Cruising

Jury Rigging

When something breaks in your Rigging, the repair is called a Jury Rig. On passage from Gibraltar to Madeira, a 700 mile voyage on the same tack, our windward chainplates broke to the cap shroud and aft lower. Not a good situation when you’re 300+ miles from land!

Adjustments.jpeg

While this picture shows the jury rig on the leeward side, it was actually the windward side for the majority of the voyage!
To support the loads of the cap shroud and aft lower, I lashed them to the neighboring deadeyes at a 45* angle. This angle helps keep the loads lower so that the remaining chainplates don’t become overwhelmed and break as well.

Adjustments.jpeg

This spread out the load to the remaining two chainplates (forward lower and check stay) while keeping the mast up.
The other very important thing we did as soon as we found the problem was change the sailplan to a setup that would put the least strain on the weakened rigging.

Adjustments.jpeg

Being a cutter, we have redundancy in our rigging. The masthead setup is again repeated at the height of our staysail.
The Cap Shroud is stressed by loads on the headstay which pull on the mast head. This meant no jib or full main while we had the broken chainplate. The aft lower is in charge of holding the middle of the mast in place when the spar is loaded, but this task is also provided by the forward lower which also is in charge of giving the mast a forward bend. Being how we were not racing, absolute trueness of the spar was not that critical so the aft lower was of little priority at the moment.
The sailplan was staysail and trysail, with the trysail set at the spreaders. The staysail was supported by the inner forestay and the check stays which also acted like lower cap shrouds for it. Running backstays would not provide this same lateral support as they run too far aft and only function as a backstay.
The trysail was set at the spreaders to keep the forces low and light. Less force aloft meant less strain on the broken rigging.
Being keel stepped with a thick and heavy mast meant that the spar itself was intrinsically stiff. The broken rigging was a unwelcome but not catastrophic.
Figure this, we were sailing along when I discovered the broken chainplates. This means that they were not supporting the mast and the mast was still able to remain unbroken while sailing in 20 knots of breeze. I jury rigged the stays to once again give support to the spar, but the spar was able to support the load on its own without those stays (for the short amount of time, I wouldn’t have wanted to sail 3 days on it without the support!)

When we arrived to our tiny island, I found a mechanic who machined new chainplates for us to replace the broken ones. With the new chainplates installed and the rig set back up to normal, we can now safely sail away to continue crossing the Atlantic.

The Best Can Opener

Canned food is an essential pet of cruising. It’s cheap, and it keeps for a long time, making it a staple in a cruisers diet. The problem with canned food is opening the cans!

Can openers are large and tend to die in the marine environment. We try to keep them alive but the salty air seems to kill critical parts in short time. If they don’t die if corrosion, they seem to just lose their ability to function!
I don’t know if it’s because cruisers use their can opener more than a dirt dweller or if it a combination of the constant use and the harsh environment, but in the end, the can opener will need replacing.

Adjustments.jpeg
Adjustments.jpeg

We picked up this little machine in France and I honestly think it’s the best Can opener ever! There are almost no moving parts and it’s very small, making storage an easier task! Best of all, it really works well, honestly better than any other Can opener I’ve ever used!

Adjustments.jpeg

It just clamps onto the side of the Can and all you need to do is spin the little wings.
This can opener is small, made entirely of stainless steel, and works really well!

Several years ago, I did a blog post about “the best Can opener” but that one has slowly stopped working as well. This little guy really is a wonder machine!