Stuck roller furling
A stuck roller furler is actually rare. As I have talked to other sailors now and in the past, I am the only one that I know of that this has happened to.A stuck roller furler with a big Genoa in high winds and seas while sailing shorthanded can be qite dangerous, I agree. But it wont be dangerous till you need to douse it. maybe you could adjust course and leave it up.If I just let it out a lot, it would just make some noise but would not have any real power to speak of. I dont thnk that I would drop the main only because the main would give you stability and power to steer. You really dont want to wallow around in rough seas without power. You will definately not be able to work at all. A severe heel is much better and more stable than bouncing every which way.When this happened, it was a nice day, about 12 knots of wind. Me at age 61, GF at age 66 and her future daughter in-law age 30 were on board. I felt 2 people up front would be more of a safety issue if we wrestled with the headsail on the foredeck. The 30 year old girl was steering with a nice beam reach which kept the sail off of the deck. I originally thought that the retreival line was jammed in the drum so I was up front comfortably unraveling retreival line one round turn at a time. GF was behind me helping to tail the line so it didnt get tangled or drop in the water. All of this was at a leisurely pace. Whe we got the retreival line completely unspooled and couldnt get it to work we had the 30 year old ( never steered a boat before)head up into the wind. I had her stop just short of completely flogging...man, could she ever hold a course. Then I proceded to roll up the jenny by turning the drum by hand. It was a lot easier than you would think. When it was secured, we headed back to the dock. If it came to a life and death situation I too would slash the jenny to death.I showed our ages and experience to give you a better idea of why and how I decided to do it. A 135 jenny on a 39 foot sailboat is a fairly large sail. Like I said earlier, trying to take it off on the foredeck was out of the question even on a nice day. Rich H: YOu may have figured out my problem. I will check it out tomorrow when its light out and hopefully no wind. Tony BP.S. Benny, this will be an interesting post. I already learned something from Rich. This kind of info could just safe someones life someday. I'm not saying that I picked the best option, its the only one that I could think of at the time.