Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

One Hand for Yourself, One for the Ship

Essentials of Single-handed Sailing
  • ISBN-13: 9780924486036
  • Publisher: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
    Imprint: SHERIDAN HOUSE
  • By Tristan Jones
  • Price: AUD $40.99
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: This book is temporarily out of stock, order will be despatched as soon as fresh stock is received.
  • Local release date: 01/11/1990
  • Format: Paperback (230.00mm X 150.00mm) 226 pages Weight: 410g
  • Categories: Water sports & recreations [WSS]
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Reviews
Google
Preview

 

Tristan Jones has logged more miles--and more adventure--sailing single-handed than any other person alive in our time. He has crossed the Atlantic many times, often alone, and has circumnavigated the globe in small boats. One Hand for Yourself, One for the Ship is a course on single-handed sailing by the man most qualified to give it. Tristan Jones offers his highly personal perspective on both the science and the art of this ultimate challenge. It is a book for every sailor, giving the novice and the experienced sailor alike invaluable information and advice simply and with humor. Rich with anecdote and detail, written as only Tristan Jones can write, this is the handbook to turn to when planning a trip and to refer to when sailing. 

Tristan Jones was born aboard his fathers sailing ship as it rounded Cape Horn. He grew up in Wales and later joined the Royal Navy. After he left the service, he began a career of yacht deliveries and, aboard his own yachts, undertook some of the most ambitious small craft journeys ever made. He has written many books about his incredible adventures and is one of the best-loved nautical writers today. His collection of stories Yarns is also published by Sheridan House.

Authors Note
1. The Wind of the Sea
2. Prepare for Sea
3. Freud Was Not a Sailor
4. Single-Handed Sailing--the Art
5. Rigs and Rigging
6. Self-Steering--Electronic and Manual
7. Accommodations
8. Scraps of Navigation
9. Celestial Navigation
10. Emergency Gear, tools and Spares
11. Anchors and Ground Tackle
12. Heavy Weather and Other Hazards
13. A New Mast
14. Staying Alive
15. Fiberglass in Plain English
16. Outboard Motors
17. Small-Craft Cooking
18. Catching Fish
Epilogue
List of Recommended Books
Index

A reference handbook of the essentials of single-handed sailing written for novice and experienced sailors. Jones offers information and advice on the science and art of solo sailing with humorous anecdotes and details. Topics range from accommodations and small-craft cooking to celestial navigation and hazardous conditions
— Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal

Tristan Jones needs no introduction to anyone interested in sailing and yachts. He has logged more miles and more adventure sailing alone than any other person alive in our time. He has crossed the Atlantic many times, often alone and has circumnavigated the globe in small boats. As such, One Hand for Yourself, One of the Ship, sub-titled The Essentials of Singlehanded Sailing is a course on singlehanded sailing by the man most qualified to give it. There are of course numerous books on singlehanded sailing, but few so readable and full of sheer commonsense and experience, laced with the highly personal perspective of a man who has lived his life on the sea. The book encompasses arguably every aspect of preparation, fear and technique needed for a person to sail alone, from rigs and rigging to catching fish; celestial navigation to stay alive. He even goes into great detail on the importance of taking along materials so that one can make an emergency mast in the event of demasting and tells you how to construct one. His advice regarding self-steering is something all cruising sailors should consider very carefully, His own vast experience has led him to believe that for serious cruising you should fit a wind-vane, preferably, in his own words, the Rolls-Royce of wind-vanes, the Aries. He says no electronic or electrical device that he has sailed with has proved 100 percent reliable and that in nine-tenths of the ports of the world, the hopes of finding someone who understands these things is about as realistic as the hope of getting Colonel Qaddafi to adopt the United States constitution. An invaluable book, written by a man described by the American magazine Motor Boat and Sailing as the Joshua Slocum of our age.
— Sailing

Google Preview content