Monday, 17 June 2013

Blasting in Ottawa!

photo credit: Kara Leslie Johnson

Last weekend the Ottawa Skiff & Cat Grand Prix was held at Nepean Sailing Club (www.nsc.ca) on Lac Deschenes, a wide spot on the Ottawa River. I'm the only Weta sailor at the club, only having purchased my boat this spring.

I was really pleased to have Richard Stephens and Keith Rice make the drive up from Ithaca NY, and bring a 3rd boat as well to loan to local sailor Jesse Henderson.

The weather pattern all weekend was an unusual breeze from the south - very gusty at times, and generally over 10 knots (sometimes over 20!). Everyone got out for some practice on Friday, with Jesse going out double-handed for his intro to the boat, as the breeze was really on at that time.

The Weta's were assigned Skiff B status, sharing the spot with 3 29ers. We rated Portsmouth 900, and the 29ers 924. We seemed to be a bit faster uphill, while they seemed to have the advantage off-wind. The first day was a surprise though as the 29ers had decided in advance to just do windward-leewards rather than the triangle-windward-leeward specified in the sailing instructions.

Ashore we wondered how the RC would make sense of it and score us all. Also on the water was Skiff A, which had 19 I14s and 49ers in it, and a Catamaran start of about a half dozen boats. The RC would frequently assign different windward marks to the different fleets to keep them separated and have the races end around the same time. We had to watch for a mark colour flag to be raised along with the fleet flag during the starting guns.

For the Sunday we decided to stay closer to the 29ers by also doing just windward-leewards. That kept the racing closer together between the two classes of boats, and the finishes were often mixed up with 29ers and Wetas interspersed. Around 12:30 pm the breeze really kicked in solidly over 20 knots with a top gust recorded at 29. After finishing that race it seemed obvious the RC wouldn't get all the upside down boats sorted out in time to squeeze in one more before the 2pm cut off, so we headed in. No Wetas capsized all weekend!

At awards the Weta's were given the Innovation Trophy (a flying pig) for bringing something new to the regatta. Lots of comments were heard about how much fun we seemed to be having out there. We ended up being scored separately from the 29ers, with Richard coming out on top and Keith 2nd.

Full results at: http://tinyurl.com/mz99d4l

The photographer has just posted pics from the event:
http://karalesliejohnson.zenfolio.com/recent.html

This is a good one of Keith blasting downwind while Richard is on his way back
upwind:
http://karalesliejohnson.zenfolio.com/p251660688/h6e98f2a4#h6e98f2a4

And one of Richard and I crossing behind a 29er
http://karalesliejohnson.zenfolio.com/p251660688/h619afcc5#h619afcc5

A big thanks again for Richard and Keith making the drive. It would be wonderful to get a bigger turnout next year.

Cheers
Phil
Weta 553
Fireball 14678
SRMax 121 (4sale)

Attention Weta No Cal Sailors!






Weta owner Jim Saarman has extended an invite to the Weta fleet to sail at the Inverness Yacht Club on lovely Tomales Bay the weekend of June 22-23. If you have not sailed here before the environment is beautiful and the IYC is a gem, 100 year clubhouse. If this sounds interesting, then read on, because it gets better...

The plan is to have a seminar in the AM to cover rigging, sailing techniques, etc. In the afternoon we can have a pursuit race up Tomales Bay to Hog Island and back. Sunday we can join the a scheduled IYC race on the bay. Fun casual sailing.

After racing on Sat night we can have BBQ, local oysters/steaks at the IYC or at Jims house (depending on how many participate).

There's accommodations on the bay. Beautiful beaches, hiking, food and a super relaxing location. I encourage this to be a fun "family" weekend.

If you have interest in this venue you need to email me ASAP so we can make plans. I guarantee that this will be a super fun family time to enjoy one of the nicest locations in No Cal with cool people on your Weta.

Please email me soon!

