FROM LOCKDOWN ΤΟ LOCK MANIA
Yachting Monthly UK|August 2023
Nic Compton and assorted crew members lock into the French canal network from the Channel to the Mediterranean
Nic Compton
FROM LOCKDOWN ΤΟ LOCK MANIA

One thing everyone knows about taking a sailing yacht into the French canals is that you have to take the mast – or masts – down first. Yet, while we had got everything else ready – extra fenders, long mooring lines, folding bikes, mast crutches, and even the required navigation qualification – the one thing we had never done was actually take the masts down. This might seem a straightforward procedure, but when you have a 40-year-old boat with free-standing, carbon-fibre masts which have probably never been lowered since she was built, nothing is straightforward.

These were the thoughts going through my brain as the crane in Le Havre tugged on the mizzen mast – 500kg, 600kg, 700kg, 800kg. STOP! By now the coachroof was bulging and the whole boat seemed to be lifting out of the water. Clearly something wasn’t right. The crane eased off. Luckily, the crane operator was a Mini-Transat sailor himself and had lowered and raised countless carbon-fibre masts. Between us, we worked out that the stainless steel plate had to be removed to release the nylon wedge which was holding the mast in place.

Once again the crane lifted – 500kg, 600kg, 700kg, 800kg. STOP! And still nothing happened. Then I jumped on the coachroof, and with a shudder the mast came sliding out and the boat settled back in the water. We could all breathe again. Now we knew what we were doing, the main mast came out much more easily, and two hours (and 200 euros) later, both masts were sitting snugly on their wooden crutches. We were back in business.

This story is from the August 2023 edition of Yachting Monthly UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the August 2023 edition of Yachting Monthly UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM YACHTING MONTHLY UKView All
Mile-long RNLI flotilla for 200th anniversary
Yachting Monthly UK

Mile-long RNLI flotilla for 200th anniversary

As the RNLI celebrates its 200th anniversary this year, more than 40 rescue vessels formed a flotilla more than a mile long in Poole in May.

time-read
1 min  |
Summer 2024
Ella Hibbert to sail to Norway and Russia in Arctic preparation
Yachting Monthly UK

Ella Hibbert to sail to Norway and Russia in Arctic preparation

Intrepid 27-year-old sailor Ella Hibbert has made the difficult decision to delay her departure to sail solo around the Arctic circle until next year, but will instead depart this summer on a training expedition to Norway and Russia in preparation.

time-read
2 mins  |
Summer 2024
Orcas sink a yacht in the Strait of Gibraltar
Yachting Monthly UK

Orcas sink a yacht in the Strait of Gibraltar

A pod of orcas attacked and sank a 15m yacht in Moroccan waters in the Strait of Gibraltar in May, the latest in a series of encounters in the area that have sunk five yachts in the past four years, the Spanish maritime authorities reported.

time-read
2 mins  |
Summer 2024
Why Pip Hare needs you now
Yachting Monthly UK

Why Pip Hare needs you now

Sailing with Pip Hare last week reminded me of my father’s sailing mantra: ‘It’s all about drag.’

time-read
2 mins  |
Summer 2024
ADVENTURE THE CALL OF THE SOUTH SEAS
Yachting Monthly UK

ADVENTURE THE CALL OF THE SOUTH SEAS

What is the call of the South Seas? The Hoiland family were curious to find out, so they set off west to explore. This is the story of their year sailing through the islands and atolls of French Polynesia

time-read
9 mins  |
Summer 2024
HOW TO DODGE GALES IN THE ISLES OF SCILLY
Yachting Monthly UK

HOW TO DODGE GALES IN THE ISLES OF SCILLY

Ken Endean tries a two-anchorage strategy

time-read
8 mins  |
Summer 2024
Picking up fore and aft moorings
Yachting Monthly UK

Picking up fore and aft moorings

Mooring fore and aft can be a fiddly process, never more so than in Cornwall's Polperro. If you can do it here, says Rachael Sprot, then you can do it anywhere

time-read
6 mins  |
Summer 2024
TECHNICAL PURCHASING POWER
Yachting Monthly UK

TECHNICAL PURCHASING POWER

Sam Fortescue explains how to check you have the power needed to handle your running rigging safely - and how to fix it if you don't

time-read
10+ mins  |
Summer 2024
NEW GEAR
Yachting Monthly UK

NEW GEAR

Dennis O'Neill reviews the latest products designed to make sailing safer and easier

time-read
3 mins  |
Summer 2024
'NEVER BEFORE HAVE I SAILED IN SUCH WILD WEATHER'
Yachting Monthly UK

'NEVER BEFORE HAVE I SAILED IN SUCH WILD WEATHER'

When Jeremy Edwards and his sister were hit by a 'weather bomb' en route to Tonga it gave him a new-found respect for his sister's skippering ability

time-read
9 mins  |
Summer 2024