IV. CANOE UNDER SAIL (II).
98 99
Getting Under Way.
The board is housed when running
free and when the canoe is on shore. It is dropped for
windward sailing. It is sometimes left down when
running free in a heavy sea to help steady the canoe
where the greatest speed is not the prime object, for
it does to some extent retard progress, as is easily
demonstrated by paddling with a board down. It may be
dropped part way to advantage at times, even when
paddling to windward, not directly in the wind's eye;
it prevents turning and the constant use of the
rudder. The board should be so arranged that it can be
easily removed when on shore, in order to get at all
its parts for cleaning and oiling, and also that the
weight of it need not be carried when on a paddling
cruise.
A Short
Spin.
THE canoe is in the water and rigged -- ballast
stowed ready for a spin. Jump aboard and shove off!
Run up the mizzen, belay the halyard when all is taut,
trim in sheet, bringing boom amidship; belay and let
the canoe swing round head to the wind. The mizzen
will now keep her there, though she may make some
sternway; but what matters that? you are well clear of
the shore. Look alive, there! is the end of that
mizzen sheet made fast below? All right ! Is the slack
of the halyard coiled up neatly so it will go with a
run and let the mizzen drop into the lazy jacks when
cast off, if a squall should happen to come along? Ay,
ay, sir! Now hoist the mainsail, having first placed
the boom to port, on which side the sail is to fill
when you bear away. Look out for your head, there, or
the boom may give you a crack as it swings about with
the wind on the sail. Put your weight on the halyard,
it will bear it, and get that sail snug up, so it will
stand out like a board when it gets the wind in it.
Belay. Cast off mizzen sheet, shove main boom to
windward, let the bow fall off a little. There you
are; now she fills. Start her off with a beam wind.
See figure on page 101.
Let go the boom and trim the mainsail (No. 1);
belay sheet. Trim mizzen to same angle and belay. Get
on deck to windward, there, with the left hand on
tiller and the main sheet in your right. Now she is
just bowling along. Bear away, there; let her have
more sheet; yes, mizzen too (No.3), and run down the
wind a bit. Here -- what are you doing on deck, there?
Down in the hold with you, and feet on the yoke, never
mind the tiller; it won't run away. Look out for the
jibe, for if that boom ever comes over with you in the
bottom, you are a goner. Must jibe soon? Well, get
that mizzen over first (No. 4). Haul in on the sheet
and put the boom over with your hand, if it will not
go over of itself. Now look out for the mainsail. Up
on deck
100 101
Canoe Handling.
with you, amidship, though; give a
touch to the tiller; haul in that main sheet. Look
out! there she comes; let her go ! and as the boom
brings up all standing to starboard, see that you are
on deck to port. Trim in main sheet (No. 6) and bring
the wind on the beam again (No.7). Trim in mizzen for
close-hauled work, as you must go on the wind in a few
seconds to get back home again. Luff her up a little
and trim in mainsail flat. That will do (No. 8); any
closer would put a shake along the luff. Keep her
there; luff just full, no more. Look under the main
boom to see ahead. Pretty near shore, are you? Well,
come about.
The helm is the steering apparatus, usually applied
to the tiller. Starboard the helm means to move the
tiller to starboard, and this carries the canoe's head
to port -- steers her to port. To port the helm
carries the head to starboard -- steers to starboard
when the canoe has headway. To put the helm hard down
means to put the tiller around to leeward, steering
the canoe up into the wind. Hard-a-lee and hard down
mean the same thing -- moving the tiller to leeward as
far as it should go, thus bringing the canoe's head to
windward as quickly as possible. Hard up means moving
the tiller as far to windward as possible, and results
in turning the canoe off the wind quickly -- bearing
away. When the canoe has sternway on -- moving
backward -- turning the tiller to starboard brings the
bow around to starboard and carries the stern to port.
A weather helm means that when the canoe is sailing on
the wind she has a tendency, by the disposition of her
sail area, to luff when the rudder is let alone.
102 103
Coming About.
With a lee helm she falls off unless
the rudder is used. When the canoe just balances --
keeps her true course without the aid of the rudder --
she is said to carry an even helm. A slight weather
helm is to be sought after in arranging the
disposition of the sail area. A lee helm is to be very
carefully avoided. The sail is too far forward when
the canoe has a lee helm It is too far aft with a
strong weather helm. Shift the sail on the mast all
you can to get an even balance or a slight weather
helm if you find the canoe does not balance on trial.