Regards

Davo

David Berntsen
Weta West
Performance*One-Design*Trimaran
US West Coast Distributor

(415) 686 4583 M
dave@wetawest.com
www.wetawest.com

facebook.com/WetaWest
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Weta-Trimarans
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/westcoastwetas

First ever NW Multi starts well


The very first NW Multihull regatta was held in Port Townsend, WA May 18-19 and featured a wide selection of “big” boats from Corsair F-24’s to the Prosail 40 Catamaran “Dragonfly” and a separate one design class for the Weta Trimaran.
Saturday morning started off with a light drizzle and even lighter winds.  The big boats were off the start line slowly drifting out to the straits for a 24 mile distance race, leaving the bay wide open for the Weta’s to do some buoy racing.  Four close races were run on Saturday in winds ranging from zero to 10kts.  At the end of the day Mark Iverson was leading the Weta fleet with an impressive 1-2-1-2 = 6 points!
Sunday morning saw a little more rain and heavier winds hanging in the upper teens with gusts into the 20+kts range.  The larger boats stayed in the bay on Sunday for buoy racing sailing a slightly longer course than the Weta’s.  With clear air and some real breeze on the Weta’s were able stretch their legs in planning mode – FINALLY!  Unfortunately Steve Keever on “Vesper” really wanted to test the limits of his Weta harness by falling of the boat prior to the starting signal on the first race!  At least he got it all on his GoPro!
The rain stopped, the sun started to burn through and the winds lightened up for the remaining 3 races.   Terry Crockett sailing his Weta for only the second time ever, was improving his speed and closing in on the competition.  With tight racing and frequent lead changes, Mark Iverson and Jeff Carson battled it out for first place the entire weekend.  On the 8th and final race Jeff managed to squeak by Mark and tie up the series at 13 points, winning on a tie breaker.
Everyone had a fantastic time and the Weta’s were truly a hit with all of the big boat sailors!  Now we just need to get more sailors to join our growing fleet!
Special thanks to the Port Townsend Sailing Association and NW Multihull Association for their excellent race committee work and party on Saturday night!  This was a great first regatta and we hope an annual event for the multihulls in the PNW!
Weta Class Results:

1    583    Carson    3    1    2    1    2    1    2    1    13.00
2    274    Iverson    1    2    1    2    1    3    1    2    13.00
3    388    Keever    2    3    4    3    5/DNS    2    3    3    25.00
4    199    Crockett    4    4    3    4    3    4    4    4    30.00
LINK to Steve Keever’s video:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQpY_LkjqQk

Alamitos Bay Yacht Club Memorial Day Regatta 2013


photo by Rich Roberts

Three day weekends are a big deal to us working stiffs. One can really relax on Sunday, knowing you’ve got an extra day to enjoy on Monday.  Two-day regattas are a lot of fun, but they burn every minute (much to the chagrin of the spouse and kids) and every ounce of energy, too.

So, when I started talking with some other So-Cal Wetas about getting together for the Memorial Day Regatta hosted by Alamitos Bay Yacht Club (ABYC) in Long Beach Harbor, I discovered the perfect fit. A two day regatta on a three day weekend! Two full days of sailing on Saturday and Sunday, followed by an extra day to unload and clean up the boat, do some laundry, mow the lawn, toss back a cold one, and take a nap before going back to work. Plus, an extra bonus: the following work week is a short one!

Long Beach, California, is definitely a long beach, adjacent to the gigantic, busiest, commercial shipping port in the U.S.A.. The beach area enjoys the protection of a miles-long break wall installed a couple miles off shore to provide a safe deep anchorage for container ships and tankers. The area between the break wall and the beach is perfect clear water for sailing.  The winds in the area blow consistently better than where I live in San Diego, but less than the blustery and cold San Francisco Bay Area, so this weekend’s event attracted some sailors from both northern and southern California.

We had seven Wetas arrive and sail this weekend. Ivan Skobtsov from Corona del Mar, who dusted off his boat after not sailing it for more than 2 years. It took him a couple races to warm up but he seemed happy to be back on it.  Tim Corcoran drove from his home in Claremont, an hour’s drive east of Los Angeles (when there’s no LA traffic) and showed further improvement in his sailing and especially his starts.

John Rizzi and Jonathan Weston drove 400+ miles from San Jose to join us. Both big guys, the lighter than expected conditions this weekend proved tough for them. Maybe it was a nice break from the intensity of San Fran. Reports and pictures of the recent Elvstrom/Zellerbach regatta indicate it was literally a blow out. Jonathan might need some new sails.

