Monthly Archives: January 2016

Xtreme Sailing Series: Looking back and looking ahead to a new era of foiling

by extremesailingseries.com

© Sander van der Borch / Bullitt GC32 Racing Tour

© Sander van der Borch / Bullitt GC32 Racing Tour

From humble beginnings as a team of six working out of his apartment in the sleepy seaside town of Cowes, Mark Turner, Executive Chairman of OC Sport, has created an empire. Turner’s clear vision to innovate, to push the boundaries and to never rest on his laurels has changed the face of sailing, he talks us through the nine exceptional years of the Extreme Sailing Series™.

I am very proud that we are now going into our 10th season. Looking back, we started in 2007 with four boats and four venues, just in Europe, and we have continued to break ground and innovate. The Extreme Sailing Series™ has certainly been a catalyst for a lot of change in the sport. Even ultimately to the point where foiling, that we are now embracing in 2016 with the GC32s, probably wouldn’t have seen the light of day if the Series hadn’t kicked it off by making multihull racing credible and accessible outside France where it has been accepted for decades.

We have made the sport more accessible and engaging bringing sailing closer to audiences and making guest sailing, from a sponsorship perspective, a core part of any professional sailing event. We used colourful boats – as opposed to lots of white sails – we race on a platform that accelerates and does things that non-sailors can relate to and will prompt them to pull their camera or phone up and take a picture.

Over the years I’ve seen lots of fads and design ideas come and go. But foiling is the only thing that I’ve seen happen that has gripped an entire sport, from someone trying to make a Laser go foiling to kiteboarders, surfboarders and even people trying to paddle a pedalo with foils. It’s been a revolution. It’s a new set of speed dynamics and I think we needed to move to that. We are not leading in that aspect but we are able to bring that into what is a leading global professional circuit. I think it gives us a re-fresh and a new chapter in the event.

It also gives the sailors and race management a new challenge without compromising our core values – we’ve got to learn to manage the line between what’s spectacular and what’s safe. There is a delicate balance between all these elements that we’ve managed very well for the last 10 years and, in Phil Lawrence, we’ve got the best possible Race Director.

It will be challenging and the foiling adds something in one particular aspect. A small difference in windspeed or direction can generate a very large difference in boatspeed – 10 knots almost instantaneously up and down again. That will be one of the most demanding elements to manage but it will also be one of the most spectacular features of the racing for audiences to enjoy.

The proximity of the boats to the shore has always been a key ingredient and will continue to be so. A boat sailing 800 metres away is not really that impressive to anyone, regardless of what kind of boat it is. The speed is not really felt. But when a boat is 10 metres away, that’s when it’s very impressive. That’s why proximity is so important and it’s something that other events have perhaps not understood. I am big fan of the visual aspect we may lose a little of the boats lifting a hull up to 30 degrees above the water and the guys hanging on as it sails past but it will be easily made up for by the acceleration that foiling will bring and the fact that it will be happening so close to spectators.

The Humble Water Bottle

11thtr

With that humble refillable water bottle, 11th Hour Racing has made great strides and reached many milestones. We focused 2015 on building collaborative and strategic partnerships within the sailing communities by funding projects that promote change for the health of the marine environments.

Our portfolio of Grantees continues to grow, with nine new partners; 11th Hour Racing funds innovative efforts advancing clean technologies, fostering environmental stewardship, promoting youth education and addressing ocean pollution.

We’ve seen tremendous progress in the field of sustainable events, teams, fan engagement, reporting and environmental responsibility through our Sponsorships Program, including impactful efforts from the 52 Super Series, the Atlantic Cup, and the International Moth US Class. Smaller but poignant sponsorships have included the Vineyard Cup and newportFILM, while another top-tier sponsorship is in the pipeline for 2016 and beyond.

As we approach the end of the year, we wish to thank our 11th Hour Racing Ambassadors for their continued support and participation. Their volunteer role is an important element to the success of our program and is fundamental in engaging sports fans around the world towards a more sustainable future.

