LadyInBed
Well-Known Member
Simple
I think DJE hits the jackpot with a blinding flash of common sense that is actually the obvious solution, hitherto overlooked!
I would have said let it out further - so the boom is short of the shrouds rather than the sail short of the spreaders. This alone could make all the difference.The main is all the way out (short of the spreaders)
The stopper not in my main sheet is always set so the boom stops before the rigging, if the sail is against the spreaders thats fine by me. Boom touching rigging I have always considered as bad, the boom touching the sail never been an issue...I would have said let it out further - so the boom is short of the shrouds rather than the sail short of the spreaders. This alone could make all the difference.
I say 'I would have said' because this is what I've always done, but I was recently on a course and the instructor said the sail shouldn't touch the rigging. Both the school boat and mine have fully battened main sails, if that makes any difference.
So does the forum have an opinion if the sail (fully battened or otherwise) should be allowed to touch the rigging or not?
There is a forumite on here who can testify this, jybing with running backstay''s and I did not release main sheet quick enough (I blame the beer the night before). I am not certain if I laughed when it happened, it was as controlled as such a maneuver can beHardening the main is def' not the the thing to do could be a bit hairy if the boat started to turn
The stopper not in my main sheet is always set so the boom stops before the rigging, if the sail is against the spreaders thats fine by me. Boom touching rigging I have always considered as bad, the boom touching the sail never been an issue...
There is a forumite on here who can testify this, jybing with running backstay''s and I did not release main sheet quick enough (I blame the beer the night before). I am not certain if I laughed when it happened, it was as controlled as such a maneuver can be.
I just can't think why anyone would want to use the Main when running.
Think Supermarket trolley - if you pull it from the front you have directional control, if you pull it from a stick near its middle it has a mind of its own.
At which end of your boat is the propeller?
I just can't think why anyone would want to use the Main when running.
I agree - if on a boat with a decent sized genoa, downwind under genoa only is fast and almost fail safe - self steering and no risk of a boom gybing.
(this is one of the big disadvantages of the current fashion for very small or worse self tacking jibs)
I would haul down on the vang to flatten the main and stop the boom lifting. You may need to attach the vang at the rail to properly pull down on the boom. Then gybe the headsail so it's blanketed by the main and drop/furl it. Then haul in the main as you turn onto the wind. Apparant wind will increase by your boat speed so be ready for that. Drop or reef main, turn back onto course.
The single handed isn't the issue, but sea room definitely is. You should be able to pole out the genoa, but use a spare sheet and fix the pole so that you can still sail upwind (with it sticking out sideways if necessary). I suggest that the pole needs a fore guy, after guy and up haul on it to be safe.Full sail, 25knot gusts over the deck singlehanded in a lightish 30ft boat is driving it very hard.
If you have traffic to windward and are afraid of rounding up, you can either drive it like a maniac until the wind drops, or reduce sail before the other boats get too close.
Round it up under control and get the main down, or a couple of reefs in.
It won't slow the boat that much.
IMHO any talk of poling the genny out while s/h is just wrong if you don't have much sea room.