Thursday, December 3, 2020

DECEMBER 1, 2020: FIRST SAIL OF DECEMBER

 

DECEMBER 1, 2020         

FIRST SAIL OF DECEMBER

I love winter sailing in Santa Cruz!  Clear skies (if not raining) and steady winds.  I got to the harbor at  about 12:15 and there was definitely wind.  We got the boat ready to sail and as we left the harbor right after 1pm, there was consistent wind across the bay. As we made our way to the start mark, we determined the wind was from 240 degrees.  We set a line mark that was nearly square to the wind. We had six boats out for the fun. We called for course Whiskey 3 and blew a 5 minute horn at 1:55.

My strategy on Pair A Dice was to start last on the line so I would be windward of other boats.  We accomplished this with Aquavie and Tusitala being further up the line. We sailed out far enough to clear the end of the wharf and tacked over on to port.  Tusitala and Auquavie sailed further out before tacking over.

As we sailed further in towards the wharf, the wind decreased but we continued in to the layline for Schuyler mark, to avoid needing to tack twice. This was probably the wrong move because Tusitala and Aquavie had more wind outside. At Schuyler it was Tusitala followed by Aquavie, Avatar, Pair a Dice and Nidaros.

On the long run back to Blacks, the order of boats did not change and at the finish it was Tusitala 48:48, Aquavie 50:20,  Avatar 51:20, Pair A Dice 52:50 and  Nidaros 55:30. Guenter also finished on his Finn but no finish time available.  All times are elapsed and the course length was 3.55 nautical miles.

Race QS:

AWESOME! Everyone is uploading their race QS tracks.  The track for this sail can be seen at: https://raceqs.com/tv-beta/tv.htm#userId=1011017&divisionId=69036&updatedAt=2020-12-02T00:11:32Z&dt=2020-12-01T13:45:18-08:00..2020-12-01T16:11:28-08:00&boat=SAILING%20PAIR%20A%20DICE&time=1606859198515&focus=SAILING%20PAIR%20A%20DICE&rival=Tusitala&tab=fleet&view=auto        

BLANKETTING:

This afternoon, Pair A Dice rounded Schuyler right behind Avatar giving us the opportunity to block their wind on the downwind leg to Blacks. How do you determine if you are effectively blocking the downwind boat’s wind?  Look at your windex!  If the tail of the windex is pointing at their boat, you are blocking their wind.  Alas in this situation, Avatar was able to escape our blocking of wind and sailed away ahead of us.

TUESDAY AFTERNOON SAILING:

I feel fortunate to be associated with such an enthusiastic group of sailors.  Last year the group wanted Tuesday evening seminars with enthusiastic participation through the winter.  This year everyone wants Tuesday AFTERNOON sailing and once again, participation is great for us retired sailors!

Next Tuesday, the club’s marks will be gone and we will have to start at Gov.  Rather than heading to the start mark, go to GOV for the start.  We will call a course from there.

See you next Tuesday.

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

 

Thursday, November 19, 2020

NOVEMBER 19, 2020: CAPTAIN JOSEPH RODGERS

                                   



                                                        CAPTAIN JOSEPH RODGERS

Santa Cruz has a diverse sailing culture.    We have people that see the boats on the water and wonder what it would like to be out there.  The other end of the spectrum are the people in Santa Cruz that are some of the best sailors in the world.  I would classify Joe Rodgers as being in this class.

While Joe was a superior sailor, I did not sense the “racing passion” many sailors have.  This did not detract from his immense sailing knowledge.  Joe was a surveyor of boats.  If you were purchasing a boat, you needed Joe in your corner to ascertain the true value of a vessel.  Joe was an sailing instructor for Pacific Yachting and served a valuable service introducing future sailors to the wonders of sailing.

I didn’t get to know Joe until I got a slip on Q dock where Joes boat “Tessa” was about 4 slips down the dock from mine.  Being an avid sailor, it seems Joe was always at his boat working on it (aren’t we all always working on our boats?)  It seems like there were many times we were both on Q dock working, talking and getting to know each other.  The better you got to know Joe, the more you liked him.  

