After 1.5 hour drive I got to sailing sight at 8 am. . I rigged the boat after replacing one of the shackles on the boom that was lost via transport, good I had spares, and was at water’s edge by 11 using my 2 wheel set beech wheels.I took my time not to forget any of the 100’s of tasks. Low and behold the jib halyard was threaded wrong through the diamond wire so after 10 minutes trying to figure out some sort of how to get the wires on the other side of the diamond I just threw a rope up there with the halyard tied to it and pulled it down the right way to free it. I raised the sails. No issues. I had my righting pole, small oar, bottle of water etc. I maneuvered the boat to the water with one set of wheels, the cat trax wheels and one cone on the edge got stuck in the daggerboard well. I took effort and maneuvering to release it. The plastic cone was cracked/ but still usable if I decide to keep cones--they got more in the way than anything. No damage to well walls. I got the boat into the water and into the wind--THEN
Both hands got horrible cramps, like my thumb on my left hand retracted uncontrollably back to my wrist. I had to PRY my thumb back to normal position with my other hand. You may have experienced this yourself fiddling with all the parts your hand muscles give out. I had thoughts that I might not be good idea to launch if I had problems with my hands. After all I had to control an unfamiliar boat. People on the beach right near me were watching my whole process--from car to water. I could almost hear what they were thinking…. will he do it. I thought to myself---F it and jumped on it and headed up wind to the Bay Bridge, center of the narrowest part of the Chesapeake Bay. Open water. I wanted to be up wind from put in, in case of problems.
Conditions were: Wind 14 kn constant no gusts, steady ideal for my purposes. Waves 1-2, Sunny and 75 degrees.
Sailing: Pretty anti climatic to say the least. I didn’t deploy the jib as I wanted to practice all points of sail to know I could maneuver in any direction plus I didn’t want the extra labor in dealing with the jib getting use to the tiller and sheet. I sailed block to block and let out to full. I found dealing with the traveler cleat somewhat cumbersome. Lines were hard to distinguish since they’re the same color. Had to sort through lines to determine which one was sheet/ traveler line. Tiller got hung on raised traveler cleat due to I never got off my butt so low angle caused some hangups. Huge reversal of blocks on jibs if you are not closed hulled. It was pretty easy to tack. Jibs were OK. I found being closed hauled down wind was faster than an open sail. Boat was fastest nearly perpendicular to wind. After 2 hours of successful sailing going any direction I felt pretty confident, but got tired. My water was out. I was hot/ not the right cloths: water cold, air warm. So knowing the labor I faced I headed back in. The launch/ landing area is a 50’ strip between rock jetties. I put it right in up wind. Had little problem getting boards up but no problem. Got off the boat:
Now for the fun part. It was an absolute PITA getting the boat out of the water. The people on the beach who were watching me were gone. I got one passer by, guy smoking helped me get it out of the water. He left suddenly: at least its out of the water he said. Maneuvering the beech wheels were a real problem. He left: Boat was now completely out of the water on a 30 degree bank about the length of the boat. Impossible for me to push up to more level ground. Got another man… we rigged the rear wheels to keep them from moving back as we pushed forward. Took much time as my rope was too long. We both pushed the boat through the sand and all the way to parking lot where there stood the park rangers car:
She said: I don’t believe we’ve ever had a small craft as large as this one in the small craft launch area--even though Hobie Cat is mentioned on their website under the small craft launch area. She also said: Do you need any help and I said NO. Boat was in easy access to my trailer, in fact we pushed the boat up the ramp and it was sitting in the parking lot on quad beech wheels after speaking with the ranger.
Mid way via derigging the boat an older lady who was with a family at a picnic table brought over a bottle of water. She said: that’s a lot of work you’re doing. We stopped playing cards just to watch you do all this, getting the boat ready. They watched me sail etc. I gladly took her water and talked with her a tad more. As I was leaving they were packing up too and her husband asked: how many more time are you going to be doing this yourself? I looked at him in the eye and said: Maybe never. We both laughed. Yea, people are curious about idiots trying to tackle more than they can chew but this one proved if you set your mind to it, you can nearly accomplish anything. I did everything except for 5 minutes of work from passerby which would have made it impossible solo. (How about that idea of a motorized quad wheels or simply use a static 12mm arborist line and drag it up the 8’ 30 degree bank with the trailer. It’s only 50 ft from the edge of the hill. I’m done thinking about it solo.
It was a great day and I finally got the boat in the water and went sailing. I’d like to experience this boat again in greater wind using the jib and trap, but probably won’t do that solo. WAY TOO MUCH WORK FOR ME. I’d have to have at least two others, and a cooler as this boat is more like a party boat. Nice stable platform in moderate wind. Wind direction could pose problem getting out of that narrow beach…. a motor to drive it from motor boat ramp through the channel to sailing area would be less work…. or perhaps buy a bigger boat at marina where with a stocked frig might get more interested parties ( who are not interested in pushing a boat around) to hang out and have fun…. so many options… so little time.. this is a team sport I fear. Next up--building the team perhaps or looking for that C&C with a cabin.
Thanks for your help..
BTW: left the park at 5 pm home by 7 as I has DC/Balt work traffic... wife took me to dinner sensing I was hurting...
Edited by goodsailing on May 16, 2015 - 12:16 PM.
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Goodsailing
Laser-Standard Rig (Sold 6/15)
H18 (Sold 7/15)
Building 19' Tacking Outrigger
Balt-Wash Area
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