jn1 said...barn said...
^ There is a difference between hooking into the harness lines in light wind, and actually using the harness lines to support your weight, the latter being their actual purpose..
Barn
I used this advice when I was a beginner three years ago. All I can say it is worked for me. My biggest fear then was being hooked in and trapped under the sail (I learnt in the ocean, messy seabreeze chop etc). I spent a session just hooking in and out and getting used to the feeling of being hooked in and getting confident with hooking out. That's all the exercise was aimed at achieving. The tip was given to me by an ex-instructor who saw me putting my brand new harness lines on my boom in the rigging area and asked me what level I was at. Everything else you said I agree with.
We're all ex-instructors..
Hooking in in light wind is an exercise in catching ropes with a hook on your belly..
Reckon FireEngine could sort that out in 5 seconds.. Less dexterous people can take longer. Some never get it..
The confidence thing is important, you should learn to unhook while under water. You can also breath while hooked in no matter where the lines are.. And to get rid of the fear of getting stuck under the sail, u can just do a few laps under it.. Fears need to be confronted, not avoided..
All these should be practiced in 3 knots..
When it's windy, it's a completely different story.. You need to commit your weight to the sail before hooking in, FireEngine can waterstart and plane, and it sounds like he doesn't care about trashing stuff, so he has it sorted, on the home straight..