J
JungleJetJock
So there I was....Sailing on my H260 on a broad reach in strong gusty winds. There was a regatta going on up and down the middle of the lake. I passed the race and headed for the fairly narrow pass from my lake to the other lake (A hole in the old dam that connects to the newer lake that flooded the bottom of the dam on the old lake). Anyone familiar with the H260 knows that rudders can be a weak point. Well I get hit with a large gust and at that point (least opportune, going through the pass) I hear a snap and the boat immediately and quickly broaches. The rudder had snapped at the top (normal failure point from what I can tell) and the down haul line was now dragging the blade, right under my outboard. Now for the lessons learned and what kept me off the rocks.1) Practice sailing without a rudder, in the open where there is nothing to hit. It’s possible to do basic steering with sail balance but it is not always strait forward. On my H260 the jib is very easily overpowered by the main (even reefed) and the boat has some weather helm even under jib. By back winding the jib it puts pressure on the bow to fall off allowing a turn in that direction but also robbing speed. Then play the main to point up or fall off as needed.2) Always carry a knife. You never know when you may need to cut something free. Serrated blades cut lines faster.3) The ability to steer an outboard is great, especially when it comes time to dock. The downside is that steering the boat with the outboard and no rudder is not an easy task. It handles very differently so it is a good idea to practice when not in an emergency situation. My boat gets a little hard to keep strait if you motor too quickly and your arm gets tired steering it. I think I will start practicing this occasionally. 3.5) Make sure you have enough gas. This goes for any time you go out. It would have really sucked to run out of gas.4) Carry a horn. It makes crossing a fleet of fast moving boats easier if you signal to them that you do not plan to stand down. By losing steering you are under distress. Do what you have to but be able to let others know that.5) Have an anchor readily available to deploy. In my situation it was not possible to immediately anchor because as the rode ran out enough to hold I would have been up on the rocks. If you are far enough away though or can get the room and have other issues the option to set the parking brake is a really good one.6) With the legend of the H260, carry a spare temporary rudder. It doesn't have to be huge and able to sail on. If it effective enough for motoring your day just got easier and more familiar. The process of removing and replacing the rudder on the H260 is pretty quick and easy. There is a place in the bow of the H260 left over from the H26 where a cockpit table was housed. I'm thinking that is a great out of the way place for an emergency rudder. I plan to build one out of wood and leave it up there. Overall it was a bitch of a day but things could have gone much worse. I posted this in the All Sailors forum because, although I reference the H260, everyone should think about what they would do given their and their boats capabilities. If you plan for the worse the day of reckoning is much less dramatic.