Hello,
To the excellent comments above, I'd add that:
- If you control a gybe by hauling in and flaking on the cockpit sole, as we do too, be conscious you don't lift a foot.
- The sheet let too far loose after a gybe is even more interesting on a schooner or ketch, where the tangle of batten ends and lifts, sheets and fabric can take a while to sort out... as you drift, with no way to reduce or control sails. My tree-climbing daughter was indispensable.
- On our schooner, sailing wing-and-wing on a broad reach is powerful, balanced and fun, in small enough waves. I always favour the fore to be the sail 'by the lee,' because it can gybe harmlessly out there. But, avoiding the great pleasure of sailing wing-and-wing can save you from a lot of gybing, if you don't care for it.
- The junk's reputation for easy 'feathered' gybing, definitely depends on the sheets' being well-slackened-off beforehand, and also on decisive steering, in our experience. Full sail, least twist, easiest.
- Finally, if there's ever much question about the wisdom of a gybe, we tack around instead. It's a rough ride sometimes, but it's sure and it's safe. I can concentrate on the steering while the rig looks after itself, especially if we take our time, and sheet in and out properly. It actually shakes a lot of things back into perfect order in the rig, and is worth doing as a normal thing. Besides all that, it's practice for MOB manoeuvres. (There, now I'm a champion for the chicken gybe.)
And I have a question - Do many of us actually get up and tie our battens together near the leech to prevent the evil fan-up?
We never have. And I've rigged the intention for downhauls, but no downhauls. In the conditions where a fan-up would be feared, (for us, the day before yesterday was a case) I'd much rather stay low in the cockpit, than try to keep the reefed bundle within lashing reach while I leave the tiller, stand on the high stern seat or side rail, and end up inviting one disaster in trying to prevent another.
I don't know. It would seem wise once done, probably, with the wind still rising, but somehow it strikes me as decidedly non-junkish behaviour.
(At the risk of having another thread created for us: Like many other less-than-pious junk people, we don't have a Jester-like control position - we use the whole cockpit, which requires us to move some. It's quite confined and safe. One big reason we have a junk rig is so that nobody has to go 'out there' at sea, climbing around on trunk cabin and pilothouse to tie reef pendants, for instance.)
Cheers,
Kurt