Thursday, June 4, 2026

JUNE 2, 2026 GREAT WIND WITH A TRANSITION

 

JUNE 2, 2026

GREAT WIND WITH A TRANSITION

As usual, predictions for the evening were mixed, calling for 15 knot winds decreasing through the evening.  Reports from sailors who had been out indicated an increasing wind through the afternoon.  As we left the harbor at 5, there was a consistent breeze coming from 250 degrees, BUT also a fog bank drifting in to Capitola which can indicate a sudden shift to an Easterly Breeze.  We set a start line that, though not perfect, would work for the Westerly if it maintained but also would work for an Easterly.

With the Westerly maintaining, all 3 fleets got off to clean starts sailing course W1.  On the run from Mile to Blacks, we saw boats flying spinnakers on a building Easterly.  It was an evening of great wind with a transition.

SPINNY FLEET TRACK CAN BE REVIEWED AT:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Spinny%20Fleet&race=2.6.2026%2017:50:00&language=en

FLEET A CAN BE REVIEWED AT:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20A&race=2.6.2026%2017:55:00&language=en

FLEET B:

https://www.regattahero.com/mapviewer/?organisation=scyc&passcode=233793&regatta=Tues%20Fleet%20B&race=2.6.2026%2018:00:00&language=en

PHRF ADJUSTED RESULTS:  COURSE W1  DISTANCE 3.884NM

PLACE    BOAT                                   PHRF                     ET                          CORRECTED TIME

SPINNY FLEET:

1             INTERLUDE                        141                       59:538                  50:45

FLEET A:

1             ABORIGINAL                      33                        48:32                    46:24

2             WATTS MOORE                 150                       57:57                    48:14

3             ZOOP                                   144                       57:40                    48:21

4             TRUE LOVE                         72                        54:52                    50:12

5             PAC HIGH                           96                          57:06                    50:53

6             SAGITTARIUS                     120                       58:52                   51:06

7             SOPHIE                                141                       1:00:29                 51:21

8             DOUBLE ESRESSO             99                        58:05                    51:40

9             PERFECT 36                        144                       1:01:23                 52:04

10           ROSIE                                  162                       1:03:40                 53:11

11           MAIN SQUEEZE                 72                         58:09                    53:29

12           KEMOSABE                         81                        1:01:19                56:04

FLEET B:

1             SIMPATICO                         165                       58:24                    47:43

2             TARA                                    243                       1:04:14                48:30

3             BIG MAC                             222                       1:02:56                48:34

4             MAKANI                             147                       58:32                    49:01

5             SAILING PAIR A DICE      180                       1:00:50                49:11

6             AZOR                                   243                       1:05:12                49:28

7             PACIFIC SPIRIT                 165                       1:02:19                51:38

8             WIND GODDESS               163                       1:03:04                52:31

9             NIDAROS                            114                       1:01:20                53:57

10           BLOND AMBITION           100                       1:05:07                58:39

              _)                                          _)                             (_       (_

ZOOP SCOOP BY PAUL TARA



SMORGASBORD!

 

Tuesday’s race had something for everyone.  If you like varying conditions, it was a banquet. Recently I referred to the “Santa Cruz Eddy” as an atmospheric whirlpool. It certainly stirred the pot this week, starting with a fake — fog in Capitola — hinting at an impending easterly. But Barry didn’t bite, and his choice of W-1 offered some great racing.  If you remembered that hint.

 

The first leg was a standard westerly with significant pressure offshore, nearer the fog.  In the A Fleet, the port end of the line was favored, allowing  Watts Moore and Pacific High to make port tack starts and appear to leave the fleet in the dust. But their early advantage dissipated as their initial tack carried them into less wind inshore (another hint). That was the choice of entrees for the evening — the shift inshore, or more breeze offshore. A predictable menu, we thought, given the time of day.

 

The westerly held for the next leg, serving up the usual broad reach parade to MB. But it also provided more hints. The breeze did not veer or  increase dramatically, as it often does on the approach to MB.  The gusts lacked the hard, cold edge one associates with a determined westerly, and our jibe at the mark was almost anticlimactic. As we approached it, I told the crew, “This race is going to get weird.”

 

Which brings us to the next leg. Sometimes the shortest distance isn’t the fastest. As far as we could tell, the first person to sense the impending weirdness was Paul Yost on True Love. I’m not sure (I haven’t spoken with him) but I bet he was feeling some faint vibe from his junior days in Lasers, when he would  go low, and then reach in hot to Black Point.  I’ve done the same thing countless times in 5o5’s, dropping the kite at the last minute, and reaching in with the crew on the wire beneath the fleet. “Reaching in hot”  in an Islander 36 is an oxymoron if there ever was one. Nevertheless it didn’t take us long to get the jib poled out to port — the minute it filled we began to gain on the boats around us. We stayed low and outside, until we saw the boats ahead stall out in the transition, dropped the pole, coasted — sometimes displacement pays — through a tack onto starboard, and close reached to BP. (Transitioning into the new wind dead to leeward of the next mark is not a good plan.)

 

We rounded close astern of Pacific High and Main Squeeze as the last leg went from an entree to a potluck. Recalling the fog in Capitola earlier, we bet the easterly was going to fill hard, and immediately set the pole to starboard as they jib reached inshore.  When they jibed onto port, we jibed also and I was surprised to find we could not carry the pole —  the wind had shifted to the south — a phenomenon that often precedes a transition. Which, of course, is exactly what happened, right at the finish line, allowing several boats astern to close in. In transitions, Zoop often asserts her true personality, turns sulky and quickly looses steerage.  Fortunately, this time she was pointing inshore, allowing us to save our bacon at the last minute by catching the next easterly fill, and nipping across just seconds ahead of Watts Moore.

 

In the B Fleet, the pot luck was served up slightly sooner, about halfway to BP, but the racing was just as close. Simpatico won, by staying low and outside, while Tara corrected out over Big Mac by just 4 seconds, and Makani over PAD by 10 seconds.   

 

THANK YOU PAUL

I  am looking forward to next Tuesday!

Barry Keeler

Sailing Pair A Dice

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment