Sunday, March 16, 2014

Header Photo: Interclub Dinghies off the Naval Academy Seawall




Interclub Dinghies coming up the last windward leg during their mid-winters - a true mid-winter regatta - held off Annapolis the end of January. A frigid frostbite regatta that proved to me that the Interclub is probably one of the best dinghies when you would want to sail in sub-freezing temperatures.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Quadcopter View of a Keeler Regatta: 2014 Heineken Regatta

Bear with me dear reader. I have yet to get my fill of quadcopter sailing videos. At some point they will get boring, but not yet. Even this keelboat regatta viewed from above is fascinating.

From Pigeon Vision.



2014 Heineken Regatta filmed by a Drone from Pigeon Vision on Vimeo.


Monday, March 10, 2014

Classic Moth drifting around Rhode River.

I've had some video clips hanging around my computer for at least two years. I've just got round to collating some of the clips into a video short of the blogmeister going on a very light air drift in his Classic Moth around Rhode River (one of the rivers just south of Annapolis). Nothing exciting at all about this day-sail but since all kinds of dreck gets posted on YouTube, I'll occasionally keep adding mine.




Sunday, March 9, 2014

Why the RS300 is Better than the Laser - Let's Stir the Pot!

(For this  post I borrow the title and concept from Tillerman's popular series "Why XYZ class is better than the Laser" to make a point using sideways logic.)

If you sift through comments in various dinghy forums about the introduction of the two new entrants in the Laser-sized hiking singlehanded market (the singlehander sans the assymetric chute), the RS Aero and the Devotti D-Zero, there seems to be a vocal majority that want to see the Laser displaced because;

  1. After forty years we need to incorporate newer technology (i.e. epoxy construction, carbon spars, laminate sails), a modern hull-shape and a double-bottom, flow-thru deck layout etc.
  2. After forty years, we should be able to get a faster hiking singlehander than the Laser.

Surprise! surprise! RS has had this hiking singlehander in their U.K. product line for fifteen years. It is the RS300 and it fulfills both of these requirements.

  1. The RS300 has carbon spars, laminate sails, and a double bottom layout, sexy flares - nothing Laser-like about this design..
  2. The RS300 is fast; faster than the Laser, faster than the Olympic Finn, and probably, when the smoke clears, faster than both the brand new RS Aero and the Devotti D-Zero.

The RS300 sold like hotcakes,  Right? Wrong. Although it has achieved a solid base of committed sailors (Steve Cockerill, the man behind Rooster Sailing was a particular fan and won several national championships), the RS300 never achieved runaway popularity. Why? It was much too tippy for the average sailor. Designed by Clive Everest, who made a name for himself in the very narrow International Moth class before it foiled, the RS300 doesn't have a flat section anywhere. In degree of difficulty, the RS300 rates behind the International Moth but probably close to the International Canoe - not a formula for mass-market success. In this case, the race for market success doesn't always go to the swiftest or sexiest.

I have come across two entertaining YouTubes of sailors trying to master the RS300.








A caveat. This blogger has never seen a RS300, let alone sailed one. Also this blogger doesn't live in the U.K so much of this info is from what I can glean from the InterWebs.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

The Quadcopter Sailing Videos Keep Coming: Foiler Moths

From the same English quadcopter video wizards, LPB Aerial Imagery, who did the winter dinghy start video I featured a couple of weeks ago; an over the top view of foiler International Moths.

Way cool. Stunning shot of flying boats speeding into the wintry sun.



Moths foiling sbsc rough clips from LPB Aerial Imagery on Vimeo.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

AH-WOOGA! AH-WOOGA! Laser Market Sector under attack!

Given the current uncertainty in who has the right to produce the Laser, combined with the feeling that it's time to modernize the mass-market hiking singlehander, two manufacturers unveiled hiking singlehanders (RS Aero and the Devotti D-Zero) smack-dab in the Laser size range during the U.K dinghy show this past weekend. Both are considerably lighter than the Laser with a more "modern" hull shape. I have my opinions about whether one of these two will eventually achieve the Laser mantle in the future - I'll save that for a future post. First, as a background, let me direct you to Tillerman's more detailed post on the RS Aero. For the rest of the post I'll let the readers of Earwigoagin absorb the design concepts as explained by the designers/builders behind these two new dinghies, as voiced in YouTube interviews during the dinghy show.

First the RS Aero design team:

Hmmm! Well, that video disappeared from public consumption after one day. Oops! No it hasn't, it's back again. TOH to the chaps at Yachts and Yachting.


And Dan Holman, designer of the Devotti D-Zero, courtesy of the RYA roving reporter:



Another recent singlehander around the same size of the Laser, though not designed with the upper end performance criteria of the RS Aero or Devotti D-Zero, here is my post on the Australian GO 4.8 singlehander.

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Life During the Polar Vortex: The Interclub Dinghy Midwinters

I got an email from Alex Stout of SSA in early January stating that he was short one RC member for the Interclub Dinghy Midwinters slated to take place the end of January in Annapolis. After taking inventory of my shopworn and dated thermal outerwear (my drysuit from the 1990's is long gone - even the replacement seals have again rotted away), and expecting the normal daytime highs for January to remain around 40 F. ( 5 degree C.). - I agreed to fill out the team.

However in the week preceding the Midwinters, the Mid-Atlantic experienced some of the coldest winter temperatures in years with night-time temperatures plunging near 0 degree F. (-17 C.) and daytime temperatures hanging around 20 F. (-7 C.). The regatta weekend didn't look much better; temperatures on Saturday were to briefly get above freezing around 3 in the afternoon, not so on Sunday. Saturday's breeze looked to be very strong from the South. Needless to say I was having second thoughts about hanging out on the race committee boat in such conditions.

I drove down Saturday morning, hoping that Spa Creek in front of the club had iced over. That wasn't the case. (Turned out that there was a boat fire at a marina that week on the next creek over, Back Creek, and the Annapolis fireboats, in responding, had chopped up the skim ice that had been forming in front of the club.) I then was hoping that the breeze was too strong for the conditions -  which was exactly the case when I showed up. There was a delay - more-so to locate a pump - for, the Interclub is not self rescuing and requires a pump boat to remove the water in the event of a capsize. I was then hoping that the local rent-it places were out of pumps since there had been a spate of broken water pipes in this week of unrelenting cold. After two hours the search team located a pump and returned and by that time the breeze had moderated. Against all my hopes, the decision was made to send the sailors out.

The Interclub Midwinters are run like a college regatta, with results scored as a team comprised of an A division skipper/crew and B division skipper and crew. This is very sensible for the sailors for, at most, no team is out on the water longer than about an hour to an hour and a half. However, as I was to find out, this did not excuse the race committee from being on-station for the duration of the day. I made it through, for the most part, warm enough but by the end my feet were complaining despite several layers of socks.

Despite the cold, we were able to get off two solid days of short-course racing. There were a couple of capsizes early on but the breeze on Saturday came down to a manageable 10-15 and on Sunday we had a sunny 8-10. The Interclub with its high freeboard makes racing in such cold temperatures do-able (a Laser deck would have quickly become a sheet of ice) though, as an outside observer, one must question the lack of self-rescuing capabilities in this dinghy. (Pumping out an Interclub takes a while and ties up a rescue craft - luckily we never had more than one Interclub over at any time.). I was wondering when watching the racing why the roll tacks looked very lackadaisical. The Interclub, being a round bottom dink, is known to be easily flopped around with a snappy roll tack. I then realized the bottom of the cockpit on these Interclubs must have been an ice-rink and skipper and crew, mindful of this, were tiptoeing across on the tacks.

Results are posted over here.

Some pictures;

Here are my compatriots on the main race committee boat, PRO Alex Stout, Marty Fletch, and Bob Tan.


Interclubs coming up to the finish.


Coming downwind next to the RC boat.


A daughter/mother team. Word on the street was the mom had never sailed dinghies before. What an introduction! (If you click on the picture you can see the icicles on the gunwhales.)