Start on the Right Day, Finish with Intensity

Start on the Right Day, Finish with Intensity

We in the PNW get to give a big cheer for Team Hamachi. They sailed a great Transpac race and appears to have won the ORR division overall. Thanks to Jason Andrews who has supplied videos and reports to sailish.com leading up to and during the race. Mahalo indeed.

We did it.  But the last 24 hours were really intense. 

We were struggling to cover both Bretwalda 3, which was focused on sailing as fast as possible to Oahu, and Velvet Hammer, who was playing a tactical game. The Hammer was heading for the right corner to establish leverage on us, while we sailed more of a rhumb line to keep our VMG high. Squalls were rolling across the race course creating challenging wind angles and large wind holes. We struggled very early Saturday morning and watched the separation increase with Bretwalda, and our advantage decrease with Velvet Hammer.  Hamachi had been atop the ORR overall standings since Wednesday morning, but all of us felt that lead slipping away.

Around 3am a series of squalls came through that increased pressure and improved wind angles which allowed us to start making gains on the competition.  Then just after sunrise we gybed right on a favorable shift to cover Velvet Hammer and rode that for many hours. Sailing was slow in 12-15 kts of wind, even though they were forecast to be 20kts.  Around this time we came into contact with Bad Pak (Pac 52) and Peligroso (Kernan 70), top sleds that started the day after us. Seeing these boats less than 200 miles from the finish made us start to comprehend the magnitude of our accomplishments.

The crew included Shawn Dougherty, Jason Andrews, Frederic Laffitte, Lucas Laffitte, Matt Pistay and David Rogers.

Unfortunately, as we entered the 200nm “Live Zone” our YB tracker battery died.  We contacted Race Committee, but they were already aware of the situation and in the process of contacting us.  Apparently our tracker went crazy and started pinging the Iridium network constantly, which burned its battery out. They instructed us to give manual updates every four hours, which made for a very stressful day for all you tracker junkies.  It was equally stressful for us on board! In actuality, at no time during the last day did we surrender the lead, it just looked that way on Yellow Brick.

Around noon the wind was forecast to go right, which would allow us to get headed up to Molokai on the opposite board.  Instead, the wind continued to clock left and remained light (12-15 kts). While this improved our tactical advantage over Velvet Hammer, it made our odds of catching Bretwalda worse, and all we could do was watch them sail to the finish around 2pm in the afternoon (local Hawaii time).  

Based on the differences in our ratings, Bretwalda owed us approximately 13.5 hours on corrected time.  So once they crossed the line a clock started and we had to finish within that time allowance. Unfortunately, we spent most of the afternoon rolling slowly downwind through swells in light breeze, 150 nm from the finish.  We felt good about our ability to finish in front of Velvet Hammer, who was 45nm north and directly upwind of us, but were not so optimistic about Bretwalda 3. The team kept pushing and around 4pm the wind increased to 15 kts, and then by 6 pm it was 17 kts. The wind angle was still terrible but we gybed back on to port and headed to Molokai.  The boat kicked up on a plane (Hamachi’s boat speed is about 2 kts less than the wind speed) and we started trucking south. The wind continued to increase to 20kts and clock slowly right and the whole team was focused on burning down the miles to the finish. We approached Molokai on a tear at 17-19kts and gybed right towards the infamous Molokai channel. Luckily it was fairly tame that evening and the team threw down six perfect gybes to get around Molokai, across the channel and lined up for Diamond Head. We power reached across the line at 16 kts at 2:21 am Sunday morning to complete the 50th Transpac in 8 days 16 hours and 21 minutes, which gives us a corrected time of 8 day 0 hours and 52 minutes. This time has been, so far, sufficient to put us in first place overall. 

It’s been a hell of an adventure and one that will not be repeated anytime soon.  We were fortunate to start on the “right day” and the high pressure materialized in a manner that allowed us to power reach the whole way to Hawaii in winds that averaged between 15-20 kts.  We never saw winds above 22 kts except for a few minutes, and always between midnight at 2 am to make it more exciting. We couldn’t have asked for a better crew and having one additional crew member became a clear advantage in the heavier wind versus the other J/125s. It’s going to take several days to catch up on sleep and begin to process the magnitude of this adventure and accomplishment. We have really appreciated all the support from our friends, family and Pacific Northwest sailing community.

