Since you are only as good as your last race, the Swiss nationals created plenty of scope for improvement for the rest of the season. Swiss cheese is famous for its holes and that's what I found in abundance in Ascona. The breeze was wildly random and I hit a log which took out the gantry after two and a half races - not the best circumstances for assessing racing strengths and weaknesses of a new boat. By definition the best and most consistent sailor wins and Matthias was impressively cool and fast so congratulations to him. It was also nice to be back on Lago Maggiore which is as beautiful as it is fickle - qualities I appreciate not just of sailing venues.
Last weekend I was up in another country famous for its cheese (no holes here however) to do some more time in the boat. Four of us braved the chop and breeze but before long I was alone as attrition took out prodders, pushrod terminations, and vang strops. My makeshift repairs on the gantry made some impressive noises but it all held together which is testament to the fact that Mike is now building a pretty solid boat. I sailed enough before going solo to find the low and fast upwind mode and that's nice as it has been a persistent and annoying gap (or is it a hole?) in the performance envelope. Left to my own resorts I invested some effort in learning to tack with the 16. I figured I needed to be completely level going into the tack as the top of the sail is so flat and feathered that it immediately backed and threw the boat on top of me if I started turning up with any amouint of windward heel. Usually I'm OK if I'm level when head to wind but with the 16, in a stiff breeze, I felt I had to anticipate that.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Sunday, May 26, 2013
The Cheese has Moved
The Swiss nationals are approaching and if all goes to plan I will be on the starting line. In theory I'm defending the title but in fact I will be looking for cheese. Last year I showed up in Geneva with a boat on which I had hundreds of hours, a boat that was never really fast but never slow, a boat on which I was confident I could win at the slowest possible speed.
The Cheese has definitely moved since then. There's a new boat with higher top speed but it's the average that counts and I have no idea what that average is and how to keep it up - I've just got a couple of hours in the boat in its current configuration. I hear Switzerland is right up there as far as places to look for cheese go and that's what I'll be doing.
The "Handwriting On the Wall" (from Who Moved My Cheese? by Spencer Johnson):
The Cheese has definitely moved since then. There's a new boat with higher top speed but it's the average that counts and I have no idea what that average is and how to keep it up - I've just got a couple of hours in the boat in its current configuration. I hear Switzerland is right up there as far as places to look for cheese go and that's what I'll be doing.
The "Handwriting On the Wall" (from Who Moved My Cheese? by Spencer Johnson):
- Change Happens
- They Keep Moving The Cheese
- Anticipate Change
- Get Ready For The Cheese To Move
- Monitor Change
- Smell The Cheese Often So You Know When It Is Getting Old
- Adapt To Change Quickly
- The Quicker You Let Go Of Old Cheese, The Sooner You Can Enjoy New Cheese
- Change
- Move With The Cheese
- Enjoy Change!
- Savor The Adventure And Enjoy The Taste Of New Cheese!
- Be Ready To Change Quickly And Enjoy It Again
- They Keep Moving The Cheese.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
My Religion
3915 combined some pretty innovative features. The question is where to go next. Radical ideas or subtle refinement? Maybe a bit of both. Can't stay in one place, can't get comfortable. It's a religious question.
Monday, January 14, 2013
WHY?
Why sail a Moth? I’ve come across a bit of backlash from the
technological complexity of the upcoming edition of the America’s Cup. I’ve
seen it in print, from the pens of esteemed sailors and heard it at the bar.
The question of the relevance of tech to grass roots sailing is being brought
up. It’s easy to forget that the venerable Beetle Cat, at some time not so
long ago, would have been the essence of modernity – centreboards and upwind
sailing considered the devil’s work by the staunchest conservatives.
Getting back to the Moth question, the first part of the
answer is because sailing has always been about moving forward, exploring what’s
just over the horizon and eventually across the ocean. The quest for discovery
is part of the spirit of sailing itself – very much at the grass roots. When it
comes specifically to the Moth, it’s just that the questions are more
interesting, the answers more diverse, the speed and manoeuvrability more exciting,
the tactics more complex. There’s probably more but this is enough for me.
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