Hello all, We finally got Ceto out of the boatyard and into her slip at a different harbor. The sail itself took about five hours, and we had all five of us (me, husband and kids - 13, 11 and 3 years old) with us. Kids had never sailed before, husband had once twenty-five years ago or something, (but has tons of powerboat/professional fish guiding experience), and I hadn't sailed in twenty years... We came out of the boatyard's dock in gorgeous sunshine, about a 15 knot breeze, cruising under power through the scattering of rocky islands, planning to raise the sails when out in the channel, where we would have some room to fuss with the unfamiliar systems. We were all chatting when the engine unceremoniously died. As we drifted between three islands, my husband called out, "Get the sails up, Danelle...and I hope you know what you're doing!" Well, that jump-started my heart. I struggled with the makeshift sail tie (yes, one long tie - I hadn't made up real sail ties yet), got the halyards mixed up, frantically jammed the bolt rope into the track, and started hauling. That was when I realized that this bolt rope thing is a whole different game than the track system our boats had used that my family had sailed. Here we were, floating helplessly into these rocks, and the stupid thing kept jamming. I got it up halfway, just enough for the wind to drift us into a dock that was, incredibly luckily for us, right downwind. A private house sits up on the island, and we floated in, tied up, got the engine going again and started back into the channel. We got our courage up again (my non-sailing family was a bit rattled, of course), enjoying our rare sunny, warm, breezy day, and raised both the main and jib. The wind was swirling a bit, so we were on a beam reach, broad reach, then wing-and-wing, then becalmed right as we passed my inlaw's beach house, where I of course, wanted to be sailing gloriously past. ha. We got sort of relaxed in the becalming, but should have been more alert, as it was only a switch in wind direction! I was messing with the centerboard trunk, where we hadn't fixed the large ragged hole where the line comes up yet, and it was blurping (is that a word?) about a quarter cup of saltwater into the cabin every few minutes. It was disturbing, along with the sloshing of the water in the cockpit from the drains with definitely need one-way sea cocks installed! Anyway, distracted by light, swirling winds, sloshing water, a sleepy and cranky 3-year-old, I took the helm from my husband, all of us just sort of spacing out...then of course a 20 knot gust swung around and knocked us down hard. My poor husband was sitting on the lee side, stern, and the water came sluicing over the toe rail about six inches from his rear, and then I pinned him there by my sudden, instinctual shove of the tiller leeward in a desperate attempt to round up. It had been so long since I'd sailed, and never had sailed such a small boat, I'd forgotten to pop the mainsheet in a knockdown...even though I'd just lectured the family about it an hour earlier. My poor family was so freaked out, and I was even a bit shaken, because this was an old boat we'd never had out before - not enough time to establish trust in a boat, for sure. All that went through my mind was "I KNOW I read that no M17 has capsized before." The rest of the sail was *awesome*! We stuffed a shirt sleeve into the CB trunk, the three-year-old fell asleep, we sailed long gorgeous tacks into our harbor, we saw humpback whales, got sun soaked (a wonderful thing in a place that gets thirteen FEET of rain annually!), and fell totally in love with our M 17! On our second sail, my husband was having so much fun I couldn't wrest the tiller from him! (His excuse was, that I am "so much better at the sails, so I could do that..." ha) I've been practicing docking, and have been so amazed at the responsive, quick handling compared to the large sailboats I grew up on, and the smaller power boats I've run, that float around like corks. The outboard has run perfectly since - it had been sitting in the former owner's garage for awhile, and our initial test run must not have worked the clogs through the system well enough. So, how can I raise that mainsail without it jamming so badly, from the cockpit? I've been raising it from the deck, one-handedly while un-jamming with the other hand. Danelle Landis "Ceto" M-17 #378 Ketchikan, AK
Quite the tale, Danelle! My boat, BuscaBrisas, has been up towards your way even if I haven't. A previous owner sailed her from Port Angeles, WA to Bella Coola BC and back one summer. Still quite a ways from Ketchikan, but... Regarding the boltrope, you have a couple of options: You can stay with the boltrope and just work on your technique, which will make a very big difference or you can add (or have someone add if you prefer) slugs to the sail. If you stay with the boltrope, on a 17 you'll probably need to get up next to the mast on the starboard side. What I've done on boats with a boltrope is first get the sail generally situated and straightened out, then guide it with my right hand by loosely holding the boltrope below the opening and along the mast just forward of the opening. The exact position usually isn't critical and the best place varies depending on the shape of the opening. Then pull on the halyard with my left hand while loosely guiding with the right, passing the halyard to my right (which is also holding the sail) so that the halyard doesn't go swinging off somewhere or the sail come sliding back down. Then I reach up again with the left for another purchase on the halyard, pull it down while feeding with the right, pass off to the right and reach up again... After doing it a few times it becomes a smooth motion, easier done than said. If you add slugs, technique is less important and I find I can leave my left foot in the cockpit and just place my right foot on the side deck to reach the halyard on the mast and haul away. Alternatively, you could run the halyard back to the cockpit, but I prefer mine at the mast as it is convenient there if reefing the sail. The slugs all stack up just above the gooseneck. With such a short foot, one long sail tie isn't so bad if you tie it on using the "log hitch". I generally use two, sometimes three, ties though. If the sail doesn't slide easily in the groove, you can get a special dry lubricant made especially for the purpose, such as McLube. Can make a big difference. I use that once or twice a season. A can has lasted me a few years now. Tod Mills M17 #408, 1987 galley model BuscaBrisas No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG. Version: 7.5.524 / Virus Database: 269.24.2/1471 - Release Date: 5/28/2008 5:33 PM
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Danelle Landis -
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