Friday, June 29, 2007

Twice the Fun

Race Report from 201 as 21 is still out with a busted stick Note to Richard Sugarman; If you need a hand assembling a new mast let me know; I'll bet we could put it together in and evening or two - Andy

Two races a night are lots more fun, in my opinion. We get one chance to go the wrong way then another to correct our mistakes.
Last Wednesday was no exception; we got out early on Raven and had a good look around the course and tried to guess where Robin Wallace would send us. We quickly found that there seemed to be a righty on the right side of the course and that the flood was much less than on the left. We decided we really wanted the right so went for a boat start with plans to tack immediately after we cleared the boat. A nice gap opened up as a few people arrived early and we nailed the start at the boat and tacked. Reed Baer on 107 tacked on our hip and we began a long port-tack board out towards Jamestown. We crossed ahead of a tug and barge that was shifting from pushing mode to pulling and tacked a liitle early so they wouldn’t block us when we wanted to come back. Reed kept going and was able to come down on top of us with eased sheets and rounded overlapped outside us; well ahead of the rest of the fleet except for our fleet measurer, Kim Roberts, we had a spinnaker wrap and held on just too long as 107 gybed and slipped by.
In the photos you can see the difference in the way the two boats fly the kites. I think 107’s way may be faster and they’ve really perfected the technique. I also think it should be illegal, but that’s beside the point. 107 went on to win the race and deserved to. They didn’t make any mistakes and capitalized on the two we made. Well done guys! Wasn’t there another fellow who sailed with you at one time, too? Perhaps he got the flick for missing too many races.
For the second race we decided—surprise—that we wanted the right again, even though the current was easing. The line was pin-favored, as the photos show, with Nicole Alio and Bill Shore on 74 crossing the fleet on port. But we were afraid of getting stuck over there; especially with so little runway to the war college there was a good possibility of getting pinged back and forth and going slow. So we planned to start late at boat again and bang right. We were about 6 seconds late with a lane to tack so we did. This time we had a bit more company but were able to get to the corner in good shape with Peter Clark on 224 ahead and well to leeward being a nice starboard blocker for us all the way in. We rounded third behind them and 74 and gybed immediately. We gained all the way down but not enough to get an overlap. The inside didn’t pay for Alio/Shore and we rounded second. We covered Chris Whithers on 138 as 224 put a loose cover on us to the finish.
Chris’s third place was enough to clinch the spring series for him on a three-way tie with us and Baer/Burnham who finished fifth in the race to take third for the series.
It’s interesting to look at the scores and see three boats with 13 points, two with 15, and two with 20 all in the top ten. That’s pretty close racing! It’s interesting, too, that if we include the throwouts, 138 and 201 are still tied and 138 still wins the tiebreaker. Cool! Well done, Chris and crew.

Andy Burton #201 Raven

Spring 2007 Overall Results

Overall Score: Last Race Date:06/27/07

Sail Spring 1 Spring 2 Spring 3 Spring 4 Spring 5 Spring 6 Total
1 138 2 1 15* 13* 7 3 13
2 201 19*RAF 9* 5 1 5 2 13
3 107 3 6* 2 3 29*DNF 5 13
4 74 5.0 ARB 4 7* 5 1 8* 15
5 202 14.0*ARB 2 3 12* 6 4 15
6 224 36*DNC 12* 1 7 11 1 20
7 145 7 3 10* 4 12* 6 20
8 217 6 8* 13* 8 2 5.0 ARB 21
9 101 10* 5 9* 6 4 7 22
10 76 4 15* 4 6.0 ARB 10 36*DNC 24
11 245 1 7 8 10* 14* 9 25
12 166 36*DNC 18 19* 2 8 17 45
13 21 9 10 11 25 29*DNF 36*DNC 55
14 59 36*DNC 20 16 18 3 36*DNC 57
15 232 19*RAF 13 17* 17 15 12 57
16 71 36*DNC 17 6 21 15.0 ARB 24* 59
17 33 13 14 21 16 29*DNF 36*DNC 64
18 15 8 21* 20 30*RAF 17 21 66
19 163 11 19* 18 19 21* 18 66
20 127 36*DNC 11 25 DNF 26.0*ARB 19 13 68
21 36 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 9 16 10 71
22 143 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 11 13 15 75
23 29 12 23 23 26* 20 36*DNC 78
24 164 19 RAF 16 14 29.0*ARB 29 DNF 36*DNC 78
25 222 36*DNC 36*DSQ 12 20 29 DNF 19 80
26 1 19 RAF 22* 22 23* 22 22 85
27 108 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 9 11 92
28 14 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 27 18 14 95
29 226 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 15 29 DNF 20 100
30 188 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 14 36 DNC 36 DNC 122
31 17 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 16 124
32 181 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 23 131
33 53 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 26 DNS 134
34= 39 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 144
34= 165 36*DNC 36*DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 36 DNC 144

