Sailing into spring

Trip dates: 
Wednesday, April 12, 2023 to Sunday, April 16, 2023
Trip length: 
5 days
Type of watercraft: 
Sail

After finding my shroud unconnected to my port spreader, worked with the manufacturer to get replacement spreader tips, and then on Wednesday, April 12, used the engine to drive the boat to Smith's Marina, where they hauled her out and placed her on land.

That night, my crew of three and I dropped the mast by removing the forward pin holding up the mast, taking up the slack on the forestay by pulling the spin halyard extension forward, allowing us to remove the pin and slowly let the mast come down to two guys catching it whilst standing on the bunks in the cockpit.  Laid it on an 8' stepladder and tied it down.  Pulled out the tape and spreader tips and installed the new ones around the shrouds, drilling a hole through and placing a bolt with a nut to hold each in place and re-applying rigging tape.  Hardest part was getting the cotter pins out from the shroud turnbuckles so we could start the process.  Once spreader tips fixed, pushed the mast back up whilst pulling on spin halyard extension; re-pinned forestay and then breathed a sigh of relief.  Tightened shrouds hand-tight.  Then drank beer and ate pizza.

 

On Thursday, April 13, drove the boat back home and put her on the lift.  And put her boom back together.  And tightened her shrouds to 42 lbs.  

Gathered on Monday, April 17 to have a shake-down cruise after tightening the shrouds to 43 lbs each.  Breeze was up (15-18 knots) so reefed the main and then deployed the jib, with three of us on the boat.  Boat handled nicely.  Took us a while to rig the reefing line and even then discovered that we needed to re-run the lines at the front of the boom.  Shrouds moved a little bit, mostly the outer ones, so need to tighten further.

Noticed that battery charger wasn't working; didn't have instruments, since I'd taken the battery out to get it charged.

One problem rose up when the spin halyard shackle opened whilst we were pulling down the jib sock and got pulled to the top of the mast.  Spent the boat ride wondering how we were going to get the halyard back down.  

Wednesday racing on April 19 had three of us on the crew plus one additional from another RBSA boat who was looking for a boat ride.  Swapped out the jib for the genoa, which went fairly quickly, in the event.  Very light winds caused postponement of the race for 30 minutes; finally filled in about 8-10 knots from the South and had a beam reach course which had us moving at 5-6-7 knots.  Didn't steer well, but still beat some boats.  Had instruments again since had battery again.  

After the race, borrowed boatswain's chair from another RBSA boat and used it to good effect by raising one of our Thrillseekers up to about a foot above the spreaders, where he was able to use a boat hook with a coat hanger duct-taped to it to reach the errant halyard and pull it down.  Relief all around when he returned to the deck -- with the halyard.

Thursday the 20th took the boat out for a quiet evening of sailing by myself.  Beautiful night with 7-8 knots of breeze, allowing me to ghost along at 5 knots.  

Friday in advance of a storm coming through was able to furl the genoa more tightly and then get the jib sock onto it and tighten everything down.  Used a messenger line with the spin halyard shackle to ensure we can retrieve it.