Seajet
...
Right on until horrible rollers jam or otherwise screw up ! Scandalising will always be a good thing in a handy sailors' arsenal.
In the dinghy, we quite often heave to between races.That is an advantage of furling sails. All you need to do is keep on rolling to achieve the desired effect. Pretty much makes scandalising redundant. It's still worth experimenting sailing with a backed headsail though. It can be a useful trick for pottering about.
Heaving to is a bit different from scandalising though, where one deliberately ' cocks up ' ( where the term comes from ) the boom so as to at least partly destroy the drive from the main.
Entirely different technique, similar aim of slowing the boat.
Scandalising suffers like poling out genoas. There is a certain sort of Yotinstructors who are obsessively enthusiastic about it.
fisherman,
one of the best sailing experiences of my life was crewing on a Falmouth Working Boat while racing, my sort of racing - ' hand out the pasties & beer ' !
Do they still go for Oysters then, I know it was part of the deal - under sail - but rather got the impression the boats belong to rich guys now; or is it a case of ' go out under reduced rig once in winter so as to qualify ' ?
As far as I'm concerned scandalising is any means you see fit of reducing the drive in your sails be it dipping the peak on a gaffer, lifting the boom, tricing the tack or easing the halyard.I'm not sure about scandalising a foresail, at least a loose footed one.
I suspect scandalising a Bermudan main works as it does because the foot is kept under control by the boom.
Not sure that what gaffers etc do is quite the same thing at all?
Perhaps the instructors thing is a separate thread, people who are always looking to try their favourite technique.
One I met was very keen to elaborately pole out the genoa to run dead down wind, good thing to do mid atlantic, bit iffy mid solent when there are about 25 boats you need to give way to.
As far as I'm concerned scandalising is any means you see fit of reducing the drive in your sails be it dipping the peak on a gaffer, lifting the boom, tricing the tack or easing the halyard.
+1, but heaving to is heaving to !![]()