Thursday, January 22, 2026

JANUARY 20, 2026 THE DEFINITIION OF "LIGHT AND VARIABLE WIND"

 

JANUARY 20, 2026

THE DEFINITION OF “LIGHT AND VARIABLE WIND”

Predictions for wind were dismal, and the limp flags confirmed the forecast.  It looked so weak that some boats opted to not come out.  As we left the harbor around 2pm there was a breeze developing by the wharf and we had a break in the predominant heavy cloud cover.  As the clock ticked down, there was a mild 5-6 knot breeze.  The wind was coming from 240 degrees, so we decided to set an offset mark about a quarter mile roughly upwind and called for a course of: S/F>offset mark>Mile>S/F.  We blew the five-minute horn which seemed to be a signal for the wind gods to go back to sleep.  We had 9 boats out for the drift-fest. At the start, boats were drifting across the start line in a 3-4 knot breeze.  Fortunately, as we sailed further out, the wind seemed to increase with close to 9 knots as we approached Mile.   As we rounded  Mile, the wind died and the finish at S/F seemed out of reach as most boats bobbed with no forward movement.

Despite the curse of no wind, 3 boats actually finished the complete course.  I offered the option of taking the finish time at Mile so everyone could stop bobbing.  The first boat to round Mile was Flexi Flyer, then Aboriginal.  Though Main Squeeze sailed and finished the long course, their track froze so I could not report a finish time for them.  The afternoon sail was a definition of “Light and Variable wind”.

 

Jennifer Kinsman photo of the drift-fest
                                           

The track for this afternoon can be reviewed at:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20B&race=20.1.2026%2015:00:00&language=en&defaultspeed=5&loop=no

PHRF ADJUSTED RESULTS : SHORT COURSE: FINISH AT MILE COURSE DIST .965NM

PLACE                BOAT                               PHRF                  ET                         CORRECTED

1            FLEXI FLYER                                96                        19:05                  17:32

2            ABORIGINAL                                33                        19:12                  18:40

3            PERFECT 36                                  144                      25:06                  22:47

4            AVATAR                                         132                      25:03                  22:56

4            ROSIE                                            162                      25:33                  22:56 (TIE)

6            AQUAVIT                                       72                       24:10                  23:01

7            SAILING PAIR A DICE                180                      27:15                  24:21

8            SAGITTARIUS                                120                   26:25                  24:29

LONG COURSE FINISHERS:  COURSE LENGTH 1.930NM

1            ABORIGINAL                                33                         46:17                  45:13

2            FLEXI FLYER                                96                         52:26                  49:21

 

Next Tuesday will be the last Tuesday of the month and we are back on track to have our end of month BARBECUE.  Bring your best grilling food to cook and share.  Pray for fair winds and good weather!

ZOOP SCOOP BY PAUL TARA

PRISM SENTENCES

In geometry, a prism is a 3 dimensional solid shape, with flat, parallel, polygonal ends connected by parallel sides.  A simple example would be the edges of a straight 2 x 4, with parallel ends.  In yacht design, aside from length, beam, and draft, the prismatic coefficient, or Cp, may be the one of the most descriptive statistics when it comes to hull shape. It basically represents how tapered the ends are, as a ratio, relative to the hull’s largest underwater cross section. A vessel  with no change in shape from bow to stern, like a barge (or an un-tapered 2 x 4), has a Cp of 1, or close to it.  The more tapered the shape is at the ends, the lower the number.  

 

Like wetted surface, Cp is difficult to calculate unless you have lines and a CAD program. For many designs it’s proprietary. But, just roughly, sailboats with low numbers tend to have finer ends, more rocker, less wetted surface, and lower top speeds.  Those with higher numbers have fuller ends, less rocker, more wetted surface, and higher top speeds. For example, the Cp of  a SC50 is around .56, while those of similar sized IOR designs could be down in the low .50’s. That’s because Cp is a hull-speed indicator, and lowering it by pinching the ends produced lower ratings. Then, there’s the tricky part, depending on its shape, a yacht’s Cp can change dramatically as it heels (scow bow anyone?).  

