Yesterday the Pacific Northwest lost not only a great sailor
but one of the classiest gentleman I have ever had the privilege to sail with.
Dick Robbins, the owner and skipper of the legendary 68- foot Perry designed
ICON passed away from complications of a stroke he had suffered recently. His
talents went far beyond sailing having designed and built revolutionary tunnel
boring machines, including the ones that dug the Chunnel beneath the English
Channel. He was a delight to sail with as there was never a cross word nor did
he ever raise his voice. Just always a very quiet competence as well as a love
of sailing and having fun while on the water. He made the world a much better
place and he will be missed.
Lots going on this weekend and plenty of great weather to go
along with it. The Van Isle 360 has a huge and very talented fleet on a very
challenging course. The Seventy48 project doesn’t involve sailing but it is
still a very cool event. Basically, any way you can get from Tacoma to Port
Townsend by way of rowing, paddling or pedaling and by pedaling I don’t mean on
land. It all has to be on the water, 70 miles in 48 hours. They start tonight at 1900 hours going out of
the Foss Waterway, up Colvos Passage then to the Port Townsend Canal or Hadlock
Canal, then finish in Port Townsend. A great tune-up for the R2AK which starts
on the 3rd. We’ll have a special update for that on the 2nd
of June.
As you can see from the Surface Analysis, we have a weak
high-pressure system off the Northern California coast and a weak low-pressure
system in Eastern Washington. As our fog burns off and the sun heats up the
land, this will bring a strong onshore flow down the Straits of JdF bringing
with it Gale Warnings for the Central and Eastern Straits as well as a Small
Craft Advisory for Admiralty Inlet. After midnight, this will ease and we
should have a very nice weekend to be on the water.
For the Van Isle folks, this will mean a nice beat from
Nanaimo to Deep Bay in 8 to 15 knots of northwesterly.
For the Seventy48 teams, there will be northerly of about
8-12-knots from the start until they get into Colvos Passage and then after
about 2100 hours they should have just about ideal conditions for whatever
manner of propulsion they have selected. After midnight, there maybe a drainage
east-northeasterly of 5-10-knots in the early morning hours then as the sun
comes up that will die until the onshore flow develops in the early afternoon
bringing 10-12-knots of northwesterly down the Sound.
Of course, if your paddling or rowing you’re going to want
to keep track of the tidal current however with most of these craft being of
very shallow draft you can really get in close to stay out of the anti-water.
It seems to me they took some fun out of the event by making them go through
the Hadlock Canal but they probably had a very good reason for doing that. It’s
just that in the flood tide you can get 3 to 3.5 knots of current in there
while you could avoid that by going around the outside of Marrowstone.
The good news is that since the current always flows north
in Colvos Passage, it will be a free ride until they get up to Blake Island.
The other good news is that the currents in the central Sound will be less than
one knot almost all weekend. In Admiralty Inlet, the max currents will be
around two knots and since the shortest possible course will take keep you on
the beach anyway, you’ll be able to avoid the worst of it until Hadlock.
Currents at West
Point
Friday
2000 Slack
Saturday
0018 Max Flood .72 knots
0330 Slack
0518 Max Ebb .47 knots
0742 Slack
1300 Max Flood .89 knots
1618 Slack
1800 Max Ebb .48 knots
2054 Slack
All in all, it looks like a lot of exercise but should be
a total hoot.
Bruce has raced and cruised the Pacific Northwest his entire life. He earned a Bachelor’s of Science from the University of Washington in Biological Oceanography and learned meteorology “to keep from getting kicked around on the race course.” Bruce spent nearly two decades as Associate Publisher for Northwest Yachting Magazine, retiring in mid-2015, and was the chairman of the board of trustees for the Northwest Marine Trade Association in 2014. (photo of Bruce driving Playstation is a bit dated, but cool)
It’s big. It’s tough. It’s unique. It’s fishy (at least for one night). The Van Isle 360 is such a great race,it requires it’s own Bruce Hedrick Powerpoint weather presentation. If you click on the following link you should be able to open or download the presentation.
If you’re racing, have fun and be safe. It’s truly the race of a lifetime. If you want to read an early preview to the race, click here. If you want to hear a student radio piece on someone doing the race on Cheekee Monkee (and listen to editor Kurt talk about the race) click here.
Bruce has raced and cruised the Pacific Northwest his entire life. He earned a Bachelor’s of Science from the University of Washington in Biological Oceanography and learned meteorology “to keep from getting kicked around on the race course.” Bruce spent nearly two decades as Associate Publisher for Northwest Yachting Magazine, retiring in mid-2015, and was the chairman of the board of trustees for the Northwest Marine Trade Association in 2014. (photo of Bruce driving Playstation is a bit dated, but cool)
Tiana Mohebi is an ambitious student at the British Columbia Institute of Technology, and as a project she chose to profile a fellow student doing this summer’s Van Isle 360. Tiana got in touch with sailish for some journalistic commentary, and I was happy to oblige. Anything to further promote sailing and an event as great and unique as the Van Isle….
