this post was submitted on 16 Jul 2024
21 points (100.0% liked)
Sailing
922 readers
2 users here now
General
Welcome! This is a place to discuss sailing, all sailing related questions and share sailing images.
Please post freely about sailing and comment generously. User adoption and use is the boon which will inspire more users to join!
Known Issues
Posts created in portrait mode automatically rotate to landscape mode. This is something across Lemmy that seems to be known. To address, the image must have the correct metadata, not just rotated in your camera roll before uploading.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
And in case your brain works in a way that needs steps, for a practice trip I'd suggest these steps:
... Get out on the water, prepare the rig you want to practice, etc...
Pick a direction you want to go in, note a landmark, buoy, or something stationary to steer towards. If you don't pick a direction straight against or with the wind, the rest will be easier.
Try adjusting your sails to give you some speed. If you have a common Bermuda rig, start with your foresail, it's going to be easier to see when it's good, and it will give you speed enough to steer. I usually teach it as: take the sail in until it gets that nice billowed curve, and then let it out again until it just about can't keep it. Then do the same with the mainsail.
Note that if the boat changes angle against the wind, you'll have to adjust the sails and/or start over. When you're starting out, you'll have no chance to keep the boat going straight for long enough to both hit your landmark and trim your sails.
Check your course against your goal, try to adjust course a bit (10-15 degrees) and adjust the sails as needed.
Now try keeping course against the wind rather than the landmark. Can you sail with the wind straight from the side? How do you adjust the sails for that? How does that affect what you need to do with the tiller to keep straight?
Repeat for different wind angles. Also, note that winds change around obstacles, sails, and with time of day. Typically not a deal breaker, but enough to be confusing if you're not aware.
This is probably enough for the first dozen trips. Remember to save energy to be able to get back, moor, and set everything ship shape again.
As you get more comfortable, you can try doing tacks (same sail adjustment procedure), then try doing a tack so that you only need to adjust the foresail, then maybe trying deliberate listing, sailing donuts (with continuous sail adjusting) with a gybe, and then onto maneuvering tasks like stopping at a buoy, doing a figure of eight Man-overboard maneuver, picking up something out of the water.
And somewhere along this you start doing actual boating, learning to moor, anchoring, cooking, planning your days, routes, planning for weather, etiquette with other boats, etc.