Steven Tunnacliffe wrote:Hi Guys
How do you come in on a lee shore (more details please) with a howling wind behind you and big waves,
eg. sail down I assume?
or up so you Keep up with the wind and waves?
Get off running is that you leaping off boat at speed and dragging it up the beach on a wave if everything goes well?
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In the big waves it tends not to be practical too drop the sail since the waves will play havoc with you trying to stay head too wind. So I normally hit the beach with full sail.
Going head too wind at the beach also tends not too work since the waves will prevent you from reaching head to wind and then you run the risk of the boat rolling in the breakers and possibly breaking the mast.
Well my technique is too sail straight at the beach, looking for a sandy patch if there is one, pull in traveller and sheet main fully in too slow the boat as much as possible. If you have time put rudders half up, weight all the way back, try too land on a big wave so you get taken up the beach as much as possible. Leap out and turn into wind. You may have too accept some slight skeg damage.
My mistakes the other weekend were, caused mainly by concentrating on other things rather than my setup for landing:
1) I forgot too pull in the main and traveller so I came in way too fast
2) I wasn't on a dead run!
3) So I hit the beach way too fast and clunked a rudder but at least it acted as a speed brake
John Holmes also landed in a similar fashion on a broad reach, not having much experience in such conditions, and toboggand up the beach about 10ft fortunately it was on a sandy patch! and his blades kicked up.
Martin S.