Thursday, September 27, 2007

End of the Season

Results Fall Series #5: Wind Speed 13: Direction SSW Start Time Wednesday, September 26, 2007 17:15:00

Pos Order Sail Score Note
1 1 217 1
2 2 74 2
3 3 145 3
4 4 138 4
5 5 232 5
6 6 201 6
7 7 226 7
8 8 108 8
9 9 202 9
10 10 107 10
11 11 59 11
12 12 181 12 Protest Pending
13 13 101 13
14 14 224 14
15 15 15 15
16 16 36 16
17 17 166 17
18 18 17 18
19 19 76 19
20 20 143 20
21 21 254 21 Protest Pending
22 22 222 22 Protest Pending
23 23 163 23
24 24 164 24
25 25 1 25
26 26 14 26
DNC 21 ----
DNC 29 ----
DNC 33 ----
DNC 39 ----
DNC 53 ----
DNC 71 ----
DNC 121 ----
DNC 127 ----
DNC 160 ----
DNC 165 ----
DNC 185 ----
DNC 188 ----
DNC 245 ----

Oh boy, the last race of the season, five boats in the hunt for the season series, 20 knots from the southwest, and a good-sized fleet on deck. The start was set just east of Rose Island, with a beat against a strong flood tide to Hammersmith, back to a leeward gate by the bridge and a short beat to the finish. We’d brought our whole crew (6 of us!) and felt fast in the warmup; the tough question was whether to sail up to the Fort and short tack the shore from there, or to hit the righthand corner hard, a move that’s been working all season but didn’t seem such a sure thing with the breeze truly southwest (a little bit right of some nights) and a stronger breeze and flood tide.

Robin, Fun, Dan, and company set a good long starting line but we still managed to arrive late in a congested part not far from the weather end. The gun sounded with us sucking bad air in the second row behind Jay Gowell in 232 alongside Chris Withers in 138. Both of us tacked after a minute to clear our air and found a good lane going over to the Cone of Rose Island, but as we came up past the green can, 138 started pinching us off and we had to take a clearing hitch.

Here we made mistake number 2: Our angle on starboard looked good, aiming up past the Fort, and it seemed as if we had the bulk of the fleet to leeward in good control, so rather than tacking back with Chris to the right, we sailed back to the left side and soon proved (again, I think, because I’ve tried this once or twice before) that you can’t play both sides of this particular beat. Our angle got a little worse and the boats coming out past the Fort got the current relief they’d been seeking. Soon we were into the ping pong tacking game, just past the Fort, and watching 217, 145,and 74 forge ahead. Only 2 or 3 boats can play that game comfortably, and we weren’t going to be one of them. And now here came Chris out of the right corner, comfortably in about third place, along with Andy Burton in 201, maybe in sixth.

Things deteriorated from there for us, almost hitting the mark with Chuck in 202 alongside grumbling that we’d finished our tack inside the two length circle; then I pulled a surprise jibe on the crew and we had a really most excellent spinnaker snafu for the first few minutes of the run. (I take all the credit for that!)

But…looking on the bright side, it was a beautiful breeze on a beautiful night, and it’s been a fun season of good competition and time spent on the water. Reed, Rachel, Matt, Pete, and Ted have been consistently aboard 107 with me, keeping us going fast and handling the sails really well. Also, based on a review of the scores, I think I’m going to have to share the tiller with some of them more next year.

Overall, our fleet seems stronger than ever—just ask Pete Denton in 226 how easy it is to win the Nationals and then come back and get no respect on Wednesday nights. And we have new boats such as 17, 76, and 108 who are only going to get faster next year.

Congratulations to Nicole and Bill on 74 on winning the Wednesday night season series; according to Nicole, they almost didn’t sail last night’s race; they were sailing around the anchorage under jib alone looking for a fourth crew to pick up, and they found one. Ted on 145 sailed an excellent season—and Nationals—as did Chris on 138. I think our fleet captain, Andy Burton, may have made the biggest improvement over last season and got some silverware for it. Nice going, Andy. We’ll see you in Right Cornersville next spring.

John Burnham, 107

Friday, September 21, 2007

Photos

photos submitted by Reed Baer

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Announcements

The Sail for Hope is our last race of the season go to www.sailnewport.org for details. It counts for the Kendall Cup and raises money for a good cause so let's get a bunch of Shields out.

The hoist at Sail Newport will be open 9-5 seven days a week so we can get our boats out.