Mahalo!

Team Hamachi


Hamachi In for the Win

Hamachi In for the Win
Hamachi for the win.

Just in from Hawaii – Hamachi did it! There were some tracker questions in the final miles that confounded watchers, but on the water apparently it was all clear. We’ll wait for Jason’s report to hear the details. Janet Lafitte, who has been the point person on putting out the Hamachi reports, says the following:

Aloha!

Team Hamachi slayed the field of J125’s, Division 3, and finished the First Boat Corrected Overall. WIN. WIN. WIN. The boys came into the dock around 03:00AM and the Mai Tais flowed. Hence, you will have to wait for Jason’s onboard report. 

ORR Overall??

ORR Overall??

Hamachi continues to charge toward the finish line in the Transpac, and continues to lead the ORR fleet (and the three other J/125s) on corrected time.

They’ve sailed a tremendous race, and there’s only 188 miles to go. Here’s the latest from Hamachi. Tune into the tracker (4 hour delay)

Been a wild 36 hours. Things got tactical starting Wednesday and we
went south to cover Velvet Hammer and Snoopy, who were heading south for
more wind. We split the difference between them and Bretwalda and spent
most of the day sailing in 20-22 kts. That evening the full moon was
blocked by low clouds and we rocketed through the night at ludicrous
speed in pitch black. The boat was barely in control launching off the
tops of big waves and accelerating down troughs and up the other side.
The speedo was often out of the water so boat speed was indeterminate
but we saw at least 23 kts of SOG the next day. This subsided after a
few hours and it was a relatively “calm” night with winds 17-20 kts.

Winds were down Thursday morning and Fred towed his Mahi Mahi lure
behind the boat for an hour. Didn’t catch anything – too fast. Thursday
was lighter in the morning (12-15 kts) with big seas. Then the squalls
started and the wind picked back up, along with even bigger seas. The
boat was back to rocketing along at 18-20 kts in 20-24 kts of wind.

We set our A2.5 spinnaker back on Sunday morning around 5am and it has
been up ever since. It carried us 1500 miles across the Pacific through
some wild conditions but at 10pm PDT last night it suffered one too many
indignities at the hands of its crew and blew apart. We quickly pulled
it out of the water and launched the A4, which we’d packed knowing we
were pushing its limits.

It’s been inshore match racing for the past 500 miles, and will continue
to the finish. We gybe on the shifts and have seen some crazy wind
angles. Right now the GFS says the wind should be at 58mag but we are
sailing 95mag directly at the finish. Aloha! We had the A4, then
switched to the backup (older) A2.5. Navigating more squals and just
trying to keep the boat and gear together while we sail fast! Winds have
been lightening some so expected finish is around midnight Sat (PDT).

Transpac Update – Hamachi, Longboard and a Dramatic Rescue

Transpac Update – Hamachi, Longboard and a Dramatic Rescue
Pyewacket and OEX crews safe ashore.

The full story has yet to be told, but the bottom line early in this year’s Transpac Race is that the crew of the SC 70 OEX was rescued by Roy Disney and company aboard Pyewacket. All are safely back on shore, and OEX is apparently still afloat. Rudder post damage was the culprit.

From the Hamachi drone……

It seems a breezy race so far, judging from the updates from the PNW’s own Hamachi crew. Here’s the latest “Half Way” report:

Well, we don’t know if its EXACTLY half way but we have 1250nm to go and it seemed like a good excuse for a party (not that Team Hamachi ever
needs an excuse to party). We gathered on the back patio to contemplate
the race so far and pass our flask, which quickly devolved into a YMCA
dance party with the drone circling the boat, all while doing 15-16 kts.
 Our objectives going into the race were: 1) be safe, 2) have fun, and
3) win.  So far we are doing well in all three categories. Taking stock
half way, here are some thoughts:

– Best Moment(s): Sailing away from our closest competition

– Crew Lowlight(s): Too many body fluids and damp socks in a small
cramped cabin

Things We Have Plenty Of:
– Food: The weight Nazis will cringe knowing we went to sea with four
days of frozen food and enough snacks for 12 days. There was a calculus
of carrying more weight on the reach to keep the crew happy and sailing
fast versus taking every last ounce our of the boat. Despite this extra
weight we’ve had amazing boat speed.
– Dude Wipes: Great marketing on someone’s part. We can sail fast
confident that our “dude parts” will stay clean to the finish.
– Boat Speed: Of the four J/125’s, we are the only one with six crew.
Despite this extra weight, and all of our frozen food, we seem to have
great boat speed. In the last 24 hours Hamachi has covered 294nm.

Things We Need More Of:
– Purell: clearly we should have thought this one through.  We left
with a small half empty container.  Definitely need more of that.
– Hot Cocoa: The key to a fast boat is a well-fueled crew.  We have
plenty of Starbucks Via but need more cocoa for our mochas.
– Ventilation: use your imagination
– Boat Speed: While we’ve got a lot, you can always have more…

Speed Records:
Starboard Watch: 18.8kts (Matt Pistay)
Port Watch: 18.6kts (Jason Andrews)

– Kudos:
1) David Rogers has been crushing it as our Lieutenant Ohura. It was
rough going (literally and figuratively) in the first 24 hours as he was
making up for a sick crew member and doing all of the boat data
collection and navigating.  Over the past few days he’s stepped up the
game and built tools to track the fleet, our performance and answer
everyone’s questions.
2) The Cooks: We are four days in and still eating frozen gourmet food.
Thank you Janet, Marian (and Jason) for doing all the cooking!

Are We There Yet?
The days are blowing by and we are a little shocked its already half
way.  Normally its a 10-11 day race for a J/125 but this year we are on
track to finish in around 8 days.

Up Next:
Sleep. Eat. Sail Fast. Repeat.

Hamachi is currently leading Division 3 and they covered 313 miles in the last 24 hours. Oh my.

Comanche, the gun in a knife-fight. She only sailed 448 miles in the last 24 hours. Photo by Sharon Green.

We’re also keeping track of Peter Salusbury’s Longboard. They are not, repeat NOT humming along. Oh, they’re going fast enough, covering 281 miles in the last 24 hours, just not “humming.” Here’s the story. Designer Paul Bieker helped deliver the boat to California and was extremely bothered by a hum/howl noise that emanated from the keel when Longboard was going fast. Bieker reports “I couldn’t stand the idea of them doing Transpac with that so I rented two tanks when we hit the dock and spent ~2 ½ hours rasping/sanding the keel trailing edge.  It was a pretty funny scene that no one could see – a lot of it was spent straddling the bulb as I worked – like Slim Pickens in Dr Strangelove.  My shoulders were sore for a week after the effort.  I didn’t give it a big chance of working 100% but I thought it was likely to help some.

And here’s skipper Peter Salusbury’s note to Paul from the Pacific as Longboard hit her stride:

Hey Paul – it’s amazing!  NO KEEL HUM AT ALL!!!!!!!

We are proposing to the Prime Minister to make you an Honorary Canadian and be awarded the Order of Canada. 

We are going real fast today – the boat is lit up and we are confident we will reel in some boats by the end of the week.  Slow start as our small waterline length was a real issue against all the huge waterlines in our division.  But it’s Longboard time now so we are making the best of it!

Thanks for all your hard work fixing the keel – can’t believe we didn’t do that sooner.

We’ll keep watching. If you want to, check out the tracker yourself.

Hamachi to Hawaii

Hamachi to Hawaii

The Hamachi team is on the way to Hawaii. And they’re allowing us an occasional peek when possible. We already showed some drone video of their passage down the coast and shared some start footage on Facebook. Below, they’re off the west end of Catalina with lots of company (for now).

Hamachi off Catalina in TransPac 2019. Thanks to Jason Andrews!

Our friends on Longboard had an interesting delivery and we here at Sailish are big fans of the Peter Salsbury owned & skippered, and Bieker designed 35-footer. They’ve made several changes to the already scary-fast boat, so we’re anticipating great things.

I was hoping to also be writing about Atalanta and her 120,000 lbs. charging toward Hawaii, but alas they decided to pull the plug and not race. We’ll be keeping an eye on the TP The Shadow II from Vancouver, which is in a very competitive class.

