I had to come to work on the 4th this year, such is life as a junior First Officer. But can’t complain about the holiday pay! Lucky for us, the marina held a slipholders-only fireworks party on the 3rd. The weather looked to be perfect for sailing with 5-8kts from the west, so on the 2nd I went to west marine and picked myself up a Loos PT1. After lots of research I decided to just get the shrouds to about 300-400lbs with a 17” rake on a weighted topping lift plumb bob from the mast step.
It took a lot of trial and error, but eventually I found the sweet spot. The uppers are at about 33 on the PT1 and the lowers at about 30, putting them at about 400 and 340 respectively. Maybe this is right maybe this is wrong idk it seems about middle of the road compared to opinions I’ve found here and elsewhere. I am seriously considering swapping out the verniers for turnbuckles, I have always removed all hardware from the deck and mast every time I have trailered Seaweed and the only argument I’ve seen for the adjusters is that they are better for trailering, but I also respect the original design concept from Roger and am leery of altering anything important.
I can’t believe how much force is needed to crank on the MRS to pin the forestay with this tension! I was so afraid of blowing out the chainplates or the strap where the gin pole block attaches or snapping the mast but it worked out! And with the rig properly tight I was confident in hoisting the sails for the first time.
I was also able to drop the mast all the way and reattach the lazy jack system while standing on the dock. This system is the Sail Cradle from SailCare, and the elastic cords that came with the boat look like they’ve been chewed by rats. The company was extremely helpful over email in figuring out which model I have and which length of bungee I needed, and I had the replacement in hand. Along with a new longer main halyard, new longer Genoa sheets and a new longer furler line, the lazy jacks have essentially made Seaweed a single hand boat again. The halyard aft tackle was already installed on the deck, but the halyard line I had was too short to reach much below the mast cleat until the sail was halfway up. My theory is the PO took his nice lines with him when he sold it to me and replaced them with the original equipment.
I am planning now on using the original lines to create some sort of parallel cheater line between the pilings at my slip that I can use to enter and exit single handed, but that’s for another post. I also need to move the jib halyard block up the mast to its own bracket, because the CDI furler cap keeps catching on it when I was trying to rotate it to pin the forestay and the jib halyard was under so much tension. I think this will also help to raise the asym, which I have never done.
Anyway, we got on the boat around 5pm, danced thru the harbor a little more confident than last time, and got out on the bay. Pointed her into the wind, unfurled the Genoa to about 100% and thru the deck cars, then raised the main. We were sailing! It was a beam reach all the way up to Herrington north, where we tacked back around for the same all the way back. The wind was constant, and we all had a turn in the helm.
I did not disconnect the motor, I don’t understand how to pin it to the starboard pivot. I know it needs a nut, but I can’t seem to find the right angle for it to fit. I have the BWY quick pin kit so I will be installing that this winter. We never had an issue with the motor causing the wheel to turn on its own, so who knows?
The speedometer wheel is probably fouled up with gunk because it read 0.0 the whole time, so I probably need to hit it with a toothbrush because it was working the last two times out. But we were moving right along sailed about 6 miles over two hours. Also, sailing much closer to the wind than I ever have before, and no problem tacking thru, so I think the tension really makes a difference.
Fireworks began around 9:30, and the youngest of our trio desperately wanted to hit the pool, so we fired up the motor and tested WOT beating a few other boats back to the entrance channel.
She fell asleep halfway thru the fantastic fireworks. What a great day!
Oh also forgot to mention I wrapped the helm in the leftover cord I had from the furler messenger line. What an upgrade!! Will finish it off with a Turk’s Head soon but the direct sunlight in the heat was too much to continue.
