Ed ...
Ed ...I use a chute singlehanded often in winds up to about 10 mph ... that is to say, on light air days. The trick I think is more about understand balancing the boat than about raising and lowering the sail.When I singlehand, I take a piece of cotton line (cotton has a bit of friction to it) and run it across the cockpit with a turn around the tiller, shock corded at both ends. This lets me set the tiller where I want. On a wheel boat, you can just lock the wheel. On my boat, you can then set her up on a reach, say 70-80 degrees, and she'll balance for several minutes at a time. On my boat, you need to be above 90 degrees to get her to balance. Once you're below 90, the waves catch the boat on the quarter and slew her around too much for a lashed tiller to work.You now have time to work the boat, getting everything rigged. Once I get the chute rigged to raise, I drop the jib, rebalance, and pop her up. Then I can fall off to whatever course I want and fill the chute (actually, mine will set at about 65 degrees). (Note ... I drop the jib first cause after the chute goes up, when I'm by myself there's just too much going on to get the jib down.)To lower, I again come up to above 90 degrees, get her balanced out, and use the flag technique described at the beginning of this thread to take the chute down.If later on I want to reset, when I'm by myself I have to heave to and go below and repack the chute into a turtle, which I don't like to do cause I'm down below too long and can't keep an eye out for drunks. So usually for me, at least on weekends, it's once a day. Which is why I'm thinking about a sock.All this is on a C27, and I'm not sure I could do all this on a boat of more than 30 feet or so. Disclaimers ... I grew up racing and am pretty quick around the foredeck, even at 56. It would be hard to do this wearing a lifeline, but I am ALWAYS wearing a lifejacket when I singlehand, and I'm sailing a lake, not coastal. And, I only do this in the right conditions ... winds below 10 and not enough waves to get bouncy. After that, there's enough wind I don't need the chute anymore, and I stay in the cockpit like a good boy.Tom MonroeCarlyle Lake