It was known that Joe was having “health issues” but he never talked much about these issues.  As a Pharmacist, I would comment on his medicines and side effects when he would ask.  He dealt with these health issues in the typical Joe way; never getting angry or begging for sympathy.  It was just a fact he seemed to deal with on his own.  

When his health was ebbing, you would see a for sale sign on his boat.  Then the sign would disappear when he was better.  Finally, he sold his Tessa to Matt and Tosh but Joe was not done with Tessa. He would come to the boat frequently to help and to teach the new owners about Tessa.  Over the last 6 months, Joe’s visits to Q dock got less frequent.  The reports from Matt were not encouraging.

I did not hear about Joe’s demise until I was on vacation and got an email from a club member about a sail out in his honor. I was very disappointed that I could not participate in this sail out.  Joe was so loved and respected by everyone that knew him!   I understand the sail out was well attended and it was a beautiful day. 

With respect and sorrow: Captain Joseph Rodgers  : R.I.P. and FAIR WINDS!

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

     
https://scmemorial.com/tribute/details/2232/Joseph-Rodgers-III/obituary.html                





Thursday, November 12, 2020

NOVEMBER 10, 2020: TUESDAY AFTERNOON SAILING FROM A DISTANCE

 



 



Douglas Mahone


This was the day of the sunny, lovely, flat conditions.  Perfect for a fun day of racing.  There were nine boats out, ranging from a 42’ Jeanneau (Aquavit) to a single handed Finn dinghy.  That’s a great turnout for a work day.  Stefan was filling in for Barry (traveling out of state) on Pair-a-Dice to set up the race. The start was called on time, with the warning at 1:55p and the actual start at 2:00p.  The course was W3: Start, Schuyler, Blacks, Finish. Winds were steady out of the west at about 10 kts.

 

The start was exciting at the left end.  Two boats were on time on starboard tacks near the start mark, when a third boat tried to sail in on port and then tack over to join the parade.  Unfortunately, they were too close to the mark and instead got in irons, blocking the start.  There was a lot of shouting of “starboard”, and apparently a couple of near collisions as the two starboard tack boats had to push up to avoid the stalled out boat on the line.  I was a bit farther to the right, with clear sailing, but my jib blocked the kerfluffle so I may not have a fully accurate description of the situation.  But it appeared that the third boat was barging on boats that had clear starboard tack right-of-way, and further exacerbated the problems by stalling out in irons nearly in front of the others just before start time.  It didn’t appear that there were any collisions, but the downwind of the two starboard boats thought that they fouled the upwind boat, and so did a penalty turn.  The other boats started further down the line without apparent incident, and the race was on.

 

The upwind leg to Schuyler was a lovely sail in a good breeze, and some fairly earnest competition.  Avatar was able to slowly expand its lead, with Pair-a-Dice, Tusitala and Aquavit all being pretty competitive with each other.  Farther back, Nidaros, Toad and Muffin were having their own pretty good race.  At the upwind mark, Avatar rounded first, followed by Tusitala, Dice and Aquavit  in close order. Then came Nidaros, Muffin and Toad.

 

For the downwind run to Blacks, the excitement was between the closely packed Dice, Aquavit and Tusitala. Aquavit was messing with Dice, interfering with their wind, while Tusitala stayed close but clear, with Nidaro in close pursuit.  Nearly everybody had their whisker poles winging out their jibs, and were making good time.  At the Blacks mark, however, nobody had changed position.  From RaceQs, it appears that Nidaro hit the mark, because they did a 360 turn after rounding, and lost some ground.

 

The short final tack back to the Finish had a few interesting moments.  The two big boats positioned themselves upwind of Dice, which may have slowed her down.  Tusitala held on to their lead at the finish, but Aquavit managed to sail over Dice to finish second.  Dice had some gear problems with their jib just before the finish, which lost them some ground.  Meanwhile, Nidaros was nearly caught by Toad and Muffin, who finished close behind.

 

The final results, this time displayed as corrected time, were Avatar 40:48, Dice 45:39, Tusitala 47:39, Aquavit 48:55, Nidaros 51:03, Toad 51:04, and Muffin (no time due to missing PHRF rating). 




 

Sadly, we can’t report on the other boats because they didn’t record a RaceQs track. We really encourage everybody to download that app on their smartphones (only need one per boat).  It’s really instructive to replay the races on the RaceQs website, compare yourself to other boats, and learn.  Here’s a link to the replay from this week:  https://raceqs.com/tv-beta/tv.htm#userId=1066813&divisionId=68698&updatedAt=2020-11-10T23:24:52Z&dt=2020-11-10T13:40:02-08:00..2020-11-10T15:24:51-08:00&boat=Avatar&model=Express27&time=1605049222020&focus=Avatar&rival=Dice&tab=fleet&view=follow&lat=36.955291&lon=-121.995461&tilt=34&range=947&heading=250

 

As those who joined in on these first two races of the post-season know, Tuesday afternoon racing can be really enjoyable.  Pass the word to the other boats, and maybe we can get more sailors involved.

 

Doug.

 

Douglas Mahone


Thanks Doug for writing up this recap since I was in Hawaii on Vacation.


Barry Keeler

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

NOVEMBER 3, 2020: ELECT TO SAIL!

 

NOVEMBER 3, 2020

ELECT TO SAIL!

After getting skunked with no wind for the last two Tuesday evening sails, it was great to see at least 10 knots of wind as we left the harbor right after 1pm.  The wind certainly felt like it had a lot of south in it and as we approached the start area, we took a reading on wind direction.  Sure enough, the wind was coming from 200 degrees.  We set a mark for the start line.  I called for an impromptu course to take into account the more southerly wind:  Start line to SC7, Mile and finish at start mark.  This seemed to be the right length of course for 11 knot winds.  We were set for a 2pm start but some boats needed more time to get to the line so we set up for a 2:10 start and blew the five minute horn at 2:05.  Had seven boats out for the fun.

Setting up for our start, the wind seemed to be getting lighter but still enough to race.  All boats started on starboard tack to get out to greater wind and greater wind is what we got.  Soon we were all sailing in winds greater than 15 knots. 

At the finish it was Aquavie 32:14, Avatar 34:00, Pair a Dice 36:03, Nidaros 39:32 and Toad 42:14. The length of the course was 2.69NM.

Race QS:

The track for this sail can be seen at:  https://raceqs.com/tv-beta/tv.htm#userId=1011017&updatedAt=2020-11-03T23:33:05Z&dt=2020-11-03T13:45:01-08:00..2020-11-03T15:33:00-08:00&boat=Pairadice&time=1604443934015&focus=Pairadice&rival=Avatar&tab=setup&view=manual&lat=36.949926&lon=-121.992612&tilt=8&range=250&heading=134

TUESDAY NIGHT SAILING:

We got off to a good start with 7 boats participating.  It seems like a 2pm start will work well, with enough time for a race even as the sun sets earlier and earlier until 12/21.  Please note that the 5 minute horn will be blown at 1:55. 

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

Thursday, October 29, 2020

OCTOBER 27, 2020: WHAT HAPPENED TO THE WIND?

 

OCTOBER 27, 2020

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE WIND?

Predict wind had indicated that a weak Easterly would develop.  After last week’s disastrous dying of the wind, I was encouraged as we left the harbor shortly after 5.  There was an awesome 11 knot wind coming from about 230 degrees filling the whole bay.  It was going to be an awesome night for a sail!  We set the line and counted 14 boats out for the fun.   We called for a rather ambitious course W5 (to Schuyler and back to finish.  We were counting down the time and getting ready to blow the 5 minute horn when suddenly the wind died.  All eye turned East looking for indications of a new Easterly wind.  We postponed for 5 minutes to see what developed, and then another 5 minute postponement with nothing developing.  Since it was such a short night, we abandoned the race.  We motored out to the wind line for a short sail before returning to the harbor ending the last Tuesday night sail for the season.

 

RACE QS:

Since there was no race, I did not upload my track for the night.

TUESDAY AFTERNOON SAILING:

There has been a lot of interest expressed by the group to continue sailing on Tuesdays through the winter starting early in the afternoon.  Sailing in the winter is a little different from sailing in the summer.  I can think of three differences that need to be considered.

1)     We get rain in the winter.  Like most of us, I have foul weather gear but do not like putting wet sails away with mildew presenting a potential problem.  I do not think anyone likes the idea of sailing in rain during the winter.  In dealing with this, if the weather is not conducive to sailing, I will send an E-mail blast or text by 9AM on Tuesdays only if the races will not take place.  There will be no notice sent if sailing will take place as normal

2)     We get larger waves and shoaling of the harbor entrance in the winter.  We all must make a judgement regarding safety of our boats.  For these races, if conditions are serious enough to present undue hazard, I will also send out a notice by 9AM cancelling the race.  Please be aware that when a swell is pouring into the bay, you may need to time your exit and entrance to the harbor to avoid breaking waves.

3)     The club’s marks that are set for the summer races are pulled for most of the winter.  Once these marks are pulled, we will call impromptu courses over the radio.  The marks we have to work with are: GOV, Mile, SC7, SC3 and Schuyler (Yellow Schuyler mark replaced with small red buoy during the winter).  My inclination is to use Gov as the start buoy with various landmarks representing the other end of the line.  For instance, we could use the extension of the line formed by the end of the wharf and Gov as a start.

Let’s continue to meet at the start buoy until it is removed for the winter.   We will be blowing a 5 minute horn at 1:55 for a 2pm start.

Currently
I have over 100 people getting the notice of the blog.  I do not think it is fair to pester all of these people with notices of “no race” on Tuesday mornings.  I have all of your contact information but need to know if you prefer texting or email notifications.  Also, there should be one person on each boat that receives the message.  Please fill out the following form and either email it back to me or take a photo of the completed form and text it to  831-234-0322.

_)                _)                             _)                  _)                     (_                                                                 

Name of boat;  _________________________ Person to be notified:___________________________

Text phone # _______________________      Email address:__________________________________

Please circle phone or email to indicate preferred method of contact

########################################################

 I am looking forward to next Tuesday for a 2pm start.

Barry L. Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

Thursday, October 22, 2020

OCTOBER 20, 2020: SKUNKED IN FOG

 

OCTOBER 20, 2020

SKUNKED IN FOG

FOG seemed to be the order of the day for Sunday, Monday and Tuesday.  I was encouraged when the newspaper weather forecast called for 12 knot winds for Tuesday.  When I got to the harbor at about 3:30, there was some wind showing on the flags, which encouraged me. As we left the harbor at 5 PM, there was very little wind on the beach, but seemed like a little more outside.  The fog was still present, but you could still easily see over 200 yards.  As we approached the start mark we determined the wind was light but coming from 80 degrees (Easterly).  We called for the shortest course possible B6 and we had 9 boats out for the fun.  We blew the 5 minute horn and set up for the race.

After our poor start a couple of weeks ago, we made certain we were not far from the line and accomplished a good start with fairly clean air.  Suddenly the confused wind set in.  It was interesting seeing all boats sailing at different angles.  We found it did no good to look at the masthead windex since the wind closer to the water was frequently 30 degrees different.  It seemed like the bigger boats with taller masts did better than boats with shorter masts.  We needed a “mast extender”!

By the time boats were approaching Blacks the wind seemed to completely die and the and boats were having trouble rounding the mark.  At Blacks, the first around was Patricia J 19:08, Tusitala 21:08, Perfect 36 21:15, Nidaros 25:00 and Pair A Dice 29:46.  Times are elapsed and the course length was .45 NM.  After rounding Blacks, one by one boats got discouraged and headed for the harbor without completing the course.  We were all skunked with no wind in the fog.

 

Race QS:

The track for tonight’s “race” can be found at:

https://raceqs.com/tv-beta/tv.htm#userId=1011017&updatedAt=2020-10-21T02:15:45Z&dt=2020-10-20T17:30:05-07:00..2020-10-20T19:15:28-07:00&boat=Pairadice&time=1603243052346&focus=Pairadice&rival=Nidaros%20II&tab=match&view=follow&lat=36.953520&lon=-121.985282&tilt=19&range=438&heading=241

DEALING WITH FOG:

Fog comes in a wide variety of intensity. Someone once told me they were stuck in very thick fog (with no GPS) here in Santa Cruz.  He followed the sound to Mile Buoy, then steered a steady course of 360 degrees.  He followed this course and the first thing he saw was after he had entered the harbor.  Fortunately, most of us have a GPS these days and fog is seldom as thick as in this case.

On my GPS, I have a waypoint for 100 yard off the entrance to the harbor and another waypoint for the center of the harbor.  If necessary, I could use these waypoint to enter the harbor in the thickest of fog.

As far as other boats in very thick fog, some boats have AIS but this is a rarity.  When travelling up or down the coast, I have a speaker that I can connect to my radio that will blast a sound every 2 minutes to let other boats know of my presence.  The rules regarding sound systems used in fog vary from boat to boat (size of boat and power or sail).  If you are interested in these regulations, check this website:  https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/33/83.35 Of course, the top of the line for dealing with any fog is the radar if you have it.

On this night, we approached the harbor in the fog and the dark.  If you have never done this, it is quite an experience.  We followed the sound of the foghorn and were confused for a bit with  the lights on shore.  We realized that the lights were the cars on the road and the only light we needed to concentrate on was the flashing green light on the lighthouse which was also sounding a horn. The other lights that were flashing in the harbor were the red light on the red buoy and the green light on the green buoy.

See you next Tuesday for our last Tuesday Night sail of the season, with another start at 5:45.

Barry L. Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

 

Thursday, October 15, 2020

OCTOBER 13, 2020: GREAT EVENING SAIL, WITH A HITCH

 

                                                              OCTOBER 13, 2020

GREAT EVENING SAIL WITH A HITCH

Predict Wind did not give an encouraging prediction for the evening sail, calling for light and variable wind. I got to the harbor around 4pm and the flags showed no wind at all.  As 5 o’clock approached there was a little wind coming from the East.  When we left the harbor at about 5, there was a little texture showing on the water but still light wind.   As if the wind gods realized we had a race to get off, as 5:45 approached, the wind increased to 11-12 knots from 100 degrees.  We set the mark and called for course B5 knowing we could shorten course if the wind decreased. Such is life when you only have an hour to get a race off.  We blew the 5 minute horn at 5:40 for a 5:45 start.

While sailing around before the start, we noticed considerably more wind on the inside, closer to the red ball end of the line.  We decided to attempt a port tack start at the red ball, lucked out and timed it perfectly.  As we were approaching our start, someone radioed that Guenter had capsized his boat.  I figured that the closest boat would assist if necessary and Aquavit was the closest boat.

After starting, it was a drag race between Pair A Dice and Sagittarius who also started on port tack further up the line from us.   At Blacks for the first rounding it was Sagittarius, Pair A Dice, Nidaros, Tusitala, Pacific Spirit, Toad, Perfect 36 and Aquavit. For the second time around Blacks, the order was the same except Toad was last to round.

At the finish, it was Sagittarius 27:24, Pair A Dice 29:26 Aquavit (corrected time 29:35), Nidaros 30:03, Tusitala 30:55, Perfect 36 32:07, Pacific Spirit 32:53 and Toad 35:10.  All times are elapsed and course length was 1.8NM.  It was a great evening for a sail, though we did have a hitch with a capsize at the start.



Race QS:

Nearly all boats are using this app which really helps on a night like this.  The track can be seen at: https://raceqs.com/tv-beta/tv.htm#userId=1011017&divisionId=68194&updatedAt=2020-10-14T02:02:11Z&dt=2020-10-13T17:30:03-07:00..2020-10-13T19:02:03-07:00&boat=Pairadice&time=1602636499368&focus=Pairadice&rival=Sagittarius&tab=match&view=follow&lat=36.950552&lon=-121.993727&tilt=25&range=230&heading=77

CORRECTED TIME:

Aquavit was late getting started because of helping Guenter right is boat.  Aquavit crossed the start line 3:19 minutes after the start. I subtracted this time from his finish time (32:54-3:19=29:35).  I think this is the correct way to handle this and will correct any boat’s time in a similar situation.  I do not know if the incident slowed any other boats down.

ANATOMY OF A PROBLEM AND IT’S RESOLUTION:

I asked Guenter to describe what happened and with his permission, this is what he presented.

My start plan was to starboard tack closest to the yellow buoy and then immediately tack again to get out of the way of the big boats.

Having a Casio stop watch hanging from my neck makes it difficult reading the time left and handling the boat at the same time.

When I noticed other boats heading for the start line, I started jibing for the start line while simultaneously trying to figure out time left.

 

I made 3 mistakes in that process:

1.       Didn’t run the downwind angle enough to safely position the boat for jibing.

2.       Didn’t uncleat my traveler lines to make jibing safer.

3.       And most important, moved  too late from the approaching leeward seating to the windward seating to stabilize to boat (because still figuring out time left).

 

Needless to say handling a tack that way doesn’t require much wind to capsize a Finn or any other dinghy.

Having sailed a Finn for over 30 years and capsized a few times, I can blame only my 76 years of age for this. What was I thinking?

 

In the water, I swam around and was able to get the boat upright again by pulling the centerboard down.

Trying to get in, the boat capsized again, probably because of the cleated traveler and/or the mainsheet line was tangled up in the pulley block and/or there was too much water in the boat.

I noticed Aquavit was kindly on standby to help under skipper Michael Hutchinson and his crew. I realized that I couldn’t do it alone and shouted for help.

A young crew member and student of UCSC, Jeremy Burke, jumped into the water and I knew immediately that he was a dinghy sailor too and that I will be in good hands when he asked me to get into the boat and that he will pull down the centerboard to upright the boat.

The plan worked on the first try.

 

I cannot thank Jeremy enough to rescue the boat and me as well as skipper Hutchison.

 

My attitude has been that capsizing the Finn on Santa Cruz water is not an option. Not anymore. I need to practice capsizing and rescue in the harbor.


This is a great chronology of events and an analysis we can all learn from.  I sailed Hobie Cats for 14 years and have capsized well over 500 times.  Hobies all have righting equipment but we quickly learned two critical things for righting the boat: the mainsheet must be uncleated and the bow(s) of the boat should be directed toward the wind.  This technique worked even in stronger winds.  

I am proud to be associated with sailors like Mike Hutchison (skipper) and Jeremy Burke for springing to action and saving the day.  If we ever get out of this COVID situation I want to buy each of them a drink.            

We have two more Tuesdays before the time changes and ends our season.  Due to restrictions imposed by COVID, we may not be able to have a barbecue on our last night.  We can hope this situation changes. If they do I will post it in next weeks blog or send out an e-mail blast.

Pray for wind and we will see you next Tuesday for a 5:45 start.

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

 

Thursday, October 8, 2020

OCTOBER 6, 2020: WIND TAKES A BREAK


 

OCTOBER 6, 2020

WIND TAKES A BREAK

While walking the dog in Aptos early in the afternoon, I could feel a brisk southerly breeze indicating there would be an Easterly on the water this evening.  Getting to the harbor the flags did not indicate much breeze, but when we exited the harbor, the Easterly was materializing with a mild 8 knot breeze.  The wind was coming from 70 degrees and we set a line square to this. I thought this was enough wind to call for course B4, with the option to shorten course to finish at GOV if necessary.  We announced this course and blew a five minute horn at 5:40 for a 5:45 start.  It seems like the five minute horn was taken as a signal for the wind to stop.

On Pair A Dice, we learned a long time ago to not venture far from the start line if the wind is questionable.  We painfully relearned this lesson tonight.  With 20 boats out for the fun, most decided to start at the yellow ball end of the line on starboard tack.  With our poor position, leeward of about 17 boats and very light wind we had no forward momentum and no ability to change our position.  We noticed the boats that had excellent (clear air) starts.  Perfect 36 was first over and Sweet Pea wisely starting down the line in unobstructed air.  Geronimo also had a great start.

About 10 minutes after the start, with the waning wind,  I knew that course B4 was out of the question and shortened course to round Blacks and finish at the finish mark.  At Blacks Perfect 36 was first around followed by Geronimo, Tusitala, Cannonball, Sagittarius, Nidaros, Zoop, New Wave, Pacific Spirit, Avatar, Sweet Pea, Toad, Pair A Dice, Sophia and Aquavit.  As boats approached Blacks, the wind came back up from the East.

On the way back to the finish line it got very interesting as boats that had rounded Blacks and boats still approaching Blacks had to pass each other.  No issues occurred but boats got very close to each other in passing.  Perfect 36 sailed a perfect race and finished first 25:58, followed by Geronimo 26:08, Cannonball 27:16, Sagittarius 27:18, Tusitala 27:44, Nidaros 27:49, Zoop 28:33, Avatar 30:06, New Wave 30:29, Pacific Spirit 31:37, Sweet Pea 32:57, Pair A Dice 34:13, Aquavit 34:43, Toad 34:54 and Sophia 37:08.  All times are elapsed and the course length was 0.9 NM.

It was a beautiful evening with an awesome sunset and a huge lesson learned: sometimes the wind just takes a break!

 

  Race QS:

Almost all boats are using Race QS now!  The track for tonight can be found at:  https://raceqs.com/tv-beta/tv.htm#userId=1011017&divisionId=68003&updatedAt=2020-10-07T01:26:53Z&dt=2020-10-06T17:30:01-07:00..2020-10-06T18:26:49-07:00&boat=Pairadice&time=1602033583749&focus=Pairadice&rival=TOAD&tab=fleet&view=follow&lat=36.951417&lon=-121.993474&tilt=9&range=400&heading=122

When boats start greater than 5 minutes apart, Race QS program does not recognize it as a race and separates boats into different classes.  With some of us starting so late, the program did not recognize it as a race. Not recognizing the event as a race turns off many of the educational functions usually available on Race QS.

 

LESSONS LEARNED:

I just love Tuesday Night Sailing because it gives the opportunity to learn (and re-learn) important concepts in a non-consequential environment.  I have been burned before being out of position when the wind dies and you get stuck behind a bunch of boats in very light wind at the start.  Once again this happened to Pair A Dice.  Some day I will learn.  Several mistakes can lead to this predicament. First is choosing to start at the preferred end of the line with many other boats.  Second is getting too far away from the line leaves you in a vulnerable position when the wind dies. Sweet Pea had the correct approach: close to the line down the line in clear air.

WHEN TO TACK?

Tonight was a fantastic study in the proper time to tack.  We all know about tacking on the lay-line and every boat is different when determining the point to tack on the layline.  Tonight, we had boats rounding and coming back toward us as well as boats coming from behind. When you need to tack  In situations like this, it is good to be cognizant of the situation: clearing the stern or bow of an oncoming boat and the bow of a boat coming from behind.  If not considered and done correctly, you may need to duck multiple boats.

See you next Tuesday for a 5:45 start.

Barry L. Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice