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Period
The racing is from
mid-April to end of October, with three distinct phases, pre-BOR, BOR and
post-BOR.
q
Type of racing
The central point to our racing this year is the 2004 Annapolis to Bermuda
race (2004 BOR Official Site) and the
return trip from June 11 to June 27.
More details on our own race at: 2004 BOR
Before the BOR we will focus on its preparation. After the BOR we will
return our focus to distance racing in the Chesapeake Bay, however we will
still be doing some W/L (windward / leeward to a drop mark) races, which in
general are set near Annapolis at the mouth of the Severn River on a
Saturday.
q
Skipper's rant
At my age I rely more on written words than on my memory. This web page
is convenient to use for everybody and is updated at the same time I read an
email bringing changes. Please use it and send me an email or a voice mail
or a fax whenever you have a change. Also, please do not delay your comments
or changes. I would rather have several timely changes in a row than one big
one coming quite late.
March
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Sun 7 |
NorthU Weather for Sailors |
Seminar: Jaffar, Larry.
The seminar was a good weather 101 course. However, I was expecting much
more sailing-oriented stuff and practical rules. Some of this is in the
training manual that was provided or may be in the training CD, that was not
ready at the time of the seminar. |
Sat 20 |
Spring fitting |
|
Sun 21 |
Spring fitting |
Santiago,
Chad |
Wed
24 |
Spring fitting |
Paul,
Mike |
Sat
27 |
Safety at Sea Seminar |
Mike |
Sat
27 |
Spring fitting |
|
Sun
28 |
Safety at Sea Seminar |
Mike |
Sun
28 |
Spring fitting |
Santiago |
Wed
31 |
Spring fitting |
Paul |
Details on Safety at sea and on the seminar at:
Safety at Sea
The April BOR newsletter is at :
BOR newsletter April.
It mentions in particular that USA 3000
has $79 tickets (one way) on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
April
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Sat
3 |
Boat launch |
Amazing!.
John, the White Rocks Marina co-owner and manager, has delivered in his promise to
me. He has launched (or moved) boats stacked behind us in a frenzy, even
under the rain, and came to work on a Saturday to finish the job for us.
Well done John, thank you.
After the launch, I had to change the impeller for the engine cooling
system as there was not much water coming out of the exhaust. I had the part
ready but I was hoping to delay the change until a few weeks before the BOR.
Well, I have learned not to play with this annual maintenance. It is a must. |
Sun 4 |
Delivery White Rocks - Annapolis |
Santiago, Mike, James, George.
We had a gale warning and Mike decided wisely to leave his two daughters
at home. We used the Sharkskin main and this alone made the preparation
longer because of the removal of the pre-feeder and the adding of the track
plates.
We left at 11: 15 and arrived at 2: 16 pm for an amazingly fast 3h for
the 20 nm trip. The instruments did not give us any wind information
(although the masthead was turning fast) but the Thomas Point web site
recorded a true wind speed of 24 to 33 kn for the period. We started with
the #4 jib and a reef in the main and doused the #4 when we had to turn into
a close reach after we reached the Bay. Maximum boat speed was 13.5 kn under
reefed main alone. It was cold but enjoyable, except maybe the last couple
of miles when we had to beat into the wind and tack a few times. The tacking
angle is quite wide with such a sail plan, but we made it happily, except
that I lost my lucky red polartec cap near the end. Also, I had forgotten my
Gore-Tex gloves and hands were blue and numb at the end despite keeping them
in the pockets quite often for the second half of the trip when Santiago and
Mike drove. The boat feels good under these trying conditions, it is
definitely a good heavy weather boat. |
Sat 10 |
North Sails: J/105 Tune Up |
Details on North Sails J/105 tune up day :Speed
Clinic James, Mike, Tony B, George, Tim, Ginny. We had a good
day of fleet practice and drills, particularly starts. The wind was not
cooperating at the beginning but fortunately filled in later up to 11+ kn.
Mike took a long turn at the wheel and James helped us practice our MOB
drill by doing an elaborate back flip into the water when we got the foot of
the chute into the water when hoisting at the windward mark. I had never
done the MOB drill before with the chute still up but there was some urgency
in my quick turn maneuver as the water was cold and we had lots of boats
behind us and the crowded place with drivers distracted by the tight
hoisting and rounding situation was not a good place for a swim.
Surprisingly the chute stayed quietly inside the jib, like in a
Mexican douse, and we were able to get back to James quite rapidly. |
Wed 14 |
Mid-week technical discussion |
Crew communication. Please read and
comment article on page 5 of the J/105 Spring Newsletter:
Can We Talk |
Fri 16 |
Late afternoon practice
at 1600 |
Not done as Tim and Ginny were doing RC
duties for NASS and the RC decided to add another race at the end of the
day. |
Sun 18 |
Practice
at 1000 |
Paul, Mike, Tony B,
George. We had a good practice but, due to communication problems, we could
not talk to Tim and Ginny who were scheduled to join us at the end of their
RC duties. |
Wed 21 |
Mid-week technical discussion |
Sail trim. Please read and comment the
North's tuning and trimming guide:
North Complete J/105 Guide (pdf) or
Tuning Guide (on the web). Remember that some of this stuff does not
directly apply to us as we are using the 155% genoa most of the time.
Also, please check this discussion on Spinnaker Dousing |
Sat 24 |
NASS Spring Race
at 0800 Will leave dock at 0815
NASS Spring SIs
A1 is the second start at 1010
RC on Channel 77 |
W/L race /
James, Tim, Ginny, Laura, George We finished 8th of 10 boats, with two
J35s behind us. Air Mail is first and we are 6 minutes behind, however we
are also 3 minutes behind the 7th boat.
Race was 7.5 nm (5 x 2.5 nm).
NASS Spring Results
|
May
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Sat 01 |
Practice
at 1000 |
Santiago, George,
Ed, Eric |
Mon 03 |
Dry dock at Muller Marine |
Refresh bottom
paint, fair rudder, change propeller to the 15x11 Flex-O-Fold folding geared
racing propeller. The new propeller has the lowest drag in its category and
has a pitch more appropriate to Chantecler than the original Elice Radiche.
So performance should be improved both under sail and motoring. The rudder
blade has a flat spot on its starboard side. It took me a while to notice
it, but once I did, it became so obvious! The rudder fairing should also
give a performance boost, particularly when beating. Also, I will have the
floatline marks added, so that we could balance the boat load properly. |
Tue 04 |
|
Bobby found a hollow
cavity in the rudder and has fixed it and faired the blade. The bottom has
been lightly sanded and the first layer was being gun sprayed when I left.
The Atlantic rigging crew is scheduled to open the boom tomorrow to fix the
outhaul line purchase system and fix the headsail tack point. No rain in the
forecast, so I am expecting the boat to be ready by Friday. |
Sat 08 |
SSC:
St. Brendan Cup Race Will leave dock at 0900
A1 is the second start at 11:10
312 SIs We had a 14.5 nm
Gov. Marks race (point to point).
312 RESULTS |
Santiago, Paul, James, Jon, George
We have finished 7th of 13 boats. We have beaten three good boats in real
time and compensated over three more. Last year, we had achieved mid-fleet
or better only twice (in one of which we had Will Keyworth onboard), so this is
a very encouraging and this time the boat felt much better upwind.
This is due above all to good sail trim and good crew work at tacks jibes
and mark roundings.
However, we have also had the following hardware improvements:
- Balancing the boat in its designed float lines at the dock. I had asked
Bobby Muller to add the official float lines and when I saw the boat on
Friday I was amazed because the bow was floating 4-5 inches higher than the
stern. So, on Friday, I have loaded the forepeak locker as much as I could,
checking the float lines after each move, before the race I have added 4 x
2.5 gallons of water (83 lbs) in the anchor locker. This has made a big
difference. The boat was stern-heavy from the beginning most likely due to
the wheel (the boat was originally designed for a tiller - the wheel adds 80
lbs at the stern), the two batteries below the wheel (some J/105 have only
one battery and in the cabin, a much more forward position) and the quarter-berth.
- The new more streamlined propeller, which by the way also gave us
fantastic cruising speed (7.5 kn), due to its 11 pitch as opposed to the 9 pitch
of the original propeller.
- The rudder fairing that fixed a serious flat spot on the Starboard side
(the spot was due to a hole in the core material).
- The brand new, properly burnished, hard bottom paint.
|
Sat 08 |
BOR practice
#1 to follow the race |
This
was the first BOR practice. We did the St Brendan race until the finish, then
we went back to Annapolis to purchase a new winch handle (having lost our
second one this year) and continued upwind up the Bay where we practiced heaving-to with the parachute
anchor. We succeeded, but the balance is difficult to achieve. We will have
to try again with either the main reefed to its second reef or the storm
trysail.
We have not used the new reacher during the race but used it extensively
thereafter. The sail is in good shape and is tremendously efficient when
reaching. We still have to define the cutoff points between the reacher and
the spinnaker, but the sail will definitely be a unique assed for the BOR.
All this augurs well for our Bermuda race.
|
Sun 09 |
End of BOR practice |
We came back to the dock around 6 am Sunday. |
Sat 15 |
Practice
Leave the dock at 1000
Return to the dock by 1700. |
The practice
was more focused on boat handling for the Bermuda trip
(sail changes, heaving-to, MOB, etc.) James, Mike, Ed, Eric, Tony B. |
Sat 22 |
SCC:
Annual Regatta Spring Race Leave the dock at 1000
Fleet RV at 1100
A1 is the second start at 1210
314_315
SIs |
George, Michael L., Ed Results:
RESULTS 314 315.htm
We raced shorthanded with two persons racing for the first time with us. We
finished 7th of 8 boats but we had a good race with no major problem, which
was the objective. |
Sat 29 |
MRYC: Annapolis to Miles River Leave the dock at 0845
316 SIs
Fleet RV at 0925
A1 is the 12th start at 1025
20.9 nm long course
RESULTS_2004/316 |
Santiago, Paul, Jon, Mike, James, Chad We had a good race with good
crew work but unfortunately I did a couple of tactical mistakes and we
finished 17th of 27 boats, 3 minutes away from the 11th place boat. We were
still in good position at the turning mark into Eastern Bay, but thereafter
we stayed way too long in a position were we had bad air from Wildfire, a
slower A2 boat that had started ahead of us, while our competitors gained
and passed us with clear air.
|
Sat
29 |
BOR practice after
the race |
We had our second BOR practice just following the race. We passed the finish line and turned
around to continue at racing speed in Eastern Bay and then we did a
couple of loops between Annapolis and Poplar Island with the genoa, the jib
top and the spinnaker. We returned to St Michaels
early on Sunday morning for a couple of hours or dock before the start of
the return race. We had perfect weather for our practice afternoon
and night of sailing. |
Sun 30 |
RRBC:
Miles River Race Back
at 1000
317 SIs
A1 is the second start at 1005 Length: 18.1 nm Results:
RESULTS 317 |
We
have finished in the silver, fourth of 16 boats, only one minute and 7 seconds, corrected
time, behind the second place boat, Promises, and 4 minutes and 18 seconds
behind the first, Pamlico. Last year we had won the same race with good
downwind trim and good strategic brains in light air after a tremendous
start. This year we added wonderful teamwork and lots of muscle for constant
tactical fights (tacks and jibes) within the lead pack after an average but
good enough start.
Congratulations to Jon and Paul for teaming up quite well on tactics, to
Mike and James for doing the same on foredeck work and inventing a much
better way of tacking (we used and abused it right away and did a large
number of tacks in Eastern Bay with minimum loss of speed at each tack -
James was helping the genoa clew pass the mast and Mike was behind the
shrouds making it pass in a flash that area where we had so much trouble in
the past). Jon and Santiago trimmed the sails perfectly well and Chad
managed to be helping everywhere when not filming. Santiago is the only
person I know who can trim the spinnaker in waves and 15 kn wind standing up
without leaning on the shrouds or grabbing anything.
