We had this exact 'discussion' yesterday. (BTW, what a beautiful day, our first 'good sailing day' of the season. Partly cloudy, light NW winds, steady, with little chop.)
Monohull sailors will say, "head up", or turn into the wind. Monohulls are designed that way, to be safe. Multihull sailors will say "it depends, but mostly head off, or turn off the wind."
Sure, releasing some mainsheet and/or jibsheet helps, hiking out helps, but if you head up too quickly, there is the chance that you will 'rotate' the cat and contribute to a capsize, especially if the gust of wind gets under the tramp.
My best friend and sailing partner, aka my wife, tends to sail in more gentle conditions that I do, so for her, it is not a problem to head up. When the puffs are stronger, or the wind is up, (in excess of Beaufort Force 4), she gives the helm to me, and I usually head off and/or depower and/or hike out.
The reasoning is that the puffs will accellerate the Hobie, not knock it down. However, you have to watch the trim of the boat, that is, if your bows are down and you are in chop, you are headed for a different kind of trouble - called submarining, often followed by the dreaded pitchpole. This is especially true on H16's, less so on H18's and Tigers.
The only time I would solo an H18 is in company with others, and in very gentle conditions. Have fun, be safe.
_________________ 2015 H16, with spin, SOLD 1989 Hobie SX18 Sail # 1947 "In Theory..." 'Only two things are infinite, the universe, and human stupidity. But I'm not sure about the former.'
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