Allowed Drops 2. Shown by '*'

June 27, summer, then spring...

or is it spring, then summer. Either way here are the results from Wednesday's races. Spring 6: Wind Speed 12: Direction SSW Start Time Wednesday, June 27, 2007 19:00:00

Pos Order Sail Score
1 1 224 1
2 2 201 2
3 3 138 3
4 4 202 4
5 5 107 5
DNC 26 217 5 ARB
7 6 145 6
8 7 101 7
9 8 74 8
10 9 245 9
11 10 36 10
12 11 108 11
13 12 232 12
14 13 127 13
15 14 14 14
16 15 143 15
17 16 17 16
18 17 166 17
19 18 163 18
20 19 222 19
21 20 226 20
22 21 15 21
23 22 1 22
24 23 181 23
25 24 71 24
DNS 25 53 26
DNC 21 ----
DNC 29 ----
DNC 33 ----
DNC 39 ----
DNC 59 ----
DNC 76 ----
DNC 164 ----
DNC 165 ----
DNC 188 ----
Summer 2: Wind Speed 14: Direction SSW Start Time Wednesday, June 27, 2007 17:45:00
Pos Order Sail Score
1 1 107 1
2 2 201 2
3 3 143 3
4 4 245 4
5 5 138 5
6 6 101 6
7 7 232 7
8 8 224 8
9 9 74 9
10 10 163 10
11 11 145 11
12 12 226 12
13 13 202 13
14 14 127 14
15 15 181 15
16 16 108 16
17 17 36 17
18 18 71 18
19 19 222 19
20 20 1 20
21 21 14 21
22 22 17 22
23 23 166 23
24 24 15 24
DNF 25 53 26
DNC 26 21 36
DNC 27 217 99 ARB
DNC 29 ----
DNC 33 ----
DNC 39 ----
DNC 59 ----
DNC 76 ----
DNC 164 ----
DNC 165 ----
DNC 188 ----

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Tanker traffic and Sailing

a recent post on the sailing world blog tells of last Tuesday's canceled racing due to High Interest Vessels passing through the bay. http://forums.sailingworld.com/blogs/?q=node/60

Thursday, June 21, 2007

June 20, 2007, Summer Series begins

Summer 1: Wind Speed 6: Direction NW Start Time Wednesday, June 20, 2007 17:45:00

Pos Order Sail Score
1 1 74 1
2 2 107 2
3 3 201 3
4 4 101 4
5 5 202 5
6 6 224 6
7 7 217 7
8 8 108 8
9 9 226 9
10 10 36 10
11 11 245 11
12 12 59 12
13 13 232 13
14 14 145 14
15 15 138 15
16 16 222 16
17 17 33 17
18 18 53 18
19 19 127 19
20 20 71 20
21 21 165 21
22 22 15 22
23 23 14 23
24 24 1 24
25 25 29 25
DNC 26 163 99 ARB
DNC 21 ----
DNC 39 ----
DNC 76 ----
DNC 143 ----
DNC 164 ----
DNC 166 ----
DNC 188 ----

