Digging The Bow
Suddenly Turn Down Wind- When you are beating hard to windward, and then suddenly turn to go down wind (like when you are rounding the windward mark).
Your body is positioned more in the middle of the boat and hiking out a bit.
When you turn to go down wind, the sail & mast act like a big lever arm, the mast partner is the pivot point, and the boat is being twisted around it.
This twisting motion lifts the stern in the air, and pushes the bow down into the water - also called a pitch polling effect.
The taller your sail is, the more you will have this effect.
Bury Into Wave - When sailing in choppy water, or around power boats that throw off big wake, when sailing down the slope of one wave, you end up buring the bow into the next wave, and possibly even submarining under it (the whole hull goes under water).
This is a common effect with all sailboats, but with longer sailboats w/pointy bows, only the bow will dig in the water and it will pop back up before the rest of the hull has had a chance to slide under the wave as well.
To avoid this, you need to avoid sailing closer than 45 degrees to the face of waves.
If you have to tack, time it so that you turn mostly on the upward side of a wave, and by the time you reach the crest, you are sailing the other way.
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