John
I've included a link to the harken site that was posted in another forum not long ago. It should display how Neil's system is set up. Mine, on my H33.5, is a little different. It's set up as a single line system. I don't have the rams horns at the gooseneck but I only have 1 line to pull that reefs both the tack and the clew and it can all be done from the cockpit. My lines run as follows:A line encircles the boom with a bowline, goes up through the reefing cringle (new clew), back over a sheave at the aft end of the boom, inside the boom to a free floating, head-to-head double block, back out to the aft end of the boom and ties on securely there. A second line secures to an eye at the gooseneck, up through the reefing cringle at the new tack (actually, mine has a block there), around a sheave at the gooseneck and into the boom. It then goes around the other sheave on the head-to-head block in the boom, back out the gooseneck and through some blocks on the mast and cabintop through a clutch and into the cockpit. The key here is that head-to-head block. It allows you to pull two lines at once and gives you 4 to 1 purchase. As you pull the cockpit line it starts to draw the tack down and the head-to-head block forward. Drawing that block forward pulls the clew down. Unfortunately, I do not have a drawing of this set-up but search here and elsewhere and I'm sure you can find one. It's called "single line reefing". Essentially, the lines form 2 horizontal V's inside the boom, connected at their apexes by the head-to-head block. Pull 1 end and it all comes down. Very easy, very simple.Toms/v Orion's ChildP.S. I see that the link isn't working. There is a fairly recent discussion on reefing in the "Ask all sailors" forum. Check there for the link.TCB