"We launched just south of Gandy Bridge on Tampa Bay. Winds were forecast at 10 knots from the SW and bay waters with a light chop. We were on the water by about 8:30 AM in order to miss the scattered thunderstorms. Set up was a breeze. I had the sails furled around the masts and bungeed. They were lashed down on top of the boat in two crutches placed into the mast steps. All I had to do was to unlash and step them before launch. I had my daughter motor us out of the boat launch canal (right into the wind) while I unrolled the sails, clipped on the sheets and set the sprits. Then we fell off the wind, killed the motor and were sailing.
I rigged the boat just like the plans indicate and everything worked as advertised. We had 5 people in the boat (570 lbs) and I left the 6hp/4stroke dragging in the water (tilted up would interfere with the sheets). Using the GPS we clocked our progress at around 3 knots close hauled and up to a little over 5 knots on a reach. On the way back we set up a run for the boat ramp and were able to sail wing-and-wing at about 3.5 knots then the wind kicked up and we reached 5 knots. It was very easy to manage and both my daughters caught on quickly. I didn’t spend a lot of effort with tweaking trim and balance or sail shape. I did adjust the snotter position and tension a little and it was not hard to do. We were able to sail straight up the canal, past the boat ramp (traffic) and luff up in a turning basin downwind. I released the snotter, removed the sprit, rolled up the sail and unclipped the sheets and fired up the motor to dock. I am not a good enough sailor to try to dock under sail at a busy public boat ramp – yet"
As you can see, this is not some tiny little dingy.
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