It's rare, but we do see an occasional boat sailing into a harbor onto a mooring or anchor, even occasionally to dock up, all under sail. It's a spectator sport for sure as we know how many things can go wrong.
For real drama, to see a boat sail into a near impossibly narrow crowded harbor like Perry Creek - dead to windward, is a real treat!
Such was the sight of this old gaff rigged sloop this season. A Bud McIntosh design and an unlikely candidate to be sailing into this slot.
I watched them sail, close hauled, into the creek. Below the mooring field, they tacked a couple of times through an alley between moored boats with a fair amount of boat speed.
On their final tack - close hauled, with no water just a few yards off their starboard side and moored boats on port side, they pinched just up a bit more which seemed to wring out the last of BUFFLEHEAD's way in the water.
The captain has his eye trained on his target ahead as his gaffer slows..... Nice.
BUFFLEHEAD coasts out the last tack with sails finally luffing and no one on the helm. The captain hooks his target as the bow kisses the mooring ball, dead center.
It's important to deactivate the sails and he has lots of help here. He wrestles with the mooring pennant while the crew quickly douses sails.
Piece of cake. What's their secret? Daily use I suspect. This is a charter boat that does daysails out of Rockland all season long.
Plus BUFFLEHEAD is a handy boat with a self tending rig. Many of these old gaff rigged designs originated for fishing under sail.
And it doesn't hurt that the captain built BUFFLEHEAD himself. That must give you an extra connection to a sailboat.
Here they are the next morning, next boat aft, well up the creek and past most of the moored boats. Who'd believe they sailed in?
For real drama, to see a boat sail into a near impossibly narrow crowded harbor like Perry Creek - dead to windward, is a real treat!
Such was the sight of this old gaff rigged sloop this season. A Bud McIntosh design and an unlikely candidate to be sailing into this slot.
I watched them sail, close hauled, into the creek. Below the mooring field, they tacked a couple of times through an alley between moored boats with a fair amount of boat speed.
On their final tack - close hauled, with no water just a few yards off their starboard side and moored boats on port side, they pinched just up a bit more which seemed to wring out the last of BUFFLEHEAD's way in the water.
The captain has his eye trained on his target ahead as his gaffer slows..... Nice.
BUFFLEHEAD coasts out the last tack with sails finally luffing and no one on the helm. The captain hooks his target as the bow kisses the mooring ball, dead center.
It's important to deactivate the sails and he has lots of help here. He wrestles with the mooring pennant while the crew quickly douses sails.
Piece of cake. What's their secret? Daily use I suspect. This is a charter boat that does daysails out of Rockland all season long.
Plus BUFFLEHEAD is a handy boat with a self tending rig. Many of these old gaff rigged designs originated for fishing under sail.
And it doesn't hurt that the captain built BUFFLEHEAD himself. That must give you an extra connection to a sailboat.
Here they are the next morning, next boat aft, well up the creek and past most of the moored boats. Who'd believe they sailed in?
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