westhinder
Well-Known Member
I am 71. I see myself as a reasonably fit 71, not overweight, gym twice a week, dont smoke , maybe drink a bit too much. And I am beginning to wonder if my boat isnt too much for me despite Knox Johnson circumnavigating in a 60?? footer at a similar age.
My boat is a Starlight 35, a medium displacement masthead rigged Bowman built sloop. Yesterday I sailed her single handed across the Bristol channel and back. Beam reaching in 20kn of wind I found it hard going winching the genoa in despite Lewmar 44s, decent winch handles and the genoa being reefed to no 1. The boat was over pressed a bit, but I didnt fancy my chances of reefing the main which is not led aft - my balance isnt that good as a visit to my wife's yoga class showed. Clambering around the decks to anchor for lunch wasnt that easy and neither was picking up the pontoons in the locks. No longer do I move about like a mountain goat!
All in all, it was hard work and not the fun it used to be when I started 30 years ago. Nothing specific that I simply cannot do, just lots of things that arent that easy any longer. Sure the boat was pressed doing hull speed plus a bit but you cannot always predict and sail in easy conditions. Indeed yesterday showed that . 20kn from the north when the forecast was 4kn from the south.
I am sure that I am not alone so I wondered what other people have done to address these sorts of issues. Maybe some will have mechanised - electric winches for example. Others will have sold up. Some will have downsized. Maybe a few will simply have worked harder at the gym, my least favoured option.
So if you too are an old phrrt, what have you done in response to age to make sailing fun again. And to fend off the transition to cruising by campervan :ambivalence:
Birdseye, I obviously can't judge what you feel confident with, but is it not possible to rig the reefing system so that it all comes back to the cockpit? In my 39 the halyard and separate reefing lines for luff and leech for all three reefs are brought back to the cockpit. As far as I can see the only addition is a small ring on the mast to guide the third reef luff line. Not having to leave the cockpit means you will take in or shake out a reef as is needed, and will seriously add to the quality of life aboard