capnsensible
Well-Known Member
Agree with all that too. Especially MOB under sail.
Beats working for a living!!
Beats working for a living!!
@neil In the real world, ie cruising not racing, there would be few times when you would have to gybe from a beam reach... In most circumstances I would gradually bear away until onto a very broad reach (or shy run) then sheet in as you describe.
As for gybing in strong winds, best advice is don't, unless you have toThe only time I've found myself having to gybe in 30+ knots and a couple metre seas we didn't
Instead we hardened up, tacked and bore away again. In those seas it was far easier to control as the boat wasn't rolling or surfing during the manoeuver. There were only two of us on board and we were cruising, not racing, so had time to maker a longer winded safer manoeuver.
In a fully crewed race boat with a big wide cockpit, gybing can be done a lot easier and quicker, and speed is a priority (sometimes above the boat and it's fittings).
"Preventer" - is that the useless bloke I have sitting on the boom going downwind?
to those that spoke of tacking round, in an early post on this thread I spoke of wearing round when short handed rather than gybing, I think this is technically the correct expression ;-) for this manouvre!
I regret, sir, to correct you but wearing ship is synonymous with gybing. With a square rigged vessel tacking was fraught with risk and wearing ship was often chosen as preferable despite the loss of ground to windward.
you'd better fix this then!
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/wear+round
Verb 1. wear round - turn into the wind;
you'd better fix this then!
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/wear+round
Verb 1. wear round - turn into the wind;
Francis Liardet: Professional Recollections on Points of Seamanship, Discipline, &c., 1849.
Wearing ship.
This evolution generally takes place from three causes; first, when you have not sufficiently of wind to tack, the ship will generally wear. Secondly, you are obliged to wear when it blows too hard to tack; and thirdly, you must wear when the ship will not come round against the sea on the weather bow. Many good officers wear their ships instead of tacking, when they have plenty of sea-room, and the nature of the Service will admit. By this means you save your ropes and sails, and endanger your spars less.
Best they do....I was always taught that wearing is to Gybe and google mostly agrees
http://www.seatalk.info/cgi-bin/nau...gi?db=db&view_records=1&uid=default&Term=wear
Wearing ship was basically a square rigger tactic, when they couldn't be persuaded to tack they had to bear away and gybe round; that in itself explains the poor progress to windward and becoming wrecked on lee shores one sees so much evidence of in old photo's etc, one could point quite well but lose a tremendous amount of ground doing that !
As for gybing yachts, I certainly didn't mean 'do it just this way' but to use judgement and choose how to suit conditions, boat and crew, I'd hoped that came across but apologies if it didn't.
Sounds as if wearing is gybing instead of tacking, so it maybe also applies to tacking instead of gybing ie doing the long but safer way round to get to the desired point of sail? Perhaps derived from wearing the crew out to get the boat round?
Give in ye wee nyaff - ye'r wrang!