| Mission Bay Regatta #73190 04/22/06 10:17 AM 04/22/06 10:17 AM |
Joined: Mar 2003 Posts: 736 Westport, Ma. U.S.A. Brian_Mc OP
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Posts: 736 Westport, Ma. U.S.A. | Having been without a computer for the past month, I just read Connie Brown's report on the Mission Bay Regatta at www.thebeachcats.com . Sounds like a great event! Dan delave care to add some details about what it was like for you? Nice going by the way! | | | Re: Mission Bay Regatta
[Re: Brian_Mc]
#73192 04/23/06 09:08 PM 04/23/06 09:08 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | Here's my CatFight I, Mission Bay report from TornadoCat group on Yahoo: CatFight I Mike.
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
| | | Re: Mission Bay Regatta
[Re: Brian_Mc]
#73194 04/25/06 11:00 AM 04/25/06 11:00 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado
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Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | OK, you asked for it:
Cat Fight I was held at Mission Bay YC in San Diego this past weekend under some very challenging conditions.
Fifteen boats (5 I20's, 5 F18's, 1 H20, 1 18-2, 1 N.5.8, 1 H16 & 1 Tornado) competed in 3 groups. The 20 ft spinny boats made up A fleet, followed by the F18's in B fleet, then the rest in C fleet. 6 races were scheduled.
Day one saw winds in the 15-18 kt range, but the real story was the huge ocean swell kicked up by a very large arctic air system that was sweeping through the region over the previous few days. We had 10-20' trough to crest heights throughout the day. This made for thrilling racing action and sickening Race Committee work.
My crew Glenn B. from this list had sailed with me in one other event, the Nationals in Houston last Nov...which were light to zero winds. Glenn had a learning curve nearly as steep as the waves we were sailing in. I'm happy to report that he came through it like a champ, steadily improving on the various new techniques he was being exposed to throughout the races.
Race 1 we found ourselves out in front shortly after the start, with the extra beam on the T being put to good advantage over those pesky "road-width legal" I20's. My OCR experience was paying off big time here...I was much more confident getting out on the wire quickly and leaving the main trim to the crew once the downhaul was set right made the boat ride the rails. The swell made seeing the weather mark near impossible. We just kept sailing to windward and scanning the horizon when at the top of waves. The only mark we could see looked to be off to the extreme right, near the peninsula...I believed it to be a marker buoy of some kind and kept driving to weather. After a while more, still no other marks to be seen, and we see the second start fleet (F18's) leader heading to that far right mark. The closest I10 (#224) tacked over to it, we hesitated a little, doing one more scan, then gave in and make for it also...now on a very fast reaching angle. I love reaching, and boy was it a hoot in these waves! We make it to the mark ~8 BL's ahead of 224, but about the same behind the lead F18...which started 3 minutes after us (that's how much time we'd lost be overstanding so much!). The rest of the I20's were way back...it was the T and 224 duking it out...with the top F18 thrown in to spice it up a bit more. We had a good hoist and set about trying to spot the leeward mark while coming to terms with the swell conditions. Though we struggled to close with the leading F18, we could use him to help guide us to the mark. 224 did a better leg and closed the gap by the bottom mark...we rounded within a few BL's of the F18 and ended up in bad air...having to tack away to clear. We blew our tack (not the for the last time...the sea conditions made tacking, particularly port to starboard, very tough), sat helpless as the I20 made a better tack and slipped by. About 2/3rd's up the leg, he was well ahead, tacked over to port for the layline, but he then went into irons. We saw a chance to make up ground and tacked within 5 BL's beneath him...but we also suffered a slow recovery...he pulled ahead and beat us to the mark. The F18 that had gone up the right side of the course had done extremely well and was right with us again. Off wind we couldn't quite find the right groove for the swells and were unable to make a gain by the bottom mark....and with the finish line only a quarter mile to weather, we just couldn't make the pass in time. A solid second place with no other boats near us.
Race 2 we were determined to strike back. Got a good start and grabbed the lead shortly afterwards and the T demonstrated its windward performance to the fleet. We had much less trouble finding the mark and made a good rounding solidly in the lead, going with a bearaway set. Shortly after, the mainsheet leapt over the rear beam and pulled the traveller line out of my hand. The boat felt sluggish as the long loop of line would skip in & out of the waves behind us. I had no emergency release without the traveller line. Tried to make a stab at pulling it back aboard with one free hand, the other still trying to steer. No way, too much load on the line. Called for Glenn to come off the wire to fetch the mess back on board. While he was doing this, I kept noticing how sluggish the boat felt, and how heavy the helm had become. Was the line wrapped on the tiller connector? Was the load that high? Can it be causing that much drag? I couldn't play the gusts & swells, we were barely moving! 224 passed us easily! Glenn finished his work but no improvement in helm feel. WHAT WAS WRONG!!! Glancing back...the windward rudder had popped up! A double-fault situation. I let go of the tiller, reached back and snapped it back down, managing to re-grab the tiller before rounding up violently. It was good to be back under control, but we were now many bl's behind 225. Could not close much before the bottom mark, and then on our final gybe to the mark, the spinny halyard came out the cleat. This set us back out of striking range for the next leg. It became apparent on the last lap that once 224 got ahead, they tend to stay ahead. We had to settle for another 2nd...rest of A fleet still a good way back on us.
After congratulating 224 for their two bullets, we let them know they'd be getting no more freebies from us!