Next Wednesday is our last evening race. We'll try to get two races in to make up for this week but with the shortening days; no promises. Anyway, we will have FREE BEER and PIZZA after sailing at Ida Lewis. Bring your crew and everyone's SO and celebrate a successful season of Fleet 9 racing. (It seems like just last week we had our first race of the season.)

-Andy

Shields Race ?

Here is yesterday's Race Report. A picture is worth a thousand words- Michael Brown (sorry the image didn't make it in the email)

Friday, September 14, 2007

September 12, 2007, Fall #4

Fall Series #4: Wind Speed 6: Direction NW Start Time Wednesday, September 12, 2007 17:22:00

Pos Order Sail Score
1 1 107 1
2 2 224 2
3 3 138 3
4 4 202 4
5 5 232 5
6 6 145 6
7 7 226 7
8 8 181 8
9 9 76 9
10 10 217 10
11 11 201 11
12 12 74 12
13 13 17 13
14 14 59 14
15 15 245 15
16 16 166 16
17 17 15 17
18 18 127 18
19 19 164 19
20 20 14 20
21 21 36 21
22 22 163 22
23 23 71 23
DNF 24 165 25
DNC 25 53 99 ARB
DNC 1 ----
DNC 21 ----
DNC 29 ----
DNC 33 ----
DNC 39 ----
DNC 101 ----
DNC 108 ----
DNC 121 ----
DNC 143 ----
DNC 160 ----
DNC 185 ----
DNC 188 ----
DNC 222 ----
DNC 254 ----

Race Report for September 12th, Fall Series

Wind out of 305 degrees at the start at 10 -12 knots velocity. Low tide was back at 2:31PM giving the fleet a strong flow South to North… point your bow at a mark and watch it walk around the clock. These boats figured it out:

1st- #107 6th- #145

2nd- #224 7th- #226

3rd- #138 8th- #181

4th- #202 9th- #76

5th- #232 10th- #217

24 Boats out on the course for this gorgeous evening, John Ghiorse would have given it a 9 out of 10 on his scale. On 76 we saw puffs coming from the right and set up to start on the committee boat end, along with a good crown of 59, 224, 201 and more…. It was a little discouraging to our boat when we approached the bouy at Rose Island to have a boat coming back at us to honor the mark so we guess the middle right was not as fast as the right side of the course. Interesting approach to the first weather mark, #17 (the red boat) did a port approach and stuck it in with a tack to lay the mark inside of two boat lengths… nice with no fouls. From our vantage on the left side of the first downwind ride the breeze was constant and we swept down on the tide which gave us a little heat for our angle into the right gate.

The second windward leg played out the same for us but the second downwind leg gave us a couple jibs forced by the wind going a little right and the tide continuing to push left.

On #76 we feel like the “new kids on the block” since we’ve only been in the boat about 6 weeks. Most of the guys are out of Etchells and we had some trepidations when we looked at this boat, that we might not “enjoy” the Shields experience… Those feelings have long gone under the keel! On the ride back to the mooring, settling back with a cold one, it was Paul Sollitto who summed it up, “boy, that was a fun race”. So on #76, we’re really enjoying the racing… and we like our new boat. I had prepped to do this race report, even brought a small recorder to keep notes… BUT I didn’t check the batteries, so this is the short version.

#76 Paul Sollitto – Ted Green – D-Mac – Ike Bowen – Dave Sunberg

Monday, September 10, 2007

Aloha Series Results 9/9/07

Aloha Series Results Sept 9 2007 201: 4,1,2 7
245: 3,7,1 11
232: 1,3,7 11
138: 2,5,4 11
107: 6,4,3 13
74: 7,2,5 14
164: 5,8,6 19
121: 9,6,8 23
15: 8,9,9 26

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Fall Race 3 Post-Race Report from Shields #15

When we arrived at the dock, the wind was out of the SE at about five and the expectation was for light breeze and the need to hurry to get out to the course in time. As we gathered our stuff, however, the sea breeze arrived, with 10-12 knots inside the Navy marina. I thought of my conversation earlier in the afternoon with Chris Withers who was scheduled for race committee, and my comment it might be a good day to have RC duty. Not anymore, and picked up fifth crewmember for insurance. After the course signal was posted, we drove past the pin and caught an interesting sight, as Lime Rock (with the aforementioned CAPT Withers onboard), had wrapped their prop around the pin line while trying to drag it forward. Knowing Robin would have to postpone, we beat towards Goat Island to check out the current along the shore. While we noticed the current was ebbing already, the more important find was that the wind went progressively left, so we abandoned our plans to start at the boat end of the line and decided for a start closer to the pin. Just as well, because AP wasn’t up very long, we got caught upwind of the line, and by the time we got back to the pin there were only two minutes left in the sequence. Bill Doyle in 222 was even further upwind and barely got back in time. Fortunately we found a hole and tacked back onto starboard about 50 seconds before the gun and were able to keep our air clear before the start…well, other than Peter Clark in 224 who rode over the top of us about 15 seconds before the gun, but he was gone pretty quick. We had decent speed at the start and clear air (first time in a while at the pin end of the line). My crew noted the port-starboard encounter at the pin (believe between 101 and 53, though Chris on the mark boat thinks it was 217 vice 53) and the resounding bang, and when I glanced to see what the other boats were doing, a strange sight unfolded, as no less than 2-3 starboard tack boats ducked port tackers that were trying to clear their air…they really wanted the left side of the course like we did. We ended up getting pinned left by 53, but as we slowly were headed, we eventually were able to tack and cross them. Upon tacking, we noted Andy (Bang Hard Right) Burton in 201 was even further left than we were, so we figured we weren’t too bad off, although we appeared to be well overstood for the windward mark. After letting a little out of the bank (why do we keep doing that), about three quarters of the way up the course we got the bad news as we fell out of the lefty and the wind went way right and the boats on the right began to cross us. Fortunately, we at least made the Dumplings and went all the way to the rock along the shore inside Quebec. We tacked at the rock and leebowed 222 (sorry Bill, but crossing you wasn’t an option with the rock there). After clearing the rock, we tacked back for clear air and the starboard layline, and rounded with only two or three boats behind us. The run downwind was a good one, as we were able to team up with 188 ahead of us to gas Stubby in 59 and 21 and past them, and then we reached over 188 and pass them as the wind continued left, and then watched Stubby return the favor and ride 59 over the top of 188. We were back in the lefty we saw before the start and the first half of the first beat, so we settled on east gate since we were right already and that gate was further upwind. We had a great mark rounding, having clear air even with the ebb pushing the boats ahead of us upwind, held it for about five boat lengths until we found a clear lane and tacked. Then we found out fairly rapidly that it was a fetch to the finish (so the boats that went to the west gate ended up making out as they were less overstood…ugh!), and we lost several of the boats we overtook downwind. When it was all over we felt fortunate to put six boats behind us. Congrats to Bill and Nicole in 74, Chuck Allen in 202, and Dan Holloway in 127 for doing the best job of figuring out which way the wind was going and finishing top three, and to Bernie Patterson in 163 who put a Navy boat in the top half of the fleet for the third straight week. Thanks also to Robin Wallace and the RC who persevered to get a race off and had to watch the wind play havoc with the course they set. Ron Oard Shields #15

September 5, Fall Race 3

Fall Series #3: Wind Speed 8: Direction SSW Start Time Wednesday, September 05, 2007 17:45:00

Pos Order Sail Score Note
1 1 74 1
2 2 202 2
3 3 127 3
4 4 76 4
5 5 181 5 Protest Pending
6 6 201 6
7 7 224 7
8 8 145 8
9 9 217 9
10 10 166 10
11 11 17 11
12 12 53 12
13 13 163 13
14 14 245 14
15 15 107 15
16 16 254 16
17 17 226 17
18 18 222 18
19 19 232 19
20 20 165 20
21 21 14 21
22 22 36 22 Protest Pending
23 23 188 23
24 24 143 24
25 25 15 25
26 26 59 26
27 27 164 27
28 28 101 28
29 29 21 29
30 30 108 30
31 31 71 31
DNC 32 138 99 ARB
DNC 1 ----
DNC 29 ----
DNC 33 ----
DNC 39 ----
DNC 121 ----
DNC 160 ----
DNC 185 ----

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Classic Yacht Regatta results

>1 Raven 201: 1,1,2: 4
>2 Mahi 121: 2,4,3: 9
>3 Diversion 160: 4,5,1: 10
>4 Abigail 76: 3,6,4: 13
>5 Karaselet 74: 6,2,6: 14
>6 Hawk 245: 5,3,7: 15
>7 Fox 232: 7,8,5: 20
>8 Icea 15: 8,7,9: 24
>9 Ultimate Pressure 226: 9,9,8:26