Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Gear Forum :: Canoe Sailing
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ArrowheadPaddler |
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gravelroad |
Types of Sailing Canoe DIY rig plan: Drop-in Sail Rig for Canoes & Kayaks Plans PDF I sail a Folbot Greenland II kayak with a Folbot rig. Stabilizers and a reefing mechanism came in handy on an occasion when the weather forecast missed the maximum wind speed by 15 knots … My father sailed an OTCA on Gitche Gumee with a lateen rig. That was handy as well. My mother would have preferred that he used stabilizers. Lug rig: Really Simple Sails |
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bwcamjh |
The foot is 55 inches. The luff about 66 inches. The diagonal about 79 inches. Not a large sail by any means but manageable with the old town pack. With the leeboards I can tack I hold the line on the foot, sometimes looping it around the seat. Have though about installing some cleats on the seat. Simple and fun, easy to pull the mast if the wind gets to big for me to handle. |
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Kendis |
gravelroad: "As hinted at above, the Brits are maniacs for this sort of thing: As I stated in my original post, I don't have the tools to create any spars or other mounting hardware. I have previously seen the items you linked and I would like to give them a try, but doing so is beyond my reach. |
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Kendis |
bwcamjh: " Thanks for letting me know the dimensions. How high do you think this rig allows you to point? Meaning what is the smallest angle to the direction the wind is coming from that you can sail? |
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Kendis |
bwcamjh: " Thanks for letting me know the dimensions. How high do you think this rig allows you to point? Meaning what is the smallest angle to the direction the wind is coming from that you can sail? |
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andym |
While it doesn’t solve the problem of having to hold the main sheet all the time, for techniques to swap hands between the sheet and rudder while moving, look at how laser sailers do it when tacking and jibing. There’s no main sheet cleat on a laser either. I’ve also thought about setting up for canoe sailing but have enhances to sailboats that I haven’t done it. |
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Kendis |
bwcamjh: " This looks promising. How long is the foot of the sail? Have you had any problems with the yard falling out of its pocket? |
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Kendis |
SailboatsToGo Canoe Rig Anyone have experience with canoe sailing? I do not have the tools needed to build a rig myself. Discussion of that is welcome but not relevant to my question. |
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deerfoot |
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KawnipiKid |
One caveat you can ask about with this set-up is if you can sail one-handed by fixing the main sheet. The set-up's weak link, from what I can see, is that there's no obvious system for running the sheet through a pulley or guide (a little chock or "fairlead") right in front of you with a block or cleat to hold it where you want it. This means you can't set the sail and run without always holding the sheet in one hand (while needing to hold the rudder in the other). You'll often want to hold the sheet but not all of the time. It's tiring holding it at all times and you want/need a free hand for lots of reasons. You need the sheet hand free because you can't let go of the rudder while moving with this set-up. Maybe I'm missing something; ignore this if there's more to the set than I can see. Also, the two-rudder system is a little clunky in and of itself. It's less maneuverable than one rudder off the back with 180 degrees of swing and requires taking one rudder/oar out of the water and putting the other in as you come about. However, it looks like it works and like it works for rowing too. I'd just want to know I can set the main sheet and not have to hold it. Ideally, you want to have the sheet reachable in one predictable place it in front of you (through a pulley or guide). Even if you you have to hold it and can't set it (fix it into a cleat/block), you want to always know where it is in front of you. You also need to be able to let go of the sheet (or pop it off a block or cleat) in an emergency so the sail swings to slack and you stop or slow enough to not capsize. The pulley/guide allows you to tie a knot in the sheet end so the sheet end won't go overboard if you let go (pop) and the sail swings wide to slack. If the sheet end goes over, you are dead in the water and have to swing the whole boat around until until you are parallel enough to the boom to retrieve the sheet. You may well be a sailor and I don't mean to lecture. I'm no expert by any stretch. I just got a little boat in college because I lived less than a block from a lake and thought I might attract dates in swimwear (alas, not nearly as well as hoped). |
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bwcamjh |
I got this sail rig from the UK. Endless river.co.uk Paired it with Sailboats to go leeboard. Canoe paddle for steerage |
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bwcamjh |
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bwcamjh |
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gravelroad |
Kendis: "gravelroad: "As hinted at above, the Brits are maniacs for this sort of thing: “I do not have the tools needed to build a rig myself. Discussion of that is welcome but not relevant to my question.” |
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Kendis |
There is some kind of mainsheet block about 2/3 the way down the length of the boom. Hard to tell in the photos on the website how the mainsheet is attached to the thwart. I'd plan to attach a cam cleat to the thwart in front of the stern seat for easy adjustment of the sheet. I worry about lift without a boom vang but that's probably overthinking things on a rig this small. The biggest challenge I have is that I would prefer to mount the rig behind the bow seat. My bow paddler is apprehensious about mounting the mast anywhere farther forward in case the sail has to be dropped in a hurry. She doesn't want the spars hitting her. I have a 19' Wenonah Itasca, so mounting the rig behind the bow seat is not out of the question, however, I worry about excessive weather helm in that layout. All in all I'd prefer a lug rig but there are no premade options available online that I can find. A lot to ponder... |
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ela45 |
I think the general consensus is NOT to use cleats on the mainsheet d/t the inherent propensity to capsize in a canoe. Folks still do it, but I haven't myself. At times I've wrapped the sheet around one of the thwarts to serve as a kind of hold. I'm looking into putting a ratchet block or a ratchet block w cam on the sheet to help with longer sailing days. All in all its a lot of fun! I'd love to meet up with other canoe sailers if anyone is interested. I'm usually on the St. Croix in the summer...but planning to hit up some TC lakes too. |
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bombinbrian |
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