June 17, Father's Day

Weekend race results from Sunday Race 1

  1. 232
  2. 224
  3. 160
  4. 201
  5. 245
  6. 138
  7. 15 p
  8. 203 not registered
  9. 107
  10. 29
  11. 164
  12. 217
  13. 101 DNF p Seeking redress
Race 2
  1. 224
  2. 245
  3. 138
  4. 101
  5. 232
  6. 160
  7. 201
  8. 107
  9. 15
  10. 29
  11. 203 DNF
  12. 217 DNF
  13. 164 DNS
Race 3
  1. 201
  2. 101
  3. 224
  4. 138
  5. 107
  6. 232
  7. 160
  8. 15
  9. 245
  10. 29
Racing was excellent last Sunday (June 17) with 13 boats showing up to sail three no-spinnaker races in 10 - 15 knots of breeze. It was Father's Day so there were several boats with fathers sailing with their kids; Jay Gowell on 232 was one, John Burnham on 107 showed up with his entire family and so did Platt Johnson on 101 (of course Rachel Burnham and Nancy Johnson are Wednesday night regulars, too). The crew on 224 thought it was part of the Aloha Series and got style points for showing up in aloha shirts and with a bikini-clad crewmember soaking up the rays on the back porch on the runs. Bob Hunte ran the races on a good windward-leeward course between marks Q and 6. And contrary to everyone's expectations, with a swift ebb it wasn't a dash for the right hand corner, so the races were interesting with lots of lead changes. The last race was the most frustrating for Robin Monk on 160 who was launched at the weather mark only to sail into a hole downwind as the rest of us brought the breeze to him. A great time was had by all in the Corinthian atmosphere that prevailed. It made a nice change from the intense competitiveness of Wednesday nights.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Introducing the Summer Partners Series

Starting with the summer series, we're introducing an informal, unofficial, experimental and for-the-moment completely secondary scoring scheme for the Wednesday Night series. Partner teams are pairs of boats determined by pairing high + low scoring spring series boats. Since the spring series isn't technically over until the first of (hopefully) 2 races is held on June 20th, partners were scored based on their points through June 13th, with average points (for RC duty) applied to date. After the top and bottom scoring boats were paired, the next pair is the 2nd highest/2nd lowest scoring boats, and so on. Any boat that had more than one DNC didn't qualify to race in this series, but can easily qualify for the fall series by competing regularly in the summer. Here are the summer series partnerships and their spring series points.

  • 1 & 74: 85+13 = 98
  • 164 & 107: 78+14 = 92
  • 29 & 202: 78+15 = 93
  • 127 & 201: 73+20 = 93
  • 163 & 138: 67+23 = 90
  • 15 & 217: 66+24 = 90
  • 33 & 145: 64+24 = 90
  • 232 & 76: 62+24 = 86
  • 71 & 245: 59 + 26 = 85
  • 59 & 224: 57 + 31 = 88
  • 21 & 53: 55 + 37 = 92
  • 36 & 222: 53 + 42 = 94
  • 166 & 143: 47 + 43 = 90
Winners: The top teams are determined during the summer series by combining individual scores and calculating which team's partner points improve the most relative to the spring series. After the summer series, we'll assign new partners and add boats that didn't qualify earlier. If you're looking for prizes, don't. This is for bragging rights, but you never know... For anyone who is confused by this, don't worry about it. Just call your partner on Mondays and make sure he or she has a full crew. Help them fix something or do some pre-race tuning. Share a few laughs. Any complaints should be addressed to the Czar of the Partners Series, whose email address will be made available sometime in November. All his decisions are final unless he changes his mind.

Monday, June 18, 2007

The Irish Are Coming-- boats needed

Dear Shields Fleet Nine Shields Owners, On July 7th and 8th 2007 a team of sailors from Kinsale Yacht Club in Ireland will be traveling to Newport to team race Ida Lewis Yacht Club (ILYC) in Shields. We are looking for 6 Shields owners to volunteer to lend their boats for these 2 days. As an incentive for these Shields owners, they will be invited to not only sail (or an appointed owners representative) but also attend the social party @ILYC on Saturday evening free of charge. ILYC member participants, boats owners, and volunteers in this event may also have the opportunity to travel abroad to Ireland and other countries in future team racing events. Interested Shields owners should contact Dan Faria at 401-225-1357 or dfaria@cox.net ASAP.

