The Complete Sailor, Second Edition
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About this ebook
This is not just an instructional book---it's an insight into a sailor's approach to the sea, boats, and the ever-changing dynamic of wind on the water
"A learn-to-sail book with heart."--WoodenBoat
"A real winner...a masterful blend of straightforward text with delightful and instructive illustrations. Quite simply a great primer on sailing and the world of boats for readers of all ages."--Cruising World
"Teaches sailing with flair and poetry."--SAIL
"A great walk-through for the novice, both entertaining and thorough."--Sailing
"Sits in a class by itself. Elegantly simple, encyclopedic in scope, and a delightful reference for any novice—with lots to offer intermediate sailors, too."--Kalamazoo Gazette
If you never sailed, sailed once, or have sailed for a lifetime, this book is perfect for beginners but deep enough content for those interested in going beyond basics. Revised and expanded to include racing and GPS navigation, The Complete Sailor is not just a how-to sail book, but a book that teaches you how to become a sailor.
Inside you’ll find:
- An all-in-one, comprehensive introduction to sailing
- Up-to-date information on techniques and approaches offered by the changing nature of the sport
- Exquisite pen-and-ink illustrations
Topics include: Wind Sense; Working Winds; Getting Underway; The Boat; Rigging; Sails; Under Power; Rules of the Road; Anchoring; Ropework; Marlinspike Seamanship; Emergencies; Sea and Sky; Navigation; Racing; Trailering
David Seidman
David Seidman is a Los Angeles–area journalist, editor, and author who often writes nonfiction for teens. He comes to the topic of atheism with empathy for teenagers and for people in the religious minority, but he’s nobody’s advocate. He has written on topics as diverse as a US president, civil rights, teens in Iran, and holiday lights displays.
Read more from David Seidman
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Reviews for The Complete Sailor, Second Edition
22 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I received this book after taking a sailing class. I have not actually read through the entire book from beginning to end, but have found it to be a great resource and something I often refer to before going sailing when it's been a while since my last trip. A great book that I will keep on my shelf for many years to come.
Book preview
The Complete Sailor, Second Edition - David Seidman
The Complete Sailor
The Complete Sailor
Learning the Art of Sailing
SECOND EDITION
Written and Designed by
David Seidman
Illustrated by
Kelly Mulford, with Jan Adkins
Copyright © 1994, 1995, 2011 by International Marine/The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The name International Marine
and the International Marine logo are trademarks of The McGraw-Hill Companies. All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
ISBN: 978-0-07-175084-4
MHID: 0-07-175084-3
The material in this eBook also appears in the print version of this title: ISBN: 978-0-07-174957-2, MHID: 0-07-174957-8.
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TERMS OF USE
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Contents
BECOMING A SAILOR
WIND SENSE
Direction
Words of the Wind
Land and the Wind
True & Apparent Winds
Wind Speed Tables
Wind Strength
WORKING WINDS
With the Wind
Across the Wind
Working the Wind
Into the Wind
GETTING UNDERWAY
Bending Sail
Steering
Making Sail
Leaving a Mooring, or a Dock
Reaching
Keeping a Course
Close-Hauled
Tacking
Other Tacks
In Irons
Downwind
Jibing
Slowing Down
Heaving-To
Heavy Weather
Capsized!