Tania along with Nikita Nayak profiled William Blouin-Comeau who is sailing on none other than the new Cheekee Monkee catamaran. Here is the website they created: https://nikitanayak319.wixsite.com/mysite.
It was fun weighing in on the subject, and Tiana did a great job of conveying some of the appeal of both the race and adventure sailing in her presentation. It’s particularly suitable for your non-sailing or casual friends who ask “why do it?” You can listen to the program here.
Best of luck to William Blouin-Comeau. More importantly, good luck to Tiana. She’s clearly one to watch. And we need to get her out on a boat!
Kurt grew up racing and cruising in the Midwest, and has raced Lasers since the late 1970s. Currently he is a broker at Swiftsure Yachts. He has been Assistant Editor at Sailing Magazine and a short stint as Editor of Northwest Yachting. Through Meadow Point Publishing he handles various marketing duties for smaller local companies. He currently is partners on a C&C 36 which he cruises throughout the Northwest. He’s married to the amazing Abby and is father to Ian and Gabe.
You gotta love any kind of love the clothing industry gives sailing. And when they give it to as unique and epic a race as the Van Isle 360, all the better. I’m not sure of how all the details are going to pan out, but this sounds intriguing. Getting partnered at random with a couple other boats as a team – that could make things interesting and keep everybody engaged on the water. And who knows, the winners might get something cozier than a plaque. Anyways, here is the release from our friends at Van Isle, Jeffrey and Sylvia Motley.
Van Isle 360 International Yacht Race and Helly Hansen announce the Team Challenge for the 2019 VI360 race.
The Van Isle 360 International Yacht Race and Helly Hansen are pleased to announce a team challenge for yachts competing in the 2019 race.
“Since the race moved to nine legs from ten in 2015, the inside legs have become very busy with long days on the water and little time to socialize amongst boats” said Sylvia Motley, “The intent of team challenge is to create the opportunity for immediate social interaction amongst the crews, and create a fun atmosphere for inter boat camaraderie during the race”
Enter the Helly Hansen Team event. Teams will be chosen from all yacht divisions by random draw at the opening reception in Nanaimo. Teams will consist boats from every division, and the team with the lowest total corrected time will win the leg. A running total will be kept so that an overall team winner will be announced at the closing ceremonies in Nanaimo on June 15th.
“Helly Hansen is very pleased to partner with the Van Isle 360, one of the Pacific Northwest’s most demanding yacht races. Our Helly Hansen apparel has been developed specifically for the world’s harshest weather, something we experience and know a thing or two about living in the PNW. Our sailors and outdoor enthusiasts require the highest quality gear and we’re proud to offer them just that.” said Damien Etchaubard, Marketing Director for Helly Hansen Canada. “Helly Hansen is looking forward to offering this new twist on the classic yacht race and the Team Challenge in 2019 will encourage social engagement and an added layer of fun. See you on the water”.
About Helly Hansen
Founded in Norway in 1877, Helly Hansen continues to develop professional-grade apparel that helps people stay and feel alive. Through insights drawn from living and working in the world’s harshest environments, the company has developed a long list of first-to-market innovations, including the first supple waterproof fabrics more than 140 years ago. Other breakthroughs include the first fleece fabrics in the 1960s, the first technical base layers in the 1970s, made with Lifa® Stay Dry Technology, and today’s award winning and patented H2Flow™ temperature regulating system.
Helly Hansen is a leader in technical sailing and performance ski apparel, as well as premium workwear. Its ski uniforms are worn and trusted by more than 55,000 professionals and can be found on Olympians, National Teams, and at more than 200 ski resorts and mountain guiding operations around the world.
Helly Hansen’s outerwear, base layers, sportswear and footwear are sold in more than 40 countries and trusted by outdoor professionals and enthusiasts around the world. To learn more about Helly Hansen’s latest collections, visit www.hellyhansen.com.
Kurt grew up racing and cruising in the Midwest, and has raced Lasers since the late 1970s. Currently he is a broker at Swiftsure Yachts. He has been Assistant Editor at Sailing Magazine and a short stint as Editor of Northwest Yachting. Through Meadow Point Publishing he handles various marketing duties for smaller local companies. He currently is partners on a C&C 36 which he cruises throughout the Northwest. He’s married to the amazing Abby and is father to Ian and Gabe.
The Van Isle 360 race is, without much doubt, unique in the world. That’s not hyperbole, it’s truth. Racing in some of the world’s most beautiful and challenging waters and geography among amazing marine and other wildlife. Then there are the different facets of race, in the first half skirting islets and rocks to deal with very strong currents, and in the second half possibly enjoying epic downwind nighttime racing in open waters. This is the quintessential Pacific Northwest race.
It’s not an easy race. Much of a boat’s success depends on shoreside organization, which usual involves one or more team members navigating Vancouver Island. Crews spend at least one night aboard next to fish farming pens. Finding and organizing a crew that can take the time off is no small chore.
We have three reports, two from class winners OxoMoxo (Swan 391) and Joy Ride (J/122), and one from my friends aboard Ace (Farr 395). Please share this post far and wide, as we can all agree that it’s fun making everyone jealous of our little corner of the sailing world. Results are here, but I’d suggest you read these tales to get to know this really special race.
OxoMoxo
This is a story of the remarkable success of OxoMoxo, the never-winning, always last in fleet, Swan 391. Below, please see a little tongue in cheek account of our underdog’s success. The crew included: Owner and newbie to racing, Doug Frazer (one-a-day customer at Fisheries Supply) and his 10 year old son, Bob; Rick Poulin (J-105 racer on Delirium), Kevin McMurray (Fire Dept. medic also new to sailing) and Canadian Jed McLean, skipper and owner of Hana Mari, Victoria BC. Joining the crew for half the race at various stages were: Stefan Damstrom, Tre Nabstedt, Russ Caldwell, Marc-Andrea Klimaschewski, Michelle Samples, and Justin Beals.
At one point, with a crew of 6 we had 5 boat owners on board, all interested in having their opinions heard at the same time. There were a few clever moves on our part that paid off in the long run. Two of these tactics included a careful interpretation of the Sailing Instructions that allowed us to cross the finish at Victoria nearly 10 miles offshore on a compass bearing where VMG and wind were maxed out; and on the final leg, sailing all the way to Tsawassen on the Canadian shore just to get in some pressure, which resulted in line honors at the finish in Nanaimo. Twice we we corrected out in hair-raising finishes in nearly zero wind. Our finish outside Victoria resulted in the new “OxoMoxo Rule,” that boats must, in the future, cross the line between a mark and Clover Point.
Tired of Winning
The Swan 391 Oxomoxo stunned the sailboat racing community with its overall first place finish in Division 3 of the just-concluded 2017 Van Isle 360 International Yacht Race. Oxomoxo FBO Doug “Mofo Rojo” Frazer, a Van Isle 360 first timer, attributed his improbable success to the law of averages, saying “We’ve never won anything before, so basically, it was our turn.”
Oxomoxo’s international crew disagreed, citing several factors. “It was all Bob – Bob was our secret weapon,” said one crew. Bob, Frazer’s 10-year old son and a budding yachtsman in his own right, was unavailable for comment, as he had to return to school to finish 4th grade. According to another crew of the ship affectionately called OhSoSlowGo, “We won because of [Canadian] Ged [McLean], plain and simple. When Ged joined the crew, we hit the *&#!ing jackpot.” Crewmember Rick Poulin agreed, adding “We also kept the boat really light. We often sailed without full tanks, and we tossed an old winch handle and my iPod overboard for good measure.” A fourth crew cited help from the “Big Guy upstairs,” rejecting rumors that the crew’s performance had been enhanced with regular injections of testosterone.
One Victoria resident, requesting anonymity, praised Oxomoxo’s commitment to “Make America Race Again.” “It almost got to the point,” he confided, “that we were tired of winning.” Veteran observers of the Van Isle 360 praised Oxomoxo’s lowest-overall point total, noting the boat’s 19-point total over 9 races was lower than any other vessel racing against competition in the regatta. Oxomoxo was the only competitor in the regatta whose worst performance was a single fourth-place finish.
Given these impressive results, Oxomoxo may finally shed its self-deprecating nickname, Box o’ Rocks.
–Rick PoulinA few more words from skipper Doug Frazer
There are plenty of stories. You might look into Beats per Minute’s videos on Youtube. 65 Red Roses lost a rudder outside Port Hardy (We saw it floating by as we passed near where they had the mishap). Vela Volta went on the rocks of a submerged reef near the last leg and had to retire to Oak Bay. For us, doing well at all was a complete surprise and we were all brought together by the amazing Ged McLean of Royal Vic YC. When we finished the race coming in from Tsawassen we had a glorious spinnaker run into the inner harbor at Nanaimo with our competitors several miles behind. As soon as we made the corner the wind shut off completely, and I mean completely. A lit cigarette showed absolutely no wind direction, and all the while those guys were climbing on us and we had only a hundred yards to go. Finally the wind filled in a bit and we were off under our wind-seeker for the last 50 M to the finish. The team from Serena, a Bavaria 40 finished well behind us, but they corrected out over our finish. Nevertheless, we were surprised by our first ever victory in any type of regatta, ever. Thanks to ORC for recognizing that we are not the world’s worst sailors.
I was completely exhausted and sort of fell apart after the finish. All things considered, this really was a Hero’s Journey, complete with a passage through Scylla and Charybdis (Dodd’s Narrows) on the delivery, winds of hell barking down Johnstone Straits, fog, calm, incredible downpours, squalls, thirst, seasickness and sea monsters (the pinniped and cetacean variety). I recommend the race to anyone who has the time, the nerve and a boat that is up to the journey. I have a new respect for the R2AK guys who we saw along the way.
–Doug Frazer, owner OxoMoxo
Joy Ride and The Broach
2017 was the first trip around Vancouver Island for both Joy Ride and me. We were fortunate to have a healthy mix of Canadians and Americans on the crew with over a dozen Van Isle races counted amongst them. Joy Ride was commissioned in late 2015 and has compete in 50+ races since. Most of the current crew has been able to do two Southern Straits and two Swiftsure races together prior to this year’s Van Isle.
Our journey around the island started off with a lot of local knowledge on board for the first four races. Consistency seemed to be our best card with a run of four second place finishes to begin the race. During our stay in Telegraph Cove we were challenged to a very competitive game of whiffle ball by the crew of White Cloud. The Canadians in our crew seemed a little confused without a hockey stick in their hands.
The leg from Telegraph to Port Hardy was as forecast with our peak observed wind speed of 38 knots and a new boat speed record at 18.3 knots. We wanted to be first to hoist at the start but were saddened when we also had to be the first to douse after not being able to initially hold our kite. Our broach at the lay line helped determine when we needed to take the kite back down. After a thorough wash cycle in the Johnstone Strait, we finally winched the kite back on board and jibed into Port Hardy.
We didn’t fair as well on the outside of the island. After a long day and night into Winter Harbor we were greeted with beer via kayak at the finish line by our awesome shore crew! Our race to Ucluelet started with lots of wind and confused seas; however we were able to find a 12-hour hole coming into Uclulet that allowed everyone’s wet gear to fully dry in the sun. After a much needed lay day in Ucluelet to fix sails and hang out with the local school kids we enjoyed a wonderful sleigh ride all the way into Victoria. Despite the fast downwind run to Victoria all our bow crew could talk about was that we didn’t do a single sail change all day.
The last leg back to Nainamo was full of currents, wind shifts, drifts and ferries. We were fortunate to be one of the last boats to make it into Active Pass and enjoyed a 5 knot push with no steerage thru the pass. A perfect sunset at Entrance Island marked the end to our two week journey around what I now know to be a very big island.
Our crew held together very well throughout the whole race. We had awesome support from Heidi driving our VW van. The community of boats at the end of every leg and the teamwork involved through the race really stand out as I look back on our two weeks.
Joy Ride is now back in Seattle. She’ll be racing this fall and hopefully headed to the Bay Area for next year’s Pacific Cup.
–John Murkowski, owner Joy Ride
Ace – One Weird Finish
The leg from Comox to Campbell River had a really epic finish. The race began in a light northwesterly with a slight ebb that turned into a massive flood during the last five miles. Flood in Campbell River is southbound.
For about the last two miles there were 10 boats (overlapped) short tacking the beach in about three knots of current and about five knots of wind on the nose. The norm was to be pointing on a close hauled course with all appearance of going upwind, but going 90 degrees to the wind over the bottom (OTB). If you chose to go more than about five boat lengths from shore you were instantly relegated to the back of the line. What we found was that it was better to reach in toward the beach and gain enough speed to coast upwind toward the finish. The coast had to be done is as shallow water as you dared go.
The bread crumb trail from Navionics (below) and Google Earth shows the fun pretty well. The final snip below shows us going to the back of the line, then back and forth, then finally figuring it out and making progress.
The waterline on Google Earth is probably high water, because we were coming within 10 ft of dry land. I was standing on the bow calling the tacks toward the end.
There were about 50 people on the pier looking down at the melee. Hamachi was the first to hit bottom, with Zulu inshore of them. Eventually Zulu also hit, but it was after Hamachi.
The 71 year old woman skippering Rags (C&C 115) came out of the group of 10 ahead. In my mind she was the hero of the day and was toasted by all on Ace. We were second over the line.
Kurt grew up racing and cruising in the Midwest, and has raced Lasers since the late 1970s. Currently he is a broker at Swiftsure Yachts. He has been Assistant Editor at Sailing Magazine and a short stint as Editor of Northwest Yachting. Through Meadow Point Publishing he handles various marketing duties for smaller local companies. He currently is partners on a C&C 36 which he cruises throughout the Northwest. He’s married to the amazing Abby and is father to Ian and Gabe.