MagicalArmchair
Well-Known Member
I have sailed Triola (30 foot Albin Ballad, fin and skeg keel) with a tiller for the 13 years I had owned her before I purchased Mirage (40 foot Bavaria, bulb keeled) at the end of last year and launched her just before the world went mad in March (note, no sailing or boat handling done since I have owned her). I had intended to get a local training bod on board to school me in handling the boat (much as that wounded my pride - with Triola I bumped into stuff until I got the hang of it) so I could practise going in and out of various berths in various conditions. A few questions:
She has midships cleats, and I have some pretty awesome mooring devices to help single handed mooring, in much the way I did with Triola.
- Social distancing, presumably, gives me a good excuse not to get a trainer on board? Or can this kind of professional activity still go ahead with PPE?
- On Triola, with a tiller, I could handle her in any situation. I knew, going backwards, if I pointed the tiller to stbd, the bow would, eventually, go to stbd. This mind 'trick' revolutionised my handling of the boat, as daft as that seems. Are there any tricks you use when on the wheel of you boat that help you out? It feels very strange, especially when going astern! A bit like driving a car with the controls reversed...
She has midships cleats, and I have some pretty awesome mooring devices to help single handed mooring, in much the way I did with Triola.