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Well, I crashed the Tri-Point race last Saturday. This race, part of the LandRover 3 races series, goes around Rig Gina & Anacapa Island to starboard and is organized by PierPoint Bay Yacht club in Ventura Harbor, CA. Race distance is ~45 miles. It's primarily a lead-bottom sailboat race, but they have an ORCA class for multihull sailboats. My Tornado catamaran doesn't qualify, but what the heck, it's a free ocean! Here's my report of the race... my first ever solo circumnavigation of Anacapa Island:
Multi's started last (about 11:25am) at the Mandalay power station buoy in 5-10 knots wind in fairly flat seas. Since I wasn't an official entry, I decided to let Afterburner (a 52 ft LOA catamaran racing machine), 2 of 10 (a 36 ft Rolland flat-out racing catamaran), a Reynolds 21 catamaran, and several Farrier and Corsair Trimarans have their way with the line. Winds had picked up to 10-15 knots and I was beginning to have some trouble keeping the boat down in the gusts. Honking on some downhaul (8:1 purchase) helped flatten off the top nicely and kept the hull down some. Coming around the rig, I had about 2 min. lead on an F28R trimaran after about 25 min. of sailing. I thought I had blown it when I passed quite close to the rig and I just stopped completely in it's lee. I sat helplessly as the F28R closed in. Suddenly I was back in the heavy air and off I went. No need to tack around the rig, as the course to the Esat end of Anacapa was still a close reach. I still had a few mono's to pass on this leg, since they had started some 25 minutes ahead of us. Blew past them doing around 7-13 knots via GPS. As I approached the island, wind began to lift even more, and was up near 17-20 knots. More trouble holding the hull down so I travelled out a few inches (no need to point since I could easily make the island on a reach). As I passed behind the arch rock of the island, swell disappeared but the wind kept on blowing strong...but it was a lot more gusty. WhoaHoo! Flat water & high speed!. By this time the F28R was about 10 minutes behind. But wait, he seemed to be very close to shore...and NOT MOVING! Was it really him or some guy at anchor? Decided to stay out away from that area incase it was a hole of some sort. Kept trucking. I could see Afterburner making his tack to head back across the channel. By the 2/3 mark along the backside, speed suddenly went to zero as I fell into the ugly wind shadow that had entrapped 2 of 10...despite staying much further out. There I sat. And Sat. And Sat. Looking back, I could see the entire fleet of mono's & tri's marching towards me at full tilt! 3 miles...2 miles...1 mile. Still coming! Wham! Everyone hit the hole! Only Afterburner had escaped (something to do with that 80 ft mast catching wind coming over the tops of the cliffs no doubt!). So, we all sat there... miserable as can be! I could see folks breaking out their lunches. I grabbed a few swigs of GatorAid right before I felt a puff. WIND! I starting moving and within about 30 secs was up to 10 knots again. As I looks back, I could not believe my luck...I was the only boat moving...not even 2 of 10 had got it yet. About ten min. into the leg, I spotted a damn sunfish flapping around on the surface. It was about 2 feet to windward so I steered lower to give it a wide berth. At the midships point, the damn thing decided it's life was worth living and bolted right towards the hull and on into my rudder. Hit one of these lethargic big fish at 5 knots is one thing (I had hit one earlier this summer in the Milt Ingram race) but at 17 knots! Rudder kicked up but I couldn't see if there was a blade still attached or just fish guts everywhere. Since I could still steer with the one blade on the leeward side still down (although with lots of side loading on the raised blade on the windward side from the cross waves), I decided not to stop to inspect/re-lock down the blade. Another 40 min. and I was across the line inside Ventura Harbor. Afterburner ended up winning on corrected time... quite a surprise because he's got a terribly fast rating to overcome... must've been the hole he seemed to missed that made the difference. What a day! Mike Tornado CAN 36 "DoubleMint" Note: Great job Mike! |