It is true that a singlehander is a one-armed paperhanger--a joke that only scores if you remember the act of hanging wallpaper.
Sometimes technique can be specialized. When tacking, the jib quickly trimmed to max, before it is pressurized. Then only releasing the sheet is necessary, not winching. To trim a sail to windward, head up for a luff, no hard winching necessary. I use all these techniques when daysailing the E38.
The best aide any singlehander has is a tillermaster or other autohelm. With the boat set to steer a course, we are free to pretend we have a crew, and take our time tending to maneuverss, and to cleaning up after them.
It is usually true that standard class rigging systems works best, the theory being that time has proven it so.
Sometimes technique can be specialized. When tacking, the jib quickly trimmed to max, before it is pressurized. Then only releasing the sheet is necessary, not winching. To trim a sail to windward, head up for a luff, no hard winching necessary. I use all these techniques when daysailing the E38.
The best aide any singlehander has is a tillermaster or other autohelm. With the boat set to steer a course, we are free to pretend we have a crew, and take our time tending to maneuverss, and to cleaning up after them.
It is usually true that standard class rigging systems works best, the theory being that time has proven it so.