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23 August
INTERVIEW WITH MARTIN DENT SKIPPER OF JELVIS THE 2016 J/111 WORLD CHAMPION
INTERVIEW WITH MARTIN DENT SKIPPER OF JELVIS THE 2016 J/111 WORLD CHAMPION
North Sails Jeremy Smart caught up with Martin to find out the secrets to their success.
What were the key ingredients of your World Championship victory?
That’s easy: it’s all down to a great team, most of which have now raced together since the 2014 Winter Series, add in some practice, and then finally some good fortune. We were especially lucky with the windy conditions, which played to our strengths.
How did you prepare for the Regatta?
We started with the Round the Island Race on July 2. This was the windiest conditions that we’d sailed the J/111, and it is hard to imagine deliberately going out for a practice session in 25 to 35 knots. So when we found ourselves round the back of the Island, wiping out on every other gybe, the process started to develop techniques that would ultimately pay for us in the Worlds one month later. Throughout July we spent time refreshing the boat handling basics. Then in mid July, North Sails organised a weekend of with some video training practice with starts, upwind tuning and downwind techniques. As it turned out we were lucky that during this training weekend it was also blowing 20+ knots: again, the exact same conditions we were to face in the Worlds.
How competitive was the racing during the Worlds?
It was very tight racing in each of the races throughout the four days. It was noticeable, as with previous Worlds, that everybody raises their game. Whether it’s new sails, A-teams, a bit of practice, or just the general focus and concentration that everyone puts in, every team was sailing well. You get boats and teams from all over the world coming together at the warning signal and the true one design of the J/111 makes the racing so tight. The starts were intense, it was a challenge to hold a lane, and the mark roundings were congested on each leg. If you made a mistake you’d immediately let through boats and it was a truly international final podium…the top 6 boats were: UK, USA, UK, USA, Netherlands, Cornwall.
There was high drama on the final day and it was all on until the last race?
Peter Wagner’s team, Skeleton Key, from San Francisco, were a hot ship. We knew this from their US performances and from when they flew in and with just one day’s acclimatisation white-washed the Pre-Worlds giving us an exhibition in nailing every shift and slick boat handling. The weather during the Pre-Worlds was closer to “normal”, but as the Worlds got underway in heavy Solent conditions, that favoured us, it seemed like Skeleton were getting faster throughout the week as they worked out both the conditions and the Solent. They always seemed to be in the right place going fast, and they were very competitive tactically: the tacking duels started on Day 1. Going into the final day, we were hanging on to a 2-point lead but we were carrying a much higher discard (15) than Skeleton who had only discarded a 5. So we knew that they would try to sail us down the fleet, it was just a question of whether they would do the damage in Race 1 or 2… Whilst we ate our pancakes at breakfast, Ruairidh, Annabel and I were drawing sketches of the various boat-on-boat scenarios that might develop… Sure enough Skeleton came at us in the pre-start on the first race. We went into a match racing dial-up, which then turned into a dial down. Somehow we got out of there ok and got a reasonable start, so going into the next and final race it was back to fleet racing. We needed a top 5 finish, and yet we had to work our way through the fleet having struggled to hold our lane off the start. We’d worked our way to 3rd at the leeward mark, only to get a bonner in the jib and let 3 boats through. After all that work it was a basic boat-handling mistake under pressure! So we’d have to work our way back up through the fleet a second time, which was no easy task as everyone was fighting for places.
How did the 2016 Worlds compare with the 2015 Worlds in Newport, USA?
Conditions were completely different. In Newport there was a 25 boat fleet but it was light and shifty winds: a lot of J1 upwind and A1.5 downwind sailing, soaking low to target VMG numbers. This year was pretty much all 20+ knots so it was J2’s and J3’s, and on the downwind legs it paid to get the boat up and ripping on the plane asap.
How many family members did you have on the team?
Last year my wife and youngest daughter sailed on the boat in Newport, this year my elder daughter and 16 year old son did the bow and pit respectively. No Worlds’ places are guaranteed for family members (!) but these two both did the full training during July and earnt their spots. My wife did an amazing job this year, catering for the whole team in our house in Cowes and also being out on the rib for each race.
You bought your J/111 in 2014. Why did you pick the J/111?
As a family we had spent the previous decade doing a lot of blue water cruising on an Oyster. The displacement Oyster was perfect for its task but when, in 2014, we switched the focus to racing we didn’t want another boat that went downwind at the same speed as it went upwind. So it had to be a planing boat, and a one-design fleet with a future, that we could grow into. I noted that the J/111 fleet was strong in the UK and was growing world wide, with an ISAF international class status. The J/111 has surpassed our expectations. I was delighted that the first year, we were firmly at the back of the fleet; this was a fleet of good sailors. The fleet has been great, there’s a good bunch of friendly owners, who share ideas and knowledge freely. Cost-wise the J/111 is not expensive, it’s just the same as any other 35 footer, and yet you get a different league of performance and racing. You can’t modify your boat so you can’t spend any money even if you wanted to, and there is a sail tag system that limits the numbers of new sails you can buy. Most importantly sailors enjoy sailing the J/111. Finding crew is not difficult: the boat is so responsive to even minor trim adjustments and to body positions, it sails like a dinghy, and downwind it is truly exciting sailing, and this keeps everybody coming back!
How have you found the North Sails product?
I had North Sails on my Oyster, but if I am honest, I wouldn’t have been able to tell you, in 2014, which of the sail-makers were building the best sails for the J/111. The 2014, 2015 and 2016 J/111 Worlds have all been won by different sail-makers. But what made the difference for me was that from the minute I bought the J/111, I received so much help and support in terms of actually sailing the boat from the North team. Over the last three years we have had 8 different North Sails sailors help us! The North team has led the development and transfer of knowledge across the fleet. This was great for us when we were starting out, and it continues to help us today and to help the fleet keep improving. We use the standard North Sails tuning guide and targets. In three years I have only bought two sets of sails, despite doing a lot of sailing and 3 World Championships. We switched from 3DL to raw 3Di and this included a different sail design and undoubtedly we had a step change in boat speed. In Newport (2015) with our 3di sails hung on a local US boat that we chartered, we had good boat speed on the US teams, including the Quantum boat that ultimately won, but we were just out-sailed, ending up 7th out of 25. It is therefore no surprise to me that, this year, North Sails have monopolised the J/111 podiums on both sides of the Atlantic in the respective Nationals, and Worlds: just deserts, in my opinion, for a full service effort.
Will you continue with the J/111?
Undoubtedly, yes. It’s simple: there isn’t any better racing. As an example and in complete contrast to the Worlds, immediately following the Worlds this year we did Cowes Week. Given some understandable fallout after the Worlds, there were only six J/111 entries and all with family and friend type crews. And yet despite this and the typical Cowes Week round the can races, it was still nip and tuck all the way; after 3 and a half hours, just 3 seconds separated McFly and us on the first day and each subsequent race the finishes were matters of seconds not minutes. To find another boat that planes downwind, the alternative in the UK fleets is to go to the Fast Forty fleet, which is a massive increase in price and a much more complex proposition. Whilst the Ker 40’s etc look awesome, and it is great that this fleet has developed, I do notice that after every event the Fast Forty fleet talk is generally about rigs, keels, etc. I’ve got great admiration for the boat development, but I prefer the J/111 post race talk, which is simply about shifts, tactics and boat handling. The 111 racing is just about the sailing, and it is exciting to the finish with boats seconds apart.
What do you think of the J/111 Class Rules?
They all make sense: the 650kg weight limit, for Class events, is perfect and most teams sail with 8 comfortably. Without the weight limit it would be a competition in finding 6 big guys for the rail. With it, we find a few teams that manage to get 9 on board with either young nippers and also it is great to see women who are typically lighter weight, amongst the teams. There is a one Cat 3 (professional sailor) limit: this is also about right, keeps the cost down, and keeps it from becoming too serious. There are IRC events where Class Rules don’t apply and in the UK we have adjusted Class rules per local events to accommodate various teams and this has worked well.
Final question, will you go to the US to defend the Championship next year?
It’s one of the great benefits of the class that the World Championships move around to great sailing venues. I can’t think of a better holiday than a week racing in San Francisco Bay, under the Golden Gate Bridge and seeking tide relief from Alcatraz on the America’s Cup race track. We will be there.
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19 August
OLYMPIC HISTORY: HUGO ROCHA REMEMBERS
Hugo Rocha of North Sails Spain recounts Olympics past and present, plus the tactics that got him through three editions of the Games in the Men’s 470, ultimately medaling in Atlanta, 1996.
You were a young guy when you first went to Barcelona in 1992. Can you put into words what a first Olympic experience is like? The scale, the excitement, the camaraderie, etc. How did this affect you and what impact did it have?
I have been a very big fan of sports since I was a little child. When I was eight I used to practice gymnastics and I remember watching on TV the Moscow’s Olympics Ceremony, and obviously being there was something unthinkable. At 10, I started sailing in the Optimist class, and by that time the idea of attending the Olympics was definitely on my mind.
So when I finally could attend, my excitement was huge. Living in the Olympic Village, sharing the facilities with your sport idols, those whom you had seen only on TV, was an unforgettable experience.
I still remember the inauguration day and the walk we did from the Village to the Stadium, I was astounded at how incredible everything was, surrounded by police, helicopters above us, like in the movies, I felt really important. Being there during the ceremony in the Stadium was a breathtaking and incredible experience.
You must be extremely proud of your Bronze Medal in Atlanta (well, Savannah!) in 1996. Can you describe your emotions on the podium and the memories you now have looking back?
Reaching your goal after 4 years of hard work represents an enormous joy. However, sailing in Savannah helped us to focus on the Olympic racing just as we would any other, since we stayed in the local Olympic Village which was far away from the hustle and bustle of the Olympic Games.
For Atlanta, the real excitment came when we arrived in home in Portugal. A country with just a few Olympic medals, we had won two medals that year: Fernanda Ribeiro won gold in Women’s 10000mn, and us with bronze in the Men’s 470.
Overnight, we became famous. Everybody stopped you on the street, the restaurants. Suddenly you felt a strange but nice pressure.
“…That’s why it is important to follow a methodology and, above all, to build your strength based on psychology, which means that you have to work hard at what you believe, feel and want.”
From your three Olympic Games, other than the medal, what stands out from the different cities, teams and experiences that are all part of the world’s greatest sporting event?
Barcelona was my first Olympic experience and I still remember some special moments like it was yesterday. I will never forget the image of Olympic flame cauldron being lit by a flaming arrow, and listening to the athlete’s oath of my friend Luis Doreste during the opening ceremony.
In the Atlanta Games, sailing was hosted at a location far from the Olympic environment so it felt more like a common international competition rather than the biggest sporting event in the world. A curious thing was the giant platform where all the sailboats were standing, only accessible by boat. Everyday we had to take a 30 minutes ferry ride, enjoying the beautiful landscape.
Sydney was the first time that I felt sailing was valued by the crowds, just as much as the other sports. It was amazing to see the great involvement of the city during the races. In fact, it was one of the few occasions that we could see such big crowds supporting a sailing event. The match racing finals in front of the Opera House had incredible and unprecedented participation from the public. Even today I ask myself why match racing does not have a place in the Olympic Games.
Where do you keep your medal?
I keep it along with all my trophies and sailing items in a personal work room.
Tell us about the emotional and physical journey required to compete at the Olympic Games? Years of training, dreaming and pushing yourself must require a lot of discipline and dedication…
It is a minimum of 4 years with just one goal on your mind: winning the medal. Obviously it’s not an easy journey. The competitors are tough and all of them are struggling hard to reach the same reward. That’s why it is important to follow a methodology and, above all, to build your strength based on psychology which means that you have to work hard at what you believe, feel and want. Having a good team around you that can give support and advice is another key factor for success, because they must know you very well, giving you the confidence to destroy your fears.
The level of competition at the Olympics is so strong in all fleets – with an experienced eye, what is your assessment of the Men’s 470 Class? Who are the top podium contenders?
The 470 has always been a very strong Olympic Class both in the number of participants and the level of the athletes. In this Class, everyone struggles to get the best tuning and use the right materials to achieve the fastest boat. It is a very complete boat that requires a broad understanding of all tactics and technical items to compete on the top. It is definitely an incredible boat and it will push you to become an experienced sailor.
From my point of view, the top podium contenders are from Australia, Croatia, Argentina and Great Britain.
How do you think the Class has changed since you raced? How have the sails also evolved to improve performance?
During the last years, the class has faced several changes, the most important in my opinion is allowing the pumping from eight knots which demands a major physical effort. Regarding the evolution of the sails, I have seen important advances on the tuning guide directions, and the rake as well, besides a much flatter mainsail – especially on the bottom.
Have you ever sailed in Rio? What do you make of the courses?
The race area inside the bay is more tricky due to all the changes in pressure and currents. Outside the bay, there is a pretty nice course with good conditions and a nice swell.
Finally, which country do you think will emerge at the top of the sailing medal table?
Great Britain.
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16 August
J/FEST NEW ENGLAND
Thirty six J/Boats hit the water to ring in the area’s inaugural J/Fest regatta.
Sponsored by North Sails and hosted by Bristol Yacht Club, the inaugural J/Fest New England kicked off Friday, August 12th with afternoon practice led by North Sails Offshore One Design, followed by a local knowledge weather briefing at the club.
Working with the J/105, J/109 and J/88 classes, North Sails experts Chuck Allen, Bill Gladstone and Jack Orr helped teams tune up and stretch their legs in 12-15 knot southerly winds. Heading in a little early due to incoming weather, sailors were met with a local knowledge briefing by North Sails experts Charlie Enright and North Sails President, Ken Read. A review of local weather trends including current, obstacles and wind direction was complemented by burgers and an open bar, all sponsored by North Sails.
“If it weren’t for the rise of J/Boat racing, I would still be in Bristol Harbor sailing Mercuries,” said Read, a multi-world champion in the J/24, acknowledging the impact of J/Boats on competitive One Design racing throughout North America.
Saturday brought the first races to fruition slowly, with a wind delay at the club and on the water. In the 90 degree heat and humidity forecast, soon more sailors were swimming than waiting patiently aboard. Nevertheless, the sea breeze filled mid-afternoon and the race committee squeezed in two quality races in a fairly stable southerly at 12 knots and ebb tide. Early on, boats starting off the pin end who worked the left shoreline fared well before the wind began to shift slightly right toward the end of the day.
Sunday brought a light southerly gradient breeze. Hopes for a bolstering seabreeze were eventually burned off with the high heat, and pressure was generally up and down with big oscillations. Three to four races were completed by all fleets.
North Sails sponsored three awards for the event which were presented by NA Sales Manager, Kimo Worthington, who sailed onboard J/109 Vento Solare for the event. The North Sails Overall award was presented to Ted Hearlihy’s J/109 Gut Feeling, the Sportsmanship award was presented to Brooke Mastrorio on J/109 Ursa, and most improved went to Kevin Dakan on J/110 Memory.
Looking back on the long weekend, local North expert Charlie Enright commented that J/Fest New England is “a great event with a bright future. It’s wonderful to see a new regatta surrounded by such enthusiasm. Events like J/Fest will strengthen local classes both on the water and off.”
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15 August
FIREBALL UK NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
FIREBALL UK NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
Tom Gillard & Richard Anderton first with a day to spare
North Sails Tom Gillard with crew Richard Anderton has won the Fireball UK Nationals at Hayling Island with a day and two races to spare.
The regatta saw mixed conditions with the the first two days raced in 12 to 18 knots and days three and four in lighter winds of 4 to 12 knots.
Other top scoring North Sails powered boats were Kevin Hope and Russell Thorne who finished in 5th place and Peter & Tom Kyne who finished in 9th place.
Overall results can be seen on the event results page.
To read a full report see yachtsandyachting.com
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12 August
DISCOVERING SRI LANKA
DISCOVERING SRI LANKA
A Fresh Perspective
It’s not every day you get to see where your sails are made and we had heard a lot of good things about the loft so we’re quite excited to see it all. During our visit many things stood out giving us a fresh perspective on the manufacturing loft in Sri Lanka.
Scale
North Sails seek to manage everything in-house meaning the sheer scale of the operation immediately impressed us. But more than that, what really stood out was the combination of technology, skilled craftsmanship and quality control. Everything from sails for dinghies to large offshore racing yachts were being made with the same meticulous level of detail. Machines using bobbins of thread that took a week to set up weaved away, plotter machines precision-cut sail panels, yet more machines laminated cloth and carbon using hi-tech adhesive. At the top end, machines followed by a person suspended in the air laid out carbon on huge automated platforms modeled to replicate the exact shape of a sail.
Expertise
Alongside the technology, each and every sail was being made with some element of human craft and skill. Spinnaker panels were laid together by ladies with an eye for precision, looking up and down the panel to determine where it needed to be laid before gently but confidently pressing it down. People sat in pits in the midst of huge platforms with sewing machines carefully stitching sails or sewing parts into them. Even top of the range carbon sails were hand finished by a professional with a pair of scissors and an eye for detail.
Pride
It was all carried out in a calm focused manner, people going about their jobs, knowing what they needed to do. Stopping to ask any Sri Lankan supervisor a question soon made you realise these people took pride in their job – quite often they would lose us as they leapt into intricate detail!
Quality
And then there was the quality control. Each sail is accompanied by a ‘ticket’, essentially a number of pages explaining the make-up of that individual sail, what needed to be done, what parts would accompany it and a list of checks to make sure it was delivered as it was designed. The name of the yacht was given and the sail’s destination – literally sails being made for the world!
As an owner of a set of North Sails sails, it really did give us the assurance that our sail had been made to a very high standard by a factory well equipped, by talented people and that it had all been quality checked. We now look at our sails with a different eye. On our sail is a little label that has the North Sail logo and states ‘Made in Sri Lanka’. It should read ‘Made with Pride in Sri Lanka’.
A loom sits loaded in Building 2 at North Sails in Sri Lanka. North Cloth takes up one of nine buildings at the North Sails complex in Sri Lanka. Dilki Kumari lays nylon spinnaker panels on a small-boat downwind sail in building eight.
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10 August
NORTH CLIENTS 1,2,3 AT 2016 J/111 WORLDS
North Sails J/111 expert Jeremy Smart re-caps the recent world championship regatta on the Solent.
The Pre-Worlds were hosted by the Royal Southern Yacht Club in Hamble on the mainland side of the Solent. Six races were sailed over two days with breezy conditions on Friday and calmer conditions on Saturday. Peter Wagner and the crew on Skeleton Key made their mark, winning five of the races and discarding a second. In second overall were Martin Dent’s JElvis on 10 points and in third Stuart Sawyer’s Black Dog on 22 points. All of the top three used North Sails 3Di RAW upwind sails.
On Sunday 31st July the 14-boat fleet moved across the Solent to Cowes for a day of weighing in and race briefings. North Sails was a sponsor for the Pre-Worlds and Worlds and provided weather forecasting each day with Libby Greenhalgh, who has forecast for the British Olympic Sailing Team and Team SCA in the Volvo Ocean Race. North also donated daily prizes and had planned some drone filming but the weather proved too windy to allow this. North representatives at the event were myself on McFly, Ruairidh Scott on JElvis, Seadon Wijsen from North Sails San Francisco on Skeleton Key, Aaron Cole from North Sails Melbourne on Kestrel and Wouter Kollman from North Sails Holland on Lällekönigl.
The first day of the championship proved to be the light wind day of the regatta, with the breeze between 8 -15 knots. Three races were sailed. JElvis were the winners of the day followed by Skeleton Key and McFly.
For the remaining three days the wind rarely dropped below 18 knots and topped at around 30. Day Two proved to be the windiest and was to be dubbed ‘Big Tuesday’! It was the Dutch boat Sweeny who showed their form in the windy conditions taking two firsts. Video footage from the day can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3nThVJc-1M
By the evening of the third day a gap was opening up between the top three boats and the rest of the fleet. In first place was Skeleton Key with 11pts, followed by JElvis with 13pts and McFly with 19pts; while the next placed boat was Sweeny at 27pts and then Kashmir with a total of 29pts. On the morning of the final day, with two races to go, these three had it all to play for! Skeleton Key didn’t get off to a good start in the first race and then struggled to fight their way back. This gave JElvis a five point lead going into the last race, and Skeleton Key nine points ahead of McFly. Skeleton Key made a good start in this race and led most of the way around. Behind them places were changing rapidly meaning the final result wasn’t certain until the second run of the race when JElvis fought back from 6th to 2nd.
The final race win for Skeleton Key, however, was not enough for them to take the overall title. JElvis had sailed incredibly consistent and were counting all top three scores, securing the win by four points from Skeleton Key. McFly was third, Kashmir fourth, Sweeny fifth and Black Dog sixth overall and first Corinthian boat.
North Sails is proud to have outfit 13 of the 14 boats in the fleet with a complete sail inventory for the Worlds.
Martin Dent’s winning team on JElvis began sailing the J/111 in 2014 and, during their short time in the class, have shown massive improvement. Martin commented that whilst the sails are undoubtedly fast, it’s the support and advice that they have received from North Sails that has enabled them to improve so quickly.
Congratulations to the crews of JElvis, Skeleton Key, and McFly; and to all the fantastic sailors throughout the J/111 fleet, on a week of exceptional racing.
Full results
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05 August
RECAP: 2016 THISTLE NATIONALS
WHAT WE LEARNED AT THE 2016 THISTLE NATIONALS
Tuning Tips from Mike Ingham
Eugene Yacht Club is a special place both on and off the water. We have raced the last two Nationals there, so we immediately signed up again this year, barely consulting our calendars. Everything else could take a back seat. When I’m asked what it is like, I say “The wind comes in like clockwork (no foulies required), the RC is spot on, the club members are gracious hosts, the camping is perfect, the scenery beautiful and there is never a drop of rain.” Fortunately, the 2016 Nationals lived up to those expectations.
We got all seven races off in Northerly winds 12-15 kts out of the north: the thermal direction. This is the long direction on the lake, so the legs were full Nationals length, meaning a lot of hiking. The water was relatively flat, and the shifts pretty big. The high end of the puffs blew into the low 20’s and the low end was light where we had to sit in. Tricky stuff! The reaches were full-on planing. It was good, fun racing! The challenge to going fast was shifting gears. Those who shifted well usually finished well. It was one of the keys to our win. Here are some of the things we did:
Constantly looking out for puffs and lulls and communicating. Delia counted down the puffs and lulls: “puff in 3, 2, 1 puff on”, or just as important “big lull in 3, 2, 1, lull”. She was relentlessly observant.
I was clear about what mode we were in. If it was marginally overpowering, I would say: “full hike” and I would balance the helm by easing just the right amount. But if it got lighter I would say; “I am fully trimmed” so Dan and Delia would know to balance the boat by moving their body weight and I would trim to the top telltale.
Dan played the vang a lot with the increased wind. The more it blew, the more he would put it down to match my easing the mainsheet to keep the mast bent. He would make his best guess at where he thought it should be and then we would talk to fine tune it.
Same with the jib. If I eased the main enough to get a big bubble up front, or even flog it, Dan would crack the jib just enough to get that bubble down a little. We found if we eased too much, we would lose height, so the ease was subtle.
In the lulls, when we were in that mode where Dan and Delia balanced the boat, I was very careful to trim to the top mainsail telltale. It was easy to sheet too hard because having just come off a puff, I would trim in as it got lighter. So I kept looking up at that telltale and Dan would too. He would take a quick look every time the wind changed significantly and we would talk about how much trim was right. In the flat water, I could stall it a good amount and still keep the boat moving.
We adjusted the cunningham and outhaul a little, but not much. Things happened quickly and getting the “big lines” (main sheet, jib sheet, vang) and boat balance right was more important than fine tuning of the “little lines” (like the cunningham).
Most of the fleet camped together, enjoying the perfect weather. The yacht club served dinner every evening. Afterward we hung out by the fire and “karate chop” sailed through the evenings. Then we started it all over again breakfast together in the morning. There was no reason to leave the grounds.
We all are looking forward to the Nationals in NY next year. Those making the trek: keep in mind that there are two other regattas in NY, one in late August and one the first weekend of September. Feel free to leave your boat at Rochester Canoe Club and stick around or fly back for those. Let me know in you’re interested and I will set you up! Learn more about North Sails’ fast Thistle designs.Learn more about North Sails fast Thistle designs.
NORTH NOTES: 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9,10 Powered by North Sails!
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04 August
J/88 YONDER CLAIMS NYYC RACE WEEK
Doug Newhouse and his team on the J/88 Yonder won the 2016 New York Yacht Club Race Week, posting three firsts and three seconds over the eight race series. We caught up with Doug to collect some words of wisdom and reflection on racing.
What conditions did you encounter at this event and how prepared were you and your team?
The Race Committee really gave us the full range of sailing experiences—a stadium course, round the island, racing up the bay, and racing in the open ocean. The breeze was strong for most races, including a driving rainstorm—but in the strangest race, the breeze changed from a 10-12 knot southerly on the first four legs to zero on the fifth leg, and then to an 8-10 knot northerly in about five minutes! Our tactician wisely realized that even though we had just dropped the kite we needed to hoist it again; his quick thinking plus great crew work allowed us to win that crazy race.
What was the biggest contributor to your success in winning this regatta?
It all starts with the team. We have a good core group and almost everyone is a twenty-something ex-college racer. They provide energy and are excited to have fun on a new boat like the J/88. Importantly, we participated in the Sail Newport one design regatta the weekend before Race Week, and we were able to work out some issues.
Everyone is talking about your incredible downwind speed. How did you guys go so fast downwind?
We need to give a salute here to North Sails. Last year we had a first generation kite, and when we switched to the newest North design it made a huge difference. The shape and overall performance was a game changer. Also the crew works the weight aggressively, like a dinghy, which allows me to keep a calm tiller and focus on keeping the boat balanced.
How did you set up the boat?
North tuning guide all the way.
Can you give us three things that you and your team would do to make your boat go fast?
It’s important to keep a balanced boat—heel angle makes a big difference. Crew consistency.
Practice, practice, practice…
Tell us about your team; they always looked to be well positioned on the boat.
Most of the crew comes from smaller boats. They are always trying to give us the best boat balance. Hopefully everyone is choreographed and can handle every situation.
As the owner, driver and skipper; can you tell us how you interact with the crew during a race?
No yelling—it adds stress and is counterproductive. Before we go out every day, we have a team meeting to discuss every issue that might come up. I ask everyone their opinion, starting with the youngest. After each race, we debrief if time permits. Also everyone has a defined role and mine is to drive—I don’t call tactics, I don’t trim sails, I only try to focus on moving the boat forward in the most efficient manner.
What do you and your team plan to work on for future events?
We need to get better. Our competitors are really great sailors and every race is up for grabs. We need to go faster—great tactics are easy with great speed. We want better sail shapes—always working to refine the sails. Crew work is always ongoing. Lastly, better starts—we were never over early but seldom first. The playbook is never finished.
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02 August
TIM SADLER & RICHARD SAULT ENTERPRISE NATIONAL CHAMPS 2016
SADLER & SAULT ENTERPRISE NATIONAL CHAMPS
Winners Tim Sadler & Richard Sault with Commodore David Faithfull © Gareth Fudge
Congratulations to Tim Sadler & Richard Sault who have retained their title – winning the Enterprise UK National Championship for 2016!
Well done also to Alice Allen and Sharky who took the prize for first Lady’s helm.
Our North Sails powered boats dominated the top 20 coming in at 1,2,5,6,7,8,9,11,12,15,17,19.
Enterprise Fleet Nationals 2016 © Gareth Fudge
Johnny Allen & James Hobson © Gareth Fudge
Ladies National Champion Alice Allen & Sharky with Commodore David Faithfull © Graham Fudge
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28 July
WARRIOR WON WINS NEWPORT TO BERMUDA RACE
Christopher Sheehan purchased Warrior Won, a new XP-44, in 2014 with the express goal of competing in the the 2016 Newport Bermuda Race. Warrior Won took the St. David’s Lighthouse Trophy in the historic race, and we caught up with her skipper after he returned to the east coast.
Approximately one third of the fleet dropped out of this year’s Newport – Bermuda Race because of the forecast (upwards of 40 knots and an especially rough sea state in the Gulf Stream). What was your thought process before leaving the dock?
The decision to race was never in question. We are all seasoned offshore racers and the boat was extremely well prepared. The fact is the conditions were near perfect. I respect the owners who did withdraw out of concern for crew who may have not been prepared for even thirty knot winds, or because they had boats that may be prone to expensive breakage in sustained high winds and seas.
Who was on the crew?
I have always felt that the individuals with small one design racing experience are the best crew on a big boat. The final 11 were: Skipper Christopher Sheehan; Watch Captains Paul van Dyke and Doug Lynn; Navigator H.L. DeVore; Bowmen, Ryan Zupon and Chris Simon; additional crew, Peter Carpenter, Roland Schulz, Andres de Lasa, Joost-Olan Sheehan, and Carter Holliday. Collectively we had extensive ocean racing experience on board.
Reviewing the tracker, it looked like Warrior Won worked hard to get east on Saturday morning, and then stayed relatively close to Rhumbline through to the finish. Was working the eastern edge your game plan from the beginning or did you improvise?
Between 36 and 12 hours before the start of the race, Commanders Weather and many others suggested going S-SW to capture breeze and avoid a huge high pressure system forming over Canada and northern New England. That was sound advice, however, by Saturday morning a few very astute navigators noticed that the wind was crashing to the SW and all boats were getting severely lifted. We and a few others gybed out crossing the back of half the fleet for 25 miles heading perpendicular to the course due east, giving up a top five position to be middle of the fleet.
It paid off tremendously to get east of Rhumbline and send it 161 degrees to Bermuda. Thirty miles from the finish the wind got very light but our position favored us as we stayed on Rhumbline and found ourselves in a small rain squall that carried us to the finish. In the words of our navigator, it was a “slow motion knife fight” with the four boats ahead of us. We gybed dozens of times and picked up three spots passing Siren, Maximizer and Crazy Horse. Only High Noon crossed the line before us in the St. David’s Lighthouse Division. Many boats finished under very light conditions.
What was the discussion like onboard when making the decision to gybe east?
Ultimately every course heading for the entire 89 hours was determined by H.L. He deliberated methodically with the watch captains and bowmen based on data gathered from various weather sources and would put Expedition Software to use to come up with an optimal course based on the data. I would say that a mere 30% of the time the computer models were right. H.L. would therefore constantly observe, with his own eyes from on deck, the condition on the water and ahead and finally would reconcile the two to make his own decision which ultimately was the winning decision.
“We raced one boat length—44 feet— at a time, despite 635 miles to Bermuda. Each person would focus intensely on his role every minute whether driving, trimming, navigating, calling tactics, or observing the weather.”
Which sails did you use the most and why?
Once H.L would determine our course, the on-duty watch captain (Doug or Paul) would decide exactly which sails we should use. We were sailing downwind or broad reaching probably 60-65% of the race. Percentage wise we used the Jib Top and Genoa Staysail and the A1 the most amount of time. In addition we used the A0 and Staysail quite frequently as well as the A4. We had the mainsail double-reefed any time winds exceeded 18 knots, which was for a solid third of the race. The boat and sails performed fantastically under these conditions.
Any other secrets to success?
We raced one boat length—44 feet— at a time, despite 635 miles to Bermuda. Each person would focus intensely on his role every minute whether driving, trimming, navigating, calling tactics, or observing the weather. Even when off watch, we’d concentrate on eating, hydrating and sleeping in order to be fresh and strong in four hours. Our navigator focused intensely for the hundreds of hours before and during the race to stay on top of the ever evolving conditions and make hundreds of brilliant decisions.
Unnecessary chatter is a huge distraction which slows the boat down almost immediately. A lost half a knot over 100-150 miles potentially means the difference between 1st or 4th. It’s not a cruise we are on. We all wanted to win. Our definition of fun is doing our absolute best every time we leave the dock, and winning is the only satisfactory result when you put in maximum effort.
Finally, were there any stand-out heroes among the crew?
I am extremely appreciative of Chris Simon who looks after Warrior Won twelve months of the year, and H.L DeVore for the thousands of hours of preparation that he put into setting us up for victory. Additionally my son Joost-Olan, age 16, deserves a great deal of credit for having the courage to race in any conditions and the mental focus to commit to the program, all while playing spring sports and attending to his school work. They are the stand-out heroes.
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25 July
READY FOR RIO: SASKIA CLARK AND HANNAH MILLS INTERVIEW
Silver medal 470 sailors Saskia Clark and Hannah Mills are ready for their most challenging venue yet in Rio de Janeiro.
“We use North Sails from Japan for our full suit and have found the reliability and attention to detail of the product better than anything else out there.”
For those not familiar with dinghy sailing, what are the characteristics of 470 racing?
The 470 is a great mix of what sailing is all about. At the lighter end, the racing is a close, tactical battle. The boats are moving quite slowly, so there is time to think through your strategy and tactics like a game of chess. As the wind increases the boats get planing, becoming more physical. You need a more dynamic technique through the waves and the decisions on strategy need to be made faster as you react to the wind and your competitors.
Going in with good form must give you some confidence?
We are pleased with the process we have gone through this four years and feel we are a better, more competitive team than in 2012. Winning the final two World Cups in the run-up to the Games has given us a clear indication of the areas we have improved on and what still needs to be done, but at this point in time, we are pleased with where we are.
What are the biggest challenges with Guanabara Bay concerning tide, the wind, etc.?
It’s a hugely tricky venue, surrounded by high land which the wind has to find a way through and lots of bays and headlands for the tide to flow and eddy around, which is massively affected by the amount of rainfall. So lots to think about!
What changes have you had to make to your boat set-up to account for the conditions?
It’s a hugely varied venue from the flatter water inside the harbor to ocean swell outside so learning how to adapt and optimize our equipment over this range has been critical as we only measure in one set of equipment.
Have you had to change anything else significant, for example in your training program?
We have changed hulls this cycle from the Mackay to the Zeiglemayer. Programme wise, it varies as to where you are in the cycle and the priorities but this cycle we have spent a significant amount of time on breaking down and rebuilding our race observations and communications, so they are robust under the stress of the Olympic competition and venue.
Who do you see as your biggest competition? Are there any dark horses in the fleet?
There are obviously a few key contenders that have a good track record either in Rio or at the big events. However, Rio is an opportunistic venue and the Olympics inspire and stress people out in different ways so we expect that any number of people could get themselves into contention.
What is the dynamic like between helm and crew and therefore you and Hannah?
Hannah and I are lucky that from the beginning we just got on well and enjoyed the challenge and journey of an Olympic campaign together. We’ve managed to drag each other through some lows and enjoyed the highs together and will go into this Olympics with a great understanding of how we both enjoy working as individuals and how this feeds our team dynamic.
What were the key factors behind your decision to be powered with North Sails? What products are you working with?
We use North Sails from Japan for our full suit and have found the reliability and attention to detail of the product better than anything else out there.
In that sailing will be much closer this time, do you expect to see any other events or hang out with any other members of British team?
Ironically now that sailing is in the heart of the city, most of the action is happening at the Olympic village which could be up to a two-hour drive away with traffic (even though it’s not that far)! Until we have finished our racing, I expect it will be much the same as the other Olympics I have been to. Hopefully, afterward, we can get a taste of all the excitement of being in the center.
What is your final run-in plan to Rio?
We leave for Rio on Sunday (7/24) and have the potential for 15 days training before we begin racing. So there is still a lot of time to refine things. We are pretty clear on what we need to get done in that time. It will focus around short course boathandling and set pieces which are easier to do in a confined space when all the race courses are occupied around us.
How do you think this Games will be different from the others you have done?
Rio is the hardest venue of all so dealing with that under pressure will be key. Most of the course areas are very tricky and even if you are out in front you can’t relax and think that you’ve got that race in the bag. It really won’t be over until the finish line of the medal race.
Finally, what are you looking forward to the most about the Rio Olympics?
We just LOVE the Olympics! I love watching it, love competing in it, it’s just so exciting! It’s an absolute privilege to represent Team GB, so we’re looking forward to getting out there, racing and delivering.
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25 July
PORTSMOUTH RECAP - SAILING FOR THE MASSES!
I think this ACWS Portsmouth will go into the books as an all-around style regatta – it has had a little bit of everything. A bit of light air, medium air and then some breeze- on yesterday. I wouldn’t say that we got to ‘heavy air’ per se yesterday but certainly we got into a good fun foiling day. And you know what, the best team won with the second best team coming in second. Its not actually often that you can say that in a regatta format like this but there is no doubt Land Rover BAR looked smooth. They get themselves out of jams when things weren’t going their way or they had a not-so–perfect start and they just didn’t make mistakes… Jimmy Spithill will be kicking himself for one race on Saturday which was held in quite light air and they made a series of mistakes at the bottom gate that turned into a 6th place, they are going to look back on that race and think what could have been. But also, what is it going to take to win one of these regattas? Its not that they aren’t trying but they just aren’t converting to wins.
Britain and specifically Portsmouth came out for this event, there were literally tens of thousands of people there, the grandstands were packed, the waterfront full and you could hear the cheers when Land Rover BAR did something well, went into the lead or won! This was crowd noise and cheering in a condensed space that made stadium sailing real. It was impressive. The roar of the crowd was really something else – you did have to stop and remind yourself that we were at a sailing regatta not a hockey or football game. It was really fun.
There were a few other notable things from this regatta – Groupama showed incredibly improved form in the light air but as soon as it went to foiling with a bit more breeze on they weren’t to be seen. They are the dark horses and certainly have potential but not up to the consistency and pace of the other top teams at the moment.
Artemis and Emirates Team New Zealand were being steered by people who have never steered a foiling catamaran in a regatta like this before – their number one helmsmen are on Olympic ‘duty’ so their tactics were a bit different. Emirates Team New Zealand tried to cling to a podium position in order to keep their overall series lead and got nipped in the end at this regatta. They have never not been in first since the start of this years ACWS so it is not a natural place or feeling for them. Glenn Ashby said many times during this event (as he was lowering expectations) that they were here to ‘survive it’ and in a way they did but they lost a full 20 points to Land Rover BAR and Oracle which is a fair chunk of points. So they are still on the podium for the overall series but with two (or maybe three) regattas to go, its a shame for those guys to lose quite so much.
With regards to Artemis, Francesco Bruni is an amazing sailor, one of the best in the world but he was thrown into the hot seat. At least Glenn Ashby, as the Olympian replacement, has been sailing on the boat nonstop for three years and is quite possibly the most heralded multihull sailor in the world. I’d say officially there is no better stand in than that right there! But for Artemis, Francesco sailed these boats when they are non foiling in the lead up to the last AC and of course, he was then Prada’s tactician, but he is new back into the game with these foiling machines so its not really a shock that they found it harder going.
Oracle must be just really, really annoyed now. Listening to Jimmy’s interview at the end of the regatta he was putting a good spin on it and they didn’t do badly, don’t get me wrong. But they didn’t win and I have sailed with, and against, Jimmy enough to know that he wants to win. He will be downright angry. It will be interested to see the rebound into France. They are just sick of coming second or third so they need to find that extra gear somehow.
But from a sporting perspective it was great to see the home team win, it just lifts an event and it certainly was the icing on the cake for Portsmouth. The energy, enthusiasm and wild scenes on the waterfront were expanded dramatically as the home town hero won again. There was a great vibe that couldn’t be matched if any other team won.
And as a final moment, the royals were out on the water yesterday which was great. Anytime the royals show up at a regatta, sailing is doing something right! It is exposure that is amazing for the sport. It was a awesome to see. And also the Duke of Edinburgh was out on the water on Saturday – at 90, he looked in his element! William and Kate looked very comfortable out there yesterday and there is no doubt it was pretty bouncy! Anyone with a slightly weaker constitution might have not enjoyed the experience so much but they were in the right boat in the chase boat with Land Rover BAR, the winning team in their home port.
Its an exciting and interesting time in the history of the Americas Cup and Im looking forward to seeing what happens next.
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22 July
THINKING BIG PICTURE: COACH MIKE INGHAM
US Paralympics Sonar coach, Mike Ingham, is leading Doerr, Kendell, and Freund off a World Championship win into the highly anticipated Rio Games.
Tell us about your role with the US Paralympic Sonar team?
I am the team’s coach. I started a few years ago helping US Sailing with some clinics, and it grew from there. Now I am full time focused on the team of Ricky Doerr, Brad Kendell, and Hugh Freund. I help organize their training, and have been with them every step of the way for the year leading up to and including the Paralympic Games in September.
The US team must feel confident going into the Rio games after their recent world championship victory and a strong run of results. What are the success factors for the team within such a competitive Sonar fleet?
Yes, we have had a good run and, with that, confidence. The team is talented, and their strengths diverse. Ricky Doerr has the ability to focus on driving fast for long periods of time. Brad Kendell is a highly competitive guy with a knack for seat-of-the-pants tactics. Hugh Freund is more methodical and is the glue that organizes the team both on and off the water. That combo is pretty powerful. My job is to be the objective observer that focuses them on the most important things. That’s usually reinforcing what they do well already, and constantly working on just a few of the key things that need improvement.
For those people not familiar with the Sonar, can you give us an insight into the racing, boat characteristics and Paralympic classification?
The Sonar is a small keelboat with a lot of cockpit room – perfect for the Paralympics. There are minor modifications based on the disability. For example, in our boat, Ricky is a Paraplegic so we have a bench that spans from seat to seat in the cockpit and a stainless bar that goes from rail to rail so Ricky can pull himself across. Brad is a double leg amputee above the knee and wears “stubby” legs to get across the boat with no additional equipment. Hugh is a single leg amputee below the knee and wears a giant eraser-like cover to his leg. He has an additional set of purchase on the jib so he can trim without the stability of two legs. The Paralympic Sonar has no spinnaker, and instead uses a pole mounted on the boom to hold out the jib downwind. Other than the bench, extra purchase on the jib sheets, and no spinnaker, the boats are standard Sonars.
A team of international doctors runs classification. Each sailor is given a classification from 1 (Quadriplegic) to 7 (an 8 would be able bodies if there were such a classification). The max number is 14 total for the 3 athletes. On our team, Hugh is classified as a 7, Brad as a 4, and Ricky as a 3.
How has north sails worked with the leading teams in the class and what cloth materials are you working with to deliver optimal performance?
As a strict one design class, we can’t use North Sails 3Di, mylar, or anything else like that, so we are “stuck” with standard polyester cloth. That is a good thing for the class as it limits the arms race. There are two mainsail cuts for the Sonar. We have chosen the flatter version because the Paralympic athletes sail with three people and only two are allowed on the rail, so we don’t have a lot of righting moment. We can measure in two jibs; one flatter and the other fuller and we switch depending on the conditions.
A couple of the teams have worked with North for special designs, most notably using North Sails Radian TM cloth in a radial design.
Most of the fleet uses the standard crosscut North Sails. All but one of the Paralympic teams at the games will be using North Sails.
We have not modified these cuts,. We use the standard off-the-shelf designs because they are solid and it is more important to learn to use what we have than develop something. Part of our “secret” to success is that we spent much of 2015 learning the subtleties of tuning so we can go fast. Hard to do well without going fast!
The Paralympics has a unique and inspirational atmosphere – what do you find special about working with these athletes?
I have done a lot of coaching in other classes, but before this, almost no Paralympic. Most of the time it is just the same as coaching anyone else. Sure there are some equipment differences like Ricky’s bench, but that is really no different than coaching say hiking vs. trapeze. Those are just details that need to be sorted. What IS different though is that these guys have a broader view on life than most sailors. I was told when I first started coaching Paralympic athletes that, for most athletes, chasing the Olympic dream is the hardest thing they have ever done – not so for Paralympians, many have already been through something much harder. That perspective is hard to put a finger on, but I can say they enjoy life, and don’t get rattled easily. To coach them, you have to show them that it matters; you can’t just go the tough love route!
How has training been going in rio? what insights can you give us to racing in Guanabara Bay?
I have to start with all the negative publicity because the press has made it on top of everyone’s mind. Sure it is not perfect there, but it is pretty cool in Rio. The scenery is spectacular, the people could not be friendlier, and we have yet to miss a day of sailing due to weather. It’s a pretty nice place to sail.
The bay itself is tricky, the most likely courses for us are “Naval” and “Pao”, each near the mouth of the Bay. The tide can come in on Naval really hard. I just last week measured 10 boat lengths a minute before one of the starts. There is an island just upwind of the course that looks like something out of a James Bond movie, and it offers some current relief –but it is not always clear exactly where.
On Pao, there is current too, but not as much. It is just to the West of Naval with the windward mark often tucked under the huge rock known as Sugarloaf. So the start is in current and relatively steady wind, but by the top 1/3 of the course it is shifty like a small Midwest US lake. We need to study the course more so are heading back down to spend time on the water, get used to the ripping currents, and the fluky winds.
That all said, it is really nice sailing. Mountains surround the bay blocking all but the strongest systems, so there is a reliable thermal that comes in early afternoon almost every day.
What are you most excited about for the Rio Games?
Lots can happen in sailboat racing, but we are in the hunt to do well and are proud to represent our country as a legitimate competitor! Some will argue that a World Championship is just as hard and should be treated the same, but having just won the Sonar Disabled World’s last month I can tell you first hand that yes, it is just as hard, but the Games are different because the non-sailing world watches. You are part of something bigger – nothing can match representing your country in the same place and time as all the other sports.
Catch up and stay in touch with Team USA One:
Follow US Sailing Team Sperry on Facebook
Ricky Doerr, Brad Kendell & Hugh Freund – UNCHARTED WATERS: https://youtu.be/GT5r1fbgfVo
World Championship Title for USA Sonar, Medemblik 2016: https://youtu.be/PO15rct-Z-k
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22 July
PORTSMOUTH, UK: SAME CITY, DIFFERENT RACE
The most unpredictable event yet in the America’s Cup World Series. Why? An interruption of Olympic proportion.
A few of the America’s Cup teams will temporarily lose key players as we build up to the Olympic Summer Games next month in Rio de Janeiro. Many of the young America’s Cup studs will compete for medals – Peter Burling and Blair Tuke from Emirates Team New Zealand, as well as Nathan Outteridge and Ian Jensen from Artemis Racing, will all compete in the Men’s 49er. Competing in the Finn class will be Giles Scott, tactician on Land Rover BAR. Scott has missed the past two ACWS events for Olympics practice, however, making his absence less of a shock to Ainslie and the BAR crew in Portsmouth.
With these sailors chasing Olympic glory, new talent will step onboard the boats. It makes sense the teams have put Veteran leaders in crucial on-deck positions – making the crew arguably as strong as before, now with an added element of surprise. When Glenn Ashby (ETNZ) is your stand-in skipper, a 15-time multihull world champion, you are in pretty good hands! The same for Francesco Bruni, filling for Outteridge on Artemis Racing. Bruni was the tactician on Prada for the last cup, he is one of the most talented sailors on the planet!
Even outside of the Olympics commitments, there are interesting crew rotations happening with all of the teams. Lets see how they play out before we make any judgements.
In addition, Portsmouth itself provides an interesting twist for this weekend’s event. Last July we witnessed a fantastic show from the town, region and wider nation. Huge support, massive crowds. Of course there will always be home town pressure, and interestingly for some reason it always seems enhanced with Ainslie and England. Ainslie’s sailing success has built up a super human quality – he can’t loose. But in the past few events he was not first – he did lose. I know his supporters and the amount of passion among English sailing fans. They all mean exceptionally well. I have to ask, is it too strong a praise that they expect him to win? Does the expectation rule anything else a failure? The pressure was on after New York, their poorest finish to date, from which they retaliated in Chicago. It will be interesting to see how Portsmouth plays out for the home team.
Plenty of intrigue, plenty of mystery. Portsmouth will be different, but the million-dollar question is: How different?
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20 July
NORTH SAILS CLIENTS DOMINATE MELGES 32 RACING IN EUROPE
NORTH SAILS CLIENTS DOMINATE MELGES 32 RACING IN EUROPE
Congratulations to North Sails Melges 32 clients for sailing exceptionally well in the European circuit.
North Sails powered every overall podium position in the 2016 Sailing Series®. The fourth and final act in the Series also served as the Melges 32 Europeans, with North outfitting the top three boats.
2016 Sailing Series Results
1. Richard Goransson – Inga From Sweden
2. Matteo Balestrero – Giogi
3. Vincenzo Onorato – Mascalzone Latino
2016 European Championship Results
1. Vincenzo Onorato/Cameron Appleton – Mascalzone Latino
2. Matteo Balestrero/Andrea Casale – Giogi
3. Richard Goransson/Vasco Vascotto – Inga From Sweden
The North Sails class leaders for the Melges 32 are Cameron Appleton, Daniele Cassinari, Chris Larson and Federico Michetti. Class leaders are committed to increasing performance through sail design and tuning. Feel free to reach out to them if you have questions on the recent Melges 32 results or the North Sails Melges 32 sail inventory.
Inga From Sweden – Federico Michetti, Giovanni Cassinari, Marco Capitani
Giogi – Andrea Casale, Danielle Cassinari
Mascalsone Latino – Cameron Appleton
3Di RAW™ was the sail of choice for all winning teams. The recent Melges 32 results are another testament that RAW’s speed without compromise is the choice of champions.
Next up for the Melges 32 class is the US Nationals in August followed by the Worlds in September.
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19 July
THE KIWI WAY: RICHARD DODSON
Richard Dodson, two-time America’s Cup Winner and former owner of North Sails in New Zealand, was forced to stop competitive sailing due to MS. Here he tells us of his journey into Paralympic sailing, and the motivation to claim New Zealand’s first-ever Paralympic gold.
Richard, please tell us about your journey from the America’s Cup to the Paralympics?
I progressed from AC sailing to the J boats which was a good progression for the changes MS was having on my sight and balance (my two worst symptoms). Sailing with MS got a little tricky especially at the top level. One World was my last AC Campaign. It took a little convincing to try Para-sailing, as I didn’t appreciate the high level Para-sailing was at. David Abercrombie, CEO of Yachting NZ, suggested David Barnes (my previous team mate who is also ex AC and has MS. David’s MS has progressed to the stage he had to pull out of the campaign) and I give Para-sailing a go as they felt it was not recognized enough in NZ and having two well known yachties involved would heighten the profile of Para-sailing in NZ. NZ is top in the world at sailing and blind sailing, but has never really been recognized in Para-sailing. After our first Para-sailing regatta in Ireland three years ago we realized the incredibly high caliber of the sailors we were to start competing against.
After that first regatta I was blown away by the positive, happy, upbeat attitude of the Para sailors. However, they are still highly competitive and as tough as any in the protest room. At this regatta, which was the Para-Worlds in Ireland, I thought we would either come first or second. We finished eighth. The competition was so much higher than first anticipated. That wiped the grin off our faces, and got the competitive juices flowing again.
How has Paralympic sailing influenced your life after such a successful sailing career before you were diagnosed with MS?
You either embrace it and take it on or you don’t, and you let life pass you by.
How does it feel to represent your country once again at the highest level?
It feels great to be representing New Zealand at this level again. There has been a massive amount of interest and support for our team. Quite mind blowing, and makes us feel extremely humbled. For instance, last night we had a meeting with Russell Coutts, Joey Allen, Matthew Mason and my brother Tom Dodson. Amazing line-up of talent coming out on a wet winter night to debrief our Rio test event and give us words of support and advice for Rio. As we told them, the support from the NZ yachting community and NZ AC yachties is astounding.
Once we had to wet sand the bottom of the boat and Matty Mason said he would rally some guys to help us. This was shortly after the AC in San Fran. We had Simon Daubney, Warwick Fleury and Matthew Mason from Oracle sanding alongside Richard Meacham and James Dagg from Team NZ. We also often will have mixed crew from different AC teams on our number two boat.
The New Zealand Sonar crew looks to be a very strong team. What are your goals, who are the big threats and where do you see your strengths on the water?
We have a fast boat. North Sails New Zealand, with technical advice from our coach Don Cowie, have built us FAST sails. Dimension Polyant has kindly supplied cloth free of charge during the whole campaign. Until very recently we had our office at North Sails in the Auckland Viaduct which they gave us at no charge.
We have had the top sailors in the world to train against. However, being on the other side of the world means we have not competed in many overseas regattas. So whilst we have tough opposition here it is still only the two Sonars to line up and start against. So we really miss not having one design fleet racing. We sail against the RNZYS Youth fleet in their Elliot 7ms and they like nothing better than to give the “old boys” a hard time.
Our goal is the same as the whole fleet. To podium. It’s in the lap of the Gods (or Christ the Redeemer statue overlooking Rio :). The difference is we are the new kids on the block. Almost the whole fleet is capable of winning Gold. And they have all competed in Paralympics at least once.
We have a great team around us. Between them and Paralympic NZ team they have everything in place we could possibly need to take any stress or unexpected issues out of play.
Have you had a chance to train in the bay in Rio? What are your expectations for the racing conditions and will this play to your strengths?
We have just returned from Rio where we had 14 races in 7 days. The Paras will be 11 races over 6 days. The tides are extremely tricky and frustrating, but it’s the same for everyone. We are lucky that our coach has spent a great deal of time in Rio coaching Torben Grael’s kids so knows the area well. On the start line you can have one end of the line with the tide going out and on the other end the tide coming in. Takes a bit of getting used to.
It’s a beautiful venue to sail, and we’re really looking forward to September.
We know it’s going to be light, which suits us as we are a light crew. The winds are quite fluky which we are OK with.
The Paralympics has a unique and inspirational atmosphere – what are you most excited about for Rio 2016?
We’re staying at the village which sounds amazing and will be great to get involved in the atmosphere and see all the other teams and NZ Paralympians who have achieved so much. I’m looking forward to the opening Ceremony which should be exciting.
New Zealand has a proud sailing heritage and has huge support. What will it mean to claim Gold in Rio?
I couldn’t begin to tell you how many people have supported our team, not only financially but also morally. It would be great to be able to pay this back and be the first ever NZ Para-Sailing team to win a medal.
We are extremely disappointed that Para-sailing has been dropped from Tokyo, as there is a very large disabled sailing community in NZ. We just hope this doesn’t make anyone drop the sport for another. It is always great to have a goal to work toward and it will be hard for those that don’t have the pinnacle of all sport, the Olympics or in this case the Paralympics to work toward. It’s a hard road being disabled but this is just another unnecessary hurdle.
You have had a long relationship with North Sails in New Zealand, which boasts some of the best sailors in the world and brightest minds in the sport. What makes North Sails stand out and attract such talent?
I have been involved with the North Sails family since I was 27 sailing Finns against my brother Tom. We became involved when Tom Schnackenberg was in Perth working with Alan Bond’s Australian AC campaign, and he needed someone here in NZ as his partner to run the loft, so brother Tom and I bought half off him. That’s approximately 30 years with the company. There is no doubt North Sails is the leading sailmaker in the world which makes me proud to be involved. For any sailor or sailmaker it is the most prestigious company to work for.
We imagine you still follow the Cup closely – what do you make of the current state of the oldest trophy in sport?
I love the fact they are sailing cats now, it’s extremely exciting to watch. Just because we’re getting old and a little fragile and can’t stay involved, that’s fine. We can be armchair admirals.
Follow Rick, Andrew and Chris via their website, kiwigoldsailing.co.nz
All images © Ainhoa Sanchez / courtesy of Kiwi Gold Sailing
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13 July
PERSONAL BEST: MCNAY AND HUGHES ROLL INTO RIO 2016
US Men’s 470 Olympic contenders Stu McNay and Dave Hughes take up final preparations for the Rio Games. Hear from Dave on the importance of training, drawing from experience, and setting goals for the Big Event.
With your first Olympics as an athlete just around the corner, how are you feeling? After an impressive run of podium finishes over the last few seasons, you must be approaching the Games with a certain level of confidence?
Those medals do hold importance. They prove to ourselves and our competitors that we have what it takes to win big events. More importantly, repeat medalling shows it’s not just a fluke. That said, you can never rest on past successes. Yes, they give confidence, but the real confidence comes with focused training and processes, and the calmness with which you can execute on game day.
What are your goals for the Games? Which other teams will be pushing you hard?
Our goal has always been the same — race a solid regatta at the standard we expect from ourselves. If we do that, we will be rewarded with an Olympic medal. Every team will be pushing hard. That’s what makes the Games so special. We are looking forward to competing within that vibe of excellence.
You’ll be racing with an experienced Olympian in Stu McNay, tell us how important this is.
Stu is a true champion. Being a veteran of the Olympic experience is an irreplaceable asset. Even now during our final preparations, Stu clearly has the mature perspective that can only come from having danced the Olympic dance before.
You were part of the coaching team for US Sailing at London 2012 – what were you able to learn and take away from this experience? It must have given you an insight into the scale of the games?
Yes, I was the US Olympic Team coach for the 49er. Similar to Stu’s Olympic experience, having been on the coaching side also gives awesome insight into the entire Olympic experience and, specifically, managing the Olympic regatta as a stand-alone event. Coaching forces you to take a holistic approach to the regatta. I lean on that experience almost daily.
Give us an update on your final training?
We’ve just completed two longer stints in Rio during May and June. Each training block culminated with a coaches’ regatta (“Acts”) with all or most of the Olympic players on the water. These were excellent formats for testing final equipment, learning more about the courses, and executing against teams at their best. We were fortunate enough to win both Act-1 and Act-2. In July, we are back in Rio for two weeks for Act-3. Final US Olympic Team processing takes place in Houston at the end of July, after which we’ll fly down for the Big Event.
For those not familiar with dinghy sailing, what are the characteristics of 470 racing?
Frankly, I love the 470. It’s a lively boat. I’m constantly learning new ways to make it sail faster. It performs in 5 knots to 30+ knots. It races well as a light-air displacement boat or heavy-air planing dinghy. There are so many technique modes both upwind and down, so it’s never one-dimensional. The overall level of the fleet is extremely high, ensuring tight racing at every regatta. Sail the 470 in a Mistral in Southern France and you’ll be hooked!
What were the key factors behind your decision to be powered with North Sails to give you a competitive advantage? What products are you working with?
Our entire inventory is North Sails – main, jib, spinnaker. It has been that way throughout our campaign. The sails are smooth and consistent. The finish work is superb. We’ve taken on a variety of special projects and testing, and the North team has always been a pleasure to work with. Their knowledge and technology are second to none. We love the products and saw no reason to go elsewhere.
The US Sailing Team for the Olympics looks one of the strongest rosters in recent memory – do you think dinghy sailing in the States is in good shape? Do you get to hang out with the wider team in the build up to the Games?
Most of us have been traveling together to the same World Cup events for years. The same has been true with our training in Rio, although each fleet might hold slightly different schedules. As we lead into the Games, the entire team is logging time down in Rio. Bigger picture, dinghy sailing in the States is in fine shape, particularly with youth classes and established classes, like the Snipe. Even with all the foiling options out there these days, one design dinghy sailing is still by far the best bang-for-your-buck racing available. I’d love to see more college graduates find their way into local fleets. I wish the 470 would make a comeback as a local, non-Olympic-path, racer in the US. Dinghy sailing enthusiasts, like myself, always want to see more growth.
Finally, what are you looking forward to the most about the Rio Olympics?
Being at my personal best and attacking the Olympic Regatta with my good friend, Stu!!
Images (c) Sailing Energy/ Jesus Renedo
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11 July
EXTREME LATITUDES ONLY: ALIOTH'S 5 YEAR PLAN
“The purpose that we all share is to access places where one cannot normally go by boat, no charters available, those that are less explored and, coincidentally and fantastically, at extreme latitudes.”
In late 2015, childhood friends Vincent Moeyersoms, Olivier Moeyersoms, and Marc Vander Stricht bought the 53’ aluminum, French-designed exploration sailboat, Alioth. Why? Because these Belgian cruising sailors share a love of extreme latitudes—now they have the vessel to get them there.
Built in 2009, Alioth is fully kitted-out with a lifting keel, water ballast, twin rudders, and crash bulkheads in the bow and stern. She is an ocean-goer with some miles in her wake, having completed a circumnavigation with her previous owners. Alioth came with sails that Vincent describes as “old” since they have 50,000 miles on them and her year-old North Sails spinnaker is a “keeper.” Next month she will receive North Sails NPL TOUR heavy-duty cruising sails.
For Vincent and crew, expedition sails might be a better term.
For 2-3 months out of the year, Alioth will serve as home for Vincent, Olivier, and Marc. Within five years they hope to lap the Americas on a zig-zag route reaching far North, and far South. In May, the crew delivered Alioth from Belgium to Norway. Over the next few months they will make their way from the Lofoten Islands, down the coast of Norway, and start ticking the boxes on the Atlantic. “Next summer we should be coming up the coast of the US to Maine, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland,” Vincent said. “If the conditions are right, we could then attempt the Northwest Passage. If not, we will delay a year.”
Completing the Northwest Passage would leave them in Alaska. From there, the planned route would deliver them down the coast of Canada, across the Pacific to New Zealand, across the South Pacific to Chile, then onto Antarctica, South Georgia, and back up to Europe.
“I sailed professionally years ago and I took part in the Round the Word Race and raced maxi boats,” Vincent said. “Later I ran a few campaigns in the Maxi class and America’s Cup. In 1992, I managed the winning America’s Cup team America3.”
Five years aboard Alioth is the next challenge.
Alioth’s name signifies the brightest star in the Big Dipper. “We decided to keep the name,” Vincent said. This decision is a nod to the crew’s shared ambition to add a greater purpose to their exploration. “We would love to adopt an environmental aspect of the journey, to contribute toward trying to find a solution to the ocean’s plastic pollution problem we’ve seen growing for so many years. In 40 years spent on the water, we have seen trash accumulating on the ocean, and we want to be part of the solution.”
We look forward to keeping in touch with Alioth throughout her journey on the globe through North Sails Waterlogs – composed by a tribe of adventurers powered by North Sails. More at northsails.com/water-logs
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07 July
VINCE BRUN TO LEAD OFFSHORE ONE DESIGN
North Sails is pleased to announce that Vince Brun has accepted the role of Director of Offshore One Design (previously called Class Sail Development-CSD). Brun, a renowned Brazilian-American Olympic sailor, brings a lifetime of one design experience to the position including a 35 year career as President of North Sails Small Boat One Design division.
North Sails President Ken Read said: “Class Sail Development has always been a focus for our company and this will mark a fresh start for the division now called Offshore One Design. From Farr 40s to J/109s, we consider all One Design Keelboats a major part of our sail development and customer service here at North Sails. Having a leader like Vince, who will focus 100% on creating class sails that can win at every single level, is imperative for our company and our clients. It is great to have Vince back full time. He is exactly the right person for the job.”
North Sails Offshore One Design division will support teams in the following classes:
BENETEAU 36.7
C&C 30
BENETEAU 40.7
FARR 280
FARR 30
FARR 40
J/30
J/88
J/105
J/109
J/111
M-32
MC 38
MELGES 32
SOTO 40
SWAN 42
Vince will work hand in hand with current Offshore One Design leaders at North Sails such as Chris Larson and Cam Appleton, two of the world’s best sailors who have helped raise the level of design and tuning in a large number of classes. “In my 38 years of sailmaking experience with North Sails, my focus was small dinghies and keelboats in the one design market,” said Brun. “Moving to larger classes is a natural progression and I’m honored to be asked to lead North Sails’ Offshore One Design division. Because I have worked for North Sails for nearly four decades, I am familiar with the people, product line, and company culture, which will be a tremendous help in my new position,” said Brun, whose tenure as Small Boat One Design President culminated in a record year of client regatta wins in 2013.
In addition to his proven business leadership, Brun’s on-the-water success includes nine collective world champion titles in the Soling, Star, J/24, Melges 24, and Etchells classes. “For the last 15+ years, North Sails has been the sailmaker of choice for the majority of the Offshore One Design classes. We will continue using our experience, design knowledge and technology to further our position with both product and sail care for all classes,” Brun concluded.
Managing the confluence of sail design with market trends, the outflow of information on tuning and technical trim to clients, and coordinating regatta and organizational support for key classes will be central to the new role. Brun will work with a team of hand-picked “class leaders” to monitor activity and effectively manage designs, ensuring North Sails products are consistently on the cutting edge.
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29 June
HAVING TROUBLE POINTING?
HAVING TROUBLE POINTING?
Tim Healy’s Tips to Help You Get More Height When You Need It
There are times where you may find yourself struggling to either keep your upwind lane, or just can’t get that height to pinch off a boat to weather. We all know that speed creates point, so the faster you go the more lift your keel or centerboard will create giving you better height, point and VMG. That said, there are still times when you think you are doing it all correctly and still aren’t matching your competitors. Here are a few “tips” that Tim Healy has picked up sailing a variety of boats through the years that he found has helped him. Try one or more of the following tips on your boat next time you are looking for better pointing.
TIM’S QUICK TIPS:
Check your backstay
Is it pulled on in light air? If so make sure it is loose. Also, check to see if you may have too much pre-bend in the mast. Prebend helps your mainsail match it’s designed shape in lighter air but a mast that is set with a lot of prebend will make for a sail that may end up too flat for your sailing style. Less prebend will make your mast straighter which will make the main deeper and can help create the power needed to point higher so try a slightly straighter mast to push some depth into your main and create a more powerful shape.
Did you pull your outhaul too tight?
Try easing it some to get some depth in the bottom of the main. A “slightly” looser outhaul will add depth to the lower ⅓ of the main and and create more depth in the back of the sail down low which will add a little “kick” and help with some height. Just be careful not to ease it too much as the sail can get too deep quickly and add a lot of drag. Less than an inch can make a difference..
Where is your traveler set?
Try moving the traveler a little higher on the track and concentrate more on where the end of the boom is and not where the traveler car or block are on the track. Most sloop rigged boats can sail upwind with the boom on centered, or even a few degrees higher, in light to moderate wind without creating too much drag. Setting the traveler so the end of the boom is as much as a “boom width” above centerline can help balance the boat and make it want to sail closer to the wind.
Are your jib leads too far back?
Sometimes we don’t think of the jib lead position as helping to point higher but it certainly can keep you from pointing higher so making certain that the leads are set far enough forward will make for a fuller jib and can help create the power needed, especially in choppy conditions, to increase forward drive and allow you to sail closer to the wind.
These are simple tips that can make a big difference. Feel free to e-mail Tim Healy or any member of the North Sails One Design Team if you have other questions on how to make your one-design boat GO BEYOND.
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28 June
DRAGON LINKERS INTERNATIONAL DE DEAUVILLE
DRAGON LINKERS IINTERNATIOANL DE DEAUVILLE
Last weekend twenty five Dragons from five countries raced at the Linkers International de Deauville.
After 6 races, in varied weather conditions, Paul Hoj Jensen won the regatta.
North Sails powered boats dominated the top 10 scores.
North Sails Results: 1, 2*, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
© Michel Tréhet
© Michel Tréhet
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27 June
2016 420 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
2016 420 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
Portuguese Costa brothers win
Last week the 420 Championship was held in San Remo, Italy, with the attendance of 262 boats from 23 countries. In the Open class, Portuguese brothers Diogo and Pedro Costa won the Championship using a full inventory of North Sails.
Besides the Open class, North Sails achieved outstanding results in other classes taking first in the U17 category with the Greek sailors Athanasopoulos Yogo and Dimitris Tassion, and second position in the Ladies class with the Spanish sailors Maria Bover and Clara Llabrés. All of them used North Sails full inventories during the regatta.
Congratulations to all and we wish you good luck in the next international event – the European Championship in Hungry.
Results
420 Open
1. Costa/ Costa
2. Rogers/ Parkin
3. Gourgiotis / Batsis
420 Ladies
1. Russo Cririllo / Linussi
2. Maria Bover/ Clara Llabrés
3. Marchesini / Fedel
U17
1. Telis Athanasopoulos Yogo / Dimitris Tassios
2. Eduard Ferrer / Carlos De Maqua
3. Enzo Balanger / Gaultier Tallieu
For more information about the Championship see the event website.
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21 June
THE RACE AROUND ST. KILDA
After 100 nautical miles and almost exactly 23 hours at sea, Moon struck Too, Gordon Lawson’s J122, took victory at the inaugural St Kilda Challenge.
Organized by North Uist’s Comann Na Mara, the challenge brought together 27 yachts from all corners of the UK and beyond to a far nook of the Western Isles with a long-held and shared common goal – to reach the alluring, mysterious, rugged cliffs of St Kilda.
Of those 27 boats, 15 of them went in the racing fleet and the remaining 12 cruised in company. Despite having been at sea for such a prolonged period, it was a nail-biting finish between Grant Kinsman’s Sigma 400 Thalia and Port Edgar Yacht Club’s Moonstruck. The fastest boat on handicap, Moonstruck was the only one of the racing fleet to make the return journey in under 24 hours – 22 hours and 59 minutes to be precise. Dublin Bay-based Thalia, meanwhile, sailed in after 24 hours and 31 minutes.
Thus ensued several hours of nervous waiting for the final yachts to arrive and the much-anticipated results – and when they came, they were exceptionally close. In the end, Moonstruck prevailed with a tiny corrected time margin of five minutes and 50 seconds over her rival. An astonishingly tight result after such distance, and so many vagaries of tide, swell and fickle breeze; a real testament to a very long night of grit and determination in some very difficult conditions. And Fraser Gray’s First 40.7 Pippa VI from Helensburgh rounded off the top three with a respectable time of 24 hours and 57 minutes.
In all of the hundreds and hundreds of hours of planning which had gone into this short 24 hour race, it had been expected that the yachts would probably have to dig deep to overcome some perilous seas and howling wind – so typical of even summer weather in this notoriously exposed and blasted outpost of the UK. There were strict guidelines in place about how much wind could actually thwart even a start. Inclement weather could have seen the flotilla shorebound while the racers were set free to pit their wits against the elements. They could all have made the journey for nought.
What had not been expected was yachts peaking at a mere seven knots, struggling against a sometimes unpleasant swell, crews toiling from fatigue and occasional seasickness as windless conditions made pacey progress impossible.
“Sailing in conditions like that is much harder than racing hard in heavy weather,” said race officer John Readman. “It is very hard work to keep morale up and attention span lively when you are wallowing in the sea like that with barely a breath of air and no real sign of any to come.”
Of the 15 racing yachts which started, seven of them judged that discretion was the better part of valour and joined the cruising flotilla – allowing the luxury of switching on the engine. Of the cruisers, just a single one – Sea Fever – actually made the determined journey to St Kilda under sail.
And yet, despite a voyage which had clearly taken its toll and after a well-earned nap, there was universal praise ashore from the participants – both the racers and the cruisers.
Phrases like ‘a mission accomplished’ and ‘a real sense of pleasure and achievement’ pervaded across Lochmaddy’s packed marina. It was an epic in ways few had considered, but an epic nonetheless.
Most regattas are run by yacht clubs or sailing organisations – the St Kilda Challenge, however, was run not only by sailing experts, but by a whole community. A community which had a vision many years ago and has worked tirelessly to bring it to fruition.
“We are exhausted but thrilled,” said Comann Na Mara chairman Gus MacAulay. “The intention is to make this a biennial event, so we will start planning for 2018 shortly.
“There was great camaraderie among the sailors and a tremendous buzz on North Uist. We simply could not have asked for more and I would like to thank all those who helped and collaborated to make it happen.”
Perhaps the greatest achievement of the St Kilda Challenge was for a small community in what cannot be described as anything other than a remote area, to pull together a dream so fascinating that the rest of the country (and a few more besides) wanted to join them.
This content has been shortened from its original version. To read the full-length article, please visit the St. Kilda Challenge webpage.
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17 June
CHECKING IN WITH THE TRANSAT BAKERLY FLEET
Gautier Sergent, North Sails designer, recently met up with the Transat bakerly fleet as it finished in New York City. Sergent had helped design new 3Di sails for several teams, helping each singlehanded sailor pick the best possible inventory based on the type of boat, skipper’s experience and preferred modes, predicted routing, and of course computer-aided design and VPP analysis. And with eighteen boats in four classes (Ultime, IMOCA 60, Multi 50, and Class 40) sailing over 3,000 miles from England, it was a great opportunity to see how the new sails lived up to durability and performance expectations. “It is always best to debrief right upon arrival to get unbiased first impressions,” Sergent said during a recent interview. “Rewind and redo the race with all the key moments: where the boat performed and where it did not, compared to others.”
