Anchor
Light - a
small light used to discharge the battery.
Backstay- The last thing to grab as
your falling overboard.
Bilge
- A storage area in the bottom of the boat for all the things you can not
find.
Also a mixing area for water, fuel and head output.
Bilge
Pump: An
electrical device designed to remove the charge from your batteries.
These
devices only operate when the vessel is not taking on water.
Bow -
Best part of the boat to ram another with.
Carbon
fibre -
Colour – black. Cost - absolutely outrageous. Life
expectancy
2 / 3 days.
Centreboard - vantage point for the
helmsman to occupy whilst blaming the crew for capsizing the boat.
Chart - a type of map which tells
you where you are aground or what you just hit.
Circuit Breaker -
Electro-mechanical switch designed to electrify all conductive metal fittings
throughout the boat and flatten batteries. Available at most chandlers.
Companionway - a hole to fall into {see
hatch).
CREW
- People
working on your vessel, usually friends who don't find out about the
"work" part of the trip until you are away from the dock. Crews have
a high turnover rate, and normally will never want to see you again, let alone
set foot on your boat again.
Cruising - Fixing your boat in distant
locations. Leaving boat, returning home by train for several weeks and then
collecting boat when unforecast storms finally ease.
Deck
Fitting -
Device for letting water into the cabin.
Engine -
Sailboats are equipped with a variety of engines, but all of them work on the
internal destruction principle, in which highly machined parts are rapidly
converted into low-grade scrap, producing in the process energy in the form of
heat, which is used to boil bilge water; vibration, which improves the muscle
tone of the crew; and a small amount of rotational force, which drives the
average size sailboat at speeds approaching a furlong per fortnight.
Flashlight - Tubular metal container
used for storing dead batteries prior to disposal.
GPS
- An
electronic device that allows you to navigate out of sight of landmarks just
before the batteries die.
Gybe - A great way to end up on
Port Tack right in front of the whole
Fleet that's approaching the mark on Starboard. Also a quick way to wash out
your racing dinghy
Hatch - 1.Another name for A hole
to fall into. 2
An opening for admitting water into the vessel.
Hazard -
Any boat or any body of water. Any body
of land near any body of water.
Helmsman - The nut attached to the
rudder through a steering mechanism. The only Crew
member who might enjoy an gybe.
Keel
- A very
heavy depth depth guage.
Motor
Sailer - A
boat that alternates between sail/rigging problems and engine problems with
beer in the cabin.
Personal
Floatation Device - Amultifunction device normally used as a cushion, packing material or
sponge. Coastguards requires one for each person on board to ensure they have
something soft to sit on in case seating is limited.
Porthole -
Glass-covered opening in the hull cleverly designed to let in water when closed.
Propeller
-Underwater winch designed to wind up any lines or sheets left hanging over the
side.
Racing
Rules of Sailing - A handy book of jokes published by the RYA .
Sailing - the most expensive and
complicated way of going slowly, getting wet and ill known to man.
Schooner -
boat with a fully stocked drinks cabinet in the cabin.
Sheet- A line made to rip gloves
or hands part. Has ability to tangle on anything.
Sloop - A boat with beer and
wine in the cabin.
Spinnaker - 1)
Large sail used in dead calm to keep the sun off the crew.
2) An extremely large, lightweight piece of
cloth trailed in the water to slow
the boat down.
Spinnaker
Pole - tubular device, the outer end designed to
sever any connection it may have with the spinnaker while the inner end clamps
itself to rigging, clothing, etc.
Stem
Fitting -
The hole made in a competitors boat when your helmsman misjudges a Port
/Starboard crossing.
Stern - The flat, back end of your boat, included so you have a place to
paint the name on.
Through
Deck / Hull Fittings - A leak.
Yacht Race -
Several boats going in different directions.