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Boating and Sailing

Webpages concerning "Boating and Sailing"

1-50 [51-53]
Boat Books Australia
http://www.boatbooks-aust.com.au
Keywords:
charts, nautical charts, boat books, boats, yachts, commercial boats, recreational boats, boat charts, digital charts

http://www.boatbooks-aust.com.au

Mauch's Sailboat Guide: a world of boats at your fingertips. A 3-volume reference set containing almost 1200 sailboats from 20' to over 86',dating from the early 60's to the 90's; the Guide has been relied upon by boat brokers, surveyors, transporters, and buyers since 1991.
http://www.mauchs.com
Keywords:
Mauch's, Mauch, sailboat guide, sailboat, review, sailboat review, boat review, sailing, sail, sailboat design, marina, yacht, boat, surveyor, broker, marine, book, buyers guide, buying guide, sloop, ketch, yawl, catboat, cutter, clipper, albin, alden, alerion, allied, allmand, american, baltic, barberis, bavaria, bayfield, beneteau, bristol, buccaneer, C&C, CS, CSY, CT, cabo rico, cal, caliber, ...

http://www.mauchs.com

The most comprehensive guide available for finding a crew job on a Yacht or Superyacht.
http://www.yachtingcrews.com/
Keywords:
Yacht crew, yacht crew jobs, luxury yacht jobs, mega yacht jobs, super yachts, megayachts, superyachts, private yachts, crew jobs

http://www.yachtingcrews.com/

Sea Chest Nautical Bookshop: Plymouth based Admiralty Chart Agents and suppliers of nautical books, admiralty sea charts, imray charts in the UK, sea maps and ships plotting instruments.
http://www.seachest.co.uk
Keywords:
online catalogue, fleet review charts, nautical books, admiralty, sea, charts, in, plymouth, imray, charts, in, devon, admiralty, charts, in, the, uk, british sea maps, electronic charting, electronic c-map charting, ARCS, Admiralty Raster Charts, tidal software, pilot, books, and, guides, naval, history, books, for, sale, marine, software, in, plymouth, navigation plotting instruments, ...

http://www.seachest.co.uk

Boat Docking is a book about close quarters maneuvering for small craft - how to dock a boat - slow speed boat handling - thorough and readable. By Charles T. Low, Harvey Island Enterprises.
http://www.boatdocking.com
Keywords:
boating, boat docking, boat handling, instruction, education, seamanship, close quarters maneuvering, dock, small craft, mooring, recreational, pleasure, Charles T. Low, Harvey Island Enterprises

http://www.boatdocking.com

BUC.com – buy, sell, charter or value your boat. Broker and dealer boat listings and evaluations.
http://www.buc.com
Keywords:
buc, boat, boats, bucnet, buc book, boat values, boats for sale, boat for sale, yachts for charter, bucvalue, bucvalu, buc value, pes, boat evaluation service, boat evaluation, yacht listings, bucmms, boat evaluations, yacht broker, boat dealer, used boats, used boat, pre-owned boats, sail boat, sailboat, used sail boats, used sailboats, power boat, yachts, yacht, yachts for sale, ...

http://www.buc.com

Advice for women and couples considering the liveaboard or cruising lifestyle.
http://www.changingcourse.ca/
Keywords:
cruising, lifestyle, change, liveaboard, boating, women, seminars, workshops, sailing

http://www.changingcourse.ca/

Books and video by Romany Publishing about sailing the world. Titles: Comfortable Cruising, Just Cruising & Still Cruising, and Cruising for Cowards, a how-to text.
http://www.aboutcruising.com
Keywords:
Liza, Andy, Copeland, books, video, author, Romany, publishing, cruising, sailing, books, voyaging, bluewater, blue water, yacht, broker, Beneteau, circumnavigation, circumnavigator, family, kids, children, coastal, author, offshore, cruising, broker, around the world, international, yachting, yachts, sailboat, lightning, boating, boats, ocean, offshore, lifestyle, alternate, escape, ...

http://www.aboutcruising.com

Nautical books for boaters, long-distance cruisers, boat builders, modellers and professional seamen.
http://shop.nauticalmind.com/
Keywords:
nautical books, books for boaters, sailboats, powerboats, boat buying, ship models, seamanship, marine navigation, cruising guides, nautical charts

http://shop.nauticalmind.com/

Nautical books for boaters, long-distance cruisers, boat builders, modellers and professional seamen.
http://www.nauticalmind.com/
Keywords:
nautical books, books for boaters, sailboats, powerboats, boat buying, ship models, seamanship, marine navigation, cruising guides, nautical charts

http://www.nauticalmind.com/

Reed's Nautical Almanac contains information for mariners including tide charts, maps of ocean currents, NOAA weather radio information and cruising information.
http://www.reedsalmanac.com/
Keywords:
nautical almanac, celestial navigation, intercoastal waterway, intracoastal waterway, noaa weather radio, ocean currents map, signal flags, tide charts, tide tables, vhf marine radio

http://www.reedsalmanac.com/

A serious, yet humorous, sailing invitation, sailing manual and safety course all rolled into one, for your landlubbing guests
http://www.emerypublishing.com/sailing/index.html
Keywords:
recreational boating, sailing invitation, sailing manual, sailing safety course, six pack, landlubber, sail, sail training, clothing, head, port, starboard, coming about, healing

http://www.emerypublishing.com/sailing/index.html

Books,Videos, poster and much more, I love the sea, boats, ships, sailing, but we have books for the landlubers also.
http://www.novagate.com/~schoonerman/booksale.htm
Keywords:
Aircraft, Carrier, Astronomer, Battleship, Boating, Boatbuilding, Business, Canoes, Caribbean, Celestial, Navigation, Chris-Craft, Civil, War, At, Sea, Coast, Guard, , Explorers, Figureheads, Fishing, Great, Lake, Hornblower, , Hunley, Kayking, Lighthouses, Marine, Biology, Marine, Life, Marine, Engines, Marlinspike, Napoleonic, Era, At, Sea, Narratives, ...

http://www.novagate.com/~schoonerman/booksale.htm

Sheridan House, Publishers of Sailing and Nautical Books, nautical and sailing fiction, nautical and sailing how to books and related subjects
http://www.sheridanhouse.com
Keywords:
Sailing Books, Boating Books, Boat Books, Sails, Sailing Yarns, Shackleton, Nathaniel Drinkwater, Tristan Jones, Joshua Slocum, adventures, America, Boatbuilding, Boats, Boating, Castaways, Charterings, Coasts, Constructions, Cruising, Designs, Destruction, Disasters, Distress, Electrics, Electronics, Encounters, fiction, Fishes, Fitting, Folkboats, Forecastings, GPS, Handling, Hemingway, ...

http://www.sheridanhouse.com

Ports and Passes: tide tables, current tables, tide books, color charts for the Pacific coast. download free tides and currents.
http://www.portsandpasses.com/
Keywords:
tides, currents, charts, British Columbia, BC, Washington, wa, tide tables, current tables, malibu rapids, vancouver island, puget sound, seattle, BC Tides

http://www.portsandpasses.com/

Sailing: An easy introduction to trimming of sails and tuning of rigs.150 colour illustrations.
http://www.sailingmanuals.com
Keywords:
Sailing, sailing, sailing schools, sailing boats, sailing yachts, ocean sailing, sailing theory, sailing manuals, sailing site, sailing news, sailing texts, havsegling, havsejlads, seiling, havseiling, segling, segeln, sejlads, tursegling, turseiling, lystsejlads, farhtensegeln

http://www.sailingmanuals.com

Sailing: An easy introduction to trimming of sails and tuning of rigs.150 colour illustrations.
http://www.dedekam.com
Keywords:
Sailing, sailing, sailing schools, sailing boats, sailing yachts, ocean sailing, sailing theory, sailing manuals, sailing site, sailing news, sailing texts, havsegling, havsejlads, seiling, havseiling, segling, segeln, sejlads, tursegling, turseiling, lystsejlads, farhtensegeln

http://www.dedekam.com

Worldwide trade, library, mail order consumer sales of nautical books, marine publications, manuals, charts, Statutory, Instruments etc for professional mariners, nautical studies students, professional and amateur yachtsmen, boat owners, and marine and naval enthusiasts. Stocks of and free service for secondhand, rare, out of print and antiquarian nautical books.
http://www.nauticalbooks.co.uk/
Keywords:
nautical books, nautical bookshop, chart agents, professional nautical, professional marine publications, trade, and, library, nautical, book, supply, nautical, and, naval, history, books, yachting, and, sailing, books, secondhand nautical books, rare nautical books, antiquarian nautical books

http://www.nauticalbooks.co.uk/

yacht design
http://boatdesign.org/books
Keywords:
yacht design Search

http://boatdesign.org/books

Publishers, Printers and Ships' Stationers, we specialise in nautical books, both technical and non-technical. Books about the sea, historical and old sailing ships.
http://www.skipper.co.uk
Keywords:
Nautical books, Publishers, Printers, Stationers, Stories, of, the, Sea, Brown's Almanac, sailing ships, plans, naval, and, historical, books, model ships, astronomy, navigation and seamanship, Basil Lubbock, Cutty Sark, Windjammers, clippers, Harold Underhill, Thermopylae

http://www.skipper.co.uk

Specialising in maritime books, the site includes thumbnail images and descriptions of the catalogue of maritime books with options to order online or email your special request.
http://www.anchorpublications.com.au
Keywords:
Marine, Engines, and, Electronics, Dick Gandy, Nautical Books, Australian Maritime History, Maintain and repair, marine engine, complete, Australian Boating Manual, learn, little-known facts, Pittwater, boats, boating, manuals, manual, novel, reading, material, engine, engines, boat engines, books, nautical, anchor, publications, anchor publications, australia, history, Martin Burke, the, ...

http://www.anchorpublications.com.au

Boaters Cruising Guide
http://boatersalmanac.com
Keywords:
Crusing, Crusing Guide, sailing, tides, tide charts, currents, pets on boats, cats on boats, dogs on boats, Chesapeake Bay, New Jersey Coast, Delaware River, New York Harbor, Hudson River, Long Island Sound, New England

http://boatersalmanac.com

Devereux Books is a publisher of nautical books in Marblehead, Massachusetts
http://www.devereuxbooks.com
Keywords:
Old engine books, marine engine books, stationary engine books, boat building books, outboard motor books, cape, cod, catboat, books, gas engine books, diesel engine books, submarine engine books, riverboat books, tow boat books, packard books, small boat books, skiff books, chris craft books, internal, combustion, engine, books, mercury outboard books, johnson outboard books, General, motors, ...

http://www.devereuxbooks.com

A Guide to Inspecting Marine Electrical Systems.
http://www.islandnet.com/~robb/marine.html
Keywords:
boat, check list, marine, wiring, standards, yacht, electrical, systems, sailboat

http://www.islandnet.com/~robb/marine.html

This Web site sells autographed copies of Michael Jeneid's books on a wide range of subjects including skiing, kayaking, adventure, and poetry.
http://www.jeneid.com/
Keywords:
birding, birding books, poetry bird imagery, sea kayaking california, ocean kayaking california, kayaking guide, outdoors adventures california, outdoor education, cross country skiing, cross, country, skiing, guidebook.

http://www.jeneid.com/

Chaffcutter Books, an expanding range of maritime heritage nautical books planned to cover many aspects of seafaring, coastal and deep sea sail, steamships and fishing vessels; and those who crewed in them, specialising in Thames sailing barge history.
http://www.chaffcutter.com
Keywords:
chaffcutter, books, maritime, ships, thames, nautical, seafaring, coastal, deep sea, sail, steamships, fishing, vessels, sailing, barges, history, boats, topsail, sailor, crew, master, seaman, steamer, merchant, voyage, faversham

http://www.chaffcutter.com

Charterboat Charts nautical charts provides the New Jersey fisherman and boater laminated charts and interactive Cd-rom's
http://www.charterboatcharts.com
Keywords:
nautical charts, sportfishing charts, navigation charts, sportfishing, digital charts, new jersey

http://www.charterboatcharts.com

http://www.common-sense-boats.com
Keywords:
boats, plans, epoxy, information, canoes, kayaks, power boats, sail boats, tug boat, barge, Wooden Boats, Martha Jane, Micro, micro trawler, Mark II, build, wood, common sense boats, common sense designs, csb, csd, home build, sails, Portland skiff, Willamette

http://www.common-sense-boats.com

fiberglass boat repair, how-to Metalflake, transom replacement and instruction books. Fiberglass boat floor replacement. Detailed instructions on repairing boat hull damage, transoms, floors & decks.
http://www.helendalepublishing.com
Keywords:
fiberglass boat repair, how to metalflake, transom, instruction, fibreglass, books, replace, rotten wood, floor, carpet, hull, ebooks, damage, repair, clear coat, Bassboat, floor replacement, fiberglass, boat, repair, how-to, metalflake, instruction books, boats, repairs, Henry Jackson Cockerham, Family, descendants, Genealogy, Metalflakes, transoms, instructions, book, boats repairs, ...

http://www.helendalepublishing.com

Pen & Ink Press is the exclusive publisher of books about the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, cooking aboard ship and sailing including the titles of Narrow Waters, The Conch Book, Maverick Sea Fare, and Windjammer Cooking (Pen and Ink Press).
http://www.peninkpress.com/
Keywords:
Pen, and, Ink, Press, books, intracoastal waterway, coastal, cruising, Dee Carstarphen, sailing, sailboats, nautical cookbooks, seafood, cooking, cook books, caribbean cooking, New England, Maine, downeast, Bahamas, Conchology, conchs, shells, shellfish, mariculture, recipes, boats, yachts, sailing, ships, boating, windjammers, Narrow Waters, The Conch Book, Maverick Sea Fare, ...

http://www.peninkpress.com/

Mclaren Books is the leading dealer in Maritime, Naval and Yachting books in Scotland. We have spent fifteen years building an extensive catalogue across all subjects and price ranges.
http://www.mclarenbooks.co.uk
Keywords:
Naval books, Maritime books, Yachting books, seafaring books, Scottish book shop, Second hand books, antique books, buying, and, selling, books, book buyer, book seller

http://www.mclarenbooks.co.uk

Nautical Charts offers navigational charts and software for the recreational boater, fisherman and diver
http://nauticalcharts.com/
Keywords:
government charts, paper charts, satellite photos, aerial photos, photomaps, gps charts, gps, chartkit, Chart Kit, Fish Dive Charts, Maptech Chart Kit, Fishing Software, digital charts, digital mapping, cruising guides, DMA charts, NIMA charts, waterproof charts, nautical charts, nautical software, navigation charts, maritime charts, navigation aids, boating, gifts boating charts, diving, ...

http://nauticalcharts.com/

Paracay.com has Nautical Books and More. Books on sailing, cruising, navigation, repair, history, lighthouses, and more. Come and see our selection.
http://www.paracay.com/
Keywords:
Nautical Books, sailing, boating, Navigation, Celestial, boat design, boat buying, boat building, nautical history, boat maintenance, nautical almanac, cruising, logbooks, sailing videos

http://www.paracay.com/

Annual guide for Northwest boating includes information on cruising Puget Sound, San Juan Islands, Canadian Gulf Islands, Desolation Sound, Inside Passage, and the West Coast of Vancouver Island.
http://www.waggonerguide.com
Keywords:
Waggoneer, Waggoner, Pacific, Northwest, Boating, Annual, Cruising, Books, Guide, Guides, Wagoner, Nautical, Reference, Puget, Sound, San, Juan, Islands, Canadian, Gulf, Desolation, Inside, Passage, West, Coast, Vancouver, Island

http://www.waggonerguide.com

An invaluable guide for cruising sailors heading for the tropics
http://tropicalcruisinghandbook.com/
Keywords:
tropical cruising, tropical voyaging, ocean voyaging, ocean sailing, bluewater sailing, tropical sailing, yachting tropics, pradise, South Pacific, passagemaking, seamanship, sailboat cruising, passage planning, tropical medicine, navigating coral, cruising provisioning, dangerous marine organisms, boats tropics, tropics, tropical, anchoring, navigation, Caribbean, Pacific Ocean, Indian Ocean, ...

http://tropicalcruisinghandbook.com/

An easily readable book that explains astro-navigation in an uncomplicated way. The book also provides an accurate method of astro-navigation that does not depend on the use of automated navigation systems, nautical almanacs or chronometers. A must for all yachtsmen and women. A life saver in a survival situation.
http://www.bookcase.org.uk

http://www.bookcase.org.uk

We have a very large stock of out-of-print boat manuals from the 1890s to the 1980s. These orginal documents cover over 500 brands including Chris-Craft.
http://www.vmsl.com/
Keywords:
Chris-Craft, antique boat literature, classic boat literature, original boat literature, boat sales brochures, outboard motor literature, marine engines, literature, outboard marine engines, old boat literature, old, motor, boat, literature, wooden boat, wooden boats, old boat, classic boat, antique boat, vintage marine literature, vintage marine, boating magazines literature, ...

http://www.vmsl.com/

Charlie's Charts are a series of cruising guides to assist a cruising sailor to identify anchorages and towns and river entrances where marinas are located.
http://www.charliescharts.com
Keywords:
Charlie's Charts, cruising, Charlies, Charts, cruising, guides, crusing guides, world travel guides, guide, navigation, sailing, book

http://www.charliescharts.com

BOOKS ON SHIPS AND THE SEA ...for everyone who served in the merchant marine, or the Navy or the Coast Guard... or who went sailing, or took a cruise, or visited a battleship... or sailed toy boats on a pond or across a large puddle... or who has dreamed of adventure and far-away places... or who just loves ships and boats...
http://www.glencannon.com
Keywords:
amphibious, antiaircraft, armada, asiatic fleet, atlantic fleet, atlantic ocean, barbary coast, barges, bark, barkentine, battle line, battleship, bird boats, bluejacket, boat, boatswain, bosun, bridge, brig, brigantine, bulk carrier, bumboat, buoy, c-1, c-2, c-3, c-4, cabin, cape horn, captain, cargo, carrier, china station, civil war, clipper ship, coal-fired, collier, combat ships, convoys, ...

http://www.glencannon.com

Welcome to our Discount Book Store please browse thru our site of new, used and out of print nautical books. These include boatbuilding, buying, design, maintenance, modeling, engines and many more.
http://www.krazyjames.com
Keywords:
boat building, boat building supply, sail boat building, wood boat building, model boat building, aluminum boat building, buying a boat, boat buying guide, buying, a, used, boat, boat buying house, sail boat buying, boat buying tip, sail boat design, boat dock design, boat house design, house boat design, boat interior design, small boat design, boat maintenance, boat maintenance sail, boat, ...

http://www.krazyjames.com

discount boating books
http://www.krazyjamesboatbooks.com
Keywords:
online book store, nautical gift, buy book online, boat books, maritime books, nautical books, marine books, new books, used books, discount books, out, of, print, books, boatbuilding books, boat buying books, boat design books, boat maintenance books, boat modeling books, navigation charts, celestial navigation books, cookbooks, cruising books, voyaging books, cruising guides, ...

http://www.krazyjamesboatbooks.com

http://www.tillerbooks.com/

http://www.tillerbooks.com/

Welcome to SAILING BOOKSYour dedicated source for sailing books, yachting books nautical books and marine books.
http://sailingbooks.co.uk
Keywords:
sailing books, nautical books, yachting books, nautical charts, navigation, watersport books, marine books

http://sailingbooks.co.uk

BOAT-BOOKS.COM
http://www.boat-books.com

http://www.boat-books.com

http://www.onlinesports.com/pages/I,HK-LYMC5001.html

http://www.onlinesports.com/pages/I,HK-LYMC5001.html

http://www.lakechamplainpub.com/cruising_guide_alone.asp

http://www.lakechamplainpub.com/cruising_guide_alone.asp

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Wikipedia-Article "Boating"

Boating is the activity of traveling by boat. In particular, it refers to the recreational use of boats, typically focused on the traveling itself, as opposed to activities just using the boat, such as fishing, waterskiing or sailing. Even so, it encompasses a wide variety of activities, ranging from taking a rowboat on the pond of a city park, to kayaking on the open sea. Boating is an extremely popular activity, and there are millions of boaters worldwide. Sailing is a category of boating that uses wind-powered vessels, while powerboating uses motorized vessels.

The obvious initial requirement for boating is a boat. There is an entire industry devoted to supplying both large and small vessels for boaters. There also is an entire industry devoted to supplying boat loans to people that cannot afford to purchase a vessel outright. Most smaller boats are stored at home and carried to the water on boat trailers, where they are floated from launch ramps leading down into the water. The smallest boats and kayaks may simply be carried by hand or by lashing it to the top of an automobile. Larger boats are kept at marinas, which offer a tie-up protected from the weather and a variety of support services, such as fuel, equipment and so forth.

Most boat trips begin and end in one day, while longer trips are typically called cruises. While other activities may be planned as part of the trip, for many boaters the purpose is simply to enjoy being out on the water; drinking and partying are proverbial as part of the experience.

Being a recreational activity, most boating is done in calm protected waters and during good weather. Even so, conditions can change rapidly, and a small vessel can get into life-threatening difficulties. The coast guards of most nations include boating safety and rescue as part of their charter.


External links

This article is based on the article "Boating" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia-Article "Sailing"

Wooden sailing boat
Enlarge
Wooden sailing boat

Sailing is the skillful art of controlling the motion of a sailing ship or smaller boat, across a body of water using wind as the source of power.

Contents

The physics of sailing

The force of the wind is used to create motion by using one or more sails. When sailing downwind (away from the wind source) the vessel's motion is derived from the simple force of the wind pushing the sail. When sailing upwind (towards the wind source) the movement of air over the sails acts in the same way as air moving over an aircraft's wing. Air flowing over the sail generates lift. This pulls the sail (and the boat) ahead, but also pushes it downwind rather strongly. The downwind, or leeward, component is offset by an underwater hydrofoil whose shape resists lateral movement while offering little resistance to forward motion. Some hydrofoils even convert some of the leeward movement into forward motion. Without this hydrofoil, sailing upwind or across the wind would be virtually impossible. Sailing hydrofoils include keels, centerboards, daggerboards, (less commonly) leeboards, and (particularly in small sailboats or dinghies), the rudder acts as a hydrofoil also, reducing leeway.

A pirogue in New Caledonia
Enlarge
A pirogue in New Caledonia

The lifting force of the sails also acts to lean the boat over to one side, which is called heeling. In monohull vessels, heeling is counteracted by ballast, either in the form of dense material located deep in the bilge or externally in the keel (usually lead or iron) or in the form of human or water ballast located near the windward rail. In multihull vessels (catamaran, trimaran or proa) righting force may also be created by the counteracting buoyancy of the leeward hull. Too much heeling may lead to a capsize.

Today, for most people, sailing is recreation, an activity pursued for the joy of being on the water and pursuing the mastery of the skills needed to manuever a sailboat in varying sea and wind conditions. Recreational sailing can be further divided into Racing, Cruising and Daysailing.

In ancient times (see Odysseus), ships used following or rear-quarter winds. Therefore, they had to either row or wait in port or at sea for the right wind directions.

Basic sailing techniques

First see the notes on points of sail which introduce some important principles.

Turning a sailing boat

When turning a sailing boat, the direction relative to the wind is as important as the direction overall. Thus all turns can be described by one of the following terms:

  • Heading up (or luffing up) is turning the boat to sail closer to the direction the wind is coming from. In order to keep the sails correctly trimmed, they must be pulled in towards the centre of the boat. Continuing to head up will bring the bow so close to the wind that the sails will no longer fill - this is called "being in irons", or (especially when teaching) "the no-go zone".
  • If the turn is continued through the no-go zone and out the other side, the boat is said to have tacked. Thus, a tack is a turn that takes the bow of the boat through the eye of the wind.
  • Bearing away (or falling off) is turning away from the direction the wind is coming from. As with luffing up, the sails must be adjusted during the turn, in this case let out away from the centre of the boat. If the turn is continued, the boat will end up running directly away from the wind, with the sails at around 90ยบ to the hull and acting as simple wind-catchers rather than aerofoils.
  • If the turn is continued such that the boat's stern passes through the wind, a gybe results. Gybing causes the boom to swing from one side to the other, sometimes rapidly, as the wind catches the leech of the mainsail on its new upwind side.

Trim

An important aspect of sailing is keeping the boat in "trim". To achieve this a useful mnemonic (memory aid) is the phrase:

Can This Boat Sail Correctly?

This helps the crew to remember these essential points;

  • Course to Steer - Turn the boat using the wheel or tiller to the desired course to steer. See points of sail. This may be a definite bearing (e.g steer 270 degrees), or towards a landmark, or at a desired angle to the apparent wind direction.
  • Trim - This is the fore and aft balance of the boat. The aim is to adjust the moveable ballast (the crew!) forwards or backwards to achieve an 'even keel'. On an upwind course in a small boat, the crew typically sit forward, when 'running' it is more efficient for the crew to sit to the rear of the boat. The position of the crew matters less as the size (and weight)of the boat increases.
  • Balance - This is the port and starboard balance. The aim, once again is to adjust weight 'inboard' or 'outboard' to prevent excessive heeling.
  • Sail - Trimming sails is a large topic. However simply put, a sail should be pulled in until it fills with wind, but no further than the point where the front edge of the sail (the luff) is exactly in line with the wind.
  • Centreboard - If a moveable centreboard is fitted, then it should be lowered when sailing "close to the wind" but can be raised up on downwind courses to reduce drag. The centreboard prevents lateral motion and allows the boat to sail upwind. A boat with no centreboard will instead have a heavy permanent keel built into the bottom of the hull, which serves the same purposes.

Running

A Thistle running downwind with a spinnaker.
Enlarge
A Thistle running downwind with a spinnaker.

Sailing the boat within roughly 30 degrees either side of dead downwind is called a run. This is the easiest point of sail in terms of comfort, but it can also be the most dangerous. When sailing upwind, it's easy to stop the boat by heading into the wind, a sailor has no such easy out when running. Severe rolling is more likely as there is less rolling resistance provided by the sails, which are eased out. And loss of attention by the helmsman could lead the boat to jibe accidentally, causing injury to the boat or crew. It's always a good idea to use a preventer to prevent an accidental jibe. Alternately, if there is a sudden increase in wind strength, the boat can round up very suddenly and heel excessively, often leading to a capsise in smaller boats. This is called broaching.

Reaching

When the boat is traveling approximately perpendicular to the wind, this is called reaching. A 'close' reach is somewhat toward the wind, and 'broad' reach is a little bit away from the wind (a 'beam' reach is with the wind precisely at right angles to the boat). For most modern sailboats, reaching is the fastest way to travel.

Sailing upwind

Using a series of close hauled legs to beat a course upwind
Enlarge
Using a series of close hauled legs to beat a course upwind

A basic rule of sailing is that it is not possible to sail directly into the wind. Generally speaking, a boat can sail 45 degrees off the wind. When a boat is sailing this close to the wind, it is close-hauled or beating (beating to weather).

Since a boat cannot sail directly into the wind, but the destination is often upwind, one can only get there by sailing close-hauled with the wind coming from the port side (the boat is on port tack), then tacking (turning the boat through the eye of the wind) and sailing with the wind coming from the starboard side (the boat is on starboard tack). By this method, it is possible to reach that destination directly upwind. The heavier the wind, the rougher the seas, thus boat movement can be more uncomfortable. This can feel like the boat is beating its hull into the waves, hence the term beating.

How close a boat can sail to the wind depends on the boat's design, sail trim, the sea state and the wind speed, since what the boat "sees" is the apparent wind, i.e., the vector sum of the actual wind and the boat's own velocity. The apparent wind speed is what the anemometer on top of the mast shows. A good analogy to this would be walking through an indoor room and feeling the "wind" on your face. The faster you walk, the more wind your feel. The apparent wind angle while sailing close hauled will be less that the true wind angle. A good, modern sloop can sail within 25 degrees of the apparent wind. An America's Cup racing sloop can sail within 16 degrees, under the right conditions. Those figures might translate into 45 degrees and 36 degrees relative to the actual wind, depending on boat speed.

Reducing sail

An important safety aspect of sailing is to adjust the amount of sail to suit the wind conditions. As the wind speed increases the crew should progressively reduce the amount of sail. On a small boat with only jib and mainsail this is done by furling the jib and by partially lowering the mainsail, a process called 'reefing the main'.

Reefing means reducing the area of a sail without actually changing it for a smaller sail. Ideally reefing does not only result in a reduced sail area but also in a lower center of effort from the sails, reducing the heeling moment and keeping the boat more upright.

There are three common methods of reefing the mainsail:

  • Slab reefing, which involves lowering the sail by about one-quarter to one-third of its luff length and tightening the lower part of the sail using an outhaul or a pre-loaded reef line through a cringle at the new clew, and hook through a cringle at the new tack.
  • In-mast (or on-mast) roller-reefing. This method rolls the sail up around a vertical foil either inside a slot in the mast, or affixed to the outside of the mast. It requires a mainsail with either no battens, or newly-developed vertical battens.
  • In-boom roller-reefing, with a horizontal foil inside the boom. This method allows for standard- or full-length horizontal battens.

Mainsail furling systems have become increasingly popular on cruising yachts as they can be operated shorthanded and from the cockpit in most cases, however, the sail can become jammed in the mast or boom slot if not operated correctly. Mainsail furling is almost never used while racing because it results in a less efficient sail profile. The classical slab-reefing method is the most widely used. Mainsail furling has an additional disadvantage in that its complicated gear may somewhat increase weight aloft. However, as the size of the boat increases, the benefits of mainsail roller furling increase dramatically.

Sail trimming

A Contender dinghy on a reach. The helmsman is using a "trapeze" to exert his weight right outside the boat.
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A Contender dinghy on a reach. The helmsman is using a "trapeze" to exert his weight right outside the boat.

As noted above, sail trimming is a large subject. Basic control of the mainsail consists of setting the sail so that it is at an optimum angle to the wind,(i.e. no flapping at the front, and tell tales flowing evenly off the rear of the sail).

Two or more sails are frequently combined to maximise the smooth flow of air. The sails are adjusted to create a smooth laminar flow over the sail surfaces. This is called the "slot effect". The combined sails fit into an imaginary aerofoil outline, so that the most forward sails are more in line with the wind, whereas the more aft sails are more in line with the course followed. The combined efficiency of this sail plan is greater than the sum of each sail used in isolation.

More detailed aspects include specific control of the sail's shape, e.g.:

  • reefing, or reducing the sail area in stronger wind
  • altering sail shape to make it flatter in high winds
  • raking the mast when going upwind (to tilt the sail towards the rear, this being more stable)
  • providing sail twist to cope with gusty conditions

Heeling

When a boat rolls over to one side under wind pressure, it's called 'heeling'. As a sailing boat heels over beyond a certain angle, it begins to sail less efficiently. Several forces can counteract this movement.

Boats heeling in front of Britannia Bridge in round Anglesey race 1998
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Boats heeling in front of Britannia Bridge in round Anglesey race 1998
  • The buoyancy of that part of the hull which is being submerged tends to bring the boat upright.
  • Raising the centreboard can paradoxically increase leeway, and therefore reduce heeling.
  • A weighted keel, which can in larger boats be canted from side to side, provides additional force to right the boat.
  • The crew may move onto the high (upwind) side of the boat, called hiking, changing the centre of gravity significantly in a small boat. They can trapeze where the boat is designed for this (see Dinghy sailing).
  • The underwater shape of the hull relative to the sails can be designed to make the boat tend to turn upwind when it heels excessively: this reduces the force on the sails, and allows the boat to right itself. This is known as rounding up.
  • The boat can be turned upwind to produce the same effect.
  • Wind can be spilled from the sails by 'sheeting out', i.e. loosening the sail.
  • Lastly, as the boat rolls farther over, wind spills from the top of the sail.

Most of the above effects can be used to right a heeling boat and to keep the boat sailing efficiently: if however the boat heels beyond a certain point of stability, it can capsize. A boat is said to have capsized when the tip of the mast is in the water.

Sailing close to the wind

How close a boat can sail to the wind depends on the wind speed, since what the boat "sees" is the apparent wind, i.e., the vector sum of the actual wind and the boat's own velocity. The apparent wind is what the wind indicator on top of the mast shows. Because of this, people often talk about how close a boat can sail to the apparent wind. A good, modern sloop can sail within 25 degrees of the apparent wind. An America's Cup racing sloop can sail within 16 degrees, under the right conditions. Those figures might translate into 45 degrees and 36 degrees relative to the actual wind. The angles at which the wind meets the boat are described by the points of sail.

Sailing safety


First and foremost:

  1. Wear a life vest!
  2. Learn to swim!

Sailing requires respect for the risks of being on the water. All sailors therefore should be sensibly prepared. Most jurisdictions have certain minimum regulations that must be met as to equipment. When engaged in publicly organized activities they may be required to take additional precautions, as detailed by the authority which regulates the training or racing.

Safety measures may include:

  • Appropriate floatation aids, including life preservers
  • Provision of a safety boat for rescue purposes
  • Appropriate first-aid and firefighting equipment
  • Carrying of a knife suitable for cutting rigging or netting in an emergency

Aside from what may be required by law or a sailing organization, real safety on the water comes from an informed awareness of risks involved and the exercise of reasonable steps to avoid dangers.

Also, know the 'rules of the road':

  • Port tack gives way to Starboard tack (when the paths of two boats on opposite tacks cross, the boat with its port side to windward must give way)
  • Windward gives way to the leeward, or downwind boat (if on the same tack)
  • Overtaking boat gives way if above do not apply
  • Non-Commercial Powerboats usually give way to sailboats (but be careful in shipping lanes, and use common sense)
  • It is everybody's responsibility to avoid a collision, and avoiding action must be taken if these rules are ignored.

Sailing hulls and hull shapes

Sailing boats can have one, two, or three hulls. Boats with one hull are known as monohulls, while those with two or more are known as multihulls. Multihulls can be further subdivided into catamarans (two hulls), and trimarans (three hulls). A sailing boat is turned by a rudder which itself is controlled by a tiller or a wheel. Smaller sailing boats often have a stabilising, raisable, underwater fin called a centreboard (or daggerboard); larger sailing boats have a fixed (or sometimes canting) keel. As a general rule, the former are called dinghies, the latter yachts. However, up until the adoption of the Racing Rules of Sailing, any vessel racing under sail was considered a yacht, be it a multi-masted ship-rigged vessel (such as a sailing frigate), a sailboard (more commonly refered to as a windsurfer) or remote-controled boat, or anything in between. (see Dinghy sailing)

Multihulls use flotation and/or weight positioned away from the centre line of the sailboat to counter the force of the wind. This is in contrast to heavy ballast that can make up to 1/3 of the weight of a monohulled sailboat. In the case of a standard catamaran there are two similarly sized and shaped narrow hulls connected by beams which are sometimes overlaid by a deck superstructure. Another catamaran variation is the proa. In the case of trimarans, which have an unballasted centre hull similar to a monohull, two relatively smaller amas are situated parallel to the centre hull to resist the sideways force of the wind. The advantage of multihulled sailboats is that they do not suffer the performance penalty of having to carry heavy ballast, and their relatively smaller hulls reduce the amount of drag caused by friction and inertia when moving through the water.

Types of sails and layouts

A traditional modern yacht is technically called a "Bermuda sloop" (sometimes a "Bermudan sloop"). A sloop is any boat that has only a single mast. The Bermuda designation refers to the fact that the sail which has its forward edge (the "luff") against the mast (the main sail) is a sail roughly triangular in shape. Addionally, Bermuda sloops only have a single sail behind the mast. Other types of sloops are gaff-rigged sloops and lateen sloops (sometimes called a junk-rig). Gaff-rigged sloops have quadrilateral mainsails with a gaff (a small boom) at their upper edge (the "head" of the sail). Gaff-rigged vessels may also have another sail, called a topsail, above the gaff. Lateen sloops have triangular sails with the upper edge attached to a gaff, and the lower edge attached to the boom, and the boom and gaff are attached to each other via some type of hinge. It is also possible for a sloop to be square rigged (having large square sails like a Napoleonic Wars-era line-of-battle ship). Note that a "sloop of war," in the naval sense, may well have more than one mast, and is not properly a sloop by the modern meaning.

