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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: scooby_simon] #176179
04/26/09 08:26 PM
04/26/09 08:26 PM
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Originally Posted by scooby_simon
Originally Posted by pepin
Funny, I was in the exact opposite situation last Wednesday: A 29er was in front of me, I was a couple of boat length behind and to windward. But my layline is further than their layline as a 29er points better than my Stealth.

I saw the skipper looking at me, looking at the mark, finally realizing he was screwed and that he would have to go further, to my layline.

I took pity of him, shouted "You tack, I'll avoid you". He said thank you then tacked, I ducked his stern, tacked 10 boat length further and beat them to the mark. It is a far better way of proceeding IMHO.

BTW, they used their huge masthead spi to pass me again on the way to the side mark, but on the hotter reach to the finish line I regained on them, cut their wind and beat them by a mere second. I'm nice, but not that nice.


I hope you mean 49er!!!

No. I meant 29er. We were sailing one of those drifter race, max wind speed was maybe 5knt, top. A 29er with two kids weighting less than me put together is as fast as me and my stealth in those conditions: they were single trapping downwind while I was unable to get a hull out of the water on any point of sail. The two 49er were far far ahead, they did an horizon job on the rest of the fleet.


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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: ncik] #176217
04/27/09 09:26 AM
04/27/09 09:26 AM
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Originally Posted by ncik
Forgot that other option, if the F18 calls "you tack" or similar in this situation, they have accepted responsibility to avoid you.


WRONG; this is ONLY the case when tacking to avoid an obstruction and you call for "room to tack to avoid an obstruction". They then have the option of tacking at once to make room for you; or telling you to tack and they the avoid you.



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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: Mary] #176225
04/27/09 10:13 AM
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I'm with Mary on this, this is tacking too close. If you're only halfway through your tack, even if the other boat is clear behind when you started tacking, they have to maneuver to avoid and you've fouled them.

The other very useful maneuver is to really pinch high as soon as you're close to the mark. You can use it as a "pick" and tack when you get to the other side. You're basically tacking around the mark. It's unlikely that the other boat would chase you, they would just sail their normal course and tack when they hit the layline.

Mike

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: brucat] #176230
04/27/09 10:30 AM
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The best thing to do obviously is to avoid it.
What works best IMHO is to just ask them directly by waving or do "the stare".

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: Tony_F18] #176234
04/27/09 11:46 AM
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Originally Posted by Tony_F18
What works best IMHO is to just ask them directly by waving or do "the stare".
Rofl. Let me rephrase my story then:

Quote

Funny, I was in the exact opposite situation last Wednesday: A 29er was in front of me, I was a couple of boat length behind and to windward. But my layline is further than their layline as a 29er points better than my Stealth.

I saw the skipper looking at me, looking at the mark, finally realizing he was screwed and that he would have to go further, to my layline.

So he gave me the evil stare, one of those long frightening look. His piercing eyes seemed to be looking into the inside of my skull. I heard myself studder "You tack, I'll avoid you". My hand, by its own accord, pulled the tiler to avoid his stern while he was tacking, still looking at me with his frightening glance. When he was sure to be clear he looked away and a weight seems to be lifting from my shoulders. I regained control of my arm. I avoided getting to close of his black sail for the rest of the regatta and made sure to land on the opposite side of the beach.


Anyway, I find the f18 crews generally more aggressive. In my experience there are more skippers there willing to push the rules a little bit to gain any advantage, especially if it is just fouling an irrelevant boat from some other class they are not directly competing against. To make matter worse, due to their minimum weight, those boats are overbuild and build like tanks. A side sweep by one of those is going to cut any F16 in two. I would not take the risk.


Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: pepin] #176237
04/27/09 12:18 PM
04/27/09 12:18 PM
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Originally Posted by pepin

Anyway, I find the f18 crews generally more aggressive. In my experience there are more skippers there willing to push the rules a little bit to gain any advantage, especially if it is just fouling an irrelevant boat from some other class they are not directly competing against. To make matter worse, due to their minimum weight, those boats are overbuild and build like tanks. A side sweep by one of those is going to cut any F16 in two. I would not take the risk.



Dude, seriously NOT cool! To imply that F18 sailors are more agressive and rule benders and hunting F16's simply because we sail an F18 is total rubbish! I think you'll find all classes large and small will have aggressive rule benders and it's not unique the F18 sailors. As for hunting F16's... don't you need a permit for that?

