E-Book, Englisch, Band 1, 168 Seiten
Reihe: Skipper's Library
Buchan Short-Handed Sailing
1. Auflage 2019
ISBN: 978-1-912177-67-7
Verlag: Fernhurst Books Limited
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Sailing solo or short-handed
E-Book, Englisch, Band 1, 168 Seiten
Reihe: Skipper's Library
ISBN: 978-1-912177-67-7
Verlag: Fernhurst Books Limited
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Alastair Buchan began sailing on the Clyde in the 1950s. In a Hurley 20 (20ft!) he has sailed single-handed round Britain and crossed the Atlantic twice. In a Dockrell 27 (27ft) he made a single-handed Atlantic circuit, from Britain to the USA via Venezuela and Cuba - and back home.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1
INTRODUCTION
I never set out to sail alone. It just happened. For years I wandered the coasts of Britain and Europe in a Hurley 20 called . Like many, when I could not find a crew, I took to sailing single-handed. Initially my solo passages were modest, hardly more than a long day sail, but you can circumnavigate Britain in daily hops and one summer I did. Gradually I began modifying to make life easier. First came a second-hand Navik self-steering gear, then head and mainsail reefing systems.
I played around with leading halyards aft to the cockpit for several years until I found an arrangement that worked, and the accommodation was tweaked until life below was reasonably civilised in harbour and at sea. I was learning the tricks of short-handed sailing the hard way. Hopefully this book will allow you to learn some of the tricks more quickly.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SHORTHANDED SAILING
The history of short-handed sailing goes back to the late 19th century when it seemed as if flotillas of small yachts, many single-handed, were crossing the Atlantic. Howard Blackburn crossed the Atlantic single-handed twice and gave new twist to single-handed sailing, as years before he set out he had lost the fingers on both hands. Joshua Slocum circumnavigated the world in and made single-handed sailing sound easy and fun.
Captain John Voss disapproved of Slocum’s enthusiasm for single-handed sailing and set out to show how it should be done with a crew in a converted dugout canoe, bought from Canadian Indians, and called . Captain Voss believed in sea anchors and you get the impression that whenever he met a gale he threw out his sea anchor and the seas calmed. When his crew fell overboard and drowned he discovered that he was perfectly happy sailing alone.
Around the same time and nearer home, yachtsmen like E F Knight and Erskine Childers began the tradition of shorthanded cruising around European coasts that persists to this day. In the 1950s a revival of blue-water sailing saw many of the early pioneers’ feats repeated. This culminated in 1960 with the first single-handed trans-Atlantic race, where the handful of boats taking part lit the fuse to an explosion in long distance short- and single-handed sailing and the development of equipment to ease a short-handed sailor’s workload.
Compared to the pioneers we have it easy. They had no self-steering and their sail handling systems were designed by pharaohs to keep slaves busy. Sails were of canvas and ropes were of hemp, manila and sisal. These are all hard to handle when wet and will rot before your eyes if given the chance. Not surprisingly, tales of their voyages are peppered with accounts of bad weather and battles with recalcitrant sails that, given half a chance, would flog themselves to tatters.
SHORT-HANDED SAILING TODAY
Although over a third of UK yachtsmen sometimes sail solo, and even more shorthanded, somehow short- and single-handed sailing is regarded as a minority activity. The image of the lone sailor is of a nautical hermit wandering the oceans and actively rejecting the company of others. Blue-water solo sailors are frequently asked, ‘How do you manage by yourself?’ meaning not, ‘How do you sail the boat?’ but ‘How do you survive the solitude?’ Since most people have never been truly alone they see isolation as a problem, perhaps even a danger, to be overcome. I am not sure this is true but, like most single-handed sailors, far from knowing the answer, I have not even considered the question and retreat behind inane remarks like, ‘There’s always plenty to do’.
Short-handed sailing is a broad church with room for all persuasions. For every blue-water solo sailor there are a hundred who mix and match, sailing with family or friends one weekend and by themselves the next. There are those who day sail happily by themselves but would never consider an overnight passage alone and those who cheerfully cruise for weeks by themselves provided that family and friends join them from time to time to hear of their exploits.
