Mooring a boat is quite common on the New England coast. Over the years, I've kept my boats, multiple sailboats up to 34', and a Nordic Tug 34, on a marina mooring. It's important to know what the actually mooring is and the weight, be it a mushroom mooring (the standard), or a Dor-Mor, et al. Marinas, with liability, regularly inspect and maintain the moorings. A private mooring, not so much. The boat attachment is critical. You'll generally have a mooring ball with a galvanized steel hoop to attach the "pendant", the line or lines hitched to your boat's forward cleats. You'll want double poly/nylon pendants sized appropriately for your boat's weight, running through bow chocks (not the anchor roller, or bow pulpit), and attached to port and starboard cleats, with chaffing gear. With this setup, I've weathered multiple windstorms, up to 70 knots of sustained wind, plus one Cat 1 hurricane. Attached is my Nordic Tug 34, riding out a multi-day October 2006 windstorm, with sustained winds over 60 knots. The Hunter Legend 40 attached to my stern, broke loose from its mooring in front of me. As it came by, it's anchor put a small hole in the NT bow, scratched down the port side accent stripe, took out the rear salon window, and impaled itself in my transom. The marina staff ran out and attached the Hunter to my stern cleats for the duration of the storm. Combined weight on my 500 pound Dor-Mor, with two 1" poly/nylon pendants, attached to my Samson Post... 34,000 pounds. Also speaks to the build strength of the Nordic Tug.
Today, I'm prepping to launch my downsized 2022 Cutwater C24 in a quiet Rhode Island coast, up-river, marina slip.
View attachment 24980