Friday, August 23, 2013
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Report from the US Windsurfing Nationals
I wasnt able to attend this years US Windsurfing Nationals in Cabrillo Beach last week but am taking the opportunity to post my good buddy- Soheil's report form the regatta.
I think you'll find it a good read about the trials and tribulations of sailing a regatta- the highs and lows and most importantly- the lesson of never ever giving up.
Soheil sailed one of the best regattas of his career and finished a career high 4th overall in the Formula class. Big props to him for keeping it going and sending out an report each evening.
I was living vicariously through his post as I find myself in a new role this summer- that of a new parent. Ana Isabelle Bodner arrived earlier last month and is keeping us busy. Ive swapped out changing rigs for changing diapers but hope to be back on the starting line sometime soon.
Until then- enjoy the guest post.
The
zigzag lines show the course I sailed. The color of the section of line
represents my speed on that section (green= slow, yellow= less slow,
orange= faster, red=fastest). The little green circle is the start and
finish point. The skinny white line is the breakwater (low rocky
seawall) that protects the entrance to the two harbors. You can see two
gaps in this breakwater that we had to sail in and out of as part of the
course. We started outside, went inside at the first gap, came back out
at the 2nd gap, went around the end of the breakwater, came back out at
the 2nd gap and stayed out until the finish.
I think you'll find it a good read about the trials and tribulations of sailing a regatta- the highs and lows and most importantly- the lesson of never ever giving up.
Soheil sailed one of the best regattas of his career and finished a career high 4th overall in the Formula class. Big props to him for keeping it going and sending out an report each evening.
I was living vicariously through his post as I find myself in a new role this summer- that of a new parent. Ana Isabelle Bodner arrived earlier last month and is keeping us busy. Ive swapped out changing rigs for changing diapers but hope to be back on the starting line sometime soon.
Until then- enjoy the guest post.
Day One
I don't see results on
the official web site yet, but I'm hoping they'll put some up soon. My
best finish today was a 3rd place, which isn't bad for an old guy like
me. Specially since the 2 in front are both pros or pro-ish.
There are some photos of the event here:http://www.flickr.com/photos/ frenchyphoto/sets/ 72157634954501300/
Day Two
Aloha from warm, sunny and pleasantly windy Cabrillo Beach in San Pedro CA!
Thanks
for all of the kind words of encouragement everyone! My back is
starting to give out (already!), but I'm motivated by yesterday's 3rd
place finish as to what's possible... I actually had another 3rd place
finish all sewn up yesterday, but had it taken away because of a silly
mark rounding mistake on my part near the finish line... So
I'm definitely in the running here if I can last the week.
Today I think I had a 4th and a 5th. Still in the running for a podium finish in the Course racing. I opted out of the Slalom racing today to give my back a rest. It is manageable with Advil and lots of stretching.
The slalom was awesome to watch (would've been more awesome to be in...). Lots of good slalom sailors are here and it looks like 20-25 guys on the start line for each race. The problem is that that is too many in one start for safe racing as slalom is a bit of a high adrenaline contact sport. Lots of crashes and several injuries so far.
They told us today that the Yacht club running the event and responsible for posting the results is closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, and that they refused to make an exception for our event. I think that's lame. The St. Francis YC that runs our events up in the Bay Area is closed on Tuesdays, but the race office staff happily comes in when we're running a national or international regatta and the results are posted on their web site before we've had a chance to get dry and put away our gear. Hopefully we'll start seeing some results posted tomorrow...
Tomorrow is the long distance race. This 1 race counts as two course races, so it is important for me to get a good result in this one!
I wonder if I come in 3rd, if I'd be the U.S. National Champion? The two guys in 1st and 2nd have foreign racing numbers: AUS and GBR... :-)
Here's a map view of the course I sailed today as recorded by my GPS watch. It may help with visualizing some of verbiage:
Today I think I had a 4th and a 5th. Still in the running for a podium finish in the Course racing. I opted out of the Slalom racing today to give my back a rest. It is manageable with Advil and lots of stretching.
The slalom was awesome to watch (would've been more awesome to be in...). Lots of good slalom sailors are here and it looks like 20-25 guys on the start line for each race. The problem is that that is too many in one start for safe racing as slalom is a bit of a high adrenaline contact sport. Lots of crashes and several injuries so far.
They told us today that the Yacht club running the event and responsible for posting the results is closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, and that they refused to make an exception for our event. I think that's lame. The St. Francis YC that runs our events up in the Bay Area is closed on Tuesdays, but the race office staff happily comes in when we're running a national or international regatta and the results are posted on their web site before we've had a chance to get dry and put away our gear. Hopefully we'll start seeing some results posted tomorrow...

Tomorrow is the long distance race. This 1 race counts as two course races, so it is important for me to get a good result in this one!
I wonder if I come in 3rd, if I'd be the U.S. National Champion? The two guys in 1st and 2nd have foreign racing numbers: AUS and GBR... :-)
Day Three
Today we had the
long distance race. This one race would count as 2 normal races, so it
was very beneficial if you did well but could be disastrous to your
overall score if you did poorly. The course was described to us at the
skipper's meeting in the morning: a short upwind leg in front the beach
we've been launching from, then a long downwind, weaving in and out of
the breakwater in front of the Los Angeles and Long Beach harbor
entrances. Around the bottom of the breakwater, and then back up to
finish in front of our beach again. My GPS recorded 32.09 miles sailed
for the entire trip, and I did it in 1 hour and 56 minutes. It was a
scenic and tactical race as there were giant container ships parked
inside the breakwater and the breakwater itself to contend with on both
legs. L.A harbor is absolutely massive. Largest port in the US, and 6th
largest in the world when you combine the L.A. and Long Beach harbors
together (they're right next to each other and effectively two terminals
of one massive harbor).
My race started well enough, on port just behind AUS7. It looked like Phil almost had a collision with Jack Lundquist who was starting on starboard. I told Jack after the race that Port/Starboard is very cut and dry and he should protest Phil if he feels like his right of way was infringed.
I continued to follow the leaders (I'm in 2nd or 3rd place now) up to the windward mark, but this last leg brought us close to the beach where there is a lot of seaweed. This is where disaster struck, I snagged a large chunk of seaweed on my fin and started slowing down and going sideways. This kept me from making the mark rounding. So I tacked, went backwards to shed the weeds off my fin and watched as 5 or 6 boards passed me. I tacked again for the mark, and stalled because of even more board traffic above me giving me bad air. I didn't make the mark again! Eight or ten more boards went by! I tacked again and finally made the mark, but I looked behind and there was nobody left behind me. I was dead last! Only 5 or so minutes had elapsed and I was already in last place.
I was so dejected, I almost quit right there. My dream of doing well in this regatta was shattered. I almost shed a tear or two as I so wanted to do well here. However, I pressed on. I knew I could catch at least some of the boards ahead of me, and maybe I could salvage a top 10 position if I was lucky.
As it turned out, I caught up to the first clump of people ahead of me fairly quickly and passed! Now almost mid-fleet or thereabouts, I wasn't making up any ground on the boards I could see off in the distance. The wind was light, I had my small (10.0) sail to try and save my back a bit, and was well underpowered. I kept going and worked hard to pump my sail and get planing after every jibe. About halfway down to the bottom rounding, I saw a chance to overtake the next group ahead as some of them were doing short legs inside the breakwater and not hitting the corners of the course (this is sometimes advantageous but risky here as there were lots of ships and obstacles with wind shadows to contend with). I weaved in and out of some ships, hit the corners, and made out! By the time we came back out to the ocean from inside the breakwater, I had passed a group of 5 or 6 more boards. I held this position until the bottom mark rounding.
I could see Al and Tom just ahead. Ahead of them, I could see Anders from Finland. Ahead of them I couldn't see anybody as I was too far back, but I calculated that Phil was in 1st place, Xavier in 2nd and Fernando was in 3rd. Based on what I remembered from my disastrous time stalled at the top mark watching people go by. So now I was in 7th. The wind had clicked up another notch and my 10.0 was starting to feel in the groove. I put the hammer down and started pushing hard.
