREE
               Bow Puddings


               Bow puddings come in all shapes and sizes. The instructions below are for a 4 ×

               28-inch (100 × 710 mm) tapered, sausage-shaped fender, just right for the bow
               of your tender, skiff,  or  rowboat. On a tender, this “pudding” will protect the
               topsides of your larger boat when the tender’s bow comes against it; but on any
               boat, a bow fender will save its own bow from bumps and dings.
                  Making this small pudding is fairly simple. Manila rope is knotted around a
               core  of  bundled  polypropylene  rope  lengths,  and  eyes  for  attachment  are
               fashioned at each end. You can also add a third eye around the girth of the fender
               in the center to help keep it from sagging after you’ve attached it. Larger fenders
               are  often  more  elaborate.  On  tugboats  you’ll  sometimes  see  a  fluffy  blanket
               installed over the top of a large pudding to keep it warm. No, not really. It’s there
               to protect the pudding from chafe and to extend its life. The rope blanket, called

               a collision mat, is fastened to the fender and is covered with rope “whiskers,”
               properly called thrums. When these thrums wear down, they’re easily replaced,
               and the mat continues to protect the fender beneath it.


















                                               TOOLS & MATERIALS


                                       30 feet (9 m) of ½-inch (12 mm) manila
                                               19 feet (6 m) of small stuff,
                                                such as #21 tarred nylon
                                           32 feet (9.8 m) of ⅜-inch (9 mm)
                                      polypropylene, preferably brown or black
                                       ¼-inch (6 mm) manila (optional)—5 feet
                                       (1.5 m) for the third eye, 12 feet (3.7 m)
                                                 for a Turk’s Head knot
                                                        Vinyl tape
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