Just before the start of Race 3 the T was in a good spot in clear air, two boats to weather but behind off the line. At the gun, the traveller sheet became hooked on a tramp stud on the rear beam and I could not sheet in, costing us vital seconds. We were swallowed by one of the two windward boats (the top F18...they were started with us this race). Had to eat bad air for a short while before we could tack off to port and breathe again. As it turned out, this proved to be an excellent situation...we were easily first to the top mark. Had another great hoist and some better swell handling to the bottom mark, where we were starting to master the art of surfing at full spinny speeds, and even one more spinny halyard release...but it didn't hurt us too bad...we rounded bottom still ahead with a pretty good lead on 224. We then kept the lead to the finish line in this Windward-Leeward-Finish course.
Back at the club, we had a great evening chatting with the other teams. Even Gary F. & Buzz from this list were on-site. They were out watching from Buzz's Prindle. We had lots of comments from other teams on how great the T was going to weather in those conditions. I was surprised to hear that many boats dropped out of the other fleets as the day wore on...due to things getting too wild for them. I was surprised since the thought had never crossed my mind that things were wild...just bumpy and fun...not beyond control (well, ok, when I lost the sheet and one rudder...that was a little daunting I suppose!!). The T just loves this stuff I guess.
Day two started with more settled winds and somewhat flatter seas. We made some rig changes to prevent the spinny halyard tripping out the cleat (easing off the slack-sucker shock cords some) and I taped off the rear-beam tramp studs to keep lines clear. Discovered a tramp hook had pulled out the deck on the port side right at the spinny block tie off point. Jury rigged it for the day. Lastly, I went up to the 224 team at breakfast and let them know they should eat lots of those "light-weight" burritos on the menu because I couldn't find their boat out on the lawn the night before and thus didn't get the chance to use my 3" hole saw ;-). They responded that that was fine because they had found my T...:-0
Race 4 started and it was back to business. Seas still lumpy but winds were down around 10-15 kts range. RC started all the classes together. Made a clean start and had the lead by the top mark, but not by much. Glancing back shortly after rounding the first top mark, it became 224 had a problem with their spinny. We'd later learn their tack line had failed and it took them many minutes to fix this. We could not sit back and rest because we have the rest of the fleet right with us. Taking a transit for the top & bottom marks before the start really helped us locate them from the lead position. We got in some really impressive surf action down the big swells and it paid off big time against teams that didn't get it quite so right. We had a reasonable lead at the first bottom mark, and went out the right side of t he course (which had paid so well the day before). This proved to be a mistake, as at least one other I20 beat us to the top and another was right with us. Our lead was gone. 224 were no where in sight. One more lap and we lost another spot, finishing 3rd...with 224 in 4th. We had failed to capitalize on 224's misfortune.
Race 5 had 224 fully recovered. We got a bad start, in the middle of the fleets with bad air from leading boats and no way to tack out. We gasped for air behind the top F18 ("Diamond Girl") for way too long in ~10 kts breeze. 224 was clear and ahead and held with lead to the top mark. We rounded 3rd or 4th. 224 went to the left gybe, we held a bear away set and followed two other boats out to the right. By midway down the leg, we had gained & passed one boat, sailing lower & faster using the surfing methods from the day before. We were the last to gybe, holding this as long as possible without overstanding the layline... The run into the bottom mark showed this to be a great decision because we smoked the fleet, getting to the mark out in front. We had passed 3 boats for the lead on that 1 downwind leg. 224 tacked over shortly after the bottom mark, so we decided it was time to give loose cover. We had good speed and could match his point of sail pretty well, even extending over most of the leg. He made some cleaner tacks and gained some back, but we held him off to the top. Off wind he didn't make the same mistake and followed up out to the right side. He didn't gain much at all and we had a nice bottom mark rounding. At the last top mark he had re-gained some position, but we still had a nice cushion. Downwind finish was very close as he seemed to get it right in the swells and went deep & faster than us. We just had him by 5-10 seconds at the line. didn't believe this to be enough against the handicap, so we resigned ourselves to 2nd place once again (this would turn out to be wrong, as the official results showed us with another 1st place).
The last race became our throw out. Winds had lightened to the 6-10 kts range, seas still fairly lumpy. Back into I20 range. RC started us without the F18's, but for some reason one of them got it wrong and came with us. This boat would prove to be our undoing, as we had to make a rushed tack from port to starboard to avoid him on the top mark layline. We couldn't make the mark and had two more tack to make. In my frustration, I blew the 1st tack and we sat in irons while the fleet swept past. Must have lost 90+ seconds on the leaders. In an act of desperation, I called for a flyer on the 1st off-wind, heading us out to the left side away from the fleet. A calculated risk that didn't pay off. We were further behind than ever by the bottom. The RC had called for a 3 lap race with another downwind finish, so there was at least time to make up some places. By the end of the next off wind leg, we had clawed back one position. On the last windward, we followed the leaders out to the right side and tacked back on their wake, some 1000+yards behind. The one boat we had passed earlier had come up the middle and crossed ahead of us! Turned out to be Wally C....good call man! We fought our way down to the finish, trying to gain ground to weather of Wally...he gave us an excellent fight, luffing us higher & higher to protect his air, but we had the speed on him and sucked the wind from his sails. Crossed the line just seconds ahead for 4th place. We were sure a 5th was in order for us after handicap...but again the official results show us with a 4th. Was the committee just racing us boat for boat? 224 was 2nd behind #22...not sure what happened because 224 was way out ahead at the midpoint.
Overall, we ended in 2nd behind 224. What a great time and exciting event. Thanks to all who attended and to the RC & MBYC staff. See you in May for round #2.
Results posted here:
P.S. Glenn's wife Connie was busying taking many photos from the RC boat...can't wait to see them all.
Mike USA 807 (a.k.a. USA 838---gotta change those sail #'s one day) "Full Tilt"
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
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