SAIL MAGAZINE
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
DICKEVERITT.COM
Taming
the Gybe
By Dick Everitt
A
An accidental gybe can be very danger-
ous—an old friend of mine was killed by the
boom slamming across. The whole crew
must therefore be warned about the pos-
sibilities of being hit by flying lines or a
rogue traveller whizzing across the track. A
bad gybe can also damage the sail, track
ends or gooseneck. It can even bring down
the entire mast.
B
There are several designs of boom
brake that add friction and slow the boom
crossing the boat.
C
A preventer is a line led forward to stop
the main gybing. Rigging it via a snatch
block means it can be adjusted from the
cockpit. Using a nylon line means it stretch-
es if you dip the boom in the water. Be-
ware: moving a kicking strap to the rail can
cause the boom to break.
D
When a boat gybes, the offset force of
the sail and the heeled underwater shape
of the hull can turn the boat. In extremis, it
can go sideways or even broach.
E
Be careful steering downwind: watch
the wind indicators or, better still, feel the
breeze on the back of your neck. If the end
of the boom starts to lift, steer to wind-
ward. An aide-memoire is “tiller toward or
wheel away” from the boom. A controlled
gybe can be done in different ways, but a
common approach is to...
F
Secure the mainsheet traveller so that it
doesn’t slam across, then pull in the kicking
strap to keep the boom down.
G
Haul in the mainsheet. When the boom
end is roughly on the quarter, start to steer
through the gybe.
H
When the boom is amidships, some
skippers release the mainsheet and let the
friction in the blocks slow the boom down
as the sheet runs free. Others prefer to pull
the main amidships, so that the sail stalls,
and then let it out under more control. To
prevent a broach (as in D) it might be nec-
essary to “catch” the turn by steering the
other way slightly.
Dick Everitt has sailed thousands of miles
in various parts of the world. He has been
an illustrator, journalist and engineer for
more than 40 years
B
C
D
E
A
G
H
F
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