Stay tuned, because we’ll be hearing more from Hamachi, and Bruce Hedrick won’t be able to stay away from the tracker for the next few days. The big boys, including odds-on lines favorite Comanche and the other 100-footer Rio, have yet to start.

Return wins San Juan 24 NAs

Return wins San Juan 24 NAs

By Ken Johnson

All photos by Jan Anderson. See the rest here.

As crews from Seattle to Bellingham gathered in Oak Harbor on June 28 for the 2019 San Juan 24 North American Class Association Championships there was great pleasure in greeting friends from previous championship regattas and concern about the light wind forecasts for the coming weekend.

As Byron Skubi, the experienced PRO running the racing, said the Friday night wind forecast for the weekend was “terrible.”  A variety of wind forecasting sites showed winds on Saturday ranging from 2-3 knots perhaps getting to 4-5 knots late in the afternoon and only marginally better for Sunday. 

As boats motored out Saturday morning on the 40-minute trip from Oak Harbor to Penn Cove, the light winds on Saratoga Passage and the flat glass on Penn Cove were not promising. Bu a dark line observed on the far west end of the Cove which slowly moved eastward and finally reached and then passed the Race Committee boat located just off of Coupeville.

Not to worry – the wind filled in with 5-6 knots westerly and Byron sounded the first warning signal on time promptly at 11:00. The wind was fairly consistent building to close to 10-11 knots in the afternoon before settling back to 6-7 knots. Byron ran eight, count them, eight great races on Saturday – windward-leeward courses, some long, some short, with both windward and downwind finishes. David Steckman of Oak Harbor, the Regatta organizer, got the racing off to a great start by dominating the first race on his renamed Juan Solo, followed by Mike Klep’s Bruce from Bellingham and Mike Irish’s Manhattan Transfer from Seattle.   Pre-race favorite Return was over early at the favored pin end and its delayed restart after ducking most of the fleet resulted in a 7th place finish.

But Return bounced back handily, winning the next 3 races to regain the lead, with Juan Solo and my Grauer Geist keeping close with top 4 finishes in each race.  Racing got closer as Return had another over-early call and finished 5th in the fifth race and got trapped on the far left side of the course in the 6th race resulting in a 4th place finish before grabbing a 1st and 2nd place result in the last two races of the day.  Meanwhile Grauer rebounded with two firsts and a second, and Juan Solo kept close with its consistent top 4 finishes. 

At the end of Saturday, after 8 races (one throw-out permitted with 6 races completed), Return had a 2 point lead over Grauer Geist with Juan Solo just one point further back.  Jeff Kendal’s Fancy lurked in 4th place while Bruce, after two second places in the first two races, had fallen to 5th overall as it suffered both a OCS in the third race and a DSQ in race 7. 

Proving the forecasts wrong again, a nice wind came in again on Sunday, and Return quickly took advantage to clinch its Championship win with two firsts and one second in the first three of four races held that day, followed by a safe second in the last race.  Meanwhile Juan Solo and Grauer Geist were battling it out for second place – after winning the third race Grauer just had to finish just one boat behind Juan Solo in the last race to match her second place finish in the 2018 regatta.   However, she lost track of Juan Solo at the start and had to go left while Juan Solo and Return headed to the right hand favorable Penn Cove current on the north side – at the windward mark, Juan Solo had a boat length lead on Return with Grauer another length back.  The first two boats headed to the southern shore, where there is supposed to be a favorable eastward current.  We followed on Grauer about half-way to the shore and, believing it had a favorable downwind angle to the long leeward mark, was the first to gybe.  Nothing like being in the middle, and forced to watch boats on the south shore sail by and, at the same time, boats further behind at the windward mark that gybed toward the northern shore  also found stronger wind and sailed by!  Juan Solo held on to win the last race and second place as Grauer sailed to its worst finish, which became our regatta throw-out.

The racing was close and competitive. Of the 12 boats in the regatta, 4 had at least one first place, and 7 boats had at least one top-three finish.  A single mistake on the course pushed all the boats back in the fleet.  Even the top three boats had 6th and 7th place finishes.

At the awards ceremony Mark Bradner noted that he had been sailing with the same crew for 15 years, and that crew consistency was instrumental in Return’s win:  Gary Reifel on foredeck, David Valentine on main and David Fukuhara on sheets.  Return previously won the SJ 24 NACA championship in 2011, 2013 and 2015.

Boats had to be conscious of building tide both days (the low was about an hour or so before racing started).  It was easy (too easy for some of us) to get pushed to the starting line early, causing many loud calls to “Stay Up, Stay Up” as boats tried to jockey to keep from crossing the starting line early.  The Race Committee called boats over-early in most races, but in only the third race did it signal a General Recall (of course many skippers said they had had great starts and it was other boats that were over early).  The Race Committee wasted no time in hosting the black flag and a conservative restart followed.

With many boats lumped close together after the start, the wind just lifts over all the boats. Boats that did well got to clear air quickly, even if it meant ducking boats, irrespective of where on the Cove they sailed.  And skippers also had to skippers had to balance the wind and the current.  As the current built, the counter-clockwise Penn Cove current is said to favor the northern side (the right-hand side going upwind in the westerly) and the south side of the Cove going downwind – but until the current really set in going up the left hand side or the middle, wherever there was clear air, paid off.  And going too far to the north side commonly resulted in boats overstanding the weather mark, letting boats coming in on port sail a shorter distance and tack underneath them.

All in all, and despite having just 12 boats participating, the 2019 regatta was great fun with challenging competition and racing, proving again that when all the boats sail about the same speed it doesn’t really matter how fast they are going.  The pleasure of one-design racing!

On Friday night the Class elected its 2020 officers:  Dave Steckman of Oak Harbor as Commodore, Mark Bradner of Seattle as Vice Commodore and Jeff Kendall of Seattle as Fleet Measurer.  The Class also decided to hold the 2020 North Americans on Shillshole Bay in Seattle on June 26-28, 2020, and to have a small group review the class specifications to see if any should be modified (most have been in effect since the mid-1970s).

The excellent Oak Harbor Yacht Club hosted the regatta.   Thanks to Club Manager Joe Catanio for the excellent food and drink each night and OHYC Commodore Ferd Johns for welcoming all of us. 

Dennis and Marjie Wade Clark joined us for dinner Saturday night, and Dennis gave an engaging talk about the origins and history of the San Juan 24, followed by questions regarding the boat’s design.  Marjie was the winning skipper of the first SJ 24 North American regatta, sailed on Bellingham Bay with over 50 boats participating!  To date she is the only female skipper to win the regatta; her father designed and built the wire sculpture of the boat that graces the SJ 24 NACA trophy.  Chuck Skewes of Ullman Sails noted that he got his start in the sailing industry working for Dennis as an apprentice sailmaker in the mid-1980s.  Chuck also described his “year as a professional skipper” and commented on sail trim issues he observed from the Race Committee boat.

Ullman Sails was the principal sponsor of the Regatta and contributed money, prizes and support.  Other main sponsors:  Oak Harbor YC and Indigo Slate (t-shirt design and cash), followed by Jan’s Marine Photography, Samson Ropes, Swinomish Casino & Lodge and Oak Harbor Marina.

Wayne Balsiger of Seattle chaired the protest committee, aided by Bill Weinsheimer and Chad Holcomb, both of Oak Harbor. In addition to PRO Byron Skubi, others on the Race Committee Boat were Chuck Skewes from Ullman Sails, Larry Munns, Jane Mays and Avis Berney. The mark boats were manned by Craig Cooley, Russ Wood, Ron DeRu, Dale Hendrickson, Rick Almberg, Joel Servatius, Ben Servatius, Chad Holcomb, Max Van Dam, Peter Hillberry and Steve Sears.  Many thanks to all these volunteers who make a regatta successful!

2019 SJ 24 North American Championship Results

     Boat                                 Skipper                       Fleet                Points

1.  Return                           Mark Bradner           Seattle                  21

  2.  Juan Solo                       David Steckman        Oak Harbor      27

  3.  Grauer Geist                Kenneth Johnson      Seattle                   29

4.  Fancy                               Jeff Kendall                Seattle                   46

5.  Bruce                               Mike Kleps                 Bellingham       52

6.  Manhattan Transfer   Mike Irish                   Seattle                     69

7.  Toto                              Allan Wilson            Oak Harbor 77                            

8.  Sweet Jesus                   Sean Busby                Seattle                      79

9.  Obi Juan                        Steve Hucke               Oak Harbor      88

10.  Snappy Tom                Gil Lund                      Seattle                      88

11.  Swift                             Bill Brown                  Oak Harbor     121

12.  Miss Mayhem              Melissa Davies           Seattle                    125

Martins Win the Party

Martins Win the Party
Keeping the speed up on West Sound. Jan Anderson photos.

Those unstoppable Martin 242 sailors planned it, sailed it and can now call it a success. The 2019 Martin 242 North Americans were held in West Sound at Orcas Island June 29-30. In the process they proved you don’t need great wind to have a great regatta.

The wind wasn’t actually all that bad, ranging from 2 (hey, that’s not 0) to twelve. And the shifty breezes kept all 27 boats engaged.

But the camaraderie was the big winner for the weekend, with BC, WA and CA sailors together claiming #Martinswintheparty. I wonder what other classes might have to say about.

The winning boat All In was from California and skippered by Michael George. Second was Michael Clements and third was Alex Fox. Results.

Organizer Ken Machtley reports the following tidbits:

  • Our next big Martin 242 event is Cow Bay (Cowichan Bay, BC). Chris and I are taking a Martin to Whidbey in a couple weeks (he won overall in a Martin in 2016)
  • California is set to host next year’s NA championship, date/place TBD. Vancouver will host in 2021, date/place TBD (much discussion about possibly holding at Race Week at PR).
  • The two spectator boats got about 20 folks out on the water to see the racing up close.
  • No protests were heard (one was filed, but dismissed for being filed past the deadline).
  • Ullman Sails was an outstanding sponsor for us from financial support to giveaways and on-site presence.
  • We had ~25 volunteers helping out on the water, decorations, food, bar, dock, spectator boats, etc.
  • We look forward to hosting here again someday. 😊

20 Years Young – Van Isle 360

20 Years Young – Van Isle 360

2019 Van Isle 360 – where to begin?

The 12th running of the race was without question worthy of the 20th Anniversary celebration as the racing was tight in all divisions.

For the first time in the history of the race, the racers were received up to date weather forecasts with insightful tactical knowledge as supplied by Bruce Hedrick and Kurt Hoehne of sailish.com on every leg of the race. Technology was forever challenging in passing on the information and some how the information managed to surpass the internet barriers in the remote portions of the island.

New for 2019 was the Helly Hansen Team Competition where boats from each division were randomly picked to form 5 teams, each with a TP 52 or the Bieker 41 as the fastest boat on the team. At the opening ceremonies, crews were provided with wrist bands in the colour and name for their team, Red-Team Race Rocks, Green-Team Johnstone Strait, Orange-Team Cape Scott, Yellow-Team Nahwitti Bar and Blue-Team Salish Sea. The idea behind the teams was to create an environment for the crews to mingle and the result was a success. At the final awards, the winning teams were as follows:

First – Team Salish Sea – Blue, Boomerang, Tuna, Oxomoxo, Riva, Serendipity and Ultraman III

Second – Team Nahwitti Bar – Back Bay, Freja, Glory, Goldcrest, Iris, Rubato, Serenite and Zulu

Third – Team Race Rocks – 65_Red Roses II, Discernment, Fortuna, Image, Lodos, Shearwater and Smoke.

The hosting ports graciously welcomed the fleet with barbeques and live bands/entertainment  in a several ports.

Full Cumulative Results

A very special First Nations welcome and blessing by Kwakwaka’wakw Chief David Knox and drummers provided the fleet with a union to the seas that have been traveled for centuries by sleek hand carved canoe.

While the inside legs provided relative shelter and steady light to medium breezes, the two outside legs were slightly different. Leg 6 from Port Hardy to Winter Harbour provided reasonably consistent winds for the fleet, but the road in from Port Hardy to Winter Harbour took its toll on the roadies. There were a record number of flat tires for the vehicles, and several rims with mangled tires were flown out by seaplane to Port Hardy for repair. A crew member on Jam was inadvertently hit by the boom and suffered a laceration requiring 5 stitches by the Royal Canadian Navy Medic before he was air lifted out for further observation. Follow up from the sailor has been positive and he is feeling well.

Leg 7 from Winter Harbour to Ucluelet turned out to be a similar repeat to the 2011 leg. A strong south easterly “breeze” pummeled the fleet from Brooks Peninsula to approximately Nootka Island where a long narrow, breezeless transition zone extended over 40 miles offshore acting as a restart and equalizing the tactics of the boats that had chosen to sail far offshore in an effort to circumvent the doldrums. Once through the transition the fleet was greeted with a long awaited northwesterly that propelled the fleet to the Ucluelet finish. Upon setting foot on ground, stories emerged of leaks found in what were thought to be water tight joints and crew succumbing to the inevitable seasickness that the open ocean can bring.

Leg 8 from Ucluelet to Victoria had the TP52’s Sonic and Glory in a drag race at over 18 knots for line honours. The video on Facebook shows the sun setting behind the boats and a golden glow off of the foresails with  perm-a-grin on the Sonic crew.

For Divisions 2 & 3, by the time they reached Race Rocks the breeze was up in the low 30’s, it was dark and strait of Juan de Fuca lived up to her reputation. Several boats reported knockdowns and equipment failures, and crew spirits remained high for the final leg from Victoria to Nanaimo.

Entering the last leg, the podium for all divisions was open for boats that had sailed consistently around the island. No division had been claimed, the quest for line honours was open and the trophy for overall winner was very much up for grabs.

As always, the big decision on Leg 9 is which way to go when you must choose left, the inside route through the Gulf Islands or right, the outside longer outside route via East Point on Saturna Island. Essentially the fleet split, and a good number of boats chose to head all the way to Dodd Narrows, a tactic that in the past has never paid with a podium finish. Over the years, many skippers have tried to make the current gate that blocks access to the shortest route to the finish line, but in 2019 Neptune decided to let the fleet pass. In Division 3, Marc-Andrea Klimaschewski, skipper of Image led the way with long line of competitors and was able to finish first in Division 3 followed by HMCSTV Goldcrest and Boomerang who finished second and third respectively. For the first time in 20 years Dodd’s pays in a big way for Division 3.

The overall winner for the race is 65 Red Roses II skippered by Alex Smyth and owned by Bruce Chan sailing out of the West Vancouver Yacht Club. Line honours went to Smoke, skippered and owned by Steve Travis sailing out of the Corinthian Yacht Club Seattle.

In Division 0, Blue was able to sail past Smoke and Sonic for first, second and third place finishes overall. Division 1 saw 65 Red Roses II, Riva and Jam take first, second and third. Division 2 was Serendipity, Mojo and Shearwater. Serendipity and Mojo were actually tied for first place so tie breaking procedures had to be employed to determine that Serendipity was the first place finisher. In Division 3 Wraith, Flow and HMCSTV Goldcrest prevailed.

The Van Isle 360 wishes to thank all of the competitors and the sponsors who supported the race. In addition thank you to the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre, The Canadian Coast Guard, Royal Canadian Marine Search and Rescue and the Royal Canadian Navy, specifically Renard 58 and her amazing crew for providing the safety net while the competitors sailed what will be surely become lifetime memories.

The dates for the 2021 race will be announced in the spring of 2020.

–Jeffrey & Sylvia Motley

Bruce’s Briefs: 12 June, Van Isle 360 Ukee to Victoria

Bruce’s Briefs: 12 June, Van Isle 360 Ukee to Victoria

Tomorrow will bring yet another challenging day, well, morning to racing Around Vancouver Island. Todays Surface Analysis Chart shows the problem. Our summer Pacific High is nowhere near ready to set up anywhere close to its “normal” position at its “normal” pressure. And what about that weak low off the coast of Southern California? So glad we aren’t starting TransPac today. Instead we have a weak high-pressure blob with a peculiar dogleg right off our coast extending inland over Vancouver Island and Queen Charlotte Sound and with the way the isobars are oriented we currently have a drainage offshore flow of east-northeasterly breeze coming down the mountains and then out the Straits. This high will weaken dropping in pressure from 1032MB today to 1024MB tomorrow as it drifts slowly to the west which will bring a more north to south orientation of the isobars which in turn will bring an onshore flow down the Straits. Timing of this is highly variable. With two models show a west-northwesterly breeze filling to the starting area by around mid-day, early afternoon. One model has a late morning fill while another has a late afternoon fill. I am partial to the late morning fill as we’ll have a flood tide in the morning in the Straits and with no cloud cover, heating will start early and these two factors should start the onshore flow down the Straits.

The best thing to do now in anticipation of light air north-northeasterly breeze at the start is to start monitoring barometric pressure at the JA VTS buoy (currently 1023.9MB) at the mouth of the Straits and the pressure at Bellingham (currently 1025MB). When the pressure becomes higher at JA than it is at Bellingham, the westerly will start.

While I’m not sure if the Gale Warnings that are in place for tomorrow in the Central and Eastern Straits are entirely appropriate, I would also start charting windspeeds at Sheringham, Race Rocks and Trial Island just to see what will be waiting at Race Passage. I think you could see 20-knots with higher gusts in the vicinity of Race Rocks by early to late evening and the easing into the early morning hours.

The good news is that the tidal current in Race Passage won’t be too ugly until about 0330-0400 Thursday morning when you’ll have the big ebb of the day at 5.7 knots at 0530.

Tidal Currents Race Passage

Wednesday 12 June

0837      Slack

1111      Max Flood            2.8 knots

1342      Slack

1700      Max Ebb                 3.0 knots

2000      Slack                       

2238      Max Flood            3.3 knots

Thursday 13 June

0116      Slack

0530      Max Ebb                 5.7 knots

0915      Slack

In conclusion, a little light at the start but building on the run to the finish with a nice tidal window at Race Passage. I have TP52’s finishing between 2230 tomorrow night and 0130 Thursday morning.

Have a great race.

Bruce’s Brief’s: Wx for 7, 8, 9 and 10 June. Downtown Sailing Series Leukemia Cup, R2AK update, and Van Isle 360.

The last two days have certainly been interesting and today could get even more interesting as we move to the evening hours. The surface charts and the 500MB charts explain why. Todays Surface Analysis shows a trough of low pressure moving through the Salish Sea today which will allow a building onshore flow to develop which will have very different effects on the three races mentioned above. The reason for all the instability around the area, rain, hail, lightning, etc etc is that upper-level low(548MB) seen on the 500MB Chart which has been parked over us the last couple of days. By tomorrow all of that will be gone and as high pressure builds over the area we should be in for a lovely weekend and a very warm week. Unfortunately, as this high-pressure builds over us, the pressure gradient will ease and except for maybe the eastern end of the Strait of JdF, San Juan, Gulf Islands, and Admiralty Inlet, winds will be on the light side. Expect Small Craft Advisories in the Straits and SJI’s where we’ll have southwesterly winds of 15-25 knots. Late Saturday afternoon and into the evening this onshore flow will come down the Straits and into Admiralty Inlet bringing northwesterlies of 15-25 knots.

For the Downtown Sailing Series kickoff event, the Leukemia Cup, expect light winds and expect to have a great time requiring lots of sunblock!

For R2AK, the lead boat, Pear Shaped Racing, just sailed by Campbell River at 1500 hrs however the tide is now against them so we’ll see if they can make it through Seymour Narrows as the tide will build to 12.5 knots at 1816 hrs. Slack won’t be until 2150 hrs tonight. This will allow the next part of the fleet to slowly compress before Campbell River. There may be a big restart at Campbell River when the tide turns.

For the Van Isle 360 folks, they had a great sail from Telegraph to Port Hardy two days ago and this morning started the leg from Port Hardy to Winter Harbour, the first of the legs to get to the outside of Vancouver Island. I had expected them to be in more of a northwesterly by now however the TP52’s are only making 7-8 knots and aren’t quite to Cape Scott. There is wind out there with Solander on the Brooks Peninsula reporting 26-knots from the northwest. So we’ll see when that gets to the fleet and sends them flying down to the finish at Winter Harbour.

As I said, get ready for a warm week and don’t forget to put the sunblock on before you leave the house.