Sunday, January 31, 2010

Viper strike: Vipers get in a second race on Saturday

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082. Viper start for the second race on Saturday; only the Viper and multihull fleets were completed a second race. Friday and Sunday both had better winds, fortunately. (20100116 123458 BD Regatta Sat 082 Viper start 33 Blr 46 Her)


083. Viper 33 "Blur"

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Sunday, January 24, 2010

Friday Fracas I: Buccaneers and Friends at Lake Pleasant, Arizona


005. Close view of Bucc 5220 (20100115 113126 Friday Fracas 005 Bucc 5220 close)



007. Buccaneer and friends (20100115 113142 Friday Fracas 007 Bucc and friend)



008. Bucc 523 and Nacra cat (20100115 113146 Friday Fracas 008 Bucc 523 Blur and Prindle 3310)



11. Buccaneer 5220 Cassiopeia at the start of race two (20100115 124438 Friday Fracas 011 2nd Bucc start Bucc 5220 Cassiopeia and start r2)


Other pictures can be found on Picasaweb, including


004. Bucc 5220, Cassiopeia, and friends
004 Cassiopeia



009. Bucc 5231 Lazy Bones and 3 kitties -- Nacra catamarans in background
009. Lazy Bones


10. Buccaneers start race two during the Arizona Yacht Club "Friday Fracas" as Lake Pleasant, Arizona.
010. Bucc race two start Friday


More pictures to come soon.... but first we need to get ready for some sailing.
(Posted originally Jan. 16 but revised and resequenced)

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Saturday, January 23, 2010

"Melissa Kay" and Buccaneers at the Friday Fracas

O'Day 25 Melissa Kay bow-on in foreground with southbound Buccaneers in the background to the east at Lake Pleasant, Arizona during race two of the Arizona Yacht Club's Friday Fracas (20100115 125652 Friday Fracas 045 ODay 25 1223 Melissa Kay and Buccs w spinnakers)


(20100115 125702 Friday Fracas 046 ODay 25 223x Melissa Kay and Buccs)

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Thursday, December 03, 2009

Fangs for the memories... one last little shot from the Viper Demo Day



One last view, taken by Gerald, while I was aboard the red Viper no. 31 during last Saturday's Viper demo day at Lake Pleasant.

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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Thoughts from the Birthday Regatta

When my spouse, Carol Anne, meets with her fellow community college instructors, they often end their meetings with a “plus delta” review of the meeting. Pluses are the things that went well; deltas are the “opportunities for improvement” or items that need discussion. The idea is for the reviewers to concentrate on improvements without focusing on being critical or negative in tone.

In a similar vein, I tried to track the Arizona Yacht Club’s 2009 Birthday Regatta – the 49th in the club’s history, if I recall correctly. Cautions are, of course in order; my perspective is an outsider's and my information is limited. And, often, things are done in a certain way because of the history of an event, or because of what resources are available or not, or because of constraints imposed by finances, limited volunteer availability, or rules made by outside agencies.

Arizona and New Mexico sailors have much more in common than differences. Primary differences are that the Valley of the Sun has a much larger and more concentrated population base than New Mexico and far west Texas, more large corporations headquartered there, and two sailing venues, one fully within the urban area. And, there’s more of a marine and sailing infrastructure, with the Sailboat Shop at the lake, two West Marines in the urban area, and Valley Marine providing a lot of support for sailboat owners.

However, Tempe Town Lake is restricted to dinghies and has only been in operation for a relatively short time, and most sailors face a drive of from half an hour to an hour and a half to reach Lake Pleasant. As with the Rio Grande Sailing Club, the AYC does not have a bricks-and-mortar clubhouse. Conditions on desert/mountain lakes are similar between New Mexico and Arizona; sailors and race officers from the coast have difficulty in appreciating how fickle our winds can be. Neither state has much of a tradition of corporate or public support of sailors. Only fairly recently has Arizona begun a youth sailing program, while New Mexico is just taking its first steps in that direction. College sailing is fairly limited in both states, with Arizona State’s club program very limited in its budget and lacking a coach and other resources; college sailing in New Mexico is also extremely limited and ad hoc.

And, in both states we share the challenge of incredulous disbelief from the bulk of the populace who just plain don’t know that there’s sailing in the southwest.

The AYC and the Birthday Regatta have done a good job of integrating dinghy sailors into its ranks, which seems to have brought new blood with lots of new members into the AYC. The development of TTL as a dinghy sailing venue has given city residents an accessible option for casual sailing. The Birthday Regatta has a casual, friendly, down-home feel and a distinct lack of pretentiousness or snobbery. The development of the Arizona Sailing Foundation is a huge bonus for area youth, as well as a potential source of community goodwill and further new members for the AYC.

This year’s Birthday Regatta participants enjoyed blue skies, mild warm temperatures, and mostly good wind. Competitors were able to get in as many as eight races, allowing for lots of intense on-the-water action and opportunities to overcome bad luck in one race with good performance in others. Sunday’s winds were particularly strong and steady, giving the regatta a very successful, exhilarating, and somewhat early finish –- just in time for some participants to move on to watch some other oddball sporting event happening that Sunday afternoon.

Most race committee work went very well and there weren’t too many glitches; the r.c. was able to give competitors lots of races and get fleets started efficiently. On Sunday, the r.c. was able to complete two whole starting sequences without a break. The automatic timer/horn worked very well; even skeptics or first-time users were impressed with it. The pontoon boat is a big, fairly stable platform, and the new paint job is gorgeous.

The Birthday Regatta apparently set some records this year. Something like $67,000 was raised for the Leukemia Society’s research programs, and attendance was high, with 240 diners at Saturday night’s steak, swordfish, or chicken dinner. Bidding was spirited on many auction items, and the regatta received significant support from generous corporate and individual donors, who supplied prizes, auction items, microbrews, and even a small cruising boat. The mellow guitarist who played on Saturday night was good, with the volume kept down just enough so people could talk without being blown out of the tent, as happens at some regattas.

Items for discussion fall into the categories of the race committee boats and equipment, race committee actions, and generic notes. As noted before, my perspective is limited and many of these items have likely been noted and may have already been dealt with or recorded for future reference. Others maybe can’t be done because of limited resources.

Here goes:

Race Committee signal boat (big pontoon boat):

 The boat didn’t have power to back off dock on Sunday against strong wind. Moving forward and along the dock, the boat tore out a couple of screws holding a piece of trim molding/rub rail a bit above the waterline, port side aft corner. Perhaps if the fenders had been placed lower, the rub rail wouldn’t have pulled out. With competition across the bay, the marina might possibly in future years be more accommodating about providing regular slips to support the regatta.

 It seemed harder to recruit volunteers to get up early on Sunday to staff the r.c. than on Saturday.

 Later, a low-oil pressure light came on and the crew had to re-fill the oil reservoir (adjacent to the fuel tank in the port aft locker) in rough choppy conditions without an oil funnel to prevent spillage or rags to clean up the spillage, which got onto some volunteers' clothing and personal items. Having a funnel on board would have been useful, and perhaps an oil level check could be part of a pre-regatta check-up. Apparently tools are not kept on the boat because of the history and potential for theft/"borrowing".

 The pontoon boat had only one anchor; in the past it has been said to have had two. Perhaps the spliced anchor line could be replaced with a single long rode with depth flags sewn in at regular intervals (the winch might eventually chew the depth flags, but at least for a while the r.c. would have a more consistent idea of depth and scope). If someone were to be so generous as to give the r.c. boat a depth sounder that might be a useful toy.

 Some of the crew were unfamiliar with how to start the boat and use the keys or operate the automatic horn. Maybe it would be useful to have a laminated SOP on how to set up and operate the boat.

 The head door seems to require two keys and is "fiddly" to open. Early in the weekend some hardware on the inside of the head door was loose.

 An organized way to gather trash would be useful – a small trash bin or frame to hold a small trash bag perhaps.

 A perhaps silly-sounding but nice luxury would be having some cup holders. That would lessen the chances of spilled coffee or sodas and rolling water bottles making footing more treacherous, and avoid crew crunching water bottles when they open the lockers.

