After all the bad weather, I finally got out for another sail yesterday. The weather was still pretty ordinary, with around 4 foot of swell, 15 knot winds and rain squalls - but it was better than it has been
I spent some time about 1km off Mooloolaba trolling, looking for some Tuna/Mackeral and after about 30 minutes I finally saw some birds hovering suspiciously about 500m upwind. I slowly beat up into the wind and swell, making slow progress. I managed to start making on the school and had a few fairly close passes, but no hookups. My next tack was looking to bring me right through the middle, but alas, it was not to be. About 20 metres from the school, the plastic bolt on the windward aka sheered off and the Ama collapsed into the side of the hull. Luckily it was the windward side, otherwise I would have been going for a swim
After furling the sail, I managed to remove the spare pin (just, it was actually quite stubborn) and re-connect everything. By this time, I had drifted quite a way so I gave up on chasing the Tuna. I spend another hour or doing some great sailing, but no fish were to be taken.
Anyway, moral to the story is make sure you always have 2 sets of pliers or spanners to remove the spare Ama bolts, and have your trigger finger ready to release the sail
Must say, I am quite surprised that sailing in moderate conditions caused the bolts to break. I know they are designed to be the weak point if you hit a solid object, but really did not expect the bashing of the waves bring things undone.