Synopses & Reviews
Since this book was written over 30 years ago by the great British sailor K. Adlard Coles, it has become the standard work on seamanship under gale conditions. More than 100,000 English-language copies have been printed, and there are editions in French, German, Dutch, Italian, Swedish, and Spanish.
The thirtieth-anniversary edition of this classic includes sections on parachute sea anchors and drogues, crew fitness, and management advice, and new material on meteorology and on seasick remedies. Ample advice from great sailors such as Oiln Stephens, Robin Knox-Johnston, and Val Haigh is augmented by new material by Dag Pike and Mike Golding. Also new in this edition is a section on multihulls in heavy weather.
Part 1 provides expert advice for crews of any vessel that ventures out of sight of land, whether for racing or cruising. It gives a clear message of seamanlike design features, preparations, and tactics that should be considered against the time when it comes on to blow. Part 2 offers hair-raising accounts of sail and power yachts overtaken by heavy weather. New in this edition are accounts of the 1998 Sydney - Hobart disaster, the 1994 "Queen's Birthday" storm off New Zealand, as well as other storm stories from the world's oceans. No one who goes to sea in his or her own craft can afford to ignore the advice in Adlard Coles' Heavy Weather Sailing. Dramatic black-and-white photos of storm seas combine with 60 new color shots throughout the book.
Synopsis
The seamanship classic you should have on-board when sailing in rough weatherAdlard Coles' Heavy Weather Sailing provides you with expert advice for when you venture out of sight of land, whether for racing or cruising. It gives a clear message of seamanlike design features, preparations, and tactics that you should consider against the time when it comes on to blow. It includes new how-to chapters on storm sails, taking shelter, and managing multihulls in storms, plus thrilling new accounts of actual storm encounters.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [291]) and index.
About the Author
During many years of seagoing in the British Royal Navy,
Peter Bruce encountered extraordinarily rough winter weather in the mid-Atlantic, off Nova Scotia and Cape Town, and in typhoons off Japan and Baja California.
Much of his time is still spent at sea, racing, cruising, or researching his pilotage books. He has achieved a string of victories in his own yachts, and though these successes have occurred in all weather conditions, the very stormy races have brought his most remarkable results. He has twice been on Britain's winning Admiral's Cup team, and has taken part with distinction in most of the Fastnet races since 1961, finishing the infamous Fastnet of 1979 in the top British boat.
Son of the legendary ocean racer Erroll Bruce and longtime associate of Adlard Coles himself, Peter Bruce is uniquely qualified to carry Adlard Coles' Heavy Weather Sailing into the twenty-first century.
Table of Contents
Foreword by Sir Peter Blake
Preface
Part 1 Expert Advice
1 Yacht design and construction for heavy weather; Olin J Stephens II
2 The stability of yachts in large breaking waves; Andrew Claughton
3 Design trends of yachts in respect of heavy weather; Peter Bruce
4 Spars and rigging considerations for heavy weather; Matthew Sheahan
5 Preparations for heavy weather; Peter Bruce
6 The use of drag devices in heavy weather; Peter Bruce
7 The meteorology of heavy weather; Richard Ebling
8 Waves; Sheldon Bacon
9 Managing a large amateur racing crew; Mike Golding
10 Crew fitness in heavy weather; Noel Dilly and Cathy Foster
11 Handling motor yachts in heavy weather; Dag Pike
12 Multihull tactics in heavy weather; Gavin Lesueur
13 Monohull heavy weather tactics; Peter Bruce
Part 2 Storm Experiences
14 North Sea gale; Adlard Coles
15 A variety of storms and weather phenomena, 1938 - 1997; Adlard Coles and Peter Bruce
16 Extreme weather south of Iceland; John Wilson
17 The 1979 Fastnet; Peter Bruce
18 Sudestada off Brazil; Stig Larsen
19 Channel storm of 1987; Peter Bruce
20 Rolled near home in Morning Sky; Oliver Roome
21 A Pacific storm to remember; Ernest and Val Haigh
22 The Queen's Birthday storm of 1994; Peter Bruce
23 North Atlantic weather seen from a family catamaran; Richard Herbert
24 An autumn Biscay storm; James Burdett
25 A winter storm off the south-west coast of Australia; Deborah Schutz
26 Orca's last cruise; Maggie and Robin Ansell
27 An experience with a sea anchor; Tim Trafford
Bibliography
Acknowledgments and Copyright Information
Index