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hoisting sail
Steve Colgate

Bending and Hoisting the Sails Locate
the clew of the mainsail. Starting at the point where the boom connects to
the mast, insert the clew into the groove of the boom and pull it out to
the end while another person feeds the foot of the sail into the groove. A
pin is placed through the tack corner, the "outhaul" is attached to the
clew, pulled tight to stretch the foot, and "secured" or
cleated.
The battens are then placed in the
batten pockets of the sail. Check that you have the right length of batten
in the proper pocket. Starting at the tack, follow along the luff to make
sure there are no twists in the sail. Attach the main halyard, looking
"aloft" (up) in case it's "fouled" (twisted) around a spreader or
backstay. If the main luff has slides, put them all on the mast track
starting at the head of the sail. If the mast is grooved, you will have to
feed the luff of the sail in the groove as it goes up. However, before you
hoist the mainsail, it's best to get the jib ready.
If the jib is not rolled up on a roller
furler, it will have to be attached each time you go out sailing. The tack
of the jib is the corner that is attached first. There are a number of
ways to quickly identify this corner: (1) the sailmaker's label or emblem
is almost always located there since there is an International Sailing
Federation rule to this effect; (2) the angle at the tack is much wider
than the angle at the head; (3) the jib hanks, or snaps, usually attach to
the jibstay from right to left, for right-handed people—in other words,
with the opening in the snap on the left. If you dump a large sail out of
the bag, just by looking at one jib hank you can tell which way to follow
the luff to the tack; (4) a good crew, knowing that the tack is needed
first, will leave that corner on top of the sail after "bagging it"
(putting it away in a sailbag); and (5) on larger boats, "Tack" is often
written at the corner so there can be no mistake.
Attach the tack of the jib and start
hanking on the snaps from bottom up. If you start at the top of the sail,
you would have to hold the sail up and hank on each snap underneath. This
would get mighty heavy after a while. Also, the sail would be up high
where a gust of wind could blow it overboard. So you start with the tack
first and pull the sail forward between your legs to keep it low,
protected from the wind, and to avoid draping it over the side of the bow
in the water.
The jib sheets (the lines that adjust
the jib in and out) are now attached to the clew with either a fastening
(if provided) or better, a
bowline and led through their
proper "leads" (blocks, or pulleys, that adjust the trim angle of the
jib), and either a
"figure-eight" knot or
"stop" knot, as shown in Figures
1 and 2, is made in the end of each sheet. This keeps the end of the line
from running out of the jib lead when you let it go. Of the two knots, the
"stop" knot is the better. Now attach the jib halyard that will pull the
sail up, and you're all set to go.
The mainsail is raised first for various
reasons. It acts like a weather vane and keeps the boat headed into the
wind. This is most important on a cruising boat since you are apt to motor
out of a harbour, head the boat into the wind, and idle the engine while
the mainsail is raised. If the boat swings broadside to the wind, which
might happen if you raise the jib first, the mainsail will fill with wind,
press against the rigging, and bind on the sail track, making it virtually
impossible to raise the sail farther.
The same problems arise on smaller
boats, but if you start from a mooring, the boat automatically "lays" with
her bow pointed directly into the wind. Sometimes the current is strong
enough to overpower the wind's effect, but in that case, usually the wind
won't be strong enough to create problems in raising the sail. Therefore,
with small boats sailing from moorings, the only reason to raise or unroll
the jib last is because it flails around during and after raising. This
tangles the jib sheets and causes an awful commotion on a windy day, which
continues until the main is raised and you start sailing. The flailing
also reduces the life of the jib because it breaks down the cloth fibres
and fatigues the sail. If the jib is rolled on the forestay, just release
the furling line and pull on the leeward jib sheet to unroll it for use.
One important item to remember when
raising sails is that all the sheets must be completely loose so the sail
will line up rather than fill with wind. At the same time, all lines that
might be holding the boom down (like the cunningham or the boom vang) must
be eased so that nothing can keep the main from going all the way up. A
crew member should hold the end of the boom up in the air to relieve the
pull of the leech of the sail if the boat does not have a topping lift
(line to hold the boom end up).
