Hiking and Trapeze
Hiking and trapeze are not optional extras in regatta sailing – they are central performance factors. When the crew deliberately shifts body weight to leeward, the boat stays upright, prevents unnecessary lee helm, and allows more sail area at the same wind strength. In dinghies with limited displacement, the quality of hiking often decides the difference between a top finish and mid-fleet – regardless of how well the sail is trimmed.
This guide explains the physical principles, correct body posture, the difference between hiking and trapeze work, crew coordination on board, and common mistakes. It complements the parent article Boat Handling and Crew Work and goes deeper into weight transfer as a discipline in its own right.
Why Weight Transfer Increases Speed
Sailboats heel to leeward under wind pressure. The stronger the wind and the larger the sail area, the more righting moment acts on the hull. Without counter-moment, the boat would develop strong lee helm, the sails would lose efficiency, and the course would drift.
Through hiking – deliberately leaning body weight out over the gunwale – and through trapeze work, the crew shifts weight outward. This effectively lowers the centre of gravity and reduces heel. The result:
- More sail area usable – less depower needed
- Less rudder angle – lower water resistance
- Higher VMG to windward – faster progress to the next mark
- More stable balance in gusts – lower capsize risk
Hiking vs. Trapeze – the Decisive Difference
Hiking means the crew leans out over the seat edge or hiking board with feet still in the boat. The feet stay in the boat; the upper body works as a lever. Typical for classes such as 420, 470, ILCA, and many keelboats with hiking straps.
Trapeze means the crew hangs on a trapeze wire with a harness and works far outside the gunwale. The feet stand on the trapeze board or on the edge. Typical for 49er, 49erFX, 29er, International 14, and Nacra 17. In-depth trapeze technique is covered under Trapeze Technique in Dinghies.
Correct Hiking Technique
Good hiking looks effortless but is a combination of body posture, timing, and endurance. Pros differ not primarily through more strength, but through more efficient muscle use and consistent posture over entire legs.
Basic Hiking Posture
- Feet firm – toes pointing forward or slightly outward, full foot contact on the hiking board or seat edge
- Knees slightly bent – not locked straight, to use the quadriceps as support
- Hips outward – push hips over the gunwale, don't just lean the upper body
- Back straight – neutral spine, no rounding in the lower back
- Head inside – look at sail, telltales, and fleet, not at your feet
- Arms relaxed – hold sheets, but no unnecessary tension in shoulders
Important: Hiking starts in the legs, not the back. Those who only lean out with the upper body tire faster and lose effective leverage after 10 minutes.
Dynamic vs. Static Hiking
Static hiking holds a constant position over longer upwind legs. Ideal with steady pressure and stable wind strength.
Dynamic hiking continuously adjusts lean to gusts and course changes: briefly more weight out in a gust, briefly back in a lull. This requires close communication between helmsman and crew.
Trapeze Work in Competition
Trapeze sailing demands body strength as well as precise timing. In classes such as the 49er and 49erFX, both crew members work synchronously on the wire – one trims, one steers or handles the spinnaker system.
Wire-to-Wire on Tacks
When tacking, the crew must switch from windward to leeward trapeze without destabilising the boat. The sequence follows a fixed order:
- Helmsman calls the tack ("Tacking in three – two – one")
- Crew releases the trapeze hook and prepares the switch
- As the bow crosses the waves: quick sidestep, new hook into the trapeze system
- Both crew members immediately back fully on the wire
- Stabilise sail trim and course before tactical decisions follow
Warning: A delayed wire-to-wire switch regularly costs two to five boat lengths in the 49er class. Practice the sequence dry on land before using it in race conditions.
Hiking Plates and Trapeze Boards
Equipment varies according to class rules:
- Hiking straps – adjustable straps on seat or hull, prevent slipping
- Hiking boards – wide buoyancy elements under the thighs on Finn and ILCA
- Trapeze wire – adjustable in length and angle, must be checked before every race
- Trapeze hooks – quick-release systems for secure hold and fast release
- Neoprene hiking pants – non-slip surface and padding for long legs
Tip: Check trapeze hooks and wire fittings before every start for wear. A released hook at 20 knots is a serious safety risk.
Crew Coordination and Weight Distribution
On double-handed and multi-handed boats, distribution of total weight across the boat decides balance. Not everyone must lean out equally far – what matters is the combined moment against heel.
Role Distribution When Hiking
The helmsman holds course and balance, often leaning out less because rudder work and trim take priority. The crew takes maximum hiking or trapeze, especially to windward. On keelboats, the tactician directs the position of the entire crew: "Everyone hike!" or "In two!" are standard commands.
Typical weight distribution in a 470 crew:
- Crew (headsail) – 70–80% of hiking moment
- Helmsman – 20–30%, focus on rudder and mainsheet
- In strong wind – both maximum, helmsman only briefly inside for rudder corrections
Hiking Intensity by Wind Strength
Physical Demands and Training
Hiking and trapeze place intense load on the body – especially with several races per day. Without targeted training, hiking quality drops measurably in the final legs. The physical effects are covered in depth under Hiking and Muscle Fatigue.
Training Building Blocks for Regatta Sailors
- Hiking bench – interval training with realistic posture, 3–5 minutes load, short breaks
- Core stability – planks, side planks, Russian twists for trunk strength
- Leg strength – squats, lunges, isometric hold in hiking position
- Grip strength – for trapeze classes: hangs, farmer walks, forearm training
- Endurance – long intervals simulate 20–30 minute upwind legs
Land training with specialised equipment is described in the article Hiking Benches and Core Equipment.
Training effect: From approx. 90 minutes of hiking bench per week, upwind position improves measurably – the top-3 rate rises significantly.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Even experienced sailors make recurring hiking and trapeze mistakes that cost boat lengths:
- Hiking too late – crew waits for heel instead of leaning out proactively
- One-sided load – only left or right thigh, leads to asymmetry and injury
- Head down – looking at feet instead of sail and fleet, tactical disadvantages
- Rigid posture – no adjustment to gusts, sails over- or under-pressed
- Wrong wire length – trapeze too short or too long, inefficient body position
- Forgetting to move in – too slow inside during maneuvers, boat heels in the tack
Pre-Start Checklist
- Hiking straps or trapeze harness correctly adjusted and secured
- Trapeze hooks work properly (open and close)
- Wire length adjusted for current wind conditions
- Hiking board or trapeze board firmly mounted, no cracks
- Crew knows commands for hiking intensity and wire-to-wire
- Neoprene or hiking pants for non-slip hold available
- Warm-up programme with leg and core activation completed
Hiking Quality During the Race
- Feet firm on hiking board or seat edge
- Hips outward, not just upper body leaning
- Back neutral, no rounding in the lower back
- Look ahead at sail, telltales, and fleet
- Dynamic adjustment to gusts and lulls
- Communication with helmsman on pressure changes
- Symmetrical load on both legs
- Immediately back fully on wire or hiking after maneuvers
Hiking and Trapeze in Different Wind Ranges
Technique must change with wind strength. In light wind, excessive hiking is counterproductive – the boat becomes too flat, the sail loses flow. In strong wind, maximum lean is mandatory, combined with depower measures such as reef, twist, and a flatter course.
Light Wind (under 8 knots)
- Minimal or no hiking
- Crew centred, let boat heel slightly for sail shape
- Focus on sail area and clean trim rather than weight
Medium Wind (8–15 knots)
- Full hiking to windward, standard in most classes
- Dynamic adjustment to pressure differences
- Trapeze classes begin wire work
Strong Wind (over 15 knots)
- Maximum hiking or trapeze, combined with Depower and Reducing Sail
- Shorter, more intense load phases
- Crew rotation on large boats to avoid fatigue
Frequently Asked Questions
From what wind strength is hiking worthwhile? – From approx. 8 knots in most dinghies.
How long can you hike continuously? – Pros 20–30 minutes, amateurs shorter; training extends this.
Do I need special clothing? – Hiking pants or neoprene recommended for grip and comfort.
What matters more: strength or technique? – Technique and endurance beat pure strength.
How do you practice trapeze without water? – Trapeze simulator or wire-to-wire on land with hook training.
Integration into the Regatta Course
Hiking and trapeze are not isolated exercises but part of every upwind leg. Quality is directly linked to VMG to Windward and Course Choice: a boat with optimal balance can sail higher to windward and still maintain speed.
Pro teams debrief after every race not only tactics but also hiking quality: where did the crew drop off? where was wire-to-wire too slow? These details add up over a regatta series to several places in the standings.