It's been a while since I've posted anything of interest on this forum since I brought up my Gin Pole topic. With spring just around the corner I'm sure everyone is making plans on getting their boats ready or maybe a new modification is in the planning. Last year I made up my mind that I was going to try to improve my mast raising rig, particularly the temporary mast stabilizers, or baby stays. If I didn't have a CDI Roller Furler I would fore go the pivot bridles and the baby stays, but the furler adds extra weight to the mast that could possibly throw the mast off balance during mast raising/lowering process which I always do by myself. I've been confounded for a long time on how to connect my stabilizer stays to my mast without having to go through a lot of extra work. The MacGregor 26 that my friend Walter owned had a bolt through the mast that held two tangs for the baby stays connection which is OK but I'm not keen on drilling a hole through my mast because I have internal halyards. I could make some kind of a crotch or yoke out of wood that could fit on my mast. Said yoke could have two eye screws for attaching the temporary stays, plus a long bolt with a nut to tighten it up around my mast to hold it in place. My friend Wayne made up a rig such as this and it works great. I had designs on making one similar to his, and then it hit me. Why not use a length of rope around the mast in the form of a "Rolling Hitch"? One rope could do it, but two ropes would be better. The "Rolling hitch" that I'm going to show you is very different than the ones that are shown on the knot sites and most knot books, yet most power company lineman can tie this hitch and use it every day on the job. This hitch can be tied to wire, rope, Jib sheets, spars, and even a mast and it's ultra simple to tie. Take a length of 5/16" rope or braid line about 3.5 or 4' long and tie a Bowline at one end. You really don't need the bowline, but this is what I intend to use as an anchor point on my mast that will hold my baby stays, and it's easier for me to describe how to tie the hitch. Start by taking 5 or 6 clockwise wraps around the mast and while holding the turns in place, bring the rope down and under the bowline and back up over the wraps and tie two half hitches around the mast. That's it! You can grab that hitch and slide it up or down with your hands and put it anywhere you like but if you add tension to that bowline, that hitch won't move. In fact, that hitch would hold your weight without slipping. So with this anchor point on my mast I needed something to attach the baby stays to and I've decided to use a short piece of rope in the form of a noose that will go around the mast and connect to the bowline at the bottom of the "Rolling Hitch." I took some small pieces of clear hose and threaded it into the noose, along with two welded stainless steel rings which will be used to connect my baby stays from the two pivot bridles. Once I get the noose set up around my mast with the rings in between the hoses where I want them, I'll probably seize the rings to the noose. Any of you people who own O'Day 25s or 26s that have triangular plates on their stays for the boom bridle attachment, can probably add more stability for their masts by making up an extra set of bridles or baby stays and attaching them to the plates and the mast. I must admit to you that I haven't really tried this yet on my mast but I know that it will work. This is what I intend to use. One other important thing bares mentioning here. When you attach the rope from the noose to the bowline of the "Rolling Hitch", you should use a "Round Turn" and two "Half Hitches" so that you can untie it easier. Also, the "Rolling Hitch" can be slid down under load. So that's it! Please feel free to improve on it if you like and let us know what you came up with.
Ahoy!
Joe
Ahoy!
Joe
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