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2008 North Bay Wayfarer Weekend Canadian Nats: race 7.1 photos by Julia Schonborn, Andy Douma & Cathy Jessup ... |
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| For a variety of reasons,
nearly half the fleet decided
that race 7 could best be enjoyed from here, in front of the North Bay
YC. ... |
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| Our considerably reduced fleet
is off in the final race of the 2008 Nationals, with Dave Hansman (282) getting the best start in the oscillation that was favouring starboard tack. ... |
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| (l
to r) Alastair, Rob, Andrew, (blocking the view of Sue), Mark,
Dave H and ... ... |
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| ... Dave Richardson (4782) ... |
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| Andrew tacks away for clear air
while Dave Hansman fights to avoid Mark's (7673) backwind. ... |
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Dave (282) looks like he could
use more vang to point better: Compare his main leech (falling off)
with Mark's (7673) (vertical). Meanwhile, 7372 has only thought one
move ahead: his tack for clear air. Ideally, he should have thought one
step further: What will we do if we cannot cross Dave R (4782)? If 7372
had a good reason to hit port tack (clear air, lift or even better
breeze on the right side), he should have decided before making his
first tack, that if necessary, he would sacrifice a boatlength or two
and bear away for Dave (starboard) but end up achieving priority one,
clear air. Instead, he has a possible panic reaction at the last
second, and he ...
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... tacks - right back into
dirty air and with very little speed after two consecutive tacks. Now
he is set up to be the meat in the sandwich between the two Daves,
Hansman off his bow and Richardson to windward. Ideally, this outcome
should have been foreseen when planning ahead before the first tack.
Unless 7372 is very lucky, he'll soon be far worse off than if he had
tacked and instantly borne away behind 4782 in the first place. I look
at this and realize that this very same mistake is one I make far too
regularly, and I tend to think we all do. I certainly will try to
remember this sequence for next time, and will work on thinking two
moves ahead, and thus be ready to make the wiser choice when fast
decisions have to be made.
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At first glance, it looks like
7372 has lucked in since Dave Hansman (282) has tacked away, but just
imagine how well used/disturbed the wind is that 7372 will be getting
for the next while. And another factor - often overlooked - is the
surprising amount of wake that even Wayfarers produce so that 7372 will
- for the next while at least - be sailing in very chopped up wind and water. None of which would be
the case if he had bitten the bullet and borne away for the orange boat!
...
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| Sue Pilling (937) has raced most
of her life, and coolly makes it across the starboard 4782. Piece of
cake!! Less experienced sailors often get nervous in this kind of a situation, vacillate, slow down and create the very disaster they were afraid of. ... |
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| As mentioned in the race 6
captions: the jib has to come in far tighter than the 7372 jib is here:
What Rob should be doing is pointing up and luffing his jib until the
pressure comes off enough to enable his crew to sheet in until the jib
foot touches the coaming!! ... |
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| After starting at the pin end,
Alastair is tacking and will get a read on how well that strategy has
panned out. ... |
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| Also coming across after holding
starboard off the line for a few minutes, are Mark and Paul (7673). Hard to tell whether they crossed Dave and Kim or not. ... |
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| Sue (l) and Dave H come across on port
and appear to be crossing Andrew (r). ... |
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| Much better sail trim for Rob
and Samantha (7372) here. Meanwhile Mark has tacked back towards the
shore on the left. ... |
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Ross and John have held
starboard since the start and are now well off to the left of the
fleet, a position where this starboard lift is exactly what they do not
want as the time when they will absolutely have to tack draws ever
closer. A big knock on the other hand, might let them tack and cross a
bunch of boats!!
... |
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| The first reach is underway, and
there is "new blood" at the top: Sue and Steph have a narrow lead over Andrew and Lori while Alastair and Andrew chug along in 3rd. ... |
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| Then there is a considerable gap
before the Hansmans, Dave and Carol, come along in a clear 4th,
while the already decided 2008 National champions, Mark and Paul, are
using their chute to try to move past Dave Richardson and Kim Rainville
into 5th place. - for full-size pic, click here ... |
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| Alastair and Andrew (3rd from left) get a nice gust and
begin to ... for full-size pic, click here ... |
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| ... make their move. Perhaps
Santa should be asked for a spinnaker that is less blown out than this
yellow, orange and red antique? ... |
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| Mark slides through to leeward
of Dave and now sets his sights on ... ... |
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| ... the other Dave - also
spinnaker-less! ... |
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Near the gybe mark, Sue and
Steph (ratty, old spinnaker and all) have very successfully fought off
the challenge from the Ryder-Turners who have gybed early and appear
set to douse. And note how well Andrew and Lori have hung in there
without a chute! There is a lesson here: Too many people believe that
racing without the newest and best gear is hopeless. That may be true
with real performance dinghies, but throughout this entire weekend, our
fleet showed again and again that in Wayfarers, it's far more a matter
of what you do than what you do it with (It's not the size of the wand that brings
the rabbit out of the hat, but the wizardry of the magician, as
we guys used to console ourselves in the 60s while speaking of another
matter entirely ...) Not that it isn't nice to have decent gear which
makes it easier to do well. I am all for decent gear, but there are
many times when for one reason or another, we get reduced to
second-rate equipment, at which time, the biggest drag on one's
performance is not the lack of good gear but the conviction that this
lack will be a major handicap!!!
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Wow! The gang knows how to
entertain the fans watching from the club: Three boats within two
lengths all fighting for the lead. Here, Sue clings to her lead while
Andrew looks set to pass Alastair (and maybe Sue??) to windward. And
here come Mark and Paul flying along under spinnaker on a lovely reach.
They have passed Dave and Carol already. Well, I didn't say, above,
that lack of gear was no handicap at all, just that such a lack need
not make your race hopeless!! - for full-size pic,
click here
...
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| next pics page return to NBWW 2008 index |