JDJD-MDR wrote:I'll catch on with the lingo. I did notice that I really have to tie the "reefing pennants just right to not tear the grommets out. Now I won't be using them any more but I will secure bundt at the clew. One reason is so It doesn't chaff at the dodger. One question for John S. I also have the Tides Marine strong track. I wonder if I will need to modify my try sail . I've never looked at it. I think I will raise it this weekend. Do they usually have slides . that go in the same track as the main. I guess I'll find out. But I always appreciate your comments.
I have a separate dedicated 7/8” wide SS track I installed on the mast for the trys’l. It’s paraell to the strong track on the starboard side. That’s the ideal solution. The trys’l track should extend down to the deck. That way when you are offshore the trys’l remains bagged but already hooked to it’s separate track. To hoist it just pull the bag off and connect the halyard and hoist away.
But sometimes we don’t live in a perfect world. Sometimes using the same track as the mains’l is the best option. I think strong track makes a “gate” for this very purpose. Not my first choice but doable.
The other option is just to have a third reef installed in the mains’l. I read an article by a very experienced high latitude sailor named Skip Novak that makes a good case for a third reef vice a separate trys’l. But, if you go that route you need to start with a sail made from heavy cloth as the extreme wind pressure will be bery hard on a it if the material is too light. So, like most things there is no one way fits all solution.