 

Modern performance designs, like sprit-polers and, now, foilers, have very high Cp’s, edging towards .60.  The further apart a designer can push the crests of a hull’s bow and stern waves, the faster her “wave train” travels. (Think of a super tanker, where the crest of the bow wave is often ahead of the hull itself.) For a given length, the higher the Cp, the longer the wavelength, resulting in a higher hull-speed, The higher the hull speed, the sooner a boat can achieve her planing or foiling speed. Once that threshold is crossed, theoretical speed limits go out the window..  

 

If you want to view examples of prismatic extremes, just pay a visit to the Club’s Junior Yard, where Optimists and El Toros are stored side by side. Although both designs have hard chines, Optimists are ‘bricks’ with flat bottoms, and little rocker, (high Cp) —they are slugs in light air.  El Toros are tapered, with more rocker and more dead-rise (lower Cp) — they’re faster, until conditions get ‘sporty’ when they become difficult to control. And then, of course, locally there’s the ultimate light-air speedster, the Jester Dinghy, which may have the world record lowest Cp.

 

By the way, the Club is selling a few of its El Toros.  They are ‘well-seasoned’, but you might want to take a look.

Thank you Paul!

I hope to see you sailing next Tuesday and at the BBQ at the club.

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

JANUARY 15, 2026 REGATTA HERO MANUAL BY DOUG MAHONE

Winter ’26 Update on Regatta Hero:
 
For those sailors and skippers who are participating in the Tuesday races want to use Regatta Hero (RH) to track your starts, finishes and results, here are a few notes to help you get the most out of RH.
 
  1. If you haven’t already downloaded and installed RH, it works on both iPhones and most Android phones.  Go to your iPhone App Store or Android Play Store and download Regatta Hero.  When you first start it up, follow the instructions for the one-time setup procedures.  You’ll be asked to enter your Organization: “scyc” and your Passcode: “517949” (without the quotes). You’ll also be asked to edit your Registration Data; it’s self-explanatory.  The only thing that’s new this season is we no longer ask you to enter your boat name in the Sail Number field, or your sail number in the Boat Name field.  That was a work-around to get the reporting and playback features to better identify the boats, but those problems have been fixed, so now just enter the information straight, as the app requests. For “Team”, enter whatever you like (e.g., the skipper’s name). For “Handicap”, enter your PHRF rating.
 
  1. One part of the initial one-time setup that’s less intuitive, are the special settings your phone needs to have adjusted in order for its GPS to accurately record your track. 
 
  1. These are described on the “Welcome to Regatta Hero” screen shown to new users. For existing users, press the “About Regatta Hero” button to review this screen. 
 
  1. Also on this screen is a button urging you to “Read Installation Tutorial (!)”. That takes you to a screen with a button labeled “App Installation”. You’ll be shown specifics for both iOS Apple phones and for Android phones. 
 
  1. If you have an Android phone, please pay special attention to the setup instructions for location tracking.  As you will learn, there are specialized tracking issues due to the fact that the Android operating system is open source, and so each manufacturer is free to tweak their tracking settings.  Some of them have made tweaks that actually defeat some RH functionality and cause some really bizarre (and useless) tracks to be recorded.  RH provides detailed instructions for re-enabling proper GPS tracking on your particular phone.
 
  1. For those of you who have been successfully using the RH app for Tuesday races (most of our racers), I hope you have been enjoying it and taking advantage of its features both to participate in the races, and to study the replays after each race. To review some recommendations and Tuesday race practices:
 
  1. Before the race, be sure your phone is charged and carried on your person (floating waterproof bags are sold at West Marine).  Log in to RH at least a half hour before the start.  For the current winter races, the start time is 3:00p. Because fewer boats are racing now, due to the early start time, we are currently only running one fleet and one start time. When asked to “Choose Regatta”, there’s currently only one choice, “Tues Fleet B”.  When we get back to summer racing, we’ll re-active the A Fleet and the Spinnaker fleet.
 
