Slow_boat
Well-Known Member
My last boat (26ft) had everything at the mast. No problem to heave to, go to mast and get a reef in. Took about a minute.
When I got my new (well, 25 year old) 29 footer, it had slab reefing at the mast but halyard and topping lift in the cockpit. Fine if two handed but a pain for single handing. It didn't take much to lead it all, including kicking strap, back to clam cleats in the cockpit. Clam cleats are a lot cheapeer than clutches and perfectly good for reefing lines, which don't need adjustment; they're either on or off. Now I can reef in under a minute from the cockpit. I use 6mm line for tack and clew, which is plenty thick enough to handle when you consider there shouldn't be any strain on the sail when you reef. It's such a simple system there's little to go wrong.
I only tried in-mast reefing once, on a chartered cat in Turkey. It deposited all the bearings from the clew traveller overboard and left us with a lot more sail than we wanted.
When I got my new (well, 25 year old) 29 footer, it had slab reefing at the mast but halyard and topping lift in the cockpit. Fine if two handed but a pain for single handing. It didn't take much to lead it all, including kicking strap, back to clam cleats in the cockpit. Clam cleats are a lot cheapeer than clutches and perfectly good for reefing lines, which don't need adjustment; they're either on or off. Now I can reef in under a minute from the cockpit. I use 6mm line for tack and clew, which is plenty thick enough to handle when you consider there shouldn't be any strain on the sail when you reef. It's such a simple system there's little to go wrong.
I only tried in-mast reefing once, on a chartered cat in Turkey. It deposited all the bearings from the clew traveller overboard and left us with a lot more sail than we wanted.