Altitude, etc.
Rich is probably right about VMG - which was the poster's original question. I don't really know about that, I really need to get a GPS which gives that info. Still, most of the time, I am better off feathering, I'd just be exhausted if I adjusted the sails for every gust, too many gusts here. With, and when I have a friend along who is also a sailor, then we play the sails more. I really need that better GPS...As for high altitude, you are correct that the wind strength is less for a given wind speed - but we get some major wind speed. I have gone from no wind to knocked flat - in clear weather with no pesky thunderstorms about - in less than a minute. Thunderstorms are sometimes worse...I am less enthusiastic about reefing because of the huge wind variability - like I wrote, racers around here don't reef early either. The lulls are windless holes and the gusts are GUSTS. Maybe the racers push it too far - it is sometimes fun to be reefed and under control and watch the racers spinning out into broaches. I sympathize with them, though, they are going for speed and when the wind dies, and it will, shaking out a reef would probably cost them too much, so they 'chance' it.The strangest day I ever sailed in had a perfectly blue sky and no wind. I cleared the dock on a small puff and before I could get two fenders in I had to heave too under main alone and sit for two hours while Adm Beaufort's gale force streaks of foam passed by me. Then paddle back to the dock when the wind died. High altitude does not mean low force winds, you just get high enough wind speeds and you still get high force. Lake Dillon is at 9300 feet - whitecaps nearly every summer day and a reef or two ~1/3-1/2 of the afternoons. I hear Wyoming is wilder...OC