  1. Also, note the course selected for the race. The Race Officer typically sends out an announcement on the app, identifying the course, which corresponds to one of those on the Course Card you received after you signed up for the Tuesday races. After you select the “Participate” button, you’re taken to the race start screen (orange header), which indicates the chosen Course (e.g., “S5”), and shows the start time in big, bold letters.  As the start approaches, it switches to a countdown timer, accompanied by horns and verbal announcements.  The start time is announced and reinforced by a horn.  To hear these events, be sure that your speaker volume is turned all the way up (same volume as for your ring tone).
 
  1. If, as the start horn sounds on your app, you see that you are over early, it’s on you to go back and start again.  The app is not designed to call out racers who are over early.  But this is sail racing, where much of it depends on the honor system, and racers are expected to obey the rules even if nobody is watching.
 
  1. When you reach the finish line, it’s only marked by one buoy, and is the imaginary extension of a line running from a landmark on the shore, extending through the finish mark, and running 200 feet beyond.  As you pass through that line, it’s advisable to sail straight on until you hear the app blow a horn and announce that you’ve crossed the finish.  Some boats have instead rounded the finish mark and immediately turned for the harbor, and RH did not catch their finish, so they were marked DNF.
 
  1. After the last boat in the fleet finishes, RH blows a horn on all sailors’ apps and displays an announcement that lists all boats, the order of finish (by corrected time), and everybody’s time.
 
  1. All boats can immediately access the RH race replay, by clicking on the Share icon at the top of the screen. This takes you to a screen called “Mapviewer URL (Spectator)”. From there, you can open the link in your phone’s browser, or you can send it to yourself or others by text, email or other means.  It’s possible to view on a phone, but much better on a larger screen. Racers and others can also view the Mapviewer live during the race, although this is quite distracting if you’re trying to race a boat.
 
  1. The race replay has loads of useful information, too much to go into here. I recommend you go to the online help to learn more. The “About Regatta Hero” button will take you there (see item #2 above).
 
  1. After you’ve finished racing, please remember to “Leave the regatta” (on the racing screen), and then to “Log out”.
 
  1. There have been several useful new features added to RH this year.  Some of the most requested are:
 
  1. Save multiple Logins (useful for people who race, but also serve as mark setters, or as race officers, or who race under a different organization). To save different logins, or to access those you’ve saved, before you hit the orange “Log in” button, instead touch the “Enter login data” button. On the small pop-up screen that appears, you’ll see a small button with three dots at the right end of the Organization line. Touch it and you’ll be shown all the different logins you’ve used before. Select one, then click Ok, and you’re ready to Log in.
 
  1. Save multiple boats (useful for people who race on more than one boat). After you’ve logged in and chosen your regatta, the next step is to touch little triangle on the orange Participate button.  If you’ve saved more than one boat, you can select your choice for the current race, and its Registration data will be used.  Tought the Participate button and proceed to the racing screen (the orange Participate button will indicate your choice by saying “Participate as <boat name>”.  To add a new set of registration data, there’s an option on the list of boats that says “New…”.
 
  1. As always, I’m happy to assist with any questions you may have about RH.  Please feel free to call, text or email me, or find me at the club.
 
Doug Mahone, Avatar

(916) 541-6607

JANUARY 13, 2026 AT LEAST A NICE BEAT TO WEATHER

 

JANUARY 13, 2026

AT LEAST A NICE BEAT TO WEATHER

Predictions were for 1-9 knot winds but when I arrived at the harbor at noon, the flags were limp.  As the afternoon progressed, so did the wind and by the time we left the harbor at 2pm, there was a nice breeze developing across the bay.  We determined the wind was coming from 270 but predicted to shift toward 240 so we set a start line that was square to about 260 as boats streamed out of the harbor for another sunny winter sail.

We called for course W5:  S/F>Schuyler>SF  as all thirteen boats jockeyed for position for the start at 3pm.  It was great to be sailing in wind again as we had up to 15 knots of apparent wind.  As we rounded the windward mark, the wind seemed to decrease as usual when changing from a beat to downwind sail. In fact, the wind was decreasing as the last finishing boats drifted very s-l-o-w-l-y toward the finish line.  Oh well, at least we had a nice beat to weather on a sunny day.

The track for this sail can be seen at:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20B&race=13.1.2026%2015:00:00&language=en

 

Jennifer Kinsman photo of Sagittarius on a nice beat


PHRF ADJUSTED RESULTS:   COURSE W5  DISTANCE 2.4NM

PLACE                BOAT                                 PHRF                  ET                         CORRECTED

1            ABORIGINAL                                33                         30:40                  29:21

2            TRUE LOVE                                   72                         36:29                  33:36

3            SAGITTARIUS                               120                      38:40                  33:51

4            ZOOP                                               144                      40:56                  35:10

5            MAIN SQUEEZE                            72                         39:08                  36:15

6            AVATAR                                           132                      42:23                  37:06

7            BIG MAC                                         222                      56:14                  47:21

8            NIDAROS                                        118                      55:22                   50:36

9            WIND II                                           213                      1:00:32             52:00

10          SAILING PAIR A DICE                  180                      1:01:50             54:38

11          AQUAVIT                                         72                         1:01:43             58:50

12          ROSIE                                               162                      1:07:47             1:01:18

 

 ZOOP SCOOP  by Paul Tara

DECISIONS & RUTS

 

Racing off Santa Cruz always presents the same conundrum, over and over — inside or outside. And it always comes up at the same two points in the race, the start and the weather mark.  It’s easy to fall into a rut.

 

Tuesday’s start was unusually vexing. The port end was favored. So, the question became, go for the best start and head outside or, give up distance at the start for an early tack onto port.  True Love made the best start and headed out into more pressure before tacking. The breeze appeared to have filled to the beach, so we went for the latter.  This gave us a long lane of clear air and we were able to clear the end of the Wharf and lay Schuyler with only one tack, rounding just behind Sagittarius and ahead of Main Squeeze.  But the distance given up at the start was too much; True Love was long gone.

 

After rounding, we jibed onto the compass course and set our pole to port, as did Sagittarius. Why? Because that’s what we always do (and what True Love had done). Meanwhile, Main Squeeze headed further out, jib reaching on starboard.  Out into more breeze. At first, it seemed as though we were holding our own.  But then, fitst Main Squeeze, then followed by Sagittarius, began to gain — a lot. In retrospect, it wasn’t that they were getting more wind, we were getting less.  The breeze was dying inshore and we were the furthest in.  Force of habit had sent us into less wind.  

 

In the past I’ve expounded on sailing the shortest course, which usually is the compass course to the mark. But you can’t be myopic about it.  Keep your eyes out of the boat. If conditions change, be prepared to change your plan.  Don’t get stuck in a rut.

 

Thank you Paul.

Starting next Tuesday, the club is supposed to be open and offering food after our races.

I Hope to see you out next Tuesday for a 3pm start.

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

Thursday, January 8, 2026

JANUARY 6, 2026 A SURPRISE WIND

 

JANUARY 6, 2026

A SURPRISE WIND

Once again, predictions were for a light breeze and as we left the harbor at about 2 there was a very light breeze.  As we approached the start area, the wind was even less, close to no wind at all.  Preparing for a no-wind situation, we set a temporary mark for a very short course.  We saw the wind was coming from 290 degrees.  As the clock ticked down, the wind was increasing so we called for course S5: Start>Mile>finish at S/F.  It was a beautiful day on the bay with a 10-14 knot breeze.  After a whole week of incessant rain and stormy conditions, we finally had a clear, sunny day for a sail with a surprise wind.

The track for this evening can be reviewed at:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20B&race=6.1.2026%2015:00:00&language=en



Jennifer Kinsman photo
BEAUTIFUL BLUE SKY AFTER A WEEK OF RAIN

PHRF ADJUSTED RESULTS:  COURSE S5 COURSE LENGTH 1.929NM

PLACE                BOAT                                 PHRF                  ET                         CORRECTED

1            FLEXI FLYER                                  96                         24:43                  21:37

2            AVATAR                                            132                      27:13                  22:58

3            AQUAVIT                                         72                         26:08                  23:49

4            PERFECT 36                                    144                      29:05                  24:27

5            NIDAROS                                        118                      28:31                  24:43

6            SAILING PAIR A DICE                  180                      30:42                  24:54

7            WIND II                                           213                      33:06                  26:15

8            PACIFIC SPIRIT                             165                      31:35                  26:16

 

ZOOP SCOOP BY Paul Tara

OUTRIGGER AMBUSH!

