I'm an over the hill sailor and in my youth I lived and sailed around Florida and Bahamas on an old 50 foot gaff rigged Newfoundland fishing schooner. To my mind no sailboat comes close to being as beautiful as a classic gaff rigged schooner under full sail. Thanks for keeping the gaffer spirit alive.
There were three of us. It had hoops on the masts, cotton and canvas sails, manila lines, no winches and no electricity, so no nav equipment, lots of leaks and a temperament diesel. It was a late 1920s boat that only young guys would be crazy enough to sail and it took all of us to do it.
Youre a mind of information and a true seaman, really enjoy all your videos. I can only dream of taking my yacht on trips beyond 15 miles from the marina, but blogs such as yours and sam holmes allow me to dream. With much respect,
You absolutely nailed it in every aspect! Exactly the reasons I wanted a gaffer. We bought a 40ft wooden Colin Archer pilot cutter. A wooden boat has a soul, can be maintained from local wood with handtools. She is simple in every way, but she is hard work. You're much closer to nature. Simple, beautiful and gracious.
It's really nice to see Ruth Avery 's past, also the previous owners and builders! Better again for them to see that she is in good hands! You are doing a great job! Love your videos! Stay safe from the east coast of Canada 🇨🇦
Good morning from Japan, Kevin. I have been following you for 5 or so years and I just want to say that you have completely changed the way I sail. I have a 25 footer with an engine, but the engine is almost never on. Silence. Thank you. Gary
Excellent video! I thoroughly enjoy following your old school expertise sailing skills. You are the only sailing video that offers the history behind the type of rigging. You are a true scholar of sailing
No argument from this bermudan rig sailor. But I'm happy every day i see a sailboat actually ssiling . And not firing up the diesel just because they cant sail the rumline or haven forbid if the wind should come forward of the mast... but i do love the complex simplicity of the gaffer.. thanks for an inspiring video Kevin. Best regards from Jarle
Wonderfully put. Loved the script. Love your channel. As someone who is lucky enough to get tonsail a friends sails mk2 24ft cornish crabbber i known what you mean about the topsails. Still i love how many strings luggers have to play with. Plus baffling my sailing friends with talk of roving backstays. 😊
I will be rewinding this episode over and over again all summer as I learn the old art on my little catboat. I would love to see S/v Ruth Avery under way on the waters of Long Island Sound one day! Thank you for the inspiration to begin my own sailing adventures!!! Best wishes Kevin.
I like it. I built myself a gaff cutter a couple of decades ago. My choice of gaff rig arose because I could build the rig myself, as you say, with hand tools thus saving a great deal of scarce cash She was a very handy sea boat and although I no longer own her, 25 years later, she's still wearing the original gaff mainsail. Power to ya Kevin.
All good, informative stuff that confirms what I learned on my 35ft gaff cutter, which I owned for 23 years and sailed about 150,000 nm. A couple of minor variations: 1 On the luff lashing, I reversed the direction of the lashing around the mast each time it went through the eyes on the luff. This style of lashing is less inclined to bind on the mast while hoisting or lowering the sail. 2 After experimenting, I decided that the mainsail set better with the foot loose (not lashed to the boom). This also simplifies the cut of the sail. 3 I had a vang to the end of the gaff to keep the gaff from bearing on the cap shroud. This vang was also useful to prevent the gaff from skying if the bunt of the sail filled with wind while lowering the main while running in heavy weather (generally only a problem in the Southern Ocean). The vang led to the weather rail and also allowed a bit of control of twist of the head of the sail. 4. With a keel-stepped mast I found that I could do away with the running backstays, but this is very dependent on the stiffness of the mast. 5. I fitted a standing topmast and made a permanent light extension to the gaff to do away with the topsail yard and jackyard. The topmast was a light, unstayed affair as it is never in use except in light airs. This converted the topsail from being a bit of a bastard to handle to being the easiest sail on the boat to set and strike. An under appreciated virtue of a topsail is that it steadies the whole rig down in light, rolly conditions so the lower sails slat less and hold their wind better.
Thanks for sharing. I just recently set my topsail, and I agree the yard and jackyard are quite mischievous while being hoisted, will try to foul anything and everything. Interesting on the luff lacing. Jamming is not usually a problem, but it does happen. I do sometimes have the problem of the lacing becoming too loose when deep reefed.
Thanks for sharing. I just recently set my topsail and I agree with you that the yard and jackyard are quite mischievous while being hoisted, will try to foul just about anything. Interesting on the luff lacing. I don't find that jamming is normally a problem. I do, however, have the issue to the lacing becoming too loose when deep reefed.
In addition to zig zagging the luff lashing, I have it in sections, each section tied off top and bottom. Section 1 throat to 3rd reef, section 2 third to second reef etc. This keeps constant tension as the sail is reefed.
The force of gravity does not apply to jackyards. 'Man unto woman born has but a short time to live He goes up like a jackyard topsail and comes down like a flying jib'
Thank you for another interesting and enjoyable. Between the wars my father's uncle was a captian of a schooner in the far East. His son wanted a bicycle for Christmas, his mum wrote to ask the captian if this was ok in Sept after Easter the reply came yes but not for more than 5 pounds, this was in Dublin.
For general interest, the Cutter with Tan sails and DS2 on the Mainsail is Jolie Breeze a Le Harve Pilot Cutter from the 1900’s . She is presently owned and sailed as the Dauntsey School’s character building and sailing vessel. I’ve raced against her and she is fast and well handled. Thanks for a lovely video, you passed the test!! 🤣
Excellent commentary on gaff rig. I personally sail a sprit rigged cat ketch and find that to be reasonably adaptable to any sailable situation. Thanks Kevin. Appreciated
This video gave me answers to so many of my questions! And I really liked what you said about the gaff rig beeing much more "self-sufficient". I never thought of that.
Thanks. Covered that fascinating topic fully yet succinctly. In all previous videos I'd failed to notice an important detail until you described gybing: the backstays! Loosening and tightening the leeward/windward backstays. Don't know how I managed to miss controlling those particular strings all this time, but I did.
Kevin ,the beauty the old school like no other . Were all other vessels measure their worth to a gaffer and that of the Capts ,such as her line both in strength beauty. The Gaffer , like no others now or evermore. Wonderful clip Kevin Angus SV Violet Walters😮
Great video Kevin and lovely narration. Just read The Dinghy Cruising Companion by Roger Barnes and his book showcased a number of dinghies with gaff or lug sails. Having had a Rhodes 19 for 29 years and now a Bristol 39 for four, the thought of going small again is very enticing. Fair winds
If this were the only video you ever posted, it would still sum up your ethos perfectly. Very well done! I learned a bit more, and was much inspired. Another note, regarding the comparison of a gaffer to a Model T: aside from being simple and easily repairable, like a gaffer, a Model T could go anywhere, in all conditions....eventually.
Thanks for the video, Kevin! And, yes, do rig that topsail some day and show us. I've had mine in storage for the first two years of owning the ship. Only recently I've come to appreciate its usefulness in light air.
Your videos have inspired me to rent a gaff rigged boat from Hunter's Boat Yard on the Norfolk Broads later this year. Not deep ocean sailing, of course, but still an old fashioned gaff rig, and a wooden boat to boot!
Forever redefined to me in the immortal words of Dodge Morgan as the "double hernia rig." Anyone who calls a gaffer slow never went up against one on a reach. And anyone who ever crossed an ocean hoped for no wind angle so much as a reach.
Great informative video. Gaffs a fabulous boats and as you point out are the backbone of working yachts all over the world. My memories of Thames yachts with their sails is a very special one. Incomparable beauty to my mind! ❤❤
Fantastic Kevin!! As a guy who learned to sail on old gaffers out of Camden this it the best lesson I have ever seen on the beauty of traditional boats! Well done Sir!
Thanks for sharing the tales of your high seas adventure. This essay on the gaff rig is interesting, and it also informs a better understanding of what we see as we watch you sail.
Hi, Kevin, you’ve got some hours into this one kind of a pleasant departure from the usual. Nice work. Stay hydrated while make and mending up in Harpswell. Not much of a breeze there.
I am 73 and i have now a 23 food yarmouth gaffel cutter.their is extra boom for a topsail,but i dont now how to raise the top sail,so yes a video .gr from Belguim
kevin…one of your best informative videos yet!…you answered many of the questions i’ve had regarding gaff rigs…and you’ve articulated what is so appealing to me…the simplicity and ability to source common parts to keep her functioning…im not sure i understand why she tacks more efficiently in tight runs while giving up 10 degrees…i’ll have to think about this a little more, because i want to know…thanks buddy!
I'm restoring my inherited 28 ft steel gaffer which is also pole masted, I'd love to see a video of the top sail as I'd like to rig one similar. Thanks for the videos!
Terrific update Kevin. I have the exact same jackyard topsail on my Cornish Crabber and I couldn't have put it better myself. It's a thing to behold and it turns heads, but oh what a lot of trouble getting it up and getting it down. I see now how you rig your topping lift so thank you for the close-up on that.
Great video and thank you for making! I got a Blackwater Sloop recently and have no experience (Yet) with gaff rigs and these videos are incredibly informative! Top man Kevin!
Hello from Montreal. I discovered your channel because of that "outdated" video some years agos. This new version is awasome! As an happy owner of a small gaff cutter (CC 24 MKII)(one and half season and my first boat) I really look forward for a video about the top sail handling. There is almost nothing on the subject over UA-cam so it will really be popular I think. My goal this summer is to rig and use my jackyard top sail. We always see the gaffer with the top sail up in video but almost never how they rig it, lift it and trim it. I got the book "Classic Boat Seamanship" from Martin Tregoning as reference for those small gaffer like mine but still a video of the quality like this one would be gold for new gaffer's owners. As alway, thanks for sharing your experience and make us dream.
A lot of the cruising cats and even the lighter monohulls start running for cover above 15 knots while the heavier boats are finding their sweet spot. I like having a full keel and though backing up is not much fun the rest of it is a win.
Excellent overview of the gaff rig and its history. I'm never going to fly a topsail on my small, gaff-rigged catboat, but I would love to see a video of how you'd do it on Ruth Avery.
Good video Kevin - As a Bermudan rig sailor I too love the look of a gaff rigger boat. There's a certain nostalgia when you see one in full flight but I think there are also very very few advantages of the rig. However I can see no reason to choose a gaff rig except where you like ,want and seek tradition, where the choice of the rig determines you choice of boat. While they use traditional materials, they are more complex, take longer to deploy and possibly require more maintenance than modern rigs. Each to their own but I'll stick to my Bermudan rig ... while gazing forever at those old gaffers with their topsails flying and the cutter rig doing it's thing so well.
You should most definitely take out the top sail and rig it! it would help all of us to visualize it your simple, simple explanations make it special !keep educating us :-)
Thank you for your insight and examples of your lovely vessel. I thoroughly enjoyed your video and learned a fair bit. I have always enjoyed your engineless adventures, and love to see you work to windward and sail oceans.
I sail a small catboat and the gaff rig is absolutely wonderful. I learn more everyday and getting it to perform takes skills few modern sailors understand. Sure I could go to weather better with a Bermuda rig but the joy I get to get what I do is worth the few degrees to weather.
Lovely video and beautiful imagery, Kevin..thanks for this! Have you ever tried setting your main sail loose footed? Some sources I've seen suggest it might be even more powerful that way (although mine being loose footed by design, I haven't done any comparisons yet.) Fair seas to you! Aldo from Malta PS: To the fellow gaffers out there who want to learn more about our delightfully anachronistic little ships, I suggest the following sources: "Hand, Reef and Steer" by Tom Cunliffe, and "The Gaff Rig Handbook" by John Leather
From one old gaffer to another, excellent entry as always...if you dont hace the old spars for the topsail let me know Kevin...got plenty of old growth doug fir to make it happen.
From a laymans perspective, the gaff rig seems like a superior choice to the bermuda rig in most conditions. You have more sail area near the vessel, ie lower, so any force acting on it will have less leverage to tilt the boat. So for the same mast height you get more sail area, with more of the sail area closer to the deck. I think a modern gaff rig where the gaff itself is lighter, possibly internal halyards and so on would fair very well even today. Almost all lighter fast sailing dinghies incorporate the concept of maximizing sail area without using a normal bermuda (be it bending the mast to create a similar shape, or going sprit rig etc). I can still see why the bermuda is and will remain the most popular choice, but there certainly are qualities to the gaff (esp if modernized) that makes it superior for sailors who want to cross the ocean safely.
Great video!! Surprised you did not mention the new gaff sails as used on Wharram catamarans,since there are thausands of them sailing up to63 feet in length. With the luffsleve around themast Wharram really improved the performance and durability is definitely proven with many ocean crossings today.
Aussum video Kevin, the one you recently promised. Just freaking cool Gaffrig is the original and certainly an adventure man ! Enjoyed this one. Fantastic and rare details, with some of the black pearls of gaff rig sailing. Nicely explained the running backstays on both sides. Also working the windward, with the figure. It helps a lot, thanks. Keep up the good work and enjoy your sailing adventures mate.
A great 101 Introduction to Gaff Rigging! I can see the advantages with it especially with the use of “off the self” gear to make it all work as opposed the the specialized gear I sometimes need for my Bermuda rigged Ericson 32-3 that you can see on my UA-cam channel. However, I sail the Chesapeake Bay which requires much more frequent tacking or jibing along with sail adjustments but you know that, Kevin. So I’m guessing that a gaff rigged boat is easier to use on ocean crossings then coastal cruising but that’s just a guess on my part. 😁
@@howtosailoceans1423 I often get unsolicited comments from persons walking down the dock on how beautiful our Ericson 32-3 is because she has beautiful lines, but your gaff rigged Gilmer 31 has me beat by a mile. 🙂
Still a popular variation on Larger Wharams the Wharram gaff riged wingsail.. a simple safe and efficient development of the tradidion for offshore cruising .
