Does your boat have its own spirit

pendlecats

Well-Known Member
Joined
29 Jan 2008
Messages
1,938
Location
North West England
Visit site
Sat in the sun wishing I was sailing I started reminiscing, when I was learning to sail I was convinced the boat had a spirit of its own, after all it was considerably older than me.

She would behave beautifully if she looked it on the water (which was most of the time), and I’m sure she once clipped me on the tip of my head with the boom when I tacked the wrong side of a buoy.

I am also convinced she saved herself once due to her crew’s inexperience (as I was the crew I won’t say incompetence).
We were coming in, to a short jetty under sail (the skipper always sailed in and away), I was given my instructions to hand the forward line to my uncle on the jetty, this I did as we passed by at walking pace, he duly tied the line round a post.

This is where I needed the experience, as no one had instructed me that the other end should have been attached to the boat, so now running out of time - as it doesn’t take long to walk to the wall at the end of the jetty - uncle hurriedly whips the line off the post and throws me the end, I duly grasped the line to immediately be aware there was a small lead weight attached to the end as it hit me square on the head.

A little dazed I tied the line to a cleat, as the crew had started this chain of erratic events they felt bad as the line went tight at the wrong moment for my uncle whose balance was compromised by 5 tonnes of moving boat ending up with him flat on the jetty with the line now free.

As there was now nothing to cease our momentum through the water I was at the stage of jumping ship and waiting for either the keel or the Bow to make first contact.

But the boat then stepped in and stopped us dead, with the sound of a crack and the sight of a glistening stainless object flying off into the water, she had looped the flagging jib sheet around a post and stopped herself as soon as the Carr had reached the end of the track and thrown away the end stop.

Skippers reaction was very mixed but sympathetic, the mention of yard arms and keel hauling were I’m sure only in jest. :rolleyes:

I know, not very eventful, I'm bored, however I’m sure to this day the boat had a spirit of its own and over the years took care of me as much as it chastised my mistakes.
 
Hey, pendlecats, I'm also bored so here is my story:

I bought my pre-owned catamaran last year and decided she needed a different name so I quickly renamed her, had her registered under that name and applied the name to the boat. No christening ceremony as my daughter wasn't around to perform her duties.

The boat needed some work done which was accomplished. Two months later I was ready to start my cruise and off I went. Unbeknown to me, Murphy of Murphy's law had joined me!

In the next six weeks

- one of two bolts securing the single rudder broke in half, the water pressure ripping the rudder out of its attachment, letting use drift slowly into the Rotterdam shipping lane in a Northerly force 6 and steep breaking 3m waves, thus requiring being towed in with some damage done by the rescue boat (but hey, I'm not complaining, was relieved to see them)
- a triple Easyblock on the mainsheet system broke when sailing, a second Easyblock one failed in port (have replaced both with a different brand!)
- my second reefing line broke and disappeared into the mast with 30kts over the deck at the time
- my bowsprit worked itself loose
- hydraulic oil in the hydraulic drive system disappeared.

The previous owner commented that I had had more breakages in six weeks than he had in 5 years of sailing this cat.

Then my daughter came and performed the official christening ceremony, with 1/4 bottle of champagne over the two bows, the rest for us!

And with that Murphy LEFT - without saying goodbye. but his stay on board was costly, I an asure you!

Has my boat got its own spirit?
 
I've named my current boat 'Freaky Friday' although you can still see the old name on the hull. I've given her a green coat of paint and we always go out for a sail on Friday afternoon with me whistling 'life on the ocean wave'. Haven't sunk yet. :D
 
Top