And ignore their roots, Mary?
Shouldn't someone managing that regatta get a report out to all the media?
For the upcoming Tradewinds I sent out a PR pre-race story to ALL the local papers. Had I sent to only one, I would be in a heap of trouble in the future.
Most of them published the story.., some editing, some not. But they all got the same story at the same time.
Rick
As class president, first I must apologize to Rick for not keeping him in the loop about our Islamorada event this year. It was not meant to exclude him and in fact I had mentioned to our class officers that we need to be sure to get regatta reports and photos to Rick for use in Catsailor.
But let me set the record straight on a couple of things. The roots of the A-Class in the US are in the New Jersey area on Lake Hopatcong. The roots of A-Class winter sailing in the Keys are with Rick and Mary White. The reason we had to move away from Rick's Place after it was sold to its new owners was because our event had outgrown the facility. It had nothing to do with any negative feelings towards Rick or Mary, in fact we were telling Sailing Anarchy last week about how the event got started at Rick's Place. John Schieffer located the Islander who welcomed us and we love the facility and they like us. You stay in rooms right on the waterfront and you really do not have to leave for anything while you are there since there is a restaurant, bar, pools, hot tube, etc. It's an excellent venue for any small boat event.
Regarding Sailing Anarchy, we do believe that we tend to attract more monohull and dinghy sailors to our class than sailors from other multihull classes and that was a primary reason that we invited Alan Block to cover the event. There seems to be a continued perception by some (publicly bloviating) individuals that A-Cats are excessively expensive and fragile boats and A-Cat sailors are elitists who avoid the mainstream mulithull community. The boats are expensive yes but they are also good investments since they have healthy resale values if maintained properly. They are not fragile, they are quite strong but you can't sail them at full speed on to the beach which seems to be a criteria we must pass by some of our critics. Fragile realative to what? A 450 lb boat? Not an apples to apples comparison. Regarding our class being elitist, whatever! Come to an event and judge for yourself. I think some of the F-18 and I-20 sailors who have gotten into the class recently will squash that hogwash.
Regarding Tradewinds, we'd love to better support the event but most of us have to get back to work after our event is over. This year, we thought several sailors were going to stay and race Tradewinds but it did not pan out. Our Islamorada event is as much about fun sailing as it is racing. We typically arrive at the Islander on Saturday morning and get two days of fun sailing and tuning before racing begins on Monday. In the past we have raced Monday and Tuesday and then take Wednesday off. We'd typically wrap up the week with two more days of racing on Thursday and Friday and then get ourselves home over the weekend. This year we left out the lay day on Wednesday and raced for four days straight so some folks could race Tradewinds on Friday. We were bummed not to be able to sail this year on the preceeding Saturday and Sunday due to the weather (42 degrees and raining on Saturday, 48 degrees on Sunday with 25-30 knots of wind).
I have just appointed a class communications officer who will be Tony Arends out of the Annapolis area. Tony will be coordinating getting US A-Class news to all of the US sailing media. We think the broadest exposure possible is in our best interest especially in light of all the recent positive attention multihull sailing has been receiving in the press.
Sail fast, sail light.
Bob Hodges
USACA
USA 230