Again, I noticed the guys ahead of me short tacking inside the harbor and not taking any chances crossing behind the large container ships parked there. I threaded the needle between two massive monsters after doing a calculation in my head that the one casting the wind shadow above me was about the same distance I normally pass below the south tower of the Golden Gate bridge, and roughly the same width. So I went for it. I couldn't see the other guys for a while as the ship was blocking my view, but by the time I tacked and looked, I had overtaken Tom, and Anders. Only Al, Fernando, Xavier and Phil were ahead of me. Now in fifth. Hey, this was turning out ok.
Now we headed back out of the breakwater and to the ocean again. I could see Al and Fernando way up ahead, but they were a LONG ways ahead and were taking a long tack out into the ocean. As I followed, I knew I had to do something different or they would maintain that lead till the end. I tacked back towards the breakwater. Immediately I could tell that was the right thing to do as I could feel the wind lifting me onto a much more advantageous vector. I kept doing this (going a short way out into the ocean, and short tacking back towards the breakwater. By about the 3rd one of these tacks, I crossed ahead of Al and Fernando! Now in 3rd place!! I looked ahead but could barely make out Xavier well in the distance with not much more distance left to the finish. I kept pushing.
Alas it was not enough. Although I made up a bunch of distance on Xavier, he crossed the finish line well ahead of me. I'm guessing Phil finished well ahead of him as I couldn't even see him and he was fully dressed standing on the beach when I got back to shore. Still, 3rd place! After starting basically last and against improbable odds. I felt pretty good. But, I couldn't find the finish line!! I could see the committee boat that started us, but I couldn't see the pin end of the line which is this flimsy little flag mark that's really hard to see. Still, I saw Xavier pass right by the committee boat so this has to be the finish. I sailed over to them and saw them frantically waving their arms at me and pointing behind me. I look behind and see a different, much smaller boat and the pin end flimsy flag mark about 100 yard downwind. Disaster! I had sailed too far and come to the wrong finish. I turned back, sailed past this new finish boat and went through the proper finish line, but not before Al, who was not too far behind, and had managed to get there first. Again I was dejected. To have clawed my way back to 3rd, only to give it up for 4th at the end made me really mad.
I thought about it on the short sail back to the beach and remembered the course diagram and the skipper's meeting from the morning. I ran up to the white board on the beach and looked at the diagram. The diagram clearly showed the same line was being used as the start line AND the finish line. This means that the same boat will be used as the start and finish boat, unless it is specifically called out as being different and is written in the sailing instructions or on the official notice board. There was no such mention or notation. Hmmmm...
Back at the rigging area, everyone was congratulating me for the massive come from behind effort, but also saying "sorry about the finish...". Al was very gracious and was saying that he considered slowing up and letting me finish in 3rd in front of him because he saw my predicament with the changed finish line, and knew that I had already beat him fair and square. On my way back to the hotel I called Darren the principal race officer to ask for redress based on the start/finish line change. He said he knew why I was calling, and that they were going to grant me redress and my 3rd place finish based on not having officially announced the finish line boat change prior to the start of the race. Hooray!
So, long story short: disastrous start in last place, perseverance, a bit of luck, good boat speed, and some calculated risks along the way paid off to a 3rd place finish.
Again, photos are here: http://www.flickr.com/ photos/frenchyphoto
...and I'll send a link to the results once they're posted somewhere!!
My race started well enough, on port just behind AUS7. It looked like Phil almost had a collision with Jack Lundquist who was starting on starboard. I told Jack after the race that Port/Starboard is very cut and dry and he should protest Phil if he feels like his right of way was infringed.
I continued to follow the leaders (I'm in 2nd or 3rd place now) up to the windward mark, but this last leg brought us close to the beach where there is a lot of seaweed. This is where disaster struck, I snagged a large chunk of seaweed on my fin and started slowing down and going sideways. This kept me from making the mark rounding. So I tacked, went backwards to shed the weeds off my fin and watched as 5 or 6 boards passed me. I tacked again for the mark, and stalled because of even more board traffic above me giving me bad air. I didn't make the mark again! Eight or ten more boards went by! I tacked again and finally made the mark, but I looked behind and there was nobody left behind me. I was dead last! Only 5 or so minutes had elapsed and I was already in last place.
I was so dejected, I almost quit right there. My dream of doing well in this regatta was shattered. I almost shed a tear or two as I so wanted to do well here. However, I pressed on. I knew I could catch at least some of the boards ahead of me, and maybe I could salvage a top 10 position if I was lucky.
As it turned out, I caught up to the first clump of people ahead of me fairly quickly and passed! Now almost mid-fleet or thereabouts, I wasn't making up any ground on the boards I could see off in the distance. The wind was light, I had my small (10.0) sail to try and save my back a bit, and was well underpowered. I kept going and worked hard to pump my sail and get planing after every jibe. About halfway down to the bottom rounding, I saw a chance to overtake the next group ahead as some of them were doing short legs inside the breakwater and not hitting the corners of the course (this is sometimes advantageous but risky here as there were lots of ships and obstacles with wind shadows to contend with). I weaved in and out of some ships, hit the corners, and made out! By the time we came back out to the ocean from inside the breakwater, I had passed a group of 5 or 6 more boards. I held this position until the bottom mark rounding.
I could see Al and Tom just ahead. Ahead of them, I could see Anders from Finland. Ahead of them I couldn't see anybody as I was too far back, but I calculated that Phil was in 1st place, Xavier in 2nd and Fernando was in 3rd. Based on what I remembered from my disastrous time stalled at the top mark watching people go by. So now I was in 7th. The wind had clicked up another notch and my 10.0 was starting to feel in the groove. I put the hammer down and started pushing hard.
Again, I noticed the guys ahead of me short tacking inside the harbor and not taking any chances crossing behind the large container ships parked there. I threaded the needle between two massive monsters after doing a calculation in my head that the one casting the wind shadow above me was about the same distance I normally pass below the south tower of the Golden Gate bridge, and roughly the same width. So I went for it. I couldn't see the other guys for a while as the ship was blocking my view, but by the time I tacked and looked, I had overtaken Tom, and Anders. Only Al, Fernando, Xavier and Phil were ahead of me. Now in fifth. Hey, this was turning out ok.
Now we headed back out of the breakwater and to the ocean again. I could see Al and Fernando way up ahead, but they were a LONG ways ahead and were taking a long tack out into the ocean. As I followed, I knew I had to do something different or they would maintain that lead till the end. I tacked back towards the breakwater. Immediately I could tell that was the right thing to do as I could feel the wind lifting me onto a much more advantageous vector. I kept doing this (going a short way out into the ocean, and short tacking back towards the breakwater. By about the 3rd one of these tacks, I crossed ahead of Al and Fernando! Now in 3rd place!! I looked ahead but could barely make out Xavier well in the distance with not much more distance left to the finish. I kept pushing.
Alas it was not enough. Although I made up a bunch of distance on Xavier, he crossed the finish line well ahead of me. I'm guessing Phil finished well ahead of him as I couldn't even see him and he was fully dressed standing on the beach when I got back to shore. Still, 3rd place! After starting basically last and against improbable odds. I felt pretty good. But, I couldn't find the finish line!! I could see the committee boat that started us, but I couldn't see the pin end of the line which is this flimsy little flag mark that's really hard to see. Still, I saw Xavier pass right by the committee boat so this has to be the finish. I sailed over to them and saw them frantically waving their arms at me and pointing behind me. I look behind and see a different, much smaller boat and the pin end flimsy flag mark about 100 yard downwind. Disaster! I had sailed too far and come to the wrong finish. I turned back, sailed past this new finish boat and went through the proper finish line, but not before Al, who was not too far behind, and had managed to get there first. Again I was dejected. To have clawed my way back to 3rd, only to give it up for 4th at the end made me really mad.
I thought about it on the short sail back to the beach and remembered the course diagram and the skipper's meeting from the morning. I ran up to the white board on the beach and looked at the diagram. The diagram clearly showed the same line was being used as the start line AND the finish line. This means that the same boat will be used as the start and finish boat, unless it is specifically called out as being different and is written in the sailing instructions or on the official notice board. There was no such mention or notation. Hmmmm...
