Length (in Feet)
    Year

    Keven on Sails: A Season of Double Handed Racing

    February 26, 2026 Last season, my son and I took part i…

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    Keven Talks Sails: Winter Voyage Preparation

    January 22, 2026 This is the time of year for planning…

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    Sail Design: From Measurements to Build Ready Project – Part 2

    May 22, 2025 Last issue Part 1 looked at the initial st…

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    Sail Design: How sails are designed – from measurements to build ready project

    May 8, 2025 By Keven Piper There are as many ways to de…

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    Keven talks sails: Developing a Sail Inventory for Short-Handed and Distance Racing

    Feb 27, 2025 By Keven Piper, Bay Sails Introduction The…

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    Viewpoint: What Does NTG Acquisition Mean for Independent Canadian Sail Lofts?

    Sept 12, 2024 By Keven Piper News of NTG (North Technol…

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    Triradial vs Crosscut Mainsails – Part 2

    Mar 20, 2024 By Keven Piper, Bay Sails Part 1 takes a l…

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    Best-in-class Speed Performance

    Mar 6, 2024 AIRMAR’s DST810 Smart™ Multisensor (depth/s…

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    MarsKeel and Catalina’s New High Lift Aspect Shoal Draft Bulb Keel

    Feb 14, 2024 The Catalina 425 is an all-new design that…

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    Guide to Keel Maintenance – Part 2

    Dec 13, 2023 Part 1 here: sailingincanada.ca/tech/guide…

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    Guide to Keel Maintenance – Part 1

    Nov 29, 2023 By William Souter, Custom Keel Sales &…

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    Triradial vs Crosscut Mainsails – Part 1

    Mar 6, 2024 I had a very interesting conversation with…

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    Keven Talks Sails: A Sailmaker’s Fall Haulout List

    Nov 1, 2023 I’m going to let you all in on my secret fa…

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    Keven Talks Sails: Whisker Pole Basics

    Club Racing has evolved over the years, from primarily racer/cruisers flying spinnakers, to a fairly serious level of non-spinnaker racers. A quick look at race registrations around the Great Lakes shows most clubs having more NFS (Non-Flying Sails = no spinnakers) racers than Flying Sails racers.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Battens – How to Keep Them in Your Sails

    At the beginning of every season, I get large numbers of sailors calling and dropping by the loft to get replacement battens. Most of these batten losses are preventable if the sail is getting serviced regularly and the battens are installed correctly. 

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    Keven Talks Sails: Sailing in Waves

    When the wind builds waves also build creating large choppy waves and gradually increasing swells. These waves slow down your boat when you are trying to make windward progress. Every wave is like climbing a hill or punching through a wall, especially when the wind gets over 25 knots.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Sail Care for the Sailor

    At the sail loft, we are always busy repairing and maintaining sails. Much of the damage we are fixing can be prevented with some simple sail handling tips.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Preparing for Bad Weather – Part 2

    Most sailors just don’t have practice sailing in really windy conditions. Club racers don’t go out if it is more than 25 knots (nor will the race committee). When doing a long-distance cruise or race, you don’t have much option if a squall runs at you.

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    Sail Replacement and Purchasing Process (Part 1 of 2)

    For many sailors north of the snow belt, haulout means getting the boat ready for winter, which inevitably involves removing the sails. Oddly enough, winter is often the first time we really take a close look at them as we spread them out, flake and fold them. This is when we can closely inspect and spot some troublesome areas.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Dealing with Squalls – To Reef or Not to Reef

    If you sail on the Great Lakes long enough, you are going to need to deal with summertime squalls. Because of the landlocked humid continental climate, we see very hot summer temperatures that lead to convective weather events.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Winter Voyage Preparation

    This is the time of year for planning next season’s special voyage. This may be a trip up the coast, across the lake, or multi week sail to the islands or a favorite anchorage.

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    Electric Yacht Conversion – Part II

    This project started off in a way that many of us can relate to: Matt Bera and his family chose a boat that is perfect for them.

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    Keven Talks Sails: A Balanced Life

    A balanced boat is key to performance and as the season winds down, let’s take a look at why and how. It’s that time of the year that we put our boats to bed and clean up the sailing locker. 

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    Dissimilar Metal Combination Keel For 68-Foot Modern Classic Cruiser/Racer

    Working alongside a US-based designer and boat building company, Burlington ON’s MarsKeel Technology recently provided a dissimilar metal combination keel for a 68-foot modern classic cruiser/racer.

