Norman_E
Well-Known Member
My lazyjacks always used to give me a problem when raising the mainsail. The reason was that with they are attached either side of the mast, so that it was necessary to raise the sail through a narrow slot between them, with the result that if the wind shifted at all or the helmsman did not keep the boat absolutely dead on a head to wind course the batten ends would get caught in the lazyjacks. On my recent cruise I had an idea to fix the problem.
I made up two pieces of thin rope with a snap link on one end and a bowline with long loop on the other. Hauled up the mast on the bosuns chair by two helpful sailors from another yacht I passed the bowline loop round a shroud and pulled the whole cord through the loop. The stainless snap link then went around the lazyjack above the top junction. Done on both sides the result was to pull the top of the lazyjacks three feet apart at a level about one metre above the first spreaders. Problem solved. It is now very easy to get the main up without entangling it with the lazyjacks, and as a bonus the sailbag is held wider open, which assists the sail in getting into it when dropped.
Why did it take me so long to think of it, or are there any known snags to this idea?
I made up two pieces of thin rope with a snap link on one end and a bowline with long loop on the other. Hauled up the mast on the bosuns chair by two helpful sailors from another yacht I passed the bowline loop round a shroud and pulled the whole cord through the loop. The stainless snap link then went around the lazyjack above the top junction. Done on both sides the result was to pull the top of the lazyjacks three feet apart at a level about one metre above the first spreaders. Problem solved. It is now very easy to get the main up without entangling it with the lazyjacks, and as a bonus the sailbag is held wider open, which assists the sail in getting into it when dropped.
Why did it take me so long to think of it, or are there any known snags to this idea?