Tuesday 19 June 2012

Streakerramblings - Blakeney and Nationals - June 2012


The last two weekends, in terms of sailing, have been a disaster for me. Over the weekend of 9th and 10th June we were due to go to Blakeney for the Streaker Open Meeting. Two weeks before Bett and I had been up in Norfolk – a surprise Birthday gift from her sister and brother in law was a week in their caravan which they pitched not far from Fakenham. We therefore had the chance to spy out the area – it did not seem too favourable to me with, as I later learned, a long tow out to the racing area against a vicious tide and then racing still within the harbour and not at sea as I had thought.  Added to that it was a 4 hour plus journey – without the boat – and the start for the first race was at 10.30am. The wind forcast was not ideal – for me – so I decided not to go after all and that after having changed safety boat duty at Lancing. I do not have any results (or report) of the meeting but understand that Ian Bradley attended and I believe he won the ‘pot’.
Post Script: The results of the Blakeney Meeting have now come to hand and it was not Ian who won but one of the local lady helms - Amy Robinson. The table below gives the full story and a report is due shortly on the SCOA web Site.
Boat Helm Club Race 1 Race 2 Points Position
1686 Amy Robinson Blakeney SC 1 1 2 1st
1619 Ian Bradley Ouse ASC 2 2 4 2nd
1747 Alan Robinson Blakeney SC 4 3 7 3rd
1746 Patsy Seymour Blakeney SC 3 5 8 4th
1711 Hugh Ambery Blakeney SC 5 5 10 5th
1757 Gary Hogan Haversham SC 6 6 12 6th

The Nationals held at Grafham Water this year over the weekend of 16th and 17th June  was not a lot more successful for me. We were staying at Alconbury, with Bett’s sister Steph and husband Colin, just 15 minutes away up the A1 so arrived on site on Saturday morning with plenty of time in hand. As you will see from the detailed report on the Streaker web site (http://www.streaker-class.org.uk/) and on the Yachts and Yachting web site (http://www.yachtsandyachting.com/news/163955/Noble-Marine-Streaker-nationals) it was going to be very windy. I decided early on to borrow the class Wave sail (No 9) and having rigged set off for the Committee Boat Area, about a mile distant and dead downwind. I had barely left the shore when my rudder came off, having failed to fully engage the retaining clip, but I eventually got it back on. For me it was a frightening sail with a very high expectation of tipping in – I could envisage trouble trying to get the boat upright and me back aboard. There were quite big waves  which had white tops and it was breakers on the northern shore.  As it happened I did stay upright and did not had a bad start, just to windward  Alan Gillard until he swiftly pulled away.
I battled upwind, even with the reduced area of the wave sail and by the time I had nearly got to the top of the first beat was not far off last place. I was not enjoying the ‘survival’ conditions and called the safety boat (the only one I could see) to ask them to advise the race officer that I was going to retire. Even then it was a struggle to beat back to the club house and landing area.
For race two, after lunch,  I thought the wind had dropped off a little so launched again but I got only a hundred or so yards out when the wind hit me hard and instead of going dead downwind in a northerly direction I headed off at full blast westwards. A few yards of that and I called it a day and headed back to the slipway, de-rigged and packed the boat away for the day. After that I helped out on the slips as boats came back ashore, holding them whilst the helms looked out their trollies. It was quite busy as there were some 25 Lasers as well as the 30 odd Streakers – there were 37 entries but some boats never went afloat that first day and others like myself came in early.

On the water in both of the races held on Saturday,  the third planned race was postponed until Sunday, after they recorded gusts of 39 knots – the top end of force 8, Gale, on the Beaufort scale – capsizes were fairly frequent amongst the second half of the fleet and only the top half finished the race anyway.

Sunday morning dawned still quite breezy and the previously quoted start time of 10am was put back until 11.00am (or thereabouts) to allow the breeze to die down as forecast which it duly did although still around force 4 when I launched. I had chosen to forgo the Wave sail and use my P & B full sized rig and having launched had a fairly swift sail across the width of the lake again to the starting area. When finally the start gun went I was in about the middle of the line, the pin end seeming to be the place to be. I struggled a bit up the long beat and arrived at the top of the course ready to bear off around the spacer buoy, and on to the reaching leg, when my Rudder went sideways - no longer vertical – and that was the end of my day. Again I called to the safety boat to let the Race officer know I was retiring – as it happened I had not been logged in anyway, they would have been (possibly) looking for sail number 9. I managed to get back ashore eventually, in one piece, to discover that the lower pintle bracket had snapped and the rudder stock opened up sideways by some three inches. Had I known, when coming ashore, that there was a chandlery alongside the clubhouse  - and which I subsequently found and there bought a replacement part (£21.00) – I could possibly have repaired it on the spot – if I could have had use of a bench, vice and the relevant tools.

So it was a case of packing the boat up and spraying it down – to kill off any killer shrimps hiding there and waiting for the prizgiving. The overall winner and this year’s National Champion is Tom Gillard, from Sheffield Vikings SC, who had three first place, a second and third place – the latter of which he discarded. Second place overall went to, a preivious class champion, Ian Jones, from Dovestones SC, with four second places and a discarded 5th. Third spot went to a new name on the block Ian Fryett from Llandegfedd SC which I would guess is in Welsh Wales. He had  one 1st place a 3rd, a 4th and a 7th place discarding a 9th.
The other main prizes went to :- Veronica Falat – First Lady, Ian Fryett -1st helm over 45, Veronica Falat - Ist helm over 55, Clive Stratton - 1st hem over 65  and Peter Cogill - Ist in Silver Fleet. Everyone who entered the meeting got a souvenir mug and several other minor prizes went to those who managed to finish their race, albeit in last place.
Alan.S 1700

The photographs on this blog are reproduced with the kind permission of the copyright holder Ben Falat