Southern Straits Recap

Southern Straits Recap

By Peter Salusbury (Skipper – Longboard and Regatta Chair)

The 2024 Southern Straits Race is in the books and was a beauty.  The 58 boats racing across four courses started Good Friday morning in a light easterly that built to about 10 knots as the fleet sailed into the Strait of Georgia.  As predicted the easterly died off in the early afternoon and a light NW started to build across the eastern and northerns sections of the Strait, creating compression between the Long and Medium Course fleets.

On the Long and Medium courses, the fleet beat up the southern shore of Lasqueti, most tacking inside Sangster Island where there was much more favorable current.  As the NW died further up the Lasqueti shore, it was evident the north flowing current and light to no wind conditions was going to make coming south after rounding Sister’s Islets challenging.  More than a few boats reporting getting swept past Sister’s only to fight hard to make their way south to Sangster Island.

The other interesting observation was the apparent wind shear between Sisters and Sangster Islands – it was evidenced by the huge gains the longer waterline boats with taller rigs made versus their smaller competitors – gains that weren’t there all day when sailing downwind in light air.  It became obvious there was more wind aloft than at sea level and the taller rigged boats generally did well in this stretch of the second leg to White Islets.

Once south of Sangster, the NNW wind settled in nicely and we all enjoyed a nice downwind sail to White Islets with a gorgeous moon rise over the city.  The race hasn’t visited White islets in decades and it was fun to revisit the sea lion colony who were hilariously barking all night long – and that stench when you got downwind!  On the Long Course, we then had one long starboard tack beat/fetch all the way to Ballenas that featured a beautiful dawn and sunrise. 

From there the Long Course boats that did the best stayed on starboard gybe all the way down to almost Nanaimo Harbor before gybing to port for the long ‘great circle’ route back to the finish line off Point Atkinson.  This last leg was relatively fast and fun with true wind speeds hovering in the low to mid teens for the faster boats.

On the Inshore Course, Rob Mulder’s Melges 24 Ferdinand was the elapsed and corrected time winner in an eight boat fleet.

The Short Course enjoyed solid wind conditions and the elapsed time winner was Bruce Townson’s J/112E Kajofi finishing early around 10:30 in the evening.   Nick Conti’s J92 Live Wire took PHRF 5 on corrected time, David George’s J/29 Rhumb Line won PHRF 6 and Vatche Yerevanian CS3- Alatus won PHRF 7.

The Medium Course elapsed time winner was Theo Arsenault’s Solana 44 Rogues just nipping out Jason Saunderson’s Ultraman by 37 seconds and Tolga Cezik’s J/111 Lodos (sailing doublehanded!) by a further 62 seconds!  With Charley Macauley’s Farr 39 ML Absolutely finishing a minute later, the Medium Course’s first four boats finished within 3 minutes of each other – close racing!

On corrected time, the timeless Cal 39 Chinook skippered by Noah Walcutt took the overall win in ORC and in ORC 3 with Rogues winning ORC 2.  On the Medium Course PHRF 4 division, the J/109 Spyhop skippered by David Schutte took the division win.

On the Long Course, Peter McCarthy’s TP52 The Shadow II took the elapsed time honours but it was Gord Wylie’s XP44 Phoenix prevailing on corrected time for the overall win, making it two years in a row for Gord as overall winner. 

Overall, it was another memorable, comfortable, and scenic Southern Straits Race with plenty of sunshine and no rain and great memories for all participants.  Thanks to all of the racers for participating and supporting the event and many thanks to all the volunteers, staff, and sponsors at West Vancouver Yacht Club for the race organization. 

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 29, 30, 31, and 1 Apr. Southern Straits underway this morning, Should be a nice weekend!

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 29, 30, 31, and 1 Apr. Southern Straits underway this morning, Should be a nice weekend!

We had a bit of rain yesterday however at this point it looks like we’ll end up about 1.6” behind for the month and about 1” behind for the year. The snowpack is still a problem with no relief in sight. So no rain this weekend or next, just a light shower on Wednesday.

WVYC is doing some innovative things for Southern Straits, especially with the ORC Scoring based on actual windspeeds. They are also to be saluted for having the stones to correct faulty PHRF-NW ratings. At least someone is doing something to try and help PHRF-NW and they can get it done in a fraction of the time.

Conditions will be relatively mild over the weekend. There will be some strong onshore flow down the Strait of JdF after that pesky low we’ve had off the coast drifts south and joins a slightly stronger system that will bring more valley rain and mountain snow to California.

The upper-level charts still have the jet stream coming ashore south of San Francisco and that will keep temps in the Salish Sea a little cool, which is fine as that will help preserve what snowpack we have.

Breezes over the central and south Sound will remain light over the weekend except for some spillover from the Straits that will occur Saturday afternoon and into Sunday morning. The Strait of Georgia will see some NW breeze Saturday afternoon and that will fill into the north part of the San Juan Islands before easing on Sunday.

Especially this time of the year it’s always a good idea to check the actual windspeeds before you head out and keep a log of those so you can spot potential issues before you leave the dock.

Have a great weekend!

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for April 7, 8, 9, and 10. A wet weekend with plenty of wind especially at the Eastern end of the Strait of JdF.

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for April 7, 8, 9, and 10. A wet weekend with plenty of wind especially at the Eastern end of the Strait of JdF.

The folks on the South Straits Race got off in a bit of light air however the breeze will pick up for them late this afternoon or early evening and then build into the low 20’s from the ESE for the rest of the race. Not bad!

We’ve had some rain this week which for the month keeps us almost near normal. For the year we are still behind by 5.77”. Unfortunately for all you outside Easter egg hunters, it is going to be wet especially on Sunday when we could see 1”+ of rainfall. The upcoming week will a series of wash, rinse, and repeat as we are into a typical wet Pac NW pattern. The bad part of this is the warm temps that are even getting into the mountains and starting to melt our snow pack. Don’t forget about California as they are going to get two more wet systems this week as well.

For boaters there will definitely be wind both Saturday and Sunday especially in the Eastern end of the Strait of JdF. The races out of Anacortes and Port Townsend will definitely be impacted as the fleets could see 25-30 knots of SE breeze with higher gusts. Plan accordingly. The Central Sound and South Sound will see slightly less breeze however be sure to check conditions before you head out. 

The other charts of interest today are the upper level, 500MB charts. The flow is slowly changing from zonal to meridional and the jet stream is finally starting to work its way north. This migration will be slowed by the presence of an upper level low pressure system right off our coast. See the 96Hr, April 11th 500MB chart. This system will also serve to keep us in a relatively wet pattern for the upcoming week. So much for getting the lawn mowed. That does however give you the opportunity to check the boat, and re-tie the mooring lines and fenders. Winter isn’t done with us yet.

Have a great weekend and be safe out there!

2022 Southern Straits Race – Post Race Report from a Long Course Perspective

2022 Southern Straits Race – Post Race Report from a Long Course Perspective

By Peter Salusbury – Skipper of Longboard

After a three-year pandemic hiatus, it was a therapeutic reunion for those intrepid Pacific NW sailors who participated in the Southern Straits Race hosted by West Vancouver Yacht Club on Easter weekend.  Bruce Hedrick’s “good news, bad news, very good news” pre-race weather briefing proved to be largely accurate though the fleet generally finished much earlier than the models predicted the night before the race.

On the long course, we started in a very light NE, steady rain, and scary ebb tide so the fleet started up-current very conservatively with Jim Innes skippering Red Sheila crossing the line first.  As we made our way out of English Bay the wind shifted around to the SE and built nicely to 15 knots as we passed Bowen Island before building even further to over 20 knots as the leaders on the long course planed to Sister’s Island.  Westerly, Blue, and The Shadow all rounded Sisters fairly close together with Longboard not far behind.  At this point in the wind cycle, the wind shifted to the SW allowing a direct starboard upwind tack down the strait to Ballenas Island.

Photos courtesy of Graeme Clendenan and Doug Wardrop.

The wind glassed off for a few hours before rebuilding south of Ballenas to a light Qualicum which allowed us to slide down past the Winchelseas before the wind veered further to the west and increased as we crossed Nanaimo harbor.  The wind stayed in the W most of the way from Entrance to Halibut Bank and built to over 10 knots before we headed upwind to Ballenas Island.  The nighttime sail was gorgeous – dry, clear, with a big full moon all night – it was a tad chilly but comfortable in our best warm weather gear.  

After Ballenas Island the W wind stayed up in the 15 knot range all the way down the Vancouver Island shore allowing a lovely downwind slide before we gybed north of Nanaimo for the long port tack gybe to the finish line.  Up front the lead boats of Westerly, Shadow, and Blue were duking it out in the shifty conditions between the westerly and outflow winds off Bowen Island with Westerly skippered by Stuart Dahlgren breaking free to take the elapsed time win at 0612 hrs Saturday morning – a very fast race given the course was a relatively long 145 nm.

The provisional results at the time this report was written on the Long Course featured the Riptide 35-2 Longboard in first, followed closely by the always well-sailed J/111 65 Red Roses skippered by Alex Smyth with tactics by the Race Chairman, Graeme Clendenan.  Michael Shoendorf’s very fast Riptide 41 Blue rounded out the podium and showed amazing flashes of speed throughout the race, often going toe-to-toe with the TP52 and SC70. 

On the Medium Course, race veteran Colin Nichols skippering Jackrabbit was the line honors winner but another one of those pesky J/111’s Raku took the overall win – kudos to them as Christina and Justin Wolfe were sailing doublehanded – very impressive!  Raku also took the Division 2 win with Jim Johannessen’s Intuition taking Division 3 and Vern Lhotzky on Invictus winning Division 4.

The short course line honors, Division 5 and overall win went to Bill Kitchen’s Terna – amazing to see an almost 50 year old C&C 39 still ripping up the race course.  Kerry Phillips skippered Incisor to an impressive second place finish across the line and in Division 5 – a perennially strong performer in this race.  Another almost 50-year-old C&C 27 Silik skippered by Wade Harrogate took the Division 6 win. 

And finally, the Inshore Race Division 7 winner was PCH skippered by Philip Harland with the impressive WVYC teen age sensation, Andre Deseau, skippering a J/22 to the Division 8 win – well done Andre!

A huge shout-out to Race Chairman, Graeme Clendenan, and Race PRO, Jennifer Ross who along with the usually brilliant organizing committee and an army of volunteers and club staff resurrected Straits Race after a 3 year hiatus and made it such a successful event.  They cleverly used ‘hybrid’ Tech Talks, Weather Briefing, and Skippers Meetings using a mix of Zoom and in-person facilities to make the event safe and comfortable for the participants.

Lastly, thank to all our American and Vancouver Island friends who made the trek to West Vancouver and back and who really make this race special.  Many of you endured difficult deliveries in colder conditions than we usually get in mid-April.  Thanks for your commitment to the race – hope to see you back again next year. 

Ed. Note: Results here: wvyc.ca/on-the-water/racing/southern-straits. Scroll down and choose which course/class you want to view. Congrats to Peter Salusbury on his Division 1 victory and thanks to him for this report.

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 15,16,17,18,and 19 Apr.

Another wild week of weather in the Pacific NW and the Southern Straits Race is off to a great start with a 20-knots of easterly wind for a downwind ride to first marks. Plus, Environment Canada has issued a Waterspout Warning for the Strait Of Georgia. I guess that when you’ve had rain, snow, hail, sunshine, and freezing temps you might as well add a waterspout into the overall equation!

There are a multiplicity of reasons for all this cool unstable weather, just take a look at today’s surface analysis chart, sat pic, and 500MB chart. We’ve had a weak surface low-pressure system over the area this entire week with a stalled occluded front just to the north and slightly to the east as well as cold upper air low-pressure system centered just north of Vancouver Island. The jet stream is primarily zonal and coming ashore between San Fran and LA. Today’s sat pic shows the cool, unstable air off our coast and the next frontal system that will arrive Sunday evening. This pattern will continue to bring upper-level lows into the area this coming week, keep temps on the cool side, and the weather challenging.

For sailing on the Sound this weekend this instability will create interesting conditions. In the morning, the central and south Sound can expect light conditions, while Admiralty inlet and the north Sound will see 10-15 knots of north-northwesterly. The Strait of JdF will have variable wind of 5-15 knots. Onshore flow will develop through the Chehalis Gap by early afternoon and this will create a building S/SW breeze over the south Sound that will gradually make it to the central Sound by mid-afternoon. The interesting part will be that just after the flow develops in the Chehalis Gap it will also start to come down the Strait of JdF and will have to meet somewhere between Alki and Edmonds.

Sunday will be even more interesting as the wind in the Straits will be a pre-frontal SE of 15-20 knots while the wind in the central and South Sound will light and variable for most of the day.

Wherever you’re sailing, have a great weekend!

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 2, 3, 4, and 5 April, Easter Weekend, Southern Straits!

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 2, 3, 4, and 5 April, Easter Weekend, Southern Straits!

Oops, not really, but it is still fun to remember one of our most favorite races. Probably would have been a nice race with not too much wind just getting a little on the cool side overnight. Then again, if you look at the Surface Analysis Chart and the 500MB Charts you will see the reasons why our weather continues to be wetter and cooler than normal, as we pointed out last week, and why it will continue that way into the coming week.

Today’s Surface Analysis Chart shows a very complex weather picture with no less than SEVEN Low-pressure systems in the NE Pacific and two areas of high pressure including a fairly strong (1038MB) high well out in the Pacific. The Satellite pic also shows these low-pressure systems and associated fronts. These fronts are relatively weak and slow-moving with one clearing the eastern Strait of JdF now and moving into eastern Washington. The next front will arrive Sunday however it will weaken as it comes onshore. High pressure will begin to build over the area after this weak front dissipates. This will keep the wind speed towards the low end of the scale with the central and eastern Straits seeing westerly breeze near 20-knots Saturday night and early Sunday morning. This breeze will ease by mid-morning Sunday.

The other charts of interest are the 500MB charts which show a distinctly meridional flow to the jet stream as it passes over the top of that high-pressure system before dropping to the south along our coast. This is what will allow fronts associated with these weak low-pressure systems to continue to bring cooler air into the Salish Sea.

The 96-hr 500MB Chart also shows the development of an upper-level cut-off low about midway between San Francisco and Hawaii. It probably won’t move very far and it will be interesting to watch how long it will last out there. Remember, it was two years ago that a similar system stalled over Kauai bringing 48” of rain in 24 hours to the north shore, flooding the Hanalei Valley and causing widespread damage.

Dress warmly, be safe, and have a great weekend!