Dave,Dennis
. Once I heard a wise sailor which I will never forget say " if you respect the water, the water will respect you; otherwise you will die. ".
Yes dieing takes all the fun out of it; spoils it for everyone.
Dave,Dennis
. Once I heard a wise sailor which I will never forget say " if you respect the water, the water will respect you; otherwise you will die. ".
Really you have to have crew or an autopilot and understand their limitations. Always be prepared to "hang on". I was very cautious to not let out much jib to begin with as it is tough to furl in high wind without letting it luff which this new heavy 110 jib is powerful and wants to shake the whole front end off the boat. Because the jib was sized right I can heave-to while reefing or striking the main. Get too much sail out in these conditions and you'll be trying to wrangle it with the boat on it's side and flogging canvas. Waiting too late to reef makes it difficult to dangerous. Actually on this day I left the dock with the reef already in the main.Thanks for the video. I was in a similar wind last weekend-white caps, 1-2 foot waves on inland lake. This is my first sailboat, first summer, so Im still pretty much a newb. I tried going into the wind with just the jib, but she was so unbalanced I could barely make any headway upwind. Just kept going perpendicular pretty much. I didnt try reefing the jib, which I should have tried. Ive got a roller setup.
As for using the main in such winds- I did it once about a month ago. Yes, it was reefed, and a challenge. But it was a huge chore reefing the sail in such winds, and then later trying to get it down and securely tied up when I was done. In such winds, I found it pretty hard to even keep the boat in a straight line into the wind while it was being reefed or secured.
Any tips for reefing and taking down the main in a good wind?
Same here. We heave to under the jib to reef the main, and we heave to under the main to hank on a different headsail.Because the jib was sized right I can heave-to while reefing or striking the main.
Dennis
Please understand, I meant no offense. I was hoping to convey those words as mine by including them in the square brackets within the quote. I was just attempting to add a finer point to your quote merely to emphasize that the author of the post (from last year I believe) was proposing a feat far outside the design limits of the H23.5. You, kind sir, are always the polite gentleman and I will strike that remark immediately and beg forgiveness.Further I never refer to any boat as a damn boat.