SAFE AND SIMPLE
Small Craft Advisor|July - August 2020
Changing rigs extended this sailor’s time on the water
Phil Brown
SAFE AND SIMPLE

How could this less spry “geezer” (seems there are more of us these days) continue sailing in safety and comfort through changing weather conditions in his advancing years? Some sailors have gone to power while others find ways to manage jib and main with minimal deck work.

My approach was to commit to a major modification of my Com-Pac 19 that should allow me to continue sailing with confidence. My answer was a junk rig with a powerful, well-cambered, and easily reefed sail. Now after three seasons of sailing with this rig on the Maine coast I can say the modification has given me all I had hoped for. Now I can do all sail handling from the comfort of the cockpit and, rather than reefing in anticipation of conditions, easily and quickly reef and raise sail as those changes occur.

Reefing the single sail, in addition to being fast and easy, offers a number of sail carrying options. To reef Iuncleat the halyard and lower the sail, one, two, three, or four of the sail’s seven 29-square-foot panels. While possible, I haven’t yet sailed with fewer than three panels. As the sail drops into the lazy jacks I haul in the slack mainsheet to keep it inboard. I re-cleat the halyard then readjust and re-cleat two control lines, the yard and throat hauling parrels, and continue sailing.

This story is from the July - August 2020 edition of Small Craft Advisor.

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This story is from the July - August 2020 edition of Small Craft Advisor.

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