oldmanofthehills
Well-Known Member
This is probably only half true. Many boats, particularly lighter boats, will get pushed around so much by flogging sails that they must either be used or doused.
My other theory is that so long as you have thrown the MOB something that floats (and hopefully they are dressed for the water temperature), it is better to take an extra 1-3 minutes to square everything away and get it right on the FIRST pass. It will be faster than the frantic 3-4 passes we so often read about. Stay close and take the time it takes... working with a purpose! But no sloppy mistakes or flogging sails. How long does it take to furl a jib and drop a main (but not put it away)? It wouldn't take me 2 minutes working alone.
The problem isnt the time it takes to pickup the casualty, its that if you ever lose sight of the casualty in bad weather or night you will never find them again. Probably not an issue for the OP chartering in the Med but my thoughts are UK shite weather thoughts as how do you fall overboard in calm?
I can probably furl the genoa quickly but short handed my focus must be on the victim and steering. Letting go the jib sheets probably good enough until I am on approach the casualty. Simply fully dropping main would ruin my forward vision but could just slacken the halliard