| At Sea Glossary - H
  halyardA line used to hoist a sail or spar. The tightness of the halyard can affect sail shape.
 harborAn anchorage protected from storms either naturally or by manmade barriers.
 harbormasterThe individual who is in charge of a harbor.
 hatchA sliding or hinged opening in the deck, providing access to thecabin or space below.
 haulPulling on a line.
 head1) The front of a vessel.
 2) The upper corner or edge of a sail.
 3) The top or front of a part.
 4) The toilet and toilet room in a vessel.
 headingThe actual course of the vessel at any given time.
 headsailAny sail forward of the mast, such as a jib.
 
 head seasWaves coming from the front of the vessel.
 headstayThe most forward forestay. The line from the bow or bowsprit to the top of the mast. This keeps the mast from falling toward the rear of the boat. The headstay is the farthest forward of all thestays on the boat.
 heaveTo throw or pull strongly on a line.
 heaving lineA light line used to be thrown ashore, from which a larger rope can then be pulled.
 heaving toArranging the sails in such a manner as to slow or stop the forward motion of the boat, such as when in heavy seas.
 heavy seasWhen the water has large waves or breakers in stormy conditions.
 heavy weatherStormy conditions, including rough, high seas and strong winds. Probably uncomfortable or dangerous.
 heel, heelingWhen a boat tilts away from the wind, caused by wind blowing on the sails and pulling the top of the mast over. Some heel is normal when under sail.
 helmThe wheel or tiller of a boat.
 helmsmanThe person who is steering the boat.
 high tideThe point of a tide when the water is the highest. The opposite oflow tide.
 hitchA knot used to attach a line to a cleat or other object.
 holding groundThe type of bottom that the anchor is set in.
 holding tankA storage tank where sewage is stored until it can be removed to a treatment facility.
 horseshoe buoyA floatation device shaped like a U and thrown to people in the water in emergencies.
 hullThe main structural body of the boat, not including the deck, keelor mast. The part that keeps the water out of the boat.
 hull speedThe theoretical speed a boat can travel without planing, based on the shape of its hull. This speed is about 1.34 times the square root of the length of a boat at its waterline. Since most monohullsailboats cannot exceed their hull speed, longer boats are faster.
 hurricaneAn intense tropical weather system with a well-defined circulation and maximum sustained winds of 74 miles per hour (64 knots or higher in the North Atlantic Ocean, the Northeast Pacific Ocean (east of the International Date Line) or the South Pacific Ocean (east of 160° east longitude). In other parts of the world, they are known as typhoons, tropical cyclones and severe tropical cyclones.
 hydrodynamicA shape designed to move efficiently through the water.
 hydrofoilA boat that has foils under its hull onto which it rises to plane across the water surface at high speed.
   
 
 
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