HOB
I was out last November on a very windy day in my 28.5 with two other experienced sailors when my hat blew overboard. It was more than just a hat, it was my FAVORITE hat.So I ordered the helmsman to turn around while the other crewman and I tried to spot the white hat in the dark water. To my disappointment, the waves made the hat all but invisible. It took a while, but our searching finally paid off, and we maneuvered in for the pickup.What happened next I would have to attribute to the surprise of it all. A year and a half earlier, I had taken ASA 101 (basic keelboat training) which included countless MOB drills. As we maneuvered, I felt calm, because I had done this so many times (although not since that class), I felt this shouldn't be too difficult.We made our first "pass" at about 5 knots. I was on the foredeck with a boathook, waiting to snare my hat as we went by. I could probably have harpooned it from that position and at that speed, but I wasn't even close to catching it with the hook.Around we turned for a second pass, which was as futile as the first. As my favorite hat went floating by the second time, it finally hit me that we were missing the crucial step of heading up to stop the boat next to the HOB, which we did, successfully, on our third attempt.Lesson learned. By all means practice! If this ever happens for real, it will probably happen on a windy day with lots of waves. The shock of it will fluster everyone (when all three experienced sailors all forget about stopping the boat, that's flustered!). Practice would have made this recovery seem more routine.Maintain visual contact at all times. I was taught "spotter, spotter, trash the water." Translation: have your spotter unload the cockpit ASAP, to put as many floating objects around the MOB as possible. This will help with maintaining visual contact, and some of those objects should be throwable PFD's.One last word. I think some helmsman rely too heavily on using the engine as a crutch for maneuvering the boat. I'd recommend practicing WITHOUT the engine, which should be faster and build more confidence. I now prefer the quick recovery technique, where you turn immediately into the wind and ignore the backwinded jib. At night, I attach strobes to the throwable PFD's. Anyone on deck must wear SOSpenders with a harness, light, and whistle, and must clip onto the jack lines.And I now have a little hat clip for that favorite hat of mine.Eric Lorguss/v Explorer 87H285s/v Impulse 83H54