Another great day on Lake Monroe. Sadly the summer Rum Race series is
coming to an end soon. Daylight savings time will affect the amount of
sun light available to race on a week night.
A big thanks to Jason for coming out and crewing on Endurance. Jason
is starting to get the hang of things (or he is in fear for his life
when I go forward and decided it was better to help, hehe). He was doing
a great job setting the sails at the beginning of the night and
securing them after the race. Beverage service was also exceptional. lol
In fact a great crew day for the Lake Monroe Sailing Association.
We had 3 new crew members show up for the evening race. All three were
able to secure a ride. We had a couple new comers and one very
experienced sailer show up.
As usual I was worried
about the wind falling off as the evening progressed so crossed the line
right at the start of the 6:00 - 6:30 PM window. The wind was ENE and I
elected to go wing on wing with main on starboard and the mizzen on
port. We sailed with the main's boom about 5 degrees forward of the
mast. We were about 1/2 way across the course when a wave shifted the
boats balance and the main sail jibed unexpectedly. It gave Jason a good
scare but when I trimmed the sails the boat took off. The boat speed
was up about 1/2 to 1 MPH. While surfing waves we hit speeds as high as
8.8 MPH.
Once again when we rounded the mark the real
race began for us. This time I was committed to rounding the mark and
trying to point high enough to go strait back to the start finish. We
actually did decent for a first attempt. When pointing the right heading
of 120 we were able to maintain speeds in the low 5 MPH range. That's
not fast enough to win but for most of the leg we were pointing high
enough to have a chance at making it.
I took some
pictures of my GPS screen and I can see a couple of things that are
worth noting. The first picture is of the entire course. As you can see
we did have to tack on the way back. This may have been avoidable. When I
rounded the mark you can see in the second shot that I fell off badly.
At the time I was trying to get up to speed. I don't think that I was in
a wind shift or header. That was poor sailing on my part. I need to
tack cleanly and start reaching immediately. Figuring out how to do fast
tacks in a Sea Pearl is going to take some practice.
In the 3rd picture you see me falling off again. That was a wind
shift that I expected to happen as we got closer to the start/finish.
Typically as you get closer to the island off of Sanford the wind bends a
little and becomes more easterly. This meant we had to tack so that we
would make the start finish line. After looking at this 3rd picture I
noticed two things. First, I may have gone to far off course. I say this
because when you follow my track after the 2nd tack you can see I
didn't sail a strait line. I was actually falling off to the mark. What I
don't have pictures of was the fun part that distracted me. The faster
two S2 7.9 boats in the fleet were almost on top of me when I tacked.
When I came over and was on a starboard tack I passed very near the
first boat just behind him and in front of the 2nd one. It had the
potential for being a dangerous move but we pulled it off perfectly and
it would have made for a nice little video to review later. In hindsight
I would have enjoyed tacking back to port and covering the 2nd S2 7.9
just for kicks.
The other thing I noticed in this last
shot of my GPS was that we had two very clean tacks. No wandering around
or falling off. That could be because of two reasons. One we weren't
trying to point that high so it was easier or we did something better
than when we rounded the mark. Not sure but I am going to try and do it
again when I round the mark next time. I need to start analyzing some of
my tacks and see if I can determine my angle of sail when reaching too.
Our finish time was good, 38:25.That's almost 4 minutes better than
last week. And instead of being 8 minutes behind the leader we cut that
in half to 4 minutes too. Other than the unexpected jibe it was one of
our cleaner sails too. Overall results ended up like this.
Rank Boat Helm Name Elapsed Corrected
1 Risky Business Fisk Hayden 29:08 35:58
2 Show Me Andy Forrest 35:15 36:43
3 Sail Gator Jerry Brinton 30:04 37:07
4 Endurance Tom Dyll 38:25 39:46
5 Free Spirit Don Hoofring 36:20 41:39
6 Cavu Jack 41:09 41:54
7 Catalina 25 Bob 44:01 46:52
After
the race there were some interesting conversations at Wolfies. Fisk
from Risky Business complimented us that we had come a long way on
Endurance and it may be time to move into a more competitive boat. I
can't deny considering it. I started going to the Rum Races in order to
learn how to get the most out of my boat and own abilities. I can not
fault the boat at all. Its a lot of fun to sail in a small package. But I
need to consider something a little more stable and roomy for my 5
person family and at the same time would be able to race well in the
club. I haven't committed to doing anything yet but my days as a Sea
Pearl 21 owner may be numbered.......
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