jac
Well-Known Member
Reading in this months YM about a guy who commuted from his boat to work over a summer.
One of the incidents he recounts involves losing the main halyard up his mast.
His solution was to go alongside an unattended yacht, be hauled up their mast by his girlfriend, haul his own mast across and retrieve his halyard.
I have to say, I would not be impressed.
No damage so all's well that ends well but there must be better ways to retrieve the halyard that don't end up prevailing on someone else's space and risking damage to someone's boat.
Imaging turning up and finding your own main halyard snapped, blood stains on the deck and some interesting questions from your insurance company.
One of the incidents he recounts involves losing the main halyard up his mast.
His solution was to go alongside an unattended yacht, be hauled up their mast by his girlfriend, haul his own mast across and retrieve his halyard.
I have to say, I would not be impressed.
No damage so all's well that ends well but there must be better ways to retrieve the halyard that don't end up prevailing on someone else's space and risking damage to someone's boat.
Imaging turning up and finding your own main halyard snapped, blood stains on the deck and some interesting questions from your insurance company.