Dean Daniels from South San Francisco and Daniel Wilson from Lake Forest (in the OC) chartered “Ginger” and “Marianne” from Paul Martson at Pierpont Performance Sailing. Paul, who brought the girls down from Ventura, provided first class rigging and launching service to his clients. Dean had some prior multihull experience and had a grin from ear to ear after Saturday’s racing. Daniel claimed he hadn't raced in almost 30 years, but his presence in the front half of the results indicated he still knew what to do. Both guys had never sailed a Weta before, and I think they had a great time. We missed Bob Shirley, who grew up sailing at ABYC, now lives in Ventura, and was purportedly one of the very first Weta owners on the West Coast.  Bob came down with Bronchitis last week so he couldn’t join us. We hope you’re on the mend now, Bob!

I’ll spare you the mundane race-by-race details, but highlight a few things:

Starts were great! I would’ve loved to see the view from the RC boat as we consistently had all seven boats at the line, on the gun, for each races. This means our skippers have developed advanced boat handling skills and the confidence to get their boat into the thick of it when the time demands it.

The winds on the course started around 7 kts and shifted right on both days, first dropping in speed for the middle races, and then increasing to nearly 15 kts for the last race on Saturday. Everybody was happy about that. These boats really start to move when the breeze climbs into the teens, and with power to burn you can really feel the boat go. On Sunday, we didn’t get that same building breeze, so the last race was almost a drifter.

The regatta was also a qualifying event for the US Sailing junior single-handed championship, so there were at least 40 lasers sharing our course. Add a dozen A cats and Nacra F-18s, eight Vipers, and Portsmouth class including a couple Hobie 16s, a few Mercurys, and a couple 505s, and we had quite a tangle at times.  The Race Committee also left the start and finish lines unrestricted, so there were many situations where one class was in their start sequence and a fleet already racing would come sailing through the area on their way to the leeward gate.

In the lighter winds, I found that it took the better part of an upwind leg to pass the lasers, but when the wind hit the teens it was no trouble at all. Call me a punk, but I get a big kick out of sailing by a Laser who’s hiking on the hard edge and going 4 or 5 knots, while I comfortably hike from the smooth curve of the ama at 6 knots or more. In this age of “sausage” windward/leeward courses, those poor guys don’t even get to enjoy some planing, screaming reaches. Let’s face it, sailing dead down wind is slow and kinda boring. It’s a rush to come charging in to the windward buoy and feel the boat accelerate as I roll out the screecher, and then heading off on a broad reach while leaving the old dinghies behind.

After the racing on Saturday, we all arrived at the beach tucked on the inside of Alamitos bay (really, a lagoon) and hauled our boats out in short order. I pulled out Full Sail IPA and Pale Ale, popping the bottles open with the bottle opener installed under the aft rail of my boat. I must admit, it is not a class-legal modification. If you anyone would like to discuss it with me, let me show you how it works with a couple of cold ones and maybe you’ll agree it’s a violation that can be overlooked.

The yacht club hosted a BBQ with grill-your-own steak and chicken, as well as a finely grilled salmon, plus baked potato, salad, and good ol’ American apple pie.  After a long day of racing, we all slept well.

After racing on Sunday, we got our boats off the beach as fast as possible since the beach access alley between the water-front houses can be a bottle neck with so many multihulls getting back on trailers.  A couple guys were on the road before the awards presentation and I missed it while I was busy hauling my boat down the street from the alley to the trailer parking. Trophies were folding camping chairs; much more useful than a gilded dust collector. A few of us stragglers hung out for another hour enjoying the cool afternoon breeze in the warm Southern California Sun, savoring fine micro-brew on tap and agreeing that this was a good weekend and a great place to sail a Weta.

Check out the event website here http://www.abyc.org/event.cfm?id=1282

For more photos check out http://www.wetamarine.com/abyc-memorial-day-regatta-2013.html

Calling all West Coast Wetas!

Join us for some great summer sailing in Ventura, California on the weekend of June 22-23.  Spend Saturday with an on-the-water coach for some skill-building and camaraderie, and enjoy Sunday with three to five short, fun races.  This event coincides with Summer Sailstice, so you can do both at the same time!
Can’t dedicate the whole weekend? Choose a day!  The Saturday activities will be geared toward folks who want more time on the water and would like some coaching to increase their skill handling a Weta.  Sunday will be fun racing and a good opportunity for racing noobs to practice starts and mark rounding with a fleet of us.  Ventura consistently serves up great sailing conditions in the summer, with winds in the low to high teens, so there will be fun for everyone. Check out the schedule for more details. You don’t want to miss this!