Back at the rigging area, everyone was congratulating me for the massive come from behind effort, but also saying "sorry about the finish...". Al was very gracious and was saying that he considered slowing up and letting me finish in 3rd in front of him because he saw my predicament with the changed finish line, and knew that I had already beat him fair and square. On my way back to the hotel I called Darren the principal race officer to ask for redress based on the start/finish line change. He said he knew why I was calling, and that they were going to grant me redress and my 3rd place finish based on not having officially announced the finish line boat change prior to the start of the race. Hooray!
So, long story short: disastrous start in last place, perseverance, a bit of luck, good boat speed, and some calculated risks along the way paid off to a 3rd place finish.
Again, photos are here: http://www.flickr.com/
...and I'll send a link to the results once they're posted somewhere!!
Day Four
Today was all about weeds.
We had the 2nd to last day of the competition and we had 2 course races followed by a few heats of slalom racing. Going into this day I was in 3rd place, but I was tied in points with the 4th place sailor (Bay Area's Al Mirel, and one of the nicest guys you'll ever meet...). My plan for the day was simple: stay ahead of Al.
The course was setup a bit differently than the first 2 days of the competition. The windward mark was set up much further upwind, and well upwind of the giant kelp bed on the north end of the beach. This made it a tactical decision whether to head to the beach for the lifted tack and risk getting stuck in the kelp bed or to avoid the weeds and instead sail out to the ocean where there is less wind on the headed tack.
Race 1, I got a good start on port tack heading into the beach. The start line was set a bit more square, so everyone opted to start on the tack going towards the lift at the beach. As we headed to the weedy zone, most people (including me) split the difference and tacked before the kelp got too thick. Since we had split the difference, we had to do a bunch of tacks to get to the windward mark. The guys who'd gone further inside the kelp were a mixed bag. Some were stuck, or down in the water, others had found a clear channel through and were now ahead. Ahead of me I could see Phil, Xavier, Jack Lindquist, and Al! Dang it, Al was ahead of me! But we were very close. I rounded carefully and jibed immediately to follow Al. We got going and I easily sped right by him (a little too easily...). I could see that he was looking back at his fin, and I knew what had happened. He was dragging some weeds. He stopped to disentangle himself from the pesky weeds, and I was gone. I finished in 5th or 6th as I also had a minor tangle with some weeds further on. As I finished, I looked back and could see that Al was at least 3 positions behind me. So far so good.
Race 2, was the same setup as Race 1 with the start on port, etc., except there was no Al!? I looked all around but couldn't see him. I got an even better start and all I could see ahead of me was Phil. I followed him all the way up to the windward mark, and then it happened to me. Stuck on weeds. I couldn't jump these off, so I had to stop and backtrack to try and get them to drop off. By the time I got going, a few boards had passed me and I was again in 5th or 6th. But still no Al. I had another minor spell with another batch of weeds further on, but quickly caught up to 5th or 6th again and held on to that to finish.
Overall, not a stellar day, but I may still be in 3rd place as Al finished behind me in 1 race and didn't compete in the 2nd race. Later we found out that he had broken his mast while waiting for race 2 to start and had to get rescued from drifting in to the rocky sea wall.
That was it for the day. I decided again not to compete in the slalom heats they had later in the afternoon as my back is still not good. I may give slalom another try tomorrow after our last course race.
Tomorrow we have course racing scheduled for the early afternoon, followed by more slalom heats. It is likely to be a short day as they have to pack up the beach and do the awards ceremony afterwards as well. Barring a disaster, I'm in a good position to hold on to my 3rd place position. We shall see!
We had the 2nd to last day of the competition and we had 2 course races followed by a few heats of slalom racing. Going into this day I was in 3rd place, but I was tied in points with the 4th place sailor (Bay Area's Al Mirel, and one of the nicest guys you'll ever meet...). My plan for the day was simple: stay ahead of Al.
The course was setup a bit differently than the first 2 days of the competition. The windward mark was set up much further upwind, and well upwind of the giant kelp bed on the north end of the beach. This made it a tactical decision whether to head to the beach for the lifted tack and risk getting stuck in the kelp bed or to avoid the weeds and instead sail out to the ocean where there is less wind on the headed tack.
Race 1, I got a good start on port tack heading into the beach. The start line was set a bit more square, so everyone opted to start on the tack going towards the lift at the beach. As we headed to the weedy zone, most people (including me) split the difference and tacked before the kelp got too thick. Since we had split the difference, we had to do a bunch of tacks to get to the windward mark. The guys who'd gone further inside the kelp were a mixed bag. Some were stuck, or down in the water, others had found a clear channel through and were now ahead. Ahead of me I could see Phil, Xavier, Jack Lindquist, and Al! Dang it, Al was ahead of me! But we were very close. I rounded carefully and jibed immediately to follow Al. We got going and I easily sped right by him (a little too easily...). I could see that he was looking back at his fin, and I knew what had happened. He was dragging some weeds. He stopped to disentangle himself from the pesky weeds, and I was gone. I finished in 5th or 6th as I also had a minor tangle with some weeds further on. As I finished, I looked back and could see that Al was at least 3 positions behind me. So far so good.
Race 2, was the same setup as Race 1 with the start on port, etc., except there was no Al!? I looked all around but couldn't see him. I got an even better start and all I could see ahead of me was Phil. I followed him all the way up to the windward mark, and then it happened to me. Stuck on weeds. I couldn't jump these off, so I had to stop and backtrack to try and get them to drop off. By the time I got going, a few boards had passed me and I was again in 5th or 6th. But still no Al. I had another minor spell with another batch of weeds further on, but quickly caught up to 5th or 6th again and held on to that to finish.
Overall, not a stellar day, but I may still be in 3rd place as Al finished behind me in 1 race and didn't compete in the 2nd race. Later we found out that he had broken his mast while waiting for race 2 to start and had to get rescued from drifting in to the rocky sea wall.
That was it for the day. I decided again not to compete in the slalom heats they had later in the afternoon as my back is still not good. I may give slalom another try tomorrow after our last course race.
Tomorrow we have course racing scheduled for the early afternoon, followed by more slalom heats. It is likely to be a short day as they have to pack up the beach and do the awards ceremony afterwards as well. Barring a disaster, I'm in a good position to hold on to my 3rd place position. We shall see!
Day Five
The last day. An epic journey for me so far, but in some ways even more drama was in store for me on this last day.
The day started out well enough, I had slept through the night for a change, the back was felling relatively loose and I was feeling good. Nervous, but good. After 4 days and lots of battles, Al and I were still tied in points going into the last day, and the last 3 races of the regatta. If the day finished with a tie, I would win the tie break since he had worse scores than me to throw out. All I had to do was to maintain the tie, or just stay ahead of him to take 3rd overall.
Race 1: Got a good start but slightly behind Al. I was going fast though, and caught him up and passed him in short order. Played all my cards right with good tactics and transitions and finished in 3rd place behind Phil and Xavier. I looked behind me as I was finishing and Al finished 3 places behind me. Things were looking up!
Race 1.5: Leaving the beach after the break between race 1 and 2, I turned my back for a second to adjust my boom, and a rogue wave snuck up behind me and crashed into my sail. I heard several sickening crunching noises and knew exactly what had happened. I looked and I had broken almost every batten in my sail!! Disaster!!! There was no time to change sails, so I had to go with what I had. Sailed to the start line with this lumpy mess of a sail.
Race 2: Got a great start. The lumpy sail was actually doing ok. The center of effort kept moving around and it was a bit of a struggle, but I was holding it together. I was in 2nd behind Phil for a while and then Tom snuck past. Xavier must have gotten tangled up in the weeds since I didn't see him after the start. I was comfortably in 3rd, but I could see Jack and Al some distance behind me pushing hard. After two laps I was still a bit ahead of them as we approached the finish line. Right before the finish we have to round the pin end of the start line, and then we have a short reach to the finish. As I turned the corner and the power came on in the sail (90 degrees to the wind exposes your sail to the maximum force of the wind), the lumpy, broken sail became a beast and started wrestling me. I wrestled back and lost, falling in backwards. Jack and Al went by, but I got going and finished behind Al before any more damage could be done. I did a quick calculation in my head: I was still ahead of Al by 2 positions. All I had to do was to do no worse than 2 positions behind him in the final race.