Sunday Racing

Racing was excellent last Sunday (June 17) with 13 boats showing up to sail three no-spinnaker races in 10 - 15 knots of breeze. It was Father's Day so there were several boats with fathers sailing with their kids; Jay Gowell on 232 was one, John Burnham on 107 showed up with his entire family and so did Platt Johnson on 101 (of course Rachel Burnham and Nancy Johnson are Wednesday night regulars, too). The crew on 224 thought it was part of the Aloha Series and got style points for showing up in aloha shirts and with a bikini-clad crewmember soaking up the rays on the back porch on the runs. Bob Hunte ran the races on a good windward-leeward course between marks Q and 6. And contrary to everyone's expectations, with a swift ebb it wasn't a dash for the right hand corner, so the races were interesting with lots of lead changes. The last race was the most frustrating for Robin Monk on 160 who was launched at the weather mark only to sail into a hole downwind as the rest of us brought the breeze to him. A great time was had by all in the Corinthian atmosphere that prevailed. It made a nice change from the intense competitiveness of Wednesday nights. Well get the results out later.

Friday, June 15, 2007

After last week's blow the grins in the bar were the widest I've seen and the decibel level was double the usual as excited crews told war stories. So I was disappointed to cancel this week for less breeze. In Europe or Australia there would be question of not sailing; are we getting to be wimps in the US? So questions for the fleet-- owners and crews; Should we have sailed last Wednesday? Should we have a "No Spinnakers" flag?

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Crew Available

If you are looking, or are willing, please post comments to this notice and there can be a standing crew list available online. ---- Here's a fellow from the Pacific Northwest who's looking for a boat to sail. He's living here so he's a potential regular. He's done a fair bit of small-boat sailing and a little shields sailing among other things. He e-mails: I'm planning to be down at Ida Lewis again tomorrow looking for a position to crew on a Shields. Please keep me in mind should you or one of your colleagues express a need for an extra hand. My phone is 401-699-2906 Andrew Walker

Quick Notes

Lost Gear:
Please check your foul weather gear- I am missing my NYYC Race Committee jacket (Helly-Hansen with NYYC/ RC Logo)- I think it disappeared from outside the Race Committee locker after racing a couple weeks ago.
Thanks,
Robin Wallace

__ Winslow Regatta: the NOR for the Winslow regatta is available here http://www.shieldsfleet9.org/CHNYC Winslow Cup NOR (2007).pdf
____
The Nominating Committee is looking for Officers of the Shields Class Sailing Association, including a President and National Measurer. Anyone wanting to be considered for a post, please contact Kim at kimroberts04@aol.com, cell 401-864-2531. We need help, energy and direction.

Friday, June 8, 2007

June 6 Race Report, and two more accounts

The first thoughts on arriving at the harbor were - Gee I hope they get a race off tonight, it looks awfully light. I have only been a part of Shields fleet 9 for 3 seasons and this is the most breeze I have ever sailed in on our Wednesday nights. I think that everyone on the water will have a story to tell about what went wrong and hopefully right. Certainly mother nature gave us a few challenges and showed once again who the boss is. I have included a few other folks thoughts so open a brew and relax.

Raja-101 got out about 30 minutes before the start and sailed most of the course. The boat felt good with the fifth crew member we had decided to enroll. Ben Quatromoni was our fordeck, Russel Miller trimmed the chute, Sam Howell did main and tactics and Andy Segal, the owner of Raja, trimmed jib and ran the pit. We felt good with five and thought we had better stiffness although it is a "lot" harder to see with that many onboard.