Did I mention, all this is FREE!  Big shout out to Wetamarine, Pierpoint Performance Sailing, and Wetawest for helping us put this together.

Don't have a boat?  Don't want to bring your boat?  Flying in from out of town?  Pierpoint Performance Sailing has two Wetas available to charter for this event.

Here’s some more info on the Pierpont website

Schedule

Arrive Saturday morning for event check-in at Pierpont Bay Yacht Club

10am Orientation for out-of-towners & discussion of the days schedule:
                                - Launch & rig (beach or ramp)
                                - Free-sail flotilla style to Ventura Pier and back (1.5 miles)
                                - Beach land for bag lunch and tech talk
                                - Capsize demo and practice
                                - Sail to Pierpont Performance Sailing's dock for overnight moorage
                                - Happy Hour at Pierpont Bay Yacht Club (next door to PPS)

Sunday:  Re-convene at PBYC 10:00am
                                - 1 hour racing discussion, from beginner through…
                                - Hit the water for 3 to 5 short course races
                                - Breakdown boats and optional weekend be-brief at PBYC

Contact Paul Martson paul@pierpontperformancesailing.com, if you have any questions or concerns or if you want to charter.

Aloha,

Bruce Fleming

King Harbor Invitational


Report by Bruce Fleming

Four West Coast Wetas descended on King Harbor Yacht Club in the west-side Los Angeles suburb of Redondo Beach, early on the last Saturday morning in March, to sail together in the early-season King Harbor One Design Invitational.

Tim Corcoran had sailed here a couple times before and finally convinced a few more of us to join him here. A one-day regatta seemed like a good way to get a short break from my job(s) while not burning the whole weekend. I drove the 115 miles up from San Diego. Bob Shirley and Paul Marston drove down from Ventura, and Tim drove west from Claremont. I also had an ulterior motive: Mark Hansen, one of the KHYC regulars, is on the USA Portsmouth rating committee, and they are quite interested in taking data on our performance so that they might update our rating.

The four of us arrived early, and rigged and hoisted our boats into the steel grey water of the harbor opening onto Santa Monica Bay. Not much sun today…it looked like southern California’s “May Gray” or “June Gloom” marine layer overcast was here a couple months early. As it often happens, there were better winds earlier in the week, but we encountered light and drifting conditions on our way out to the race course, and the breeze slowly filled in to a gentle 5-8 mph as the day progressed. The best speeds of the day…occurred on the sail back in.

The R/C ran starts for each class, including a dozen Viper 640s, six to eight Martin 20s, a few Cal 20s, and a couple of Capri 14.2. Wetas started last, along with a single Hobie Wave sailed by Mark Hansen. I’m not sure the Wave was a great match for data collection against the Weta, but the RC took great pains to measure the course and keep our times. It will be interesting for some in this Weta community to find out what they learned about our performance against the provisional #s we’ve been given. I’m sorry, I don’t have the info at this time.

Race 1 started well: Tim Corcoran has been practicing, and it showed—he was aggressively positioned at t boat end of the line in the final 10, but alas, Bob Shirley shut the door on him similar to Jimmy Spithill’s treatment of Russell Couts in San Francisco a few months ago. Luckily, unlike Russell’s AC 45, Tim’s boat remained unscathed. This single Windward/Leeward course was tricky—the light wind was stronger on the left side of the course, but the preceeding classes were crowding this area as they rounded the windward bouy and popping their chutes, so we had to tack back to the right side layline before being smothered. After rounding the top mark, I proceeded on the favored starboard tack, while Paul gybed. About a quarter mile later, I gybed to cover my leading position. In the next quarter mile, a large commercial power boat arrived from the distance in front of us and forced Paul to sail high to allow the boat to go between us, so I benefitted greatly from this further separation. I think we finished Bruce, Paul, Bob,Tim.

Race 2, after a less exciting start, Paul and Bob tacked away from my bad air and sailed toward the right side of the course. I was 2/3 of the way to the top mark when I noticed that Paul had dissappeared. More precisely, his rig had disappeared! Long story short…I won the second race and Tim came in behind me. Bob kept going and Tim and I wondered if he or we sailed the wrong course. We sailed over to Paul who was wrapping up his rig. The reason his rig came down: hand-tightening the shackel on a side shroud was not enough. The cyclical loading and unloading of the rig in the bumpy conditions loosened the shackel at the ama, and the mast came down. Shackel, bolt, and shroud are now at the bottom of the bay. Bob “finished” his 2 lap race, and I’m still wondering who sailed the correct course.