Race 3: It all came down to this. Got a good start above Al and tacked above him. Started the next leg ahead of him and going fast. Then everything slowed down and going sideways: weeds!! Tried jumping them off, no go. Tacked and went backwards for a bit, no go. Dropped in the water and kicked the damn clump off my fin and got going again. Al was well ahead now and there were about 6 or 7 other boards between us! I had to whittle this deficit down to 2 before the finish! Turned on the afterburners (well..., lumpy, unwieldy afterburners). Sailed fast and well with crisp transitions to catch one after another of these boards. Rounded the upwind mark on the 2nd lap with just 1 more board to catch. He was well ahead but I was going faster and deeper downwind. I jibed when he jibed and we started the last leg before the reach to the finish. Again going faster, I caught him up, and pulled up even with him, but he was still below me a bit and very close. I jibed for the final reach to the finish and he jibed almost at the same time. We were dead even. But then the lumpy, unwieldy sail was again exposed to the full fury of the wind. I was wrestling it and couldn't get any speed. I managed to stay upright and sailing, but I watched in despair as he pulled away and finished in front of me. I had given up 1 too many places...
The dream is dead. Well, not completely... I lost to Al Mirel in an awesome epic battle by 1 point. It's still quite an achievement, because he's one of the most consistently fast sailors in the U.S., has a long history of windsurfing racing (racing windsurfers and doing Olympic campaigns long before I knew what windsurfing even was.), regularly trounces me at our local races, and is 6 or 7 years younger than I am. Actually, I'd forgotten about the age thing and it comes into play now. As I'm sitting dejected at the awards ceremony tonight, I hear them call my name and announce that I'm in 3rd place. What?! I go up to get my trophy and then they call up Xavier in 2nd, and Phil in 1st. As I'm standing up there with these two getting applause, it hits me that Al and I are in different age divisions! Al ended up getting 1st place in the Master's division and 3rd overall in the Formula class.
There you go. Not so bad after all. It was a really fun regatta. The conditions were just about perfect for racing. The only things I regret are injuring my back, and not being able to continue racing in the slalom after the first day, which looked REALLY fun.
The day started out well enough, I had slept through the night for a change, the back was felling relatively loose and I was feeling good. Nervous, but good. After 4 days and lots of battles, Al and I were still tied in points going into the last day, and the last 3 races of the regatta. If the day finished with a tie, I would win the tie break since he had worse scores than me to throw out. All I had to do was to maintain the tie, or just stay ahead of him to take 3rd overall.
Race 1: Got a good start but slightly behind Al. I was going fast though, and caught him up and passed him in short order. Played all my cards right with good tactics and transitions and finished in 3rd place behind Phil and Xavier. I looked behind me as I was finishing and Al finished 3 places behind me. Things were looking up!
Race 1.5: Leaving the beach after the break between race 1 and 2, I turned my back for a second to adjust my boom, and a rogue wave snuck up behind me and crashed into my sail. I heard several sickening crunching noises and knew exactly what had happened. I looked and I had broken almost every batten in my sail!! Disaster!!! There was no time to change sails, so I had to go with what I had. Sailed to the start line with this lumpy mess of a sail.
Race 2: Got a great start. The lumpy sail was actually doing ok. The center of effort kept moving around and it was a bit of a struggle, but I was holding it together. I was in 2nd behind Phil for a while and then Tom snuck past. Xavier must have gotten tangled up in the weeds since I didn't see him after the start. I was comfortably in 3rd, but I could see Jack and Al some distance behind me pushing hard. After two laps I was still a bit ahead of them as we approached the finish line. Right before the finish we have to round the pin end of the start line, and then we have a short reach to the finish. As I turned the corner and the power came on in the sail (90 degrees to the wind exposes your sail to the maximum force of the wind), the lumpy, broken sail became a beast and started wrestling me. I wrestled back and lost, falling in backwards. Jack and Al went by, but I got going and finished behind Al before any more damage could be done. I did a quick calculation in my head: I was still ahead of Al by 2 positions. All I had to do was to do no worse than 2 positions behind him in the final race.
Race 3: It all came down to this. Got a good start above Al and tacked above him. Started the next leg ahead of him and going fast. Then everything slowed down and going sideways: weeds!! Tried jumping them off, no go. Tacked and went backwards for a bit, no go. Dropped in the water and kicked the damn clump off my fin and got going again. Al was well ahead now and there were about 6 or 7 other boards between us! I had to whittle this deficit down to 2 before the finish! Turned on the afterburners (well..., lumpy, unwieldy afterburners). Sailed fast and well with crisp transitions to catch one after another of these boards. Rounded the upwind mark on the 2nd lap with just 1 more board to catch. He was well ahead but I was going faster and deeper downwind. I jibed when he jibed and we started the last leg before the reach to the finish. Again going faster, I caught him up, and pulled up even with him, but he was still below me a bit and very close. I jibed for the final reach to the finish and he jibed almost at the same time. We were dead even. But then the lumpy, unwieldy sail was again exposed to the full fury of the wind. I was wrestling it and couldn't get any speed. I managed to stay upright and sailing, but I watched in despair as he pulled away and finished in front of me. I had given up 1 too many places...
The dream is dead. Well, not completely... I lost to Al Mirel in an awesome epic battle by 1 point. It's still quite an achievement, because he's one of the most consistently fast sailors in the U.S., has a long history of windsurfing racing (racing windsurfers and doing Olympic campaigns long before I knew what windsurfing even was.), regularly trounces me at our local races, and is 6 or 7 years younger than I am. Actually, I'd forgotten about the age thing and it comes into play now. As I'm sitting dejected at the awards ceremony tonight, I hear them call my name and announce that I'm in 3rd place. What?! I go up to get my trophy and then they call up Xavier in 2nd, and Phil in 1st. As I'm standing up there with these two getting applause, it hits me that Al and I are in different age divisions! Al ended up getting 1st place in the Master's division and 3rd overall in the Formula class.
There you go. Not so bad after all. It was a really fun regatta. The conditions were just about perfect for racing. The only things I regret are injuring my back, and not being able to continue racing in the slalom after the first day, which looked REALLY fun.
The official Results for Formula, Men's and Women's Slalom are now posted here:
Monday, June 10, 2013
Out smarted
That was certainly the case for Sunday's long distance race of the SF Classic where the top 4 leading kite boards rounded mark 3 of 14 in the wrong direction despite charging down the slalom course to Berkeley in just over 1 hour.
36 kite and formula windsurfing boards started the race but only 19 finished!
Its the details that count and veteran waterman, Chip Wasson, the only sailor to win the race on both a windsurfer and a kite board made sure he crossed his t's, dotted his i's and rounded the marks in the right direction and finished the race in 108:41!

Saturday's long distance race is actually 2 races rolled into 1 and one of my favorite races of the year. Ive done it about a dozen times, abandoned a few times after breaking down and even won the 2 races back in 2009. Its a 40 mile + grueling long distance race that takes every ounce to finish.
The first part of the race is the San Francisco Classic which takes sailors on a full tour of the Bay with 2 triangles around the red nun outside the golden gate bridge from Crissy field, then a slalom course across the Bay on beam/broad reaches from Anita Rock to Harding Rock to Blossom Rock to Blunt to R4 buoy to R2 buoy to the top of the Berkeley pier, to Olympic circle X buoy and back to the bottom of the Berkeley pier. Crossing the finish line starts the 2nd half of the race- the Ultra Nectar Challenge- which brings sailors back upwind on any course they choose to a finish in front of the St. Francis Yacht Club.

Kite boarders, Johnny Heineken, Bernie Lake, Joey Pasquali and Ty Reed led the charge from the start taking the 36 board fleet of kites and windsurfers out the gate and around the red nun in a flood tide and onward to the 2nd mark stationed just inside the north tower of the golden gate bridge. It was next where they made their fatal mistake rounding the pin end of the starting line to port rather to starboard. This probably gave them an advantage as they didn't have to stay in the light air near shore like the rest of the fleet who puttered around the buoy.

I had chosen the wrong gear for Sundays long distance race thinking the big breeze would be back again after Saturdays salughter house on the Bay with gust to 35k on the city front and beyond 40k in Berkeley circle. My 7.7 and micro formula board were no match for the other guys on formula gear as the holes on the course were often bigger than the gusts.
All in all, I would have been well lit on my bread and butter set up of starboard 167, kashy 64 and Avanti 10.0 but alas you've got to run with what youve got. I tried coming back in to switch once I made my initial run across the starting line before the race but the 5 min gun went off as I was rigging the formula setup. Lesson learned- rig at least 2 sails and be ready to jump on either and go out early to test the course!
I tried to stay in the hunt- rounding the 2nd time around the red nun just behind Wasson and but wasn't able to get through the lulls rounding Anita Rock and shlogged for a the first of many times while the leaders sailed away across the Bay. The pin end and Anita rock rounding were a grave yard for the kites as nearly 1/2 the fleet had their kites fall out of the sky while other parts of the course had 20-25k and steep swell.
You've got the survive the gusts but more importantly get through the lulls!
I contemplated quitting after shlogging for a few more minutes but kept at it after getting some company on the kites. Chris Brown and Tom Gore and I pushed each other from Harding rock onward down the Bay but I again fell into a hole and stopped planning at the top of the pier and watched them sail away.
Adding insult to injury, I had to gybe again on the last reach just to make the finish line on what normally would be a tight reach.
Again- I was looking to quit- getting ready to duck into treasure island and getting a ride back on the chase boats as I looked upwind and saw the golden gate bridge in the far far off distance.

The fleet is pretty spread out at this point and unless you're in a micro battle with someone nearby, it's hard to keep up the pace while beating to windward by yourself. I finally finished in just over 2-1/2 hours almost 30 min behind the leaders but sometimes racing is more about seeing how far you can push yourself vs using others as a yardstick.
Something I continue to learn on the water is that you dont always win but you always try to finish strong!
Xavier grabbed the top formula spot sailing very efficiently on his small rig and formula board just 3 minutes behind Heineken who took the gun and the best time for Ultra Nectar Challenge.
Back at the St. FYC, drinking beers and waiting for the awards while hashing out war stories on the course, it become apparent that the leaders sailed the wrong course and did the sportsmanlike thing and retired form the race. A quick re-tally of the scores made for an interesting end to a spectacular weekend of racing.
Many thanks to the volunteers and race management team at the St.FYC for another great regatta.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Sailing smarter
I've been trying to beat one of my arch rivals around the course for the last few years without much success.
He always gets me- even on my home waters.
Today it finally happened.
I was able to best him at his own game by sailing even more efficient than him.
Sometimes it's not about how much sail or board you can hold but how efficiently you can use it.
We had a small mixed fleet of formula boards & kites for the first day of racing at the St.FYC SF Classic. Most of the kite fleet was spent after 16 races over the past 4 days but a handful showed up for more racing.
I rigged both the starboard 167, 64 kashy fin and avanti 10.0 + the mikeslab 89cm board, kashy 61 & avanti 7.7. The San Francisco fleet hasn't always enforced the class rules here of 1 board & 3 sails but would rather progress the sport through trying new ideas.
I had the hybrid board & slalom sail on standby-ready to use if the breeze came up. Sure enough by race 1 it was gusting to 25k & building.
I went out with my starboard 167 & 7.7 but hadn't tried this combo yet but Xavier had been making a similar setup work very well the past few seasons.
Al & Xavier got off the line well but I couldn't quite find 5th gear in the chop. We rounded the top mark in front of the kites and I immediately gybed off with Tom to get back to the middle. Tom went down hard as we approached the leeward mark in some wicked chop while Al & Xavier were able to cross and get the advantage upwind and it stuck in that order to the finish. The avanti 7.7 was easy to handle but the starboard 167 was starting to get overpowered.
I came in and switched to the smaller board and fin and kept the 7.7.
The combo was a dream to sail. I had power, angle and speed and was not overpowered. The breeze was building to 30k while the wind swell was breaking across the bay.
I was able to put the hammer down for longer and sail more efficiently than the rest of the fleet and climbed upwind to get to the windward mark just behind the top kite. Downwind it was a wild ride, an ocean rodeo of sorts with the swell and wind sending the the fleet flying across the bay to the leeward gate. If you could avoid catastrophe- it would be a miracle!
Boards were going down left & right but I was able to keep it together and round ahead at the leeward gate behind the top 2 kites. I split tacks but the 2 kites got me in the end but was the first formula board to finish.
Race 3: same setup but windier. The gusts were coming through in the mid 30s. I was able to get a good jump on the fleet by starting strong but fumbled my 1st tack at the sea wall and let Xavier and Tom gain the advantage on port tack grind to the windward mark. I went below them with speed and rounded just behind Xavier as Tom went down on his tack. Downwind we all charged hard in probably the most trying conditions I've sailed in. My leeward foot was firmly planted in the double chicken strap and the 7.7 was pulling like a freight train. Somehow we all made it to the leeward mark at the same time but Tom left the door open for me to get inside at the rounding and I put the hammer down for the last beat. Partof the advantage of sailing a smaller board and rig are that you are able to make transitions easier and more efficiently.
With 2 kites in front of me I was grinding them down but Adam Vance on a kite board & 7m kite got the bullet as I squeaked by the 2nd kite in the last 30 seconds to the finish line.
That was enough to tie with Adam for the overall lead but after 3 races it was decided it was just to windy to race.
Up next is the 40 mile + long distance race out the gate with 18 gybe marks downwind to Berkeley and then back home.
To give you an idea of how windy it was on Saturday on bay- guys were sailing with 3.7's wound in Berkley where it was 40k+
Enjoy.
Windsurfing SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA, BERKELEY, June 8th 2013 from alex d on Vimeo.
He always gets me- even on my home waters.
Today it finally happened.
I was able to best him at his own game by sailing even more efficient than him.
Sometimes it's not about how much sail or board you can hold but how efficiently you can use it.
We had a small mixed fleet of formula boards & kites for the first day of racing at the St.FYC SF Classic. Most of the kite fleet was spent after 16 races over the past 4 days but a handful showed up for more racing.
I rigged both the starboard 167, 64 kashy fin and avanti 10.0 + the mikeslab 89cm board, kashy 61 & avanti 7.7. The San Francisco fleet hasn't always enforced the class rules here of 1 board & 3 sails but would rather progress the sport through trying new ideas.
I had the hybrid board & slalom sail on standby-ready to use if the breeze came up. Sure enough by race 1 it was gusting to 25k & building.
I went out with my starboard 167 & 7.7 but hadn't tried this combo yet but Xavier had been making a similar setup work very well the past few seasons.
Al & Xavier got off the line well but I couldn't quite find 5th gear in the chop. We rounded the top mark in front of the kites and I immediately gybed off with Tom to get back to the middle. Tom went down hard as we approached the leeward mark in some wicked chop while Al & Xavier were able to cross and get the advantage upwind and it stuck in that order to the finish. The avanti 7.7 was easy to handle but the starboard 167 was starting to get overpowered.
I came in and switched to the smaller board and fin and kept the 7.7.
The combo was a dream to sail. I had power, angle and speed and was not overpowered. The breeze was building to 30k while the wind swell was breaking across the bay.
I was able to put the hammer down for longer and sail more efficiently than the rest of the fleet and climbed upwind to get to the windward mark just behind the top kite. Downwind it was a wild ride, an ocean rodeo of sorts with the swell and wind sending the the fleet flying across the bay to the leeward gate. If you could avoid catastrophe- it would be a miracle!
