I hit a milestone in my Hobie sailing career, two or three actually.
1) I flew a hull
2) I capsized the boat
3) and I turtled the boat
The story:
10-15 mph winds. I (160lbs) went out with a friend (180lbs) and our two boys (70 & 50lbs respectively) on my Hobie 18 (and my wife, but in a totally different story she opted to not talk to me the rest of the day and stay on shore). I let my friend handle the tiller so he could have a little fun and had him turn off the wind a couple times to avoid scaring the little ones. We did not have harnesses so no trapping was ensuing. We were on a medium reach (I think, wind was shifting) when a gust came.
Port Hull (upwind) started coming up, I unleashed the jib and he turned into the wind (he did NOT get the main sheet uncleated) and splash down. Maybe 2 seconds from oh crap to lets swim. My friend and boy went right in (all had life jackets and had been told the procedure before we set off), I dropped in in about 2 or 3 seconds (making sure they were clear) and then yelled for my boy to get off the hull. Which he did... into the main sail.
By the time I got the righting line untied and started climbing on the floating hull the boat started slipping under. i frantically climbed on the hull but it was too late... turtled. I'm proud to report we had the plugs in and were not near any bridges.
At this point I need to point out that everyone on Oklahoma lakes are apparently VERY helpful. No fewer than 3 boats and 3 jetskis offered to help (we accepted a ride for our boys while we got it upright).
We ended up using a jetski towrope to get from turtle and then a third man to get us back out of the water. To return to shore in defeat as our allotted sailing time had expired.
The Questions
1) I believe I was told/read to turn into the wind to stop the boat from going over. However, a turn to port inherently puts upward pressure on the inside (port) hull, encouraging it to come out of the water. Is uncleating and turning into the wind what I am supposed to do here?
2) Righting procedure:
Just to make sure I have this right.
a) Righting line tied to dolphin striker
b) Boat goes over... climb onto the float hull
c) Throw the righting line OVER the top/skyward hull.
d) pull, dont get squished.
3) Turtle - it seemed to go turtle pretty fast. I'd say 30 seconds. Was the downward push of my boy the cause (fell onto it, then JUMPED off of it) or is there something wrong with the mast? It seems that when we got it up from turtle we did not have any problem with it trying to go back under, but I cannot be sure as it is kind of a blur.
4) Shallow Water
I thought we were in 60' of water, but upon trailering and lowering the mast there was a dab of mud on the top of it . So I assume it barely hit bottom at some point (which could explain the difficulty in righting it). What happens if you turtle in 15' of water or near shore in less? I could see serious strain on the mast, anything special to right it at that point to avoid putting pressure on it or no big deal? 40' water is not the norm in Oklahoma unless you really get out there.
- - -
Thanks in advance. I'm learning so this is bound to happen more and more. My friends son was apparently traumatized and has vowed motor-only boating... proud to say my son said it was scary "but was really just mostly swimming." He was much more confident than I that the entire thing wouldn't sink, we ended up with maybe 10 gallons in the water side hull...which I will look into since it usually doesnt (hasnt) take on water.
- Jesse
ps. only mild battle wounds and only for me. Apparently I caught a cable with my back that left a mark and I discovered you use muscles you didnt know you had when trying to right those things. Boat and all else is well.
[edit]
It is a 1992 Hobie 18. It has a comp tip. No idea really if the mast leaks (I'd guess it does) or if the water running out of it was really off the sails/groove or whatever. I'm a nub, working on it.
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