– Happy New Year from the 11th Hour Racing Team –
December 2015
Newport, RI, USA

Scheurer G7 A-Class Catamaran with new foils

by a-cat.org

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwE6d4xbmDg]

Scheurer test pilot, Sandro Caviezel, unveils the latest foil designs for the Scheurer G7.

Best Christmas Gift Ever

My intention was to continue with some recaps of the past sailing season and the development we did so far but there are some news I would like to share.

Scheurer G7

Scheurer G7

After the Worlds in Punta Ala we decided to develop a new daggerboard. Until the Worlds there was nothing available that was obviously faster as our J-board. But we already considered that the DNA guys are doing really well. One year ago in Maubuisson we could keep up with them, but as the conditions in that time were really unsteady and gusty, it was not easy to compare. Furthermore the water was really flat all the time which was good for our foil. Later in Punta Ala, we noticed that especially in mid range conditions with building waves, we were a little bit behind. This is based on our shorter daggerboard compared to others. If the breeze and waves were building, further up the differences were getting smaller as in strong breeze conditions everybody is struggling to keep the foils in the water (as also do other boat classes as eg. the Moths). We also noticed that in the lower wind range we were doing really well and we could keep up with classic C-board boats which is really an advantage. However, it seems that the new rigs are working so efficient that you can foil almost in every race that is held in regular conditions (wind > 5 knots).

Based on this analysis, the design goals for our new daggerboards were:

  • improve stability
  • keep light wind performance
  • more lift (for light wind foiling downwind and upwind foiling in mid range conditions)
Scheurer G7

Scheurer G7

Improving stability and getting a longer foil was going hand in hand by opening the angle of the lifting surface a little bit. If you take into account a force equilibrium of an A-Class platform using both daggerboards for foiling, you can find an construction angle for which the leeward foil has a force-minimum to produce (boundary conditions: foiling on two foils). With CFD simulations we took into account deformations (and therefore change of the angle of the lifting surface) to get the right angle while loaded.

Next design goal was to keep the existing light wind performance while increasing lift. The light wind performance is best analysed looking at the upwind performance in floating mode. We were playing around with toe-in angles and symmetrical and asymmetrical sections. It was a little bit like finding a needle in haystack to find the optimal solutions for upwind sailing and downwind foiling. The tricky thing is to get everything sorted out so that the daggerboards are pushing against each other on the downwind and so creating a big “V” which gives you great stability. The sections of the board have to be carefully selected so the windward foil doesn’t produce a force while sailing upwind to not loose any righting moment.

To cut a long story short, we think we found the solution. Just to give you an idea of how sensible the whole system was: During development we started with the daggerboard “01a”. Every time we changed the outline we also changed the number . Whenever we changed the section we also changed the letter. The final solution has the internal number “14o” 😉

Scheurer G7

Scheurer G7

Development was quite time-consuming which resulted in not being on the water since the Worlds in Punta Ala. We took advantage of a little bit of wind last Monday to go on the water for the first test. We were still sailing with classic mains and tramps so we could compare only the old daggerboard to the new one and the results were really convincing. We started in a very light breeze (below 4 knots) where no performance difference was noticeable. As the breeze was picking up a little (8 – 10 knots) we find a performance advantage of the new foil compared to the old one in terms of pure speed, controllability and handling. Upwind in classic floating mode we found no performance difference, so we tried upwind foiling (which was not efficient with the old daggerboard). It was possible to get the boat on the foils and the feeling was really great and easy. It seems definitely the way to go and I’m really looking forward to get things sorted out for upwind foiling. I think bringing down the point of sail force application using the new style decksweeper sails is the obvious next step.

The Next Steps:

We will run a few more tests and improve some details for final production solution of the daggerboard. We should be ready for production mid February. I will keep you up to date. Next test will be together with Sascha who was developing in the meantime together with Felix & Landy the LOD decksweeper and tramp.

So, we (Daniel, Andy, Aron and the Scheurwerft crew and myself) wish you a peaceful Christmas season and a good start to a promising year 2016.

Cheers!

