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"rhys" wrote
Do you have hanks or furling? Roller furling. I would have preferred it if the boat had come with hanks because I wanted to give my kids a chance to learn foredeck work. (Remember how beat up I got here over how "irresponsible" that was.) "Thinking like a racer" and the Chinese fire-drill approach aren't mutually exclusive. Hardly a Chinese fire-drill. The key is to be deliberate, organized, and thinking ahead. I just meant that I would be willing to give up the speed gained by letting the boat accelerate under a slightly fuller jib in order to be spend the time I would be flattening looking for traffic and verifying the new course. If stiffer jib sheets would let me do that, I would put up with their being harder on the hands. As you or someone up in the thread pointed out, my crusing rig is probably so flexible that the sheets are not going to make that difference. -- Roger Long |
#2
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On Tue, 04 Apr 2006 20:08:59 GMT, "Roger Long"
wrote: "rhys" wrote Do you have hanks or furling? Roller furling. I would have preferred it if the boat had come with hanks because I wanted to give my kids a chance to learn foredeck work. (Remember how beat up I got here over how "irresponsible" that was.) Heh. Such folk probably wouldn't enjoy seeing my four and a half year old son (lashed via a lanyard) on the tiller for short stretches in light airs, either. He has to use the extension and stand on a locker to see forward, but he's getting a feel for the relationship between sail, course and rudder angle. "Thinking like a racer" and the Chinese fire-drill approach aren't mutually exclusive. Hardly a Chinese fire-drill. The key is to be deliberate, organized, and thinking ahead. I just meant that I would be willing to give up the speed gained by letting the boat accelerate under a slightly fuller jib in order to be spend the time I would be flattening looking for traffic and verifying the new course. If stiffer jib sheets would let me do that, I would put up with their being harder on the hands. As you or someone up in the thread pointed out, my crusing rig is probably so flexible that the sheets are not going to make that difference. I agree. Solo sailing, I tend to tweak less, and instead go for "80-90%" efficient, because it's easier on me and the gear. If I'm feeling particularly lazy, I will just poke about under main alone, as the prevailing summer southwesterlies make going in front of Toronto a windward/leeward beam reach both ways. I find a mile south of the city, I'm clear of most of the traffic anyway, and my loud music and "male noises" will only offend the fish. R. |
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