the
Wayfarer
Ontarios Lac Deschênes Sailing Club * July 28-29, 2007 Saturday race 4.1 pics by Doug Netherton ... |
Saturday's final race.
Unsure whether
John placed 2nd or 3rd in race 3, Marc and I are
assuming he took 2nd,
and now has a 1-2-3 while we have a 1-1-2. After 4
races are in the
books, there is a drop. And who knows what, if
anything, tomorrow may
bring, so the SHADES
race
strategy remains unchanged. If John wins and this
turns out to be the
final race of the series, we will both be counting
1-1-2, and if
there's a tie breaker, John will win it by virtue of
having beaten us
in the last race. So, we
have to sail to beat John.
... |
The start signal is made:
Jamie
(4594), Colin (929) and Tony (4105) are very well placed,
unlike John
(7351) and Al who is near the RC boat end but well back. And not only are Jamie, Colin and Tony well placed, but they are also ... ... |
... moving very nicely. ... |
Seconds later, starboard
seems
to be ... ... |
... getting knocked, and
those
in a position to do so - like Jamie (under the 929 boom), Sue (under the 282 boom) and Andrew G. (4610) - have flipped onto the favoured port tack. ... |
While Colin (929) joins the
port-tack hordes, Tony (4105) is pinned on starboard until
... ... |
... Frank (648) tacks. Tony
(4105) and Bill (937) follow suit. - for full-size pic,
click here ... |
With almost the entire
fleet on
port, we see Al (3854) for the first time. He has, for
the moment,
succeeded in his attempt to find clear air, but now must
weigh this and
the port lift against the fact that John (not in this
pic) has held
starboard and is getting away, something we really can't
afford to
risk. This being Lac Deschênes, John could come out of
the left
corner with an insurmountable lead. So ...
- for
full-size pic, click here
... |
... we tack. Only to
find that
Tony (4105) and Frank (648) have also tacked. I suppose
a case could
made for saying that we are seeing how the other half
lives. I seem to
recall that John had tacked to port by this time and it
was becoming
clear that the left side was not paying off for the
moment. A shift is
about to hit Al (3854) and Bill (937) who are converging
on opposite
tacks. Oddly enough, both Al and Bill ... - for full-size
pic, click here
... |
... see this shift as a
knock,
and thus tack. The three boats on the left side of this
picture look to
be in fine shape: (l to r) Jamie, Tony, Frank - for full-size pic, click here ... |
A minute or two later:
Tony (2nd from left)
holds starboard in
spite of a substantial knock which is correspondingly
lifting all the
port boats here. Bill (937) and Al (3854) are in fact,
pretty close to
the port lay line and not all that far from the mark.
Thus this is no
time for Al to tack to escape Bill's disturbed air.
Instead ...
... |
... he and Marc foot off
for
speed and do manage to break through Bill's wind shadow.
Now all Al has
to do is ... ... |
... stay out of Sue's
(4677)
backwind. ... |
This picture illustrates
what I
mean when I tell people that a bridle-mounted mainsheet
block lets us
judge small mainsheet adjustments far better than a
block on a
traveller at deck level. Here, we are one to two inches
from being
block to block, which is usually about right for our
pinching mode when
the wind strength is such that we both need to sit on
the deck but do
not need to hike out.
... |
The big port lift has
killed
all the boats that went way right on the beat, and
benefitted Bill
(937) and Al (3854) who happened to be left of centre at
the right
time. After his last windward-mark experience, Bill and
Deirdre take no
chances here. To ensure that they will most definitely
lay the mark,
they ...
... |
... throw in two more
tacks,
putting a nice ... ... |
... lee-bow on Al and Sue. ... |
Bill and Deirdre will round
a
nice first, ahead of Al and Sue. |