Boards were going down left & right but I was able to keep it together and round ahead at the leeward gate behind the top 2 kites. I split tacks but the 2 kites got me in the end but was the first formula board to finish.
Race 3: same setup but windier. The gusts were coming through in the mid 30s. I was able to get a good jump on the fleet by starting strong but fumbled my 1st tack at the sea wall and let Xavier and Tom gain the advantage on port tack grind to the windward mark. I went below them with speed and rounded just behind Xavier as Tom went down on his tack. Downwind we all charged hard in probably the most trying conditions I've sailed in. My leeward foot was firmly planted in the double chicken strap and the 7.7 was pulling like a freight train. Somehow we all made it to the leeward mark at the same time but Tom left the door open for me to get inside at the rounding and I put the hammer down for the last beat. Partof the advantage of sailing a smaller board and rig are that you are able to make transitions easier and more efficiently.
With 2 kites in front of me I was grinding them down but Adam Vance on a kite board & 7m kite got the bullet as I squeaked by the 2nd kite in the last 30 seconds to the finish line.
That was enough to tie with Adam for the overall lead but after 3 races it was decided it was just to windy to race.
Up next is the 40 mile + long distance race out the gate with 18 gybe marks downwind to Berkeley and then back home.
To give you an idea of how windy it was on Saturday on bay- guys were sailing with 3.7's wound in Berkley where it was 40k+
Enjoy.
Windsurfing SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA, BERKELEY, June 8th 2013 from alex d on Vimeo.
Friday, June 7, 2013
Leader of the Pack
I did some guest posting on Sailing Anarchy for the Kite North American Course Racing Championships. Below are the post.
Leader of the Pack-
by Steve Bodner
The final 2 days of the Kite
boarding North American North American Championships concluded with the fleets
broken into gold, silver and finally a new platinum fleet with the top 10
competitors duking it out among the best of the best for the last 4 races of
the series.
The new format gave competitors a
chance to race within a championship regatta but unlike the recent ISAF World
Cup events - consistency is rewarded. The platinum fleet carried their first 2
days score into the final round and took 1 throw out after 8 races. Thursday
gold and silver fleet races added 4 more races to the mix for each fleet and
another throw out and finally 4 more races on the final day with racing for the
platinum fleet limited to the top 10 and 1 discard for a total of 3 discards after 16 races.
That was enough for Johnny Heineken
to secure victory in what has become an amazing run over the last few years
winning almost all of the events he's entered. Bernie Lake made a huge push
with consistent results never outside the top 3 and was rewarded with 2nd place
overall in front of Columbian 'Ricki- Bob' Leccesse.
With 37 racers in the silver fleet,
it was anyone's game in the top few places but Andrew Wong from Canada- after
having made the transition from lasers to kites a few years ago- came out on
top just in front of Nico Landauer of Uruguay and local local Kevin Growney of
San Francisco taking third.
In the gold fleet, 27 racers took
the field and while Wilson Veloso from Paraiba, Brasil had a comfortable
cushion going in to the final day- he was challenged by Jhon Mora from West
Bay, Grand Cayman who took 2 bullets. Stefano Rista from Canada and
Alejandro Climent Hernandez from Valencia, Spain rounded out the top group in
some amazing gold fleet races where any mistake immediately put you back 10
places in the fleet.
Erika Heineken, older sister of
Johnny- was the only girl who qualified for the gold fleet and put forth a huge
effort racing among the men and finishing 29th overall in a hugely competitive
fleet
Full results, photos, videos and
interviews here.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Developing the sport
I did some guest posting on Sailing Anarchy for the Kite North American Course Racing Championships. Below are the post.
Developing the sport
By Steve Bodner
Competitors are young and fit and are constantly developing the face of this changing sport. One success to their class has been drawing sailors from other classes and ease of travel.
Pumped up and spread across the beach- each competitor's 3-4 kites take up a lot of room but packed away- everything fits inside the back or top of your car or easily disguised as golf gear for airline travel. The sailors are as diverse as the sport- with backgrounds from professional match racers, RSX Olympic class windsurfers and surf bums just enjoying the ride.
After 2 days of racing with 8 races for each fleet, the sailors have been divided into gold and silver fleets. Yachtsman of the year, Johnny Heineken remains on top with the slimmest of leads with just 1 point separating himself and 'Ricki- Bob' Leccese from Columbia.
Heineken and Leccese showed some vulnerability on the course yesterday as the rest of the top 5 charged with Adam Koch taking the first bullet in of the day in front of Heineken and Bernie Lake putting together an impressive day with a 2 bullets and 2 2nds - closing the gap on Leccese to within 4 points.
With only 1 throw out carrying through for the qualifying series, there's no room for mistakes as sailors enter the 2nd half of the regatta. 4 more races are planned for each fleet Thursday before the top 10 get to race on Friday in a final medal race to determine the overall winner.
Live streaming starts around 1pm PST from the deck of the St. Francis Yacht Club with go pro mounted quad rc helicopters capturing the view from the starting line and mark roundings.
Huge props to the St.FYC and their impeccable race management team for a superb showing so far. Event sponsors include Live2Kite, RRD, Wind over water, Patagonia, Ultra Nectar and the IKA
Event page with videos, results and photos can be found here
Developing the sport
By Steve Bodner
The Kite boarding North
American Course Racing Championships continued on the San Francisco Bay
with blue skies and mid teens on the race course for the 2nd day of
racing. It's a spectacular site seeing a fleet of colorful kites fly
across the starting line in perfect unison and then down looping around
the windward mark and speeding downwind at over 30 knots. Finishes are
directly in front of the beach on 30 second tight reach after 15 min of
windward leeward racing.
If there's anything that can change the perception of sailing being an old rich mans sport- this is probably it!
If there's anything that can change the perception of sailing being an old rich mans sport- this is probably it!
Competitors are young and fit and are constantly developing the face of this changing sport. One success to their class has been drawing sailors from other classes and ease of travel.
Pumped up and spread across the beach- each competitor's 3-4 kites take up a lot of room but packed away- everything fits inside the back or top of your car or easily disguised as golf gear for airline travel. The sailors are as diverse as the sport- with backgrounds from professional match racers, RSX Olympic class windsurfers and surf bums just enjoying the ride.
After 2 days of racing with 8 races for each fleet, the sailors have been divided into gold and silver fleets. Yachtsman of the year, Johnny Heineken remains on top with the slimmest of leads with just 1 point separating himself and 'Ricki- Bob' Leccese from Columbia.
Heineken and Leccese showed some vulnerability on the course yesterday as the rest of the top 5 charged with Adam Koch taking the first bullet in of the day in front of Heineken and Bernie Lake putting together an impressive day with a 2 bullets and 2 2nds - closing the gap on Leccese to within 4 points.
With only 1 throw out carrying through for the qualifying series, there's no room for mistakes as sailors enter the 2nd half of the regatta. 4 more races are planned for each fleet Thursday before the top 10 get to race on Friday in a final medal race to determine the overall winner.
Live streaming starts around 1pm PST from the deck of the St. Francis Yacht Club with go pro mounted quad rc helicopters capturing the view from the starting line and mark roundings.
Huge props to the St.FYC and their impeccable race management team for a superb showing so far. Event sponsors include Live2Kite, RRD, Wind over water, Patagonia, Ultra Nectar and the IKA
Event page with videos, results and photos can be found here
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
wind gods
I did some guest posting on Sailing Anarchy for the Kite North American Course Racing Championships. Below are the post.
Day 1 of the North American Kite boarding Course Racing Championship kicked off on the San Francisco Bay on Tuesday but you wouldn't know it looking at this fleet. It might as well be the World Championships with 74 top ranked international sailors vying for their chance to move through the qualifying rounds and onto the gold fleet and finally into the top 10 for the final days of racing later this week.
8 races were run on the first day of racing in 12-18k of breeze with the each fleet getting off 4 starts on a double windward leeward course finishing with a tight reach just in front of crissy field- where the kiters are staged and an announcer keeps the crowds abreast of all the action.
