Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Georgetown, Exuma, Bahamas
23.30.235N
75.45.748W
Tent poles so Dale
can walk underneath.
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I was not looking forward to this as I remembered seeing an inch or two that was damaged but Dale remembered about a 5-6” tear; we were both right. There was a 5-6” tear along the webbing with about 1” of missing material.
As the luff line was still intact, I decided to hand stitch the webbing that had torn and then put rip-stop sail tape over the missing piece with a couple of extra pieces over what I had hand stitched. Then I hand stitched over the sail tape right next to the cording to make sure it was compressed enough to slide up the groove when it was hoisted. By the time I was done, the adhesive on the tape was beginning to pull away. We used 5200 to re-glue it to the sail (as suggested by Practical Sailor and the Tinkering Consultant) being careful to keep it under the sail tape. Lord knows we don’t want to pull it out tomorrow and find that when it was put away, it glued itself in the boom. Then Dale took over and replaced the broken batten stop.
We rolled it back into the boom before reattaching the halyard and slowly fed it up the mast. It appeared to work. I hope it holds for the next couple of weeks until we can get to Puerto Rico where the entire length will have to be replaced.
It looks like we’ll have to motor sail the remainder of tomorrow as the winds are fairly light (which is what we were hoping for to repair the sail). Now we need a tad more wind--on the beam--to get anywhere. We plan on making a direct transit to the Turks and Caicos, so you won’t hear from us for the next couple of days unless I find an errant WiFi signal in the middle of nowhere.
As always, wish us luck.