I think you mean Reefing Claw
I think you are refering to the Reefing Claw, I don't think Rudy has any, but I could be wrong. Cape Cod Shipbuilding may have one sitting around, but it may not be the right size for a DS. I'd give CCSB a call anyway, the Goodwins are worth talking to.Now, after saying that, I had a reefing claw for my DS II, I tried using it....what I found is that the roller-reefing really didn't work very well. The botrope on the sail made it hard to get the gooseneck to re-engage it's lock and so the sail often as not would suddenly unroll. I converted to a "slab-reef", also know as "Jiffy-Reefing" on my DS II, it cost me about $60 to have a sailmaker add the reef, plus about $20-30 in hardware. This works MUCH better than the roller-reefing ever did.Roller-reefing was the "latest thing" in sailing in the late 1960's and early 1970's, but has now gone out of favor due to the "old-fashioned" slab-reefing being so much better. The problem with that is that due to roller-reefing not being as popular....the reefing claws are hard (maybe not impossible, but) to find anymore. You might try a local Marine Consignment store?A reefing claw looks like a sort-of "C" shaped metal device, with plastic or urethane rollers on each end of the C, and a shackle at the bottom (opening of C points up). The opening in the "C" is about 1-2" wide to fit over the sail. The Claw slides along the boom and the mainsheet attaches to the shackle.