Annie, you certainly are right when hinting that I had something to learn in those days. However, as I recall it, it was not strong winds that gave problems. Malena’s rudder, totally unbalanced and sitting behind a skeg, simply needs some tiller forces to control it, higher than on the much bigger Johanna, with her horn-balanced rudder.
Now I re-read Bob Grove’s article about his “Reggy, the Regulator” in Magazine 51. The last paragraph opens with...
“Without a balanced rudder this same vane could be used to control a trim tab on the rear of the rudder or become the driving force for a servo pendulum gear”...
From this I conclude that the rudder on Easy Go indeed had a balanced rudder, as seen on some of these Benford dories. Even Reggy, twice as strong as my Otto, would not be man enough to control a 5-ton boat with an unbalanced rudder. As you well know, quartering seas are just as eager to push a boat off course as the sail(s) are, so fitting a 2-stick rig would only solve half of the problem.
Cheers, Arne