I recently bought a Pearson 26 and have had her out several times. Generally speaking I go out alone; if I do have my wife and granddaughter or other guests along, they are novices.
I have been thinking about safety, my own and other's, if I should happen to go overboard. I have visions of surfacing and watching as my beautiful boat sails away and piles up on the rocks, while I bob about barely visible to the fishers and skiers and tubers blasting around the lake at high speed. To tell the truth, I don't wear my life jacket - by way of excuse, I'm a pretty good swimmer and it is no more than a mile to shore, which I could do easily enough, even though I'm not in the greatest shape. I am more concerned about being seen than staying afloat; and getting the boat to stop so I can get back to it; and getting back aboard - with 3 feet of freeboard and at my age, weight and condition, getting back on without a boarding ladder would be a challenge, to say the least. I have a boarding ladder but it is not a permanently mounted, folding type and can't be deployed except from on board.
I have my sheets and halyards all led aft to the cockpit, but no self-tailing on the winches and no roller-furling. I've looked into self-tailing winches, and discovered that unless I hit the lottery (even more unlikely than usual, since I never buy tickets) or inherit from a long lost, fabulously wealthy uncle, then I'll have to make do without.
To take down the jib I usually put her on the motor with the tiller lashed to keep her headed into the wind - I then let go the halyard and let the sail come down under its own weight as far as possible, then go forward to get it all the way down on deck - that is probably when I am most vulnerable. Is there such a thing as a remote kill switch for the motor? It's a 35-year-old 9.9 hp Evinrude.
So I'm looking for advice from more experienced single-handers. Should I wear a tether of some sort? Wouldn't it get in the way and possibly drag me under? (Well, I carry a knife, so I could probably cut myself loose in an emergency.) Do I need to bite the bullet and just get used to wearing a life jacket at all times? What are some good tips for sail handling and steering all at once? I usually steer with my knees or foot while hauling in the sheets or what have you; I heave to or go on the motor dead slow to run down and use the head.
All replies appreciated!
I have been thinking about safety, my own and other's, if I should happen to go overboard. I have visions of surfacing and watching as my beautiful boat sails away and piles up on the rocks, while I bob about barely visible to the fishers and skiers and tubers blasting around the lake at high speed. To tell the truth, I don't wear my life jacket - by way of excuse, I'm a pretty good swimmer and it is no more than a mile to shore, which I could do easily enough, even though I'm not in the greatest shape. I am more concerned about being seen than staying afloat; and getting the boat to stop so I can get back to it; and getting back aboard - with 3 feet of freeboard and at my age, weight and condition, getting back on without a boarding ladder would be a challenge, to say the least. I have a boarding ladder but it is not a permanently mounted, folding type and can't be deployed except from on board.
I have my sheets and halyards all led aft to the cockpit, but no self-tailing on the winches and no roller-furling. I've looked into self-tailing winches, and discovered that unless I hit the lottery (even more unlikely than usual, since I never buy tickets) or inherit from a long lost, fabulously wealthy uncle, then I'll have to make do without.
To take down the jib I usually put her on the motor with the tiller lashed to keep her headed into the wind - I then let go the halyard and let the sail come down under its own weight as far as possible, then go forward to get it all the way down on deck - that is probably when I am most vulnerable. Is there such a thing as a remote kill switch for the motor? It's a 35-year-old 9.9 hp Evinrude.
So I'm looking for advice from more experienced single-handers. Should I wear a tether of some sort? Wouldn't it get in the way and possibly drag me under? (Well, I carry a knife, so I could probably cut myself loose in an emergency.) Do I need to bite the bullet and just get used to wearing a life jacket at all times? What are some good tips for sail handling and steering all at once? I usually steer with my knees or foot while hauling in the sheets or what have you; I heave to or go on the motor dead slow to run down and use the head.
All replies appreciated!