(See Appendix, balance of sail.)
If you cannot shift the sail enough on the mast to
accomplish the desired result, then have the mast tube
and step shifted. The true balance can be very closely
calculated beforehand, as fully explained in "Canoe
Building for Amateurs."
If you have not run hard and fast aground by this
time, we will at once come about. Helm hard-a-lee,
there ! Let go the main sheet. Do not jam the tiller
around too far, nor too quickly, either, thus stopping
headway, but do all gently and comfortably. Don't
touch that mizzen sheet; the sail helps to bring the
canoe head to the wind. When she gets there, let go
the mizzen sheet; and as she falls off on the other
tack, trim in mainsail flat, again taking the true
course, now you can trim in mizzen. A heavily
ballasted canoe has enough momentum to bring her round
without letting go the mizzen, that is, unless in very
rough water. If you find the canoe loses headway
quickly for want of ballast, get your own weight well
forward as you come about, and it will help to bring
her around greatly. If she hangs in stays, shove the
mainsail over to get the bow around just as she is in
the wind's eye -- mizzen of course cast off. If this
does not work, but results in sternway, shove the
tiller clear over to the opposite side. If this fails
and she falls off on the same tack, let her go, get
headway on, and when at full speed again try once more
to get her about. Jibing is dangerous but easy. Coming
about is perfectly safe, as the wind is entirely out
of the sail, but difficult. Therefore try it often and
acquire the knack of knowing just how to do it, and,
what your particular canoe needs to accomplish it
every time. The paddle should never be used, as it is
not allowed in racing under the rules; it is very
unseamanlike to resort to it, and if used, will tend
to satisfy you with only half learning how to manage
the canoe under sail. We are off again, on the
starboard tack this time (No. 11), having been on the
port tack before (No. 8). Come about well off shore
(No. 12), so if you don't get around the first time
you will have plenty of sea room to try it again. As
you approach the home float (No. 14), steer a little
below it, to leeward of it, and luff up into the wind
just as you get in line with it, allowing the canoe to
run up to windward till all headway is lost before
coming up alongside. Novices frequently try
conclusions with a float, the shore, or a wharf, by
sailing right at them, becoming nervous and not
knowing how to stop before going smash
104 105
Reefing.
into them at full speed. This does
not always result seriously to the float, but it is
apt to damage the canoe. If you do not feel sure of
making a good landing, luff up a little off shore,
drop the mainsail and paddle in, or sail in under
mizzen alone. No damage will then result to nerves,
canoe or float. Making a neat landing is a thing of
beauty and a joy forever. Do not lose the chance of
relishing it by neglecting practice.
It is much more difficult to tack in a heavy sea
than on calm water. Learn to do it, therefore, on
smooth water first, and in a light wind. With a stiff
breeze and lumpy water, if you can't get the canoe to
tack, paddle round rather than wearing away and
getting on the other tack after a jibe. It is well to
lower the mainsail if you have to jibe on very rough
water in a stiff breeze.
When beating to windward, depend on the sail alone
for information as to the course you should take. Keep
it just full and sail so close that by luffing a
little now and then the consequent shiver on the luff
of the sail will tell you exactly where the wind is.
Sailing any way but close-hauled, you must lay your
course and trim the sail to get the best speed out of
the canoe. When the wind is abeam or forward of the
beam, let out the sail till it begins to shiver, and
then trim in so it is just full. Wind abaft the beam,
trim sail as before explained, shifting it at first a
little perhaps one way, and then the other, to hit the
highest speed point. Don't depend on any fly at mast
head to trim sail by, but learn to trim it by itself
alone, knowing, of course the exact direction of the
wind.
Shifting ballast is at times a good thing, and
convenient if you sit in the well all the time. Twenty
five pounds of shot up to windward on the bottom board
does counteract some wind pressure on the sail; but if
you forget to shift it when you come about, rest
assured it will not do you any good way down to
leeward out of reach. If your ballast is all on the
very bottom, and so fastened that it cannot shift, no
matter how much the canoe heels, you have, one less
item of worry to think of. You can depend on its all
being there, too, when it is needed.
Place all the ballast as near amidships as
possible, if it does not spoil the trim, so the ends
of the canoe will be light and she will ride the waves
easily and lightly. A canoe may be made to trim
perfectly with the ballast spread out nine or ten feet
along the keel, and she will sail well on smooth
water; but on rough water she will plunge heavily and
ship the seas easily, every now and then burying the
bow and much of the forward deck. Spreading out the
ballast makes a canoe logy, if such an expression be
permitted.
Reefing.
THE amount of sail that can be carried on a canoe
depends on the force of the wind -- on its speed,
really. It is not practicable to have a number of
sails of different sizes to suit every breeze that
blows. A sail should be used part of the area of which
can be disposed of so as not to present wind surface
when less sail is made necessary by more wind.
106 107
Reefing Gear.
Practically, all canoe sails,
therefore, are capable of being reeled, that is,
partially taken in. A reef is that part of the sail
which can be tied in with lines called reef points, on
both sides of the sail. These lines are placed a foot
or more apart and an equal distance above the boom.
When a reef is to be taken in the sail is lowered till
the reef points come even with the boom, around which
they are tied, gathering the cloth in compactly along
the boom. The mainsail is generally made with from one
to three reefs. The mizzen has from one to two. It is
well to have the mainmast tube and mizzenmast tube of
the same size, so the mizzen can be stepped forward, a
storm mizzen placed aft, and the mainsail dispensed
with altogether in a heavy blow.
Suppose you have a lug mainsail of 75 feet area, a
mizzen of 25 feet area, and a storm leg of mutton
laced to its mast of 7 feet. The wind is light and you
carry full sail, mainsail, mizzen, together 100 feet.
The wind increases and you reef the mizzen (10 ft.),
leaving 90 feet up. More wind, and a reef is taken in
the mainsail (20 ft.), leaving 70 feet up; the general
balance varying very little with these changes. It
comes on to blow, and you drop the mizzen (15 ft.)
into the lazy jacks and pass a line over it so the
wind cannot blow it about. You now have but one sail
up, the mainsail reefed once, giving 55 feet wind
surface. But it blows harder, and you must reduce
still more. Take in a second reef (20 ft.), leaving up
but 35 feet for the wind to act on.
The blow turns out to be a small gale. Take down
the mainsail and mast, lash them on deck securely, set
the mizzen forward, full sail up (25 ft.), or put one
reef in it and set the storm dandy (7 ft.) aft, thus
spreading 22 feet, and you are in good shape to
weather a pretty heavy blow. If this is found to be
too much sail for a howling gale that you happen to be
caught out in, stow the mizzen below and place the
storm dandy forward; now scud down the wind and get
into the first harbor you can find -- it is no canoe
weather to be out in.
This reefing business is a serious affair and has,
one way and another, in thought, occupied many an
hour's time of probably every canoeist that ever did
any sailing. When it becomes necessary to reef, you
want to reef quickly, in order that the control of the
canoe may not be lost. When a yachts sail is to be
reefed, she is luffed up to bring the sail inboard and
to spill the wind out of it. The sail is lowered the
proper distance, and as many of the crew as possible
tie down the points. When all is snug the sail is
hoisted up all taut again and the yacht allowed to
fall off to her true course.
To reef a canoe sail, having the ordinary reef
points as shown in Fig. A, on page 109, the canoeist
must leave the tiller, crawl clear out on deck to
reach the forward points of his sail to tie them in;
and in doing this the canoe is bound to luff up into
the wind, his weight being forward, to lose all
headway, become partially unmanageable, and she is
pretty sure to roll about considerably if there is any
sea on, thus retarding the work of reefing greatly. In
some canoes it is almost impossible to reach the tack
end of the boom on account of the mast being stepped
far forward to preserve the balance of sail area. Some
other reefing arrangement is therefore necessary in
such cases.
108 109
Canoe Handling.
Figure B shows an arrangement by
which the sail is reefed from the well by means of a
line, the end of which is at the clew end of the boom.
The sail is lowered till the batten is down on the
boom, the line is then pulled in as far as it will
come, and the slack wound around the batten and boom
together where they project beyond the cloth of the
sail at the clew. The sail is hoisted taut and halyard
belayed.