Rule 55.3 says it’s illegal to sheet to an outrigger, which is anything that exerts “outward pressure” beyond the edge of the deck or hull.  Note the word sheet. A few miles from the finish of last month’s Sydney Hobart Race, the overall corrected time leader, a JPK 10.80  (a really cool French 36 footer), rigged with both a short bowsprit and a conventional pole, decided to pole out her asymmetric kite to port, wing on wing. Totally OK, so far. The pole is not an outrigger because the sail is not being “sheeted” to it.(even though the kite is asymmetrical, the clew automatically becomes the new tack, and the sheet automatically becomes an after-guy when the pole goes out). But, simultaneously, the original tack becomes the new clew, which makes the original tack line into, you guessed it, the new sheet, still led to the end of the bowsprit.  Now, a bowsprit or sprit pole is a “hull spar” which does exert outward pressure. You can tack a jib or an asymmetrical to it — no problemo — but not sheet to it. Easy remedies would have been to sail wing on wing without the pole, or lead the tack line (now the sheet) back to the stem-head, thereby eliminating the outward pressure, but they were unaware of 55.3. Unfortunately, you only get one tack and one clew per sail. The protest committee assessed enough of a  time penalty that the rule breech cost them first overall in IRC. Bummer.

 

WIN BY A WHISKER

If there’s wind, our races don’t usually end at the weather mark.  To be competitive downwind in a non-spinnaker fleet, boats need to consider a whisker pole.  So, what’s legal? PHRF is not homogeneous — it’s composed of regional committees — some areas control the length. But San Francisco Bay PHRF Rules simply state, “Whisker pole may be of any length.” 

 

To me, this makes sense. It avoids the hassle of trying to compensate for adjustable length poles which, in a sense, are self-regulating. If you extend one too far, it will suffer catastrophic compression failure.  (Ask Barry — and wear a helmet if you plan on sitting under one.) A popular misconception is that whisker poles are not highly loaded (only real men sail with spinnakers) but that’s not true.  The compression load on a spinnaker pole does increase as the pole goes forward, but it can be controlled by easing the sheet and luffing the sail.  The same is true of a whisker pole, but there’s no back door. The pole is trapped by the tension on the jib foot and the sheet.  Easing the sheet makes little difference;  the sail stays powered-up and will not luff until it’s flogging out forward of the headstay.  A quick by-the-lee bear away can momentarily unload the pole, but crew need to be on their toes.  A good adjustable pole can help; shortening it can take the load off. Another place an adjustable might come in handy could be tacking downwind in light air with the pole set to leeward, where the ability to shorten it might allow a tighter reaching angle.  I don’t know, Zoop doesn’t have one.   I also don’t know why a whisker pole set to leeward is no longer “sheeting to an outrigger”. Maybe it’s because it’s a “spar-spar” as opposed to a “hull-spar”.  But I suspect it’s because the rule makers just gave up and went with popular demand. 

 

Our pole is double-ended, and is rigged with both topping-lift and fore-guy bridles. We jibe end-for-end. The fore-guy acts as the jib’s vang; it controls the amount of twist, and can make a big difference. Without it, when there’s a puff, the pole end rises, the jib leech twists off at the top and dissipates power. Conversely, in light air, no topping lift means the weight of the pole is carried by the jib leech, making it straight and unresponsive.   The helmsman’s job in light air is to find the right compromise between leech tension and apparent wind angle so that the sail stays full and relatively stable. 

Thank you Paul.

