Close Hauled
Sailing as close to the No Go Zone as possible, normally about 45 deg from the direction of the wind
Beam Reach
Sheeting a sail
Pulling it in
When you’re sailing upwind
* “Steer to the jib” to achieve smooth air flow
Steps as you’re sailing downwind on broad reach
Points of sail
Close hauled, beam reach, broad reach
Close reach is in between close hauled and beam reach
Sailing on starboard (port) tack
Wind blowing over starboard (port) side of boat
Heading Up
Turning towards the wind
Bearing Away
Heading away from the wind
Movement of the tiller as you’re turning the boat
Tiller is pushed in the opposite direction that you want to the boat to turn, rudder swings other way, water pushes against rudder with pressure on the front, causing the boat to turn
Tacking
In Irons
* Sails are luffing, you’re stalled, rudder not working
Getting out of Irons
Jibing
Uncontrolled jibe
Beating
Sailing upwind with a series of tacks
Wind indicators
Halyard
Edges of Sail and where they’re attached
Bottom = foot (foot of mainsail is attached to the boom), foot of jib is unattached
Forward edge = luff (luff of jib attached to forestay by hanks, luff of mainsail is attached to mast)
Back edge - leech - not attached but has battens for support
Corners of Sails and where they’re attached
Tack - lower forward corner, where the sail is attached to the rig
Clew - lower back corner. Jib sheets are attached to the clew of the jib, clew of the mainsail is attached to the outhaul to keep it taught on the boom
Head - top corner, attached to the halyard on both sails
Sailing in the Groove and the 3 references
The sailing angle where you’re making the best progress “windward” (toward the wind). References are your speed, the angle of heel, and the telltale on the jib
Sailing too close to the wind will cause sails to luff, and the windward telltale to flutter. Heading back away to fill the sails back up again
Sailing too far away from the windward direction will cause you to heel too much, and the leeward telltale will flutter
“Hard a lee!”
“Tacking!”
Heaving To
Holds your position with the sails and rudder countering each other
Hold the boat at a “stop”
Lines when you’re tying up at the dock
Bow and Stern lines - attached to cleat on dock from each end of the boat. Keep boat close to dock, but doesn’t prevent backward/forward motion
Spring lines - prevent backward/forward motion. Referred to according to where they go from the cleat on the boat. “Aft Spring line” (or Forward Quarter Spring line”) goes from a forward cleat on the boat back towards a cleat on the dock
Always secured with a cleat hitch