The start looked favored at the pin but a quick dial up at 2 minutes showed a favor to the windward end. We opted for a safe middle of the line start and managed to live just above John Dory-217's hip for a long tack out towards the dumplings. Most boats looked better on the right but by tucking up inside Dumplings gong we seemed to enjoy a bit of current relief. John Dory-217 who had tacked earlier with Chuck Allen on 202 and Bill Shore on 74 played it perfectly and extended their leads. We rounded 4th and had a good bit of separation on the rest of the fleet so we set our sights on catching 74 and 202. 202 slid to the right and played the leg well while we tried to get inside of Bill Shore at the end of the leg. Unfortunately the extra distance sailed plus Bill's experience still left us in 4th. Our rounding was not one of our best with the jib not all the way up, the main not tuned and the port jib car slipping. In addition we decided that the left was the way to go and forgot about playing the shifts. Result was we lost another 4 boats as 59, 138, 107 and 76 all beat us to the windward mark by playing the right side shifts and the cone of current relief from Rose Island. We rounded the windward mark and set our course to the right courtesy of a slow jybe. Once we were settled into the run we moved to the inside of 201 and then started dealing with the monster gusts. Russel did a great job of tuning the kite and Sam called the puffs so we could soak in the lulls with the kite rotated to windward and then ease the guy and trim the spinn sheet and main sheet to survive the gusts with a higher angle. It was an interesting leg as one kite after another blew up. We watched 107 execute a perfect 10 wipeout although we missed seeing their impromptu bottom scrubbing efforts. John elaborates on them further below. 202 also had kite issues although I am not sure exactly what they were as they tried to fly something for a while before giving up. We caught a few of these boats before our own spinnaker halyard parted at the head which was probably a good thing. We got to the leeward mark in 6th and rounded just behind 201 but with a narrow lane just to windward of his line again proving that Shields like a nice slow turn. Up the last leg we held 201 to the starboard layline by keeping just above them so that they couldn't tack. When we finally tacked for the RC boat, which was favored by quite a bit, we ended up catching 202 as well. After the race I debriefed a few folks who trounced us on the second leg. Andy MacKechnie on 138 said it was mostly good fortune that they played it correctly as they were really trying to free their air. When they tacked to starboard to make it around the red buoy off Rose Island Light they were on the layline with a nice righty. Sailing in clear air really does pay off although I suspect that the crafty Chris Withers meant to go that way all along. Bill Shore who stayed cool and collected just stayed perfectly in phase the entire 2nd leg while playing the right side. He credits a new deck mounted Plastimo Compass (just the parts with no plastic fittings) with making the shifts easy to read. His crew Curtis takes the credit for actually watching it and paying attention to it's rotations. Congrats to them on a well earned victory.

I want to thank Peter Gerard, who stepped in for Robin Wallace, and his excellent race committee team for a wonderful and memorable evening of sailing without whom we would just be the pretty boat cruising society.

Submitted by Platt Johnson helm 101-Raja

-- Platt:

I heard you were doing the writeup for last night's adventures. I thought I'd give you the inside scoop on how you passed us on the last run:
I tipped the boat over last night in a big gust of wind, and I went swimming. Our boat (107) was riding about 5th, most of the way down the second run, and smugly gaining on other boats that had blown out their chutes. The boat laid over to leeward quickly in the puff and, with the vang on, the boom self-trimmed as it hit the water and the boat laid over on its side. Perched to windward but trying to pull the tiller in my direction, I got pitched to leeward and stepped for the seat, but it was too vertical to hold me. Judging from the gash in my shin, I hit the coaming and the rest of me kept on going.
As I hit the water I remember thinking two things: 1) I'm glad I have my PFD on and 2) I'm not letting go of the tiller extension. I held on tight even as my body tacked violently under water from leftside forward to right; judging from how sore my right hand is today, I had a death grip on the extension and fortunately the universal joint held up, perhaps better than the joint in my right shoulder, which is a little sore this morning.
The boat slowed down dramatically (taking a big drink of the Bay in the process) and with my free left hand and forearm, I grabbed the toe rail as evidenced by the new bruise on my forearm. I was half back in the boat by the time the rest of our crew realized I'd been displaced; they were busy releasing the vang and trying to figure out how to drop the chute, which had blown through the foretriangle and was flagging to leeward at 25 or 30 knots. Pete, on the foredeck, got banged in the head by the pole as we got the chute down and the process took us several minutes, so when all was said and done, we elected to head for the mooring and lick our wounds, happy to all still be aboard with nothing more seriously damaged except our egos.

