Good, Hard Swiftsure

Good, Hard Swiftsure

Nothing like a good hard run on the Straits to blow away some of the Covid “stuff” we’ve been suffering through. We have reports from two courses from Bruce and Peter, plus Jan’s photos (not really indicative of the race, but still….) A video and newspaper clip bring Longboard’s race to the front. Results here. -KH

The Hein Bank Perspective

By Peter Salusbury, skipper, Longboard

The first “post pandemic” Swiftsure race hosted by Royal Victoria Yacht Club was held this past weekend and it was great fun to see old friends pre-race on the docks and race against our U.S. and Vancouver Island friends.  Bruce’s pre-race weather forecast wasn’t far off and it made for some very fast elapsed times on the Hein Bank, Cape Flattery, and Juan de Fuca courses after the late afternoon westerly filled in.

Peter Salusbury won the start in his 48th Swiftsure

The Swiftsure Classic and Hein Bank race boats started first in a drizzly rain and 6-knot easterly and by Race Rocks, those favoring the more northerly route faired much better than those of us who didn’t with Blue and Smoke setting the pace.  After Race Rocks, the flood tide started to become the challenge and those of us who led across to the U.S. side of Juan de Fuca faired much better than those who chose the Canadian side of the Strait.  As predicted, the southeasterly died off in the early afternoon and came in from the south earlier for those of us in the middle of the strait and we had a pretty nice rhumb line course out of the Strait.  Watching the AIS tracker was critical as it was clear Smoke and Blue were doing better a few miles off the US shoreline relative to Glory and Shadow who favored the US beach. 

The westerly finally filled in solidly at Clallam Bay and we changed from the J1 to J2, eventually putting in one reef as the westerly built to over 25 knots at times.  We had a classic Swiftsure beat up the US shoreline to Neah Bay and rounded just before a beautiful sunset at 9:00 in the evening.  Unfortunately, Mark Vangolen’s beautifully refurbished ILC40 Occams Razor had mast problems and had to retire before rounding Neah Bay – very unfortunate as they had been sailing a real strong race to that point.

The run back was fast and fun but nerve racking at times dodging freighters, cruise ships, and those sneaky Clallam Bay boats with no AIS transponders!  Planing downwind in the pitch black at 15 knots was a blast though and while we extended our lead on the boats behind us, Zvi, Smoke, Blue, The Shadow, and Westerly did a nice job legging out on us.

We rounded the Hein Bank buoy at 3:30am Sunday morning and had a bone jarring one tack beat to the finish line with a J4 and two reefs in main – wave pattern was steep and square and on one notable slam off a wave, our radar reflector surrendered and decided to part the boat!  We finished at 5:10 Sunday morning so taking into consideration the light air conditions we had to Pillar Point and adverse current, this turned out to be a relatively fast race for us all.

Alan Lubner’s RP/55 Zvi took elapsed time honors finishing at just after 1:00am Sunday morning with Steve Travis’ Smoke finishing less than half an hour later.  The overall winner on the Hein Bank course was Michael Schoendorf’s Riptide 41 Blue with Smoke taking second place and our own Riptide 35 Longboard in third place.  Both Blue and Smoke sailed very smart races, made good decisions, and clearly were pushing their boats downwind on the way home – huge congratulations to them both for sailing great races. 

And as always, a huge thank-you to Race Chairman, Randy Diamond, PRO John Abel, and the massive list of volunteers at RVicYC that, once again, made Swiftsure such a fun event to attend. 

Longboard flying back to Victoria. Video courtesy of the good folk on Westerly.

The Cape Flattery Course Perspective

By Bruce Hedrick, chief weather guesser, J/35 Tahlequah (“The oldest boat in the Cape Flattery fleet with clearly the oldest crew, scary.”)

It was great to finally get back to Victoria for Swiftsure and see all those folks we couldn’t see for the last two years. It wasn’t perfect with rain on Friday afternoon that put a bit of a damper on the usual dock parties. The cooler than normal temps we’ve had this spring extended into the weekend with marine weather on the VHF warning that Hurricane Ridge in the Olympics and right above the racecourse would get two more inches of snow on Saturday night.

As usual, the Royal Victoria Yacht Club and its army of volunteers did a superb job of managing the event. Events came off on time, the start sequence was nicely spelled out in the SI’s and then repeated on VHF. The big boats got started first with a combined Long Course and Hein Bank fleet, followed by multihulls, the Cape Flattery fleet, and finally the Clallam Bay group. 

A low-pressure system coming ashore in Oregon and a lobe of high-pressure to the north of the Straits, combined to give us an easterly wind and more importantly a downwind start. Great for spectators on the beach at Clover Point. It was only about six knots so it was critical to find a lane of clear air so you could try to get to Race Passage before the ebb changed to the big flood of the day. Navigators were tasked with watching speed over ground as well as the handbearing compass or AIS screen to keep track of the groups that were on the other gybe.

By the time the Cape Flattery fleet got going, it quickly became apparent that we would not get through the Race before the flood started. The boats that held starboard off the line seemed to do better than the boats that gybed early and went to the SSE. As the fleet got closer to Race Passage most boats decided it was better to sail outside Race Passage and avoid the building flood which always starts first on the Vancouver Island side.

The easterly held until about Pillar Point with the fleet that went to the south of the VTS lanes doing better than those who stayed to the north. The weather models were consistent that a westerly would eventually fill down the Straits and consistent with the typical pattern of the strongest breeze occurring the first day after frontal passage. It did seem that it took longer than the models suggested for the pressure gradient to shift to higher pressure offshore. The transition zone can be tough however this year the breeze went to the north first allowing the fleet to the south to close reach aimed directly at Neah Bay.

By the time the fleet got to Clallam Bay, the westerly had filled in and most boats went directly from the J1 to the J3 and some tucked in reefs. The other problem was that the flood had ended and the ebb began to build and with winds in the 20-25 knot range the seas got steep and very close together. The boats that had stayed to the south and closer to the US shore then followed a pretty typical pattern of beating along that shore to try and get into smoother water. Starboard tack was smoother but shorter so the longer port tack into the seas was bone-jarring and tough on boats and crews. 

As boats got to the mark at Cape Flattery, some decided to set the kite immediately in the breezy and lumpy conditions while others decided to just do the gybe, get around the mark, stay with jib and main only, and get pointed back towards the Vancouver Island side. All of the leaders also rounded in what was a spectacular sunset giving the boats still beating up to the mark a beautiful vista. Some boats, like the Farr 36 OD Annapurna, once they got the kite up took off in the 20-25+ knots of westerly and flew back down the Straits, finishing almost an hour ahead of the next boat and easily correcting out on the fleet.

The rest of the fleet finally got their kites up at various points and then followed the traditional route back to Race Passage, the next problem was to get back through Race Passage before the big ebb of the day started. Luckily this year there was not the usual doubling of the wind speed from Sheringham to Passage. This allowed boats to ride the last of the flood down the Vancouver Island shore and do the gybe from starboard to port right in Race Passage. The wind was down to 15-20 knots so the gybe wasn’t too scary. The biggest problem was that it was very cold on deck and hands had a tough time holding on to sheets.

Once clear of Race Passage you could still keep the kite up by not being too greedy and aiming immediately for the finish. Plus you could see the puffs coming off the Island which allowed drivers and trimmers to work together and keep the boat upright and aimed roughly for the barn. The best part of this leg was that while the wind built into the low 20s for the first part, it didn’t die as you got closer to the finish and you were still flying along. 

The post-race inspection at Ship Point in Victoria Harbour was not only friendly and efficient, but they were also serving a greatly appreciated and very tasty bowl of hot potato soup. NICE!

Again, kudos to RVYC and the Swiftsure Committee, this was a great event.

Bruce’s Debriefs: CYC Blakely Rock 2022

Bruce’s Debriefs: CYC Blakely Rock 2022

Saturday’s Blakely Rock Race is most assuredly for the books. Conditions were about as close to perfect as you can get. True, they didn’t match any of the models but that’s why we sail the race.

If you take the data from West Point from 1000hrs to 1600hrs you get a picture that is almost unheard of with remarkably stable conditions which turned this into a true boat speed race and even if the fleets split there was almost no wrong way to go. Wind speed varied from a high of 14 knots to a low of 9 knots, which was very close to what we recorded on the boat. Even more interesting was the wind direction which only varied from 010° to 020° again from 1000hrs to 1600hrs. On the boat, we recorded the wind going from 040° to 350°. Interesting just because the wind stayed so far to the East of North.

Then there was all that sunshine, NICE!.

Wind speed at West Point

In a general analysis of the race, it seemed that if you managed to get a clear air start on starboard off the line, you just held starboard until you could almost lay the top mark. Every once and a while there would be a hint of a port tack lift but it never really materialized. It also seemed that if you tacked to port too early and came in really low of the top mark, the wind got lighter and you lost to the boats who stayed out in the Sound.

The run to Blakely Rock had the fleet spread all across the Sound with some boats going to the west and then a single gybe to take them into the Rock. The boats that went east,  like the sprit boats that had to sail wider angles and the boats with poles that could sail deeper all seemed to be in the same relative position at Blakely Rock, no big gains or losses from going one way or the other.

Perhaps the most interesting leg was the one from Blakely Rock to the finish. That route is pretty much cast in concrete, in that you sail to Magnolia and tack at FourMile Rock beat to West Point and then tack when you can lay the entrance to the Ship Canal. It was just so strange to see boats on port tack aimed into Elliott Bay low of Elliott Bay Marina, while some boats that tacked to starboard just after the Rock were sailing right up the Sound. When the West group converged with the Elliott Bay group, they were pretty much in the same places. For a while, the west group appeared to have gotten into a bit of a lefty as the wind went back to 350°and were lifted almost to the finish while on port tack. The problem was that the finish line was still in a NNE and with the flood finally starting to show up, the West group having gained for a while got pushed down to the Elliott Bay group.

Wind direction at West Point

The results show just how even things were on the course With the top four boats overall all within 2.4 minutes.  And they weren’t all from one class with the top four boats being the J-122 Grace(Class 7), 2nd boat the J-125 Hamachi (Class 8), 3rd boat Pell Mell (Class 2), and the TP 52 Smoke (Class 9). 

The J-105 Fleet was also remarkably close with the top eight boats being within 5.18 minutes. Class 6 the top four boats were within 4.37 minutes.

How close was the crystal ball? Not very when it came to the big boats but not surprising considering that we had just over half the wind we were expecting. Zvi was 33 minutes slower, Glory was 25 minutes slower, and Jam was 26 minutes slower.

In the middle fleets it got closer, The J-111’s were within 7 minutes, The J-109 was within 6 minutes, the J-35 was within 12 minutes, and the J-105’s were within 10 minutes. The Sierra 26 just didn’t have enough wind to break loose on the downwind leg so they 11 minutes slower.

All in all a great day to be out on the water.

Photos by Jan Anderson, check ’em all out here. Results here.

Ed. Note: Have some fun with the name “Bruce’s Debriefs.”