Absolutely brilliant episode. I truly love your way of life and your channel & follow you religiously but this episode could’ve been on the Discovery channel etc. Although the little dig to us Bermuda rigged sailors regarding sailing in/out of the town cut in said Bermuda is more down to having an engine & that convenience than the type of boat, but I get your point. Thanks for sharing captain ⚓️⛵️👍 Warren s/y Legend
Thanks Warren! Yes, the point there was despite having many more conveniences and the superior windward performance of the bermudan rig, the only boats I've seen tacking in through the Town Cut are gaffers.
Working men on boats, not always hell bent on high-speed but rather benefiting from more power, needed the lower center of effort in order to work on more level decks. And, dredging for scallops or, draging in tow a loaded fish net was done off the wind with all of that extra sail area providing the pull needed.
Thanks for what you're doing to keep gaff alive. Even the venerable Tom Cunliffe has a (lovely) modern rig. But he'd be the first to admit that gaff is not out of date and remains as viable and useful as it always was. A powerful downwind rig that can be easily powered up, or down, is a supremely useful tool, and repeated claims about performance to weather of more modern rigs miss the point entirely.
👍from an alu gaffers its true and we love the view on the horizon of gaffers and all the different top sails with there own shapes and colors Falmouth workboats are a nice example. Our boat is not the fastest but fun to play with and not smal and single handed is an good option .the only sail what is giving us now an dan problems is the furling jib.😉
Thanks for these instructional videos on the gaff rig and how to single-hand one, without an engine even. I guess one extra thing contributing to the gaffers poorer upwind performance is the lower tension on the forestays. Can you affect that by tightening the running backstay with a winch while pointing into the wind in a tack? Also how far aft should you have to running backstays? I guess that's a balancing act between how much they are in the way and how well they stay the mast?
Am near speechless. You are at the top of your game. Stunning presentation. Thanks.
It is typical of him. For my money, this is one of the better sailing channels on UA-cam.
I'm an over the hill sailor and in my youth I lived and sailed around Florida and Bahamas on an old 50 foot gaff rigged Newfoundland fishing schooner. To my mind no sailboat comes close to being as beautiful as a classic gaff rigged schooner under full sail. Thanks for keeping the gaffer spirit alive.
A Pinky schooner
Did you manage that single handed?
There were three of us. It had hoops on the masts, cotton and canvas sails, manila lines, no winches and no electricity, so no nav equipment, lots of leaks and a temperament diesel. It was a late 1920s boat that only young guys would be crazy enough to sail and it took all of us to do it.
Youre a mind of information and a true seaman, really enjoy all your videos. I can only dream of taking my yacht on trips beyond 15 miles from the marina, but blogs such as yours and sam holmes allow me to dream. With much respect,
My guess is this video will, over time, be a very popular production. Kudos to Kevin and Ms Avery.
Thanks Rich!
You absolutely nailed it in every aspect! Exactly the reasons I wanted a gaffer. We bought a 40ft wooden Colin Archer pilot cutter. A wooden boat has a soul, can be maintained from local wood with handtools. She is simple in every way, but she is hard work. You're much closer to nature.
Simple, beautiful and gracious.
Just watched your reels. She sure looks like a beauty! Fair winds mate.
It's really nice to see Ruth Avery 's past, also the previous owners and builders! Better again for them to see that she is in good hands! You are doing a great job! Love your videos! Stay safe from the east coast of Canada 🇨🇦
Good morning from Japan, Kevin.
I have been following you for 5 or so years and I just want to say that you have completely changed the way I sail.
I have a 25 footer with an engine, but the engine is almost never on.
Silence.
Thank you.
Gary
You don’t see too many gaff rigs these days. But when you do, it’s almost majestic! Absolutely gorgeous boats.
Funny you say that. Someone around here converted a Thistle dinghy to gaff rig. No idea on how it sails.
One niche where the gaff rig still dominates is on the river sailing yachts on the Norfolk Broads, in the UK.
@@jakereich yeah, Europe always has the coolest stuff!
Excellent video! I thoroughly enjoy following your old school expertise sailing skills. You are the only sailing video that offers the history behind the type of rigging. You are a true scholar of sailing
Deeply thought and beautifully written! Enjoyed both the practical and philosophical aspects of your video. Thank you!
"Casting off mooring lines and sensible advise"
That hit right in the feels.
