Just Read
Most of the relevant data are given by Warren in black and white, but as usual, many insist on creating conditions that contradict the given scenario. Reading, gentlemen, is fundamental.1) The weather is okay.2) Steerage is lost, which I take to mean the helm is unresponsive to input (an apparently dropped rudder or one that has separated from the shaft, and not turning with it any more), not locked and turning you in circles. Where do you guys come up with this stuff? The sky is not falling.Anchoring is probably not practical: what are you doing that close to shore at night? I think I'll pass cruising with you, Skipper.First, check the rudder shaft to ensure you're not taking on water.Rudderless steering by sail trim and/or streaming warps is possible in open water on certain points of sail, but you're heading for port now, and you will require precise piloting in close quarters: laser straight in channels, turning into basins, avoiding the rocks, docks, boat traffic and the yachtclub. No way would I try to enter a marina that way. You'd be limited to approaching the seawall, then calling for a tow. Less than desirable, and less than can be reasonably done.Given the relatively benign conditions, a bolted up hatchboard rudder may give you adequate steerage and last long enough to get to your nearest port (you're coastal cruising, so it only has to perform for a few hours). But woudn't it be nice to have thought this out beforehand?Here's a link to a couple of prepared emergency rudders that can be adapted to either tillers or wheels. I rather like the cassette with slide-in rudder setup, though I think reeving the control lines through the spinnaker blocks, using them as turning blocks, then running the lines to a wooden pulley attached to the wheel (this can be seen in the pics for the other option for the reverse transom) would reestablish control to the helm station, instead of fooling around trying to steer with winches, as the cassette setup shows.This cassette rudder bolts to the pre-drilled & lowered swim ladder, and the whole thing looks like something even I could measure, glass up and store compactly in an out-of-the-way place. It's like your manhood: it don't have to be pretty to be functional. (Ladies, pardon my crudeness).What no one has addressed is the fact that it's dark and you will be, at least temporarily, without steerage. If you're coastal cruising, there is a very good possibility you are in or near a commercial traffic lane. Those of you who are drilling boards and poles, bolting up Rube Goldberg systems and lashing them in place will spend an hour or more in that condition, I think. Since you have crew, shouldn't someone issue a /securite/ over the VHF, advising any 22kt cargo carrier bearing down on you in the dark of your position and impaired situation, before you're surfing their bowwave and counting the rivets on their hull? And post a lookout to constantly scan the 24 points of the compass? Turning on more lights, like the deck flood, would be a good idea, Colregs notwithstanding.Oh, and white sails up increase visibility, so mine stay up.After installation, I'd furl the genoa and gently motorsail in under a steadying main, keep those crew stationed as lookouts, monitor the apparent function of the emergency steering system, and sing pirate songs to keep morale up.Yeah, Jeff, but how many of us will actually spend the couple of hours to build a drop-in emergency rudder ready to go? I wonder…Here's the link.