Sandro

Buenos Aires Foiling Long Distance 2015

by catsailingnews.com

[youtube=https://youtu.be/Gbh7zVUfUGA]

Regatta Report: The race was scheduled for saturday 1PM, a decreasing wind forescast was know, but the cat guys couldn´t race the next day, so all foilers went out to start the first class combined foiling Long Distance in BA: 3 Kite Foilers, 4 F20s, 2 As, 2 Moths & 1 FP.
Just before the start the wind dropped from some good 10 knots and only one Kiter was left literally standing, but he managed to dominated the short upwind leg to first buoy and the following reaching mark +500mts to shore. The Kiter established a gap of +1 minute ahead of the Nacra 20s and the top A, Moths and the FP followed behind.

Copyright Catsailingnews.com

Copyright Catsailingnews.com

After the Kiter, Nico Ocariz,  lead through the offset he just couldn´t get going and it was race over for him as wind kept decreasing in intensity. The rest of the fleet went for a first leg upwind to the turning point mark near BA port.
It  was a lottery with lulls , holes and wind from every direction as it tried to establish itself 180° from the North. Nevertheless it was a interesting tactical regatta, where you needed to see the transition taking place and act accordingly, some like the FP crew couldn´t react though as the were stuck too close to the coast while the F20 in last place at the moment went offshore searching for more breeze.

Copyright Catsailingnews.com

Copyright Catsailingnews.com

The move payed off and the fastest F18 & F20 foiler local crew, Juan Faustin & Nico Aragones, started foiling upwind! while the others watched in awe (watch shorth video above). These guys were eating distance like melted butter. Meanwhile the leaders, Cruz & Mariano reached the turning point Mark with a good lead, although the raid was far from over…

They decided to go for the last Southern gust near the shore to raise Spi, they gained some meters but wind began to establish a solid NorthEast direction benefiting those who decided (again) to go for the outside,  like Juan & Nico and Segio in the A, who was 3rd at the moment.

Copyright Catsailingnews.com

Copyright Catsailingnews.com

So in the outside Juan & Nico’s F20 went for an upwind/reach full leg followed by Sergio DNA who was maintaining the speed rythm in that sailing course towards the second last mark that became upwind again on the wind chage direction.

Faustin reached first to that Mark while Smith-Heuser were pointing high from the coast now in 4th place behind Fede-Lucas F20.  Sergio reached  3rd to the offset,  really close to the leading 20s.

After the final mark Faustin did a short final downwind leg to extend lead, the A lost too much ground without any spi to raise for the last short ride to finish in 4th place overall.

In the end we could match much performance on the conditions, but it was a first good try who reinforced some aspects:

  • Kite Foils (underwater & up) are simply untouchable if they are able to fly the kite, they need +6/7knots – Below that range they are useless.
  • Moths did pretty well for moments considering the conditions , but then again, they are another perfect winds machine. Get a caddie for them in long Distance racing.
  • The Dna / Decksweeper is quite dangerous for the double handed/ spi equipped foiler on the upwind legs, we did some tests last week downwind with spi for the F20s and it was not contest with the A foiling good.
  • F20 vs FP was sadly no measurable in the end this time, so don´t start speculating cause is worthless, if lottery breeze would have established from the coast it was advantage for the FP position.  The 20s had a way better start though with Juan & Nico lightweight and skills showing off their foiling abilities.

The most interesting performance measure was the start, with photo progression below with the Kite Foiler killing the fleet.  Remember it was a short upwind and then a reach offset to start the way to the long distance mark upwind.

Final Standings:
1st  Juan Faustin & Nico Aragones – Team Forward Sailing: 1:53:07 – F20
2nd Federico Ferioli-Lucas Gonzalez Smith – Team Código Rojo 1:54:33 – F20
3rd  Cruz Gonzalez Smith-Mariano Heuser – 1:58:17  – F20
4th  Sergio Mehl 2:02:12 – A-Class
5th  Sergio Armesto- Ian Rodger 2:05:00 FP
6th  Francisco Bellochio 2:16:45 Moth
7th  Julio Saubidet 2:17:08 – Aclass
8th  Pablo Volker 2:29:03 – Moth

Text, images and video are sourced and copyrighted by Catsailingnews.com

IKA or IKFO… Which World Tour?

by kitenews.fr

hfpt

Our trusty readers of Kitenews.fr will already be fully aware that the general atmosphere in the kiting world is wobbly and uncertain to say the least. There seems to be a bit of showdown in all disciplines making for an entertaining king-of-the-playground FFV (French sailing federation) vs FFVL (French kitesurf federation) brawl!
Within the discipline of Foil, several of the 2015 KiteFoil Gold Cup organisers got together and decided to make up a tour to rival the current IKA. Rob Dean, former IKA racing manager, is at the helm of this second new foil tour, which is to be named the Hydrofoil Tour. As the saying goes, three is the magic number ! And there is an another third foil tour : IKFO World Tour. The first event is planned to take place at FestiKite (Villeneuve les Maguelone, France) as the Silver Cup and the race organiser is no other than yet another IKA defector!

Turning now to the world of freestyle; with a VKWC not showing any signs of life since the Germany Tour Stop in August, the IKA has announced its own world tour, having so far outlined the following 4 dates;
Dakhla in early march (ex VKWC)
El Gouna mid march
Leucate for the Mondial du Vent (although still no confirmation from organisers)
Fuerteventura with René Egli (ex VKWC) this summer

Rumours suggest that the IFKO isn’t resting dormant in freestyle. They will almost certainly host a Youth World Championship in St Pierre La Mer (ex EJKC European Junior Kite Cup location) and there are a few dates floating around in talks for a IKFO Senior World Tour.
All should become clearer in the coming weeks, notably with the GM in Rome at the end of this month.
Stay tuned!

WASZP status

Designer Andrew McDougall on the status of the WASZP…

Today we sailed the boat after installing a new production mast, a new wand control system, production injection parts, and an improved mainsheet system. As you can see from the video the boat is really coming to life now.
The sailor is Harry Mighell, (pronounced My-ell). Harry has taken the Waszp to heart and has been out testing on it more than anyone. He holds the speed record of 24.79 kn. He has been working for us for nearly 6 months now, concentrating mainly on fluid analysis. He has taken over the design of the foil tips from me and has done a magnificent job on that and getting the dynamics of the foil systems right.

WASZP-2015-12-22-1

You may notice that the sail is cambered (pocket luff). If you read my last blog I was fully committed to going with a bolt rope sail. We are not going that way. We have solved the issue of rigging the cambered sail by simply reducing the weight of the rig. The prototype mast we have been using was a lot heavier than the new production mast, and the new sail is also significantly lighter than the original prototype sail. It’s now much much easier to get the mast in. It’s amazing what a kilo or two will do when it’s 5 m away from you!

WASZP-2015-12-22-2

We did put a lot of time in on the bolt rope sail. We found two serious issues which we solved, but the solutions were not elegant and did not have a place on this clean boat.

In late November I spent a long stretch at McCongahy and resolved a range of issues.
We built fully assembled master boat to align the ‘Green Jig’ (read more here) to ensure everything lined up millimetre perfect. Everything came together really well and we built the first production hull.
We now have two hull moulds complete and another two in final preparation, along with two Green jigs, so we are ready to build hulls.
At this www we remain on track for first WASZP’s to start shipping in March.
I just need to finalalize the sail and make sure we don’t miss our production slot.

Apologies for the shaky video, we have not had time to get someone down to do a proper shoot. So it is just me with a basic SLR, without my glasses and hanging off the rocking RIB!

2016 Moth Australian Championship: Final Day, Josh Mcknight finishes the job in thunderstorms

By Jonny Fullerton, Grand Prix Sailing

McDougall McConaghy 2016 International Moth Australian Championship in Perth, WA

Thunder and lightning threatened over the Perth city skyline on the final day of the McDougall McConaghy Australian Moth Championships but an early start meant a number of competitors were slow to get afloat for the first of three final races.

Josh Mcknight. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Josh Mcknight. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

The PRO Les Swinton fired his gun for a 3 lap race in a shifty 15 knot NE/E breeze. Britain’s Ed Chapman was still frantically foiling to the start line in the final seconds, rounded the committee boat and picked the first shift perfectly to lead around the course and never look back. Some of the favourites were less fortunate. Runaway leader Josh Mcknight (NSW) hit the ground in one of the many shallow patches and limped round to finish 31st (his second discard). Many other competitors went for a pitstop ashore to change foils due to the the impending storm clouds. Rob Gough (TAS) used the situation to his advantage to finish in second with Reece Tailby from RPAYC in Sydney, enjoying the freshening conditions in third.

As race 2 started the breeze was already shifting further East and building and the lightning flashing around the shoreline. It was back to business as usual with Josh Mcknight doing somewhat of a horizon job on the fleet with the ever consistent Rob Gough in second. Reece Talby claimed third again.

As the final race approached the thunderstorm really broke and a reduced fleet blasted around the track in a gusty 25 knots with gusts of 30! It was wipeouts everywhere, even the top sailors had control issues especially at the bottom rounding. However it didn’t slow down the flying Sydneysider, who finished the regatta in style with a bullet to build his tally to 12 wins in 15 races. Rob Gough sealed second overall and Ed Chapman settled for third crashing around the course at every turn.

Steve Thomas. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Steve Thomas. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

WA’s Steve Thomas also suffered some impressive face-plants but managed to hold on to 4th overall and Grand Master Andrew ‘Amac’ McDougall (VIC) 5th despite his wipeouts. The fleet got back ashore just before it got a bit ugly.

Emma Jane Spiers (NSW) finished as top female in 30th place.

The host club, the South of Perth Yacht Club did a good job in a variety of testing conditions and hospitality ashore was well received. A large number of spectators afloat and ashore marvelled at the site of the flying moths and it is no doubt the class is growing in WA.

For full results and more info go to: sopyc.com.au
Facebook site: 2016 Australian Moth Championships

Sponsors & suppliers to the event include: McDougall McConaghy, Deck Hardware, Zhik, CST Composites, Knee Deep and Matso’s Brewery.

2016 Moth Australian Championship: Day 4, Moths wilting in the heat

By Jonny Fullerton, Grand Prix Sailing

McDougall McConaghy 2016 International Moth Australian Championship in Perth, WA

The moth fleet sweltered in the heat scattered around the boat park at the South of Perth Yacht Club under the shade of trees and in air conditioned rooms waiting for the scorching Easterly breeze to stabilise.

With the thermometer reaching around 42 degrees mid afternoon, race officer Les Swinton sniffed a small window of opportunity to squeeze two quick races in when the sea breeze finally forced its way down the Swan River.

There was a lot of ‘bimbling’ around the boat park and mothies strugglng in their choice of size of foils, (critical to have the right foil for the wind speed as it turns out!).

Josh Mcknight. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Josh Mcknight. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

In race one of the day (race 11 of the series) the unstoppable force that is Josh Mcknight (NSW) again led the fleet round the race track in the short two lap race held in a 11-12 knot WSW patchy breeze.

Places from 2 – 5 changed on almost every leg but the ever reliable Tasmanian Rob Gough sealed second with the lone British competitor Ed Chapman taking third. Andrew McDougall (VIC) took fourth and Steve Thomas (WA) fifth.

Rob Gough. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Rob Gough. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Race 12 started soon after with an extra lap before a big thunderstorm threatened to shut down the breeze again for the day. Andrew ‘Amac’ McDougall bolted off the pin end of the start line timing it perfectly and challenged guess who? (yes Josh Mcknight) for the lead on lap 1 but it didn’t take long for the irresistible force to snatch the lead and never look back. WA’s Steve Thomas pushed Josh hard on the second lap and looked good for second before just losing out to the flying Brit, Ed Chapman on the final lap. Amac dropped a few spots allowing Rob Gough to recover to fourth. Victorian Harold Mighell scored his best result of the championship with a 5th.

Steve Thomas describes his day:

I started the first race a bit shaky, I didn’t get off the line very cleanly, i worked my way back into the race to score a keeper.

In the second race I had a good one, rounding the top mark on the transom of Josh and from there stayed just behind Josh but a couple of crashes off the foils put my back into 5th. But I had a good upwind on the third lap and a reasonable downwind with only one crash.

The breeze was a lot further west than the true sea breeze and just surged a couple of times to get everyone excited but it has been quite unusual weather for the last couple of days.

Stefano Ferrighi. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Stefano Ferrighi. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

The two Italian brothers from Lake Garda, Stefano and Gian Maria Ferrighi both had a good day, Stefano with a (5,8) to move up to 7th overall and Gian with a (6,7) to climb to 13th.

Emma Spiers. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Emma Spiers. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

First female sailor is still Emma Jane Spiers from Sydney (NSW) who remains in 29th place overall.

So with one more race day to go, Josh Mcknight has one hand on the trophy with a scorecard of no less than 10 bullets as the second discard comes into play. Rob Gough looks quite comfortable in second with 25pts and Ed Chapman of GBR in third with 34pts. Steve Thomas is just off the podium in fourth.

Racing starts earlier on the final day with 3 more races starting at 1100 hrs local. The cold Matso’s beer tasted good on return ashore but lets hope the temperature drops a little for the carbon foils to cool down.

For full results and more info go to: sopyc.com.au
Facebook site: 2016 Australian Moth Championships

Sponsors & suppliers to the event include: McDougall McConaghy, Deck Hardware, Zhik, CST Composites, Knee Deep and Matso’s Brewery.

2016 Moth Australian Championship: Day3, Perth turns it on with flawless foiling day

By Jonny Fullerton, Grand Prix Sailing

McDougall McConaghy 2016 International Moth Australian Championship in Perth, WA

Perth delivered a fantastic days racing on day three of the McDougall McConachy Moth Australian Championship in hazy sunshine and a more stable 15 – 16 knot westerly and flat water. Perfect foiling conditions for the fleet of 54 moths. Three more races and the same names beginning to take a hold of the championship leaderboard.

Josh Mcknight. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Josh Mcknight. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

It was another masterclass by Josh Mcknight from RPAYC in Sydney. He blitzed the fleet in all three races even with a slight hi-cup in race 2 of the day when his outhaul came apart forcing him to nurse his boat downwind! His boat handling skill and raw speed sees him open up a 14 point lead overall.

Having another consistent day, Rob Gough from Tasmania enjoyed the fresher conditions. (3,2,4). Rob just dropped two places on the final leg of the last race of the day choosing the wrong side of the race track. The slightest mistake and you get punished at this level!

“On the last leg a couple of people went hard left and got an absolute ripper of a lift and came in, you have to work really hard, you can’t ease back at all, hike your guts off upwind and try and pick the shifts downwind.” Rob Gough

On sailing on the Swan River;
“I race mainly on the Derwent (Tasmania) and the lighter breeze is a bit like a westerly on the Derwent and quite flat water and big shifts so I quite like that and then we get the big sea breezes so its similar but normally we get more waves and I quite like the waves.”

Steve Thomas. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Steve Thomas. Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Also sailing very consistently is Brit, Ed Chapman who finished the day with a (4,4,3) to keep third overall and local WA sailor Steve Thomas carding a (2,5,7). He sits just off the podium in fourth.

Staying in the mix at the top end of the fleet is Amac (VIC), and the NSW moth squadron, Kurtis Warner, Warren Sare and Les Thorpe.

Despite the threat of the Scotsman with the infamous starting rifle (PRO Les Swinton), a number of mothies were caught over the start line (OCS) in judging their time on distance to the gun. Unlike most classes the moths start at full tilt and the front runners are already 500 meters ahead after one minute of racing!

One sailor who got caught today was Kohei Kajimoto of Japan who uses up his discard but still stays in 7th overall. Kohei recently married Wakako Tabata who is in a real battle with Emma Jane Spiers for the title of top female in the championship. Emma currently sits in 29th and Wakako 30th.

Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

The skill level at the top end of the fleet is a joy to watch but for many its a achievement to get round the course in one piece without too many wipeouts. The free supply of Redbull on shore helps some to last the distance.

In the last race of the day a cruiser fleet racing in an afternoon twilight race looked to be in danger of an invasion by a cluster of moths doing around 25 knots but thankfully the wise PRO armed with his shotgun had already made arrangements with the organising club to avoid any catastrophe.

Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

Image by Rick Steuart of Perth Sailing Photography

So it was a weary but mostly happy fleet of moth sailors returning to the comfort of the host club South of Perth Yacht Club for the now obligatory snags and Matso beer on ice.

The penultimate day of racing starts at the regular time of 1300hrs local. Stay tuned for more frantic foiling frolics.

For full results and more info go to: sopyc.com.au
Facebook site: 2016 Australian Moth Championships

Sponsors & suppliers to the event include: McDougall McConaghy, Deck Hardware, Zhik, CST Composites, Knee Deep and Matso’s Brewery.

2016 Moth Australian Championship: Day2, Josh Mcknight puts the hammer down

By Jonny Fullerton, Grand Prix Sailing

McDougall McConaghy 2016 International Moth Australian Championship in Perth, WA

After a hazy start, day two of the McDougall McConaghy 2016 International Moth Australian Championship was a much better day for racing out on the Swan river in Perth, WA.

Around midday a light and shifty breeze filled in from around 290 degrees enabling the PRO Les Swinton to bang off four short races to keep the series on track.

The patchy 7 – 11 knot breeze was just enough for most of the fleet to get foiling but the race course was still tough to read and involved keeping the head out of the boat to search for the shifts, (much easier to do when foiling 1m above the water!). After the third race of the day the sea breeze threatened with a big shift to 245 degrees and a cool feel to go with it but it really didn’t establish above 12 knots.

The starts again proved crucial and Josh Mcknight (NSW) showed his class with 3 straight bullets and a 3rd to lead the championship by 8 points. His boat handling is a class apart but he was pushed hard by Rob Gough (TAS) who scored consistently with (2,3,6,2) for the day. Rob sits in second overall with 16 points.

Ed Chapman. Image by Cameron Elliott

Ed Chapman. Image by Cameron Elliott

The top international sailor Ed Chapman from Great Britain also had an excellent day moving up from 18th overall yesterday to third today. He scored (8,2,1,3). When asked about his speed on the water today Ed explained:

“A nice day on the water, I think everyone was powered up nothing like yesterday. Today was quite a lot like when I am sailing in the UK, its quite like lake sailing so as long as you have your head out the boat, you can spot the shifts and be able to do ok. You can pull yourself back through the fleet. In a couple of races I didn’t manage to get off the start line like I would have liked but still managed to battle through and get a result.”

On his starting strategy;

“I was pretty conventional on the starts today, massively low risk. You want to be foiling with about 10 – 15 seconds to go, especially in this type of breeze. Then you really need to control your speed so that you are not covering too much distance to the pin and not burning your options.”

Fleet-Day-2_low

Image by Cameron Elliott

Most of the other leading competitors picked up at least one double digit result. Local WA sailor Steve Thomas suffered in the last race of the day to drop to fourth overall shared with Andrew ‘Amac’ McDougall who had to drop his DNC in the first race, both remain in the hunt.

The second international sailor and going well is Kohei Kajimoto of Japan who is also in the mix in seventh overall.

Of the ladies, class secretary, Emma Jane Spiers (NSW) sits in 27th just three places in front of Wakako Tabata of Japan.

So some tired mothies returned ashore for more snags and Matso beer and to share tuning tips, settings, fiddle with rigs etc etc and prepare for day three on Wednesday with a race start time of 1300 hrs local.

For full results and more info go to: sopyc.com.au
Facebook site: 2016 Australian Moth Championships

Sponsors & suppliers to the event include: McDougall McConaghy, Deck Hardware, Zhik, CST Composites, Knee Deep and Matso’s Brewery.