Great Stories/videos! 

Just reading these gets my heart thumping. They are too real.

 

Bill Coleman

C&C 39

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Martin
DeYoung
Sent: Friday, April 11, 2014 5:22 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Spinnaker Stops

 

 

Ed, awesome spinnaker story, especially based on a C&C 39, one of my
favorite C&C designs. As someone famous said: what don’t kill you makes
great sea stories.

 

 

I have a scar (8 stiches) over my right eye from a similar “blow the guy”
take down when a less experienced non-English speaking crew snubbed the guy
during a spinnaker take down. That’s the short story.

 

Long story: 

 

The boat was a Frers 46.  It was April 1989 and we were hosting 9 Japanese
sailors in town for the SYC Suma Cup.  The plan was to sail/tour  the
Seattle waterfront then head for the yacht club.  The owner and I were the
only non-Japanese on board.  We were sailing in a 5-10 southerly, ½ mile off
Alki Point, with just a spinnaker up (no main) in flat water.  Being tour
guides we (the owner and I) did not see a line squall coming at us from the
north.  When the strong northerly squall wind hit, the boat was spun towards
the now way too close lee shore.

 

As the boat’s owner and I had sailed many miles together (big IOR boats and
J-24s) we had little need to communicate between us the urgent nature of the
spinnaker take down and how to go about it.  I communicated to the Japanese
J-24 sailors with English sailing terms and hand signals the concept of a
lazy sheet leeward drop.  The plan was to blow the guy and the spinnaker
halyard simultaneously and completely while several of us gather the sail at
the leeward rail.  The owner had the engine started and in reverse to help
slow our progress towards the way, way too close beach.  The engine was
losing the battle.

 

So, all is well as I gather large armfuls of spinnaker until one of our
guests snubs the guy.  The spinny filled rapidly / explosively and launched
me off the deck.  I (am told) went up until my boots caught the lifelines,
flipped until my head hit the aluminum toe rail, then landed in the water
slightly dazed but still hold fast to the spinny sheet.  I recall it being
weird that a bunch of Japanese guys were pulling me back onboard and
blotting up blood with paper towels.  (Fortunately one of the Japanese
sailors was a Dr. Later after things settled a bit he did some origami with
a few Band-Aids to close the wound.)

 

Once I was back upright and on board, the spinnaker was unloaded enough to
handle and the boat was kept off the beach.  With the mess on deck
straightened up we powered north to the Lake Washington Ship Canal, went
through the Ballard Locks, and tied up at Seattle Yacht Club docks where the
SYC members who had offered to house the Japanese sailors expected to meet
their guests.

 

By 10pm, most of the guest sailors were taken care of and some boat drinks
had been consumed.  My wife had showed up to drive the left over guests and
me back to our home.  She was underwhelmed with another head wound caused by
a boat related adventure.  Once our guests were settled I drove myself to
the local ER for proper stitches.  The black, blue, and yellow/greenish hue
around one side of my face made for good conversation at the regatta
socials.

 

SYC successfully defended the Suma Cup.

 

Martin

Calypso

1971 C&C 43

Seattle


cid:D1BF9853-22F7-47FB-86F2-4115CE0BAF2F

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Ed Levert
Sent: Friday, April 11, 2014 1:28 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Spinnaker Stops

 

This is not about spinnaker stops but it is about a spinnaker douse. It is
an example of the forces large boats can generate.

 

It was my first sail/race on any C&C,  the 1st race for brand new C&C 39
Corrie, Hull # 3 just commissioned for my sister's in laws. (They swapped
delivery positions so that Hull #2, Windquest, could compete in the SORC)
Competent skipper and competent (with 1 exception) and sufficient crew. 

 

Chute was set without stops on a course that was on the beam or just ahead
in too much wind. After several rig/boat shaking broaches, the order was
given to drop the chute. It was too dangerous for the foredeck crew to trip
the shackle on the guy. The option was to let the guy run. I uncleated the
guy not realizing that someone else had put a knot in the end. Stopped by
the knot at the block, the chute was still violently filling and collapsing
but now with the tack nowhere near the pole and the pole doing a good job of
making the headstay look like a pulled bow string. 

 

With the skipper/owner's approval, I cut the guy at the block thinking I was
only losing a knot's length of line. The guy then ran through the end of the
pole with enough drag that combined with the pole's stressing of the
headstay, when the sail pressure was released, the original equipment pole
sprung aft into the shrouds bending it 90 degrees. Thankfully no one's head
was up. 

 

And that is my Friday afternoon story. Have a good weekend all !

 

Ed

C&C 34 Briar Patch

New Orleans

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