nigelmercier
RIP
- Joined
- 20 Jun 2007
- Messages
- 16,234
- Location
- Live in Kent, boat in Canary Islands
I recently bought a MastaClimba from Graham Wright on this forum. Being nervous of heights, I wanted to try it in a stable environment, so I visited his stand at SIBS: stand J40, facing the Kelvin Hughes stand.
Graham is a charming gentleman, and helped me into a Boatswain's Chair fitted to a halyard, then explained what to do. Pretty simple really: you hold the mast, stand up on his very sturdy device (fitted over a fixed 12mm line), the crew takes up the slack on the chair halyard, sit down in the chair and slide the device up. Repeat.
I was up the top of the truncated mast in no time, my 18m mast would be a doddle. I felt very safe, and I have been known to get dizzy on a thick-pile carpet
The MastaClimba is very well made, perhaps even a little over-engineered - but this is very a good thing to know at the top of a mast.
http://www.mastaclimba.com/
Graham is a charming gentleman, and helped me into a Boatswain's Chair fitted to a halyard, then explained what to do. Pretty simple really: you hold the mast, stand up on his very sturdy device (fitted over a fixed 12mm line), the crew takes up the slack on the chair halyard, sit down in the chair and slide the device up. Repeat.
I was up the top of the truncated mast in no time, my 18m mast would be a doddle. I felt very safe, and I have been known to get dizzy on a thick-pile carpet
The MastaClimba is very well made, perhaps even a little over-engineered - but this is very a good thing to know at the top of a mast.
http://www.mastaclimba.com/
Last edited: