Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 12, 13, 14, and 15 Nov. Round the County!

There are some signs that boating may be returning to normal with 114 entries for this weekend’s Round-The County Race. I think that this would make the RTC the most popular race this year. Well done OIYC, but then again they always do a great job with this event.

Then there’s the weather and the tides as there always is up in the Islands. Weather has been a big topic this week with big breeze, big rain, lots of snow in the passes, and even a tornado warning for the Kitsap Peninsula. Now as you can see from the Doppler Radar, today’s sat pic and surface weather analysis, it’s all changing. The big breeze is easing until at least Saturday afternoon and into Sunday morning when another frontal system will roll over the area. There is clearing to the west and the Doppler is just showing scattered rain showers. So unless you live on a steep slope, it’s all good!

Tides are always interesting for the Race and with light air forecast for tomorrow luckily they won’t be much of an issue. The real problem will be Sunday in Rosario Strait with slack at 1500 and the ebb starting, coinciding with the breeze easing off.

Tidal Currents

Lawrence Point Orcas Island Saturday 13 Nov

0612       Slack

1006       Max Flood           2.3 knts

1518       Slack

1824       Max Ebb               .97 knts

Turn Point Boundary Pass Sunday 14 Nov

0724       Slack

1130       Max Flood           2.3 knts

1454       Slack

Rosario Strait Sunday 14 Nov

0824       Slack

1130      Max Flood           1.75 knts

1506       Slack

1854       Max Ebb               2.33 knts             

The big picture for the weather shows the front moving through today with that persistent but weak high-pressure system off the coast of California,  with a lobe extending up into eastern Washington. This high will become more dominant tomorrow with the pressure gradient easing over the racecourse through the day. 

Saturday Summary

0900 Start to Lawrence Point      S-SE        8-10 knot

1200 Lawrence Pt to  Patos          S-SE       5-8 knots

1400 Patos to Turn Point              SE           5-8 knots with 6-12 knots near Turn Point

1600 Turn Point to Finish              SE           8-15 knots

1800 Turn Point to Finish              SE           15-25 knots

Overnight in Roche Harbor, it will be breezy and will hold into the Sunday morning start.               

Sunday Summary

0900 Start to False Bay                  S              25-30 knots

1100 Flase Bay to Davidson Rk    S              20-30 knots

1300 Iceberg Pt to Davidson        S              10 knots at Iceberg becoming 10-20 near Davidson

1500 Iceberg to Davidson             S              5-10 knots becoming 5 at Davidson, 10-12 at Lydia Shoal

1700 Iceberg to Lydia                     S              0-5 knots.

By Sunday morning the front will be moving rapidly off to the NE and dragging the breeze with it. The models are not in agreement about how fast this will happen. The zonal flow of the jet stream will keep this pattern coming well into next week.

For Saturday I have Zvi around the course and finishing at around 1500 hrs, the J-111 Raku finishing at 1609, The Beneteau 36.7 finishing at 1703, the J-35 at 1709, the J-105’s in at 1713, and the J-30’s in around 1752hrs.

For those boats thinking about heading South immediately after the race you’ll be able to get across the Straits in very mild conditions however once you enter Admiralty, the breeze will pick up and you’ll be powering into 20-25 knots from the due south.

Have a great race, prepare accordingly, and be safe. Keep your AIS on so I can at least enjoy the race from the Sailish.com Weather Center.

Round the County 2019 - An Exercise in Patience

Round the County 2019 – An Exercise in Patience

It seems the Round the County race always serves up one marginal race day and one great race day. This past weekend, Saturday was truly marginal and Sunday could be called “OK,” especially if you were playing the shore along San Juan Island.

Soon after Saturday’s start. A bit of fending off, but both boats were DNFs for the day.

Saturday’s start verged on silly. Some boats were barely able cross the start before the time limit for starting expired. A lot of boats were stuck not far from the start line for hours. The race turned into a nice run in a southerly past Sucia Island, but at the turn at Patos things turned ugly.

A handful of the fastest boats were able to break through and sail for the finish at Roche, but ended up not making it in the time limit. For the most part the rest of the fleet crossed the halfway finish line and pretty much stopped there. It was quite the parade of running lights as boats headed for Roche Harbor to tie up for the night.

On Sunday the light-air downwind starts were entertaining, and it became evident early on the fleet was split on playing the shore or not. Boats holding out looked good early, but the boats along the shore had the last laugh as the northerly was found near the shore, but didn’t extend to the fleet outside.

Jan Anderson’s photos -see the rest here.

At one point, the ORC speedsters Crossfire, Glory, Blue and Dark Star were parked up together. John Buchan and the Glory gang decided enough was enough and quit, only to see the northerly show up as they were headed home.

Nearly everybody had their moment while patches of wind anointed a few boats at a time to be the heroes of the moment. But only a few could be in front at the end.

Some images borrowed from Facebook and elsewhere:

Steve Johnson’s TP 52 Mist won the cumulative ORC class results over the two days, followed closely by Jonathan McKee’s Dark Star. The J/111 Recon won Division 0 on the strength of an excellent second day. Freda Mae built enough of a cushion on Saturday to hold on for the multihull win over Big Broderna. It’s worth noting that that the Cal 33 Cherokee won her class by nearly two hours. Who says moderate displacement older designs can’t win in light air? Results.

My RTC – Chocolate Chip Cookies Rule the Day

Why is Round the County one of the best races, not just in the Northwest – but anywhere?

Scenery. ‘Nuff said.

Anybody can win. Capricious San Juan Islands winds and currents serve up surprise winners often enough that everybody should feel they have a chance. Because they do.

By the same token, if you’re one of those afflicted with that Highly Competitive Itch, it’s a race where you can leave it at home. If you go out when in pays, it’s easy to write it off as bad luck.

Weird course. This big circle course really demands a lot of sailing skill. Playing currents, guessing the geographical effects of the wind, navigation crew work on the sail changes and plain old boatspeed. It’s a wonderful challenge, especially after a season of round-the-buoys.

Roche Harbor. What a great stopover place. All those huge powerboats make it seem like Fort Lauderdale. Maybe not.

But for me it’s about the socializing. I’m not talking about the beer tent and all the renewed friendships that bubble up in Roche, although that’s all pretty special.

For me it’s getting to know new folks on a crew, or getting to connect with those onboard better. In a buoy series or short point-to-point race, there really isn’t much time for socializing. It’s about the race. On RTC, there’s usually time (and sometimes a LOT of time) for connecting with shipmates.

I was the new guy on Oxomoxo, and only knew the owner Doug Frazer. By the time we locked up the boat on Sunday night in Anacortes, I had several new friendships. Sailors are generally very interesting people, and their lives outsides of sailing are fascinating. A drifty RTC is a great chance to get to know them.

Our RTC had its moments, like when we nearly crossed the fleet on port. That is, crossed the start behind us. Unfortunately we couldn’t cross and had to tack, which I’m sure wasn’t too popular with those starters at the boat end of the line.

But here’s the good news – chocolate chip cookies are a good remedy for the Highly Competitive Itch. One thing about a real cruiser racer is that it usually has an oven. And what comes out of an oven? Chocolate chip cookies. No matter how you’re doing, or have done, they taste good. They did both days.

Bruce’s Briefs: Wx for 8, 9, 10, and 11 Nov. Round the County

It’s Round the County so it really doesn’t matter what the weather will be doing, it will still be a great time. We have had an incredibly dry November so far which, for what is traditionally the wettest month of the year, just a little strange. Plus it’s going to be almost 60-degrees F today. The surface charts give us a pretty clear picture of what is going on. We still have a weak ridge of high-pressure guarding the Pacific Northwest and that combined with the jet stream is directing our traditional fall soakers well north of us and into SE Alaska. This is not going to change until the middle of next week.

Today’s surface analysis shows the remnants of a weak front moving across southern BC today and that has brought a southerly flow over the area which will persist into tomorrow. Sunday will have a northerly flow develop and by late Sunday this will become an offshore flow as high-pressure rebuilds over the area. The 96-hour surface forecast chart the strongest low-pressure system(956MB) we’ve seen this fall lurking in the mid-Pacific. We’ll see if this will be strong enough to break up our ridge of high-pressure.

For RTC on Saturday, this will mean wind (8-12 knots from the SE) for the start however as the gradient eases the wind will drop. This problem is compounded by the geography of Orcas Island and Mt Constitution which as the breeze eases will create a wind shadow extending from Orcas across Boundary Pass. The boats with TALL rigs should prevail. The other problem will be that after about 1030 the tide will be flooding in Boundary Pass and while it’s not a big flood, it will still be difficult to fight.

Currents in Rosario Strait. 

Saturday

0706       Max Ebb                1.08 knts

1000       Slack

1300       Max Flood             1.23 knts

1548       Slack      

1948       Max Ebb                2.41 knts

Sunday

0742       Max Ebb                1.11 knts

1042       Slack

1336       Max Flood             1.14 knts

1606       Slack

2012       Max Ebb                2.77 knts

Current in Haro Strait

Sunday

0654    Max Ebb          .83 knts

0930    Slack

1306    Max Flood       1.4 knts

1618    Slack   

For Sunday as a weak northerly flow comes in, the problem will be reversed as the wind shadow will go south from Mt. Constitution and over the finish area. 

On Saturday I have Crossfire around the course in about 5.75 hours finishing between 1430 and 1500 hours.

Have a great time and leave your AIS on so I can at least armchair quarterback from the computer.

RTC Drone Style

Many of you pick up on Sean Trew’s great still photo and video work via his Facebook feed. But those of you who don’t “do” Facebook shouldn’t be deprived of the great pleasure it is to see that work. And besides, who doesn’t want to see drone footage of a racecourse? With his permission, here are some of Sean’s videos from RTC:

 

 

Round the County, All in a Northerly

For many of us, Round the County (RTC) race in the San Juans is the best of times and the worst of times, with one day having breeze and the next, none. Or, doing well one day and not the next. This year, the wind gods (Bruce Hedrick among them) decided on a relatively light two-day northerly for the race this past weekend.

The finish at Lydia Shoal, photo by Bob Brunius.

It was a clockwise year, and the fleet had good breeze heading south after the start. After Davidson Rock things became challenging, with the boats that headed inshore seemingly doing the best. Of course short-tacking the shore to the finish kept crews busy. On day two, the boats that kept close to shore after Turn Point found some good breeze and were able to escape quicker than those who kept off shore. A freighter forced that decision on a few, and in fact keeping clear of commercial traffic this year was one of the points of emphasis from the organizers.

The finish turned out to a parkup off Lydia Shoal, where much of the race was won or lost. The results show Hamachi winning the ORC division just ahead of Dark Star with the TP 52s, for once, back in the pack. Class winners in PHRF included Recon, 65 Red Roses, Vitesse, Sir Isaac, Here and Now and Saltheart Foamfollower.

Sir Isaac

One of the great things about Round the County is the variety of boats that compete - and win! Remember the schooner Martha? This year there’s another schooner to talk about, Sir Isaac, John and Ann Bailey’s Chuck Burns designed 49-footer which won Division 3.

The first thing to know about Sir Isaac is that she spent 10 years in a major rebuild. John and Ann sailed the boat for a few years before deciding to do the extensive work that would be needed to make her the cruising machine they wanted. From 2006-2016 Sir Isaac lived in one end of a building and the Bailey’s in another. They wanted to be close, after all they were doing all the work themselves! It would be no small job on the 1984 cold-molded boat.

The work including cutting the deck off (with a Sawzall, no less), replacing the deck, cabin and cockpit, glassing the cockpit, gutting and rebuilding the interior and re-glassing the hull. There was extensive vacuum bagging involved, and John Bailey credits “mentor” Russell Brown with advising throughout the process. The Baileys have plans to do some serious sailing in the years to come, including considering a race to Hawaii in 2020. So they built in additional tankage.

The second thing to know about the Baileys and Sir Isaac is that they “LOVE” their boat and the Salish sailing scene. “Everybody treats us nicely,” John reports. If the name John Bailey, associated with PNW sailing, sounds familiar, it is. John’s mother, Jo Bailey, co-authored the wonderful Gunkholing in the San Juans book that goes cruising with me every time I head north. Sadly, Jo Bailey died about a year ago.

While a schooner rig is fairly daunting for a racing crew, the way it breaks up sail area makes a good choice for shorthanded cruising. The Baileys find it an easy rig to handle. The boat certainly has strong and weak points. This year’s light air reaching was very good for Sir Isaac, thought the beat up the west side of San Juan Island was not. The crew kept all those sails (including that marvelous “fisherman” hanging between the masts) going up and down and the the boat pointed away from the holes while John Bailey focused on boat speed. At the finish line parking lot, Bailey picked what was probably the best route - outside the Peapods, but not getting too wide before riding a wind line to the finish.

Photos by Jan Anderson, except where noted. Click any to enlarge.

Bruce’s Weather Brief for November 9-11 and the Round The County!

Absolutely one of our most favorite races with challenging conditions, challenging tidal currents, incredible scenery, and best of all, great competition with great parties before, during, and after the racing.

Click to enlarge

This year will be no different except that, as always, no two races are ever the same. The good news is that at least for Saturday, the currents will be relatively favorable. Sunday a slightly different story with the tides being against us until Patos, at least they won’t be very strong. The really good news is that while there won’t be a lot of wind either day, there should be enough to get around the course and there shouldn’t be any rain. I have Crossfire taking about five hours to complete the course, both days.

 

Tidal Currents

Rosario Straits Turn Point, Haro Straits

Nov 10th Nov 10th

0848 Slack 1248 Slack

1148 Max Ebb 1.43 knts 1512 Max Flood 1.56 knts

1530 Slack 1742 Slack

1636 Max Flood .29 knts

Nov 11th Nov 11th

0936 Slack 0948 Slack

1242 Max Ebb 1.23 knts 1112 Max Ebb .72 knts

2318 Max Ebb 3.16 knts* 1330 Slack

*Not an error see the chart 1548 Max Flood 1.39 knts

 

We have a weak frontal system passing over us today after which high pressure will build over the area bringing a northerly flow over the area. For the race course, this will mean 5-10 knots of north-northwesterly in the starting area making for a colorful, downwind start and with the ebb tide you should make pretty good time down to the bottom end of Lopez. The problem will be that with the northerly flow over the Islands it will be light and shifty across the bottom of the course until you get past Eagle Point and False Bay where you’ll back into a more solid northerly for the beat up to the finish.

Click any map to enlarge.

As you can see from the surface chart for Sunday, it doesn’t change much, except for that whopping big low out in the middle of the Pacific. The high over our interior is building in strength that will act as a blocker until the end of next week. For the race course, this will mean a nice breeze of 8-12 knots from the north in the starting area and this will drop slightly after you get around Turn Point, with slightly more breeze just to the north of the rhumb line to Alden Pt. After Alden, it should be a pleasant run south to the finish with the northerly building slightly after early to mid-afternoon. The real challenge will be from Lawrence Point to the finish because the closer you get to the finish the less wind there will be in the lee of Orcas so watch the boats ahead of you as they fall into the holes and sail around them, just don’t get swept past the finish line in the ebb tide.

For the delivery home, it doesn’t matter if you’re going north or south, it’s going to be light.

Have a great race, be safe and have fun.

Round the County, Part 2, with Beef Stew

After our initial Round the County coverage, we were called out by Vin Colgin in the comments section: “More small boat results. Local super yacht results are interesting, but not relatable. I want to see more < 30′ news to increase participation.”

Hey, Vin, when you’re right, you’re right. I didn’t get a <30′ skipper or crew to report here, but your comment did inspire a tale from another classic that many could relate to. For the <30′ tale, I suggest you go to Ben Braden’s story of the race.

Alert reader Jarred Swalwell chimed in with his tale of crewing with Megan Kogut on the RTC on the Carter 37 Arrow: “Yes, it’s tempting to wax poetic about big, pretty expensive boats. Did anyone notice the ’73 IOR one tonner out there rocking the BBQ, radar tower + solar panels and 30 year old dacron? For a period, I had a lovely time with one elbow casually hooked around a shroud while eating hot beef stew and admiring a Moore 24 off our starboard bow plane a little on the downwind run on day 2. This just before I went back to admiring my beef stew. We finished near to the top third in both class and fleet. We had cushions to sit on, a diesel heater, substantially Moore than a pot to piss in, and of course cold beer. I did enjoy watching the sporty boats, they are pretty. At times, I even enjoyed passing the sporty boats. But seriously, it would be nice to see a few more comfortable plain white sloops out there having a good time, RTC is a terrific event. BTW, props to the Cal 34!!”

(It’s worth noting that Ben Braden ate a hot lunch on his own Moore 24 Moore Uff Da in the same race from his well-known barbecue while finishing eighth overall)

But more than that, Jarred’s and three other boats utilized raceQs to track the race, and compare notes afterward. racQs is new to me, and pretty interesting. I haven’t figured out how to embed the video but if you follow the links below you’ll see the tracks play out for the entire race. The screenshots are from raceQs. This would definitely be fun to set up with your favorite enemies on the race course to have something to talk about afterward.

Megan and I were on Arrow, an IOR boat. We use raceQs to track and analyze what happened, a few other boats do as well so it’s a pretty interesting watch.

The “fleet” going around Patos.

The screen as it looks in the helmsman’s view.

Saturday is here. You can see the shut down at the end and where a few boats (Bravo Zulu and Lodos) figured out the counter current on the other side of Battle Rock which paid off pretty big for them.

Sunday we stayed out and walked away from the short tackers in faster boats. On the downwind we had to fly a smaller storm kite as our big kite had a tear. But staying to the east on the course kept us away from a hole that a number of other boats got stuck into on the west.

–Jarred Salwell

 

 

There are a lot of us who can look around just about any harbor an identify “former” raceboats that still have a lot of fun and a few wins still in them.

Ydra

Take Arrow. In 1973 Dick Carter was at the top of of the design game, with the help of none other than the Northwest’s own Bob Perry who was working for Carter at the time. This pinched-end, wide-beamed boat was the bomb, and still sails very well, even with Dacron. The design derived from the world One Ton champion Ydra. The faults with IOR boats of that era are well known, but they’re voluminous and usually fitted with decent galleys, heads and berths. They’re not going to keep up with a modern well-designed racer-cruiser, and they’re never going to plane (at least you don’t want to be on them if they do), but they definitely have style and sail well.

There are of course, plenty of other non-IOR boats that can be talked about (and raced) as well. So while it’s often easier to write about the expensive end of the fleet, get us the tales and pictures and we’ll certainly tell the stories from the heart of the fleet too.

Round the County Wrap, Glory and Wicked Wahine with the Wins

John Buchan’s Glory won the ORC Division of the Round the County Race, despite a smokin’ first to finish on day two by Steve Travis’ Smoke. The “newest” member of the big boat fleet made its first racing appearance as Steve Johnson’s Mist.

Crossfire’s Day 2 Track

Of course Mist is already known in the area as Braveheart and then Valkyrie. Crossfire definitely has her hands full with all these TP 52s flying around. Nigel Barron of Crossfire reports, “We hooked some kelp halfway down San Juan Island that didn’t help, and really had some issues keeping the boat going in the lumps.”

The PHRF podium was filled with Division “0” boats, led by Darrin Towe’s Melges 32 Wicked Wahine. Carl Buchan ended up 10 minutes back in Madrona and Shorett/Burzycki’s Farr 395 Ace finished third with a particularly strong first day.

It’s worth noting that two Moore 24s cracked the top 10 overall with Bruzer in fourth and Moore Uff Da in eighth. That design never ages.

All photos by Jan Anderson, and of course there are many more. Please support Jan.

Local regular Bob Brunius won his class with the J/120 Time Bandit, but it wasn’t without a bit of self-reflection. “After having a disastrous race last year because of two faulty tactical decisions I made, I was thinking toxic thoughts about my ability to do this racing thing anymore. This year was different. Each day this race I made a call based on local knowledge that separated us from the fleet significantly and paid hugely. Confidence restored.”

The mighty Santa Cruz 33 Muffin hit an unmarked spire northeast side of Patos and retired under her own power to Anacortes, with no threat of sinking. Skipper Garry Greth said about the incident, “It is faster go in there for current relief and pressure in a southerly, but you can’t go in that far!” Note we’re hoping to do a full on piece on Muffin‘s remarkable renovation over the last few years here on sailish.com.

And finally, the results of the RTC Youth Sailing Challenge are in with Wild Rumpus earning $2131 for youth sailing, followed by Crazy Salsa with $1872 and Time Bandit with $1335.

RTC Photo Finish Vids and Bruce’s Weather Brief for Saturday Night thru Monday and “Home Delivery”

If you’re up in the Islands then you are already feeling what’s coming tomorrow. Smith Island currently showing 28 with gusts to 32 from SE and the barometer is still dropping. So while there will be wind in the Straits, it still looks like the starting area could be a problem. Once you get just a little ways south you should be sailing into a building southeasterly where along the very bottom of the course you could see 15-25 with higher gusts. By the time you get to Davidson Rock it should back off to 15 from the SE and then steadily drop as you approach the finish. On the run north, there will tend to be more wind on the west side of the course.

The real question about getting heading for home on Sunday comes down “well, do you feel lucky?” If you’re trying to get back to Seattle and you think you can make it to Port Townsend before 1800 hours go ahead and roll the dice. The next blast of SE will fill in around midnight but you will still be in 15-25 knots on and off all the way back. After midnight expect 25+ from the SE. Regardless, I would probably park the boat at Orcas, enjoy the post-race party, and salute your fellow competitors. Plan to bring the boat down later, much later. Just check out the surface charts.

If you’re headed back to Vancouver, and you finish by 1300-1400, the key will be to be back at your slip in Vancouver before midnight. For the run north, you’ll have consistently 15-25 from the SE. After midnight expect it to build to 25-30 with higher gusts.

Contrary to what my friend Nigel says, the logs don’t sink below the surface after dark. So be careful out there.

Today’s Half - A Good Day’s Sail

As far as the racing went today, well, word it was a good day on the water with no rain. The results.

Our friends on Crossfire were quick to get out the following track.

Crossfire’s Track

The videos, by Malcolm MacNeil, show the duel to the finish between Crossfire and Glory. Crossfire just beat them across the line, But Glory won the day on corrected time in ORC. Over on the PHRF side, it was apparently a Moore kind of day with Moore 24s taking the top three spots in Division 5 with the top Moore, Bruzer, grabbing first in fleet. It’ll be interesting to see what happens in tomorrow’s blow. After all is said and done, I’ll be looking for material (stories, photos, vids) to post. Hit me. -KH

Bruce’s Brief 11, 12 &13 November, Round the County 2017

There’s a reason why Round the County (RTC) is one of the most popular races in the Pacific Northwest and this weekend will only continue to further that reputation. The course, in addition to being just beautiful, is always a challenge with interesting rivers of tidal current and winds that do their best to be unpredictable. As we get closer to the start the different models are not very much in agreement and it’s easy to see why, just check out the current surface analysis and then the forecast chart for tomorrow.

We currently have a weak, 1009 MB, low-pressure system off of the central Oregon coast trying to move inland. There is a deepening low-pressure system off of SE Alaska which is riding the jet stream (500MB chart) towards the Pacific Northwest and will start to impact us Sunday night and into next week. Delivery skippers heading south may want to park the boat after the race. If you’re headed north and back to Vancouver, be prepared for some breeze. I’ll update this on Sunday.

Tidal Currents

Peapod Rocks

0538 Slack

0912 Max Flood 2.14 knts

1255 Slack

1515 Max Ebb 1.66 knts

1950 Slack

Turn Point

1252 Slack

1537 Max Ebb 1.38 knts

2011 Slack

For Saturday that weak low-pressure system will be gone and we’ll have a pair of weak high-pressure systems inland slowing the approach of that low from SE Alaska. In addition, we’ll have a weak low-pressure trough off our coast ahead of that approaching cold front. So what does that mean for racing? Be prepared for just about anything. Since most of the time, we race in windward-leeward format, the reaching equipment is usually buried in the gear locker. Get out those barber haulers, snatch blocks and reaching sheets and make sure they are readily available along with the drifter. Those crews that trim and change gears aggressively will be the winners. While the forecast may be for small craft advisories on both Saturday and Sunday, the timing of the breeze is very much in question. Also, the wind will be from the southeast however where it will be is still a very big question.

Click to enlarge image:

For the start expect light air, downwind conditions with the wind building slightly as you get north of Lawrence Point on Orcas. From Lawrence to Patos you will essentially be dead downwind so you’ll be watching the gybe angles and your SOG with the flood tide. Also be aware of the limiting marks found in the SI’s. The really interesting part of the race will be from Patos to Turn Point as the southeasterly is going to have a hard time getting over Orcas and back to touching down in Boundary Pass. After 1300 hours you’ll at least have the tide with you. This is where the models are very divergent as to when the steadier breeze might fill in. One model has Crossfire finishing at around 1300 hrs while another has them in around 1430 hrs.

Sunday will be quite a different story as that low gets closer to the race course. This shouldn’t be a gear busting thrash to Davidson Rock however you could see puffs to 20 knots from SE the closer you get to Davidson. Unfortunately, the problem may be the starting line and where the committee decides to set it. You may recall in 2015 that after a wild Saturday, the Sunday start was set in a real hole and a number of contenders were unable to even make the start line. Those that made it had a nice beat in a southeasterly after they got past Lime Kiln Point.

Tidal Currents Sunday

Haro Strait

0812 Slack

1036 Max Flood 1.61 knts

1315 Slack

1656 Max Ebb 1.61 knts

2242 Slack

Rosario Strait

0900 Max Flood 1.5 knts

1300 Slack

1630 Max Ebb 1.94 knts

2048 Slack

In addition to the challenge of getting away from the starting line, you’ll also be sailing into a building flood tide until you get past False Bay. Keep track of COG and SOG until you are solidly into the current that’s going your way. Ideally, you’d like to finish before 1300 hrs. The current GRIB files have Crossfire finishing just after noon. Think about starting with the headsail in the port groove so you’d hoist the next headsail while on starboard tack, then do a short hitch to port away from the Island to drop the old headsail.

Besides getting all the reach gear ready make sure safety comes first. Have a great weekend and if you’ve got AIS please leave it on for the race so I can armchair race along with you! Thanks