The magic hook on a stick
Michael,
here is the lazy old man’s way of picking up a mooring under sail:
· Tie a 10mm (permanent) line to the post at the foredeck and bring it back to the cockpit, outside everything (pulpit, rails...)
· Tie the cockpit end of the line to a big, nice carabine hook, set on the end of a one-meter long stick. You can actually buy such things, some of them very clever.
· After the sailtrip, pick up the mooring by approaching slowly under sail, and then, as the mooring passes your cockpit, reach out a hand and clip on that hook-on-a-stick.
· If you miss, go around and try again.
· When you hear the lovely click from the carabine hook, shout “CONTACT!” and dump the sail immediately.
From now on you have all the time in the world to sort out sheets and stuff in the cockpit while the boat settles less than a boatlength to the lee of the mooring. Then you can at your leisure - slowly, just to show off - walk forward, pull the boat up to the mooring and tie the permanent lines on. Finally you unclip the carabine hook and bring it back to its “permanent” position, a rope loop or something. There, next to the cockpit it is ready for next time.
The clue with shorthanded sailing is to make arrangements so we don’t have to be on two places simultaneously. Fitting a JR is a long step in the right direction.
Cheers, Arne