abbman wrote:
Matt,
What line stays on the boat the best? I could care less how it feels at this point. I bet I lost my mainsheet off the back of the boat 30 times within an hour trapped out in 16-18 mph winds last weekend. It was more than frustrating. It's hard to focus on sailing when your line won't stay on the boat. I've tried all kinds of things too, like wrapping the loose end of the mainsheet on my leg and holding the traveler side with my foot, but eventually I see it getting dragged being the boat. Not to mention your almost totally screwed at that point if you need to dump the main.
Sampson Trophy Braid gets really heavy when it's wet and it stays put pretty good. I still prefer a lighter sheet and just control it more.
There are a couple of things I do - first of all, I make sure that the excess sheet is in a pile on the high side of the boat. Once I'm sheeted in all the way, I rarely make sheet / traveller adjustments, unless it's really puffy, so that tends to keep the pile there. (If you're dumping a lot, then pulling back in a lot, travel off a couple of inches.)
I also use a pretty short mainsheet - it's only 37 feet long.
If the line is determined to go out the back, I'll gather the loose part up (main cleated, using your forward hand) and put the loops over my trapeze connection. When you come in off the wire and unhook, the pile just drops to the trampoline. Sailing the 14 and the 17, you get pretty good at this, but sometimes it gets ugly:
It looks like I'm being attacked by an exotic water snake. (That's Bzzz line, by the way.)
Some people use strips of vinyl or foam noodles in the trampoline lacing to keep the line on the boat. Some, like Karl, blame it on the crew.