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

Thursday, January 1, 2026

DECEMBER 30, 2025 CLOSE, BUT SO FAR AWAY

 

DECEMBER 30, 2025

 CLOSE, BUT SO FAR AWAY

I was encouraged with the predictions of 9-11 knots winds.  Through the early afternoon, the wind was nonexistent.  With a heavy cloud cover, could we get any wind?  As we left the harbor at 2PM there was a wind line showing about a mile offshore slowly coming in towards the start area.  The very light wind was coming from an unusual 140 degrees. We set a windward mark practically a stone’s throw from the start line.  We set the start line mark and called for course E7 as boats drifted aimlessly in the start area. With the wind line getting closer, then receding it was frustrating.  It was totally understandable when boats started retiring from the race to go out and sail in some stronger wind.  Ultimately, the wind did fill in and the boats that had not retired finished the race.  As expressed by one skipper, “we waited 30 minutes for an 8 minute race”.  Kudos to the Nidaros crew who started in clear wind at the port end of the line and was first of the 4 boats to finish.  It was a frustrating afternoon with a windward mark that was close but so far away.

To review the track for this race:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20B&race=30.12.2025%2015:00:00&language=en

PHRF ADJUSTED RESULTS:  COURSE DISTANCE 0.12NM

PLACE                BOAT                                 PHRF     ELAPSED TIME           CORRECTED

1            NIDAROS                                        118       20:07                                 19:40

2            ROSIE                                              162       27:48                                 27:11

3            QUIXOTIC                                       57        32:47                                 32:34

4            ABSLOLUTE 05                              117       37:50                                 37:23

 

RESILIENCE!  

As we enter a new year, I want to express my appreciation for the resilience of our group of sailors.  On this evening It was amazing to witness eleven boats coming out for a sail when there was no wind.  During this season, I have witnessed multiple times when there was very light wind with boats inching their way to the finish line even in the dark.  I appreciate the demeanor, resilience and the Corinthian spirit displayed by our group of sailors.

ZOOP SCOOP BY PAUL TARA

 

AN UNFULFILLED FORECAST  

This Monday, the northern edge of the circulation around a low to the southwest of us produced a beautiful sunny southeasterly (not our usual Santa Cruz Eddy easterly).  I spent the day, gnashing my teeth, fiddling with a shroud roller, knowing that I could have been sailing my El Toro.  But I had to finish the job, because the next day was going to be the last sail of the year.  Mistake. On Tuesday, even though NOAA stuck by their forecast, the earlier offshore, didn’t hold.  By 1300 the Harbor glassed off with no sign of new breeze and I reluctantly called off the crew.  As Barry headed out, whiffs boxed the compass; what Neils Kisling calls “Guilt wind — it shows up after you’ve decided not to sail”.   Beneath increasing overcast, Monterey was as clear as a bell.  “If it’s cloudy and you can see Monterey, it’s gonna rain,” was my parents’ weather axiom.  They didn’t say anything about wind.





A CAPFUL O’ WINDage

Last week’s storm certainly delivered more than a capful, fulfilling NOAA’s forecast of “wide-spread gales with storm force (55-63 kn) gusts.” It also delivered some valuable lessons on windage.  At one point, early on, the forecast included the phrase “hurricane force (63+kn) gusts” which made my hair stand up, but it was later downgraded to “storm force”.  They should have left it in; on Christmas Eve, a 77 knot (91 mph) squall went through that rolled up the beach cats stored on the hard like so many dry leaves, and left the usual trail of shredded tarps and roller-furled jibs, broken dock lines, missing fenders and dock box lids, only to follow it up with an encore tornado warning on Christmas Day.  Mount Hamilton saw a 100 knot gust, which damaged a telescope dome and adjoining structure. But, not much rain locally, so no reenactment of 1955.

 

Let’s talk some numbers.  Wind load increases as a square of the wind speed.  At 77 knots, dynamic wind load is around 15-20 pounds per square foot.  The windage of a 25’ mast, with a 3” cross section (most catamarans have wing masts, which may, or may not be aligned with the breeze) could easily top 90 pounds. (Correspondingly, the windage of a 45 foot roller-furled jib, could easily top 200 pounds!) In the case of the cat, given the mast’s lever arm, 90 pounds is more than enough to flip it and its trailer (not to mention the windage of the trampoline).  This is especially true if it’s not parked head-to-wind. Most of the flipped cats  appear to have been parked beam-on, which would be silly. But they’re so light they may have been ‘re-parked’ by the wind . 

