15 fixes at sea

26 min read

DIY FIXES AT SEA

Transatlantic sailors tell Ali Wood how they used their ingenuity –and sometimes bravery–to cope with emergencies on passage

The Lohikari family (right) The Smith family (left)
Lotta Dizengremel and Sara Mannerford (right) Alfie Moore (left)

Boats sailed 24 hours a day, seven days a week rarely remain intact; ask anyone who’s crossed an ocean. Whether it’s a jammed headsail, afailed autopilot or aline chafed to the core, every boat has a casualty.

Having covered the Atlantic Rally for Cruisers (ARC) for many years now, I’ve learned to ask not ‘did anything fail?’ but ‘what failed and how did you fix it?’ When help is a thousand miles away, crew have to dig deep for solutions.

1 Wear and tear

Apassage from the Canary Islands to the Caribbean is the ultimate test of gear (see PBO March 2024), but no matter how new your kit, it can’t stand up to wear and tear indefinitely.

“Like a shotgun going off,” that’s how one crewmember described the noise of the spinnaker pole crashing down on Moody 46 Evangeline when the rivets sheared. The sail “flapped all over the place,” explained crewmember Graham Wood. It was just one of several wear-andtear issues, none of which stopped the crew from Derbyshire getting a podium position in ARC+ 22.

Graham gave me a tour of the boat in Grenada, pointing out where they’d lashed the spinnaker pole with rope and cut up a hose pipe to prevent sheets rubbing against the bottom of a shroud.

“We went through rope casing every four days,” he said. “We kept having to cut off the end and tape it.”

Worse still was where the lines were rubbing on the cars and chafing on guardrails and shrouds.

The rope chafing on Evangeline was extreme
Ali Wood
Old hosepipe is used to protect the lines from chafe on Evangeline
Ali Wood

“We had to think on our feet. In the end, we re-rigged the spinnaker and took the spinnaker lines back to the cockpit but not through the cars. You don’t get this kind of issue when you’re daysailing!”

2 Autopilot failure

Other casualties on board Evangeline included the genoa, which had torn where it fed into the furler, a leak in the rudder and failure of the autopilot’s hydraulic ram.

“The autopilot is still moving but there’s no power so it’s not doing anything to the wheel,” said Graham.

“The loads on it every second are immense. The jacks are very hot when you feel them. I wonder if at some stage that hydraulic fluid just gets hotter and hotter, especially with the swell and the rudder pushing against it? The seals go and the hydraulic fluid leaks out.”

“It comes back to the same thing,” he added. “These items are not designed to be pushed to the limit the way they are on an ocean passage.”

For Stephen Heap, who did the ARC

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