Also fouling someone and not doing a turn (I'm assuming that's your implication) is a douche move in any class and not unique to the F18 class. Now if you're saying that an F18 exercised their rights for no tactical advantage again a bit of douche move but again not unique to the F18 class.

We get it and we get it and we get it! Our boats are heavy! Do you seriously think that F18 sailors are thinking that because our boats are over built we will win a contest of contact... come on now... seriously!?

We really aren't out to get you... really... well, maybe.


David Ingram
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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: David Ingram] #176242
04/27/09 01:22 PM
04/27/09 01:22 PM
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Well good to hear that I did the right thing in the situation. Still have to learn quite a lot about tactics...

I'll also practice 'the stare' :-)

Concerning aggresive F18 crews, I have the experience that more of them are used to sailing regattas and therefore sail more on the edge during regattas. But always within the fairplay of the game.

We're of to Eurocat at Carnac Wednesday, I hope I'm not confronted with the discussed situation to much!

Gill


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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: David Ingram] #176243
04/27/09 01:22 PM
04/27/09 01:22 PM
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Quote
Anyway, I find the f18 crews generally more aggressive. In my experience there are more skippers there willing to push the rules a little bit to gain any advantage, especially if it is just fouling an irrelevant boat from some other class they are not directly competing against. To make matter worse, due to their minimum weight, those boats are overbuild and build like tanks. A side sweep by one of those is going to cut any F16 in two. I would not take the risk.


LMAO.


Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: David Ingram] #176252
04/27/09 02:57 PM
04/27/09 02:57 PM
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Originally Posted by David Ingram
Originally Posted by pepin

[...]Anyway, I find the f18 crews generally more aggressive.[...]

Dude, seriously NOT cool! To imply that F18 sailors are more agressive and rule benders and hunting F16's simply because we sail an F18 is total rubbish![...]


Okay. Let me clarify that. You are a US sailor. Your national association boast 20 members. Let me put that in perspective: Carnac next week is going to have around 400 cats on the water. Two third of those F18. My old sailing club, near Toulon has 36 F18 on the parking. Most of them sailed weekly during the summer. No other class is coming close in terms of numbers, the F18 is the king of the cat. F18 class is the class where the top cat sailors are. All the big names in cat sailing are racing F18, Ellen McArthur, Laurent Bourgnon, Franck Cammas and more.

The sailors are nice generally. I have good friends who are F18 sailors. I'd probably be a F18 sailor if I could find a regular crew/helm. But the on water competition is fierce.

In order to be competitive they have to know the rules. So they carry protest forms in their sailbag, store their rulebooks under their pillow and play subliminal tapes of rule interpretations while they sleep.

The screaming and shouting at the marks is legendary. Grafham last year was my first race sharing a course with F18 and I was shocked by the agressivity around the mark. This was repeated three weeks ago at the open they did at my club, we shared the water with them again. The level of testosterone was high. The race committee had to start them under black flag 4 times out of 6 because of general recalls. We never had anybody over the line in our fleet.

So when you are not used to this level of competition you know you have to be careful. They will not be lenient with you. They will never wave you across. They are sailing on the edge, for a win.

I'm not saying that they are there to get me. It's just that they are there to WIN. I'm not *that* competitive, and I'd rather avoid problems. So I douse my spi earlier so I can maneuver when one of those guys cut me off around the mark. I look around me and try to keep away from them.

So in that particular situation Gilo was in the F18 would expect him to know the rules, because he is always sailing with people who know the rules. As such he is not expecting him to tack in front of him. If you do, you will surprise him and that's dangerous. End of the story.

It's not just the F18. Dart 18 are a competitive bunch as well. Other cat fleets are generally not that aggressive. Spitfires, F16, Hurricane or Shearwater are a quieter bunch, there for a day on the water, not to pick a fight to WIN!

Don't get me wrong either. I enjoyed those races. There is bad apples in every bunch (like the bastard who ramed Mark P last year and then protested him. Nice going) but overall it raised my game. I loved it.

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: pepin] #176257
04/27/09 03:14 PM
04/27/09 03:14 PM
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We're on the same page now.

I also agree that the smaller group the more passive the crowd can be (not always though). You say the Spitfires, F16, Hurricane or Shearwater crowd is quieter group, is that because of the boat they are on or their numbers? The simple fact of the matter is we are always trying to grow our respective fleets and with numbers comes greater competition and aggression. That is simply the trade off and I think this is what Hobie Alter meant by the racers ruining it. I guess what is one man's ruin is anothers paradise. I say bring on the numbers.