John B, 107

--
The view from the front of 101-Raja by Ben Quatromoni

To start out with I would like to point out how important it is to make sure you are properly equipped for anything while on the water. I think the front of the boat learned the importance of carrying spray gear at all times even when the weather looks like a drifter!! Another big lesson was to keep your head out of the boat no matter what. Up the 2nd beat, I think we had our heads too in the boat dealing with equipment malfunctions and failed to notice the advantage going up the right. This let most of the fleet get leveraged out to the right but were still able to round in 9th. The last downwind run made it perfectly clear just how hard it is to sail a shields downwind in big breeze. Some well timed equipment failures on some of the leaders, we were able to pass boats until our own spin halyard broke. Cool heads prevailed and we controlled the situation and managed to round in around 6th. The last beat was short as usual and by slightly overstanding the boat layline we were able to pick off 2 boats at the finish and finish a solid 4th. A great race with some thrilling and exciting moments made for an excellent evening. This race really demonstrated to me the importance of communication and keeping your head out of the boat and on the course. Overall a great race sailed!!

Sincerely, Ben Quatromoni - Foredeck 101 Raja

Thursday, June 7, 2007

June 6, Overall results to date

Fleet 9
File: 2007 Spring Scores
Class: Shields. One design (Finish position)
Overall Score: Last Race Date:06/06/07

Sail Spring 1 Spring 2 Spring 3 Spring 4 Spring 5 Total
1 107 3 6 2 3 29*DNF 14
2 74 99.9*ARB 4 7 5 1 17
3 201 19*RAF 9 5 1 5 20
4 138 2 1 15* 13 7 23
5 202 14.0*ARB 2 3 12 6 23
6 217 6 8 13* 8 2 24
7 145 7 3 10 4 12* 24
8 101 10* 5 9 6 4 24
9 245 1 7 8 10 14* 26
10 224 34*DNC 12 1 7 11 31
11 76 4 15 4 99.0*ARB 10 33
12 166 34*DNC 18 19 2 8 47
13 21 9 10 11 25 29*DNF 55
14 59 34*DNC 20 16 18 3 57
15 232 19*RAF 13 17 17 15 62
16 33 13 14 21 16 29*DNF 64
17 15 8 21 20 30*RAF 17 66
18 163 11 19 18 19 21* 67
19 71 34 DNC 17 6 21 99.0*ARB 78
20 29 12 23 23 26* 20 78
21 164 19 RAF 16 14 29.0*ARB 29 DNF 78
22 127 34*DNC 11 25 DNF 26.0 ARB 19 81
23 1 19 RAF 22 22 23* 22 85
24 143 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 11 13 92
25 36 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 9 16 93
26 222 34*DNC 34 DSQ 12 20 29 DNF 95
27 108 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 9 111
28 226 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 15 29 DNF 112
29 14 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 27 18 113
30 188 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 14 34 DNC 116
31= 39 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 136
31= 53 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 136
31= 165 34*DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 34 DNC 136


Allowed Drops 1. Shown by '*'


June 6, 2007

Spring 5: Wind Speed 15 (i'm not sure about this see chart below), Direction W Start Time Wednesday, June 06, 2007 17:45:00
Pos Order Sail Score
1 1 74 1
2 2 217 2
3 3 59 3
4 4 101 4
5 5 201 5
6 6 202 6
7 7 138 7
8 8 166 8
9 9 108 9
10 10 76 10
11 11 224 11
12 12 145 12
13 13 143 13
14 14 245 14
15 15 232 15
16 16 36 16
17 17 15 17
18 18 14 18
19 19 127 19
20 20 29 20
21 21 163 21
22 22 1 22
DNF 28 107 29
DNF 25 164 29
DNF 26 33 29
DNF 24 222 29
DNF 27 21 29
DNF 23 226 29
DNC 29 71 99 ARB
DNC 39 ----
DNC 53 ----
DNC 165 ----
DNC 188 ----

and this picture more accurately describes the night,
Boat 76, William Crisp, has offered his brand new spinnaker (all blue) to any boat that may need one after last night. The sail is on the shelf and has never been used. He'll wait for another to be built. Best, Chuck Allen North Sails One Design

Monday, June 4, 2007

Race Report, May 30

Shields report from 145

Race 4, 5/30/07 In Race 4 of the Spring Series we on 145 followed Andy Burton … and this time it paid off.

