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  2. Burgee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burgee

    Yacht clubs and their members may fly their club's burgee while under way and at anchor, day or night. Sailing vessels may fly the burgee either from the main masthead or from a halyard under the lowermost starboard spreader. [2]

  3. Halyard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halyard

    The halyard is used to raise (hail or hal) the yard when setting the sail. A gaff rigged sail has two; a throat halyard to lift the end of the gaff nearer the mast, and a peak halyard to lift the outer end. A more modern triangular (Bermuda or "Marconi") sail has only one halyard which is attached at its uppermost point (the head).

  4. Pig stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_stick

    A pig stick (occasionally pigstick [1] or pig-stick [2]) is a staff that carries a flag or pennant, usually the burgee of the boat owner's yacht club or private signal, above a mast of a sailboat. [3]

  5. Gaff rig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaff_rig

    Halyards (and edges) on a gaff rigged sail. The throat halyard hoists the throat of the sail (the end closer to the mast) at the forward end of the gaff and bears the main weight of the sail and the tension of the luff. [5] The peak halyard lifts the aft end of the gaff and bears the leech tension. Small craft attach the peak halyard to the ...

  6. Albacore (dinghy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albacore_(dinghy)

    The Locks Sailing club soon had a fleet of about 20 Albacores that raced regularly against one another. In 1958 the National Albacore championships were held under the burgee of the Locks Sailing Club, in Langstone Harbour with a fleet of 46 boats. [2] Lowe and Dollery on Albacore 1 Albacore 1 Albacore Fleet Albacore on land

  7. Peak halyard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_halyard

    Halyards (and edges) on a gaff rigged sail. In sailing, the peak halyard (or peak for short) is a line that raises the end of a gaff, which is further from the mast, [1] [2] as opposed to the throat halyard that raises the end, which is nearer to the mast.

  8. Shields (keelboat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shields_(keelboat)

    For sailing the design is equipped with a halyard winch console, with vertical cleats to secure the halyards. The design rules limit the adjustable backstay, the boom vang and the mainsheet to a maximum of an 8:1 mechanical advantage. A jib is used, but a genoa is not permitted under class rules.

  9. Chance 32/28 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chance_32/28

    A racing package was optional with a Proctor tapered anodized aluminum spar with two wire jib halyards, two spinnaker halyards, one wire main halyard, and a wire pole lift all internal. Also included were airfoil spreaders, a spinnaker pole and reaching strut, three Number 20 Barlow winches, one Number 24 Barlow halyard winch, one Number 14 ...