Wintering with the mast up?

Quandary

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Coming south yesterday the tide turned and with lightish winds we diverted to Oban Marina on Kerrera, had a walk round and they already have quite a few boats ashore nearly all with the rig still in place, apparently, despite the windy location, this is their normal practice. Some still have sails on the forestay or boom as well but I presume most owners will deal with this. (They charge £120/metre ashore for up to six months which I presume includes the hull props and two rides in the travel hoist)
When our boat was being commissioned at Largs after delivery I slept on the boat ashore on the night after the 16m. mast was stepped, no boom or sails, just the bare spar; it was a summer 'gale', about force 7 for a few hours and the vibration inside the hull was enough to shake your teeth out, the boat was well secured on the shipping cradle but the wind on the rigidly supported keel stepped mast transmitted a lot of energy to the hull. Since then the mast has been extracted and stripped every winter and then endures a perilous return trolley journey from the yard across the road and the canal, then through a cunningly disguised gap in the boundary hedge (via a roller made from a foot of telegraph pole) to rest front up on trestles in the front garden. Craning it out and then in costs me £70 each way but since the clubs boat lift and storage is only a couple of hundred I am happy enough to pay that. (I go up and take the windex, aerials and transducers etc down myself, well, not myself! I sit in a bosuns chair while my wife winds the winch; amazing how much safer you feel at height over water than on land even though in either place it is the deck you would hit.)
I did store our old Sigma 38 ashore with the similar height mast up once for a couple of months but we took off the boom and eased the rig a few turns and it was on a lorry wheeled yard trolley which we deliberately did not jack it that year to let the tyres absorb some movement.

Surely continuous exposure to months of intermiitent vibration can not be good for the structure of a boat, particularly the keel joint, or am I just far too cautious?
 
leaving the mast up is a practice with which I could not be happy. Apart from the wobble factor, the danger of being hit by low-flying squadrons of geese is not to be ignored; similarly, lightning. Of the two....
 
My mast stays up when I'm ashore for the winter (£20/foot including lifts at Port Bannatyne) but luckily my spot in the yard is immediately to the east of a cliff higher than the mast, so I am perfectly sheltered from westerlies and buffered from easterlies.
 
My mast stays up all winter. How else would I go sailing?

Nice one.

If you are ashore though and get a chance to visit the marina in a good blow, that is anything over a 7, put your hand on the hull of the boat with a mast up, you will as Quandry has learned find the whole thing shaking and vibrating. If you have to live it up, take off as much as you can to reduce windage.
 
Mine is always up too, whether afloat or ashore, as are the majority of those in the compound. I don't worry as SR is twin keel, but the odd monopod has fallen over on the quay from time to time. But I've only been doing it for 28 years so I guess it could happen next time.
 
Our masts stay up all winter, but the yard is very sheltered, and yard rules demand a cradle, rather than shores. I am more than happy to comply. I do strip all unnecessary windage from the masts.
 
I don't think anybody gets their masts craned out for the winter here. I don't know that the yard even has the facilities if someone wanted to (there's no crane as such, but maybe something could be rigged using the travelift?). Quite a few leave their sails bent on, which seems like poor practice to me - there are a couple of boats which have been ashore apparently untouched for years, still with sails and other gear in place. Most boats are in cradles, but one of the "untouched" ones was on traditional props.

All that said, I used to take Kindred Spirit's mast down each winter for varnishing. We had a tabernacle so could raise and lower the rig independently.

Ariam has so far spent the winter laid up afloat, mast up and sails removed.

Pete
 
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