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Mooring to stern and raising the chute in light air should not be a problem.
It is not a particularly good way to practice but it is pretty good for learing the very basics. As a way of debugging hardware and setup, it makes a lot of sense. There is no concern for navigation, sail set etc. that come into play while sailing. No one even has to touch the tiller. I suspect such a situation would not be with a full crew who want to enjoy the water and would get bored with on-the-water spinnaker practice. As for the boat turning around, I seriously doubt it. Before a spinnaker could force the bow upwind, it would collapse. A jib would have more chance as it has a rigid leading edge but in my experience, it has too many other forces to contend with. I have found some boats that are not stable when moored by the bow. I had a Star that was just such a boat. A slight shift in wind direction and it would try to pass the mooring. The line would then pull the bow and it would, in effect, tack and keep going back and forth. This was without any sails or people on board. Mooring downwind had no problems. Dave. |
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