pokerrick1 wrote: Moral of the story: don't fall overboard if you are sailing alone

Funny story: My friend lost his footing and went overboard while single handing. Deck was wet, he was not wearing boat shoes, and he slipped while going forward topside outside the stays (the boat was narrow and it was his habit to sidestep along the windward deck edge while holding onto the stays). He loses his footing, but holds onto the stays, tries grabbing a fender but it goes over the side, and he winds up slipping down along the stay until his hand hits the turnbuckle swage near the chain plate and it opens him up pretty good. He lets go because of the pain and drops into the water.
So now he's in the middle of San Diego bay, bleeding, treading water, and watching the boat sail off without him. It was a tiller rudder he'd tied off before going forward. It wasn't a busy day on the bay being a weekday, and nobody had seen him go in, nor was there anyone else within shouting or waving distance. In the water he took his shirt off and tied it around his hand as a bit of a bandage.
Just as he's committing himself to a two-mile swim to Coronado Naval Air Station (along with probable arrest upon stumbling ashore), he notices that the boat has been arcing to starboard and suddenly "autotacked", with the jib backwinded. As soon as it did that, it started doing pretty tight circles because the tiller fell to the side it had been tied to.
So he starts swimming towards it. He watches it gybe, and now its coming basically right at him as the tiller fell back against the robe and straightened the boat out. So he starts swimming to intercept, and winds up grabbing the fender he'd knocked over the side when he fell out as the boat passes by him. There's no transom on this boat and it was very difficult to board even from a dingy, so he's exceptionally lucky there was anything he could reach at all. After being dragged a few hundred feet hugging the fender, he manages to get a hand and then foot up on deck and hauls himself aboard. Gets the first aid kit out, fixes up his hand as best he can, and brings the boat back in to the slip.
Not funny part: It was my boat.