this post was submitted on 16 Jul 2024
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Sailing

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I've recently learnt to sail but when I'm on the water, all of my theory goes out of my head. Can someone please explain the steps of sailing or confirm what I've written below?

  1. check the wind direction
  2. think of where I want to navigate to and point the boat relative to the wind.
  3. think of the points of sail. For the boat's position relative to the wind, change the main sail to the respective point of sail and the wind will catch the sail.
  4. use the main sheet to keep the sail in the "point of sail" direction that the wind should be in.
  5. make very small movements to keep the boat going straight towards my target
  6. once i'm going straight, check the sail if it's luffing periodically and trim the sail if necessary

when tacking,

  1. use the tiller to turn the boat around, either pull it fully towards or away from me
  2. once the boat is turned around, pull the tiller so that it's now straight and you can let the tiller handle lay on the side of the boat
  3. switch sides as usual

thank you!

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I'd change your initial points up a bit:

  • Assuming you're under engine leaving the harbor, put the bow into the wind (do you have a relative wind indicator?)
  • Put the main up
  • Decide roughly where you want to go, to port or stbd
  • Turn off the wind in that direction enough that the main fills with wind
  • Turn off engine
  • Deploy genoa
  • Decide more specifically where you want to go and turn the boat in that direction
  • Trim the sails to your new point of sail. Always start from the front of the boat, and trim to the telltails. The closer you are on the wind the tighter the sheets have to be, the further you are off the wind the looser.

For tacking: The tiller just changes direction of the boat. Tacking means changing course though the wind. Because the boat doesn't sail upwind you have to go through the wind quickly to avoid irons. So if you're on a starboard tack (wind is blowing across stbd side of the boat) and you want to get on port tack,

  • you'd push the tiller over to port so the bow of the boat swings to starboard
  • the boat will swing through the wind until the main swings across and the genoa tries to blow through the hole
  • release the genoa port sheet
  • stop the turn of the boat with the tiller (push it back to port)
  • haul in the genoa starboard sheet
  • retrim genoa and main for new point of sail

In general whenever you make a course change you have to say

  1. Am I going to need a tack or gybe for my new desired course
  2. If so execute the maneuver
  3. Get the boat pointed in the desired direction
  4. Trim sails to the telltails front to back
[–] sailingbythelee 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Good explanation. This is the way.

Backing it up one step further, a common beginner mistake is to decide on a destination irrespective of the wind direction. This sometimes makes sailing more difficult than it needs to be and can result in the unnecessary torturing of guests as the captain stubbornly pounds into wind and wave to achieve a destination not superior to other options that would provide a more congenial travel experience.

Therefore, I would add:

  1. Choose a destination with due consideration for wind and wave.

Beginners should note that a beam reach is typically the fastest point of sail on flat water. A broad reach is the fastest and typically most comfortable point of sail in wavy conditions. Close-hauled is the most exciting for short periods of time, but will exhaust your guests (and stress your rig) if prolonged in windy and wavy conditions. Pointing dead down wind can be fun when sailing wing-and-wing or with a spinnaker, but is often rather exhausting for the helm as it requires close attention.

I can't remember who it was anymore, but I once saw a video by a women's cruising instructor who said: "If it's hard, you're doing it wrong." Over the years, I've grown to more fully appreciate the truth and wisdom of that advice.

[–] Pat12 1 points 5 months ago

Backing it up one step further, a common beginner mistake is to decide on a destination irrespective of the wind direction. This sometimes makes sailing more difficult than it needs to be and can result in the unnecessary torturing of guests as the captain stubbornly pounds into wind and wave to achieve a destination not superior to other options that would provide a more congenial travel experience.

this is really helpful, thank you!