Wooden Boat Fittings
Well-Known Member
Old-time gaffers could scandalise quickly by loosening the peak halyard and dropping the peak; and if loose-footed (like a Thames barge), haul on a 'topping lift' that would drag the clew up to the throat. Sprit rigs can use a tricing-line to brail up the whole rig against the mast. Norfolk wherries did this. So did my fifteen-footer Aileen Louisa --
'Falcon' Knight describes a "balance reef" for a gaffer, which consists of a diagonal row of reef points from the clew to the throat. You drop both peak and throat halyards, lash the gaff jaws to the boom jaws, make off the reef pendants, then hoist the peak back up so it comes nearly parallel to the mast, getting effectively a small trysail. (Not really scandalising I know, but interesting. Definitely not yotty, not even in Knight's day, and hardly anyone's heard of it now.)
Mike
'Falcon' Knight describes a "balance reef" for a gaffer, which consists of a diagonal row of reef points from the clew to the throat. You drop both peak and throat halyards, lash the gaff jaws to the boom jaws, make off the reef pendants, then hoist the peak back up so it comes nearly parallel to the mast, getting effectively a small trysail. (Not really scandalising I know, but interesting. Definitely not yotty, not even in Knight's day, and hardly anyone's heard of it now.)
Mike