KellysEye
Well-Known Member
Here are mast climbing kit tests: http://www.pbo.co.uk/gear/7-mast-climbing-kits-on-test-49797


I had to drill holes for a new wind instrument. After 2 hours I was feeling a bit faint & drilled the holes wrong & had to drill one twice & rushed it.
Then had to come down a bit sharpish as I started to go giddy in the heat so could not finish it
When I got down my son said . " I thought you said this halyard was OK"
guess what I had been drilling? Fortunately I had not been able to finish the job due to feeling faint
View attachment 70744
Cost me £ 200-00 for a new b..dy halyard!!!! Made me feel faint all over again
Climbing masts doesn't need to be as difficult or complicated as people make out. Some good suggestions on this thread.
My own method is to use an external halyard, i.e. one that does not go inside the mast, as the primary means of ascent. One end is attached to my harness, and I pull on the other end to haul myself up. A second halyard, which can be an internal one, acts as a slack backup and SWMBO will take this up every so often and cleat it off, allowing me to have a rest. I generally have three stops before reaching the top.
To come down, the two halyards take the opposite role: the external one is given a few feet of slack and cleated off, and then SWMBO eases me down on the other halyard, stopping every time the first halyard pulls tight.
If one halyard were to fail, the furthest I would ever fall would be about six feet, which would be unpleasant but probably not fatal.
As others have said, do not trust bowlines or snap shackles. Use a figure 8 knot and/or spliced eyes and carabiners. Always use two separate halyards and eliminate single points of failure wherever possible.
Eee gads man! That's exciting... Did you have a backup line / fall arrester?
As my post stated - I only used one halyard.
I might normally have backed up with the topping lift but in the interests of windage & streamlining & changed this to a very thin line which would only carry the boom- not me.
I spoke to the local rigger & he said that he had done a similar thing when fitting a radar dome but always had 2 halyards when up the mast.
A couple of short Prusik loops with thick rope around the mast at thigh height can give you a few extra feet to stand up if you can get your feet in themI thought of the chain block because I happened to have one. Good point about reaching the masthead when sitting in the bosun’s chair, I will have to check the measurements. Thanks
I did this using my normal harness with a strop going around the foil, and a helper taking in the slack on two halyards. The actual climbing was done entirely by me, monkeying up the foil itself, and every time I wanted a rest I just asked him to make off the halyards. No winching involved.
I was surprised at how easy this was- possibly because of the angle involved. I wonder how much easier it would be with a sail bent on and furled?
Agree. And for a mast climb grippy trainers and gloves enable the climber to do most of the work. My other half can pull me up by hand using this method. Anyone with a gym membership will know those chin-up machines where one pegs in a weight which is deducted from your body weight. If one can do say 20 reps with 20kg off bodyweight, then with the assistance of one’s feet and knees it is possible to whizz up in stages between the spreaders. Good fun too![]()