Sailing

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founded 1 year ago
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A few of you may remember my post about the back end of my boat falling off and wanted to say thank you for all of your advice/encouragement!

I started building a new rudder a couple weeks ago and am probably a couple weeks out from getting it finished up. The hole in the back end has been sealed up and I built a much stronger mounting point than the original system.

I found a template of my boats rudder and modeled a copy then 3d printed the core. Between the fiberglass and the rods I’ve added for rigidity, I’m hoping it works out well. It may be coming up to October, but I think I’ll get at least one test run before the season ends.

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I'm a member of Erith Yacht Club and I've been working on their website - Adding content and starting to think and talk with others in the club about the technology running behind it.

More generally I have a background in Marketing and Media Tech, CRM digital and Social media advertising and marketing.

Keeping the club going with CRM, Website, Accounting systems, Admin, Collaboration , Building tech, Events booking, Social media, email communications is hard work for everyone.

I'm keen to talk to other sailing clubs who are interested in using OpenSource tech to manage their club, the tech itself and wider issues around that. (Skills, training, tech, costs, data privacy, security - Working with Committees all that kind of thing)

Tech I have been looking at includes - Wordpress, CiviCRM, Mobilizon](https://mobilizon.org/en/), obviously love to include Lemmy/Mastodon in our social media but keeping Facebook going is enough work already. I don't just want to talk about the tech though.

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If you want to take someone sailing on a boat and you ask them if they can swim, what exactly are you asking? Everyone can float if they have a life jacket right?

My understanding is that someone is being asked if they can take care of themselves and/or tread water until they are rescued and/or if they are a strong swimmer, but I could be wrong.

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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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Bought a 1984 Hunter 27 recently. There is some exposed lead on the keel where some paint is chipping off. Any advice?

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I took the boat out for its first sail this year and lost the rudder.

Do you guys think this is reparable or am I buying a new boat? It’d be a shame to lose her over something so stupid

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The season will be opening up here in Upstate NY soon. It can't come soon enough.

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I liked this guy's dodger so started following him. He's a cruiser but got invited to a regatta and filmed it. I think it gives a great perspective of what a sailboat race is like. I think more cruisers should go racing, it teaches you how to react under pressure and how to use your equipment. And tests your equipment, it's better to break stuff on a Wednesday night than 2 weeks out from port!

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Being on a sailboat often means having a plethora of beach and wading opportunities. It also means space is at a premium. You'll have to load everything into the dinghy, or carry it with you if you are walking there.

I'm going to be heading back to the states, and am planning on upping my beach game. While the only thing I currently have is a little shade tent that I barely use, what I have on my list, based on hanging out with other cruisers at the beach, are as follows:

  • Ball/Frisbee (catch is crazy fun, and as a grown up, I don't do it enough)
  • Beach Chair (just to keep yourself off the sand)
  • Portable cooler of some kind for beverages
  • Beach blanket/towel (again, sand buffer)

What would you add?

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Anyone have any bareboat chartering experience in either/both? I have pretty extensive BVI charter experience and am looking to do the Med for the first time. For a long time, Med == Greece for me, but I hear a lot now about Croatia being the new hotness. Curious if anyone can share some key points of difference between the two.

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After two months on Porto Santo it's time to head to the Canary Islands.

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So a boat neighbor of mine was just telling me that he's got an entire locker configured just for an onboard hydroponics setup. I'm gonna head over at some point this week to check it out, but he mentioned that it all started with this book.

You will notice a couple of things.

  • This book was published in 1981.
  • Amazon lists it for $75 (paperback)
  • If you just Google it, there are a lot of freely available PDF versions
  • On the fourth page of the pdf, it says you can order your own copy for $7.95 + $.50 postage and handling.

Regardless, I think I'm going to enjoy this.

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Not sure how well this will work, sharing a post from a different community.

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Just saw this in "all" and thought I'd share.

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I'd been lazy about it because I need to launch from a boat ramp every time. This was my second time out. First time with the jib up. She sailed just fine. Great day for it. Got back at 5:30 and finally ready to get gone at 8. It's kind of stupid how much time it can take to get everything back together for trailering. I need more than one day off a week for this.

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Weather was very nice but the wind could’ve been more constant. Regardless, this is freaking great.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by mountainCalledMonkey@lemmy.world to c/sailing@lemmy.world
 
 

what offshore pfd recommendations do you have? i have used several but never take note of brand/model. I'm looking at this mustang md3184; something with harness built in and easy enough to travel with.

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Picked up a Force 5 dinghy plus trailer years ago, for the low low price of $100. Prior owner had let water sit in the mast tube, cracking it vertically. Trailer bunks were set up improperly as well, leading to some gnarly cracks in the hull. Without having any sailing experience, I was besotted with her (I can't resist a good project), until I learned the sail slipped over the mast and wasn't raised via halyard. I set her aside for a few years while I worked on other boat projects that fell into my lap (O'Day 19 & Westerly Centaur).

I'm based on a river with height restrictions in both directions, preventing me from actually sailing with the O'Day and the Westerly. The dinghy can make it under with feet to spare. I'd like to get some actual sailing in,, so I've set myself a goal to finish the rehab and get her on the water before the end of the season.

Mast tube has been repaired. Ground out and beveled the cracks in the hull, then fiberglassed several layers over. I hate mixing gelcoat, so I'll be painting instead. PVC replacements for the thwart bits are sitting in the pile, ready to go.

Trailer needs some work as well: bunkers need to be secured better, tires and bearings need inspection.

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After four hours of sail through the rain. Just after we docked the sun greeted us.

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Forecast had it miserably hot, but turned out to be decent. Way nicer than I was expecting.

O'Day 23-2 rafted up to a 32' Benateu, and another O'Day (272LE).

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This was taken in the Hornsund - southern Spitsbergen. I would love to go back - a very stark and beautifiul place.

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