This reefing line has one end made fast at the
forward end of the boom; it leads from there (through
a ring sewed into the sail half way between boom and
batten) through a block attached to the under side of
batten at the luff, from here along batten across sail
and through a block on middle of batten, down to boom
-- through a ring on sail half way between boom and
batten, as on luff -- through a block on boom and
diagonally across sail through a block on batten at
the leach end, leaving a few inches of slack beyond
the block when the sail is up. At this end is a short
stick, or button, as it is called, around the middle
of which the line is wound in a groove to prevent
slipping, and the end whipped. This button prevents
the line end running back through the block. By
pulling in this line when the sail is lowered batten
to boom, the reef is taken in and the batten and cloth
below it are held more or less neatly along the
boom.

110 111
Baden-Powell Reefing Gear.

Even with reef points a line from
batten to nock at tack on boom and leading along boom
to the clew end enables the skipper to get the forward
part of his reef in without getting clear out on deck,
The balance of the points can then be easily reached
and tied in. This Fig. B reef has one weak point. The
cloth is not closely tied in along boom and catches
the wind; the boom has to be brought amidship in order
to reach the reefing line, and this is a difficult
position to keep it in with a stiff breeze blowing and
the canoe apt to fall off from the wind at any moment.
The disadvantages of these two reefing gears, A and B,
are not very serious with small sails, say from thirty
to fifty feet in area.
With larger sails they are clumsy and very
imperfect, slow in being tied or taken in, and
difficult to shake out quickly when more sail could be
used to advantage. Many other gears and arrangements
have been tried a number of which are now in use, two
of them are illustrated on page 109, Figures C and
D.
C is the gear invented by Mr. Baden-Powell and now
in use on many English and some American canoes. D is
a gear largely used in this country for the larger
balance lug sails and, slightly modified, on the
Mohican settee and the Stoddard sail. It can only be
applied to the first reef. C can be arranged for three
reefs.
Nautilus
Reefing Gear.

A LINE is made fast to boom at clew
end (Figure C, page 109, at point marked 1); it is run
up to the batten, passing through small brass rings
sewed on a tape along leach, two or three inches
apart; at the batten it runs through a block (2) and
then leads to a loop over the block (3) at the middle
of the batten; passing through this loop -- which is
used only as a guide -- it runs through one of the
halves of a sister block (4) (two blocks lashed head
to head, or a single block with two sheaves, one at
each end, and not alongside each other as in a double
block), back through the block under the loop on
batten (3) and through rings again down to boom at
(5), where it is made fast permanently. Another line
starts at (6) the tack end of boom, to which its end
is secured; leading through rings on the luff up to a
block on the batten (7) through which it passes,
leading along the batten through a guide loop over
block (8) on batten just aft of the mast, out to the
sister block, through which it leads, returning to
block on batten (8), through it, down to block at foot
of mast (9) and along deck to within easy reach of
skipper's hand.
The reef line when hauled in, the sail being
dropped sufficiently, pulls directly on the boom at
the tack, taking in the reef there, and indirectly by
means of the sister block in the bight of the line
running from 1 to 5, brings the boom up to the batten
at these points, gathering the sail in neatly along
boom, the rings keeping the cloth in close. Exactly
the same method is employed for a second, and a third
reef. The reef gear in this arrangement is entirely on
one side of the sail. With this arrangement a jackstay
must be used to keep the boom in position when the
halyard is cast off to lower the sail.
If you like the Baden-Powell reef and put it on
your sails, be careful to arrange the spacing so that
8 is a little more than the exact distance between
batten and boom from the block at (3); for, in taking
in the reef, the sister block (4) moves from 3 toward
8 the distance between 1 and 2 increased by the
stretch of the lines.
112 113
Dot Reefing Gear
When the lines are wet they are much
shorter than when dry. This gear can be worked with
the sail in any position, and does not require the
skipper to get boom inboard, and consequently luff the
canoe, to work it. In fact, the reef can be turned in
when the canoe is sailing before the wind with the
boom clear out at right angles to the keel, and
without losing headway at any time.
This is a great advantage over the slow and clumsy
tying in of the reef points, especially in racing,
when every minute's headway lost counts. The blocks
used are of English make, and are of boxwood with
brass sheaves neatly put in. These blocks can now be
had in this country, some of the dealers having
imported them. The best cordage, too, for canoe lines
is of English make, but it also is now imported.
The Dot
Reef.

THREE holes are made through the
cloth and batten at points 1, 2, 3, Figure D. If the
batten is light and a hole would weaken it, a cringle
just above the batten through the cloth will do as
well. At 4, 5, 6 on boom-directly under 1, 2, 3 on
batten -- thimbles are lashed securely on the under
side of the boom, having the hole through them running
in the direction of the length of the boom. A thimble
is a small cylinder of hard wood having a groove
around it so a cord run round in the groove will not
slip. Instead of a thimble two blocks can be used, one
on each side of the boom. Sometimes the boom is made
to serve the purpose of one side of the block, the
ends of the block being screwed to it and the pin run
through the block and sheave and into the boom for its
support at one end.
This is the arrangement used by Mr. Stoddard on his
canoe Atlantis. A line is led through the thimble 4,
passes up from the boom on the left side of the sail
to the batten, through the cringle to the right side
of the sail, down the sail again to the boom and back
through the same thimble. The line coming down on each
side of the sail as it does, passes double through the
thimble, entering its forward end and coming out
pointing aft. Both lines are cut about four inches
from the thimble and made fast round a block-if block
is of wood-or through the eye of the block if of
brass.
Similar double lines are placed between 2 and 5, 3
and 6; or, more correctly speaking, a line is run
through thimble at 6 -- entering its forward
end-carried up the left side of the same to 3, through
the cringle and down the right side of the sail and
back through the thimble. Its end is then lashed
securely at this point, forming a loop which includes
within it the batten at 3, the boom at 6 and the cloth
of the sail between 3 and 6. This line continues along
the boom to the forward end of the thimble at 5. It is
left a little slack between 5 and 6.
114 115
Carrying Sail.
Before entering the thimble it is
run through a block (7) which is left free to play
along it. Passing through the thimble from fore and
aft, it runs up the sail to cringle at 2, through it
and down the other side of the sail to aft end of
thimble, through it, and about two inches beyond. It
is here cut off and the end securely lashed to the
main part of the line as before. Thus another loop is
formed about batten, boom and cloth between 2 and 5. A
line secured to block 7 runs forward and through the
block on the reef line at 4; from here it runs clear
of everything out to point 8 on boom, where its end is
made fast. A cleat is lashed to the boom at 8 by which
the reef line is secured when the reef is taken in.
Now dropping the sail and hauling in on the reef line
at 8 brings batten and boom together, and the loops
gather the cloth in as well, thus forming a neat and
compact reef. The advantage of having the reef line
end on the boom is that the reefing gear then in all
its parts is entirely on the sail and is not
interfered with when the sail is taken off the mast.
The objection to it is that the boom has to be brought
close enough to the skipper in reefing to allow him to
reach the line and cleat at 8, thus necessitating some
slight change in the canoe's course. The reef can be
turned in or shaken out in thirty seconds, as can also
the Baden-Powell. 4 and 5 must be twice the width of
the reef apart to allow room to take in all the slack.
By shifting this rig end for end, j and 4 where 3 and
6 now are, and adding a, block on boom by the mast and
one at the foot of the mast, the reef line can be
carried down to and along deck in exactly the same way
as the Baden-Powell reef line runs.
With a very wide reef it is well to sew on rings
through which the lines may pass on both sides of the
sail and half way between the points 1 and 4, 2 and 5,
3 and 6. A closer gather of the cloth thus results.
This reef is used on the Mohican settee, with plain
rings substituted for the thimbles. The second reef is
usually arranged with the ordinary reef points and
reef line for luff end. This reef is a simpler one to
make and fit than the Baden-Powell, and makes a closer
reef along the boom, not bunching the cloth up so
much.
The reefing line from the mizzen must come at least
as far forward as the tack end of the boom to be
within reach when the skipper is sitting on the after
cockpit hatch. With the Dot gear two reef points are
all that need be used on the mizzen. Three are
required for the mainsail. The mizzen reef line should
be so arranged that it can be operated at tack end of
boom when the sail is used as a mizzen, and at the
clew end when the sail is stepped forward and used as
a mainsail. This can easily be managed by having it
work from a block in the middle of the boom, and lead
from this, as the case may be, either forward or
aft.
Carrying
Sail.
ALWAYS keep your sail area down to a spread that
can be easily and safely carried. By reefing you are
enabled to do this. A little too much sail needs
constant care and watching, perpetual luffing during
the puffs, and heels the canoe over way beyond her
best sailing position.
116 117
To Rig and Bend Sails.
Therefore proportion the sail to the
wind, that you may keep your course all the time and
sail steadily. What you lose on your mate, who has too
much sail spread, during the lulls, you will gain on
him when the puffs come and you can keep full headway
on, he having to continually luff and spill the wind
out of his sail to keep right side up, thus losing way
all the time. Be comfortable and avoid running great
risks. You may lose a race now and then, but you will
often win, and at the finish be over the line long
before the leader during the first half of the race
gets his canoe right side up and the water out of her.
If you ever get caught in a thunder squall, and
cannot make a harbor, get in all sail, stow as much
below deck as possible, take down the masts, and
securely lash masts and sails on deck so they present
as little wind surface as possible. Leave no loose end
of the sail for the wind to get under, perhaps to
raise up and capsize the canoe. Depend on paddle
alone, and keep the bow headed into the teeth of the
wind, even if you are making sternway. Squalls of any
kind usually give warning of their approach, if they
are severe enough to do harm. Learn to read the signs
of nature, and get in the sail or make a harbor before
you get caught in a tight place. Don't attempt to
carry sail till the last moment; it may then be too
late to even get it in. Acquire judgment, if you are
lacking, by constant study.
Monkeying.
THIS is a word which has come into general use
contemporaneously with the canoe. Whether it owes its
origin to the canoeist perhaps will never be known. It
is a fact, though, that a few years ago, when canoe
builders were few and they confined their labors to
the canoe alone, the canoeist found, after he had
purchased his boat, that only half the battle was won.
He needed a seat, steering gear, sails, blocks,
cleats, running rigging; and he needed them in such
shape, too, that they would fulfill his desires and
serve his wants. This work he could get no one to do
for him, so he set to work to do it himself. As he had
never done anything of the kind before, the first
trial failed; the second was a partial success,
perhaps, but opened up enormous possibilities; and
thus he was led on from one thing to another till he
found much time taken from other important
occupations, and yet he was far from satisfied with
the results of his labors. It began to be said of him,
when other things came up for him to do, "Oh, Jack is
out of the question; he can't come, you know; he is
monkeying with that canoe's fan mainsail." There are
still many little touches about 'a canoe that cannot
be bought; and where is there a builder who can rig a
canoe one-half as well as some of the canoeists
themselves? Therefore, if you want peace of mind,
monkey. Learn the different useful knots; square knot,
bowline, half-hitches, etc., and induce some old tar
to show you how to whip a rope's end, to splice, to do
lashings neatly, and
118 119
Monkeying
many other sailor dodges more or
less useful. Rig your own sail, bend it to the boom
and yard, attach the halyards and sheets just where
they should be to work to the best advantage; adjust
the parrels, screw down the cleats, place the steering
lines and construct your reefing gear. Thus will you
learn much, become bandy with lines, the palm and sail
needle, and so be able to do better and stronger work
about the sailing gear than any builder in the
country, whose business it is to construct canoes, and
not to sail them. Probably no two canoes in the
country are rigged exactly alike, and this shows
conclusively that the canoeists must be a monkeying
set of fellows, for originality is a rare quality
among men in most walks of life. Attending an ACA meet
will give you a good idea of the originality that has
been displayed by canoeists, and it will no doubt
suggest many ideas for improvement to you, though you
may be a recent recruit.
Know your gear and watch it. Supply new parts as
soon as any weakness displays itself in any part.
Accidents don't often happen to the careful and
painstaking canoeist. It is the careless man who loses
a race just at the finish by the parting of a rudder
line or sheet.
Keep the sails dry. If they get wet, let them dry
spread out, and sun them, if possible, before rolling
them up to stow away. Oil, Vaseline and grease are
good things to prevent friction and consequent wear.
They are cheap, too. Put all your things in or near
the canoe when you bring her into the house after an
outing. You can thus easily find them again when
wanted, and they are less apt to be damaged than if
left anywhere, scattered about. Varnish is cheap, too;
therefore have the wood of the canoe well protected by
it at all times. If you can't varnish the canoe
yourself, learn to do it, or get some one who can.
Don't neglect this.
DEVICE

© 2000 Craig O'Donnell
May not be reproduced without my
permission.
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