 With the line sighter in the bow and the scorers aft, communication was difficult between them. David A. has discussed this problem. Unfortunately, moving the scorers forward can make the bow congested. Maybe a courtesy board rail could be added port side, allowing the board people to work just one side of the bow and a couple of scorers to come forward. Also, in case times or sail numbers are missed by a scorer, perhaps a digital audio recording could be made from the line sighter’s position, allowing a chance to recover missing information. Yet another idea would be moving the finishing mark on the boat aft from the forward mast to the middle of the boat, perhaps at a second mast or at an orange flag.

 About 2/3 of the way aft along the courtesy rail (starboard forward side of boat) used to display fleet boards, there’s a spot where several of the boards wouldn’t fit in the track. Perhaps that could be filed or reamed out until the boards fit.

 One of the Viper fleet boards was too tall and hard to force into the flip rack; it could be filed down an 1/8 inch or so.

 One of the green PHRF spin boards was too short and tried to fall out of the rack.

 One of the "H" (Horse Island) course boards had the H made with duct tape and not painted.

 Neither the signal boat nor the other boats were equipped to signal a change of course leg; there would need to be a C (Charlie) flag, green and red flags, plus and minus flags.

 It was not easy to signal an abandonment for only one fleet; pretty much a crew member had to hold an N flag or board over a fleet board, supplemented by sending the mark-set boat out after the fleet.

Race committee actions

 We were inconsistent day-to-day about the exact procedures for displaying courses; on Saturday we gave competitors the first mark but on Sunday we specified all the marks.

 On Saturday, we displayed Yankee to require life vests, but on Sunday, when it was windier, we didn’t put it up – perhaps an oversight.

 It was necessarily hard to be consistent about signaling finishes; we most often used the forward horn when not running sequences and just called out time marks and sail numbers otherwise -- and not always as consistently as might be possible.

 As noted before, we needed better communication between the line sighter and scorers. Perhaps moving the finishing position to a mid-boat position would help.

 The PROs didn’t always have good info on which fleets had completed a race; as a result, we started the multihulls on a Saturday race when they hadn’t all finished. (Fortunately or otherwise, the wind had died and they weren’t having much fun anyway.)

 On Friday, some of the scorers were using a clipboard with a clock attached to it that had not been synchronized to correct time; as a result the finish times needed to be corrected to mesh with the starting times.

 The mark set boat had a good radio, but communication with other boats wasn’t as good. It would be good to have a means of discussing race committee business or even a way of having “sensitive” conversations privately.

 The on-water race committee volunteers didn’t have a list of phone numbers to answer questions about the boats or regatta. A printed phone tree could be posted on the boat during the regatta, or at least given to key volunteers. The list could also have names/boat names and cell phone numbers for the fleet captains.

 The SI’s didn’t use the word “obstruction” when specifying that the start and finish lines were closed to boats racing after their first leg and before finishing. Working the word "obstruction" into the SI could clarify and emphasize the need to respect the line.

 The SI’s did not have a hard time limit for finishes; this could be amended in various ways. Although the RC/PROs can come up with bases for shortening or abandoning a race due to poor wind or advancing darkness, hard time limits would give them more authority.

Generic comments

 The provision in the SI’s for protests is more suited for regular regattas. Perhaps the SI’s could specify that protest time will be sounded at a designated location adjacent to the regatta tent, and that protest forms will be available and protests will be received at a specific designated location at the tent, rather than at the more generic and out-of-the-way “Spinnaker Point” in the SI’s.

 The regatta web site didn’t have a provision for volunteers to pay for meals or order shirts during the week before the regatta, or for already-registered competitors to order more items, without incurring a late fee.

 Maybe the "how to save money" e-mail could be expanded into a guide for first-time Lake Pleasant sailors and Birthday Regatta participants.

 The regatta did not have a bulletin board. Bulletin boards could be set up to display lists of fleets, interim results, protest information, lost and found, crew availability and needs, volunteer sign-ups and assignments, schedule changes, maps for the park and area, resource lists, "brag" articles about the Leukemia Society, Arizona Sailing Foundation, etc.

 The regatta didn’t have a volunteer stationed at or near the tent entrance as a “traffic director” or greeter. It would be nice to have someone in that role (who knows all the who's whoms), and a marked station, and equipped with schedules, forms, phone numbers of key people, etc.

 Regatta volunteers didn’t have a well organized or specifically located place to gather and to find out where they were supposed to go, and when. That may have contributed to events starting off slowly on Friday and Saturday.

 Competitors weren’t as aware of the rules as they should have been, such as the start/finish line being closed, and some boats had to be scored as DNF because they violated the line. Competitors often didn't understand the use of the AP + H or N + H flags to end the day's racing.

Maybe or maybe not worth doing:
Putting an underline or stripe at the bottom of course boards to indicate the bottom and lessen the chance of a board inserter putting a board into the flipper upside down.
Having the mark set boat crew run a GPS track and be able to give the race committee a precise distance to the mark.

Again, some of these things may have been discussed or fixed already, or there just may not have been enough people to go around to do everything that wanted doing. The regatta depends on volunteers, and everyone needs to be grateful to them for providing their time and energy. And, the regatta was a big success.

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Friday, January 23, 2009

Room at an obstruction

During the last race for one boat class at the Arizona Yacht Club's Birthday Regatta, an incident occurred when two 25-foot keelboats were overlapped downwind, both on the same tack. As they approached the mid point of their downwind run, they neared the pin buoy of the start line. The sailing instructions for the regatta had made the start and finish lines the equivalent of obstructions, severely penalizing any boat that crossed either line after its first leg, and before finishing, with a DNF.

Caveat: A real protest hearing would have established facts and conclusions based on input from all involved parties, and additional facts would likely have been found. This post is necessarily based on my personal conclusions and interpretations and thus cannot define all of what really happened or what a real protest committee would have decided. However, in addition to being a witness to the incident, I did visit with some of the sailors involved, and would have been the chairman of the PC had a full hearing been held, so this post should address the issue fairly reasonably.

The wind was about 8 to 10 kts from the NNE with the line oriented generally E-W and the two boats were approaching on starboard gybe at about at 70 degree angle to the line. The inside leeward (IL) boat appeared to have established its overlap at least some 5 boat lengths from the line and appeared to be within two boat lengths of the outside windward (OW) boat when it established its overlap. The boats were each flying mainsail and symmetrical spinnaker.

At that point, the boats' courses would have taken the outside boat just outside the starting pin and the inside leeward boat about a boat length inside the pin. The incident was viewed by several persons about 400 feet away on the race committee boat, who, however, could not hear hails or determine whether a protest flag was flown.

The IL boat did not get room and was forced to sail through the "poisoned line". It protested, and announced to the race committee that it was protesting at the finish. After sailing through the line, and continuing downwind for several boat lengths, the IL boat was able to take down its chute, sail back to the line, go back outside, and thus "unwind her string", as was allowable (exonerated) because she had been forced over the line by another boat's foul.

The OW proceeded most of the way down the course but completed a 720 (two turns penalty) before reaching the leeward mark.

Afterward I discussed some of the issues with crew members of the boats and in that fleet and noted some questions that they wanted clarified. Although a protest hearing didn't happen, the fleet members wanted to know their rights and obligations and had some theories about them that needed to be answered.


What rules applied here? 11 (windward leeward), 17 (proper course), 19 (obstructions) (also, 15, acquiring right of way)

Was the line a continuing obstruction? No.
A continuing obstruction is one that isn't passed momentarily, such as a beach, long pier, etc., that a boat is generally parallel too. At the speed and angle (almost a right angle) the 25-foot boats were approaching the pin, they would pass it in roughly 3 seconds.

The line could have been a continuing obstruction if for some odd reason the course the boats were following had required them to sail roughly parallel to it (for example if sailing between the east and west marks), but it wasn't.

What made the line an obstruction?
The SIs made it an obstruction by prohibiting the boats from going through it, and the basic test of an obstruction is whether a boat within a boat length of it would have to make a substantial course change to avoid it. IL, at boat length away, would have had to have headed up about 70 degrees to avoid the line, which is substantial, especially when dealing with a spinnaker in a healthy breeze.


Were the competitors aware of their obligation to avoid the line? Not all of them.
In addition to the incident with the 25-foot keelboats, two Buccaneers crossed the finish line on their downwind run, and were scored DNF as required by the SIs.


What were the boats' initial obligations?
When the overlap was first established, from clear astern, IL became the right-of-way boat (leeward boat, same tack under RRS 11) but was "limited" by RRS 17 (proper course, overlap established from clear astern) and could only luff OW up to IL's "proper course". However, IL's proper course was to avoid the "poisoned" line; therefore she had the right to call for OW to head up so IL could sail her proper course. IL was required to give OW enough time to respond to her hail and OW was not required to anticipate her hail.