Race 3 started with a flurry. Bob had sailed to the left/pin end of the line and in the final 20 seconds of the sequence I agressively sailed to that side to be sure he didn’t get too far away on the beat. I was a little surprised to see him tack to port, but this put me at a distinct advantage on Starbord. After the gun we were on split tacks up the beat. We crossed about ¾ of the way to the buoy, but I was behind by a couple boat lengths. I guess the wind was filling in on the right? After rounding the top buoy, I worked to go deeper than Bob all the way to the last gybe, finally egding into the lead about 6 boatlengths from The Zone at the lee buoy. I furled and rounded clean. I heard some frustrated words from Bob that I think were related to a crummy furl. Since this was a 2-lap race, it was another neck-and-neck sail to the top buoy again. I stretched out the lead a little by heading to the right this time, and I think Bob went left, reversing our previous tracks. Bob weighs 40 to 50 lb more than me, and stands easiliy a foot taller, yet we are often duking it out on the course in 10 to 15 kt winds. In this lighter stuff, I’m able to slowly walk away from him. In the heavy stuff, I just can’t keep the boat down the way his larger frame can. Well, today’s light conditions were in my favor.

After crossing the finish of Race 3, the RC had chase boats sailing ahead of the finishers and tossing out overzied plastic eggs for us to pick up. Calling it sailing’s version of an easter egg hunt. Each of us who successfully retrieved an egg turned them in for cool prizes at the prize-giving party, such as US Sails t-shirts. I took home 1st, Bob took 2nd, and Tim 3rd. We all know that Paul would’ve serously shuffled the numbers if his rig hadn’t come down in Race 2. King Harbor Yacht Club has a 2-story club house out on the habor jetty with a bar and lounge on the top floor, sporting a 300-degree panoramic view of the ocean from Point Magu to the north, all the way to the cliffs of Palos Verdes to the south. The folks at this club also boast one of the largest collections of reciprocal priveleges lists, with burgees of hundreds of other yacht clubs. They are a really warm, down-to-earth crowd, so uncommon in this Hollywood town. I’m looking forward to returning for another regatta some time this summer.

Aloha,

Bruce Fleming

Akahele!, #276

San Diego, California

Thanks to C.J. Krimm for the photos!

Check out more photos at http://www.wetamarine.com/king-harbor-invitational-2013.html

The double handed duo take it out!

Congrats to Randy Smyth and Toni Sacco who took out the first WetaFest ever, sponsored by Ronstan over the weekend!

The last race of the series was a 1.5 hour distance race, Fort Walton turned it on with a warm, sunny and windy conditions!

Chris Kitchen and Brian Harrison were dueling out the front of the pack, Brian using his local knowledge to his advantage when Chris got a bit confused and starting going back upwind to early, he then had to turn around and follow Brian to the correct bottom mark, however he slipped back in front of him to be the first to round and start heading upwind to the finish. BUT there was no stopping Toni and Randy who powered past Chris and Brian on the upwind, using their extra weight which had been a hindrance on the downwind to their advantage to win the race and the regatta. This is the first time that a double handed crew have won a big Weta regatta, admittedly conditions were good, the windy short courses on the first day suiting the extra weight upwind and the extra pair of hands around the corners, but there is no taking away that they sailed awesomely to not lose out to much on the downwinds and keep their cool to take it out!

Chris was buzzing with how today went he says "everyone sailed really well and the windy and warm conditions made for awesome sailing. Thanks so much to Fort Walton Yacht Club for putting on a great regatta, great sailing and great people, it was a lot of fun!"

Check out the full results here http://www.fwyc.org/Regattas2013/Weta/2013%20Weta%20Results.htm

Thanks Ronstan for the awesome swag for prizes!

Check out more photos here http://www.wetamarine.com/wetafest-day-three.html

Fort Walton gets a few extra's for their first Summer Series race!

BEAST!!!

When Race Chairman John Farris saw the Weta's arriving, he offered them a separate start at the FWYC Wednesday Night Fun Race - the challenge - get 3 boats on the line in time. Dave Kleinman and John Luzius and the man himself Chris Kitchen got out on the water in the nick of time.

With the wind blowing a steady 12 with puffs to 15, they blasted around a few marks and finished in front of the yacht club. Was it a photo finish? Did they duke it out? Hard to say - John Luzius was pretty laconic as he described the outing.

Finishing order - John Luzius, Chris Kitchen, Dave Kleinman. This, of course, will be Dave's throwout.

Arriving tonight will be the NY crew, and Dick is working hard to rig the charter boats for those arriving.

What an unexpected perk for those guys...I totally forgot tonight was the inaugural race for the summer series!

WAY TO GO!

Damn, should have been there.

C.

Spring has sprung in San Fran!

 We are lucky to have two reports on the Spring Dinghy - Dave Berntsen and Jonathon Weston with their different takes on the tight and tricky racing in classic San Fran conditions at the St Francis Spring Dinghy last weekend

Dave

About one week before this event, the weather pattern in SF switched from winter (cold/no wind) to spring (cold/wind).  I started to notice the fog rolling over the Marin headlands and sailboats populating the bay.  The weather for our first San Francisco race in 2013 was sunny and cool.  Water temps were in the mid 50’s and the air still had a spring time chill, not to be confused with the summertime chill!

There were 9 Wetas racing on the same course as last year, tucked inbetween Alcatraz and the Golden Gate Bridge, doing windward leewards with a starboard roundings and offsets to help cope with the tide. With a strong ebb on both days of racing, it was classic SF racing!  Just to weather of Alcatraz, there is some ebb tide relief behind the island and this generally where we started our races.  Just after the start we’d barrel off on starboard tack to the stronger ebb.  Once you hit the tide line it was like sailing into a river where the waves would build often with very short periods.  Once in the strong ebb, we’d do our best to maximize boat speed and let the ebb pull us to weather.  Downwind we’d look for a path with less ebb (not likely) and then surf our Wetas downwind in the strongest breeze we could find. Well that was the plan anyway!

The racing was full of position changes with strong presence from Bob Shirley (Ventura, CA) Gordon Lyon (SF), Jim Saarman (SF), Paul Marston (Ventura CA), Mark Simmel (SF), Jonathan Weston (SF).  Over the course of the weekend every Weta sailor made gains by sailing fast, choosing different sides of the race course, or just sailing smarter than others.  It was competitive racing all along. Top finishers for the race were; Jonathan Weston (1st), David Berntsen (me – 2nd), Bob Shirley (3rd). This is Jonathan Westons second year sailing Wetas,  he has a successful racing history with Laser’s and after a short retirement is making a sailing comeback on the Weta.   Bob Shirley is a very strong sailor and all around waterman, a life long surfer in So Cal, he knows how to make a boat move through the waves.  Dave Berntsen (me) we’ll I’m happy to be out sailing with a great group of guys.


The first race I had a lacklustre start and managed to chase Bob and Jonathan around the race course first lap.  At the first leeward mark rounding there were about 5 Wetas (Gordon, Mark, Jim, Paul) and I rounding together.  I got around first in this pack (still behind Bob and Jonathan) and had my focus on catching up when,....my freaking kite started to unfurl because of a bad furl.  All I could do was bear away, deploy the kite and then furl again before going to weather.  I tried this and – failed.  Had to bear away again before it furled correctly and I was able to start racing again, but lost my position from 3rd to 7th.  After the race I determined that my kite halyard was too loose, which made furling problematic.  I tugged on the halyard and furling worked for the rest of the regatta. 


I had an interesting weather rounding with Bob Shirley in the second race.  It was pretty windy and rough waves.  I was barrelling to the mark on port tack and Bob tacked to starboard layline ahead of me but came out of the tack a bit slow and was over standing the mark.  I followed with a quick tack to starboard and powered up quickly to catch him at the mark.  Bob was directly in front of me by less than a boat length and I directly behind.  We both bore away together and my boat was just a few feet behind his hull and we were both bearing away and powered up, boats bucking through the waves.  I’m sure my prod was overlapping his leeward tramp and I was just hoping that he did not slow down or else I would have run him over.  I’m surprised we never made contact, or I would have been screwed (penalty)!  We both unfurled and then separated.  I pulled ahead because my boat has the new Ronstan continuous furler and came out immediately.  Bob was using the Harken furler which takes some more care to deploy.  Super fun.


