Brad Baker Wonders if the Vic-Maui Record Will Fall

The question of whether or not the Vic-Maui elapsed time record will fall is certainly on a few minds. Our resident weather guru Bruce Hedrick, who’s navigating the mighty Crossfire, has been wondering that for months. On the water reports from Bruce will start coming in after the last start which is just hours away. Friend and multiple Vic-Maui winning navigator Brad Baker has graciously allowed us to use his analyses from his swiftsureyachts.com blog which will come every few days. Here’s the first part of his most recent post (you gotta go to the great swiftsureyachts site to read the rest of his post).

If you’re getting updates from any of the boats and would like them to appear here – send them along! We’ll be hearing lots more from Crossfire and Canard as they make their way across the pond.

 

Will the Record Fall?

By Brad Baker

I’m gonna lay it all on the line, I think this will be the year! The record will fall. OK, I know, now I’ve jinxed it right? Knocking on wood right now so as to undo the jinx. I’ll back up a bit. For my initial blog on Saturday, the weather models weren’t really showing a pattern conducive to shattering records. For the fast boats it looked like they might have light southerly winds coming out the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the high pressure looked anemic and fairly far east. Well……On Sunday the GFS model showed a significant change to that older forecast. The high pressure, still forecast to initially set up fairly far to the east, is now forecast to build significantly and to retrograde back west and a bit to the North all the while strengthening to a very strong near 1040 mb height. If this holds true that will be a very strong and stable high pressure system.  This solution has been consistent over three GFS forecast model runs.

1040-mb-screen-shot
Screen shot of the University of Washington’s WRF-GFS model showing a 1040 mb high! on July 18. One little issue is the remnants of a tropical depression right in the way!

The Scenario goes like this: The fast boats in the last start will start later in the morning then the rest of the fleet. This gives them a better chance of starting in consistent breeze as thermal effect has a chance to kick in. The current model show a reasonable onshore push in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, with enough northerly in the wind direction to make for a long starboard tack out the strait. These big very fast thoroughbreds will eat this up and will very likely make the corner in daylight, perhaps before the wind shuts down as it often does at Flattery for the night. Read the rest of the post.

Vic-Maui, On Your Mark, Get Set, Drift

The race that will end up with 200-mile days for many, 300 (more?) for some started a bit slowly for the boats in the first start.

Check out the race tracker here: http://www.vicmaui.org/tracker. Don’t forget there may be a delay of up to 40 mins for the positions.

I’ll be assembling some race coverage from various sources. Right now I’m traveling in a very different time zone, but I’ll get the word out as fast as I can. Look for tidbits from Vic-Maui central command, some of the brain trust of Crossfire (Bruce Hedrick), some of the braintrust at Swiftsure Yachts (Brad Baker) and some others. I’ll dredge up some pictures and screen shots

We’ll kick it off with a report from Joe Gaffney, skipper of the Jeanneau 36 Canard. Incidentally, a shipmate of mine is onboard, the one and only Sheridan Ferguson on board.

Here’s from Joe:

As you know, fickle first day here getting out the Strait. No consistent pressure for more than an hour or so with each change typically led in by an extended calm period. Regardless, plenty of fun sailing and a great time with the Canard crew so far. It was a nice way to start the race leading our fleet through Race Rocks.

Everyone is happy, well fed and in really good spirits. We’re a crew of six – Joe, Meg, Adam, Lara, Steve and Sheridan – all of which are first time Vic Maui participants so we have this really cool shared understanding that we don’t know what we don’t know yet so I think that’s going to help keep all of humble and relying on each other. So far – that’s the case.

We had a 0130 battle this morning with the mother of all kelp balls…the style that traps wood the size of what you’d burn in your fireplace – it stretched the entire length of our boat and was determined to hug our keel to Lahaina.  We eventually dragged it on two deck in three big sections and cut it into throwable pieces to get it far enough away from the boat to ensure it didn’t reach up and drag us again. Although we won it stole our boat hook to the depths 🙁 but we substituted in the GoPro and a rudder broom (aka our MOB pole turned upside down) and finished off the final stoways early this morning once the sun lit up the water enough to get a look with the GoPro. All in all…that cost us about 4 miles on our fleet but we’ve taken most of that back in the past 5 1/2 hours.

As of now, we’re just north of flattery with Duntze at a bearing of 207 magnetic. We have Raindrop just to our north (I’m not using windward b/c well…there is no wind again. 0.00 kts to be exact :)), Expresso to our south close in to Duntze with Mountain about a mile ahead of them. They’re both making what seems to be good time hugging the coast but we’re going to continue to push out a few miles and then we’ll make our call. Ion is to our stern.

That’s all for now. Off to the bunk for some sleep (finally).

 

And from Kurt – stay tuned, lots of weather and tactical discussions coming up!