Halyard Snare

Dec 30, 2013
56
ODAY 322 Portsmouth
So I've used this trick a couple of times and thought I'd pass it along

For whatever reason the halyard wanders up the mast, and a simple snare might help you get it back without a boson chair and willing climber.
Well, IF there is another available halyard handy.

Using my spinnaker halyard I make a simple snare (slipknot) with a large loop. Make sure the knot tightens when hauled up and closes the loop when pulled down.

Bend another line to the lower end of the knot, as a downhaul (I use the other end of the halyard) and raise the snare so the loop is near the wayward halyard. You might have to pull it aft around the spreaders for the mail halyard.

Using the downhaul, maneuver the snare to capture the halyard.
You might need to rock the boat to swing the end into the snare.

When you wriggle the loop over the halyard PULL the downhaul to snare the halyard. Now just pull the wayward halyard back down. It can be a bit of a game, but rewarding to win.

Of course it needs an available halyard running high enough to be the snare. But any halyard will do as long as it will go higher that the target. IF it works for you, you saved a climb.

Pat NH USA
Note Added a photo
 

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May 16, 2010
18
Northstar 22 Baltimore
This is a great idea. Right now I have a 18' telescoping golf ball retriever with a coat hanger hook on it for just that purpose. I'll probably still hang on to it for grabbing hats and other unintentional flotsam.
 
Dec 27, 2011
279
Oday 272 Pensacola
I tried joining 3 10' sections of PVC to pull my jib halyard on a roller-furler on my O'Day 272 - 30'+ mast. I thought PVC would be rigid enough to handle the vertical distance, but found it too limber. Wound up with the top 10' section hanging from halyard, and lower 20' disconnected. Wound up purchasing a 'Mast Climber' to retrieve both halyard and PVC.

Charles
 
Jan 6, 2010
1,520
I'll tell what I used onetime.

My mom has a 2 foot long aluminum GripCert. Its a device for those with physical ailments to allow picking up things on the ground or overhead without bending.

I taped it to a spare halyard with the "grip" end pointing up. The other end of the gripper has a trigger type handle. To this I attached a thin line to use for gripping & as a downhaul. I got the gripping end close to the shackle & pulled on the downhaul while keeping the spare halyard in the same position.

I kept the trigger lever closed while lowering the spare halyard. I did this with another person working the spare halyard. I now keep this on my boat, just in case.

CR
 
Jan 6, 2010
1,520
Speaking of Duct Tape, here are some statistics on tape used thus far:

Travel from the Earth to the Moon 5 times.

In 2001, the length of Duck Tape sold could…
Cross the United States from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon 489 times.
Cover the Appalachian Trail from start to finish 688 times.
Wrap around the Earth 50 times.
Run around the bases of a Major League ballpark 18,257,719 times.
Cross the Golden Gate Bridge 15,64,947 times.
Span the length of the Great Wall of China 889 times.
Run the length of the Eiffel tower from top to bottom 6,679,653 times.
Follow a boat up and down the Mississippi River more than 166 times.
Climb Mount Everest 226 times.

Go from Home Plate to the center of Yankee field 14,259,201.4 times. (for salutes)
Span the Nile 358.8 times
Reach from the bottom to the top of the Empire State Building 45,24,089.97 times


CR
 
Oct 9, 2008
1,742
Bristol 29.9 Dana Point
Mousetrap, tied horizontally with thin cord, which is tied to the auxiliary halyard. Haul up, pull the halyard towards the stuck halyard, and bounce the trigger off the stuck halyard till it springs. Haul down.
 
Jun 8, 2004
853
Pearson 26W Marblehead
Ive got one of those old snares from sailboat owners .com Its steel with a bunch 0f
of assorted hooks and bends. What I do with it, is tie a downhaul on it than hoist it up on another halyard to where the lost halyard is and start twirling it around. sooner or later one of the hooks or bends snares the lost halyard