David Ingram
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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: David Ingram] #176258
04/27/09 03:23 PM
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WOW!!! 400 boats on the water!!! Economy aside, what in the unholy FFFF are we doing wrong over here?????

Mike

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: brucat] #176260
04/27/09 03:27 PM
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This is America, to get those kinds of numbers we would have to hang 200 h.p. OBs off the back.

Alternately, how many NASCAR events in EU?

Last edited by pgp; 04/27/09 03:29 PM.

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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: pgp] #176269
04/27/09 04:17 PM
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Originally Posted by pgp
This is America, to get those kinds of numbers we would have to hang 200 h.p. OBs off the back.

Alternately, how many NASCAR events in EU?


they don't have NASCAR, they have FORMULA racing...the Indy of the US... Indy car racing used to be bigger than NASCAR, but it isn't now....


Mike


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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: brucat] #176270
04/27/09 04:41 PM
04/27/09 04:41 PM
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Originally Posted by brucat
WOW!!! 400 boats on the water!!! Economy aside, what in the unholy FFFF are we doing wrong over here?????

Mike


Lots!

Why do we want big fleets to race in.... Because the competition around the race course is full on and constant... if you blink... you get passed by a lot of boats = great fun or a great horror! You are always racing someone on these courses. You have to pass boats and you have to round marks with lots of boats... You fit into the group that goes racing... The party is great... but not the reason you come back year after year. The experience of blink and you loose and the challenge of sailing against all those people is key.

What do we do in the USA... engage in fantasy and nostalgia.

We believe that a 4 boat one design fleet will grow to 10 boats and then 20 boats because all people are focused on one design racing and every weekend regatta should be run like the nationals identifying the top one design racer. The guy who wins every race gets bored and moves on. The guy who finishes last in every race gets bored and moves on. Racing in a small fleet can get pretty dull. BUT we know the past ... We believe that if ONLY we could go back to the hobie way of life of yore where the parties were legendary... That casual racers will come out in droves and join the hard core racers (See Hobie Alter Interview of not letting the racers ruin things). So... we continue running the same game plan year after year.

In the EU.... they don't break up 60 boats into 12 classes on their average weekend of racing. They understand that good sailors need to race other good sailors... no matter what boat they are on. The competition will keep those guys interested. Competition at the bottom will be equally as keen. It becomes personal if X beats you again this weekend.

Fact. Lots of new sailors get old race boats and come give it a try... they are parsed into a small open fleet or a small B fleet .. They don't have a good enough time to get into the sport of racing and never come back.

So… we need to ask… What is missing?
What is the fundamental joy in racing sailboats… IMO.. its passing another boat. We need to recreate this today. ITS MISSING all too often.
Second… make sure everyone feels welcome in the group,
Third, a great party usually follows the first two and great food and booze certainly help… but a party alone won’t get you to return the next year if the first two are missing…. Take a look at spring fever… best deal and party that I know of… but about 30 % of the sailors do not bother to return to the event within three years of going. Ouch! IMO… they say… great party, great regatta… Nah… not worth going back next year. Been there… done that.
Finally… Oh yeah… the scores and trophies, camping, giveaways etc..

Identify what’s missing and we will do better.
Your mileage may vary!

Last edited by Mark Schneider; 04/27/09 04:55 PM.

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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: pepin] #176271
04/27/09 04:53 PM
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Originally Posted by pepin
Anyway, I find the f18 crews generally more aggressive. In my experience there are more skippers there willing to push the rules a little bit to gain any advantage, especially if it is just fouling an irrelevant boat from some other class they are not directly competing against.


I have never found that to be the case when sharing the racecourse with F18s. The F18 skippers I've met all know that getting tied up with other boats (especially ones in other classes) only slows you down. For example, at CatFest some years back, I was sailing hot downwind on starboard tack in good breeze on a converging course with an F18 under spin on port. Had we actually met, he could have tried to cross (and risk a foul), or he could have rounded up to sail above me (risking a capsize in a gust). Instead, he gybed early, put some distance between us, and gybed back again (crossing easily). I think that was a smart and courteous move. He kept a good lookout, knew the rules, foresaw a problem situation, and acted early to avoid it at minimum cost with no fuss.

I do know some sailors who regard other fleet boats as interlopers on their racecourse, but I certainly don't feel that way about the F18 racers. In fact, I once suggested to the best cat sailor I know that we should campaign an F18 together.

Regards,
Eric

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: Tony_F18] #176273
04/27/09 05:13 PM
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Originally Posted by Tony_F18
The best thing to do obviously is to avoid it.
What works best IMHO is to just ask them directly by waving or do "the stare".