To claim that one form of short-handed sailing is better or more demanding than another is silly. Every short-handed sailor faces the same problems of passage planning and boat handling. Every solo skipper walks the high wire, balancing competing demands on his time.
A solo overnight coastal passage may not carry the cachet of an ocean crossing but the worries of weather, pinpoint navigation, busy shipping lanes, pot buoys and objective dangers make it as challenging and often more dangerous. The sight of land, however distant, terrifies most blue-water sailors. Bill King, solo circumnavigator, considered coastal sailing so hazardous that, when he was in coastal waters, he took a crew whenever possible.
The difference between solo coastal and ocean passages is mostly of scale. Unlike the coastal cruiser, whose exposure to the pressures of being alone lasts only hours and whose problems are solved quickly or not all, the solitary blue-water cruiser measures his stress in weeks, but his problems become old, familiar friends whose idiosyncrasies are tolerated and are dealt with at a gentler pace. It is the difference between a sprinter and a marathon runner.
SINGLE-HANDED SAILING
Somebody, somewhere, has almost certainly prepared a personality profile of the single-handed sailor. It would make interesting reading but ticking boxes will not be of much value to the would-be single-hander who wants to know if solo sailing is for him. I know no shore-bound answer to that question. Being a social isolate is not essential. If single-handed sailors are loners, then they are the most sociable loners in the world. Their cruises tend to be one long party interrupted by the occasional sail to a different location. It is a busy social life.
My first port of call in Les Saintes was the Anse du Bourg on Terre de Haut but I found the anchorage crowded and uncomfortable and the streets ashore full of noisy mopeds. So, I headed for what looked from the chart to be a quiet anchorage in Anse Sous Vent on the uninhabited Islet A’Cabrit, a couple of miles away, only to discover friends that I had not seen for months had exactly the same idea. My anchor had barely reached the sandy bottom before the first invitation for drinks arrived and, when I took that up, I was ordered to that evening’s beach barbeque.
Nor is sailing alone a path leading to deeper truths or the meaning of life. Reading this book, or any other, will not tell you if you can sail solo. I suspect the only sure way of finding an answer is to sail on your own. If you enjoy it then it is for you. If not, then put that voyage down to experience and look for a crew. At least you will know for certain that single-handed sailing is not for you and plan accordingly.
SHORT-HANDED SAILING
However, just because you chose sail with a crew, do not assume that you are not short-handed. Short voyages and kind weather can conceal the truth that many yachtsmen, who would never consider leaving the pontoon without company and would vehemently deny ever considering sailing solo, are a whisker from unwittingly joining the ranks of those who sail alone.
Regardless of how many people are aboard, if the skipper is the only person competent to stand a watch, then he is effectively sailing single-handed. He must either be in the cockpit or on call for the duration of the voyage. He makes every decision, however minor, and then oversees its execution. This describes the single-handed sailor’s life afloat.
Skippers with inexperienced or incompetent crews who require constant instruction and supervision have a hard time. Nothing can be taken for granted. Lack of initiative amongst crew is as much a blessing as a curse, for unwanted enterprise is dangerous. The skipper issues instructions for even the smallest task and can never rely on it being executed properly never mind promptly. From the moment he casts off until he berths, the responsibility for the safety and well-being of the crew niggles at him like toothache.
In the early part of a voyage, or with the arrival of bad weather, the skipper of such crews may find himself alone in the cockpit while his crew lie below, prostrate with seasickness. Some incapacitated crew members, clutching to the erroneous belief that looking towards the horizon is a sure cure for mal de mer, huddle be-hooded and useless in the cockpit. They insist fresh air is good, defiantly rejecting suggestions to go below. They throw up over the compass and court hypothermia until they become comatose and are carried to a bunk. If there is an emergency, then lord help the skipper! At least the single-handed sailor has only his own incompetence and temporary lack of sea legs to worry him.
SAILING WITH CHILDREN OR PARTNERS
Mum and Dad sailing with the kids is a special case. Often only one parent is competent to take command and, if that parent is out of action, the other is confronted with what politicians call ‘hard choices’. Even if both parents are able sailors, in an emergency one will be tasked to look after the children to the exclusion of all else. The other is left to sort the problem out and faces exactly the same challenges as a single-handed sailor but...