The Chesapeake Bay Laser Masters Championships at the Fishing Bay Yacht Club in Deltaville, VA easily made my all-time top ten regatta list. The venue, hospitality, the gourmet dinner, and the weather made for a memorable autumn weekend.
A big, shifty breeze (20-30 knots) on Saturday made the radial/full rig decision easy for all but a few of us. Peter Seidenberg, the iron man of Laser sailing put up his radial only to discover it had no numbers. His only option was to race with his full rig. He is small in stature and 72 years old, but he sure knows how to sail a Laser in a breeze. With many of us struggling to keep upright and moving in the right direction, he finished third in the first race out in the open river in survival conditions. When the RC mercifully moved us into the more sheltered Fishing Bay for the next three races on Saturday, he went 7, 4, 5 in extremly gusty, shifty conditions. He went on to edge out James Jacob for second overall. Amazing performance! Also amazing was John Bertrand. Seven bullets in challanging conditions. Always goiing fast in the right direction. Too good!
My perfomance was not so amazing. First race out in the river I managed to finish and remain upright, thanks to a couple chicken gybes. I was pleased with my 15th. I and a lot of other folks would have been happy to stay on the beach, enjoying the sunshine, but the New England contigent, led the charge to go back on the water.
The RC moved the course in close to shore where those who chose to battled 30 degree shifts and 30 knot blasts for three more races. JR Futcher wanted to go, but the RC wouldn't let her, as she had broken her outhaul, capsized, and couldn't rescue herself as the boat was unmanagable with the sail bunched up near the mast. Moral of the story, alway check everything before you leave the dock and take a spare bit of line with you, especially in a breeze.
Another moral. Before you forbid someone to race, the RC should make sure they know all the facts. JR was in an untenable situation and needed to be recsued, but after a simple repair was clearly able to race safely.
I had a miserable time inshore, autotacking and capsizing way too many times. But I finished all three races, against my better judgement, a small victory.
Sunday was a spectaular day to race. Wind had gone left to SW, 8-14 knots. Four races in full-hiking conditions. My first race of the day, an 18th, was not memorable. The next race, I battled Roger Link, a good friend and former 14er, who I can never seem to beat, all around the course. Coming up the last beat to the finish I was on port, on his weather hip, about even but slowly gaining, when a righty put him ahead coming back on starboard. I again finished behind him in a bang-bang finish. At least I'm getting closer!
Third race I caught the damn mainsheet over the transom on my tack into my spot on the line, lost control and rammed into the poor boat to leeward. There went my hole and my race. After starting I waited too long to do turns, so sailed the race out of harms way and withdrew after finishing. So much for my goal of avoiding the big mistake. One more race to make amends.
In the last race of the day, I got a good mid-line start, blew off the guy to weather, caught the first shift, a header, and found myself up with the leaders at the first weather mark. Finally ahead of Roger and more amazingly, ahead of Peter the Great. I stayed with the top four and ahead of Peter, who was really fast downwind. So quiet in the boat, picking his way through the waves, sheeting in and out with every wave. A beautiful thing to watch. Held my 4th upwind by catching a few shifts, staying in the pressure, and nailing the starboard tack layline.
Got downwind in third, just ahead of Mike Schmidt, made a pretty good turn but not as good as Mike's. Meanwhile, Nick Place and Peter have gained a bunch and are close behind.
Coming to the finish on port, not yet on the layline, I see Peter coming out of the right corner. We approach each other, bow to bow. I decide to take his stern and take my chances coming back on starboard. I make a nice duck at high speed, get to the layline and tack. Peter has to tack to leeward, I finish about a half boat length ahead. It is every GGM's dream to beat the iron man and I finally did it!
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