Same Bay, similar results
Jim,I have tried sailing with a partially furled jib (Yankee), on a stiff July day on the Bay, and found it unsatisfactory. I played around briefly with this, but found it much less easy to control and less consistent than either using jib or staysail without the other.Your last question gets similar results from me:-- About 50% of the time I use all three sails on San Francisco Bay. In San Diego the number would have been 90% of the time.(I do have heavy and lighter cut sails for different conditions).-- When the wind gets above 20-25k, I find it comfortable to drop the staysail most of the time. Any higher wind speed, or in very rough water, I may furl the jib and keep the staysail. Either way I usually can maintain speed, but ease the heel and reduce or eliminate weather helm. That's probably 10-15% of the time, often in July.-- If I am leaving the dock and the wind is high, I start with a single reef and all three sails(another 10-15% of the time), and then furl the jib if it builds. In 25 knots plus that is my preferred setup: a single reefed main and staysail.-- On really lazy days (like this weekend) I may float around with main and furling jib, which allows minimum work and maximum lunch and relaxing. I'm then moving slow, but looking and feeling good.- - I am still learning, so some of the time drop the staysail on a downwind run,probably because I am still working out how to set that properly.(I didn't make 100%, but you get the idea.)I have a drifter in the bag which I have not learned how to use, as well as a staysail with reef points, but will get the big sail out while the wind is light. I'm told if it passes 10 knots bring it down.See you on the bay...Sanderss/v Good News Marina Bay