Leaving the tiller extension hanging over the stern can damage it if it catches in the sand. Better to tuck it underneath one of the hiking straps or the lashing that holds the spinnaker ratchet blocks.
Nice job, kinda hard to that in Newfoundland in 5 degree C water, but then again that's where a dry suit comes in handy. Love sailing around home but it's some bloody cold if you get wet. How come you don't use mast floats?
Sorry three years late! You would need a massive amount of buoyancy to keep it at 90 degrees. Also it is so easy to recover from a capsize, we see no need for one.
awesome video thanks miranda - now i'm looking forward to my next onshore-wind launch!
Thank you Miranda ! I did this alone sometimes, made me completely exhausted.
Excellent instruction! Thanks
That's nice work. I do a similar manoeuvre in West Africa. Except, I am sailing a Mono-hull lightning class (6 metres length).
Leaving the tiller extension hanging over the stern can damage it if it catches in the sand. Better to tuck it underneath one of the hiking straps or the lashing that holds the spinnaker ratchet blocks.
Impressive
How big of waves can you do this in? Presumably cant do it in 3ft waves???
Wow, it looks like so much fun 🤩
I must try it! How much is the max hull speed and how much degrees tack angle of this Tri?
Not sure on the tacking degree, depends who is sailing it! Highest speed recorded 20.68 knots (38.30 km/h; 23.80 mph) by Tom Kirkman, USA
Nice job, kinda hard to that in Newfoundland in 5 degree C water, but then again that's where a dry suit comes in handy. Love sailing around home but it's some bloody cold if you get wet. How come you don't use mast floats?
Sorry three years late! You would need a massive amount of buoyancy to keep it at 90 degrees. Also it is so easy to recover from a capsize, we see no need for one.
Go Girl
Thank you! How much does it weigh?
The new generation foam core Weta are in total 120kg
Main hull 72KG
Float with beam frame 17KG
Nice little tri, but why was it named of an ugly roach type bug?
Wētā are native to New Zealand and the long back legs look similar to the ama's.