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Acadia's Log: The Mini Fastnet
06/15/06, Douarnenez, France
Well, with the Mini Fastnet 4 days behind me,
I have had time to rest and reflect on the race. The good news
is now I am qualified for the Azores race, which starts on July
30th. The Mini Fastnet also ended at least with a positive trend
as we worked our way from 69th position after rounding Fastnet
Rock to 28th at the finish.
I would rate the Mini Fastnet as the
most difficult sailboat race I have ever done… in the Mini
class, I have the feeling there may be more in store (though even
Isabelle commented that the conditions
were the worst she had seen in her three seasons of racing). At
least a couple of times I wondered why I had not taken all of the
money invested in this project and purchased the Lumpy Lanes Bowling
Alley in some place like Pawtucket, Rhode Island. There was lots
of current, 60 percent of the race was light air… the rest,
a 270 mile upwind port tack fetch almost to the coast of France,
in 20 knot winds and confused seas, and finally variable winds
from all directions for the last 40 miles into the finish. I now
understand why there are only a few of us sailors in the class
in our 40s and 50s… Minis tend to find any physical weakness
that you have.
After being postponed, the race started on a
beautiful Sunday afternoon in about 8 knots of wind. There were
two general
recalls (99 boats
on the line), on both of those starts we took the pin end of the
line and had clear air and we were moving fast. For the third start,
the committee hoisted a black flag (major time penalty as opposed
to being thrown out of the race), we were second boat from the
pin on a pin end favored start. We approached the southern shore
of Douarnenez Bay in a North West breeze and started tacking up
the coast, headed going in, lifted coming out. We crossed tacks
with the some of the top sailors in the class, working our way
into first or second place.
We then worked our way across to the
Northern side of the bay were we had to round a point and tack
our up to the English Channel.
As we crossed the bay, a 30 degree right shift came in and those
boats that went right off the line, or part way up the beat, were
now fairly far in the lead. It looked as though we were in about
30th as we came in about 3 miles from the buoy we had to honor
when leaving the bay. Fortunately, many on the right had overstood
as the wind continued to veer, so we managed to get back into the
teens by the time we reached the mark.
It was then about a 30 mile
upwind leg, honoring some marks in a channel between the mainland
and some small offshore islands,
basically tacking up along the mainland, first to avoid the current
and then to take advantage of it changing inshore first. By the
time we departed France and entered the Channel, we seemed to be
in good position, though the fleet was spread widely east and west
(boats decided to breakoff their short tacks up the coast at different
places). We all headed on starboard tack…100 miles upwind
to Wolf Rock, located between Lands End, England and the Scilly
Islands.
During the night the winds dropped from 10-15
knots down to drifting conditions. We tried the Code 0, which got
the boat
moving slightly,
though no pointing ability. We shifted back and forth a number
of times between this sail and the jib. Sometimes we would pass
boats, then they would pass us, and at times, we were not sure
if the lights we were looking at were indeed the same boat that
was there before. By morning the breeze filled into around 8 knots
and as we approached to within about 40 miles of Wolf Rock, we
started tacking on the shifts, trying to work our way East and
get up current for what we thought would be our approximate rounding
time. We crossed tacks with some of the top boats in the class,
like Sam Manuard sailing on one of his designs, Adria Mobil. As,
we got to about 8 miles from Wolf Rock, we were perhaps 500 meters
behind Credit Agricole, one of the better boats in the class, so
we knew were doing well. Then the current shifted and the wind
went screwy. We soon found our own private hole where we proceeded
to do three 360 degree circles…we were stuck there for 30
minutes. Boats approaching from both the right and left were able
to see this rather bizarre scene and tack away our just follow
the wind line that went right around us, no more than 100 meters
away.
By the time we rounded Wolf Rock, were we around
30th, though there were still many good boats behind us, some that
ended up
in the
top 10. It was then a fast reach to the Seven Stones Lightship
(10 miles away), and then bearing off for Fastnet Rock, located
near the southern coast of Ireland, 150 miles to the west/northwest.
Initially, it was a fast spinnaker reach in about 12 knots of wind
, then it died and came aft, though we managed to keep 4-5 knots
of boat speed through the night. We choose to go south of the rhumbline,
following the advice of a weather router who said this was the
best way to avoid light winds on the rhumbline and north of it
associated with a high pressure system. We were not very successful
at receiving radio weather forecasts, so we were not clear if the
high was moving. Eventually the wind went flat. We spent 12 hours,
hoisting different spinnakers as some small puff from any direction
wandered by, upwind, downwind, reaching, nothing. We drifted along
with about 10 other boats who all used the same router or got similar
advice…we hoped the fleet to the north was also becalmed.
The
following morning (Wednesday), we had slowly moved pass those near
use, the wind filled in slightly from the Northwest (now upwind
for the last 40 miles to Fastnet!) and the fog rolled in. We had
no idea how we were doing, but were soon to find out when we heard
the first boat radio that they were rounding the Rock, 39 miles
ahead…for the next 10 hours, as we slowly approached on an
upwind course, it was a steady stream of calls coming in as boats
rounded. Fastnet finally came into view, it took us three hours
to cover the last 8 miles, we basically drifted around the place
in current (which is very imposing in light winds, I can only imagine
in a gale). We then parked for the next 12 hours, 200 to 300 meters
from Fastnet, staring at the place. By then, the tracking system
on the boat (I would later find out) had us listed in 69th place.
In
the morning (Thursday) the breeze finally arrived, filling in from
the east, 8-10 for a few hours and then finally building to
around 20. We had full cant on the keel, water ballast tanks full,
three 5 gallon jerry jugs of water lashed to the lifelines and
all of the gear below stacked to windward behind nets (stacking – moving
of all the gear – is a big deal on these boats and the top
sailors take it very seriously, especially Isabelle). We were pointing
and moving fast, doing around 6.5 knots in very confused seas.
We passed a few boats near us, two were series and one proto…we
did not see any more boats for 36 hours (hazy-fog). It was a rough
ride, pounding along, every third wave covering the boat (and us)
with wall of water…it was cold, boots were full of water,
we were soaked inside our follies, everything is wet below, water
constantly in the bilges. I had dry clothes, though not much good
under wet gear. Nowhere to sleep, everything is stacked to windward
and in the only place on the boat with no structural frames – I
find myself curling up, half on some wet sail, half on the keelbox;
we switch steering every hour because it is hard to handle it for
any longer, I find myself dozing at best, not sleeping.
We keep
this up for about one and half days and as we get to within 40
miles of the finish, the winds go light again. I had a sense
that we had done well on this leg as 8am position reports came
in… it sounded as though many boats were to the south and
west of us (further offshore from the finish) and this was in spite
of the fact that the wind had veered 30 degrees (switched from
East to Southeast) over the last few hours. We started tacking
for the coast, which eventually turned into a no air run, back
to a light air reach, then drifting upwind, on and on. We got close
enough to here the 7th place boat cross the line (about 30 miles
ahead)…as we approached, we listened to each finisher and
figured we had moved up significantly, it was in the end 28th.
On long port tack from Fastnet, we passed 40 boats, about half
protos and half series (ok- there were two protos in front of us
who broke there mast, unfortunately… great guys; I would
have to say that about all the sailors in this class, excellent
group of people).
The performance of the boat seemed good (though
needs some fine tuning in certain conditions), the end result was
due to tactical
errors and getting further behind by sitting in holes as the leaders
moved on. Sailing with Isabelle, I was also able to witness the
intensity that the top sailors in the class maintain…she
was relentless about changing sails, stacking of gear, whatever
it took, no matter how tired or how far behind we were.
I am headed back to the US for two weeks to work on some business
issues (therefore, not doing the Open Demi clé), and then back
over here July 1st to start preparing for the Azores Race, which
starts July 30th from Les Sables. This race is a 2520 solo race
with 72 boats on the line. The race goes from Les Sables to Horta
in the Azores (1270 miles), stops for one week, then 1270 miles
back to Les Sables.
As always, thanks for your help and interest
in the Acadia project.
Clay |
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