What happened under the rules when they got close to the line?
Now the two boats came under RRS 19, dealing with obstructions. (RRS 20 didn't apply since the boats weren't heading upwind. Also, the starting line and pin were an obstruction, but they were not a rounding mark for the boats and they did not have a "zone".)

When IL got close enough that avoiding action was required, she had the right to get room from OW under RRS 19, subject to OW being able to do so. Under the obligations of this rule, OW was required to keep a lookout for the obstruction, and, once it was clear on which side the obstruction was to be passed, OW was required to give IL room, even without a hail being heard. Because the start and finish lines were very long, it was obvious from a very long distance (at least 20 boat lengths) which side the obstruction would be passed. At this point, the onus for following the rule fell upon OW.


Did OW exonerate herself successfully with the two-turns penalty? Maybe.
One crew member of the IL boat thought that the turn-turns penalty still left the OW boat in a much more favorable relative position than she would been in without the foul, because the IL boat had to take down her chute and travel perhaps an extra 15 boat lengths along with multiple turns. A boat that gains a gross advantage through a foul is not allowed to exonerate herself with turns, so a protest committee or arbitrator might have imposed a greater penalty upon OW.


Was the protest executed properly? Probably not.
The IL boat used the red cover of an inflatable PFD as its "flag". A strict protest committee could disallow this, since the rules specifically call for the flag and Dave Perry's 2009 edition of Understanding the Racing Rules of Sailing notes that articles such as a piece of clothing don't qualify as flags; it's important that the flag be clearly understandable as being a protest flag. The protesting boat (small dinghies are exempt) needs to be equipped to display conspicuously something that's obviously a protest flag.


Would arbitration have been a good option? Likely yes.
An arbitrator would have had more flexibility to establish a fair settlement for the two boats while saving on the complexity, uncertainty, and perhaps more severe consequences of a full-fledged "trip to the room". As just one example, an arbitrator might have given OW a penalty less than DNF/DSQ, such as a scoring penalty, that might have more closely restored equity to the situation.


Are there lessons for the race committee and birthday regatta? Yes.

(1) It would be good to make it more obvious to the competitors that the line is "poisoned" even though this is done commonly in large regattas. The RC is not in the business of reading the NOR and SIs to the competitors, but it can be helpful to point out a few special features.

(2) To make the status of the line even more clear, the word "obstruction" should be
part of the wording about the start and finish line in the SIs.

(3) It would help for every club to periodically remind sailors of the requirements for protests. A mock protest hearing wouldn't be a bad idea.

(4) Rules awareness is always a good thing, and the AYC is very active in this area, with briefings on the new rules already scheduled.

(5) The procedure of signaling protest time at Spinnaker Point is more suited for normal regattas but less so for the Birthday Regatta, where all the on-shore action occurs at the large tent. A more specific site should be designated for receiving protests. This could be combined with having a specific site for bulletin boards for race and schedule updates, posting protest time, posting the NOR and SIs, etc.


Are there lessons for the competitors? Yes. Going into a protest hearing, the boats would have risked having the protest thrown out (IL) or being disqualified from the race (OW). Knowledge of the rules is good "risk management" for racers. Knowing their rights and obligations, the boats could have entirely avoided this situation and enjoyed a fair test of boat speed and sailing ability without the distraction of a protest situation.

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Thursday, January 22, 2009

Friday Eventagram Centerboard Challenge at Lake Pleasant

Waterdog and friends romp through the waters of Lake Pleasant, north of Phoenix, Arizona for their regatta on Friday. Usually, most of the smaller centerboarders sail at Tempe Town Lake, but this is one day of the year when they get a special welcome on the larger waters of Lake Pleasant.





Boats gear up for a start at the centerboard challenge on Friday at Lake Pleasant.

View to the west, with Evantagram boats sailing by the start line.

Megabyte 181, Waterdog sails by the fleet.

Capri C14.2 no. 4650 at left, Tempe Town Lake AYZ pontoon boat at right, and more. These were some of the centerboard boats sailing on Friday, January 16, 2009, at Lake Pleasant.

