P
Phil Ward
July Fourth, my wife, middle daughter and I were sailing Water Lily, our 2002 H260 in winds a little less than 15 knots. We were traveling at hull speed on a broadreach with the wind coming over the port side of the stern, when the jib stay separated from the mast. My wife left the cockpit to retrieve the furler/jib from the water. Not thinking clearly, I had my daughter, who was at the helm, turn toward the wind and the mast came down over the top of the cockpit. There was enough wind in the sail that the mast dropped slowly with no apparent damage to the boat other than whatever failed in the mast and a slightly bent mast pin. The boom and mainsail was laid out to the starboard side of the boat flapping in the wind. The sails appeared to survive rather well. My daughter slightly bruised her hand, and I must have been hit on the shoulder, because I have a linear bruise consistent with the width of the steel cable on the shroud. We carefully motored to the dock and with the help of a Conservation Officer, with docked, trailered the boat, then used a gin pole to raise the mast to disconnect the boom and remove the mainsail. We retrieved the mast crutch, lowered the mast and placed the boat in our drydock space.If I had been thinking clearly, I would have moved the jib halyard to the bowsprit from its position to the side of the mast while the wind was still in the mainsail (which was apparently holding the mast up after the failure). Then we could have turned the boat into the wind to lower the mainsail. We could have motored to the dock, trailered the boat and lowered the mast with the mast raising system. By the way, the one place you do not want to be when the mast comes down is in the sternrail seats. The ends of the spreaders stopped about six inched above the seats.I welcome questions, comments, etc.