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Rosalie B. wrote in
: Inexperience can be remedied. On our first cruises, I also had to rely a lot on Bob even though I had taken some sailing lessons. You are right...inexperience can be remedied. But, alas, ABILITY cannot. A 40' cruising sailboat is a handful for a 250 pound, able male. I'm sure glad I sail on one with roller furling main and mizzen. Sailing the Endeavour in bad conditions where you had to take the main down and lash it to the rolling, rocking boom was a handful for 2 big people, not one. Lazy jacks are really nice until there's a gale. The finest thing about Lionheart's roller furling mast is its GEARBOX. I can furl the main, alone, hanging on for dear life strapped to the base of the mast cranking in a sail at full load. Coming into the wind, possibly rolling over because that's not necessarily coming into the wave train, isn't necessary at all. Roller furling mains make sail handling for less experienced hands just so simple. It's not necessary for them to figure out which line reefs which section and how to set it under pressure. Just roll the damned thing into the mast until what's left outside relieves the pressure trying to rip it off the boat and that, although not really "nautical" to brag about at the yacht club bar, way good enough in 40 knots of wind and 12' seas. Try it sometime...even you diehard traditionalists. For a 120 pound female teacher who has had all the sailing classes in the best schools in the nation....a 40' cruising sailboat in a gale is a recipe for disaster. She's just not big enough, weighs enough and is strong enough to do it. It's not politically correct, it's truth. Even standing at the wheel, to say nothing of going forward to do anything about reefing the main and furling the ripping jib, she won't be strong enough for long. I'm 255 and moved pianos for a living for many years. I'm not "physically fit", but I'm strong. Lifting an end to a 900 pound piano became easy. I cannot haul the wheel back and forth fighting to hold any kind of course with the swells against the rudder for hours and hours to keep the boat off those reefs. My strong arms get so sore and my back in so much pain, I'm sure glad there are 5 other big souls to relieve me. What about the "cruising couple"? The man is totally exhausted. His arms have given out. The 120 pound teacher must now stand at the helm, hauling the wheel back and forth in a losing battle with the rudder and course. She has no more relief aboard. She's DOOMED! Face it...it's true! But, every one of you know who the "dock hermits" are who go off way out there for adventure, him and her, in their fancy sailing clothes and bushy beards trying to look like sailors of 1852. They'd rather die first than take some really strong 20-somethings with them who know how to sail, for hours and hours if necessary.... The boat manufacturers are also to blame. We've no place to SLEEP those boys on a 35' Endeavour, except on the cabin deck or that little cubby hole of a quarterberth. Berths are ugly, especially berths that are USEFUL rolling 35 degrees over so you don't get thrown out. That won't do..... Good enough? Amazing how many survive out of just luck. Larry -- VIRUS ALERT! VISTA has been released! NOONE will be spared! |
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