And, there's nothing wrong with politely asking "will you let me tack?". In many such situtations, staying together is actually disavantageous for both boats - especially if they are in different classes. I know I'd rather have a boat that outpoints me off of my lee-bow and would probably wave her across.

Here is a (slighly different, but still illustrative) case in point. At Spring Fever a few years back, I was sailing downwind on starboard tack behind and to leeward of a Hobie 16. I wanted to sail farther before gybing, but would either have to sail through his shadow or fight to roll him. I could tell by the way he kept looking back that he wanted to gybe. So I called out "do you want to gybe?". He said yes and I told him to go ahead. He gybed; I sailed past his stern - we both came out ahead. Encounters on the water don't always have to be hostile.

Regards,
Eric

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: scooby_simon] #176282
04/27/09 07:50 PM
04/27/09 07:50 PM
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Originally Posted by scooby_simon
Originally Posted by ncik
Forgot that other option, if the F18 calls "you tack" or similar in this situation, they have accepted responsibility to avoid you.


WRONG; this is ONLY the case when tacking to avoid an obstruction and you call for "room to tack to avoid an obstruction". They then have the option of tacking at once to make room for you; or telling you to tack and they the avoid you.



true...but if you ask for it, you may receive.

Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: Isotope235] #176306
04/28/09 02:40 AM
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Originally Posted by Isotope42
Originally Posted by pepin
Anyway, I find the f18 crews generally more aggressive. In my experience there are more skippers there willing to push the rules a little bit to gain any advantage, especially if it is just fouling an irrelevant boat from some other class they are not directly competing against.


I have never found that to be the case when sharing the racecourse with F18s. The F18 skippers I've met all know that getting tied up with other boats (especially ones in other classes) only slows you down. For example, at CatFest some years back, I was sailing hot downwind on starboard tack in good breeze on a converging course with an F18 under spin on port. Had we actually met, he could have tried to cross (and risk a foul), or he could have rounded up to sail above me (risking a capsize in a gust). Instead, he gybed early, put some distance between us, and gybed back again (crossing easily). I think that was a smart and courteous move. He kept a good lookout, knew the rules, foresaw a problem situation, and acted early to avoid it at minimum cost with no fuss.

I do know some sailors who regard other fleet boats as interlopers on their racecourse, but I certainly don't feel that way about the F18 racers. In fact, I once suggested to the best cat sailor I know that we should campaign an F18 together.

Regards,
Eric


It is different over here. The F18 fleet comes to the "open opens" over here and these events are usually F18 worlds qual events for us; thus the Ccompetition is high and there are big things at stake. Also, because the fleet is big and well stocked with talent, no-one usually gets clear and can ease off. How many times do you get a good lead and can then ease off a bit? I've done it and it's the "safe" thing to do; but when you are sailing around with 8 oir 10 otgher boats who are all going the same speed, inches matter and so people do not ease off as thet never get clear away!!!





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Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: scooby_simon] #176315
04/28/09 06:22 AM
04/28/09 06:22 AM
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in the few years of catsailing i have been doing, nothing compares to the aggressiveness of monoslug sailors as far as rules go. Was racing the flying scot this weekend, rouned A in 2nd place as the wind was dying. the boat behind caught a small puff and came down and below us, came up about 4 bootlenghts to start drifting just us and tap us. That is headhunting, legal but bull **** was to act.
At least here in the US I do not see that out of catsailors in the level I sail in.


Jody Blade F16 724 Plays with Sharp Objects
Re: Tacking and right of way [Re: Gilo] #176326
04/28/09 07:56 AM
04/28/09 07:56 AM
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My personal goal on the race course is to avoid situations like that if at all possible. Being able to sail your own race is always faster if not always possible. As Rick pointed out, if there was a good distance to the leg going into the mark, then working the whole leg to either pinch up high enough to be clear of foot to be clear earlier so the issue of rights around a mark are not inquestion.

Next option is to ask if you can go. Sometimes they will oblige, but ususally there is just a stare at least untill they are clear to tack themselves. Here it pays to know your competition.

If the situation is close enough to be of any question then your only real option is to wait it out, run a better tack and drive over them as it sound like you did. The other other options are all potentail bad outcomes.

If they are not skilled in boat handling or your tack is not as fast as you planned a collision is very likely.

If they happen to be one of the few who try and use rules to win, even if you were in the right, you will likely be in the protest room trying to prove it. Not a good way to spend the evening.


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