Jump to content

Rob Hazard

Guest
  • Posts

    690
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Rob Hazard

  1. I just read this report through again. Sounds like most everyone had a great time. I hope John is completely recovered from his broken leg by now! 

    Yesterday morning I ventured out on the Gulf off Yankeetown, FL, with a few fellow Greenland stickers for a serene (flat calm) 10 mile paddle. 

    Merry Christmas, everyone! Hope to paddle with you all next summer!

     

    Cheers,

    Rob

  2. Thinking further about this, it occurred to me that some people respond to questions like, "Hey, you got your paddle?", or to directions that engage their knowledge, like "Go to the stern of your boat, where the Skeg is!", or to a request like, "Can you swim your boat out to me?" The point in each case is to engage them mentally to an active state and jog them free of the frozen state.

    Sometimes a quick joke can break the spell and get a swimmer back on the team: "Hey, good thing you're wearing that orange helmet, huh?"

  3. Josko, I don't know how helpful any one magazine article would be. What does help is rescue practice and lots of it. Paddling classes under either the BCU or ACA systems will help immensely. You need to be confident in your ability to handle the conditions and to put a capsized paddler back in the boat and ready to continue, even if it's just to be towed to shore.

    Practice, practice, practice!

  4. The time and hassle involved in launching and rigging a sailboat is part of why I spend so much of my time in a kayak. The speed and ease of rigging my Coquina is part of why I chose that design as a building project.

    From the videos you posted, Leon, it seems the advantage of roll tacking is to keep the ends out of the water so the boat spins quicker. Only then do you move your weight to weather, just in time to prevent capsizing. Plus popping the boat upright fills the sail instantly without luffing. Looks like it pays to be <30years old.

    I spent Saturday helping teach an Advanced Strokes class at Crystal River. It felt just like Chebacco Lake with Manatees!

  5. Does a Sunfish respond to roll-tacking the way a Laser does? Maybe it's not your fault! My Coquina, a 17ft cat-ketch, prefers to be sailed serenely through a tack, with just a touch of backed main to help her around. But she's so pretty I forgive her that quirk.

  6. Gee, I WISH I had it as easy as Leon! I have to put the boat on the car, drive 45 minutes to Cedar Key or Crystal River, lug the boat down to the water, put on a shortie wetsuit for the cold water, blah blah blah...

    And I have news for you; once you've seen your first hundred manatees, they're BORING! A dolphin swimming under the boat is more exciting, but that doesn't happen all that often.

    And conditions? Some headwind and a few motorboat wakes if you're lucky!

    (Jason, your shot of Casco Bay is making me homesick! I must be nuts!)

  7. Gary,

    That natural arch is located at the west end of Salisbury Cove, not far east of Hadley Point. I knew it was somewhere along that section of shoreline so we went looking for it on our way back from Bar Harbor.

    We all had a splendid weekend up there. The high point for me was Sunday's paddle out of Seal Harbor. With a fleet of 13 we toured Bear I. and Sutton I. before stopping for lunch on Little Cranberry. We then headed out around Baker I. and returned to Seal Harbor. The sky was flawless and the view of the mountains of MDI was spectacular. It was a total blast.

    I can't wait to go there again!

    Many thanks to Peter Brady for instigating and organizing a great weekend on the water.

  8. Very thorough report, Pru! And LOTS of pictures!

    I had a great time yesterday. Thanks for posting the trip.

    As to the lack of a chart, if you can't find your way from Lanesville to Rockport without a chart, the chart wouldn't help you anyway!

    On the other hand, I was chagrined to find I'd left my helmet home, so I had to bypass the tastiest rocky bits. I still managed to leave a few stripes of gel-coat behind.

    The svelte sailboat in question was a fiberglass version of L. Francis Herreshoff's iconic "Rozinante". I was glad to find I'm not the only Herreshoff groupie in the club!

    Thanks again, Pru, and everyone who came along.

  9. Thursday we had 6 boats on the lake. It was damp, gray, and cool and the majority of us were in drysuits. A little rolling happened but we mostly preferred to stay more or less upright. Give the water temp a tiny nudge upward and we'll start getting more upside down.

×
×
  • Create New...