No argument from this bermudan rig sailor. But I'm happy every day i see a sailboat actually ssiling . And not firing up the diesel just because they cant sail the rumline or haven forbid if the wind should come forward of the mast... but i do love the complex simplicity of the gaffer.. thanks for an inspiring video Kevin. Best regards from Jarle
"The complex simplicity of the gaffer". I might have to borrow that. Especially when I get to the gaff topsail ...
@@howtosailoceans1423 👍
So happy I own a gaffer boat. I use this video to demonstrate to my friends about the benefits.
As a novice ‘gaffer’ (and sailor), this was a great video. Thank you!
Thanks for stopping by!
Wonderfully put. Loved the script. Love your channel. As someone who is lucky enough to get tonsail a friends sails mk2 24ft cornish crabbber i known what you mean about the topsails. Still i love how many strings luggers have to play with. Plus baffling my sailing friends with talk of roving backstays. 😊
I will be rewinding this episode over and over again all summer as I learn the old art on my little catboat. I would love to see S/v Ruth Avery under way on the waters of Long Island Sound one day! Thank you for the inspiration to begin my own sailing adventures!!! Best wishes Kevin.
Excellent as always. Often you describe things I already know, but in different ways, deepening my understanding.
I like it. I built myself a gaff cutter a couple of decades ago. My choice of gaff rig arose because I could build the rig myself, as you say, with hand tools thus saving a great deal of scarce cash She was a very handy sea boat and although I no longer own her, 25 years later, she's still wearing the original gaff mainsail. Power to ya Kevin.
All good, informative stuff that confirms what I learned on my 35ft gaff cutter, which I owned for 23 years and sailed about 150,000 nm. A couple of minor variations:
1 On the luff lashing, I reversed the direction of the lashing around the mast each time it went through the eyes on the luff. This style of lashing is less inclined to bind on the mast while hoisting or lowering the sail.
2 After experimenting, I decided that the mainsail set better with the foot loose (not lashed to the boom). This also simplifies the cut of the sail.
3 I had a vang to the end of the gaff to keep the gaff from bearing on the cap shroud. This vang was also useful to prevent the gaff from skying if the bunt of the sail filled with wind while lowering the main while running in heavy weather (generally only a problem in the Southern Ocean). The vang led to the weather rail and also allowed a bit of control of twist of the head of the sail.
4. With a keel-stepped mast I found that I could do away with the running backstays, but this is very dependent on the stiffness of the mast.
5. I fitted a standing topmast and made a permanent light extension to the gaff to do away with the topsail yard and jackyard. The topmast was a light, unstayed affair as it is never in use except in light airs. This converted the topsail from being a bit of a bastard to handle to being the easiest sail on the boat to set and strike. An under appreciated virtue of a topsail is that it steadies the whole rig down in light, rolly conditions so the lower sails slat less and hold their wind better.
Thanks for sharing. I just recently set my topsail, and I agree the yard and jackyard are quite mischievous while being hoisted, will try to foul anything and everything. Interesting on the luff lacing. Jamming is not usually a problem, but it does happen. I do sometimes have the problem of the lacing becoming too loose when deep reefed.
Thanks for sharing. I just recently set my topsail and I agree with you that the yard and jackyard are quite mischievous while being hoisted, will try to foul just about anything. Interesting on the luff lacing. I don't find that jamming is normally a problem. I do, however, have the issue to the lacing becoming too loose when deep reefed.
In addition to zig zagging the luff lashing, I have it in sections, each section tied off top and bottom. Section 1 throat to 3rd reef, section 2 third to second reef etc. This keeps constant tension as the sail is reefed.
The force of gravity does not apply to jackyards.
'Man unto woman born has but a short time to live
He goes up like a jackyard topsail and comes down like a flying jib'
Thank you for another interesting and enjoyable. Between the wars my father's uncle was a captian of a schooner in the far East. His son wanted a bicycle for Christmas, his mum wrote to ask the captian if this was ok in Sept after Easter the reply came yes but not for more than 5 pounds, this was in Dublin.
For general interest, the Cutter with Tan sails and DS2 on the Mainsail is Jolie Breeze a Le Harve Pilot Cutter from the 1900’s . She is presently owned and sailed as the Dauntsey School’s character building and sailing vessel. I’ve raced against her and she is fast and well handled. Thanks for a lovely video, you passed the test!! 🤣
Found this extremely interesting! Thanks for the lesson!
Your a true sailor!
That was a GREAT video! Gaff-rigs are beautiful. No doubt about it.
Your best video yet. I learned a lot, and anyone with even a passing interest in sailing should watch this!
I AM IMPRESSED YOU ARE A GREATE WRITER. GREAT VOICE AND SOUND, THE AEREO CAMERA WORK WAS EXELENT. THIS IS A GREATE VIDEO THANKS . SALUDOS
Well done and good writing, Thanks for advocating fo the gaff!
