Bimini Boom Gallows

When your mainsail is lowered, the task of holding your boom up usually falls to the topping lift. This piece of running rigging can support the vertical load of your boom, but it offers little to keep the boom from swaying laterally. Tightening the mainsheet will help reduce the swing from the boom, but it will still jostle back and forth.

if you are leaving your boat in a marina for the week, a little noise from the traveler and mainsheet is inconsequential. If you are passagemaking and the off-watch crew is trying to sleep, the rattling of the boom could keep them awake.

How do you hold the boom steady when it is lowered?  The old answer was to rest the boom in its gallow. This was a support that would hold the boom in its place when the mainsail was lowered in lieu of a topping lift. Boom gallows can be readily found on historical yachts but are less commonplace on modern production yachts.

If you don't have a boom gallow, like me, and don't have the time to spend fabricating and installing a boom gallow, there is an alternative: your Bimini.

A well made Bimini will be made of stainless steel pipes that can easily support a lot of extra weight. Think about it, the Bimini and dodger need to withstand a boarding wave crashing hundreds of pounds onto your boat. A boom (on a boat below 50 feet in length) is not going to weigh that much, and it can safely be supported for the night while your crew sleeps.

Another great advantage to resting the boom on the Bimini is there is no movement, and therefore, no chafe! The sound of a mainsail sliding back and forth on the Bimini is not only annoying, but it is the sound of damage being done to both parties! Minimizing chafe usually entails raising the boom and tying the sail up nice and tight. This is effective, but also takes time, effort, and a lot of work. The alternative is to lower the topping lift to rest the boom on the Bimini and call it a night!

If you don't have a gallow and need to silence a noisy boom for the night, try resting the boom on your Bimini by easing the topping lift until the boom rests securely in place.

Synthetic Standing Rigging and Quality of Sleep

When you think about rigging, quality of sleep is probably the last detail on your mind. If you plan to do any kind of passage making, quality of sleep should become a priority in your desired attributes list for your rigging. Remember, the headstay attached right above the V-berth in the forward cabin!

Steel rigging with hank on sails or roller furling sails will present a problem to (trying to) sleep off-watch crew. The foil of the furler will constantly tap and shimmy on the stay, making constant racket that is transmitted right over their head! Bronze hanks are just as offensive in anything but high winds.

Bronze hanks in high winds will sit still and quiet down, but anything else will cause the hanks to shimmy and twist on the steel stay making a grating sound that will keep everyone under it awake!

Synthetic headstays are rope and not metal, making it quieter in terms of noise transmission. Then, to protect against chafe, the sail needs to be fitted with soft hanks which look like webbing straps that relocate the bronze hank to the side of the sail. Soft hanks on a synthetic headstay are completely silent!

The sail can be luffing, twisting, shimmying, anything; and the off-watch crew in the V-berth will sleep peacefully under the silence of the synthetic headstay.

Most Useful Sail: The Drifter

They say the least used sail is the spinnaker; I would agree on that. Spinnakers require a lot of work to setup, sail, and strike. If conditions are not perfect, they can quickly become a handful and hold your yacht with the mast in the water until the problem is rectified. This means that few people get to encounter "spinnaker conditions" and those who flew it once won't ever make that mistake again.

While the spinnaker may be the least useful sail on a boat, I would say that its counterpart, the drifter, is the most useful sail to have.

When sailing in the Chesapeake Bay, our drifter would keep us moving on windless days. We would put it up for a few hours to keep moving while the winds died down. Once the winds returned we would strike it and put up the jib in its stead.

We liked our drifter but had no idea just how useful it is until we set out to cross the Atlantic Ocean.

We found ourselves trapped in the doldrums, and with our small electric motor, I mean trapped! There was no wind anywhere and we were not moving at all.

We set our drifter up and quickly began moving forward through the water. While we failed to set any speed records as we transited the doldrums, we were able to move at around 1 knot at all times. Some days we moved 20 miles, other days we moved 40 miles. After about 4 days in the doldrums, we finally found ourselves north enough that the winds began to build again!

Our drifter literally pulled us through the doldrums, bringing us back to the world of wind. On the northern part of the doldrums, we still fly the drifter at night.

This sail is great for downwind sailing, just like a spinnaker, but since it hanks onto the headstay, you have control as you strike it should the winds pick up too much. Downwind, the drifter fills beautifully and provides steady lee helm, this lets your wind steering guide you on a set downwind angle without the need to fight the mainsails' weather helm.

Since the main is not set, there is no noise from the boom or slating sail to keep off-watch crew awake.

For downwind sailing and ocean crossing, the drifter is the most versatile sail you can carry! But that's not all; unlike a spinnaker, a drifter can be sheeted in tight and used to sail upwind in very light conditions. This lets you (slowly) ghost around on light wind days without needing to rely on your motor.

If you are considering the purchase of a spinnaker, why not buy a similar sail that you will actually use?

Ocean Crossing and Chafe

Ocean sailing differs greatly from coastal cruising. In a coastal situation, you can afford to be risky. You can fly too much sail, heel over too far, maybe even push the envelope of what the yacht is capable of. If something breaks, the penalty is rather costly and small, as a repair facility is always at hand. Should your mast break, a sail tear, or a sheet part, the result is the same: the boat broke and will be fixed promptly at a nearby facility.

In the ocean, there is no nearby facility. If something on the boat breaks, you are left to your own devices to repair it. Carrying too much sail can risk tearing the sails with no sail loft for a thousand miles and no way of getting your yacht to shore! Setting the sails against the rigging will also cause them to chafe, and that will lead to a gash forming in the sail cloth.

On a deep broad reach or run, you may be tempted to ease the main all the way out and let it drape against the rigging, but each wave and puff of wind will cause the sail to shimmy up and down on the stay, sawing through the cloth.

Instead of trimming the sails to perfection, it is more important to trim the sails to longevity. Keep them set in a way that they do not contact any part of the boat or rigging. This will keep them from chafing and will almost guarantee that your sails will make it across the ocean and be ready to carry you back home when the time comes.

This might not be the fastest way, nor the most efficient, but it certainly is the safest and most frugal way to trim your sails.

Pig Beach

No, this isn't a photo from a farm, this is on the beach near Staniel Cay.

IMG_2495.JPG

The original pigs were shrouded in mystery, as no one knew for sure where they came from. The current pigs are brought over from Nassau as they have become a tourist attraction. Pigs do surcomb to disease and die from time to time, and they are replaced with a new pig to keep the pig population going. That being said, the pigs are doing their own part to keep their numbers up. These little piglets were going to town as they feasted upon their mother.

IMG_2510.JPG

The pigs do enjoy a different lifestyle from their agrarian counterparts, as they live on a beach and often go for swims in the pristine waters. There is a freshwater spring in the island, but the pigs prefer to stay on the beach where tourists bring them food. This has led to the locals providing them fresh water on their beach front villa. 

IMG_2516.JPG

The pigs will come out into the water when a tour boat arrives, because they know tourists are going to bring them lots of tasty snacks! 

IMG_2507.JPG

It was fun to watch the pigs swim with superyachts in the background. 

IMG_2519.JPG

While the big pigs like to go swimming, the smaller piglets seemed content to hang out under the bushes. Keeping cool in the shade as they sleep the day away with full bellies from all the tourist handouts.