Hi all,Made it out on the lake for a rousing (and frankly picture-perfect) sail on the 170 yesterday. I was solo with winds easily up to 14mph, and both main and jib flying full. I was on the rail almost the entire time, with the jib close-hauled 100% of the time, spilling the mainsail when puffs hit. A couple times I heeled up so far that I had to let-fly on the sheet to quickly ease the main during a puff. Talk about calling on the high-speed reflexes!So here's my thought; On days when the wind is 15+, it'd be a good option to pin on a bare forestay cable that's the precise length between the furler drum pin and the furler swivel bail/cable-lead high up on the mast and then have a smaller, hank-on jibsail (say, a 40 sq. ft. model from a Snark or smaller sized boat). Most 170 masts already have a jib halyard fairlead up near the top of the mast. I think the 170 could be single-handed with a 'storm jib' of this sort and reefed main in higher breezes, thus maintaining helm balance and not overpowering the boat(I find that a baggy, roller-furled 170 jib just doesn't pull as efficiently as a full, smaller sized after-market jib might). Thoughts on this idea?Mike G.