Excellent commentary on gaff rig. I personally sail a sprit rigged cat ketch and find that to be reasonably adaptable to any sailable situation. Thanks Kevin. Appreciated
This video gave me answers to so many of my questions!
And I really liked what you said about the gaff rig beeing much more "self-sufficient". I never thought of that.
Thanks for stopping by, glad you found it informative!
Thanks. Covered that fascinating topic fully yet succinctly. In all previous videos I'd failed to notice an important detail until you described gybing: the backstays! Loosening and tightening the leeward/windward backstays. Don't know how I managed to miss controlling those particular strings all this time, but I did.
Kevin ,the beauty the old school like no other . Were all other vessels measure their worth to a gaffer and that of the Capts ,such as her line both in strength beauty.
The Gaffer , like no others now or evermore.
Wonderful clip Kevin
Angus
SV Violet Walters😮
Amen to that.
Great video Kevin and lovely narration. Just read The Dinghy Cruising Companion by Roger Barnes and his book showcased a number of dinghies with gaff or lug sails. Having had a Rhodes 19 for 29 years and now a Bristol 39 for four, the thought of going small again is very enticing.
Fair winds
That was an outstanding video! Thank you so much for the time you put into this. I learned a lot. I'm subscribing.
Great video Kevin. My little Haven 12 1/2 is gaff rigged and I love sailing it.
Love those boats, one of Nat Herreshoff's most perfect designs.
If this were the only video you ever posted, it would still sum up your ethos perfectly. Very well done!
I learned a bit more, and was much inspired.
Another note, regarding the comparison of a gaffer to a Model T: aside from being simple and easily repairable, like a gaffer, a Model T could go anywhere, in all conditions....eventually.
I would love to see you right now your topsail.
Pilot cutters are the most beautiful boat out there!
Always look forward to your videos, I'm a small boat sailor and the gaff rig is my favorite ..
Ty! Nice for calm weather 😊
Thanks for the video, Kevin! And, yes, do rig that topsail some day and show us. I've had mine in storage for the first two years of owning the ship. Only recently I've come to appreciate its usefulness in light air.
This was a very informative video. Thanks for taking the time to put it together.
Thanks for mentioning Brittany :)
Your videos have inspired me to rent a gaff rigged boat from Hunter's Boat Yard on the Norfolk Broads later this year. Not deep ocean sailing, of course, but still an old fashioned gaff rig, and a wooden boat to boot!
Enjoy! First I've ever heard of a rental gaffer ..
Forever redefined to me in the immortal words of Dodge Morgan as the "double hernia rig." Anyone who calls a gaffer slow never went up against one on a reach. And anyone who ever crossed an ocean hoped for no wind angle so much as a reach.
Great informative video. Gaffs a fabulous boats and as you point out are the backbone of working yachts all over the world. My memories of Thames yachts with their sails is a very special one. Incomparable beauty to my mind! ❤❤
Being from the great lakes gaff rigged schooners are my favorite. I like the Tall Ships.
Excellent, very clear and easy to understand. Liked and subbed.
One of your best videos ever 👌👏
Fantastic Kevin!! As a guy who learned to sail on old gaffers out of Camden this it the best lesson I have ever seen on the beauty of traditional boats! Well done Sir!
Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for stopping by.
Thanks for sharing the tales of your high seas adventure. This essay on the gaff rig is interesting, and it also informs a better understanding of what we see as we watch you sail.
Hello Kevin, It was a pleasure to meet you today and see Ruth Avery in person. Thank you for some more excellent content.
Is this John Pender? Glad you enjoyed the vid!
@@howtosailoceans1423
Yes Sir.
Hope your repairs go smoothly!
Take care
Hi, Kevin, you’ve got some hours into this one kind of a pleasant departure from the usual. Nice work. Stay hydrated while make and mending up in Harpswell. Not much of a breeze there.
Thanks Karl. This video was more labor intensive than usual, but I wanted to do something more high end on gaff rig.
I am 73 and i have now a 23 food yarmouth gaffel cutter.their is extra boom for a topsail,but
i dont now how to raise the top sail,so yes a video .gr from Belguim
This channel keeps getting better, as does the quality of your prose.
Great video! Appreciate the point of view. Love watching you sail your boat, especially without the assistance of a diesel.
Really good informative vid Really enjoyed this look forward seeing a top sail one hopefully
kevin…one of your best informative videos yet!…you answered many of the questions i’ve had regarding gaff rigs…and you’ve articulated what is so appealing to me…the simplicity and ability to source common parts to keep her functioning…im not sure i understand why she tacks more efficiently in tight runs while giving up 10 degrees…i’ll have to think about this a little more, because i want to know…thanks buddy!
