Puffin10032
Well-Known Member
I’ve always used the term ‘fetch’ to refer to how much room there is from land to allow the wind to build up waves. Eg. Close inshore to a windward shore there’s no ‘fetch’ and the sea is calm (unless there’s an underlying swell coming from another direction). Conversely in an easterly gale the east coast can be very rough inshore as there is a long fetch allowing the sea state to build.
However, I understood perfectly what someone went when they said they’d had a close fetch from a certain port. I think it’s a valid alternative use but what do I know…
In addition to that we often use the word in racing to signify being able to reach a mark to windward without tacking . A close fetch then becomes having the boat just about close-hauled although the division between a close fetch and a close reach is probably a matter of personal taste. We'll often use it in the context of "can we hold the spinnaker on a tight reach and still fetch/make the mark"? It seem to be a bit of a Swiss Army Knife of a word and it wouldn't surprise me at all if it's usage varied from region to region.
There is of course the the more mainstream dog-retrieving-stick usage of the word too...