Leaving the Mooring Before leaving
the mooring, let's get a couple of basic terms clear: starboard and port
are two terms in constant use on board a boat. Starboard is right and port
is left when facing forward (toward the bow). Some remember this by the
fact that "port" and "left" have the same number of letters. It's been
said that the words came from sailing ships of long ago that used a sweep,
or oar, for steering. It was called the "steering board" and was over the
right side of the boat when one faced the bow. Thus the right side was
called the "steering board" side and later, the starboard side. The left
side was clear to lay next to a dock while the boat was in port and became
the "port" side.
Now we're ready to sail away, but since
the boat is headed directly into the wind at a mooring and is not moving
through the water, it is what we call "in irons" or "in stays." This can
happen at other times when a boat attempts to change tacks by turning into
the wind, is stopped by a wave, and loses "steerageway" or "headway." In
order to steer a boat, water must be flowing past the rudder. If the boat
is "dead in the water" (motionless) the rudder is useless, so the sails
have to be used in its place.
Because the boat is pointing directly
into the wind, the sails are "luffing" (shaking). To "fill" the sails, you
will have to place the boat at an angle to the wind. Usually this angle is
45 degrees or more, and when the boat reaches this position, the sails
will fill with wind and the boat will start moving forward. Until that
point, however, the sails have to be manually forced out against the wind
to fill them. This is called "backing" the sail. If you want to turn the
bow of the boat to starboard (to the right), you hold the jib out to port
as in Figure 3. The wind hits the port side of the jib and pushes the bow
to starboard. After the boat is pushed 45 degrees to the wind, the jib is
released and trimmed normally on the starboard side.
Though backing the jib is the fastest
and surest method of falling off onto the desired tack, there are other
ways. If the boat is drifting backward as in Figure 4, put the tiller to
starboard. The rudder will turn the stern of the boat in the direction of
the arrow and the boat will "fall off" onto the port tack.
You might be sailing a small boat that
has no jib. In that case, you can push the main out against the wind. This
starts the boat moving backward and turns the stern to the opposite
direction of the side that you are holding the main. In other words, if
you back the main to the starboard side, the stern will go to port as in
Figure 5. Help the boat to turn by putting the tiller to starboard as
described in Figure 4.
If you are sailing a yawl or a ketch,
you can back the mizzen (aft-most smaller sail) out against the wind in the
same manner, and with the same effect, as backing the main of a small
boat. Note Figure 6. The standard procedure when leaving a mooring is for
a crew member to untie the mooring line, but hold on to the end of it (or,
if possible, use it to pull the boat forward to gain a little forward
momentum) while another crew member backs the jib. When the bow is
definitely swinging in the desired direction, the mooring line is released
and you're off sailing.
As the boat starts moving forward, the
rudder becomes effective. Though it eventually becomes automatic, at first
one has to think which way to push the tiller to steer a sailboat. As the
boat sails along, water flows past the rudder. When the rudder is turned,
it deflects the water flow and pushes the stern opposite from the
direction of the deflected flow.
You should study Figures 7 and 8. The
hull and keel of the boat act as a pivotal point, so the bow goes in the
opposite direction of the stern. When leaving a dock in a cruising boat
under power, one often sees the new owner try to swing the bow out too
sharply. The stern bumps along the pilings because the skipper is so
intent on turning the bow, he forgets he is actually throwing the stern
toward the dock. To turn to port you have to push the tiller to starboard
and vice-versa, which confuses many beginners. It's interesting to note
that the fireman who steers the rear wheels of a hook-and-ladder truck is
called the "tillerman." The theory is the same. There's no easy way to
remember how to steer a sailboat. Practice is the key. Just sail on a
"beam reach" (see Figure 8) and make a series of small turns to get the
feel of it.

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