An excellent commentary on gaff rigs and the spirit of sailing. As usual a great episode :)
Best explanation for a gaffer I've seen. Well done!
I'm restoring my inherited 28 ft steel gaffer which is also pole masted, I'd love to see a video of the top sail as I'd like to rig one similar. Thanks for the videos!
Captain, I think this most informative video is among your very best work! I thoroughly enjoyed every minute!🙏💪❤️👊😎
Terrific update Kevin. I have the exact same jackyard topsail on my Cornish Crabber and I couldn't have put it better myself. It's a thing to behold and it turns heads, but oh what a lot of trouble getting it up and getting it down. I see now how you rig your topping lift so thank you for the close-up on that.
Well done!
Excellent content on the gaff rigg! I’m building a second rigg right now for my double ender lugg sail.
Keep it up!
Great video and thank you for making!
I got a Blackwater Sloop recently and have no experience (Yet) with gaff rigs and these videos are incredibly informative!
Top man Kevin!
Hello from Montreal. I discovered your channel because of that "outdated" video some years agos. This new version is awasome! As an happy owner of a small gaff cutter (CC 24 MKII)(one and half season and my first boat) I really look forward for a video about the top sail handling. There is almost nothing on the subject over UA-cam so it will really be popular I think. My goal this summer is to rig and use my jackyard top sail. We always see the gaffer with the top sail up in video but almost never how they rig it, lift it and trim it.
I got the book "Classic Boat Seamanship" from Martin Tregoning as reference for those small gaffer like mine but still a video of the quality like this one would be gold for new gaffer's owners. As alway, thanks for sharing your experience and make us dream.
Good to hear. Looks like I'll have to get to work on the topsail vid, it's getting lots of requests here. Fair winds.
A lot of the cruising cats and even the lighter monohulls start running for cover above 15 knots while the heavier boats are finding their sweet spot. I like having a full keel and though backing up is not much fun the rest of it is a win.
Excellent overview of the gaff rig and its history. I'm never going to fly a topsail on my small, gaff-rigged catboat, but I would love to see a video of how you'd do it on Ruth Avery.
Good video Kevin - As a Bermudan rig sailor I too love the look of a gaff rigger boat. There's a certain nostalgia when you see one in full flight but I think there are also very very few advantages of the rig. However I can see no reason to choose a gaff rig except where you like ,want and seek tradition, where the choice of the rig determines you choice of boat. While they use traditional materials, they are more complex, take longer to deploy and possibly require more maintenance than modern rigs. Each to their own but I'll stick to my Bermudan rig ... while gazing forever at those old gaffers with their topsails flying and the cutter rig doing it's thing so well.
Bloody good episode Kevin. Haul away!
You should most definitely take out the top sail and rig it! it would help all of us to visualize it your simple, simple explanations make it special !keep educating us :-)
Thank you for your insight and examples of your lovely vessel. I thoroughly enjoyed your video and learned a fair bit. I have always enjoyed your engineless adventures, and love to see you work to windward and sail oceans.
Thank you for in the info, and for topsail one in particular, that one is harder to find.
Beautifully presented!
I sail a small catboat and the gaff rig is absolutely wonderful. I learn more everyday and getting it to perform takes skills few modern sailors understand. Sure I could go to weather better with a Bermuda rig but the joy I get to get what I do is worth the few degrees to weather.
I love cat boats. Actually the Marshall cats do amazingly well to windward from what I've observed.
Thanks. This is the kind of video that got me to your channel. I like all your videos, but I confess that I like the “technical” ones best.
Well done Kevin. I always learn something new watching your videos. This time i learned a lot.
Lovely video and beautiful imagery, Kevin..thanks for this!
Have you ever tried setting your main sail loose footed? Some sources I've seen suggest it might be even more powerful that way (although mine being loose footed by design, I haven't done any comparisons yet.)
Fair seas to you!
Aldo from Malta
PS: To the fellow gaffers out there who want to learn more about our delightfully anachronistic little ships, I suggest the following sources: "Hand, Reef and Steer" by Tom Cunliffe, and "The Gaff Rig Handbook" by John Leather
Simon Willis who re-cut the mainsail for Ruth Avery wanted to go loose footed, but thus far I've stuck with hitches, it just seems more secure.
Nice presentation, thank you. Enjoyed the music at the end, too! 😀
From one old gaffer to another, excellent entry as always...if you dont hace the old spars for the topsail let me know Kevin...got plenty of old growth doug fir to make it happen.
This is what I was looking for! Thank you!
Fair winds!