Practice
Returning to a Mooring, or a Dock
Beach Sailing
Dock Work
Leaving Her
THE BOAT
Form
Comparing Boats
Lines
Stability
Heeling
Resistance
Preventing Leeway
Wooden Boats
Fiberglass Boats
Metal Boats
Buoyancy
Boats
RIGGING
Standing Rigging
Tuning the Rig
Running Rigging
Sail Controls
Tackle
Winches
Stepping the Mast
Rigs
Balance
SAILS
Sail Shape
Telltales
Fault Finder
Reefing
The Genoa
The Spinnaker
Sail Care
UNDER POWER
Inboards
Outboards
Oars
RULES OF THE ROAD
Right of Way
Avoiding Collisions
Sound Signals
Lights & Shapes
ANCHORING
Ground Tackle
The Anchorage
Anchoring Under Sail
A Second Anchor
Weighing Anchor
Moorings
MARLINSPIKE SEAMANSHIP
Rope
The Ditty Bag
Knots
Cleats
Eye Splice
Going Aloft
Chafe
Coiling
Heaving Lines
EMERGENCIES
Avoiding Trouble
Personal Safety
Aground
Man Overboard
Towing
Signaling for Help
SEA & SKY
Weather
Fog
Squalls
Currents
Tides
Waves
NAVIGATION
Language of the Chart
Aids to Navigation
Lights
Visibility
Sound
Plotting a Course
The Compass
Deviation
Lines of Position
Danger LOPs
Distance Off
A Fix
Dead Reckoning
Distance Run
Speed
Running Fix
Correcting for Currents
GPS
Getting a Fix with GPS
Waypoint Navigation
Staying on n Course with GPS
RACING
How It’s Done
Racers
Rules
The Start
Playing the Wind
The Windward Leg
A Racer’s tack
Offwind Legs
At the Mark
Racers’ Secrets
TRAILERING
The Trailer
On the Road
Ramps
Backing Up
Launching & Retrieving
INDEX
For Mom and Dad who, as usual, were right when they said that hanging around the docks would get me into trouble. God bless you both.
THE WATCH BELOW
While I stood my watch over this book, there have been others manning the pumps below who have kept it afloat and must be thanked: Jon Eaton, whose idea sent it down the ways; Molly Mulhern, who constantly tweaked the autopilot to keep it on course; Kelly Mulford, for bringing life to my words; Jan Adkins, who brought a fresh breeze; and Capt. Joe Friedman, the only hand I’d trust at the wheel while I slept through a storm. You can stop pumping now; we’re there.
Becoming a Sailor
There are more efficient, faster, and economical ways to travel on the water, but none as rewarding as traveling under sail. After decades of being blown about, soaked, awed, teased, and satisfied, each time I set forth there is magic. For forty years it has stayed fresh and new, never failing to lighten my soul when I realize that through cunning and skill I have tricked the wind into moving my boat. There is nothing like it.
And that is what I hope to share with you in this book. Through these drawings and meager words I hope to entice you into another world. The world of the sailor.
Anyone can learn to sail. That’s easy enough. In fact there are books that will show you how to sail in a weekend. And I’m sure you’re capable of doing it. But there is more to sailing than … well, than just sailing. By its very nature sailing is slightly enigmatic and requires abstract thought. You can’t just press a button and go wherever and whenever you like. It takes effort. Which in turn necessitates a certain amount of involvement. And this involvement is what being a sailor is all about.
After a few times out on the water you will see for yourself that there are many who sail but few who are sailors. You will also find that by the mere fact of commanding a boat, no matter how modest it may be, you will be hailed as Captain, or Cap’. It’s a nice touch of nautical etiquette and a step up in station for most of us. But I’d rather be called Sailor any day.
A sailor is one who can handle a vessel of almost any type quietly and competently. He, or she, can read the water, the current, the waves, the clouds, and even the smells. The sailor, like any good craftsman, is at home with the tools of his trade and the elements he works in. Becoming a sailor takes time (more than a weekend, I can promise), and it takes work. But the time will pass all too swiftly, and the work will seem like pleasure.
Is it worth the effort? Years ago I read about an old man who enjoyed working his small sailboat up and down a narrow river. His skill in handling the boat impressed the writer, who one day asked him why he sailed. The old man said that he first became a sailor for the pleasure it seemed to promise, but soon found it to be work mixed with small doses of fear. He almost gave it up right at the start. But before long the problems were overcome or in some manner dealt with. From then on, he said, the true rewards of sailing—patience, philosophy, self-respect, and the mastery of time—became evident. To him, these were the pleasures that becoming a sailor promised and eventually fulfilled.
Now it’s your turn, and I envy the start of your adventure.
WIND SENSE
To know the laws that govern the winds, and to know that you know them, will give you an easy mind …; otherwise you may tremble at the appearance of every cloud.
—Joshua Slocum, Sailing Alone Around the World
Sailing is not a science that can be practiced with precision. It is an art, or at the least a craft, with its own medium. As an artist uses and understands light, you must understand the wind. It is the sailor’s medium.
