Greenheart
Well-Known Member
I didn't notice my walk had been a downwind mile across the park, till I headed back against it. Or perhaps it rose from force 3 to force 5 at that moment?
Either way, I was reminded that an hour sailing 'downhill' in a fresh breeze leaves a sailor smiling contentedly; but beating against it to cover the same distance towards a destination, is hard, slow work.
All the boats I like best are modest, comfortable, accommodating cruisers and most have average reputations for the inevitable upwind work they'll have to do.
I really hate to hear an engine running on a sailboat, so I ought to dream about fin keelers; but their parking requirements eliminate them. So what's left? Bilge keels, lifting keels and multihulls. Few of which are highly-rated for sailing upwind. Westerly Fulmar with B/K? Is there anything else?
I'd be fascinated to read forumites' honest estimates of their boats' tacking angles and leeway in, let's say, open sea conditions, force 5...
...at the point where things start to feel genuinely boisterous. Please describe your rig and keel type, too. And the builder, if possible. :encouragement:
Either way, I was reminded that an hour sailing 'downhill' in a fresh breeze leaves a sailor smiling contentedly; but beating against it to cover the same distance towards a destination, is hard, slow work.
All the boats I like best are modest, comfortable, accommodating cruisers and most have average reputations for the inevitable upwind work they'll have to do.
I really hate to hear an engine running on a sailboat, so I ought to dream about fin keelers; but their parking requirements eliminate them. So what's left? Bilge keels, lifting keels and multihulls. Few of which are highly-rated for sailing upwind. Westerly Fulmar with B/K? Is there anything else?
I'd be fascinated to read forumites' honest estimates of their boats' tacking angles and leeway in, let's say, open sea conditions, force 5...
...at the point where things start to feel genuinely boisterous. Please describe your rig and keel type, too. And the builder, if possible. :encouragement: