Monday, October 26, 2015

How I (Almost) Won the 2015 Archipelago Rally

So my friends Eric and Gary and I showed up with our shiny, new(ish) 2015 RS Aeros for the Archipelago Rally at Spindle Rock Club in Westport MA on Saturday and started to wonder if we had stepped into a time warp.

Clearly quite a lot of the sailors at the event had brought the oldest boats they could find, preferably something from the 1940s, or something found in a dumpster, or something that had been sitting under their deck for 30 years, or something they had built themselves. I helped one guy carry his boat down to the beach and I swear to god there was a mouse nest in the cockpit.

I was also wondering if I should have brought a few random grandkids with me as other sailors seemed to be planning to see how many small kids they could cram on to one of the aforementioned oldish boats, with or without any adult supervision.

Whatever! The Poster of Race did say "Anything with a Sail" and the RS Aero does have a sail and I had checked in with the Archipelago Rally organizer, Chris Museler beforehand to make sure we would be welcome with our RS Aeros. "Ya ya," he had replied. "Please come and send the rating you think is good."

Poster of Race


So I had crunched the numbers and calculated some Portsmouth Handicap ratings for the RS Aeros on the American scale, which for reasons I have never understood is totally different from the British scale, so I basically chose the Laser, a boat of similar speed to the RS Aero, and converted the UK handicap numbers for the RS Aeros into American on the assumption that if an RS Aero is X% faster than a Laser in the UK it will be X% faster than a Laser in America too. Sounded like a fair system to me and I sent the numbers off to Chris.

A few days before the regatta I received a "scratch list" showing the start times for all the boats. The Archipelago Rally is a pursuit race with the slowest boats starting first and the fastest boat last. As I expected the RS Aeros were very much among the later starters.

2015 Archipelago Rally scratch list 
which you probably can't read
 and in any case
 it got changed again before the actual race
 when they knew who actually showed up 
and what boats they had brought.


As we offloaded and rigged our boats, Gary was stressing out about how he was going to remember the course.

"There are over 30 boats starting before us," I told him. "Just follow the others."

"But what if I am in the lead?" he persisted.

"The least of my worries is that I will ever be leading this race!" I argued.

How wrong I was. Not for the first time Gary was right, and I was wrong.



Just before noon there was a skippers' meeting. It would be a Le Mans style start from the beach. The starting order and times were explained. Everyone was asked to remember their start times but if they didn't there would be a man called Matt with a very loud voice who would shout at us and tell us when it was our time to go.

A man called Woody explained the course.






































The course
Start on beach middle left of chart near "17"
Head to top right and go round "27" aka Crack Rock leaving it to S
Back to "17" leaving it to P
Head to bottom right and go round Halfmile Rock leaving it to S
Back to beach
What could be easier?


That's easy I thought. Only three things to remember. I even looked at Woody's chart to make sure I knew exactly where the two rounding rocks were. Anyone can remember that, I thought. Once again I would shortly be proved wrong.

Woody went on to explain the tides. The water will still be flowing out from the river when we start. But by the time we round Halfmile Rock, the tide will be coming in and so nobody will get swept out on to the wild and wooly ocean and we will all make it safely back to the beach. That's a relief.

Woody then warned us about the channels and flats. Basically he was saying that if you stay between the channel markers you will probably be OK but if you venture a few inches outside the channel you will probably hit the bottom but don't worry because it's very soft mud in fact it is so soft that under no circumstances should you get out of your boat and push the boat out of the shallows because the deep soft sticky mud will probably suck off your boots or even worse suck you down, down, down into the dark dismal depths of the deep, deep, soft, sticky mud and we will never see you again. Oh, and by the way if you haven't yet signed a waiver, please do so now. Hmmm!

The last thing you will see in this life 
if you step off your boat 
and sink into the infinite depths 
of
 soft
 sticky
 Westport River 
   mud.




This post is turning out to be longer than I thought it would. If you need to take a bathroom break, then now would probably be a good time. Don't worry we are getting to the fun bits soon.




So we all walked over to the beach and stood by our boats waiting for our turn to start.

Photo taken by Tillerwoman 
of boats on the beach 
showing just a few of the 43 diverse craft 
which sailed int the 2015 Archipelago Rally
artistically framed by the weeds in the foreground


Almost everyone started launching their boats and walking them out into deeper water in preparation for the start. We RS Aero sailors decided we would rather stay dry until it was a bit nearer our actual start time. Matt started shouting and the slower boats started racing.

Once the first 37 boats had got out of the way Rufus Van Gruissen, the regatta photographer, was able to capture this photo of the precise moment of the RS Aero 9s "starting."




Photo credit: Rufus Van Gruissen

Gary in his RS Aero 7 started a minute ago and is already out of the picture - a long way out of the picture. Eric is already in his RS Aero 9 #1422 and all ready to start. I am the other side of him about to give my boat a giant push forwards as I dive over the transom. We are off!!!

Also in the picture is a Laser Radial sailed by Aili Moffet who apparently won the 2014 Archipelago Rally for which she has been severely punished by being given a handicap adjustment making her start a minute behind the RS Aero 9s, as will the two Hobie cats. And the last boat to start will be Steve Clark in what I think is a C-Class Canoe, who will start another minute later, just because he is Steve Clark I assume.

The man standing in the water wearing a red PFD who is shouting and waving his arms is the regatta official in charge of shouting and waving arms. And the person on the left standing in the water is just some random passer-by enjoying, on this fine fall day, the traditional Massachusetts pastime of standing in the water looking at boats. Hey, they all came on the Mayflower, don't you know!

The reason why everyone in Massachusetts likes boats so much


Where was I? Where am I? Oh yes. We are now racing! Woo hoo! And it only took me about 1500 words to get to the start of the actual race.

And so we start beating up the Westport Harbor Channel towards the ominously named Crack Rock and two things become immediately apparent....

1. There is a lot of current still going out.

2. When sailing in an adverse current in a handicap or pursuit race, the faster boats have a significant advantage. Indeed it looks as if some of the slower boats are hardly making any headway at all against the current. It's no help to have a nice big juicy Portsmouth Number if you are actually going backwards.



By the time I spot where Crack Rock actually is (always a help to know where you are going) we have overtaken pretty much all of the boats who started ahead of us. There is a blue boat way out in front (which I later learned was Ned Jones sailing singlehanded in what I believe was a Lehman 12) and then the three RS Aeros. As we arrive at the rock the Hobie 14 catches up with the RS Aeros and passes us. And as we head back downwind and down river toward the beach again, it looks to me as if these five boats have a significant lead on the rest of the fleet and are unlikely to be caught. (One of the few things I got right all day!)

Crack Rock
Wait - I think Google is mistaken
Crack Rock didn't look anything like this


With the current pushing us downwind, the wind is pretty light on the run, and I'm not quite sure exactly which green mark we are heading for. What number was it again? Oh well, never mind, there are some boats in front of me, so I will just follow them. The catamaran starts doing that zig-zagging all over the place thing that catamarans do when going downwind so I just follow Eric who is following Gary who is following Ned. See Gary, I told you there was nothing to worry about. Just follow the boat in front.

Eventually I see which mark Gary is heading for, and Eric and I follow him. As I gybe round the mark I vaguely notice the number on the mark - "19" - but it doesn't really register. I concentrate on sailing fast and trying to catch Eric as we sail out to sea on a very close port tack reach.

Hmm! 19? Was that the right number? Didn't they say 17? The mark we rounded was a green mark just off the starting beach just like the one they pointed out to us. If it were 17, where would it be? Oh wait. What's that green mark close to the dock about 100 yards to my right? Oh shit, that must be 17, the one we should have rounded.

By this time the Hobie 14, who has been doing that zigging and zagging that catamarans do downwind, has caught up with me again and we shout at each other and confirm that, yes, we are definitely supposed to round mark 17. Some other guy sailing near the beach hails that nobody else went round 17. Hmmm? But the Hobie 14 guy and I are pretty sure that we should round 17, so we do so, even though it means I have to backtrack quite a way to get to it.

All these green can buoys look the same
They really should put numbers on them

As we head out to the open sea I am thinking that I am probably so far back that I am not going to catch any of the boats in front of me now, so as the Hobie 14 passes me again I figure that I will probably finish 5th which is pretty damn awesome in a 43 boat fleet. Plus I will have the personal knowledge that I did actually sail the right course so I can always tell myself I am really 2nd.

When we reach the mouth of the harbor I see a big rock with a pole on it just to the right of the channel. That must be Halfmile Rock I figure. Half mile from where I wonder? But wait, all four boats in front of me are sailing past that rock and further out to sea. They can't all be wrong, surely? I try and figure out where the rock really is. I squint. There is something out there, but it seems a lot further out than I remember from Woody's chart.

Then one of the safety boats for the rally comes out of the river mouth and the people on it start blowing whistles and shouting at us and pointing back to the beach. They are too far away for me to figure exactly what they are saying but they clearly want us to go back to the beach which means either....

(a) the race has been abandoned for some reason or

(b) the rock with the pole that I just passed is really Halfmile Rock.

So I turn around and decide to pass the rock with the pole to starboard, just in case (b) is the correct answer. The other four boats ahead of me turn around too.

No, wait. Now they aren't ahead of me. They are following me now. And I'm leading the race. The thing I told Gary before the race was the least of my worries, the thing that I never imagined in my wildest dreams, has come to pass. Oh shit. Now, I have nobody to follow.

Thankfully the Hobie 14, who wasn't that far ahead of me when we turned round, soon passes me... for the third time today! It is being sailed by a family, father and two sons by the look of it, and the boys are whooping and hollering as they take the lead.

All I have to do is stay in the channel and I will be second. I don't even get that quite right as I somehow find a shallow area and realize I must have strayed from the channel. But I had already released my rudder downhaul and pulled up my daggerboard, so it's no big deal. I skitter along with the rudder half up and hardly any daggerboard in the water until I find the channel again, cross it, sail towards the beach, jump out of the boat when I can see the bottom, take out the daggerboard, lift up the rudder and run through the mud, pulling the boat until I hit the beach to score second place.

Phew!

And that's how I (almost) won the 2015 Archipelago Rally.

I shake hands with the father of the family on the Hobie 14 and one of his sons and congratulate them on their win. Apparently their name is Guck. I think Mr. Guck may have done a bit of catamaran racing before, maybe even won a few races.

This picture looks like it was taken, from on or near the beach, just about as I was finishing. Eric and Gary in their RS Aeros, Ned in the blue boat, and Aili in the Radial are heading towards the camera to finish. Pretty much everyone else is still sailing out to Halfmile Rock. Gary held on to take 3rd and Eric was 4th.

Photo credit Rufus Van Gruissen


The awards ceremony was as awesome as the rest of the event and very much in the overall spirit of the rally.

There was quite a lot of swag - t-shirts, hats etc. - to give out. The results were read in order from last to first and the swag was given to the sailors at the back of the fleet first, making sure that all the many kids got something, until all the swag had run out. Quite right too. I always feel that in sailing and running races, the rewards should go to the competitors at the back of the race. After all they spent more time on the course than those at the front who also got to the beer first.

There were various special awards. The DNFs got swag but the Lonely Loon award went to the sailor who completed the race but came last. (I would have been the lonely loon at a Laser North Americans a few years back.) There was a special perpetual trophy for the lowest placed family. There were a few very large bottles of rum. I think two of those went to the sailors with the oldest boats.  I kid you not, there was also a trophy called the Pine Needle award which went to the sailor with the most "biomass" in their boat and this was won by the guy I had helped who had a mouse nest in his boat. There may have even still been mice in it for all I knew.

Mouse in nest
Hard to beat this for biomass in a boat


The overall winners, the Guck family, took home the Broken Head perpetual trophy which is actually an old wooden Sunfish rudder that was broken in the first ever Archipelago Rally in 2006 - also won that year by a Hobie 14, sailed by Olympic silver medalist Bob Merrick.

Thankfully by the time they got around to reading out the names of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th place sailors there was no swag left, and the rum had all gone, so we RS Aero sailors didn't have to go through all that rigmarole of going up and shaking hands and having photos with cheesy smiles taken. But we were sternly warned that by showing up with three boats in the same class that had done so well we had earned a major (adverse) adjustment to the RS Aero handicap for next year's Archipelago Rally.

Something to be proud of, I think?


Participants and volunteers at 2015 Archipelago Rally



Lessons learned.

1. If there is any chance whatsoever you won't remember the course, tape a course diagram on the deck. I tell you what, tape a course diagram of the course to the deck anyway. Your memory ain't so good these days as you remember it was.

2. If you are racing around navigation marks and random rocks, then make a copy of the NOAA chart, mark the course on it, and tape it to the deck.

3. Trust your judgment. The sailors in front of you are not smarter than you. They are just faster.

4. Karma exists. If I had not back-tracked to round the correct mark then I would have not have been so far behind which means that I would not have then been so far ahead.

5. I need to lay my hands on a decent, but seriously old, Hobie 14 or 16.

Just what I need for the 2016 Archipelago Rally
If nothing else I would be in the running for the Pine Needle Award




More to the point, what boat will YOU be sailing in next year's Archipelago Rally?


Sunday, October 25, 2015

Saint Crispin's Day



It's a good day to be English.

600 years ago today, on October 25 1415, the English army led by King Henry V defeated a much larger French army at the Battle of Agincourt.

There's an excellent account of the battle by Bernard Cornwell at The Telegraph today - The Battle of Agincourt: Why we should remember it.

"The few had destroyed the many, and most of those few were archers. They were not lords and knights and gentry, but butchers, bakers and candlestick-makers from the shires. They were the ordinary men of England and Wales, and they had met the awesome power of France in hand-to-hand fighting and they had won. 
The battle of Agincourt is part of the binding of England, the emergence of the common man as a vital part of the nation. Those common men returned to England with their stories and their pride, and these stories were told in taverns over and over, how a few hungry trapped men had gained an amazing victory. The story is still remembered, even six hundred years later, because it has such power. It is a tale of the common man achieving greatness. It is an English tale for the ages, an inspiration and we can be proud of it."


Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Son of a Son of a Blogger




My youngest grandson, Andrew, is two years old now.

He loves watching YouTube videos of nursery rhymes... and videos of boats.

Any boats will do, but he gets most excited about videos of foiling moths, like this one of International Moths at the Gorge, back in August.

I think there may be a WASZP in his future.


Tuesday, October 13, 2015

11 Reasons to Buy the Melges 14

Anyone on the market for a new design 13-14ft hiking, planing, single-hander this year had at least three choices: the RS Aero, the Devoti D-Zero and the Melges 14.



Regular readers of this blog will know that I chose to go the RS Aero route. I placed a deposit on an RS Aero as soon as the order book was opened for North America in March 2014. I was later informed that I had the distinction of placing the first order for an RS Aero in North America. I had an opportunity to try out the RS Aero at Minorca Sailing in October of 2014 and, thanks to Scott Hardy of the Boat Locker, two friends and I were able to borrow a demo RS Aero in March this year so they could try it too. All three of us committed to the RS Aero and took delivery of our boats in May. After a summer of sailing the boat in pursuit races and fleet races, two regattas in Massachusetts, and at the 21 boat North Americans in the Columbia River Gorge, we have no regrets. The RS Aero has totally lived up to and even exceeded our expectations.


2015 RS Aero North Americans

Apparently RS Sailing have sold over 750 RS Aeros worldwide with about 100 delivered in North America. The main concentration of RS Aeros on this continent is in the Pacific North West, but they can also be found in the north-east, Florida, Texas and the Gulf Coast, California, Canada and various inland locations.

Correction 14 Oct 2015 - Apparently I understated the RS Aero sales in North America. There was an RS Sailing North American dealers meeting at the Annapolis Boat Show and one of the dealers posted on Sailing Anarchy today that "close to 120" RS Aeros have been sold.




But what about those other two new-single-handers?

The Devoti D-Zero seems to have done well in the UK. From what I gather some clubs in the UK chose to build D-Zero fleets and others went for the RS Aero. Makes sense. There were 24 D-Zeros at their Inland Championship at Yorkshire Dales SC last weekend. I have not heard of any major marketing activity for the D-Zero in the US but I think a few have been imported by individuals.

2015 Devoti D-Zero UK Inland Championship



And the Melges 14? I hadn't heard much about Melges 14 activity this year until seeing the video below produced by Scuttlebutt at the Annapolis Boat Show.

So why would American sailors want to buy the Melges 14 rather than the Aero or D-Zero? Maybe the video has some answers?

1. It's made in America.  Americans are very patriotic people and many sailors would rather support a boat made in the good old USA than one of those foreign countries.

2. It's made by Melges a very well-respected boat building brand, if not known all that well in the dinghy market yet.

3. It's a Sailing World 2016 Boat of the Year Nominee. I have no idea what that really means but it sounds good.

4. Can be sailed by one or two people.

5. Two different sized rigs so "kids or gals" can race the boat.

6. Mylar sail.

7. Carbon rig.

8. Melges' goal is to create a one design racing circuit so people can race Melges 14s around the country.

9. Over 40 boats sold so far.

10. Melges hope to have their first Melges 14 regatta this winter down in Florida.

11. Melges rocks!




Melges rocks...
Posted by Scuttlebutt Sailing News on Friday, October 9, 2015

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Are Yacht Clubs Offensive?




Are yacht clubs offensive?

According to Pitzer College in Claremont, California, the answer is yes.

Last week, the student Senate at Pitzer voted to deny instating a yacht club at the school "as the majority of Senators found the name 'yacht club' to have a particularly offensive association with yacht clubs and a recreation known for being exclusive," according to Taylor Novick-Finder, a Pitzer College Senator.

Watch the video.

What do you think?


Saturday, October 03, 2015

Sailing in Newport



The weather is starting to feel a lot cooler.

We have had strong winds all week.

Summer has gone.

I wonder when we will see the first snow?



It's time to start looking forward to sailing Lasers in Newport in the winter.

Only 4 more weeks until the start of the season.

Can't wait!



I Love Winter