In the beginning you need only know from where and how strong the wind is blowing. Without this you’ll go nowhere. Literally. But the essence of sailing lies not just in reacting to the wind; if you would be a sailor you must learn to read the wind and foretell what it will bring. It is a rare ability in the 21st century, but our marine forebears acquired a deep knowledge of the winds, and for good reason. Their lives depended on it. You will find some of this lore in the coming pages. To acquire a wind sense learn these few facts, and then start using your own natural abilities.
There is an old Irish saying that man’s best friends and worst enemies are fire, rain, and wind. We can’t deny that wind possesses its share of riddles, but the better you understand the laws that govern it, the less a mystery the wind will be when you are on the water.
Direction
By convention, winds are named for the quarter from which they blow. A wind blowing from the north toward the south is a north wind. But the wind’s direction is never steady, and as you sail you’ll need to keep track of what it is doing.
Clues to the wind are always around you. Waves are sculpted and pushed along by the wind, but only the ripples on the surface will show the wind’s direction. Larger waves and swells may have been generated hours or days ago by distant forces. Cat’s-paws—delicate, rapidly moving ripples that crest at right angles to the wind and chase it along the surface—reveal the direction of an approaching gust. Look for leaves, sand, or anything that can be blown. Boats at anchor or on moorings can give clues, for they will swing to point into the wind unless otherwise influenced by currents. Light shallow boats are the best indicators. Curiously, the sky is the last place to look, the movement of high clouds having little to do with the wind down here at the bottom of the atmosphere.
Make your own indicators on the boat. Install a flag or specially made windvane (better for light winds) at the top of the mast. Tie telltales (made from yarn) to the shrouds as high up as possible.
You are your own best indicator. Face the wind’s general direction and turn your head slowly from side to side, noting the changing sensations on your skin and hair. There will be a difference in pressure, and temperature from evaporation, on each cheek until you are facing squarely into the breeze. Use your ears too. Even the slightest draft creates turbulence. Keep turning until the sound is the same in both.
If you practice sensing the wind on land as well as on the water, it will become second nature in a very short time.
Words of the Wind
UP/DOWN: A sailor’s world is divided into two halves: everything toward the wind and everything away from it. You face upwind by looking into the wind, and downwind by turning your back to it. Sailors shorten this to up or down. If you were told to bring her up,
you would turn toward the wind; take her down
means to turn away.
WINDWARD/LEEWARD: This is another way of saying up or down. Anything upwind of you is to windward, anything downwind is to leeward, which is often pronounced loo’ard
by some tradition-minded sailors.
WEATHER/LEE: Anything upwind of you is prefaced by the word weather. A weather shore gives protection from the wind, but the weather side of a boat is exposed to it. Anything downwind of you is prefaced by the word lee. A gale can blow you onto a lee shore, and you can get out of the wind by anchoring in the lee of a bold shore.
ON/OFF: Sailing on the wind means your course is in a windward direction, and you are either close-hauled or on a close reach. Sailing off the wind means you are headed in a leeward direction, and you are on a beam reach, broad reach, or running with the wind.
Land and the Wind
THE EFFECTS OF LAND
Winds coming off the land will always be more capricious than those that have reached you over open water. New England’s prevailing cool-weather northwesterlies can be maddeningly indecisive to a sailor used to the steadier southwesterlies of summer. And a blue-water ocean sailor may be at a loss to decipher wind directions on a lake, while the inland sailor may find the steadier winds of the open sea thoroughly uninteresting.
Large land features can produce their own wind systems. The notorious Santa Ana winds of Southern California are caused by inland desert air tumbling down the coastal mountains to the shore. Or winds can be funneled by the banks of a river or down a narrow tree-lined lake.
More important to most sailors are the smaller land features that affect the wind. Looking at this illustration you may get some clues as to why the winds where you sail seem irrational. Try to find wind funnels that compress and accelerate winds. Islands cause eddies that whirl about for great distances downwind. Cliffs have only a minor effect on winds blowing along their face, but cause radical changes to those blowing toward or over them. Solid objects blocking a wind, such as buildings or another boat, make wind shadows—areas of reduced wind speed—that can extend downwind for up to thirty times the height of the object. Bridges and other open barriers create wind flaws with baffling shifts. The mere passage of a wind over or through something is enough to alter it.