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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Sailing Scenery at the 2009 Birthday Regatta

Bucc 5239, Erin Morgan, and C14 no. 3941. (end of Friday pictures)

Hobie Tiger Team Chum and Capri 26 no. 41 sail at Lake Pleasant on Saturday, January 17, 2009 during the Birthday Regatta and Leukemia Cup.

Hobie Tiger Team no. 1529 Team Chum in center; Bucc 5220 Cassiopeia at left, with Merit 25 at right (probably no. 841, Blue Streak).

View toward Scorpion Bay Marina with Catalina Capri 26 no. 41x at left and J/24 no. 999, To the Nines, at right.yacht Cassiopeia

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Hiss! A nest of Vipers in the Arizona sun

Blue-hulled Viper no. 71

coup de rouge and friends

Viper 31, coup de rouge

Viper 46, Heroin, the fleet winner.

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Birthday Regatta , January 17, 2009, Lake Pleasant

F27 Corsair trimaran at left, unidentified boat no. 687 at right, and plenty of other action on the racecourse at the Birthday Regatta on January 17, 2009, at Lake Pleasant, Arizona.

PHRF and other boats.

Red Viper, probably no. 31, coup de rouge.

PHRF spin and other boats.

Laser 131673, Viper 21, and many more.

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Arizona Birthday Regatta sailing trip log, January 2009,

Wednesday, Jan. 14 – arrived Scottsdale 5:30, checked in, dinner with Gerald at Texaz off route 51.

Thur., Jan. 15 – Gerald ran errands on campus, then we met at Chipotle east of ASU for lunch. Went by West Marine. Visited JJ and Howard in the evening in Sun City West; JJ was a very active Rio Grande Sailing Club member when she lived in New Mexico and still keeps up her associate membership. Sun City’s roads are dark and a bit confusing, but then the residents probably don’t drive a lot after dark. Got socks for Gerald at sporting goods place on Mayo Drive off Scottsdale Road near the condo.

Fri. Jan. 16 – Went to Pleasant Harbor, met Arno, Dave, and Pat B. Went with Pat to fill tanks and launch TTL pontoon boat. Event running behind schedule; waited with John at marina and race committee boat; took a quick look at John’s 30’ Chrysler TMI 1980-81 sloop. John, in spite of a short time as owner that was interrupted by a hospital visit, has been busy; he’s already re-built his first marine head. Went out and ran races; Dave as PRO, me as board flipper and general deputy and jack of all trades; part of time worked radio with support boats, helped coordinate signaler, worked with Dale to anchor and hoist anchor, etc. Three starting groups; single-hand, double-hand, and multi-hull. Morning winds were 4-8 kt. NE to NNE; mid-afternoon switch to SW but only about 2-4 kt. We noticed that the pontoon boat seemed to have only one anchor, when in the past it’s been said to be equipped with a second anchor. Dave, as a principal engineer for building the pontoon boat, filled me in on a lot of how it was designed and set up.

Gerald wound up helping unload and set up for the regatta at the big tent above Spinnaker Point and later became a beverage server, consorting with the Merit Boys. Stir fry dinner was quite good, with four different stir fries. Pat B. said kind words at the presentation.

Sat. Jan. 17 – Event running quite a bit behind schedule in morning; waited at pontoon boat at marina courtesy dock. After rest of crew arrived, and Gerald produced the magic key to start the motor and drive the boat, we went out in a good breeze of around 10-12 kts and set up. John W. was PRO with me as his co-; I again did boards, helped with wind shifts/courses/line and radio for mark boat, PA system, anchor, etc. We had a big crew of about 10 to 12 people on board with PRO, board flipper, signaler (Dale), and others doing line sighting, photography, and especially several people scoring finishes, with most scorers responsible for a couple of fleets. Eight fleets in seven starting groups at first, starting with Vipers, Buccs, Merit 25s, Spin boats, Catalina 22s, multi-hulls and Portsmouth together, PHRF non-spin (order may not be exact and changed later on in the day). Wind was nice for a couple of hours of racing but then faded to around 6 kts and then tried to shift in mid-afternoon but didn’t do a very good job of it, leaving us with only an oscillation between 0 and 3 knots. The last couple of fleets got their X course shortened at their leeward mark.

