Changing fore sails

I've recently bought a larger overlapping genoa for my boat as an alternaive to the small self-tacking jib which was Hunters' standard fit. The idea is to use the self-tacker when single-handing and the genoa when I've a crew. My question is: how do you fold the sail you've taken down within the confines of the boat on a mooring or pontoon berth. Having always owned boats with roller-furling jibs I've only ever had to fold a sail after taking it down at the end of the season when the boat is already ashore and I can spread the sail out on the club lawn. There must obviously be an easy answer as people with hanked-on jibs must be doing it all the time.

you must heave toooo first though


Did you read the OPs question first
 
Thanks for all the suggestions. Flaking the sail along the side deck or onto a pontoon if available seem the best bets for me though both two-handed operations. If alone may have to be the random fold just stuffed into sailbag option.
 
Stuff it roughly in the bag any old how.
As a lad I was taught that this was the best way to treat sails - though terylene ones hadn't been invented then. I have the slowest boat on the east coast, and my sail-maker (James Lawrence) makes sails for working boats not high-performance machines (though many of them perform quite admirably). I do sometimes hanker after a more high performance rig, but the sails I have can take a fair amount of abuse. Mostly they live on the spars and I flake them reasonably carefully, especially at the end of the season. I was winding you up a bit... but it is nice to have a forgiving, no fuss configuration.
 
I tend to sheet the geneoa in hard then let the halyard go. If SH I have a down haul on the 2nd hank that I use in case the sail doest drop by itself.

The sail tneds to come down faily well flaked so by simply pulling the leech against the hanks, you get a decent flake. I then remove the sheets and fold up the sail.

When I get to the hanks, I tie the sail while still attached. I somtimes put the bag over too, then undoo the hanks nd simply fold them into the bag.

I find this works quite well most of the time and it leaves the sail ready to be put back up.

I use the same technique if changing at sea, on the way back up the river or in the marina.

I once used a pontoon, with my brand new genoa and it got a horid oil stain on it. Never again.
 
I tend to sheet the geneoa in hard then let the halyard go. If SH I have a down haul on the 2nd hank that I use in case the sail doest drop by itself.

The sail tneds to come down faily well flaked so by simply pulling the leech against the hanks, you get a decent flake. I then remove the sheets and fold up the sail.

When I get to the hanks, I tie the sail while still attached. I somtimes put the bag over too, then undoo the hanks nd simply fold them into the bag.

I find this works quite well most of the time and it leaves the sail ready to be put back up.

I use the same technique if changing at sea, on the way back up the river or in the marina.

I once used a pontoon, with my brand new genoa and it got a horid oil stain on it. Never again.

Exactly.
 
As it is basically a two0man operation, suggest you always leave the boat rigged for single-handed operation - with crew you can always change, but if you find time to sneak off to the boat on your own it will be ready for you.

Rob.
 
As it is basically a two0man operation, suggest you always leave the boat rigged for single-handed operation - with crew you can always change, but if you find time to sneak off to the boat on your own it will be ready for you.

Rob.

Excellent suggestion - that's what I'll do - thanks.
 
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