Also many 30's had short secondary jib tracks on the cabin top. Use these to get the headsail tighter, depending on size. You may have to reroute the sheets around the shrouds.Depending on wind speed, tighten boom vang and/or move boom windward with traveler.
Only somebody sitting on the boat with you could give a very useful answer to this question b/c the first assumption has to be that you basically know how to sail to weather to begin with. After that we might be able to offer suggestions on minor adjustments, crew position, condition of sails, etc. Also, not knowing the other boats makes it difficult to respond. Generally, however, a deep-keel, narrow beam boat will naturally point higher than a comparatively shallow-keel, wide beam one. So even with the "best of all tips and advice" the Cat-30 will still not match the pointing angle of some other boats.What techniques and adjustments do you use to get your 30 to point higher? I was in a race his weekend and saw boats with better angles.
This is very true. I coach racing teams and I'm amazing how many boats/teams/skippers actually don't know how to effectively go to weather. Often they are 5-10 degrees off. This is a trim, telltail, driving, heel issue. The trick is that the boat feels fast and looks the business, but is not making good VMG.Only somebody sitting on the boat with you could give a very useful answer to this question b/c the first assumption has to be that you basically know how to sail to weather to begin with.