Local San Francisco favorite and current two time World Champ, Johnny Heineken took form control grabbing the first 2 bullets in the yellow fleet while US sailors Adam Koch and Brian Kendal had to settle for the top 3. In the blue fleet, Riccardo "Ricki- Bob" Leccese from Columbia showed his dominance as well in front of socal's, Bernie Lake and the top European sailor form Poland, Tomek Janiak who rounded out the top group. It's as close as it gets with 12 points separating the top 10 racers after the 1st day of racing. The women are racing with the men in the mixed split fleet and current world women's champion- Erika Heineken leads sitting in 28th place overall in front of Catherine Dufour from France and Nuria Goma from Spain.
The fleet had their share of challenges with a big tangle at the start of the 2nd yellow fleet race (1:55 in the video) and a multitude of obstacles on the course from incoming freighters, commuter ferries, the local fishing trawlers and finally the U.S.S Potomac steaming their way through the middle of the course and splitting the fleet in half! While this might spell trouble for any notice racers, the fleet displayed a huge level of professionalism and the race officials were quick to help detangle lines and get racers safely out of harms way.
Racing continues on Wednesday June 5th and runs through Friday June 7th.
Stay tuned...
Wind Gods by Steve Bodner
Day 1 of the North American Kite boarding Course Racing Championship kicked off on the San Francisco Bay on Tuesday but you wouldn't know it looking at this fleet. It might as well be the World Championships with 74 top ranked international sailors vying for their chance to move through the qualifying rounds and onto the gold fleet and finally into the top 10 for the final days of racing later this week.
8 races were run on the first day of racing in 12-18k of breeze with the each fleet getting off 4 starts on a double windward leeward course finishing with a tight reach just in front of crissy field- where the kiters are staged and an announcer keeps the crowds abreast of all the action.
Local San Francisco favorite and current two time World Champ, Johnny Heineken took form control grabbing the first 2 bullets in the yellow fleet while US sailors Adam Koch and Brian Kendal had to settle for the top 3. In the blue fleet, Riccardo "Ricki- Bob" Leccese from Columbia showed his dominance as well in front of socal's, Bernie Lake and the top European sailor form Poland, Tomek Janiak who rounded out the top group. It's as close as it gets with 12 points separating the top 10 racers after the 1st day of racing. The women are racing with the men in the mixed split fleet and current world women's champion- Erika Heineken leads sitting in 28th place overall in front of Catherine Dufour from France and Nuria Goma from Spain.
The fleet had their share of challenges with a big tangle at the start of the 2nd yellow fleet race (1:55 in the video) and a multitude of obstacles on the course from incoming freighters, commuter ferries, the local fishing trawlers and finally the U.S.S Potomac steaming their way through the middle of the course and splitting the fleet in half! While this might spell trouble for any notice racers, the fleet displayed a huge level of professionalism and the race officials were quick to help detangle lines and get racers safely out of harms way.
There's a huge effort to bring the event to a wider audience with live streaming and commentary from the St. Francis YC race deck, racer interviews, live tweeting from mark roundings and finishes and up the the minute scoring.
You might catch some of the AC72s on the course as well as several members of the AC after-guards have joined the kite racing crowd but unfortunately did not enter the event. Apparently they're training for something bigger later this summer but with 74 competitors from 18 countries- this might just be the event of the year!
You might catch some of the AC72s on the course as well as several members of the AC after-guards have joined the kite racing crowd but unfortunately did not enter the event. Apparently they're training for something bigger later this summer but with 74 competitors from 18 countries- this might just be the event of the year!
Racing continues on Wednesday June 5th and runs through Friday June 7th.
On June 8-9th, the kiters will join the Formula Windsurfing
fleet for the San Francisco Classic and Ultra Nectar Challenge taking
riders on a 40 mile + long distance marathon around the Bay.
Stay tuned...
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Blown off the water...
It's been one of the windiest springs I can remember on the San Francisco Bay.
Last month we saw a week of 25k+ topped off by 2 days of 35-45k inside the golden gate.
I should have learned my lesson and just left the whole quiver of sails in the van as the sail you need most is always the one you've left behind in the garage.
That was the case again this past weekend at the Elvestrom Zellerback regatta at the St. Francis Yacht Club where it blew 25-35k on Saturday and most of the fleet, including myself got blown off the water.
I'd been practicing on the smaller formula set up the past few weeks but more or less wrote it off as it wasn't performing upwind against the formula board. On 3 different occasions, Percey, Soheil and myself lined up against the formula fleet on the ML13 and either 7.8 rig or 9.5 rig. The result always came back the same- great control in the breeze, flying offwind, good transitions but just not up to par upwind in terms of angle. The board is wicked fast at 89cm wide and a 71cm OFO. It performs more like a big slalom board than it does a formula board. I've never been so comfortable downwind, flying through the voodoochop than I have on this board. It seems to fly right over the chop staying in 5th gear longer and going more efficiently. It's really a pleasure to sail and when it wasn't coming up at the top on race days, I was a bit bummed.
I decided not to even pack the 7.7rig for the Elvestrom regatta as I knew it wasn't working and the forecast was only calling for 15-20k westerly.
Ha- big mistake.
My first run out 25 min before the first start saw a quick return to the beach to put on the smaller 64cm fin. The voodoo chop at the leeward gate was harrowing!
Just before the 1st start I went in to last chance beach to add another 1/2" of donwhaul when my downhaul pulley & webbing blew out form the sail.
I spent the next 20 min derigging and rerigging the 9.5 just to make it to the start of the 2nd race.
The wind had picked up from 20-25k and was now 30-35 with a solid sea state of swell and chop.
The dinghies still racing on our course were going down like flies.
Making any transition was almost out of the question.
It was pure survival sailing.
I wasnt as much trying to sail but trying to get back to the beach faster!
After just one upwind leg and failing to make the windward mark and having to quadruple tack the windward mark in a raging flood tide, I was done.
For one of the few times in my racing career, I simply gave up.
I wasnt the only one as more than 1/2 the fleet in all the classes had one or more DNF's on their scorecards on Saturday
You've got to have your kit tuned up to sail well in conditions like that, otherwise its a horrible experience- fighting the rig and constantly trying to depower.
If only, I had packed the ML13, 7.7 rig and a small fin- it would be another story!
The race is sometimes won before it even begins.
On the course side, Xavier was showing great form with his starboard 167, 60cm kashy fin and 7.8 NP RS racing rig. Tom and Al- both on North 9.3s and ML12s were also charging at the front of the fleet- looking comfortable on their smallest rigs.
Sunday- I showed up to the beach with every race sail in my quiver form 7.7 to 12.0 but didnt even get to use even one as the wind never cooperated and the sea breeze failed to materialize leaving the dinghies to be towed back to the dock and the boards never off the beach.
You win some.
You loose some.
Last month we saw a week of 25k+ topped off by 2 days of 35-45k inside the golden gate.
I should have learned my lesson and just left the whole quiver of sails in the van as the sail you need most is always the one you've left behind in the garage.
That was the case again this past weekend at the Elvestrom Zellerback regatta at the St. Francis Yacht Club where it blew 25-35k on Saturday and most of the fleet, including myself got blown off the water.
I'd been practicing on the smaller formula set up the past few weeks but more or less wrote it off as it wasn't performing upwind against the formula board. On 3 different occasions, Percey, Soheil and myself lined up against the formula fleet on the ML13 and either 7.8 rig or 9.5 rig. The result always came back the same- great control in the breeze, flying offwind, good transitions but just not up to par upwind in terms of angle. The board is wicked fast at 89cm wide and a 71cm OFO. It performs more like a big slalom board than it does a formula board. I've never been so comfortable downwind, flying through the voodoochop than I have on this board. It seems to fly right over the chop staying in 5th gear longer and going more efficiently. It's really a pleasure to sail and when it wasn't coming up at the top on race days, I was a bit bummed.
I decided not to even pack the 7.7rig for the Elvestrom regatta as I knew it wasn't working and the forecast was only calling for 15-20k westerly.
Ha- big mistake.