PREVAILING WINDS
The difference in temperatures at the equator and the poles, with warm air rising to be replaced by colder air, is the foundation of the world’s wind patterns. To this we add a deflecting effect from the Earth’s eastward rotation, the presence of relatively stationary areas of high and low pressure, and land-masses with their own localized wind machines to produce the prevailing winds of the world.
Between 30 and 50 degrees north and south latitude is the home of the westerlies. Just south of 30 degrees north, in the Gulf states and Florida, is the northern boundary of the northeast trade winds. This narrow buffer zone between two major wind systems is an area of calms and light variable winds known as the horse latitudes.
Here early explorers were forced to jettison their horses, as food ran low while they sat becalmed waiting to hitch a downwind ride on the trade winds to the New World.
Of course these global wind patterns are often obscured by local influences, such as land and sea breezes.
LAND & SEA BREEZES
As the land heats up during the day, warm air rises to be replaced by cooler air from over the water. This shoreward movement of air, called a sea breeze, creeps in around noon, becomes strongest (10 to 15 mph) by late afternoon, then tails off and dies around sunset.
At night the land cools rapidly. The air above it soon becomes comparatively colder than the air over the water, whose temperature is more stable. This causes a wind from the land toward the water, called a land breeze, that starts before midnight and continues until the land is once again heated. The temperature differences are not as great during the night, so land breezes are seldom more than 10 mph.
Sea breezes can work with or against a prevailing wind. In San Francisco the prevailing westerly wind is often augmented and then overrun by a sea breeze. By late afternoon, sea breezes funneling through the Golden Gate can reach 30 mph, but die away at sunset with the cooling fog. The Atlantic coast’s prevailing northwest winds of fall may be held back or even overrun on a warm day by a southwest sea breeze.
The Great Lakes can have lake breezes as strong as any from the sea. On smaller lakes, these breezes are weaker and do not extend far from shore. They can still be useful though, and may even be dominant when the prevailing wind is light. Very often the only wind you’ll find is near shore, with the center as calm and flat as a mirror.
True & Apparent Winds
There are two winds in sailing, true and apparent. The wind direction and speed you feel when standing on the dock or sitting in your boat while it is moored is the true wind. All wind indicators on land show its direction and speed. As we’ve seen, wind’s nature is fickle and rarely true to anything; but we’ll call this wind true and let it go at that.
The wind you feel when moving is the apparent wind, a combination of the true wind and the wind you create for yourself by moving through the air. The wind indicators on your boat when it is underway show the apparent wind. This is handy because you adjust your sails to the apparent wind, not the true.
For boats that rarely exceed 6 mph the distinction between true and apparent is not particularly important. Look to the boat’s wind indicators, and trim sails accordingly.
Fast boats, however, make their own wind. If you’re sailing a high-performance dinghy like a Laser, or a multihull like a Tornado catamaran, the apparent wind is very important. The faster the boat goes, the more it distorts the true wind. When a catamaran sailing on a beam reach gets hit with a strong gust, it immediately starts to accelerate. As the boat goes faster, the apparent wind shifts forward and increases in speed. The true wind’s direction and the boat’s course haven’t changed, but suddenly you are trimming the sails in tight to their close-hauled position. After the gust passes, the boat slows down and you can ease the sails out until you are back on a beam reach again.
The most extreme examples of this are windsurfers and iceboats. Watch closely and you’ll notice that in a strong breeze they are almost always trimmed as if close-hauled regardless of their course relative to the true wind, even if it is a broad reach.
Wind Speed Tables
Before the 19th century there was no uniform way of describing wind and sea conditions. One sailor’s fresh breeze was another’s howling gale. In 1806 Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort devised a table that classified winds into groups called Forces. The system worked, and is still in use today.
The trouble is that his tables were devised for ships of the line and meant more to those on board the Constitution during the War of 1812 than the crew of a modern Catalina 22 trailer/sailer. So the tables below have been adapted to make them more relevant to a small coastal cruiser.