Interesting. I have considered mounting them on the mast but never thought about the boom. What would be the advantage of one location over the other? What do most of you guys do with paddles? Often times I just leave them on the trailer as I am rarely more than 150 yards from shore and can easily tow the boat that far while swimming.
On the Getaway, I used to slide them into the bungee lacing under the wings. Now I've got a Prindle 19 and was planning on tying them to the rear tramp lacing, under the lacing flap. At least until I saw that video. The boom looks like a great location.
I'm thinking something like a couple holes drilled in the paddles and some bungee cord should do it. I asked in the hope that someone had already put some thought into this. But I enjoy experimenting.
I've been caught out on the lake when the sun gets low and the lake suddenly turn to glass. Had to paddle a bit before a boat came by and towed me to shore.
The boom is not really a great long term location. a paddle could hit someone during a tack at some point. The guys in the race are pulling out the paddles often.. it makes more sense but i BET THE FARM someone eats that paddle every race
On the trailer is obviously of no use if you demast, or the wind dies. I would not leave it there with an offshore wind
I can't see the mast as a great location either... you have things like Jibs (unless uni rigged), jib sheets that will constantly get fouled on a paddle.
on my h18 i drilled a few holes in each decklid to lace bungee to hold my paddle. worked flawless (except the amount of exposure on the paddle reduced its lifespan)
I know people who simply place it by the rear beam, under the hiking straps, with a single line holding it in place incase of capsize.
I personally have 2 collapsible paddles. 1 in my hull (i have an access hatch) and the other in my trunk. I will bring it if i have crew, but thats not often. it is soooooo much easier for 2 people with paddles than 1.
I carry an extendable paddle on my boom during any long race, especially if the start is miles offshore.
I hold it to the boom with tech velcro straps - the kind that have a plastic buckle at one end and the closure part at the other. There is a hand hold (oval hole) on the end of the paddle, and I use this to strap it up out of the way while stored.
If you're going to get hit by anything in this situation, it'll be the boom.
-- Sheet In!
Bob
_/)_____/)_/)____/)____/)_____/)/)__________/)__
Prindle 18-2 #244 "Wakizashi"
Prindle 16 #3690 "Pegasus" Sold (sigh)
AZ Multihull Fleet 42 member
(Way) Past Commodore of Prindle Fleet 14
Arizona, USA --
I have a telescoping paddle that I occasionally carry on the H18. I carefully cut 1/4 - 1/2" off of each side and it will slip inside my 6" access port and can be stored inside the hull and out of the way.
i still have the extendable paddle but have had them fail on me in my time of need
i now carry a decent quality one, tucked into my tramp and rear beam - not even tied .. just pinched in there
saved me last weekend when the wind crapped out and the tide wouldn't let me into hurricane pass to get home
Do you just drop the paddle in? have you got anything to keep it from sliding forward in the hull? I guess the dagger trunk would keep if from sliding back.
-- Sheet In!
Bob
_/)_____/)_/)____/)____/)_____/)/)__________/)__
Prindle 18-2 #244 "Wakizashi"
Prindle 16 #3690 "Pegasus" Sold (sigh)
AZ Multihull Fleet 42 member
(Way) Past Commodore of Prindle Fleet 14
Arizona, USA --
On the P18, I keep a sturdy, medium-sized SUP paddle w/ a T -handle bungeed to the hiking straps, just behind my built-in tramp bag and just in front of my jib blocks. I lays flat, between the hulls and doesn't seem to snag anything there. So far.
I see others who bungee one right to their boom. As I often do with my gopro camera pole. This works better on a boxed boom than a rounded one. If you do it right, it won't jam up the outhaul or rotator-limiter systems. No one has been guillotined. So far..
Personally I see no point in strapping the paddle under the hull, where it will be out of reach in light winds, or following a rudder failure.
Hi,
I slide my Prindle 16 at a boat ramp some distance up a very quiet Chesapeake inlet. I've tried pushing, paddling and even made a pair of monstrous 13' oars mounting them in custom oarlocks. But the solution was there in the redneck section of youtube. Look it up. I 'drill myself ' out into the breeze, never takes more than five minutes, and I'm off.