Abigail
Well-Known Member
This may never happen to other people, but we've had an interesting time this spring getting our rigging back on as a number of our messenger lines got shredded by mistral (or otherwise lost due to attention failures when taking the lines off). So - how do you get a halyard back on when it runs inside the mast?
We took a p[iece of the weighted line that you use inside net curtains and made a short plait. Inserted into the plait was a heavy, small nut. This must be small enough to go over your sheaves. The plait need not be more than six inches long. Attach your plait very securely with sewn through whipping twin to a good messenger line twice the height of your mast.
Climb mast. (If you have lost every heavy halyard/messenger, this is a seperate challenge!) Feed your weighted end over the sheave and into mast, gradually feeding it down again.
At the bottom, take a wire clothes hanger and bend into a hook. Tape the business end so it cannot snag. Use hook to pull out messenger through relevant slot in mast.
Attach halyard to other end of messenger and pull through mast. All the usual caveats about attaching these strongly (preferably sewn) apply, as discussed on another recent thread.
Sometimes it takes two goes to make sure the weighted end drops properly through obstructions, but it gets there in the end.
Wehave to thank Zigmundo Van Dog of this parish for suggesting (and indeed supplying!) the netting weights. We used a small nut, but a fishing sinker would do if you had one small enough. It works! All lines are now reinstated. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
We took a p[iece of the weighted line that you use inside net curtains and made a short plait. Inserted into the plait was a heavy, small nut. This must be small enough to go over your sheaves. The plait need not be more than six inches long. Attach your plait very securely with sewn through whipping twin to a good messenger line twice the height of your mast.
Climb mast. (If you have lost every heavy halyard/messenger, this is a seperate challenge!) Feed your weighted end over the sheave and into mast, gradually feeding it down again.
At the bottom, take a wire clothes hanger and bend into a hook. Tape the business end so it cannot snag. Use hook to pull out messenger through relevant slot in mast.
Attach halyard to other end of messenger and pull through mast. All the usual caveats about attaching these strongly (preferably sewn) apply, as discussed on another recent thread.
Sometimes it takes two goes to make sure the weighted end drops properly through obstructions, but it gets there in the end.
Wehave to thank Zigmundo Van Dog of this parish for suggesting (and indeed supplying!) the netting weights. We used a small nut, but a fishing sinker would do if you had one small enough. It works! All lines are now reinstated. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif