stevie69p
Well-Known Member
Ok first off to all ye old salts who have no doubt done this, but today was my first time out single handing since buying new (to me) boat (MG Spring), and after initially motoring out of the marina and down the river channel I thought happy days, it's going to be a nice beam / broad reach to Holy Loch... which it was. Relaxing, lazy sailing in winds of 15 to 20 knots.
So on reaching Holy Loch, I sailed up towards the head of the loch and tacked round thinking I would harden up with the Genoa, and hoist the main. Well harden up indeed I did, and the boat felt fine, helm felt neutral, even a wee tiny touch of weather helm... stuck on the autohelm and it coped fine too. I thought to myself " well this is quite nice, I'm doing 4.5 to 5 knots SOG and only 10 degrees of heel" rather than the usual 25 degrees... Sailed the whole way back just as an experiment; reckon she was tacking through 100 degrees. Literally walked away from a Hunter Pilot 27 who were struggling with reefed main and Genoa...
Now... we recently tried Genoa only in similar winds on a weeks cruise, but she wouldn't point, but I now reckon that was because we had a couple of rolls furled away, and what's needed is that big, sweeping overlap to provide power slightly aft of the mast, and b) a decent sail shape.
Thoughts from others appreciated!
So on reaching Holy Loch, I sailed up towards the head of the loch and tacked round thinking I would harden up with the Genoa, and hoist the main. Well harden up indeed I did, and the boat felt fine, helm felt neutral, even a wee tiny touch of weather helm... stuck on the autohelm and it coped fine too. I thought to myself " well this is quite nice, I'm doing 4.5 to 5 knots SOG and only 10 degrees of heel" rather than the usual 25 degrees... Sailed the whole way back just as an experiment; reckon she was tacking through 100 degrees. Literally walked away from a Hunter Pilot 27 who were struggling with reefed main and Genoa...
Now... we recently tried Genoa only in similar winds on a weeks cruise, but she wouldn't point, but I now reckon that was because we had a couple of rolls furled away, and what's needed is that big, sweeping overlap to provide power slightly aft of the mast, and b) a decent sail shape.
Thoughts from others appreciated!
Last edited: