Shaw Island Classic 49 1/2

Shaw Island Classic 49 1/2
From a previous Shaw Island Classic.

Alert reader Scott Boye of Friday Harbor wanted to make sure we all didn’t forget about the San Juan Island YC Shaw Island Classic on August 8. Seems a perfect Covid 19 race, except the feast afterward won’t happen. I’ve copied the description from the web site where you can register and see who’s registered. This race is an absolute casual hoot. Hopefully we’ll get a report or some pix to share after the fact.

From the web site:

Although the San Juan Island Yacht Club has postponed the 50th Shaw Island Classic Sailboat Race until 2021 (let future club historians figure out why it took us 51 years to celebrate the 50th), we invite you to participate in the special and unique 49 ½ Un-Shaw Island Sailboat Race to be held Saturday, August 8, 2020.

As in the past, the race starts at Friday Harbor, circumnavigating scenic Shaw Island in either direction, and back to Friday Harbor. That is about the only thing that remains the same. Here’s the plan for now. Rather than everyone on the start line at the same time, the race will be a do-it-yourself reverse start. Each boat will be assigned a start time based on their rating and, theoretically, everyone would finish at about the same time. There will be no half-way boat and no shortened course, full race only. This also changes scoring from time-on-time to time-on distance. There will be no race committee boats. The start/finish line will be determined via GPS and visual locators with both the start and finish on the honor system.  Sorry, I know everyone cherishes the post-race banter and hearty lasagna dinner, but there will be no dinner served by First Mates at the clubhouse followed by no awards presentation. Finish times and awards will be posted on our website.

For more information contact the SJIYC Race Committee via email: racecommittee@sjiyc.com or by phone 360.317.6442 (PC Jim Corenman) or contact Fleet Captain, Jerry Whitfield via email: fleetcaptain@sjiyc.com .

We hope to see you there! In the meantime, fresh air sailing is just the thing to escape the Covid-19 craziness. So, have some fun on the water and we’ll see you on the start line.

Round Whidbey Island Race

Round Whidbey Island Race

As PNW big boat racing sputters to life, not only are we seeing new races like the Salish 200, we’re seeing existing races that some of us are learning more about. Case in point, the Round Whidbey Island Race. Jan and Skip Anderson knew about the race, and jumped at the chance to shoot the event. As Skip says, “Both Jan and I were SO freakin’ glad to get back out on the water …”

Looks like fun, although we all know how “mild” Puget Sound can be like in July. As one would expect, an eclectic group showed up, including an AeroRig (I had no idea one existed here in the PNW) The event site is here. And for those who are wondering, here’s the course:

  1. THE COURSE
    The committee boat will be anchored off West Beach at Deception Pass,
    within 0.5 nm south of Deception Island. The course then proceeds down the
    west side of Whidbey Island to its southern tip at Possession Point, then
    north up the east side of Whidbey Island to the entrance of Oak Harbor. The
    green buoys at Partridge Point, Double Bluff, Scatchet Head and
    Possession Point must all be kept to port. The course is 65 nautical
    miles.
    Alternate course: “Along Whidbey” In case the winds are too high to sail
    out Deception Pass as determined by the race committee, the start will be in
    the vicinity of the Committee Boat, around the northeast end of Whidbey
    Island (Hoypus Point) and race down the east side of Whidbey Island, to
    round Gedney Island in either direction and return to the posted finish line.
    The distance is approximately 54 nautical miles.

Jan’s report: What a glorious day to transition out of our COVID caves back onto the water!  Sure, little to no wind, but at some point, who cares?!  After all this time away, it was TERRIFIC to muster on the starting line once again, regardless of the race outcome.  Seeing familiar faces, meeting new ones, smiles all around, and they’re OFF!  Conditions were so light that you will not see major league action in these photographs; instead, look for the sailing spirit, the racing community’s heart, and you just might be able to spot why we do this racing thing after all.  Friends for life, engaged with Mother Nature!

And here are the rest of Jan’s pix!

Results.

Covid Racing in the Pacific Northwest

Covid Racing in the Pacific Northwest

Covid 19 has taught, or rather reminded, us about how vital sailing and racing are and how to make it happen without all the trappings normally deemed necessary. Of course, generally speaking the events are not considered racing, because that implies someone’s on the hook if anything goes wrong. Call them practices, or sailing in company. But as anyone knows, it’s fun to make your boat go faster than the other boat.

It would be hard to find a better sport for the Covid 19 world we’re living in. We’re outdoors (unless you’re spending too much time in the cabin with others!) in the fresh air where transmission of the disease, even without masks, seems to be very unlikely. We’re not putting the public at risk. We’re getting exercise and enjoying the outdoors. Early on there was some appropriate consideration of putting emergency response professionals at risk if they’re needed to help. But if there are several boats sailing, and we look out for each other, that possibility is minimized.

In a bit of a “back to where we started” grass roots movement, Pacific Northwest sailors have found a way to get on the water however possible. I think there’s something to be learned in all this – basically a reminder about how we the sailors can control our sport’s trajectory.

The Canadians have held several events already, including the West Vancouver YC & Royal Naval Sailing Association Race, which we covered here on Sailish.com. In Victoria, BC there have been several practices, thoroughly photographed by Andrew Madding, who posts on Facebook.

On the singlehanded dinghy scene, which is close to my heart, the Seattle Laser and Aero fleets and Corinthian Yacht Club have put on several weeks of practices off Shilshole Bay Marina. Jared Hickman has used a CYC Whaler and done superb job of setting marks and keeping the 20 RS Aeros and 15 or so Lasers getting in lots of practice. The RS Aero fleet is truly remarkable, with a who’s who of racing out there including Olympic champions, college sailors of the year, world champions, national champions and a lot of sailors drawn to the boat’s performance.

The Laser fleet mostly consists of young (!!) sailors in Radial rigs. Without the other organized events such as soccer and Ultimate Frisbee, sailing is a great option. Hopefully they will see it as a great option moving forward. John Beaver’s four kids are all sailing Lasers and he’s done a great job in photographing these events. If you wonder if singlehanded sailing is alive and well, check out these photos.

Even while the virus continues to grow, sailing is getting back in gear. This past weekend Jason Andrews and the Hamachi team organized the Salish 200 series of events, which sent appropriately undercrewed boats around some of the islands we have in abundance. Several notable boats made the trip, and even though (or because!?) crews were limited to 5 on each boat, there was an exceptional amount of interest. Hopefully we can share a race report.

And Seattle Yacht Club is proceeding with it’s Snooze and Cruise event from Seattle to Port Madison. My colleague Ryan finally got to take his new boat Coho across a start line! His infant Ernie did the tactics on this liveaboard boat. Kids racing with their parents – that’s how many of us, including me, started.

CYC Seattle is starting up its weeknight racing next week on Puget Sound and Lake Washington. And Sail Sand Point is opening in a limited way. Basically, rising infections or no, things are opening up. And certain evidence it pointing to outdoor activities, and sailing is an inherently socially distant activity, does little to spread the virus.

One of the most important things I see in all this is that idea that we need clubhouses, professional PROs and teams, beer tents, swag, and awards ceremonies to make sailing appealing is just plain wrong. Sailing and racing is attractive in and of itself. That other stuff is great, but first and foremost sailing is great, and that’s something that we should all remember even when the Covid crisis is over. Sponsorship might be hard to come by for a while, but that doesn’t mean we have to stop doing what we love. When I hear we need so many thousands of dollars to put a race on, well, that ain’t true. You need two boats and gumption. Guess what, there are a lot more than two boats out there and plenty of gumption.

I’d love to help get everybody out there. If you have a series or event you’d like me to promote, just email me.

Sail on.

Happy Birthday West Coast Sailing

Happy Birthday West Coast Sailing

West Coast Sailing is celebrating 15 years (!) with a little video. I wish them a hearty happy birthday.

I have a rather special relationship with West Coast Sailing and its founder George Yioulos. As a Laser fleet captain and district secretary, I asked for and received help promoting the fleet as soon as they were on the scene. As a writer, I’ve leaned on George for helping me understand the marine industry. As a customer, they’ve always come through for me. As a sailor, I’ve seen WCS step up to sponsor and support both community sailing and some of our most notable international racers. Finally, WCS has been a great support to sailish.com.

West Coast Sailing deserves every bit of their success. And here’s their video:

Privilege in Sailing and Life

My friend and colleague Joe Cline, editor of 48 North Magazine, has just come up with something great. I’ll share it below in its entirety, but it’s already been posted on the 48North site and Sailing Scuttlebutt. While it stands by itself as a statement, it also serves as a starting point for a conversation. I’ll add a couple thoughts after you get a chance to read his.

Finding inspiration in how maritime right-of-way rules determine privilege

I have been reflecting on the notion of privilege recently, and the ways I may have been a recipient or beneficiary of privilege without recognizing it. It’s leading to ruminations and realizations, both uncomfortable and worthwhile. One thing I’ve found helpful is thinking about how that word—privilege—is used in a maritime context. 

Joe Cline

In right-of-way rules, “privileged” and “stand-on” are sometimes used interchangeably. Such as: a vessel being overtaken is the most privileged vessel. In this context, privilege is the allowance to continue on your course unaffected, while others must make way for your passage. Pretty standard stuff for boaters. It’s also sensible and in-line with some societal definitions of privilege—the ability to live your life generally as you wish, unaffected, with some others altering course to give you an easier pathway forward. 

Here’s where it gets interesting: to which boat is privilege given in the right-of-way scenario? Sometimes it’s just the rules (starboard rights over port, for example). Yet, in most cases, it is the less advantaged vessel. 

The vessel constrained by its draft in a narrow channel is less able to move without running aground than smaller boats nearby. The overtaken boat may have fewer options for speed and maneuverability. Power-driven vessels give privilege to sailboats, whose mobility is limited by conditions and the nature of their propulsion. And, when two sailboats are on the same tack, it is the leeward boat—the one with less access to the wind, and thus less speed and maneuverability—that receives privilege. 

It is, of course, more complicated than that, but you get the point. There is inherent fairness and virtue in the principle that boats with more options and ability can, and therefore should, make accommodations for those with less.

Conventional definitions of privilege on land look a lot more like the windward boat or the overtaking boat. The maritime definition has been helping me process my own sense of privilege, and has given me a template with which to think about how I might reframe certain definitions and priorities in pursuit of a more just and equal world. 

It is important to say this out loud. As a white man, I have been the recipient of incalculable structural privilege. I am the figurative stand-on vessel far more often than not, and I have enjoyed these advantages without asking for or earning them. This moment hurts, as I feel shamefully exposed for mistakes I’ve made in taking this reality for granted.

Conversely, there are a host of disadvantages and an infinitely deeper hurt that my neighbors and friends of color have endured, and continue to endure. And this is far more important to say aloud.

Boating and sailing are often broadly associated with societal privilege. Optimistically, water-borne enthusiasts hope to increase diversity on the water, and lots of us talk about that. Realistically, too little has been done to take steps toward this attainable goal; and boating and sailing are presently activities with disappointingly homogenous audiences. 

I believe the vast majority of boaters and landlubbers alike aspire to be instruments of peace, equality, and justice. Yet in spite (and because!) of those good intentions, we have a lot of work to do. Like so many others, I’m taking time to listen, to read, to donate, and to resolve to be better. I encourage everyone to join me in these commitments, and challenge us all to work toward tangible good and actionable change. What form this change can take isn’t clear to me today, but this is the overdue beginning of a long conversation in which I welcome help to learn and discern what we can do to help foster more inclusiveness in boating. 

As a starting point—like sailors always do for inspiration—we can look to the water. Whatever your experience of life and these difficult last few weeks, the maritime right-of-way rules remind us that privilege can and should be given to the disadvantaged, not the other way around. Be more like boats.

In humility and solidarity,
Joe

Joe’s analogy is apt. It’s essential that the more maneuverable, more advantaged vessel, make allowances for the less maneuverable. It’s common sense.

I’ll add this. What would it look like if boaters all just grabbed what they can, where they can, ran roughshod over their neighbors, as some people seem to think people should in society. That kind of social Darwinism just wouldn’t work on the water. I get it, some boaters are always going to have the megayacht and some the 14′ outboard. But the megayacht owner shouldn’t be able to run over the guy with an outboard just because he’s bigger and faster.

And I’ll add another. I was taught that when a fellow mariner is in trouble, and you can help, you do help. It doesn’t matter what kind of boat or what kind of boater it is, you help. You don’t make a big deal of it, you just do it. When talking to non-sailors about our sport, I point to that proudly. In general, sailors and power boaters understand why that’s important and practice it.

Translated to white privilege and racism, even outside sailing, our responsibilities are fairly obvious. First and foremost respect everyone. Secondly, make allowances for those without the same maneuverability. Finally, if someone’s in trouble, you help.

So, yes, Joe nailed it. We sailing writers often find truth in sailing, and he uncovered a great lesson. – Kurt Hoehne

Safety Starts with the Skipper

Safety Starts with the Skipper

There are countless articles, videos, courses and opinions on the subject of safe sailing. And for the most part they all have something to offer. But one thing that I often find myself talking about is something very basic, and very essential: attitude. The Cruising Club of America has just put together a succinct “Guidance,” which is available online to all sailors. It emphasizes the essential need for safety to start with attitude, not equipment. Sailing is traditionally a very self-reliant sport – we don’t call the Coast Guard because we run out of gas. We practice person overboard maneuvers. Anybody who’s prepared a boat for a serious offshore race knows the extent of the medical kit. There’s so much to consider the real place to start is with the culture. If done correctly, it needn’t be onerous or inhibit fun. This guide is a great place to start. -KH

NEW YORK, May 13, 2020—The Cruising Club of America has published guidance entitled “Creating a Culture of Safety: The Skipper’s Responsibility” that spotlights the skipper’s overriding responsibility for the safety of boat and crew. The advisory, which takes the form of a series of recommendations, emphasizes creating a culture of safety aboard the boat as the only logical means of successfully fulfilling the skipper’s responsibility.
 
According to John Robinson, chair of the CCA’s Safety & Seamanship Committee, “We wrote the paper because of our concern about the number of sailing safety incidents over the last few years that resulted in loss of life and near losses—all of which appeared preventable with appropriate preparation, training and decision-making at sea.”
 
“As many sailors look to the CCA for advice regarding safety at sea,” Robinson adds, “we felt that the highest level of advice should start with the skipper, before setting sail, and should draw  attention to the broad scope of issues that their leadership role requires.”
 
Posted on the CCA’s website, the recommendations can serve as a skipper’s checklist covering four areas—leadership, boat and equipment preparation, crew training, and best practices at sea—which together help to build a strong culture of safety.
 
Notably, the CCA paper’s publication also highlights a coalescing of efforts towards more effective safety-at-sea education and collaboration among major U.S. boating organizations that conduct classroom, hands-on, on-water, and online safety training, which include the CCA, Storm Trysail Club, New York Yacht Club, The Sailing Foundation, U.S. Naval Academy, and US Sailing.”
 
Mark Lenci, a former captain of a nuclear attack submarine who leads the joint CCA/New York Yacht Club safety at sea training says, “Change a couple of technical details and ‘The Culture of Safety’ issued by the CCA would be just as relevant for a nuclear submarine as for a sailboat. In fact, Magellan would have endorsed it. The ‘culture of safety’ at sea is timeless. This will serve as the opening message to attendees at our future hands-on safety at sea courses.”
 
Rich du Moulin, chairman and moderator of Storm Trysail Club’s safety at sea programs, says, “Storm Trysail Club echoes the CCA’s emphasis on the skipper’s leadership and will be organizing an event later this year specifically addressing the need for leadership at sea.”
 
David Tunick, chair of the Seamanship Committee of New York Yacht Club, says, “Collaboration with the CCA and other groups at the highest level of leadership in safety at sea, including support for US Sailing, is a cornerstone of our growing safety program. Safety leadership will be a core principle at our advanced Level 200 safety at sea seminars, in part modeled after the course pioneered by the Storm Trysail Club.”


Introducing sailors to firefighting practices is part of hands-on safety-at-sea courses available through the CCA/New York Yacht Club and others including the the Storm Trysail Club, U.S. Naval Academy, and other boating organizations.  

Swiftsure 2012 and 2013

Swiftsure 2012 and 2013

Once again Jan and Skip Anderson have provided some visual entertainment in the form of photos from the 2012 and 2013 Swiftsure races. Even as we start to emerge from stay-at-home, it’s worth a look back. Makes you want to get back out there, eh?

Speaking of stay-at-home, let’s share more cruising and racing stories about emerging! Let’s use this tragedy to remember what’s important and motivate us to do and enjoy more of it. Just email sailing story/photos me.

The following photos are courtesy of Jan Anderson, who makes it out for the Swiftsure starts no matter the condition. There are lots more photos of these and other recent Swiftsures here. I chose these few to remind us of some of the more beautiful, well known and memorable ones.

Margaret Pommert, Force of Nature, Recognized

Margaret Pommert, Force of Nature, Recognized

Margaret Pommert was just recognized as with the 2020 BoatUS/National Women’s Sailing Association (NWSA) Leadership in Women’s Sailing Award. I’m lucky enough to see her when she stops by the Swiftsure office to plan The Sailing Foundation events with fellow Sailing Foundation stalwart Ryan Helling.

Margaret Pommert

She’s called a force of nature in this release, and no doubt that’s true, but what I see is a sailor dedicated to broadening the appeal of the sport and giving everyone the tools to make it safer, and feel safer.

Earlier this year, she put together the Safety at Sea seminar on Bainbridge Island. Watch this pages in the next few days as I’ll be posting photos from the event to help people get excited for the next seminar!

Here’s the press release from BoatUS:

Margaret Pommert Honored with 2020 BoatUS/NWSA Leadership in Women’s Sailing Award

2020 BoatUS/NWSA Leadership in Women’s Sailing Award honoree Margaret Pommert (left, at helm) with crew competing in the 2016 Pacific Northwest One Design Regatta

Margaret Pommert (left, at helm) with crew competing in the 2016 Pacific Northwest One Design Regatta Jan Anderson

MARBLEHEAD, Mass., May 20, 2020 – Margaret Pommert of Seattle, Washington, has been named recipient of the 2020 BoatUS/National Women’s Sailing Association (NWSA) Leadership in Women’s Sailing Award. The award annually recognizes an individual with a record of achievement in inspiring, educating, and enriching the lives of women through sailing.

“Margaret has been called ‘a force of nature’ for her enthusiasm and effectiveness in getting more women on the water,” said NWSA President Debbie Huntsman. “She encourages women to step up to new responsibilities and to expand their capabilities, confidence, and boating horizons.”

Margaret Pommert

Added Huntsman, “Margaret also has developed impressive, forward-thinking mentoring and online learning opportunities for bringing more women sailors forward as certified instructors and licensed mariners. In doing so, she has truly shown exceptional leadership in women’s sailing and is most deserving of this award.”

A Pacific Northwest native, Pommert is an American Sailing Association and US Sailing certified instructor and holds a 100-ton U.S. Coast Guard Master Captain’s License. For many years, she taught sailing in California on dinghies, keelboats, catamarans and monohulls, and she now teaches at a variety of locations in the Pacific Northwest as well as online. Pommert also works for the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, teaching new keelboat instructors. One of the nation’s largest sailing schools named her 2019 Instructor of the Year.

Beyond instruction, Pommert skippered an all-woman J105 sailing team that twice won a fundraising regatta for The Breast Cancer Research Foundation. She was on the only all-woman U.S. team at the 2018 J22 International Midwinter Championship Regatta, co-led a flotilla up the Inside Passage to Alaska five times, sailed a Pacific Crossing, and explored many top cruising destinations. She also writes a monthly column for women sailors in Northwest Yachting magazine, created the free boating education website seattleonthewater.com, and serves on The Sailing Foundation’s Executive Committee where she is the organization’s Offshore Safety at Sea training organizer. Pommert has served as a member of the Washington State Boating Programs Advisory Committee, which provides recommendations on ways to enhance boating safety and evaluates grants on boating access infrastructure.

Doug Fryer Epitomized PNW Sailing

Doug Fryer Epitomized PNW Sailing

Pacific Northwest sailing legend Doug Fryer died about a month ago. Much has already been written about him elsewhere, but I’d like to add a few thoughts here, even though I never knew him.

Night Runner

A few years after Night Runner was launched I was working at Sailing Magazine in Wisconsin. In the course of my work there editing Bob Perry, I saw photos of the magnificent Night Runner, and was taken aback by how a boat like that could be conceived, created and competitive in the Pacific Northwest. What a cool region, I thought. Eventually, largely because it was such a great sailing area, I moved here.

When Fryer died my colleague Ryan Helling, who served on The Sailing Foundation board with him, related how “just the other day” Fryer had been promoting some initiative at the Foundation.

Night Runner
Doug Fryer

From everything I’ve heard and read about Doug Fryer, he epitomized PNW sailing. As a young man he worked as for a sailmaker and as a rigger. He created a true original in Night Runner, utilizing local talents for the design and build. He raced very successfully. He cruised far and wide was awarded the Cruising Club of America’s Blue Water Medal.

Through it all and with what must have been an unreal amount of energy, he gave back to the sport. I wish I had known him. Sailish readers, whether you knew him or not, can be appreciative of Fryer’s example and contributions to PNW sailing.

48 North has a web page dedicated to Doug Fryer, with Andy Schwenk’s first-hand accounts. Here’s the obituary. Sail on, Doug.

Dinghy Racing is ON

Dinghy Racing is ON

In a bit of a throwback to days gone by of racing, the singlehanded dinghy sailors came out in force on Thursday off Shilshole in Seattle. Yes, Virginia, there IS racing while simultaneously social distancing. The Seattle Laser Fleet – which includes the RS Aeros in town, dotted the water on a perfect, sunny May evening. There were very good fleets of both boats with about 30 boats dotting the Sound.

The Aero sailors have been at it for a while this spring, meeting multiple times a week and working on their speed and technique. The World Championship, after all, had been scheduled to run this summer on the Columbia River Gorge. This fleet boasts some of the region’s best sailors and is likely the strongest Aero fleet in the US. So it’s no surprise they’re out there.

The Laser fleet, however, has not been as active. That all changed Thursday night when 14 Lasers, about evenly split between Radial and Standard rigs, were out. About half of the fleet were junior sailors which bodes well, not just for Laser sailing, but sailing in general. Fleet captain Mark Ross had worked with Corinthian Yacht Club to have one person in a Whaler on hand to set the course and run starts.

Five races were run with the boats returning in the fading light and a building northerly. Only smiles were seen on the sailors’ faces.

For more information on RS Aero and Laser sailing, visit seattlelaserfleet.org.