Race 1.09 photos by Sharon Nowak, Janice Ryder, Mike Sharkey ... |
Meanwhile, back with the
leading Interlakes near mark #4 along the south shore, 3rd-place Bob and Betsy have gybed back and are now hugging the south shore. ... |
I believe Andy Nixon was
still winning (by a large margin?) as the Interlake
leaders rounded #4 (above) with eventual race winner, Scott Savage (1340) rounding 2nd ahead of Bob Bradley. Now they'll head for ... ... |
... mark #3 and then do a
final beat (we hope!) to the finish. ... |
I believe that's Scott
Savage (6th from
left) in 2nd with Bob Bradley (7th from right) and
Ron Gall (5th from
right) following at a respectful distance. All
the leading Rebels are in this shot: (l to r) Woody,
Mary, Dave, Uncle Al mostly hidden by Jim's main, Kevin,
John, Neil, Al Vorel. Note that Al (Uncle) has responded
to his fear of that very well "treed" little point near
the south-east corner of the lake (see chart above) when
it is or may become a windward shore, and has kept
extremely well clear of it. But now he and Larry are
looking forward to - they hope - being able to sail
higher and faster the rest of the way to #4 which is
hidden from view by the white spi with the red
stripe. - click here for full-size image
... |
Did anyone say "horizon
job"? I recall taking a quick glance to my left as we
neared #4 and being truly impressed with how far ahead
the leading Interlake had gotten. I think that little
white speck (3rd from
left) is Andy and Kirsten? But Clark Lake
giveth, and Clark Lake taketh away. Only minutes later
... - click here for full-size image
... |
... Scott and Lynn (2nd from right) have
somehow managed to pass ... ... |
... Andy and Kirsten
(1318)!! Doubtless they are under-amused!! ... |
Woody Woodruff and Bill
Locke have begun their third leg, while Dan is just
rounding #4. ... |
As Gary (W1321) and Tom
Katterheinrich (r) approach
mark
#4, Brian and Mike (R4160) have picked up a nice breeze that is moving them closer to ... ... |
... the Rebels ahead: (l to r) Jim
Quiniff, Kevin Nickels, Woody Woodruff, John Washburn, Al
Vorel ... |
Dave Nickels (4th from left) begins
to make his move! Overall (l to r) Kevin Bracy (I-1248), Uncle
Al, Mary Vorel, Dave Nickels, Jim Quiniff, Tom Marriott
(I-909), Neil Robb, Kevin Nickels, John Washburn in front
of Woody, Al Vorel - click here for full-size image ... |
So near and yet ...
Al Vorel has tacked onto the very lifted starboard tack.
Off his bow, we can see Uncle Al who is currently just nicely laying the finish line with no other Rebels around #3 as yet. ... |
Jim Q (r) has also tacked
away from Kevin (4140) and Woody (4077 - M*A*S*H???) and
onto a huge starboard lift, a move ... ... |
... that I could go for,
since the next wind - if any - is most likely to come in
from the west. ... |
Still, since Woody (l) and Kevin are
virtually laying the mark here, I wouldn't (in their shoes) tack here unless I got a substantial knock. ... |
Are we having fun
yet??!! As felt first on Al's bare back, the final
beat is now a run. Both Al and (especially) Neil lost
big-time on this: the rest of the Rebel fleet that had
been well back closed right in as they brought a little
easterly breeze with them. In the background of this
shot, we can see the 3-4-5 boats of the Wayfarer fleet -
Mike Austerberry, Mike Anspach and John Kolstoe -
working their way towards mark #3 on what is now a beat.
... |
Larry (r) and I may look a
tad grim, but we still have about 50 yards of lead, and
there is good news off the bow: ... |
Larry has spotted some
healthy-looking ripples coming oh so slowly towards us
from the west. ... |
Drifter mode for Larry and
Al in 4180, and for Tom Marriott and Mike Judd in
Interlake 909. ... |
Al shows off the world's
most sensitive back as he and Larry eagerly watch the
westerly breeze inching closer. When that hits us well
before the others, I thought, we will get all of our
lead back and perhaps more. But wait! Not so fast!!!!
Instead of us getting the breeze first, the boats
directly behind us got it a good half-minute before we
did! Hard to fathom that one! I thought I had seen it
all in my 50+ years of racing, but this was perhaps the
unkindest cut of all.
But still, I can't blame any of this for ultimately losing the race to Dave and Shannon who had been buried half-way up the third leg but made the most of the opportunities that the odd winds presented them with. Once the "new" wind settled in, Larry and I still had a nice little lead over 2nd-place Dave with a steady breeze, good boat speed and no pointing problems. All I had to do to stay ahead of Dave was to cover him to the finish. How could I have been so stupid, I asked myself and Larry after the race, as to tack for the line before Dave did??!! And then I remembered: The finish line was set up near #6, our original windward mark, and I wasn't sure whether the line was between #6 and the raft, or between the little red ball and the raft - the SI's had mentioned both (after some - later - study it became clear to me that the "if present" part had to refer only to the inflatable red ball). Larry assured me it was the ball, but I wanted to make doubly sure and tacked to lay #6. There I shoved our nose over the "line", got no beep, bore away and apologized to Larry for having doubted his wisdom. Anyway, despite my having luffed head to wind at #6 in my unsuccessful finish attempt, we were still ... ...
|
next photos page return to 2008 Tim Dowling Regatta index |