scottie
Well-Known Member
Does hogging the helm end up single handing ?
Does hogging the helm end up single handing ?
It's very easy, you just want to know you want to do it.How to start single handing
And, if you can find them, a series of reprints of John Goode's excellent articles in PBO on handing under sail and power. (Brilliantly illustrated by Dick Everritt)It's very easy, you just want to know you want to do it.
I recommend getting Duncan Wells book Stress Free Sailing and look at his suggestions and go sailing.
Sorry, but I disagree. It is like having a crew member onboard.I'm sorry to disagree but an autopilot is not, and should not be, essential.
Yes , they are very useful and a great convenience but I still say an autopilot is not, and should not be, essential.Sorry, but I disagree. It is like having a crew member onboard.
It entirely depends on the boat. Many modern designs won't hold a course without a hand at the helm; my not-so-modern 1989 Moody certainly won't. And if I can't hold a course without a hand at the tiller, I can't set sail, as the mainsail can only be set with the boat reliably head to wind; if not head to wind, the battens catch in the lower shrouds, and the friction on the mast sliders increases enormously, despite being lubricated. I doubt whether lashing the tiller would work RELIABLY - the helm loads very quickly as she heels in a gust, and she'd round up without active control of the tiller.I'm sorry to disagree but an autopilot is not, and should not be, essential.
For a novice singlehander, I still disagree. Most fin and spade rudder designs do not stay on track like a long keel boat and as most people now sail lighter displacement yachts that almost never stay on track without a hand on the tiller (a wheel can be locked), but we do not know what type of boat the OP is sailing. I have an over sized autopilot and tiller tamer as well. My Fulmar will stay on track for up to a minute without an autopilot - provided the sails are correctly trimmed, certainly not long enough to carry out many things like reef or fit fenders and warps. A good autopilot is like having an extra crew member. As I sail singlehanded most of the time, I am talking from experience.Yes , they are very useful and a great convenience but I still say an autopilot is not, and should not be, essential.
You could buy one of Tom Cunliffe's excellent sailing manuals.And, if you can find them, a series of reprints of John Goode's excellent articles in PBO on handing under sail and power. (Brilliantly illustrated by Dick Everritt)