 

Now let’s talk seamanship. Windage is not a new concept. Take a close look at this painting of the frigate USS President riding out a gale at anchor. Her topmasts and upper yards have been ‘sent down’, and her lower yards are not just braced sharp up; their slings have been eased, so they can be pivoted clear around, outboard of the shrouds and secured fore-and-aft, parallel to the wind.  That’s a lot of work, all to reduce windage.

 

 


  Those guys knew how critical windage could be.  Sending down upper spars was a standard drill. No Towboat US for them. Come to think of it, it seems as if they may have had a slightly different philosophy than the characters responsible for Bayesian, the 184’ mega-sloop with the 247’ rig, that was knocked down by a squall at anchor in the Med., sinking with the loss of 7 lives.  For us, those types of downbursts are rare. Our weather can be so predictable it’s almost hypnotic. But it may be changing. Don’t be lulled into complacency — our winter storms should not be taken for granted — anytime you see the words “gale”, “south”, or “southeast” in the same paragraph, it’s time to pay attention. Double check dock lines, triple check, or lower, roller furled sails.  If you’ve got a beach cat on the hard, unstep your rig and chock your trailer head-to wind.

 

Force increases as a square of the wind speed. Reduce your windage. 

Thanks Paul!

Lets hope for good sailing conditions for next Tuesday and for the new year.

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice


  


Thursday, December 25, 2025

DECEMBER 23, 2025 STORMY WEATHER

                                                                  DECEMBER 23, 2025

                                                                   STORMY WEATHER

As noted, we cancelled the race for the 23rd because of the foul weather.  We are planning to sail again on this coming Tuesday the 30th if conditions permit.  If we race, it will be another single start with all boats starting at 3pm.   Stay tuned for further announcements or possible cacellation.

Paul Tara has come through with another pertinent ZOOP SCOOP.  


STORMY WEATHER

I started writing this on Tuesday morning, just as  Barry cancelled the day’s sail. A wise call, in my opinion.  Our Pacific storms are among the largest weather systems on the planet — last week’s Pineapple Express delivered flooding to both in Hawaii and the Pacific Northwest. Sometimes it’s hard to anticipate just how long it takes to wind those isobars up. But the same rules still apply, face the wind and the low is on your right.

Which reminds me that today, December 23rd, is the seventieth anniversary, of the 1955 Flood, one of the more seminal events in Santa Cruz history.  A 50 knot southerly, a high tide, heavy rain in the Santa Cruz Mountains, and incomplete construction of the Highway 1 bridge over the San Lorenzo River all coincided to produce disaster. The southerly and the tide backed up the river’s flow, and raised its elevation at the  mouth. Rain in the San Lorenzo Valley sent debris downstream, where it promptly fetched up against the scaffolding and forming still in place at the highway bridge.  This effectively dammed the River, which immediately excused itself and headed down River St., straight through Downtown, and back out to sea through the gap between Beach Hill and West Cliff, leaving everything in between submerged and Beach Hill sticking up as an island.  

Of course this all happened at night. There were no levees, so, eventually, much of the water was able to flow back into the river. It took about a week. (My grandparents, who had been evacuated in the bucket of a skip-loader, spent Christmas with us.) But, it’s effects lasted much longer.  Chief among these was the San Lorenzo River Flood Control Project (the levees) and the redevelopment of downtown, including the County Governmental Center. Not every storm results in disaster, but it pays to prepare.

A HITCH IN TIME
Storms require some additional seamanship.  In Santa Cruz, southerlies erase the lee normally afforded by the land.  Whenever a ‘big’ southerly is forecast, we double up our dock lines.  This requires use of one of the most basic tools of seamanship: the lowly Cleat Hitch.

image0.jpeg

Note the full turn around the base.  This allows the cleat to serve as a snubbing post, and minimizes the chance of the line jumping the cleat if the lead changes.  Also, note how the tail of the hitch lies parallel to the previous crossover.  That’s it! Do NOT keep adding crossovers to use up extra tail. Coil it down separately. Somebody’s going to want to uncleat that line eventually, which they’ll be able to do safely under load thanks to the control offered by that first turn.

