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hello and new to sailing
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Author:  Andysrt [ Mon Jun 25, 2012 3:34 pm ]
Post subject:  hello and new to sailing

Just figured I would introduce myself. After sailing on my brothers mantra 7000 I'm hooked and looking to get into sailing a cat because I can tow it and after watching a few videos looks like a lot more fun. I signed up for a class to see how everything goes. Anyone know of any good places around the Chicago area to sail?


Andy

Author:  JSWoerner [ Mon Jun 25, 2012 5:32 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

I haven't lived there for years but "the Chicago Area" is pretty broad. Also your experience on a 16' cat is going to be VERY different than a 22' mono. I recommend you try it out before committing.

Author:  Andysrt [ Mon Jun 25, 2012 8:01 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

I'm taking a cat class at northwestern first before I buy anything. I know the Chicago area is pretty broad but I can tow so weekend adventures are what id be looking for. Any good books I can pick up?

Andy

Author:  ryman522 [ Mon Jun 25, 2012 8:17 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

I know Evanston has a pretty strong catamaran presence. NU has a beach littered with them and then I think there is another mast up storage area just north of the university

Author:  JSWoerner [ Tue Jun 26, 2012 9:00 am ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

I don't know that part of the north side very well. IIRC the north branch of the Chicago river runs through a golf course on campus and there's a marina or boat ramp in the area where it emptys into Lake Michigan right near the Bahai temple.

You might want to make your first ventures onto the water on something other (smaller) than Lake Michigan but I'm not sure where that would be. Ive seen an awful lot of small boats have to get rescued off of Lake Michigan.

I know in northern Indiana Cedar Lake near Crown point is probably closest to you. Bass Lake and Maxenkuckie are a bit farther east and Freeman and Shafer are farther south. Those are all a trek from the north side.

What about Fox Lake west of Waukegan. That's probably about half an hour from you.

Author:  jkkartz [ Tue Jun 26, 2012 10:05 am ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

I think a few people still sail from Lake Street Beach in Gary.

It's been 30 years since I've been to Cedar Lake. It was poor launching then. We took my new "red line" 1984 H16 there for its initial sail. It was the same weekend as a scow regatta, so I got to sail near Buddy Melges.

Author:  tkeiser [ Tue Jun 26, 2012 10:15 am ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

Busse woods forest preserve used to be a hot spot for Hobies and had a lot of help if you ran into trouble

Author:  Andysrt [ Tue Jun 26, 2012 11:11 am ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

Thanks for all the ideas. I'm still waiting to hear back from nu on taking a class. Any ideas on safety equipment I should go and take a look at?

Author:  JSWoerner [ Tue Jun 26, 2012 12:57 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: hello and new to sailing

I took a friend out on my 18 who used to sale on an 18 on Buzzards Bay. He couldn't believe all the safety gear I took but in FL when you go from 16-18 ft the rules get a lot stricter.

Obviously 1 PFD per. Each PFD should have a whistle for signaling permanently attached. Adult PFDs should also have a knife (not required) to cut yourself free if you get tangled.

Flare gun and flares, signaling mirror, dye packs, throwing ring or equivalent, anchor and line and a flashlight if you're out after dark. (Over 18ft requires full running lights). If you have a kicker motor you need an extinguisher. It's my understanding that's whats required.

We also take a dry box with a leatherman(knockoff), extra pins and rings, an extra small block and shackle, cell phone, boat papers, ID or wallet, and car keys. Also have a GPS and a VHF radio and air horn.

Believe it or not most of that stores inside the hulls of my 18. I have 1 box (that floats) appx. 16"x12"x2" and the cushion that is our throwing ring bungied to the
tramp.

If you ever want to go out solo you should probably have a righting system. We have a Hawaiian system and a bag.

Not safety equip but you'll want a trap harness too.

By the way, Busse Lake looks like a good place to practice tacking if you get my drift.

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