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    Sail Techology: Sailing in the Right Gear

    I was helping teach my daughters to drive a 5-speed manual over the last while, and they have gotten very good at it. The clutch has survived, and they willingly take that car when they need it, so I think that is a win. I only wish my customers would figure out the 3 gears they need to race a sailboat!

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    Sail Tech: Slugs, Slides, and Boltrope

    Sails are attached to the sailboat rig using several different systems. Let’s begin with mainsails. The most basic attachment is with a boltrope that fits into a mast groove. This is very secure, and the sail is very well supported along the luff edge.

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    Sail Tech: Slugs, Slides, and Boltrope

    Sails are attached to the sailboat rig using several different systems. Let’s begin with mainsail. The most basic attachment is with a boltrope that fits into a mast groove. This is very secure, and the sail is very well supported along the luff edge.

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    Sail Techology: Simple Sailing Tips… That Everyone Forgets

    Sailing really is a simple sport, just you and the wind and waves. And the boat, an infernal contraption made of twisted ropes, slipping cleats and flapping sails. Ok, so sailing is simple when you tame Hydra’s nest and get all the ropey bits correct.

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    Sail Techology: Choosing Woven Sailcloth for a Sail

    Even after 30 years in the business, I still love thumbing through the pages of Canadian Yachting magazine – the beautiful new boats, the latest electronics or sailing gear. I particularly like reading the advertisements describing something that I may or not know anything about. “Lighter, faster, stronger, brighter”.

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    Sail Techology: Pre-Season Sail Inspection

    Many sailors get their sails into the sail loft for inspection at the end of the sailing season for a professional inspection, recuts and repairs. The sailmakers can quickly assess the condition, get the sail hung up on their pulling rig, check the shape of the sail, and easily take care of damaged stitching.

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    Sail Techology: Selecting your PHRF Racing Inventory

    The Weeknight Grand Prix! There are more keelboats racing using a performance handicapping system like PHRF on any given night than all One Design fleets put together. There are some excellent measurement rule systems as well to get a performance handicap, but none are as easy to implement at the club level as PHRF.

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    Code Sails and Reaching Sails

    Over the last month we have been busy in the loft getting customers sails recut for the next sailing season. Two of the projects were interesting recut jobs. One involved an Asymmetric Spinnaker that wasn’t asymmetric enough to qualify for racing, and the other was a modern offshore one design boat from Europe with a Furling Asymmetric Spinnaker.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Do you need a Spinnaker for cruising?

    Do you really need a spinnaker for your cruising sailboat? Probably not, unless you are prepared to put it up some of the time.  Half of cruising customers will never sail with a spinnaker, and that is fine. 

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    Keven Talks Sails: Crosscut VS Triradial Sail Cutting

    Over the last decade, sailcloth weaving equipment has evolved and allowed the production of low crimp warp oriented woven cloth of medium to heavy weights. We have had light weight warp wovens of 200g/m2 (4oz) or lighter for much longer than that, but the finer denier weaves of light sailcloth allowed that with older looms and setups.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Sail and Cover Cleaning

    Last issue we covered most of the different materials used for protective covers, and these durable materials require special care. So, how often should you wash your sails and sail covers? As infrequently as possible! An aggressive and thorough sail washing can wash several seasons’ worth of use out of a sail; work on preventing soiling rather than relying on cleaning!

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    Keven Talks Sails: UV Cover Cloth

    Last issue we covered types of headsail UV protective covers. All of these covers can be made of many different cover cloths, and I will give you the low down on how to choose what material is best for your application.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Headsail UV Covers

    Did I ever mention how much I like headsail furling? I’ve been club racing our 30’ cruising boat lately, and it has been easily the equal to two more crew members on board. When you are double handing with a now 14 year old, with a spinnaker (Asymmetric in a Sock), the headsail furling is the only thing that keeps us from sailing off the course to handle sails.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Windy Day Upwind Sailing

    It has been remarkably windy lately, so I figured I should share some windy day techniques to make your sailing easier and faster. I’ve been club racing with my 13 year old son driving lately, so I figured I should share with you what I shared with him.

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    Keven Talks Sails: Boat Tips from a Sailmaker

    At the start of the season, many boat owners tend to do some things the hard way. Here are some tips to get you sailing in less time, and with better outcomes. Furling Lines – Furling system rope that squishes flat, tends to bury itself in the spooled up drum if you are sailing reefed.

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