Our epic sailing has been recorded and I am sure that Chad and Santiago
will come up with a beautiful video. They even stayed on Chantecler after
the return to the dock for cabling the link between the aft camera and the
camcorder below. The rest of us were too exhausted to stay.
It was the most satisfying race.
On the hardware side, two problems surfaced and need to be fixed very
quickly: the cutlass bearing on the propeller shaft is making noises and
vibrations from time to time and the digital compass of the Nexus instrument
system is misbehaving badly. A view from the Race Committee:
|
|
|
We
have sailed from 9 am Saturday to a little before 3 pm Sunday with one stop
of a couple of hours at the end of the raft in St Michael before the race
back and these have been close to my most enjoyable sailing hours as a
racing skipper. Thank you to all who were onboard and all who were not but
made that possible by participating in the team activities. |
June
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Sun 6 |
EYC: Short Tail Leave the dock at
0830
Fleet
RV at 0930.
Results: RESULTS_320 |
Point-to-point 20 nm race that is meant to be a
preparation for the BOR.
Mike, George, Bill, Ed, Eric
Return to the dock expected around 1600. |
Thu 10 |
BOR Briefings and Skippers' meeting at 1700 |
At the Annapolis Recreation Center (across the Marriott Waterfront Hotel) |
Fri 11 |
Jenifer Clark BOR Seminar at 0800 at the Radisson Hotel, Annapolis |
|
Fri 11 |
Start. EYC: Bermuda Ocean Leave the dock at
1245 Start at 1405 |
Santiago, Paul, Jon, James, Mike Chad will film the start from a
vintage Chris Craft. George will bring his motor boat to encourage the team. |
Fri 11 |
Early evening
We abandon the race |
After an average start, we had a good spinnaker broad reach where we moved
from 11th position at the first mark to the fifth overall position. Then the
wind moved forward and we changed to the reacher. As the bow felt heavy, we
moved the second anchor from the anchor locker to the port cockpit locker.
However, we were taking water through the sprit pole hole, which filled the
anchor locker and then drained into the forepeak through the pole sleeve. We
did not realize the situation until we had two tons of water inside the
forepeak and overflowing into the main cabin and we had to seek shelter
under a squall when we were off Point No Point.
When assessing the safety situation, I decided to abandon the race as the
sea state and wind conditions at the Gulf Stream was expected to be
challenging and the risk was simply too great to affront it with a leaky
pole.
More details at: 2004 BOR |
Sat 12 |
|
We spend the night at dock in a marina in a creek on the western side of Pt
Lookout. We motored back and reached Annapolis in late afternoon. |
Sat 12 |
J/105 Fleet #3 Chesapeake |
A fleet meeting has overwhelmingly decided to change keels in bulk from
shoal draft to deep draft. Many boats have decided to change keels ASAP in
order to be able to compete in the NAs in September. A circuit of major
fleet races may be set up next year along the East Coast, from Key West in
January to Block Island in June.
See the 14 Jun 2004 news at: J105.org
We will then be back to class
racing in 2005, but still keeping a major focus on distance racing. |
More details on the BOR at: 2004 BOR
We have only two major and two minor races in the summer schedule. Let's
focus on taking our revenge against bad luck and acing at least one of
the two major distance race, a silver result in either the Solomons race or
the Governor's Cup will nicely do.
July
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Fri 16 |
EYC: Solomons Island Invitational at
1700
55 nm
NOR_334
2004solomonsletter
2004_solomons_SIs
RESULTS_2004/334 |
Major race for us.
I am trying for a revenge with the Bermuda crew who are available and also
go light at the same time.
Mike, Tim, Ginny, James, George It did not work but will try again at
the Gov's Cup. There was a major equipment failure, just below my hat, as I
followed a flawed Western shore strategy, despite multiple failures of
similar strategy in several previous races, with the exception of 2002.
Somehow, I convinced myself again that this was the way to go and we were so
hopelessly behind any class boat when the wind died a couple of miles from
the finish that I did not have the patience to stay there more than a couple
of hours, using our anchor from time to time to avoid negative SOG. We had
nobody around us for the second half of the race and we understood why when
we reached the turning mark and could identify the boats ahead of us and
behind us, they were all from classes starting way behind us and they had
all followed an Eastern shore strategy, which had better pressure and better
wind direction and led them to the mark with basically no tacks while we had
many to stay on our route.
|
Sat 17 |
Arrival
in the morning |
|
Sat 17 |
Around noon |
Return
delivery to arrive at the dock in Annapolis in the evening |
August
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Fri
6 |
SMCSA: Governor's Cup
We will leave the dock at 1630
We are the second start at 1810
govcup SIs
70 nm
RESULTS_2004/341 |
Chad, Bill, George, Ed We have finished 23 of 32 boats. We had a nice
race in front and then lost big in a jibe to the Eastern shore followed by a
25 kn gust that made us broach. Then it took us too long to fix a mainsheet
problem and to change to a heavier spinnaker. We are lucky we did not damage
our light spinnaker in the gust. We are also lucky we were close to get a
MOB but caught him by the ankle before he was completely overboard. |
Sat 7 |
Arrival in the morning |
|
Sat
7 |
Around noon |
Return delivery to arrive at the dock in
Annapolis in the evening |
Sat
21 |
WRSC: Twilight Race We will leave dock
at 1430
SIs 346
RESULTS_2004/WRSC_Twilight |
Ed, Eric, George |
Sat
28 |
GIYS: Cedar Point Race
We will leave dock at 0815
35 nm race
Expect a return late in the evening
SIs 208 |
Ed, Tim, Ginny, George, Eric We got a
terrible start when Muskrat luffed on the line and pushed Air Mail and us
into the CB. The tide was against the light South wind and thus the CB had
its bow on the leeward side of the starting line and was in such position
that we had no escape possibilities, once we committed to the gap between
Air Mail and the CB, 10 to 15 seconds before the start. We may have been
barging, but Muskrat had the obligation to avoid the collision. The CB then
had three short signals that we interpreted for a short while as being a
general recall so we tacked but soon discovered that there was no general
recall. We then decided to protest Muskrat and tacked back to continue
racing, but we had lost lots of ground to the A1 fleet.
We had a good first leg along the Eastern shore (but in deep water most
of the time) in medium and steady Southern breeze and a couple of miles from
the turning mark, we were ahead of a few class boats. Unfortunately, we lost
some ground in the tacks for the final approach to the mark and turned it in
last position, just behind Hot Pepper, a J/120.
From there on we stayed on the Eastern shore while the rest of the fleet
one by one moved to the Western shore. We stayed at the same level but
behind a pack of boats, until just South of Bloody Pt light, where a strong
power shop and a diminishing pressure slowed us down while the Western shore
boats kept going. |
September
We are now going
back to J/105 class racing as several boats have converted or are in
the process of conversion to DD keel. Fleet #3 has decided in an email poll
to let DD and SD boats start together in class events. This will start to
apply with the NASS race to Oxford, it is official now.
On Saturday 9/4, Ed and I have measured the forestay, which is within class
specs after all, about 3/8" short of the maximum permitted, remounted the
roller-furler drum and cleaned the forestay from the remains of the teflon
tape. We are almost ready for class racing. I am hoping to get a one year
old sharkskin main ready in time for the NASS race (after I get it, I need to
change number and the slides), otherwise, we will use our own sharkskin main
that is a bit older and has done the 2002 BOR and back.
In terms of crew, local class racing permits only a total of five persons in most
cases and six persons if at least two of them are women.
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Sat
11 |
SSC: Hospice Cup
Be at the boat by 0845
Will leave dock at 0900
RV at 1000
A1 Start is the second at 1110
SIs_hospice/352.pdf
Results hospice2004 |
Tim, Eric,
Bill, Laura Be at the dock in time, as we need to practice using the roller-furler
and dousing the chute when shorthanded. This should be our last PHRF race
of the season.