Before the race we were thinking that we had to get into Fort Adams and engage in the inevitable tacking duel that would ensue up the shoreline. The tide was flooding and the wind seemed solid on the shore. So we started in the pin end half of the line. To leeward was 107, 202, 226 and a bunch of others while 217 and 224 were to windward. We approached the harbor in good shape but then fell into a little hole and lost a lot of height, which meant we couldn’t tack and cross 217. Worse, it gave the group to leeward some leverage so that when they tacked they’d all cross us. So we bailed outta there early.

Now we were mixed up in the tacking duel up the beach. We called for water once or twice and had others call it on us once or twice. We felt we were going well and making gains but, in hindsight, we made the best gains offshore, outside of everyone. We should’ve been more aware.

We kept the tacking game going but it didn’t pay well for us and we rounded the windward mark somewhere around 15th-17th. Not good. On the first run we headed offshore and made some nice gains riding the current downwind. There also was clean pressure. We moved up to around 10-12 at the leeward gate and then banged the right side. Hard. It worked for 201, 166 and 188 on the first leg, who led the fleet of nearly 30 around the first mark. So we reasoned it could work for us on the second uphill. And it did. Nicely.

We rode port until 107, who we were following about 6-8 lengths behind, tacked to starboard. We followed suit and rode that tack all the way back to the shoreline where we met up with 217, who promptly tacked on us. Again. We rounded the 2nd windward mark in fifth, just behind 217, and then jibed offshore after setting.

Once again, we were in slightly more current out there and clean pressure and we got to the gate in fourth, ahead of 74 and 217. Up the final, short beat there wasn’t much going on and we held our position for a very satisfying comeback. Sure, it was a flier, but they’re deeply satisfying when they work. And there was no sense in following the clump up the shoreline.

But why does that strategy work? It seemed last week that there was better pressure over there, and it was slightly right of the starting line and left shoreline, which seems to negate the adverse current that was running. That certainly was the case for us on the second upwind. Also, you’re not tacking as much. As we all know, Shields hate to be maneuvered. But keep ‘em in a straight line and they move along nicely. So the combo of better pressure, better angle and fewer maneuvers helped move us up. And special thanks to Andy for leading the right way.

Respectfully submitted,

145

Friday, June 1, 2007

Overall Results to date

Two races remaining in the Spring Series
2007 Spring Scores
Class: Shields. One design (Finish position)
Overall Score: Last Race Date:05/30/07

Sail Spring 1 Spring 2 Spring 3 Spring 4 Total
1 107 3 6* 2 3 8
2 145 7 3 10* 4 14
3 201 19*RAF 9 5 1 15
4 138 2 1 15* 13 16
5 245 1 7 8 10* 16
6 74 99.9*ARB 4 7 5 16
7 202 14.0*ARB 2 3 12 17
8 224 33*DNC 12 1 7 20
9 101 10* 5 9 6 20
10 217 6 8 13* 8 22
11 76 4 15 4 99.0*ARB 23
12 21 9 10 11 25* 30
13 166 33*DNC 18 19 2 39
14 33 13 14 21* 16 43
15 71 33*DNC 17 6 21 44
16 232 19*RAF 13 17 17 47
17 163 11 19* 18 19 48
18 15 8 21 20 27* 49
19 164 19 RAF 16 14 29.0*ARB 49
20 59 33*DNC 20 16 18 54
21 29 12 23 23 26* 58
22 127 33*DNC 11 25 DNF 26.0 ARB 62
23 1 19 RAF 22 22 23* 63
24 222 33*DNC 33 DSQ 12 20 65
25 36 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 9 75
26 143 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 11 77
27 188 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 14 80
28 226 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 15 81
29= 14 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 99
29= 39 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 99
29= 53 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 99
29= 165 33*DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 33 DNC 99

Allowed Drops 1. Shown by '*'