Quandary
Well-Known Member
My boat came with a North mainsail with three reefs. The reefing intervals are enormous compared to anything I have had before. So far we have never used the second reef though we have not been out in steady wind much above F6 and the conditions that would require the third reef inshore in a UK summer (F8 or 9+?)are so unlikely that we have never bothered to reeve the line for it. I was having the sail modified last winter and asked the sailmaker to put in a new first reef halfway to the existing one, he persuaded me instead to install a lens foot to make the outhaul more effective, he told me that flattening reefs were now old hat and booms tend to be higher now. Certainly I feel happier looking up at the boom than seeing it at knee level. Looking around it seems that a lot of recent cruising boats now have these very high reefing cringles
His explanation of the very big reefs were that unless the boat carried a trysail it was now required that the sail area can be reduced by a stated percentage. I think that this may have related to getting a CE cert or it may have something to do with one of the rating systems.
Does anyone know what the score is here? I suspect that if it was more widely understood that it would be better to buy a trysail than have these distorted mainsails, or at least the issue of reef placement should be discussed when taking an order for a sail.
His explanation of the very big reefs were that unless the boat carried a trysail it was now required that the sail area can be reduced by a stated percentage. I think that this may have related to getting a CE cert or it may have something to do with one of the rating systems.
Does anyone know what the score is here? I suspect that if it was more widely understood that it would be better to buy a trysail than have these distorted mainsails, or at least the issue of reef placement should be discussed when taking an order for a sail.