Ric, What you see on the stern, under and behind the solar panel, is the quadrant for the Navik wind vane. It is an old picture and I have since removed it since it is vulnerable on the mooring. The boats swing against each other at times.
Right now the lines coming to the cockpit are, from port to starboard; topping lift, cunningham, spinnaker halyard, jib halyard. All but the topping lift come to a rope clutch. On the starboard coach roof is the first single line reef, second reef, main halyard and main down haul. There is a third reef but I've removed the line as it is not needed for day sails. Coming down the stanchions on the port rail is the tack line for the asymmetrical spinnaker, which I am now using also for the tacks on the smaller jibs (Chuck's suggestion, and I have no idea why I wasn't doing that before). On the starboard rail is the jib downhaul. If I fly the asyem I will also run a light line up to the bow before the hoist, then before the drop, this will be connected to the tack's snap shackle permitting the tack to be blown from the cockpit.
Perhaps there are a lot of lines and some may be unnecessary. Others I wouldn't do without, now that I've used them, the jib downhaul for instance. The layout is pretty much as it was set up by the previous owner but I've made some changes, and now I want to try reefing at the mast, which I have not done with this boat, and that will change things again, a lot. What is remarkable is that of the 3500 or so Vegas built, there are 3500 or so different setups. Perhaps more amazing is that they all work perfectly well for their owners. You can't say that about a Prius or an Acura. Some modifications are better than others though and I like the mast bail on the Mystic Rose. It looks cleaner than my setup on the Tern.
I think a through bolt in the mast needs a compression tube. Dimpling or creasing the mast wall is probably something to avoid.
I've been posting with some regularity lately. There must be some unpleasant chore that I am avoiding.
Craig 1519Tern