Scott, I fully agree with that statement, but ....
it pays to distinguish between different points of sail in heavy weather, namely: running, reaching or beating.When running off heavier vessels, particularly full-keeled ones (which the Catalina is not, of course) are hard to beat in terms of stability against yawing and pitching (if the weight is properly distributed). Their initial resistance against rolling depends largely on beam width and ballast depth and is not necessarily all that great in the classical narrow-beamed, shallow ballast vessels.When trying to sail on a beam reach in heavy weather (something to avoid unless you are trying to reach a particular destination) both lighter and heavier vessels do have their own sets of problems and advantages and it becomes a matter of preference, IMHO.However, when you need to beat into wind and waves in heavy weather you will find very few experienced sailors who consider greater weight an advantage. Sure, the heavier vessel will pierce the waves more efficiently but the same inertia that keeps it going into the wave also prevents it from accelerating rapidly within the few seconds it can do so between waves. Plus for the same hull shape greater weight will mean greater wetted area and more drag.Full-keeled heavier vessels basically don't go to wind very well. Hence the old adage "Gentlemen don't sail to weather", which certainly does not seem to apply to the gentlemen on this board who sail B