Other races on the first day, I did okay with a 2nd (to Jonathan) and first.  There’s no slacking off to keep up with the faster Weta sailors.  In order to do well in the regatta I needed to make no mistakes on Sunday and/or Jonathan had to do really badly.  Bob Shirley was only one point behind me so I needed to beat him consistently on Sunday to do well...


Day two of racing was an interesting start.  The skies were clear and the bay completely glassy at 10:00 AM.  The previous day there it was breezy by 9:00 AM, so we were not sure if there was going to be any racing on Sunday.  At best all we could do is set up our rigs for light air sailing.  I walked over to Jonathans boat and noticed that he was increasing the shroud length to pull the mast forward (to power up the boat).  My set up from Saturday was to shackle my shrouds to the ama (using shackles like the one on the jib or halyard) which raked the mast for windier conditions.  I figured, if Jonathon was going to power up his rig, I’d have to do so also.  After some adjustments at the dock my mast was vertical, with no rake.  After measuring Jonathans rig after the race, his rake was set at the same setting as mine.  Okay – a level playing field.  I set my rig tension light so there would be some head stay sag, to power up the jib for the expected light air conditions for Sunday.


So off we go to the starting line about 1 mile from the StFYC harbour.  Once we got there,  the wind started to fill in and I’m thinking, okay, I just set up my rig for light air and it’s going to blow 15-18 again!  There was no time to reset the rig rake so I hove to and crawled to the foredeck so I could get some more rig tension (which shortens the head stay and pulls the rig ever further forward), but I needed the tension to stiffen up the head stay and prep the boat for some bumpy sailing.  So for the rest of the day my challenge was to maximize boat speed and height with a rig setting that I was not used to using.  As the wind picked up I tightened up the jib and cranked on the main using just enough Cunningham to flatten the main without dumping all the leach tension in the top of the sail.  With the rig further forward, the bow definitely pressed into the water and the boat pitched forward cutting through waves.  Once I figured out the groove, I was able to get upwind pretty quick but not as fast as JW and Bob in the first and second races.


Downwind I chased Jonathon (a few times) and figured out that driving deep and keeping the boat flat and sailing/surfing the waves was not fast.  At the same time, Jonathon would be sailing higher angles, faster, longer distance, but would get downwind faster than me.  Bugger.   So I modified my downwind strategy by sailing higher, but just high enough to engage the leeward ama so that it was pressing down in the water enough to get some righting moment.  This increased flow over the daggerboard and at this point the boat would accelerate (apparent wind) increasing and everything clicked into place.  The trick was to find the line where there was flow over the blade and then surf the waves but not so long that the boat slowed down.  So downwind, sail higher and faster and engage the leeward ama and dagger board .  I was sitting aft with legs straight, feet braced in the cockpit floor (under super important hiking strap so I don’t fall off the back of the boat), butt over the rear aka tube.  With this new strategy, I could catch up to and pass Jonathon and Bob.


Last race I was fast downwind, so was Jonathan, but I was gaining on him.  On the last downwind leg, JW went on a flyer to the right into a strong ebb and waves and I figured that the ebb would be lighter on the other side of the course, so I jibed to the middle of the bay, where it was still windy.  This paid off as after we both jibed back we were one jibe from the finish and our positions were tight.  I was on starboard and JW was on port and we were going to pass very close.  I called out, “starboard” and JW luffed up as I had right of way and then bada boom, JW’s leeward ama hit my weather ama on the last 1” of the hull.  I sailed off to win the last race and JW did his penalty. 


Bob Shirley sailed super strong races and is definitely fast on his Weta. New to the Weta fleet, Paul Marston from Ventura (Pierpont Performance Sailing) picked up the boat super fast and is a competitive racer both up and down wind.  Sunday Paul double handed with Jared Brockway and with the combined weight on the rail were motoring to weather with the top of the fleet.


Gordon Lyon, Jim Saarman and Mark Simmel had competitive races and pushed their boats hard through the challenging conditions. Fun racing,  great group of guys, a lot of tactics in a dynamic and  always changing race course, strategy on boat setup and another good weekend of sailing.

Thanks to the StFYC for running a great regatta, providing food and free beer afterwards! For those reading that that will be at the FL Nationals next week, make sure you introduce yourselves to Jonathon Weston (big Kahuna) and Paul Marston who will be attending the regatta as West Coast Representatives!  Wish I could attend, but have family to attend to.  Next nationals will be in CA in 2014, so we’ll meet then

Results
Jonathon Weston – 1
David Berntsen – 2
Bob Shirley – 3
Mark Simmel – 4
Gordon Lyon – 5

Regards,

Dave






Great Racing and Learning at Charlotte Harbor Regatta 2013

Report by Cliff Farrah



Charlotte Harbor Regatta kicked off the Weta Florida Spring Series for 2013. The racing fleet was 6 strong, fewer than prior years, but strong in spirit and expecting a great regatta. We were not disappointed, and Thursday's practice started with gusts to the mid twenties. While others huddled on the beach, the Wetas went out and ripped around the bay.

Racing started at 10:55 AM on Friday, and sailors dealt with 44 degrees warming to low 70's. Richard and Keith came out strong, trading bullets and ending the day tied for first. Corsair 28R phenom and National Champion Tom Reese, a fellow New Yorker (in the summers) held on to third, while Dick, Matt and I rounded out the bottom half of the fleet. Shifty conditions dominated the day, with the earlier day's front having departed the area, leaving a turbulent mix for the race course. Boatspeeds as high as 13 were in the puffs, while the lulls offered 4 to 5 knots. Staying in the pressure paid, and the margins of victory were huge as Richard and Keith were able to extend their leads throughout the races.

Day 2 offered lighter air, with more shifts and puffs… The Weta racing was tighter, as the lower half of the fleet benefited from feedback as Richard and Keith shared their boat setup, and Tom worked to help us update rigging to the "improved" tweaks that the New Yorkers had done to the boat. I learned a ton that I'll post later from the perspective of a former Corsair racer.

Richard took the lead, with Keith 2 back and Tom in the hunt as we entered the final day of racing.

This was my favorite day on the water. After over a year off from racing, and having never sailed against a Weta before, I finally stopped worrying about the mechanics and got my head out of the boat. Crazy conditions, tight racing, races being won by feet, not miles and lead changes from the entire crew were the order of the day, and when the dust settled (or spray cleared), Richard took a well earned first place, Keith a hard fought second, Tom third, Cliff fourth, Dick fifth and newcomer Matt sixth (but coming down the curve quickly by the last day. Heartfelt congratulations all…I consider myself lucky to have been able to race with you, and to have you as friends. Well done!

I wish all of you reading this could have all been there. The regatta was well run, had a great venue, and I can't remember having as much fun on the water. It was great racing, and simple fun…I'll post a video, but on Sunday the Laser Masters fleet of over 60 boats started an hour early. I had 3 friends racing, and ran out to watch them. It was blowing as I cut across the fleet doing 15 knots as they went into sequence… Awesome! I can't wait until we have 60 Weta's on the line in a few years.  It will be great fun to worry about things like "line sag"…

So yes…the Yankees taught the Southerners how to sail the boat, but know that we are learning fast… Oh, and I'm really from Mass, Dick is from Alaska, and Matt? Matt, where are you from?

The next stop on the Weta Florida Spring Series is WetaFest 2013 – the East Coast Championship being held at FWYC on March 21 to 24. Will Jon live up to his hype, or will Jim Leonard teach him the error of his ways… Come race with us – over 20 boats have now committed verbally, including Chris Kitchen from Weta head office in New Zealand and I hope even more will come now that we have this critical mass. I believe this will be the largest gathering of Weta's in the US, and the winner will be flown to Cali to participate in the West Coast championship. Check out a silly video I made with my iPhone while I was having a rum drink at the regatta…

http://youtu.be/Pc3_60v7d9Y

– I scavenged pics off the web…hope some of you are in this.

HEY - Don't forget about the last event in the series – the Trimaran Nationals at Pensacola Yacht Club in May. Boats that attend all 3 are eligible for a drawing for a new Screecher with special WetaFest graphics.

2013 promises to be a great year for the Weta fleet in North America. We are building momentum, and I'm excited to be a part of it with you all.

C.



The Weta East Coast Champs - WetaFest will be held at the Fort Walton Yacht Club March 21-24. Check out the Weta Yahoo Forum to find out more info about the event or email miranda@wetamarine.com.

For full results and photos check out the Charlotte Harbor Regatta website