Thanks Paul.   

HAVE A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Barry Keeler
Sailing Pair A Dice

Thursday, December 18, 2025

DECEMBER 16, 2025 AWESOME WINTER SAIL

 

DECEMBER 16, 2025

AWESOME WINTER SAIL

Check out the Zoop Scoop below for an excellent recap of this awesome winter sail.

To view the Regatta Hero track:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20B&race=16.12.2025%2015:00:00&language=en

 

Jennifer Kinsman photo

 PHRF ADJUSTED RESULTS:  course W5 course distance 2.4NM

PLACE                BOAT                      PHRF              ET          CORRECTED TIME

1            FLEXI FLYER                      96                     37:05                 33:14

2            ABORIGINAL                     33                      34:49                 33:30

3            ZOOP                                   144                   41:18                  35:32

4            WIND II                               213                   45:16                  36:44

5            ROSIE                                  162                   43:36                  37:07

6            NIDAROS                           118                    42:09                  37:25

7            SAILING PAIR A DICE     180                    45:56                  38:44

8            MAIN SQUEEZE               72                       42:39                  39:46

9            PERFECT 36                      144                    47:24                  41:38

10          OLD ENOUGH TKB         243                    51:37                  41:53

11          AQUAVIT                           72                       45:36                  42:43

 

ZOOP SCOOP BY PAUL TARA

 

WOW, WHAT AN EVENING!

This Tuesday’s race was spectacular.  You could have fooled me — we almost didn’t sail.  When I was at the Harbor on Monday, there was thick fog and practically no wind, and Tuesday’s forecast was for more of the same. I had already made up my mind to pull the plug if I couldn’t see the Crows Nest flag from our slip.  But instead, Tuesday dawned clear, and by 1200 there was a nice southwesterly filling in. And it was warm. Which made me suspicious.

 

Inside or outside, which to choose?  Course was W-5. We figured go right.  We were wrong. There was slightly more breeze outside and the wind was starting to hint at backing or shifting left. Remember how I said I was suspicious?  Didn’t matter — we were about to get rolled after the start — we had to bail and go right anyway. But the duck was a big one, and it cost us.  Meanwhile the boats on the outside were launched.  If you look at the track, the whole fleet is gradually lifted on port, with Nidaros II smiling all the way to the starboard tack layline. 

 

On the run to the finish, the breeze held, but still continued backing.  We started  the run DDW on port tack, jibed onto starboard about half-way down the leg, and finished up barely being able to carry the pole on starboard. In fact, we probably should have dropped it, and jib reached the final portion.  That’s a big shift — and not the first time. 

 

After we finished, the conditions were so perfect that we took another lap, rendezvousing with Chardonnay at MB, where her skipper, Krista Swedberg, took this shot.

  


 ZAP! — MORE SHOCKING NEWS — D DOCK NOW LIVE

D Dock just became the first dock in the Harbor to install a sea lion deterrent system on every slip, including (attention SC-27 fleet) the entire end tie.  So far, it seems quite effective. But it’s non discriminatory — it can shock humans just as easily. As long as you don’t touch the thin yellow guard wire and the water at the same time, you’ll get just a tickle. But, if you do, watch out.  And, before we have an environmental hue-and-cry, it’s important to know that it’s NOAA approved, and MBARI just installed it on their docks in Moss Landing. So, say good bye to buckets and paintballs, and ….

 

1. Don’t step on the wire if you can avoid it, especially if barefoot.
2. Beware when folding sails, they don’t catch on it.
3. Don’t leave dock lines in the water and let them lay on the wire.
4. Report problems to either me (831) 251-3622 , or Neils Kisling (831) 332-7454  
5. Controller is at D-4 (Zoop). Off switch is on the bottom of the SW corner.

6. DON’T FALL IN

 

Thank you Paul Tara!

 

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice