Monday, May 12, 2014

Dare I Admit It?


We had a lovely day of racing last weekend with a good number of participants including several new members which is always encouraging to see.

Two races of 45 minutes each, with breeze around 12 knots, and an outgoing tide for most of the time but which turned during the last part of the second race.

First race was not so good - mediocre start in the middle of the pack with few options at first except to follow the crowd on starboard when the favorable tidal flow was off to the right.  And my good friend and close competitor who beat me handily last week was ahead most of the race and finished a minute and half ahead of me.

But the second race was much better - a very good start in the middle of the line with very clean air. I paid more attention to the wind shifts - the breeze was especially capricious - and stayed with the first bunch of sailors. Eventually, our top 3 Laser sailors turned on their engines or did whatever they do and opened up good leads. But I was in a close fight with my friend and another good sailor and we stayed relatively close until the last 2 legs.  The other good sailor noticed that the tide had begun to turn and my friend and I didn't see that, but our colleague went left out of the channel and away from the slightly adverse tide and gained at least 6 or 7 boat lengths to pull ahead of both of us. So at the tale end of the first group my friend and I battled it out.  Just a downwind run and then round the leeward mark and a short beat to the finish.

My friend had a better rounding at the windward mark and was slightly ahead of me at the start of the downwind run. I gained back some by seeing a gust behind and going on a short broad reach in it and then drew almost even with him just to his starboard. Then, dare I admit it, I hatched an evil plan.  I told myself that I would go just behind him and block his wind. At a minimum it would slow him down, but in my evil heart I was also thinking that he is sometimes prone to capsizes on runs and maybe if I play with his air a bit, who knows, maybe something could happen.  So, I went just behind him and he did in fact slow down a bit, and then, he started rocking, went into a quick death roll and that was it.  Although I was looking forward to a rounding and tacking duel with him to the finish line, it was nice to be handed the gift of his capsize. And, dare I admit it - one that perhaps I was not entirely innocent of.



1 comment:

  1. Sometimes just getting close to another sailor, maybe starting a conversation with him, can be just enough to make him lose his concentration downwind and cause a capsize. I have to admit I have not been entirely innocent.

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