Consult:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Long-Way-Bernard-Moitessier/dp/0924486848/ref=la_B000APBX38_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1346032265&sr=1-1

On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 8:31 PM, Legler, Ken <[email protected]>wrote:

> College sailors and race managers,
>
> After running this idea by a number of agreeable people, here is an idea
> worth trying.  At any event other than championships and intersectionals,
> make one race per division a longer race with some interesting legs.  Such
> courses could include a long windward leg or long reach leg to create a
> more interesting race.
>
> Here are some possible examples depending upon wind direction and strength:
> At Maine Maritime a long downwind leg around the rotation dock.
> At Bowdoin a long beat out toward the ocean and back.
> At Vermont a long leg out into the middle of Lake Champlain.
> At Tufts zig-zag reaches in heavy air.
> At MIT or Harvard a bridge to bridge leg.
> At Roger Williams a course through the bridge at slack tide.
> At Salve Regina lots of possibilities.
> At Yale out into the Sound or up the shoreline and back.
> At Fordham part way across to Long Island and back.
> At Navy up to the Severn River bridge in a NW or SE wind.
> At St. Mary's going well up river or down river.
> At Old Dominion a giant triangle.
> At Charleston under the bridge at slack tide.
> On a river a really long W-L if winds parallel the river; a wide butterfly
> course in cross winds with three shorts beats and two long reaches.
> At any site the usual W-L but then turning toward the rotation site and
> going as far as a fair wind allows.
>
> And so on, you get the idea.
> Yes, it should count.  Reaching on a long leg is a good test of sailing
> skill, not a parade.  Most important we should do this because it is fun.
>  It is also a challenge for the race committee to pick a great course and
> diagram it in the morning so sailors can figure it out without any
> confusion.  It is also a challenge to pick a course that is fair,
> challenging and about 20-30 minutes long instead of the exact same standard
> W4 of 15-18 minutes every single race at every single regatta.
>
> In short, setting and sailing long reaches is becoming a lost skill.
>  Racing on a long reach once in awhile can be really challenging and fun in
> any wind speed.  There is some reaching in the Olympics and plenty in
> distance racing.
>
> Enjoy,
> Ken Legler
> Tufts Sailing Coach
>
>
>
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-- 
Jeff Knowles
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