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Gladly.
My boat heaves-to with no forereaching when the tiller is tied off so the rudder is 90 degrees to her centerline. This means I can sail close hauled to a point directly upwind of a mooring, come up and around so the jib backs, tie the tiller off at 90 degrees and drift about one knot or less depending on the wind down on the mooring ball. I then grab the mooring pendant and make the line fast to a cleat on the bow. This happens while the jib is still backed and the vessel is still drifting sideways. Then I walk back to the mast where both the jib and main halyard are made fast to their respective cleats. I cast off the jib halyard as soon as the vessel snubs up on the mooring and points her prow into the wind. The jib falls straight down on the foredeck. Then I let go the main halyard and the main falls straight down on the boom since the wind is still directly on the bow. This all takes place in a flash as if both sails are falling almost simultaneously. I keep the mast slot lubed with silicone spray so the slugs don't hand up. The halyards cause no friction because they don't go snaking through various turning blocks to the cockpit as on those with lubberly boats. Also, I have wire to rope halyards and these run very, very free. The advantage of this type halyard combined with hank-on jib means it is very fast to drop the sail. Winding up a headsail while it is flapping usually cause trouble for the wind-up crowd while a little flapping assists a hank-on jib to fall. "Thom Stewart" wrote in message ... Neal, Please explain your techigue of heaving-to to drift sideward? Also, explain the advantage of "Hanked sails in a heave-to attitude? OT |
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