That was a good race and we felt good about it despite the result. We had
a 3-leg course. We had a good start, after averting a disaster when we were
caught so far downwind at the 5 mn gun. We had clear air in the first leg
and did well compared to the boats around, but unfortunately, the pressure
was better on the other side and the shift to the right was in fact a
permanent shift, so we lost some ground. We maintained our position
downwind, and had a good leeward mark rounding but the short Starboard leg
we did before tacking was a big mistake with the windward mark so out of
position for the average wind direction we were getting at that time. Air
Mail was behind us before the rounding but passed us upwind and beat us to
the finish for the 8th place by only 6 seconds (corrected time). We finished
9th of 12 boats, but nevertheless had two good boats behind us. |
Sat
18 |
NASS: Race To
Oxford Be at the boat by 0745
Will leave dock at 0800
RV at 0900
Start at 0935
SIs_353.pdf
RESULTS_2004/353 |
Major race. This is the last distance race of the
season and the wind is usually good. This will also be the first Chantecler
race in the J/105 class. Ed, Eric, Jim, Alexander I had never
before experienced force 8-9 conditions (and hopefully never will again),
never before seen 48 knots on my True Wind Speed display, never before seen 18+knots on my
boat speed display.
I am talking about Saturday’s race to Oxford (29 nautical miles), while a
cold front combined with the remnants of hurricane Ivan passing South of us
created exceptional weather conditions. The starting sequence was a big mess
and many boats in all classes were as confused as us and started several
minutes behind. We had reefed the main before the start and this made our
gibes manageable when we did it at peak boat speed. The waves were short and
steep. Foam and spray was everywhere and visibility was limited under the
rain. I assume the key to success was for the top drivers to be able to
sustain the surf in such difficult wave conditions. I buried my bow too
often in the next wave. But what a feeling! The J/105 is a great heavy
weather boat.
I have damaged my only class jib (stupid roller-furler mistake in the
reaching leg) and damaged the top slide on my main (over-cranking the
backstay), but it was the experience of a lifetime.
We have finished fifth of 16 boats of which only seven finished. Most of
the others turned around at the start or before.
But this was not the end of the adventure, as the TAYC marina where we
arrived was quite exposed to the Northern wind. Few of the finishers had
decided to stay there and we should have tried some other places upriver
that were more protected. But, we were exhausted and settled for staying
along the main quay. We managed to borrow large fenders and to put two
dock lines on nearby piles to avoid being tossed against the quay. Then
somebody mentioned the draft and I checked that we were only a few inches
from the bottom. Furthermore, the tide was scheduled to go down during the
night. The tide table for the area from my navigation computer gave a weak
high tide from 7 to 8 am the following day with about the same level as
where we were then. I decided to stay. The wind kept blowing strong most of
the night and from 11 pm to around 2 am we hit the bottom with each wave.
Thereafter, it became much quieter when the keel stayed constantly on the
bottom and the wind weakened and thus we got a few hours of sleep.
|
Sun
19 |
TAYC: Hammond Memorial Race DNC |
Ed, Eric, Jim, Alexander
We have had dinner in a nice place nearby but the breakfast at TAYC was
awful. We managed to leave the quay in time after a well-planned maneuver,
only to find us grounded again in the middle of the small harbor with a long
line across preventing us to go to the deeper side. We nevertheless managed
to get under way and motored back at moderate rpm (because of the vibrations
from the prop) with no sail up. When we reached the Bay, the fun began
against still a strong NE wind and waves. Despite the low rpm, the engine
temperature alarm set off and we had to shut the engine down and hoist a
reefed main despite the lack of a top slug near the board. It worked without
a hitch nevertheless and we slowly and painfully made our way tacking upwind
without a jib. Later on, the wind and waves dropped a bit and the sail
became more pleasant.
Later on, I found what the engine overheating was: the primary water
filter was clogged with pin needles, several large pieces of rubber, a few
leaves and five baby eels! We should have picked the stuff when we grounded
the boat at TAYC and the temperature alarm sounded only when the engine
strained against wind and waves.
Bobby Muller has promised to lift the boat soon to change the cutlass
bearing (making this terrible grinding noise from time to time) and put my
old propeller back. He needs a special tool from Vosbury and this is why the
schedule is not yet firm. After that we should have again a decent cruising
speed and no vibration.
Also, good news from North, as Jeff has been able to patch the class jib,
contrarily to what I was expecting, and repaired the slug on the main. So,
unless something unexpected happens, we are good to go for the AYC Fall
series.
|
Sun 26 |
Practice with other J/105s
Be at the boat by 1130
Will leave dock at 1145
Be back around 1600 |
Eric, Jim, Suzonna, Bill,
Ed |
October
AYC has agreed to score DD boats separately from SD with
both keels getting the same start. We will miss the mid-race of the AYC
series as I will be traveling to Europe. We will also be doing the J/105
championship, which will have separate DD and SD starts.
Date |
Event |
Comments / Participants |
Sat 2 |
AYC Fall Series #1
Be at the boat by 0910
Will leave dock by 0925
RV at 1000
Warning at 1100
Class start at 1115
SIs 357_362.
Regatta Results Race 1 |
James, Ed, Eric, Bill We did our first class W/L race with Chantecler and
I am in serious disarray because of our stunning last place, beaten by all
SD and DD boats that raced that day, a huge 8 minutes behind the nearest DD
boat and 13 minutes behind the winner.
We had the 2001 3DL jib that was not used much since its purchase
(something like ½ a season in total), the 89 m2 US spinnaker that I had
purchased used in 2002 and has been used regularly since and the sharkskin
main that Walt had loaned me after using it one season (the sail looks quite
good to me). The wind was 8-15 TWS and the sea was choppy. The rig was on
the base set up with lower tension on the intermediates to induce leeward
mid-mast sag (we got a bit less than ½ inch; I had tried the base set up the
Sunday before and had no sag in 4-10 TWS). The mast step was what it was for
PHRF and I may need to move it one hole back to induce more forestay sag and
more power with the class jib.
I messed up the start a bit in the middle of the line and tacked to avoid
bad air. We had a few boat handling mistakes during the six-leg race but my
estimate is that we did not lose more than a couple of minutes on that
account. We did not take any big gamble; we stayed mostly in the center of
the course and had clear air most of the time. Our trim and my steering had
no glaring mistake as we kept the speed up in the short waves. We were
staying with everybody around us downwind or gaining a little and most of
the ground we lost was upwind.
I know that the boat is likely to be lighter than any DD boat here but is
stern-heavy. I am trying to compensate by loading the forepeak, but I have
not found the optimum, yet. I also know that my mast is larger and heavier
and adding weight aloft with a second jib halyard, a second spin halyard and
a masthead VHF antenna (all for better offshore racing) is not helping.
I knew that all that was too far from being perfect to make us a
contender for that race, but the 8 minutes gap with the closest DD seems to
confirm the bad PHRF racing results. I somehow doubt that new sails and a
better rig tuning will make the boat 8 minutes faster on a 9 nm course.
The only J/105 behind us, a SD, decided to not finish the race because it
was obvious they had picked up a piece of garbage on the rudder and could
not get rid of it. We may have done something similar as I have ducked a
couple of plastic bags when I could see them during the race, and we were
low and slow, even compared to SD boats, but I did not feel anything unusual
on the rudder. |
Sat 16 |
AYC Fall Series #3
Be at the boat by 0915
Will leave dock by 0930
RV at 1000
Warning at 1100
Class start at 1115
|
James, Ed, Eric, Jim |
Sat
23 |
J/105 Fleet 3 Championship
Day 1 (3 races) Be at the boat by 0900
Will leave dock by 0915
Warning at 1100
Start at |
The J/105 championship has a DD start this year
Ed, Tim, Ginny, Eric, Suzonna? |
Sun 24 |
J/105 Fleet 3 Championship
Day 2 (2 races) Be at the boat by 0845
Will leave dock by 0900
Warning at 1000
Start at |
Ed, Tim, Ginny, Eric, Suzonna? Reserve: James |
|