Monday, October 29, 2018

Stooges sound off about SOS


Good Morning Racers,
So, here’s a post Sailing on Sunday question for you: Is it possible for your Race Captain to get egg on his face twice in the same two hour period of Sailing on Sunday? I’ll answer for you, yeah, pretty easy. 
In our case, the first egg was sailing around during the entire pre-start with a fender over the side. You’d think with a 20 foot boat one would easily see the fender tag line attached to a shroud. Apparently not. I could blame having to talk our substitute driver through all our lines and such or that my attention was distracted in attempting to put on foulie bottoms that I bought 5 years ago that now are a squeeze given the most recent 8 lbs of extra beer I’m carrying around my midsection, but alas neither would really excuse the gross style points we lost with that little bumper bumping along beside us. OOPS!! (Thanks go to Rick Perry for legitimizing it.) A dear racing friend (cough, cough) sent me a text after the race to inquire if we sailed the WHOLE RACE with the fender over the side. All I have to say to him is that turnabout is fair play. His day will come.
The second one was a combination of inattention, hubris, and unusually bad, quick judgment. Being the turtle in the SOS fleet, we were approaching the leeward mark (wing dam) bringing up the way-back boats. We didn’t pay much attention to the course announcements at the beginning of the race (see above: substitute driver, fat midsection, etc.) or where the lead boats had turned, and as we got up near the 42nd street ramp, the onboard two stooges convinced ourselves that the rounding wing dam was the second one up river. See, these two stooges have only been sailing a combined 60 years on this river. Apparently that’s not enough time to memorize the courses and mark locations and know the difference between "airport" and "upper airport." Slow learners, we are. 
As we passed wing dam 1 headed to wing dam 2, Stooge 1, “Those two boats turned early.” Stooge 2, “Yeah, they need to go to the next wing dam.” Stooge 1, “Well…” Quick hands Stooge 2 on the radio, “Race Committee, two boats turned early.” Stooge 1, “Huh?…” Merit 25 OB1 (on the radio politely and in the corinthian spirit), “You are headed to the wrong wing dam.” Stooge 1, “Where is that race chart? Here it is…..oh, uh, Oops. Get the kite down and turn around!” Stooge 2, “Race Committee, never mind.” See, too easy coach, too easy. A two egg omelet of embarrassment, so to speak.
Well, the good news is that we weren’t stuck in the mud to get out of McCuddy’s, which also meant that boats coming out of the slough could get out easily, and we didn’t get hit by lightening. (Substitute driver, Quinn, “What happens if lightening hits the boat?” Stooges, “We don’t know, but sail closer to that boat with the taller mast.”)
It actually was a wonderful day. Wind, calm, rain, sunshine, cool, warm…it hit all the notes. Plus, it was the first day of being on a Cal 20 for the Mighty Quinn Flanigan, who drove from the second we left the dock until we tied up at the end. A smile never left his face. He was pumped and did a great job. Helped us old curmudgeons be reminded of why we do all this sailing stuff and how, under the right conditions, a couple of eggs can actually make a soufflĂ©. Yum.
Finally, a true shout out to OB1 for being so professional and courteous about the whole wing dam incident. From my perspective, it's how all mistakes should be handled on SOS, politely, courteously, in the corinthian spirit, and by doing your turns. Good on ya! 
See you on the river.
Denny
Race Captain

Monday, October 8, 2018

Lessons from Moe

Listening to Cullison after the races today I learned their secret of going fast to weather. They were able to sail as fast as we were and higher. 

Brian is a good driver who can follow the subtitles of shifting winds and communicate changes to the trimmers. 

Jim sits on the weather rail and trims the main and jib. He is also able to play the back stay outhaul and halyard tension from the rail. 

This allows them to constantly shift gears to keep the boat fast, high and flat as conditions change. 

They flatten or deepen sails as the winds change. Jim can retrim the main and jib quickly to match changing or shifting winds. 

For example,  in a header or a lift Jim can ease or trim the jib faster than the helm can follow the shift. Once boat is on the new heading the jib and maybe the main can be retrimed. This keeps the boat fast. 

At the same time the back stay and outhaul can be adjusted to keep the sails powered up as winds increase or decrease. 


Jim said they like to keep the main flat with main tension and top open with backstay.  This allows the boat to sail high and fast. It also prevents weather helm. We witnessed that on Saturday.

He said the outhaul position is adjusted about an inch between minimum and maximum. 

This symphony of steering and trimming relies on constant communication between driver and trimmers. 
 
To accomplish all this will require we change where some of our controls are located.

Sailing with three of us allows many of these adjustments to happen easier while having the ability to keep our eyes outside the boat. 

If we want to win we must incorporate these changes to overcome our extra weight of sailing with three people. We need to be cleaver and fast. 

And so endth the sermon for this evening. 