My first run out 25 min before the first start saw a quick return to the beach to put on the smaller 64cm fin. The voodoo chop at the leeward gate was harrowing!
Just before the 1st start I went in to last chance beach to add another 1/2" of donwhaul when my downhaul pulley & webbing blew out form the sail.
I spent the next 20 min derigging and rerigging the 9.5 just to make it to the start of the 2nd race.
The wind had picked up from 20-25k and was now 30-35 with a solid sea state of swell and chop.
The dinghies still racing on our course were going down like flies.
Making any transition was almost out of the question.
It was pure survival sailing.
I wasnt as much trying to sail but trying to get back to the beach faster!
After just one upwind leg and failing to make the windward mark and having to quadruple tack the windward mark in a raging flood tide, I was done.
For one of the few times in my racing career, I simply gave up.
I wasnt the only one as more than 1/2 the fleet in all the classes had one or more DNF's on their scorecards on Saturday
You've got to have your kit tuned up to sail well in conditions like that, otherwise its a horrible experience- fighting the rig and constantly trying to depower.
If only, I had packed the ML13, 7.7 rig and a small fin- it would be another story!
The race is sometimes won before it even begins.
On the course side, Xavier was showing great form with his starboard 167, 60cm kashy fin and 7.8 NP RS racing rig. Tom and Al- both on North 9.3s and ML12s were also charging at the front of the fleet- looking comfortable on their smallest rigs.
Sunday- I showed up to the beach with every race sail in my quiver form 7.7 to 12.0 but didnt even get to use even one as the wind never cooperated and the sea breeze failed to materialize leaving the dinghies to be towed back to the dock and the boards never off the beach.
You win some.
You loose some.
Monday, March 11, 2013
Spring line up
The first race of the year is always a good chance to see where you stand after the winter off season. Sure enough- after a few months break from formula racing we lined up to find we were in the same pecking order as where we left off last summer.
This year the kites and formula boards were invited to the Spring Dinghy regatta at the St.FYC along with 5 other dinghy classes.
Xavier, Al and I traded spots throughout the 3 windward-leeward races on Saturday along the city front course with winds in the mid teens and a viscous 4 knot ebb tide ripping across the course.
Unfortunately a work commitment on Sunday, left me unable to sail the last 3 races but Xavier finished the series with 5/6 bullets- a solid showing.
All of the formula fleet is still on last years set up and top 3 remain extremely tight. The biggest gains I made were on the downwind where Avanti 10.0 & starboard 167 really came alive. The 64 kashy fin set up, I was using really works in the breeze and chop but I suffered a bit upwind in the lighter stuff.

Thanks to Chris Ray for the photo- Full spring dinghy gallery here
Also- Lryah's photo here
On 2 out of the 3 upwind legs I got ground down by Xavier on the long port tack upwind.
I think he's just being a bit more efficient with the fin pressure as he's using the starboard 167, 61cm kashy and NP 7.8 rig and makes that combo go very well!
It left me scratching my head on how to improve my upwind performance.
Most of the time- we rig for the gust while racing on the San Francisco Bay. You need to survive. The water texture over a typical course can give you anything from voodoo chop to areas of smooth flood tide. Traditionally a smaller fin, like a 64 kashy allows you cope with the conditions a bit better but Im beginning to rethink things.
Back to a bigger fin, seat harness,softer battens, or higher booms???
Time will tell on this one as I try a few things over the next few weeks.
Al was sailing a strong series as well on his ML-12 board, F4 fin and NP 10.0 grabbing the bullet on the 1st race after virtually no time on the water since last October. It goes to show you that maybe all this practice time is just for show.
Race 1 started off with starting line set up just in front of last chance beach near the harbor mouth. We all started on port taking the long beat 1st. As we got out to the middle of the Bay, the ebb increased and it was a real challenge to call the layline, Sure enough Xavier got to the top mark 1st followed by Al and myself. We had a great southerly riding the puff all the way down past Anita Rock before gybing. At the leeward gate, both Al and I decided to return to the shore and got a substantial lift on the next upwind while Xavier opted for the outside. We crossed ahead and extended the lead on the last downwind leg finishing 1-2.
Race 2 and 3 started with the entire fleet on starboard going for the big geographical lift at the shore. The first short beat proved to the most important as it put you in a position for the long beat up the course. You wanted to be the inside boat lining up on port tack in order to gain on the lifts.
After that, it was a bit of a race track following the leader around the course.
Sometimes you just need to wait for the guy in front of you to make a mistake and capitalize on it. Al went down hard in some ferry chop downwind and I was able to sail right over him grabbing 2nd in the 2nd race behind Xavier
I managed 2 2nds on Saturday and had a really good 3rd start- in the front pack with Xavier and Al after the 1st rounding and then gybed through what I later remembered as a restricted area of the course and subsequently retired from the race after the 1st lap
The Sailing Instructions had Anita Rock and its buoy as restricted area.
Lesson learned- read the race instructions and don't take anything for granted.
Oh- and for the client who scheduled a meeting on a Sunday- the 'wind minimum clause' in your contract just got lowered from 20k to 15k !
This year the kites and formula boards were invited to the Spring Dinghy regatta at the St.FYC along with 5 other dinghy classes.
Xavier, Al and I traded spots throughout the 3 windward-leeward races on Saturday along the city front course with winds in the mid teens and a viscous 4 knot ebb tide ripping across the course.
All of the formula fleet is still on last years set up and top 3 remain extremely tight. The biggest gains I made were on the downwind where Avanti 10.0 & starboard 167 really came alive. The 64 kashy fin set up, I was using really works in the breeze and chop but I suffered a bit upwind in the lighter stuff.
Thanks to Chris Ray for the photo- Full spring dinghy gallery here
Also- Lryah's photo here
On 2 out of the 3 upwind legs I got ground down by Xavier on the long port tack upwind.
I think he's just being a bit more efficient with the fin pressure as he's using the starboard 167, 61cm kashy and NP 7.8 rig and makes that combo go very well!
It left me scratching my head on how to improve my upwind performance.
Most of the time- we rig for the gust while racing on the San Francisco Bay. You need to survive. The water texture over a typical course can give you anything from voodoo chop to areas of smooth flood tide. Traditionally a smaller fin, like a 64 kashy allows you cope with the conditions a bit better but Im beginning to rethink things.
Back to a bigger fin, seat harness,softer battens, or higher booms???
Time will tell on this one as I try a few things over the next few weeks.
Al was sailing a strong series as well on his ML-12 board, F4 fin and NP 10.0 grabbing the bullet on the 1st race after virtually no time on the water since last October. It goes to show you that maybe all this practice time is just for show.
Race 1 started off with starting line set up just in front of last chance beach near the harbor mouth. We all started on port taking the long beat 1st. As we got out to the middle of the Bay, the ebb increased and it was a real challenge to call the layline, Sure enough Xavier got to the top mark 1st followed by Al and myself. We had a great southerly riding the puff all the way down past Anita Rock before gybing. At the leeward gate, both Al and I decided to return to the shore and got a substantial lift on the next upwind while Xavier opted for the outside. We crossed ahead and extended the lead on the last downwind leg finishing 1-2.
Race 2 and 3 started with the entire fleet on starboard going for the big geographical lift at the shore. The first short beat proved to the most important as it put you in a position for the long beat up the course. You wanted to be the inside boat lining up on port tack in order to gain on the lifts.
After that, it was a bit of a race track following the leader around the course.
Sometimes you just need to wait for the guy in front of you to make a mistake and capitalize on it. Al went down hard in some ferry chop downwind and I was able to sail right over him grabbing 2nd in the 2nd race behind Xavier
I managed 2 2nds on Saturday and had a really good 3rd start- in the front pack with Xavier and Al after the 1st rounding and then gybed through what I later remembered as a restricted area of the course and subsequently retired from the race after the 1st lap
The Sailing Instructions had Anita Rock and its buoy as restricted area.
Lesson learned- read the race instructions and don't take anything for granted.
Oh- and for the client who scheduled a meeting on a Sunday- the 'wind minimum clause' in your contract just got lowered from 20k to 15k !
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