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...I can tell you with some pretty good authority that all those stitches are doing is holding the batten in the pocket. A few stitch breaks are absolutely no cause for any concern and if you touch them up, you are wasting your time...but hey!, it is your time.
Actually, you are incorrect. The batten pocket stitches on a Hobie sail do more than just hold the batten in the pocket. If you look closely at the sail, you will see that the batten pocket is actually formed by the overlap of the adjacent horizontal panels, it is not a separate pocket stitched onto the sail (if it were a separate pocket, then I would agree with you). The stitches in question are not simply holding the batten in the pocket, they are actually forming the seam between the adjacent horizontal sail panels. So the batten pocket stitches actually do hold the sail together - not only are they are structural, but they also influence the overall shape of the sail through the broad seaming between sail panels.
I agree that a few missing stitches is not going to cause your sail to blow apart, but if you let them go unaddressed, they could continue to unravel and eventually it is very likely you could have a problem.
So you can either take 20 minutes to repair a few inches of missing stitching or you can do nothing, let the stitches potentially continue to unravel, and risk one day having the sail come apart. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
sm