Our fleet race on Saturday was one to remember. The story line includes man and machine versus the elements, drama on the high seas, damsels in distress..... Weird thing was some attendees missed all or some of the action.
First, the players, (by hull#). Andy Hayward and Rocket Rod Koch #38. Dave and Kim Thinel #812, (you have to see the beautiful new bottom job on Pig Pen by the way). Diamond Doug King and his TWO girlfriends (sorry I did not get the ladies names), #2069. Bill Adikes and Joy #3998. Dave Bell and Susan Cintron #4156. Mike Douglas and Terry #4305. Brian and Kat Malone #4318. Mark Taylor and a variable amount of kids #4321. Paul Silvernail and Leslie Fisher #5026. For a total of nine Flying Scots.
The rescue of 5026 in progess, this is how a Scot will sit with no bow bag, one crew, when fully swamped
Almost back to the dock where we will use the hoist to drain her out.
Mike and Mark thought that we all had flaked out and actually had a match race while all of this was transpiring.
The fleet got back on track and headed out, the wind stayed pretty strong from the South/Southwest all afternoon. The second race saw Mike Douglas jump out to a early lead followed by Dave Bell at the windward mark. Andy and Rod got ole #38 cranking and passed a boat on each of the subsequent legs to snag the win.
Mike with Terry crewing, shows some nice form and speed
Shortly after the finish it was noticed that Doug King's Mandy Rose (2069)was on her side about a quarter mile South of the starting line. When #2069 righted two of Doug's crew were in the water away from the boat. Doug's outhaul had parted which made moving to windward impossible. Andy and Rod scooped up the ladies, and Rod used the " what are nice girls like you doing in place like this" line, that Rod, he's smoooth! It was too rough to attempt a boat to boat transfer so the girls were deposited on DIYC's beach and #38 missed race three's start.
It proved to be a super close race with Mike, Dave T and Dave B all finishing overlapped in that order! It should be noted that Mark Taylor single handed Blast Off in this race and really pressed the leaders, awesome!
More speed from Mike and Terry to take the finish
Race four saw #38 win the boat in a righty biased race and never look back, Mark had added his ace super crew Stu and was back in the mix for a 2nd, followed by the fresh and clean #5026. Tom Taylor, race committee extraordinare, called it a day, and the wind/sunburned group headed for the docks. Thanks again to Mr Taylor for his top notch efforts!
The weary bunch gathered poolside to relive the drama, unfortunately Andy had to scat early due to work, total bummer!
Lessons learned; 5026, never leave the mainsheet unattended in the cleat, even to only put on gloves. Skipper or crew has to always have it in hand on a gusty day. 2069, jury rigging a new outhaul in 15 or 16 knots of wind and steep waves with the main still up is a real battle. Partially dropping the main to complete the temporary repair and rehoisting would prove easier.
If the oppurtunity arises you must ask Doug King for his "blow by blow" version of the events, hopefully with cocktails in hand.
Kudos to Leslie and Paul for jumping right back into it as soon as their boat was straightened out. This was only their second time out with the boat after purchasing it several weeks ago. Awesome.
2 comments:
Dear Kim and Dave, Chuck Tanner here, and though I may in the past have been known occasionally as an unsavory element of society, I send my comment anyway, and remain anonymous, on your pretty great and fun site. Many congratulations. Let's hope for some high wind action shots in the near future. We'll mix in four trapeze wires and a big-boat chute for the masthead of that Scot telephone pole of a mast, plus a hotdog eating contest or two, and we'll be ready to go worldwide!
Occasional unsavoryness adds a little "flavor". That reminds me of the time we returned from rough day on the water, big wind, huge thunderstorms, hey wait..... this story could be a future post, when I'm desparate for ideas.
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