Greenheart
Well-Known Member
In today's light airs, I sailed a friend's Mirror dinghy. Must be the latest in the year I've ever sailed, north of the equator. She was taking the boat home for the winter and I begged an hour or two's sail on account of the weather. Nice day.
It set me thinking again about which dinghy I want next year. And, about just how much sail a singlehander can manage, in terms of hiking/trapezing to counter the heel of a sporty rig in a breeze. Sportier than a Mirror, anyway!
Even though the little gunter didn't give me any exercise today, I did start to wonder if there's any good reason why the simplest method of water ballasting, isn't more popular. In fact, I don't think I've ever seen or heard or read of the idea...
If one bought a couple of sturdy plastic 20 litre jerrycans...and tied each to a strong central point like the centreboard case, using a cord of a length equal to just over half the overall beam...the filled cans may sit securely on either side of the centreboard, until a tough beat makes the helm wish he was a few stones heavier...at which point, luff for a moment, reach for the first jerrycan and hang it over the windward gunwale!
It'd probably want secure snap shackles on each side-deck, to prevent the cans roaming destructively round the cockpit during an unforeseen broach. And maybe a bit of aluminium sheet so the cord or wire doesn't cut a groove in the side-decks.
But assuming one is prepared to persevere, is it really any less practical than a sliding seat? They look precarious, but reward practise.
And wouldn't it be a fine thing, to be able to gain three or six stone at a moment's notice, then jettison the weight for downwind legs?
And if the boat does roll over, the 'ballast' will become neutral once it's in the water. And at least it'd be cheap.
It set me thinking again about which dinghy I want next year. And, about just how much sail a singlehander can manage, in terms of hiking/trapezing to counter the heel of a sporty rig in a breeze. Sportier than a Mirror, anyway!
Even though the little gunter didn't give me any exercise today, I did start to wonder if there's any good reason why the simplest method of water ballasting, isn't more popular. In fact, I don't think I've ever seen or heard or read of the idea...
If one bought a couple of sturdy plastic 20 litre jerrycans...and tied each to a strong central point like the centreboard case, using a cord of a length equal to just over half the overall beam...the filled cans may sit securely on either side of the centreboard, until a tough beat makes the helm wish he was a few stones heavier...at which point, luff for a moment, reach for the first jerrycan and hang it over the windward gunwale!
It'd probably want secure snap shackles on each side-deck, to prevent the cans roaming destructively round the cockpit during an unforeseen broach. And maybe a bit of aluminium sheet so the cord or wire doesn't cut a groove in the side-decks.
But assuming one is prepared to persevere, is it really any less practical than a sliding seat? They look precarious, but reward practise.
And wouldn't it be a fine thing, to be able to gain three or six stone at a moment's notice, then jettison the weight for downwind legs?
And if the boat does roll over, the 'ballast' will become neutral once it's in the water. And at least it'd be cheap.
Last edited: