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Default Seamanship Question #37

Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.

You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?

What else do you need to do?


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Default Seamanship Question #37

Bart Senior wrote:
Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.

You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?

What else do you need to do?


Boom to port, tiller to starboard.

Of course, if you want to exit the anchorage backwards, you put the
tiller to port.
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Default Seamanship Question #37

No... deploy your anchor. :-)

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"Jeff" wrote in message
. ..
Bart Senior wrote:
Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.

You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?

What else do you need to do?

Boom to port, tiller to starboard.

Of course, if you want to exit the anchorage backwards, you put the tiller
to port.



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Default Seamanship Question #37


"Bart Senior" .@. wrote
| Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
| at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
| main alone.
|
| You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
| in the water.
|
| Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
| tack?
|
| What else do you need to do?


Back the main to starboard. Then you wait till you have some sternway so the rudder will work.
Then you push the tiller to port and the stern will go to starboard and the bow will fall of to port.

Cheers,
Ellen



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Default Seamanship Question #37

Wrong again.

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"Ellen MacArthur" wrote in message
reenews.net...

"Bart Senior" .@. wrote
| Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
| at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
| main alone.
|
| You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
| in the water.
|
| Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
| tack?
|
| What else do you need to do?


Back the main to starboard. Then you wait till you have some sternway
so the rudder will work.
Then you push the tiller to port and the stern will go to starboard and
the bow will fall of to port.

Cheers,
Ellen







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Default Seamanship Question #37


"Bart Senior" .@. wrote in message
...
Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.

You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?



Port side.


What else do you need to do?



Turn the wheel to port.

Flash your back-up lights..

SBV




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Default Seamanship Question #37

Bart Senior wrote:
Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.

You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?



Sheesh, doesn't anybody here know how to sail backwards?

Push the boom out to starboard. Center the tiller. Wait for the boat
to start moving backwards. Move the tiller slightly to starboard (not
too much or you'll stop the boat by using the rudder as a brake.) The
boat will start backing around presenting the port side to the wind.
Once you've turned enough that you're on a close reach heading, trim in
the main, center the tiller and start saiing forward.


What else do you need to do?


Learn not to get stuck in irons when sailing under main alone?

//Walt
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Default Seamanship Question #37

Bart Senior wrote:
Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.


Must be somebody else's boat, but OK I sail OPB's a lot.


You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?



It depends. What is the keel configuration? Where is the
mast stepped fore/aft? Relatively few boats will fall off to
the same side the sail is backed, but some definitely will.


Walt wrote:
Sheesh, doesn't anybody here know how to sail backwards?


Yep


Push the boom out to starboard. Center the tiller. Wait for the boat
to start moving backwards.


Most boats will begin to fall off to port (ie onto port
tack) with the boom backed to starboard. You can have the
helm at any position and the forces on the rig & hull & keel
will produce this effect.


.... Move the tiller slightly to starboard (not
too much or you'll stop the boat by using the rudder as a brake.) The
boat will start backing around presenting the port side to the wind.
Once you've turned enough that you're on a close reach heading, trim in
the main, center the tiller and start saiing forward.


What if the boat gets stuck in irons again? Why might it do
this?



What else do you need to do?


Learn not to get stuck in irons when sailing under main alone?


What techniques would you recommend for tacking to avoid
getting stuck in irons?

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

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Default Seamanship Question #37

Never.

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Sheesh, doesn't anybody here know how to sail backwards?



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Default Seamanship Question #37


DSK wrote:
Bart Senior wrote:
Your 35' sloop is bare headed--the one jib you have is
at the sailmakers for repairs. You are sailing today with
main alone.


Must be somebody else's boat, but OK I sail OPB's a lot.


You are directly head to wind, in irons, stopped dead
in the water.

For 1 point

Which side do you back the main to sail off on a port
tack?



It depends. What is the keel configuration? Where is the
mast stepped fore/aft? Relatively few boats will fall off to
the same side the sail is backed, but some definitely will.


Walt wrote:
Sheesh, doesn't anybody here know how to sail backwards?


Yep


Push the boom out to starboard. Center the tiller. Wait for the boat
to start moving backwards.


Most boats will begin to fall off to port (ie onto port
tack) with the boom backed to starboard. You can have the
helm at any position and the forces on the rig & hull & keel
will produce this effect.


.... Move the tiller slightly to starboard (not
too much or you'll stop the boat by using the rudder as a brake.) The
boat will start backing around presenting the port side to the wind.
Once you've turned enough that you're on a close reach heading, trim in
the main, center the tiller and start saiing forward.


What if the boat gets stuck in irons again? Why might it do
this?



What else do you need to do?


Learn not to get stuck in irons when sailing under main alone?


What techniques would you recommend for tacking to avoid
getting stuck in irons?


Wear ship. Not a tack I know but it works.

PDW

 
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