Just to pile on. Your not scared until you think you're being knocked down! While sailing my 260 in the Back Bay of Biloxi with all the canvas up, was pinching the point a bit one day because we were on the leeward side of the channel (cuz in Mississippi you tack by depth meter) and I didn't want to have to tack an extra time,. and thought I could squeeze by the marker where the channel turned downwind. Made the marker, sailed out a couple hundred feet then fell off the wind. Holding the boat on a very close hold made me misjudge the wind. No sooner than we had gone into a beam reach then a stiff gust came across Keesler's runway and heeled us WAY over. I immediately dumped the main thinking that would bring us more upright, but the gust just kept right on blowing us over. The admiral's glasses went skittering across the cockpit and into the drink. Good thing the two other adults in the boat were on the windward side. So, I turned the boat into irons and rolled in the jib. Lesson learned, when it's gusty, don't keep all your canvas up. Reef early and often. As Crazy Dave pointed out, you go just as fast flat as you do heeled over at 45 degrees (which is no fun in a Hunter 260). Also, practice these situations over and over in your head. I reacted automatically and probably saved a few moments of panic since I corrected the situation before anybody know how much on the edge we were. OBTW...I didn't drop the boom in the water, even with it all the way out. A few years ago, the admiral would have made me walk the plank on the spot, but there's a video out there of some guys trying to get a Hunter 260 knocked down and all it did was round up into the wind. Still....I still looking for that missing seat cushion.