Great writing Martin. Thanks for sharing.

Bruno Lachance
Bécassine 33-2

Envoyé de mon iPhone

Le 26 févr. 2023 à 17:47, Martin DeYoung via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com> a 
écrit :


“A masthead wind instrument works at night.”

Absolutely, except when it doesn’t.  During the 1982 Vic-Maui race on a Britt 
Chance designed 54’ IOR boat in trade winds reinforced by a tropical storm 
nearby (steady high 20’s, gusts to mid 30’s) the wind instruments were lagging 
behind the actual apparent wind enough that we needed to improvise.  It was the 
kind of dark wild night that made Mister Toad’s Wild ride seem tame.  We had a 
reaching spinnaker up (slightly smaller sq area and shoulders) with a full 
mainsail. AWA of 160 was our target.  Boat speeds were running in the low teens 
until a good surf then headed into the high teens.

I was watch captain with two other, experience crew on deck.  We were quickly 
schooled by the wind gods that relying on the wind instruments resulted in 
being caught by the lee at the end of a surf. (The apparent wind goes forward 
while surfing then quickly back to “base line” when the boat slows.)  Naturally 
being caught by the lee in those conditions often resulted in a spin 
out/round-up/broach, mostly to weather. (Spin pole up, boom in the water.)  The 
owner would occasionally stick his head up from below complaining about the 
ride.  I would suggest we were at the top of the spinnaker’s wind range. He 
would indicate maybe we needed better drivers.)

On this particular night we resorted to dividing up the information processing 
tasks.  The helmsman concentrated on the compass using a base line course as a 
guide.  Another crew concentrated on calling out AWA as shown by the lighted 
Windex. (Usually something like “5 high” or similar.  When the Windex indicated 
we were by the lee a noise similar to an aircraft’s stall warning buzzer was 
used.)  Driving was intense enough we stood ½ hour tricks rotating through the 
positions.  This technique allowed us to sail fast, diving deep to ride the 
best waves and limit the spin outs to mostly gentle low impact events.

Until it doesn’t.  At the end of our watch (+-2AM) the new watch gains the deck 
and includes the “hired gun” rock star sailmaker helmsman.  The rock star guy 
total ignored my recommendations on how we got through the last 4 hours.  He 
steps behind the wheel (a very large diameter wheel popular with IOR boats) and 
starts sailing like he was in charge.  Shortly there after he drives into a 
leeward broach that lays the boat flat enough that the mast head was hitting 
the top of waves and most of the deck crew was left hanging by safety 
harnesses.  I imagine it was exciting down below.  The rock star lost his 
footing and rotated “ass over tea kettle” into the leeward corner of the 
cockpit. (Still holding the wheel.)  The mainsail attempted to cross to leeward 
but was trapped by a line wrapped around a coffee grinder winch handle.

As I was in the mid/crew cockpit and closest to the line trapping the mainsail 
I pulled out my trusty sailing knife and cut the line (line was part of a 
failed preventer).  As soon as my knife blade touched the highly loaded line 
the mainsail violently crossed to leeward splashing into the water. Now that 
the boat was freed of the tangled mainsail load it stood up straight (ish), the 
spinnaker popped full, and the boat took off downwind.  Unfortunately the rock 
star was totally disoriented, the rudder still hard over and the boat went into 
another broach therefore completing the coveted “banana split”.

Once we got the boat sorted and back on its feet the owner stuck his head up 
from down below and said “OK boys we can take the spinnaker down now”.  We 
spent the next day or so under twin headsails still making speeds in the low 
teens but under much better control.

Martin DeYoung
Calypso
1971 C&C 43
Port Ludlow/Seattle

Sent from Mail<https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows

From: dwight veinot via CnC-List<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2023 12:54 PM
To: Stus-List<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Cc: dwight veinot<mailto:dwight...@gmail.com>
Subject: Stus-List Re: Racing at night

A masthead wind instrument works at night. Learn your sail trim vs wind speed 
and wind angle in the daylight. Should be the same in the dark

On Sun, Feb 26, 2023 at 1:01 PM David Knecht via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>> wrote:
I just read an interesting article in Practical Sailor on red vs. white lights 
and night vision.  It reminded me to ask a question of those more experienced 
about night racing.  I have only done this a few times and found upwind 
steering at night to be a real challenge.  I normally steer by the genoa 
telltales.  In light, shifting winds which we inevitably encounter at the 
darkest hours, it is especially important to steer well to keep the boat 
moving, but it is hard.   We used a hand held spotlight to periodically check 
the telltales, but that destroys night vision.  Are there better solutions?  
Thanks- Dave

S/V Aries
1990 C&C 34+
New London, CT

<276E5808F80B4EBCB88DCA1348E057A5.png>

Please show your appreciation for this list and the Photo Album site and help 
me pay the associated bills.  Make a contribution at:
https://www.paypal.me/stumurray<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.paypal.me%2Fstumurray&data=05%7C01%7C%7C722a601eeb6f45417d9d08db183b96c0%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435aaaaaaaaaaaa%7C1%7C0%7C638130416425300367%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=M6HofoOU5ePuv5sgXI3uHonE3uQJrO5qiiiX1tzGAIY%3D&reserved=0>
Thanks for your help.
Stu
--
Sent from Gmail Mobile

Please show your appreciation for this list and the Photo Album site and help 
me pay the associated bills.  Make a contribution at:
https://www.paypal.me/stumurray
Thanks for your help.
Stu
Please show your appreciation for this list and the Photo Album site and help 
me pay the associated bills.  Make a contribution at:
https://www.paypal.me/stumurray
Thanks for your help.
Stu

Reply via email to