I had an instructor a long time ago who used it
when someone would coil a sheet correctly. He'd
say something like you've put assholes in my sheets.
--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com
"N1EE" wrote in message
om...
We used to call it an "asshole" when the spinnaker
halyard or some other line would get a round turned
jammed in a block or something. I can remember it
happening a few times during spinnaker takedowns
when I raced as Etchells crew in SF. It never
caused a series probelm there.
On an Express 37, a round trun ground into a cheek
block put us in serious trouble. Everyone else was
on the high side, the boat was flat on it's ear, and
I was the only man on the low side. I managed to
clear it, but was seriously thinking about cutting it.
Thinking back on it now, it is kind of funny when
a couple guys are yelling "ASSHOLE" "ASSHOLE" over
and over again. Anyone not in on the term would
be confused.
Does anyone else use that term in that manner?
Bart
Matt Colie wrote
Gawd,
We gave that up when we went to braided halyards.
I hadn't thought about it, but the chutes are so light and the boats so
fast these days - you might have to Pull it down with a tail fling.
It also made life interesting at the winches when that wet line
whiplashed accross the cockpit.
Matt Colie
DSK wrote:
N1EE wrote:
What do some sailboat racers throw overboard just before the leeward
mark?
The tail of the spinnaker halyard.
Bart, you may be showing your age (and mine) here. This was failry
common about 40 years ago, and I don't recall seeing anybody do it for
about 20. The idea was to shake the tangle out and control the speed
of
the douse.
Fresh Breezes
Doug King