From a laymans perspective, the gaff rig seems like a superior choice to the bermuda rig in most conditions. You have more sail area near the vessel, ie lower, so any force acting on it will have less leverage to tilt the boat. So for the same mast height you get more sail area, with more of the sail area closer to the deck. I think a modern gaff rig where the gaff itself is lighter, possibly internal halyards and so on would fair very well even today. Almost all lighter fast sailing dinghies incorporate the concept of maximizing sail area without using a normal bermuda (be it bending the mast to create a similar shape, or going sprit rig etc).
I can still see why the bermuda is and will remain the most popular choice, but there certainly are qualities to the gaff (esp if modernized) that makes it superior for sailors who want to cross the ocean safely.
Nice video Kevin...Christ it almost looks like fun!
Outstanding episode Kevin. I'd like to see a working topsail.
Great video!! Surprised you did not mention the new gaff sails as used on Wharram catamarans,since there are thausands of them sailing up to63 feet in length. With the luffsleve around themast Wharram really improved the performance and durability is definitely proven with many ocean crossings today.
Awesome Kevin….. thanks
Thanks Stott, good to hear from you.
I had a Catboat that I loved esp. when off the wind a point or so she would enjoy showing her stern to a plastic boat.
Aussum video Kevin, the one you recently promised.
Just freaking cool Gaffrig is the original and certainly an adventure man ! Enjoyed this one.
Fantastic and rare details, with some of the black pearls of gaff rig sailing.
Nicely explained the running backstays on both sides.
Also working the windward, with the figure. It helps a lot, thanks.
Keep up the good work and enjoy your sailing adventures mate.
Thank you, Kevin, for this excellent video.😮
A very informative vid thx for that...
A great 101 Introduction to Gaff Rigging! I can see the advantages with it especially with the use of “off the self” gear to make it all work as opposed the the specialized gear I sometimes need for my Bermuda rigged Ericson 32-3 that you can see on my UA-cam channel. However, I sail the Chesapeake Bay which requires much more frequent tacking or jibing along with sail adjustments but you know that, Kevin. So I’m guessing that a gaff rigged boat is easier to use on ocean crossings then coastal cruising but that’s just a guess on my part. 😁
Correct. Bermuda rigged production boats like the Ericson will generally be better suited for sailing in constricted waterways and for day sailing.
@@howtosailoceans1423 I often get unsolicited comments from persons walking down the dock on how beautiful our Ericson 32-3 is because she has beautiful lines, but your gaff rigged Gilmer 31 has me beat by a mile. 🙂
Great video. I would love to see a topsail vid.
Still a popular variation on Larger Wharams the Wharram gaff riged wingsail.. a simple safe and efficient development of the tradidion for offshore cruising .
Damn. One of your best videos yet! Nice 😎
Absolutely brilliant episode. I truly love your way of life and your channel & follow you religiously but this episode could’ve been on the Discovery channel etc.
Although the little dig to us Bermuda rigged sailors regarding sailing in/out of the town cut in said Bermuda is more down to having an engine & that convenience than the type of boat, but I get your point.
Thanks for sharing captain ⚓️⛵️👍
Warren s/y Legend
Thanks Warren! Yes, the point there was despite having many more conveniences and the superior windward performance of the bermudan rig, the only boats I've seen tacking in through the Town Cut are gaffers.
Working men on boats, not always hell bent on high-speed but rather benefiting from more power, needed the lower center of effort in order to work on more level decks. And, dredging for scallops or, draging in tow a loaded fish net was done off the wind with all of that extra sail area providing the pull needed.
Great video Kevin
Thanks for what you're doing to keep gaff alive. Even the venerable Tom Cunliffe has a (lovely) modern rig. But he'd be the first to admit that gaff is not out of date and remains as viable and useful as it always was. A powerful downwind rig that can be easily powered up, or down, is a supremely useful tool, and repeated claims about performance to weather of more modern rigs miss the point entirely.
Love your gaff!
👍from an alu gaffers
its true and we love the view on the horizon of gaffers and all the different top sails with there own shapes and colors
Falmouth workboats are a nice example.
Our boat is not the fastest but fun to play with and not smal and single handed is an good option .the only sail what is giving us now an dan problems is the furling jib.😉
Really well put together Kevin!
Thanks Kevin. Great story and video.
Thanks for these instructional videos on the gaff rig and how to single-hand one, without an engine even. I guess one extra thing contributing to the gaffers poorer upwind performance is the lower tension on the forestays. Can you affect that by tightening the running backstay with a winch while pointing into the wind in a tack? Also how far aft should you have to running backstays? I guess that's a balancing act between how much they are in the way and how well they stay the mast?
Correct. Yes, I take the tails to the runners around the genoa winch and can get the headstays reasonably tight for windward work.