We had a couple of moderate goofs during the day, such as starting the multi-hulls when they hadn’t all finished a previous race and having to abandon their race (but the wind had fallen away to nothing, so they didn’t really mind anyway), but overall things ran quite smoothly and racers were happy with the courses we gave them. The automatic horn system on the boat worked quite well, essentially taking the place of one race committee crew member. A couple of the boards that were used as class flags need to be re-worked; one Viper board fit too tightly and needs to be shaved down and a PHRF spin board was too short and wanted to fall out of the rack. Also, several of the boards don’t fit in the slot on one segment toward the back of the courtesy rail that runs along the starboard bow. We had to re-load one mark board at the last minute and sometimes remembering to get boards in right-side-up was a challenge; it might be helpful to have something like a thin underline marked along the bottom of each board. We also found that the pontoon boat was missing some equipment for signaling course shortening and course changes; it had an S board but no flag, no C flag (with red/green and plus/minus) on board on either the pontoon boat or mark set boat, and no really easy way to signal an abandonment for only one fleet, since we’d have to hand-hold an N flag over a fleet course board.

We were in early enough that Gerald and I went into town; I dropped him off at his Jeep Cherokee so he could start moving in to his dorm room, which ASU didn’t allow until the Saturday before classes started. I took a quick dip in the pool and hot tub at the condo, then returned in time for dinner and presentations. The regatta had a fairly mellow guitar play who could play Jimmy Buffet tunes and such, which were well received; this was much better than having a loud rock band blast people out of the tent. Gerald arrived later but was introduced to the Blumms, who have a daughter who is Arizona’s youngest sailing instructor and owner of a 420 sailing dinghy. Afterward, Gerald picked up his cello and the last of his other stuff at the condo and drove to Tempe to spend the night in the dorm.

Sun. Jan. 18 – This time the committee boat kept pretty darn close to schedule; John and I arrived at 7:40 and opened the lockers to retrieve gear with the rest of the crew, including PRO David A. as well as John W., John (the Chrysler TMI owner), Janet and Eric the scorers, only seconds behind. Tad was running about 10 minutes further behind and was ferried out later on one of the other support boats. The early morning or rough weather also probably cost us some crew; we were down a couple from Saturday. For some reason, the challenge this time was opening the head door; for some reason it has two door locks and the way to open it is a bit “fiddly”. A strong NNE wind blowing at about 15 kts onto the boat’s starboard quarter hampered leaving the dock; the boat didn’t have enough power to back out so eventually we drove forward, pulling out a piece of the pontoon boat’s trim molding. Then the boat showed an oil pressure warning and had to have oil added to the reservoir adjacent to the fuel tank; there wasn’t a funnel and some got spilled on the sleeve of my fleece pullover. But, all that only set us back about 10 minutes.

Once on station, we let out lots of scope on the anchor and checked boats in. Some of the scorers had three fleets this day, and with higher winds, more noise, and boats finishing closer together, there was more of a challenge to communicate between the line sighters and the scorers to make sure that none of the boats were missed, and to make sure that times were recorded for all the handicap fleet boats. As PRO, Dave A. especially concentrated on line sighting at the forward mast and working with the scorers, especially trying to get good verbal feedback from them to make sure boat positions and times weren’t lost. John, Dale, and I covered the rest of the bases other than scoring; Dale signaled and worked with me on the anchor, while I did board flips and watched the wind and line a lot.

The wind stayed strong on Sunday, remaining at around 10-12 kts and shifting only a bit eastward, which eventually caused the pontoon boat to swing west, toward the starting pin. That left the finish line too long and the start line skewed and short, but we were so busy starting boats that we didn’t get enough of a breather to re-set the line until just before the fourth and final set of races for the stay. Previously, however, we’d had the mark boat set an A (alternate, green) mark further to the east, and move the leeward mark that was far to the south of the committee boat, so the racers always had good windward legs. (That is, except for some of the fleets, which were sent on triangles for some of their races; the multihulls, Portsmouth boats, and PHRF non-spin got in some reaching legs.) And, for the final race of the day, we sent a couple of fleets (Merit 25, PHRF spin) the long way upwind to round Horse Island as their windward mark, sending them on a big windward-leeward race that then had them round the South mark back toward the dam before finishing upwind.

