dammit wrote:
Just curious what your "cut-off" is as to when the conditions/wind speed is too powerful to warrant taking the TI out for a day on the water?
Bay or ocean?
So far, I have avoided the ocean - not so much for the ocean itself, but for the unfriendly lee shores (waves breaking hard on sandbars) and the extreme tidal currents on the routes into the ocean and back from the ocean.
I sail the bays behind Atlantic City NJ (USA) where 90% of the lee shores are friendly and the tidal currents aren't
too bad as long as I use a little common sense in the vicinity of bridges and piling-mounted channel markers.
After a day of sailing, I always check the local iWindsurf chart to see what the anemometer near where I do most of my sailing was reading.
Experience with my AI2 (not a TI) on these protected waters so far has been:
- Averages in high teens, gusting into low-twenties: These are the optimal 'FeelGood' conditions for me and my AI2 with the main fullly-deployed.
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I often stow the Mirage Drive because it makes the boat noticibly less of a pig.... Or use the Mirage Drive to get to an upwind destination, keep using it to surf some big boat wakes, and then stow it for the downwinder home.
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I tend to gybe, but have a single-blade paddle holstered on the tramp for if/when I decide to tack.
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. - Averages around twenty, gusting into mid-twenties: About the same fun factor as above except that the boat sails better with one turn of reef...... At this point launching off of a beach where the wind is blowing directly onshore becomes a little problematic.....I can usually do it without resorting to the Mirage Drive by paddling hard dead into the wind to get far enough offshore to deploy the sail and get under way before getting blown back onto the beach...... Push-comes-to-shove and I will install the Mirage Drive, walk the boat out to waist-deep water, jump on, and pedal hard until I am comfortably far from the beach before deploying the sail/centerboard and locking the rudder down...... But then I am stuck with the Mirage Drive and I try to avoid that in those conditions...... Usually the paddle does the job - especially since I have gotten better/faster at plopping my butt into the boat, flipping the rudder down, deploying the main, and deploying the centerboard.
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. - Averages in mid-twenties, gusting near thirty: I might re-install the Mirage drive because, as somebody observed, it goes into the wind like a beast......Depends on the wind direction and lee shores..... At this point, the fun factor has diminished from the first two scenarios and sailing the AI becomes more "Interesting" than fun.
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. - Averages in high twenties, gusting into low thirties: "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore.".... I would probably not choose to go out.... but if I am out there and conditions deteriorate to this state, I'm starting to think of my position, the relative friendliness of the lee shore, and the best way to get back to my launching point....... I am also watching the sky, staying not too far from shore, and am ready to just make for shore, fully reef the sail, pull the boat up on the beach, and seek shelter by laying on the sand under bushes or trees...... Which I had occasion to do earlier in the summer when a 50+ mph squall materialized out of nowhere.
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Late in my windsurfing career I realized that, once it starts gusting into the thirties, it's more pleasurable to sit on the beach in nice warm dry clothes (prefereably with the hot or cold beverage of one's choice) and watch the other sailors tack out, do a survival gybe, pinch back in to where there's less wind, do another survival gybe...and repeat.... and then come in to the beach going on about "How great it is out there...."..... Yeaaaahhhh, riiiiite.... I was watching pal and you were not having fun.....-).
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At some point in the high teens/low twenties, aka shear pins start to break if/when the ama hits some chop "Just So".
I discovered this a couple of weeks ago and it has inspired me to install a righting-line system that doubles as an aka-collapse mitigator on both sides - even so my little home-made tramp on the starboard side prevented complete aka collapse/capsize the one time I sheared a pin on that side......
You still want the pins to shear and you still want some collapse.... but you want to mitigate the collapse enough so the boat does not capsize.
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Semi-tangentially, I have logged some practice time sailing with the rudder completely up and steering with the single-bladed paddle.... but not all that much, and the jury is still out on whether I can control the boat sufficiently in 25+ conditions with just the paddle....... I lost my outrigger canoe steering paddle a couple of seasons ago, but I am thinking of buying another one and using it as my single-bladed paddle just in case....
Also semi-tangentially, I have modified my non-inflatable life jacket so that it doubles as a harness and almost always sail with a tether attached to the boat and quick-release shackled to the life jacket/harness..... I am not 100% sure that this is such a great idea because of the possibility of entanglement in the tether..... but blowaway in the middle if the bay is pretty much a certainty if I manage to get thrown into the water without it so I am staying with it for now and mean to practice a little more when winds are strong enough,
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