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  2. Warping (sailing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warping_(sailing)

    HMS Thetis aground Warping or kedging is a method of moving a sailing vessel, typically against the wind or current, after running aground, or out from a dead calm, by hauling on a line attached to a kedge anchor, a sea anchor, or a fixed object, such as a bollard or tree.

  3. Man overboard rescue turn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_overboard_rescue_turn

    A man overboard rescue turn (or person overboard) [1] is a shiphandling manoeuvre usually implemented immediately upon learning of a person having gone overboard into the sea. To bring a vessel closer to the person's location, implementations of the principles described are: the Anderson turn (or single turn), the quick turn (also known as the ...

  4. Man overboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_overboard

    Rescue (MOB on a boat) "Man overboard!" is an exclamation given aboard a vessel to indicate that a member of the crew or a passenger has fallen off of the ship into the water and is in need of immediate rescue. Whoever sees the person fall is to shout, "Man overboard!"

  5. Tacking (sailing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacking_(sailing)

    Tacking or coming about is a sailing maneuver by which a sailing craft (sailing vessel, ice boat, or land yacht), whose next destination is into the wind, turns its bow toward and through the wind so that the direction from which the wind blows changes from one side of the boat to the other, allowing progress in the desired direction. [1]

  6. 2 boaters seen on viral video dumping trash overboard in ...

    www.aol.com/news/florida-boaters-seen-video...

    The video, which content creator Wavy Boats posted on YouTube, shows two people each dumping a trash bin full of garbage into the sea. A video still of boaters dumping trash off a boat into the ...

  7. Heaving to - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heaving_to

    The jib is backed to windward, the mainsail is slightly eased, and the rudder is fixed in an attempt to turn into the wind (which is coming from the top of the diagram). In sailing , heaving to (to heave to and to be hove to ) is a way of slowing a sailing vessel's forward progress, as well as fixing the helm and sail positions so that the ...

  8. Jibe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jibe

    The other way to change the side of the boat that faces the wind is turning the bow of the boat into, and then through, the direction of the wind. This operation is known as tacking or coming about. Tacking more than 180° to avoid a jibe is sometimes referred to as a "chicken jibe".

  9. Astern propulsion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astern_propulsion

    Astern propulsion (as applied to a ship) is a maneuver in which a ship's propelling mechanism is used to develop thrust in a retrograde direction. Astern propulsion does not necessarily imply the ship is moving astern ( in reverse ); astern propulsion is used to slow a ship by applying a force in the direction of the bow of the ship, instead of ...