"Nav" wrote in message
...
Donal wrote:
In fact, leeway is *always* directly downwind. I learned this on my
recent
dinghy sailing holiday. There was an area known as "the Graveyard".
It
was a lee shore that had very gentle winds. Once you entered the
Graveyard,
you were bound to end up on the rocks. The reason was that after a
tack,
you would make leeway before you got forward motion. Furthermore, the
wind
was so light that it was impossible to get forward movement without
bearing
away --- which meant going even closer to the shore..... The first
time
that it happened to me was very disspiriting. I thought that I had
forgotten everything that I knew about dinghy sailing.
Was there a current to drive you onto the rock or are you saying you
can't sail to windward in light winds???
Current??? Now why didn't I think of that?
Sadly, there wasn't any current.
Regards
Donal
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