We worked at a furious pace, getting off four races and starting close to 200 boats. The first two serious of starting sequences came off without interruption; 14 starts in 75 minutes. Then, there was only about a ten-minute interruption before the third sequence. And perhaps a fifteen- or twenty-minute break before the fourth – just enough time for folks to grab lunch and re-adjust settings while we re-adjusted the line and courses. Because of the heavier winds and earlier starting time, some boats didn’t race on Sunday, but we still had about ¾ of the 65 boats that had raced on Saturday. One Buccaneer did flip and we dispatched the mark set boat to help. We had two other support boats, but one of them didn’t have a good radio and the mark set boat was closest.

Aside from perhaps wanting to improve communication between the scorers and line sighters, and not being able to react as well as we’d like to the boat swinging on the long anchor line, things went very smoothly on the committee boat and the races were run efficiently. Fleets got in from five to eight races between Saturday and Sunday, so everyone got one throw-out.

We did have a couple of rules issues involving the start and finish lines, which were restricted by the sailing instructions to effectively make them an obstruction to boats racing but not starting or finishing. A couple of Buccs sailed through the finish line on the downwind leg of a windward-leeward course, causing them to be scored DNF in accordance with the SIs. And, two Merits were overlapped sailing downwind, with the outside boat not giving the inside boat room to sail outside the starting pin buoy. The inside boat then had to collect its chute, head upwind several boat lengths, and come around outside the mark to “unwind her string” (exonerated for so because she had been forced inside by the outside boat). Although the outside boat later did a 720 two-turns penalty to atone, a crew member on the inside boat thought that wasn’t enough of a penalty to make up for how far back the inside boat had been moved. But, although we made provisions to hold a protest hearing if needed, it didn’t happen; I met with some of the members of the Merit fleet after the race and we had a good discussion and resolved to clear up a couple of possible rules issues. The PRO trio on the committee boat also had a good discussion about time limits and the ability to shorten courses; perhaps a couple of refinements could be made to the SIs in the future to clarify the rules and empower the PROs/race committee in this area.

One other issue was beyond the power of the race organizers. When the regatta schedule had been set, no one knew that there would be a competing athletic event on Sunday afternoon down near where loop 101 west meets Interstate 20. I think it was some sort of American footy-ball event involving some Red Birds and Eagle Birds, but whatever it was, it made some of the race committee and sailors disappear shortly after their boats docked. As someone with an outside perspective, I made some notes for the regatta organizers and race committee folks; perhaps they’ll be of some use.

After the awards ceremony it was time for a fuel stop and the long drive home. Because I was so far north, I took the longer route through Flagstaff rather then the shorter one via Payson and stopped for dinner in Gallup at the El Rancho. It was almost 11:00 p.m. when the trip ended back in Albuquerque.

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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

This Racecourse protected by Viper

Viper no. USA 46, Heroin took first place in the fleet with six bullets out of eight races.

Viper 31, coup de rouge.

Viper start

Viper start

Another Viper start. The red-hulled Viper 31, coup de rouge, won a tight battle for second place in the fleet, with only six points separating four boats.

Viper start

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On the water at the Birthday Regatta, January 17, 2009

PHRF spinnaker fleet start.

Santana 23 no. 43625, Teresa Lynn, amidst dozens of boats at the 2009 Arizona Yacht Club Birthday Regatta and Leukemia Cup, January 17, 2009.

Wavelength 30 no. 31591 Alibi and other boats

Four Merit 25 boats off on their start.

Merit 25 no. 77616 Runaway and yellow-hulled Merit 67624 Dream On.

Teresa Lynn and To the Nines approach the committee boat.

Santana 2034 no. 43625, Teresa Lynn, and yellow-hulled J/24 n. 999, To the Nines.

Cat Capri 26 no. 41 and Catalina 22 no. 1671, Son T, which finished near the top of the Catalina 22 fleet.

Boat panorama

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The Bucc starts here at the Birthday Regatta

Buccaneer 5239, Erin Morgan.




Blue Bucc with black and gold chute.

Buccs and friends

Buccneer start with nos. 524, 3659 Rainie's Day, and 3313 Dorado visible.

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