The Offshore Voyaging Reference Site

  • Nice Bags and No Hole Mounting

    Nice Bags and No Hole Mounting

    I like these sheet and odds and ends bags from Blue Performance a lot, but I hate drilling holes in our boats. So I ordered these snap together fastener strips with adhesive backing to stick on the boat, and disks without adhesive to bolt the little mounting doodads the bags come with to. Seems to […]

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  • Harken Bosun’s Chair

    Harken Bosun’s Chair

    I let my much-loved and venerable Hood Sails bosun’s chair go with her when we sold our McCurdy and Rhodes 56. Just received this replacement from Harken. After a quick look over, I’m liking what I’m seeing a lot, but of course I will know more once I have used it and will share that […]

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  • Cross-Bank Battery Charging—Splitters and Relays

    Cross-Bank Battery Charging—Splitters and Relays

    A well set up cruising boat electrical system separates the house and engine start batteries. Here’s how to make sure both are properly charged.

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  • Cruiser Under $20K, Bayfield 29

    Cruiser Under $20K, Bayfield 29

    My last post got me thinking about the importance of just getting out there in some boat, any boat, if we really want to go cruising and make a success of it. We can always buy a bigger and better boat later. With that in mind, there’s a Bayfield 29 we go by on our […]

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  • A Boat While You Wait To Go Cruising

    A Boat While You Wait To Go Cruising

    I came across this cool article on old small boats available for less than the cost of a good dinner out. One of these would make a great project while waiting and saving to go cruising: Learn some useful skills while fixing the boat. Then hone sailing skills. The O’Day Day Sailer for US$78 jumped […]

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  • Brion Toss Splicing Wand

    Brion Toss Splicing Wand

    I have owned this great tool for at least 25 years. I don’t use it that often, but when I do, it saves so much agro. The photo to the right shows the way I was using it locked in a vice to Brummell splice 1/2″ Amsteel. No way my little D-splicer was going to […]

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  • Getting Ready for a Hurricane

    Getting Ready for a Hurricane

    The North Atlantic heating up in the last week got me working on preparing our new-to-us J/109 for a strike. We have always added a backup pendant before expected winds of storm force or over, but in the past it was chain. Now, with a smaller boat and the availability of high-modulus rope, we are […]

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  • Justifying Expensive Tools

    Justifying Expensive Tools

    The enjoyment of one’s tools is an essential ingredient of successful work Donald Knuth This quote makes me feel a lot better about blowing the price of a nice second hand car on new tools after we sold the McCurdy and Rhodes 56 with all my old tools. Thanks to Stan Honey for the heads […]

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  • Battery Bank Separation and Cross-Charging Best Practices

    Battery Bank Separation and Cross-Charging Best Practices

    We all know that any cruising boat should have the engine and house banks separated, but that’s just the start of what we need to know.

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  • A Fractional Rig is Like a Gearbox

    A Fractional Rig is Like a Gearbox

    Above is with the backstay set for light air (about 7 knots true) and mast on our J/109 pretty much straight. Big time power in the mainsail and lots of sag in the headstay powering up the jib. This is the same two sails in 14 knots true at which point we de-powered by pumping […]

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  • 49er, 49er FX and NACRA 17 Worlds

    49er, 49er FX and NACRA 17 Worlds

    A friend invited me along to watch some of the races. Amazing how performance sailing has changed since my days in the 505, and yet, in some ways, is still very much the same. Also interesting that of the few races we watched, the women’s teams in the FX seemed by far the most aggressive, […]

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  • Don’t Ever Lie Ahull

    Don’t Ever Lie Ahull

    I can’t believe that experienced ocean sailors are still making the mistake of lying ahull in heavy weather and then blaming a freak or rogue wave when they get rolled. We have known for over 40 years how dangerous lying ahull is. Extra big waves are a reality in anything over gale force offshore, not […]

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  • Slippery Deck Shoe Fix

    Slippery Deck Shoe Fix

    My Gill deck shoes were completely losing their grip. We are talking scary-slippery, to the point I nearly went on my ass, and overboard was a real possibility. We have seen this before. Seems like whatever material deck shoe soles are being made of these days, it develops a hard yellowy layer way before the […]

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  • Why We Need a Traveler

    Why We Need a Traveler

    We increasingly see boats without travellers, but that’s a big performance hit, particularly in light air going to windward where we want the boom on the centreline but the sheet not too tight. To make that happen the traveler car needs to be well to windward of centre. Check out the nice twist and leach […]

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  • Demo of In-Boom Furling

    Demo of In-Boom Furling

    My friend Hans, who advised me while I was writing the article on the tragedy aboard Escape, took me out on his Farr 56 for a demo of hoisting, reefing, and furling, using his in-boom automated mainsail-handling system. Hans is an incredible resource, since he has owned boats with slab, in-mast, and in-boom furling, as […]

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  • Safer Transom Ladder

    Our new-to-us J/109 has a robust transom swim ladder that could definitely enable someone who fell overboard get back into the boat, at least in smooth water. But check out the photo above: There’s no way for someone in the water, particularly wearing a lifejacket, to deploy the ladder unassisted. The angle is just wrong […]

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  • Nylon Line In Europe 2

    Nylon Line In Europe 2

    The plot thickens. I came across this product page at RobLine an Austrian rope maker and they have a bunch of lines for mooring, docking, that will be good for anchor snubbers. Interesting quote from that page: Robline caters to the trend toward using different fibers for mooring and anchor lines, depending on the specific […]

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  • John and Andy Schell Podcast

    John and Andy Schell Podcast

    Andy Schell and John Harries do a podcast together. Lithium batteries, seamanship, refits, and much more.

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  • Starlink Maritime

    Starlink Maritime

    Starlink are going to provide a solution for moving vessels, but before we get too excited check out the price! Think US$10,000 for the unit and US$7000/month for service! Looks like I will be right that Iridium will the solution for most of us for some time to come. In 2019 I predicted 10 years […]

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  • Nylon Rope in Europe

    A member was having a heck of a time finding Nylon rope for a snubber, as we recommend, in Europe. After some research I think I have found out why: What we call Nylon in North America, and the UK, is known as H.T. Polyester in Europe and staff in stores sometimes refer to it […]

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  • Lessons From a Tragedy at Sea

    Lessons From a Tragedy at Sea

    John’s take on the causes of the two fatalities on the yacht Escape south of Nova Scotia in June 2022, and some thoughts on how similar tragedies can be avoided.

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  • Backstay Adjusters & Fractional Rigs

    Backstay Adjusters & Fractional Rigs

    With fractional rigs we are way more interested in how much pumping the adjuster down has shortened the backstay and bent the mast than we are the reading on the pressure gauge (within reason). That’s why the marked batten. Click on images to enlarge

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  • Reaving Halyards

    Reaving Halyards

    You see people taping messenger lines to halyards, but that can lead to tears when the messenger comes off inside the mast. So way better to put a flemish eye, sometimes known as a reaving eye, in the bitter end of all halyards and internal reefing lines. The key to success is that the eye […]

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  • Whip Before Cut

    Whip Before Cut

    When shortening a line, it’s way easier if we put on two sailmakers whippings and then cut the line between them. Whipping how-to. (Scroll down to #6)

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  • How Hard Can We Charge Our Lead-Acid Batteries?

    How Hard Can We Charge Our Lead-Acid Batteries?

    Charging batteries fast has all kinds of benefits: less engine wear, fuel savings, less carbon. But how far can we go?

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