If a boat has two masts, it may be either a schooner, a ketch, or a yawl, if it is rigged fore-and-aft on all masts. A schooner may have any number of masts provided the second from the front is the tallest (called the "main mast"). In both a ketch and a yawl, the foremost mast is tallest, and thus the main mast, while the rear mast is shorter, and called the mizen mast. The difference between a ketch and a yawl is that in a ketch, the mizen mast is forward of the rudderpost (the axis of rotation for the rudder), while a yawl has its mizen mast behind the rudderpost. In modern parlance, a brigantine is a vessel whose forward mast is rigged with square sails, while her after mast is rigged fore-and-aft. A brig is a vessel with two masts both rigged square.

As one gets into three or masts the number of combinations rises and one gets barques, barquentines, and three-masted brigs.

A spinnaker is a large, full sail that is only used when sailing off wind either reaching or downwind, to catch the maximum amount of wind.

See also Sail and sail-plan.

Sailing terminology

Sailors use many traditional nautical terms for the parts of or directions on a vessel; starboard (right), port (left), forward or fore (front), aft (rearward), bow (forward part of the hull), stern (aft part of the hull). Vertical spars are masts, horizontal spars are booms (if they can hit you), gaffs (if they're too high to reach) or poles (if they can't hit you).

Rope & line

Standing rigging (on the left) and running rigging (on the right), on a sailing boat
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Standing rigging (on the left) and running rigging (on the right), on a sailing boat

Actually, only a few of the "ropes" on a boat are called ropes, most are called lines or cables. Generally a very thick line would be considered a cable.

Ropes or wires that hold up masts are collectively known as standing rigging and are called shrouds or stays (the stay connecting the top of the mast to the bow is called the forestay or headstay).

Ropes or wires that control the sails are known collectively as running rigging or lines. Those that raise sails are called halyards while those that strike them are called downhauls or cunninghams. Ropes that adjust (trim) the sails are called sheets. These are often referred to using the name of the sail they control (e.g. "main sheet", or "jib sheet"). Alternately, the trim may be controlled with a smaller set of sheets attached to the forward section of the boom called the vang, or the kicker in the United Kingdom.

Ropes used to tie the boat up when alongside are called docklines or docking cables.

There are some ropes: A few examples, the bell rope (to ring the bell), a bolt rope (attached to the edge of a sail for extra strength), a foot rope (on old square riggers for the sailors to stand on while reefing or furling the sails), and a tiller rope (to temporarily hold the tiller and keep the boat on course). A rope is what keeps an anchor attached to the boat when the anchor is in use.

Other terms

Walls are called 'bulkheads' or 'ceilings', while the surfaces referred to as 'ceilings' on land are called 'overheads'. Floors are called 'soles' or 'decks'. The toilet is traditionally called the 'head', the kitchen is the 'galley'. In sailing lines are rarely tied off, they are almost always 'made fast' or 'belayed.' Sails in different sail plans have unchanging names, however. For the naming of sails, see sail-plan.

Sailing terms have entered popular language in many ways. "Broken up" was the fate of a ship that hit a "rocky point" or was simply no longer wanted. "Poop" refers to the aftermost deck of a ship, taken from "puppis" the Latin word for "stern". "Pooped" refers to a wave breaking over the stern and filling the cockpit with water. "In the doldrums" referred to being becalmed, windless, especially in the narrow band of hot windless water "the doldrums", near the equator. "Adrift" meant literally that a ship's anchor had come loose, and the ship was out of control near land and therefore in serious danger. "Keel-hauled and hung out to dry." was the rather nasty process of attaching a sailor to a rope, and drawing him under the sailboat while underway, and then hanging him from a yard-arm (under his shoulders usually, not by his neck), where officers and crew could mock him. This was a particularly unpleasant punishment; apart from the risk of drowning, the sailor would be lacerated by the barnacles on the ship's hull.

Sailing regulations

There are two very basic rules for avoiding a collision at sea: 1) Power gives way to sail 2) Port gives way to starboard. This second point means that boats who have their sails set for a breeze coming from the left hand side of the boat (port) must give way to yachts that have their sails set for a breeze coming from the right side of the boat (starboard). If both boats have their sails set on the same side of the boat, then the boat closer to where the wind is coming from (the windward boat) must give way to the leeward boat.

However there are many other rules besides and sailors are expected to know the essentials of boating safety which include;

Sailboat racing

U.S. Sailing team at the World Military Games Sailing Competition, December 2003
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U.S. Sailing team at the World Military Games Sailing Competition, December 2003

Sailboat racing ranges from single person dinghy racing to large boats with 10 or 20 crew and from small boats costing a few hundred dollars to multi-million dollar Americas Cup campaigns. The costs of participating in the high end large boat competitions make this type of sailing one of the most expensive spor