Moe

Monday, October 23, 2017

A Sunday of Fury

Sunday's race was interesting in that with no rain we had winds from almost 0 to 20kts.  The 1st leg from 14 to 18 had great winds from the south.  During the 2nd leg from 18 to 2 winds dramatically diminished and switched from the south to north north west.  The spinnaker leg back to 14 was a slow crawl with speeds over the bottom from less than 1 kt to 3 kts.  

We were in a battle with the J 42 Velocity all around the course.  We rounded 18 just head of them. At 2 we were about 5 boat leans behind them.  On the spinnaker leg we found more air than they did and finished 2 minutes ahead of them.

In the end we finished 2nd overall and corrected 4th with a J 35 and a Olson 30 correcting on us.  First to finish by a mile was a Melgus 24.

All in all a great day with great crew work keeping us in the Hunt.

Weather permitting we will sail again next Sunday.


Fast Freddy

Friday, May 26, 2017

Credit

Last night John reminded us of Huseby's tactic of sailing down the river until you tack for the mark.  Typically with NW wind and the current favoring long starboard tacks it really makes sense.  Remember the old adage "stay on the favored tack as long as possible."  Further, you don't lose one ore 2 boat lengths every time you make extra tacks.

Fred


Nice Start!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Good Wind - good upwind leg.  Came around the mark with a twist in the spinny.  No problem.  We were in the middle.

Boats to the right of us
Boats to the left of us
Boats behind us
Into the valley of lost wind

But we hung in there.  Gawahir was the guy to beat.  We had to stay ahead to pull a third for the Regatta.

Rounded the mark clean.  Locked Gahwir out.

More hats.  Good thing.  I lost 2 during that series.


Monday, May 22, 2017

The bitch wins again!

Was over early by a nose.  Circled back around and headed East in good breeze and DFL.  Stayed in the middle and did well against the Oregon boats – we climbed near the top.  Then the wind lightened and they took off.  DFL again. 
Decided to go for current relief and hit the shore.  We worked the shore for the next three hours and worked our way to the front of the pack again. 
We were second to put our Anchor out at the Bitch (Glenn Jackson Bridge).  So we were second.
The race was called at 5:30 as no boats could make it past the Bitch.
Enjoyed the race with Steve and Cheryl. 
Good day to be on the water.


Worked on the deck again yesterday – I have a long way to go but I have enough to get furniture out again.  Got the lawn mowed and weeded too.

Friday, May 19, 2017

Another Sky day


I'll explain later - I got this at 5 this morning


Craig,
Yep. I looked it up this morning. I’ve cc’d John and Fred here. I’ll send something out to the fleet also. Nice job last night. Curren relief paid off big time. 
D


On May 18, 2017, at 11:44 PM, Craig Daniels <craig@craigdaniels.com> wrote:

10.1) The area between McCuddy’s Moorage and the 42nd Street boat ramp is restricted. A boat shall not sail inside the boundaries that are between the lighted day mark “2” at McCuddy’s Moorage and the end of the breakwater at the 42nd Street boat ramp, and inside the county marker buoys which designate the restricted area. In the absence of county marker buoys boats shall not sail within 150 feet of the moorages or launch area. County marker buoys upriver or downriver of the restricted area do not designate an area restricted to racing.

Clearly the questions we all asked tonight have been asked before.  I somehow don't have skippy's email so if one of you could forward it to them, that'd be great.


-- Craig Daniels

Light air day.  No wind at the dock.  Freddy didn't want to put the sails up.  I put the engine on - Denny put up the Jib - we rigged for a spinnaker.  Tuned to channel 72.

No wind at the committee boat.  Farted around.

Wind cam up light.  Course was 'T' - Downriver upwind start.

We banged it pretty good.

Came to the windward mark and rounded well.  

'Put up the Kite Skippy - NOW!!!'  Kite was stuck  -  I pulled harder.  The halyard came off and skyed to the sky.  

Fred - Oh Shit - We are done- pull the sails down.

Skippy and Denny - 'Fuck off.'

Fred - Use the Jib halyard and take the fraculator off

Skippy and Denny - Way ahead of you.

We were DFL again.

We had a great downwind leg.  We went Oregon shore - looked for breeze - stayed out of current and were 3 around the mark.  

One guy that went way into shore - see the original note.  We protested him.  And like good sailors we discussed it at the dock and withdrew our protest

Monday, May 1, 2017

What a difference a week makes

What a difference a week makes

Last Thursday I put the mast up twice
Last Thursday some of the lines were not run right
Last Thursday I sky'd the halyard
Last Thursday the wind was light and flukey
Last Thursday we had a not so good start
Last Thursday we got in the wrong position
Last Thursday everyone stole our wind and we did nothing about it
Last Thursday we had to fight not to be DFL (dead fucking last)
Last Thursday I was washed up and going to hang up my cleats

This Thursday we battled for first.
It blew like stink on a stink bug
Fred had to hang on tight to not fall off and keep the boat under control
Denny worked his ass off and kept the sail full
Most of the lines were run properly
We got two new compasses and didn't use either of them

I wrote this down because I will remember this Thursday and forget all my Last Thursday's.  Sometimes a limited memory is a blessing and sometimes it not.