Sergent also wanted to assist with any service that might be required, since many of the boats were quickly heading back across the Atlantic, either as part of the New York-Vendée Race or to attempt a North Atlantic record. And with the start of the ultimate solo race, the Vendée Globe, less than five months away, “the Transat bakerly is one of the last big events before the Vendée Globe for the IMOCA and the Jules Verne for some Ultimes.”
Overall, Sergent was happy with the feedback he received. “The new sails we made matched expectations—how the sailors were hoping they would use them and how they would perform. Our upcoming downwind product 3Di FORCE has made a very strong impact on the maxi tris and IMOCAs. It retains deeper angle performance, while offering better acceleration and more potential to sail tighter angles.”
And now Sergent will take this data back to the drawing board and share with the rest of the design team, material engineers, and R&D lab. “Interpret the results, project this onto the next race, etc…” At the end of the day, client impressions help create and improve these designs and each is tailor made to suit. “The latest layout updates seem a good improvement, thanks to field feedback.”
It’s important to be involved from the start of each project, Sergent explains. “The teams enjoy our expertise and our involvement right from the beginning of the design of the boat, giving us a unique understanding of how the boat works and what the skipper expects.” And the sailors appreciate the proven track record in performance and durability that North 3Di offers. “We have powered every single major IMOCA race win since 2011: Barcelona, Vendée Globe, Route du Rhum, Transat Jacques Vabres… Same with the Ultime.”
Of the Ultimes, Coville on Sodebo recently broke the 24 hour solo sailing distance record: 714 nautical miles. The Ultime MACIF is on stand by for a North Atlantic/24 hour record attempt, while the IMOCA 60s have just finished their return sprint across the Atlantic as part of the inaugural New York-Vendee Race, their last chance to qualify for the Vendée Globe. The Class 40 and Multi 50 will do the Quebec / St Malo race next. Then, Sergent says, “We will have more debrief and analysis before the sprint to the start of the Vendée Globe or Jules Verne, to confirm the choices and final sail inspection.” Records may fall, but for this sail designer, the learning never ends.
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17 June
FIRST HOIST
FIRST HOIST
When summer arrived in Newport, RI, Onne and his family were excited for their first hoist of the sailing season
Onne van der Wal and his family spent the winter restoring their 1972 Pearson 36, Snoek. And then came summer, and their reward: the first sail. The skies opened up for their first day with the new sails. Onne and his daughter, Read, teamed up with North Sails’ Bill Fortenberry to rig up and sail the boat, and together they captured the day through Onne’s lens. Following are some highlights with their remarks.
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13 June
HIGHS AND LOWS IN CHICAGO WRAP WITH SPECTACULAR SUPER SUNDAY
This Louis Vuitton America’s Cup World Series has been snake-bit like I have never seen. They’ve lost more days due to too much wind or lack of wind, to a point that is really unprecedented. Usually it happens once in a blue moon, but in the past year it has become all too common. The America’s Cup solution is the Substitute Race. So, if there are good conditions on the practice day, they put a race in the can and use it on a day where there potentially is no racing. On Saturday in Chicago the first race ended up being counted as the substitute race from Friday. I haven’t talked to the teams, but if I was a competitor I would say put three substitute races in the can on Friday. Television and promotion of our sport is a huge part of what the America’s Cup is trying to do, so it’s simply being a bit more creative and open-minded about how to pull it all off in less than ideal situations.
“The enthusiasm of not just Mid-West sailors but sports fanatics was out there on the Navy Pier. Anyone who was out there Sunday walked away going “Woah, that is not the sailing I’ve seen before”. That’s good for sailing.”
The other thing that sailors don’t realize is that every time you go out on a race course, in your local bay for example, and conditions are too light or windy in the morning, you just delay and wait for the conditions to get better. So essentially you have an all day window to pick the right conditions. Well, because of television and when the racing goes live around the world, you don’t have that luxury. You go when you go. That’s it, whether it’s the best or worst conditions of the day. It’s one of the drawbacks of modern, televised sailboat racing. The substitute race buys a little bit of broadcast time. And the great thing in Chicago was that after the race period expired for live television, they kept the boats out and the wind filled in to deliver a terrific race that afternoon, and that became a substitute race for Sunday. But what it also did was offer a sailboat race to the thousands and thousands of spectators on Navy Pier. Too put it perspective, it’s tough to hold a crowd during a rain delay in baseball, but on Saturday in Chicago, nobody left the pier. The boats put on a great show in a good breeze later in the day, and everyone went home happy.
Then Sunday doesn’t even compare: on schedule, three race day, drama, upsets, cool passes and great sailing by Artemis. Although they did try pretty hard to lose it at the end of the final race! It was great to see some of the new blood thriving. I felt really happy for Soft Bank Team Japan finishing off the regatta with a win, and getting on the podium. I’m also happy that Artemis pulled together a string of consistent races. And some of the big guns like Ainslie figured out how not to sail his best but at the same time come within a couple of points of winning the regatta. And Oracle Team USA and Emirates Team New Zealand did not have their best regatta. You can really see how the breaks come your way from time to time. They didn’t get any breaks and they didn’t sail perfectly. All of a sudden the overall series is really tight.
Chicago was great: the venue was unbelievable. The enthusiasm of not just Mid-West sailors but sports fanatics was out there on the Navy Pier. Anyone who was out there Sunday walked away going “woah, that’s not the sailing I’ve ever seen before”. That’s good for sailing. But venues, and venue times, are becoming more and more critical with televised sailing. Everyone is really learning that you have to consider the time and place based on historical wind and weather data. But I’m really proud of Chicago – the VIP experience through to the fan experience was especially well done.
Next is Portsmouth – the first time for me that I’ll be returning to a venue for the second time. The first event was terrific, heaps of people. But it was only a one day regatta. So let’s all root for two good race days. And we know the British are enthusiastic not only for their team but also for sailing and for the America’s Cup. I have no doubt that what they have learnt across all the events since last time, it should be a great experience and a heck of an event.
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12 June
FLYING SCOT SUMMER TIPS
GET READY FOR SUMMER SAILING
Few tips from our Flying Scot experts Zeke and Brian
If you are like most of us getting into the swing of things at the beginning of the summer sailing, season gets very exciting though, sometimes, we can forget some very basic things that make sailing and racing the Flying Scot fun. Here are five “reminder” tips from Zeke and Brian to refresh your memory on things that may easily be overlooked.
GET THE RIGHT HALYARD TENSION
MAINSAIL HALYARD – It is very common to see many teams sailing with incorrect main halyard tension. Generally we see the sail is not hoisted high enough. This causes the boom to “droop” and creates a bad sheeting angle. Even being as little as 3/4″ too low can make a big difference. Next time out try to hoist the main until the luff goes smooth then lower it one or two clicks until some wrinkles appear. This is a good starting point and a way to make sure you hoist high enough.
JIB HALYARD – Jib halyard tension, like the main, can be tricky. We don’t like to see “scallops” (or gaps between the snaps) with our jibs. However, we do want to see some “crow’s feet” on the bottom 2 or 3 snaps. “Crow’s feet” are small wrinkles that go into the sail about 2″ at the snaps and, if we have them at the bottom 3 snaps, it tells me the halyard isn’t too tight or too loose. If, when sailing, we see the sail sagging between the snaps, we need more halyard. If the sail is smooth all the way up the luff, it may be a click too tight. Note: As sails age it is better to be a click too tight than too loose on both halyards.
CREW WEIGHT POSITIONING
Crew weight positioning is critical in the Scot. We work to keep our crew weight close together and centered. This helps keep the boat balanced and on it’s designed lines. As the wind increases we move aft to keep the bow “knuckle” just out of the water or “kissing” the waves.
Also, it is very important to keep the big bow out of the water while sailing downwind. As soon as the wind is over about 6 knots, the skipper should sit all the way at the back of the bench. The crew should never be more than a body width forward of the main sheet block. As the breeze picks up, the crew should keep scooting back until they are all the way back against the skipper in over 15 knots.
MARK YOUR SHEETS AND HALYARDS!
Sailing fast consistently requires being able to repeat past successes so we have marks on our halyards and sheets. Some folks even mark the vang, centerboard and cunningham. The important thing is to find what makes you go fast and be able to repeat it the next time conditions are identical.
PLAY WITH YOUR CENTERBOARD HEIGHT GOING DOWNWIND
The boat reacts very sensitively to board height downwind. You want to have the board as far out of the water as you can to reduce drag. Proper board height helps the boat track straight and fast. If the helm is telling you the boat wants to head up, try pulling the board up another couple of inches until the helm goes neutral. Conversely, if the helm is telling you the boat wants to head down, try letting the board down a couple of inches.
DON’T BE AFRAID OF THE VANG!
Remember that the only really effective way to de-power your Flying Scot is to pull the vang on HARD! The more over-powered you get, the more vang you pull on so that you can ease the main sheet. In fully over-powered breeze strengths, the vang should be on so hard that the boom has a visual bend in it and the main sheet can be eased so that the boom is all the way past the corner of the transom. Just remember to ease the vang when you get to the weather mark!
These tips were provided by the North Sails Flying Scot experts Zeke Horowitz and Brian Hayes. Feel free to contact them if you have any questions or need any assistance. We want to help you make your Flying Scot fly so you can exceed your expectations and GO BEYOND this summer!
Good sailing!
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09 June
COVILLE STRIKES AGAIN
North Sails 3Di ENDURANCE powers Coville to another offshore milestone
Thomas Coville has broken the 24 hour solo distance record by sailing 714 nautical miles in a single day. The record was broken at roughly 2000 UTC on June 8th after departing New York City on a record attempt onboard the 100’ trimaran Sodebo Ultim. Coville was racing with one reef in Sodebo’s North Sails 3Di ENDURANCE mainsail and a 3Di RAW J1 when he set the record, averaging just under 30 knots.
This whopping 714nm beats Armel Lecleach’s 2014 record on Banque Populaire VII (now IDEC Sport) of 682 miles in 24 hours. Coville’s record marks the first time a single-handed sailor has broken the 700 mile mark in 24 hours. The record was announced this morning by Team Sodebo, and must still be ratified by the World Sailing Speed Record Council.
North Sails is proud to supply Sodebo Ultim with a full inventory of offshore sails including North Sails 3Di ENDURANCETM and 3Di RAWTM:
North Sails 3Di ENDURANCE Mainsail (built in 2014)
North Sails RAW J1
North Sails Endurance J2
North Sails Endurance J3
North Sails Panel Laminate (NPL) J0
North Sails 3Di composite sailmaking technology is proprietary and exclusive to North. Launched in 2010, the 3Di product has now sailed around the world multiple times on varied platforms and applications. In addition, 3Di has powered the following sailing speed or distance records:
Sodebo Ultim: 24 hour solo distance record with Thomas Coville | 714 nautical miles
Spindrift 2: Ushant to the Equator | 4 days 21 hours 29 minutes
Spindrift 2: Ushant to the South of Tasmania, the entrance to the Pacific | 20 days 04 hours 37 minutes
IDEC Sport: Crossing the Indian Ocean
Spindrift 2: Ushant-Cape Horn | 30 days 04 hours 07 minutes
Dona Bertarelli: Fastest circumnavigation by a female sailor | 47 days 10 hours 59 minutes
Comanche: 24 hour monohull distance record (fully crewed) | 618 nautical miles
Phaedo 3: Bermuda to Plymouth | 2870 nautical miles
Phaedo 3: Rolex Fastnet Race original course | 595 nautical miles
IMOCA Macif: 24 hour solo distance record on a monohull with Francois Gabart | @550 miles
“I am sat(sic) at the nav table on Sodebo and as I looked up out of my window at my mainsail I was thinking: this is the most beautiful mainsail I have ever had.” – Thomas Coville describes his 3Di Mainsail just before finishing the 2015 Transat Jacques Vabre
We congratulate Coville on his third time setting the 24 hour solo distance record, this time surpassing his previous record by nearly 100 nautical miles!
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06 June
NORTH CREW JEAN-PHILIPPE GALLOIS
Jean-Philippe, could you describe what you do at north sails and why you enjoy it?
At the base level I work as a Salesman to improve the experiences of our local customer on and off the water, and to support various local events. I also work to discover new prospects and I enjoy collaborating with them to optimize their boat and onboard performance.
As a Technical Consultant I contribute to racing teams with sail plan optimization, sail charts, rating and often assist as a sail trimmer or tactician. I would love to design the sails but I’m not good enough with the software (laughs…), so I leave this to the real designers and try to give precise, useful feedback on behalf of me, the owner and crew.
I like my job first of all because it is a passion and without passion you cannot do a good job, especially when striving to push the limits, be as precise as possible and go beyond the status quo as we do at North. It is very exciting to work in a company where the goal is to give to the customer the best product with the best service. North Sails is considered a luxury brand in the yachting field, often compared to Formula 1 for the high level of products we deliver.
I’m also lucky to have met very interesting people. It helps me to grow and continually improve. Now 16 years have passed since I entered the company and I have the same motivation because each project is unique. I started from the bottom of the ladder and I intend to continue to growing within the company.
Most recently you have completed a re-configuration for the Volvo Open 70 SFS. Can you tell us about this process and the end results you are experiencing?
The objective for SFS was to move from the Volvo Ocean Race (VOR) box rule to a true IRC plan, where we know the rating is a big part of the equation. It was not an easy job. On SFS we have been running a Pro-Am system with six different guests on board during racing. We wanted to adjust the sail inventory in order to be quicker in maneuvers, reduce effort for the crew and increase performance inshore and offshore.
In March 2015, a new spinnaker staysail, A2, and a North Sails 3Di RAWTM IRC Code 0 were added. The Code 0 replaced the original Masthead Code 0 with equal area and 48kg weight savings. More recently, we switched from overlapping genoas to small jibs and added some padeyes to play more with the in-hauler and up & down system.
The new configuration gives us more ability to manage the sails. Other notable sailplan modifications included a larger and lighter #4 Jib; increased apparent wind angle in the new #2 Jib. The #1 Jib (largest Jib) was switched from a standard overlapping genoa on hanks to a furling masthead genoa with equal area (191m²). The inshore mainsail was built with three full battens instead of 6-7 in the previous main, plus one reef.
This new configuration give us more flexibility managing the sails.
In total we saved more than 200kg in comparison to the Volvo inventory and experienced even, or faster, speeds and a higher angle. Today the boat handles more like a TP52. Overall we have experienced even or faster speeds and a higher angle. We have two certificates for IRC: one with and one without the spinnaker.
On the Offshore Side, we still use the original Masthead Genoa and we had a new furling Cuben Fibre A3 for IRC racing.
What advice do you have for a young person with big aspirations in sailing?
This question makes me smile because it means I am passing to the other side of the barrier, even if I am still 18 years old in spirit (smiles).
To someone with aspirations in sailing, I will advise them to tell the truth and not be afraid to say “I don’t know, but I can find out” instead of saying something wrong, as I hear too often in this business. Stay humble. Because we are fortunate to sail on such prestigious boats does not permit us to forget where we come from (by instance, I still sail on 7m boats with friends / customers. Sometimes it is good to trim a sail you can bring in with two fingers).
In the end don’t hesitate to share and smile. I am convinced the more you give, the more you will receive. But this is more a way of spirit and a philosophy than a piece of advice, so you may take it or leave it!
Images © Gilles Martin Raget
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02 June
INSIGHTS FROM J/30 ANNAPOLIS NOOD WINNER BOB RUTSCH
INSIGHTS FROM J/30 ANNAPOLIS NOOD WINNER BOB RUTSCH
After Bob Rutsch won the J/30 class by one point at the 2016 Annapolis NOOD with two firsts on the final day, Jonathan Bartlett from North Sails Chesapeake asked him a few questions about his program.
How do you fit successful resutls into such a busy life?
There’s never enough time. An injury this winter didn’t allow me to get to the boat put away properly or get winter upgrades done so it was a struggle to get the boat ready on time. Not sure how we would do it without Bobby Muller. His crew had the bottom ready as always and installed a new hatch that we broke at the end of last year. Then our crew all pitched in to get us ready before Annapolis Yacht Club One Design event, which we used as a shake down for the NOOD. Good thing as we broke the topping lift.
Who is on your crew? What are their responsibilities? Do you always sail with the same people?
My boat partner and brother-in-law Mike Costello handles tactics and main. After 20+ years he can do it all and we always have fun. But he’s so busy with three kids playing baseball and soccer that I only get him out for a couple events a year: NOOD, Race Week and NA’s.
Daughter Poncie Rutsch, now 25, trimmed spinnaker. Matthew Wienold was bow and has been my most dependable crew since he joined us ten years ago. Barry Deren did mast. He’s been on the boat since we bought it in 1984. Brad Blash is our primary jib trimmer. He’s been with us five years and is good for jokes and morale. Janie Gittleman was our floater/squirrel.
I also have a couple of new people I can call on who are still learning. After that it’s friends, neighbors, and crew on loan from boats in the fleet that are not sailing a particular event.
How critical is rig tune through the range of conditions?
For many years we used a median setting with Class maximum headstay and only cranked on turns when it blew over 15. We had to up our game when John White joined the fleet. Since we don’t have wind instruments after every race I download ten-minute wind and sea conditions from NOAA and log it with our tune and sail usage. I also look at our GPS track to see what we did right or wrong. We can generally hit our desired tune on the water by adding or subtracting turns for wind speeds from 6-20 at two-knot intervals.
If you have to give three pointers to other teams on how to get the best performance out of the J/30 what would these be?
Only three? After thirty-two years in this boat there’s more but I’ll try to keep it short.
Boat prep is a necessity–a smooth and clean bottom, good sails, and up-to-date rigging.
Sail inventory
So far the 3DI Genoa has been everything I hoped for. It has maintained its shape through two years—52 races and counting. No apparent material deterioration. Normally after 50 races I would be planning on a new genoa for the NA’s this fall.
A typical laminated genoa would be getting brittle, starting to delaminate at this point. The J/30 with a 162% overlap takes a beating during the tacks from the mast, the halyard turning blocks, spin pole ring and stanchions. The extra thickness built in for this down low and wear patches seem to have helped.
After a year the #3 3DI has only been up to see if it fit and an couple tacks while warming up on opening day this year. Looking forward to using that next time it blows.
As for care, we try to rinse it off occasionally if it gets salty and give it time to dry. It probably helps that we take our sails off the boat and store them inside when we are not out sailing.
Crew work
I like to sail with people I enjoy spending time with, who are willing to commit to our program. Talk about or show your crew how you want to handle maneuvers, and cross-train so everyone is at least able to step in and help if needed. There are good crew guides for the J/30 available online but adapt them to your needs. Get the sails up before the first race of the day and practice at least a few tacks to get your compass numbers. Then do a set, some jibes and a douse. Use time between races or on the way in to the dock to work out any problems and find solutions.
Change gears with the conditions
Keep making adjustments as wind and sea conditions change–crew weight, sail trim, and settings like outhaul, halyard tension, traveler and backstay. Compare speed and angle to competitors around you: always speed first, then angle.
There’s lots more but that will do for now.
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01 June
AFTER THE CRAZINESS OF NEW YORK, DON’T EXPECT THINGS TO GET EASIER IN THE WINDY CITY
New York was more than slightly crazy, it was fully fledged crazy! Even with all of the insanity on the water, the same couple of teams keep coming out ahead. If I were a competitor I’d be saying “That was a fluke! It was crazy! That was luck of the draw!” And isn’t it strange that Emirates Team New Zealand and Oracle Team USA are consistently right there. Land Rover BAR has certainly had their moments. Chicago will be difficult, but things are possibly becoming more predictable…
I was quite nervous that New York was going to be just another event happening in the biggest city in the world. I was very, very surprised and thankfully wrong! Good for New York! Even on Saturday, which was a complete washout breeze-wise, there was an incredible number of people. The Louis Vuitton America’s Cup World Series always puts itself in a bit of a tough spot with its time restrictions for television and its location restrictions for helicopters, security and everything else. Some people complained, but they couldn’t just move the race course around the island, it’s not possible. We’re committed to time and space because there are so many other variables that none of us can ever imagine. But even without the perfect race track and with a flukey wind blowing across the channel, the same teams keep winning.
Chicago, as a venue, will potentially impress and surprise people. Some of the diagrams I’ve seen of the race locations show that it could be really fun for spectators right off the Long Docks. That said, the most wind I have ever seen in my whole life on a sailboat has been in Chicago: 70 knots. To think that you’re going to a cute little lake to zip around and have fun, like your grandparents, is not necessarily the case! You can get really steep waves there, it can be windy and rough – it can be nasty. But hopefully the weather prevails and we’ll finally get a series with the races and schedule going off on time. We’re due for a good weekend!
It’s interesting to see how each team has its own level of expectation. For example, I think Groupama Team France were thrilled to come in third in New York, whereas Oracle Team USA were devastated, in a way, to come in second. There’s no question that Ben Ainslie and his supporters have very high expectations. But if you follow America’s Cup tradition and history, expectations from your most avid supporters tend to be far overblown, almost unreachable. So it’s a big job for skippers and CEOs of these projects to manage those expectations. And I think they have to be managed, because if you just come out every other day and say “We’re going to win the America’s Cup, we’re going to win all the regattas, we’re the best, look at us” – OK, maybe it helps raise money in the short term – but for the long term, you’re setting yourself up to be in the serious hot seat given any little hiccup. So I’m sure all these guys are figuring out how to manage expectations as they go, and they’ll have to keep that high on their list of daily priorities.
Bring on Chicago!
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01 June
SOLO UK SOUTHERN CHAMPIONSHIP
SOLO UK SOUTHERN CHAMPIONSHIP
Won by Pete Mitchell
Congratulations to North Sails Pete Mitchell who won the Solo UK Southern Championship at the weekend.
Pete won 3 of the 4 races and sailed using an ST-2K design.
Well done!
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25 May
LIGHT AIR GYBE STEP-BY-STEP
LIGHT AIR GYBE STEP-BY-STEP
The video below shows Tim Healy and his J/70 team performing a perfect light-air gybe. These tips can be applied to any boat.
1. Clear all spinnaker sheets and make sure no one is stepping on them
2. Initiate gybe with slow turn down and slowly ease the spinnaker sheet to get clew forward
3. Vang on to firm up main leech (See step 6)
4. Roll hard when boat is turned downwind and speed up turn
5. Sheet spinnaker around with new sheet. Second crew back pulls on sheet, back and down
6. Turn up to fill spinnaker and pressure up sails, trim main to pop main battens on new gybe.
7. Flatten aggressively, accelerate and carve turn back down to best VMG course.
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23 May
INTERVIEW WITH C&C 30 OWNER ANGUS DAVIS
INTERVIEW WITH C&C30 OWNER ANGUS DAVIS
Angus Davis took time out of his busy day job to answer some questions, after winning the 12 boat Annapolis NOOD on Nyabinghi in this hot new one design class.
YOU ARE AN EXTREMELY BUSY GUY, HOW DO YOU ORGANIZE YOUR PROGRAM TO HAVE SUCH A SUCCESSFUL RESULT?
Racing the C&C 30 is a “mind clearing event” … during my time on the water, I am in control of boat speed and the maneuvers, and everything else fades away. The key is being able to focus on sailing—and this is what attracts me. For a busy business person, competitive sailing is an oasis.
WE UNDERSTAND YOU COME FROM A WOODEN BOAT BACKGROUND. HAS IT BEEN DIFFICULT LEARNING A NEW PLATFORM?
I grew up sailing Herreshoff S Boats with my dad, in Narragansett Bay. They were the C&C 30 of their day: 28 feet long, high performance for their time, and most importantly, one design. The Narragansett Bay fleet is the oldest one design fleet in America still racing in their original boats. I thought my lack of planing keelboat experience would be a disadvantage, but I picked it up quickly thanks to good teachers. And my experience one design racing is an advantage over those with backgrounds in IRC or other handicap racing.
WHO IS ON YOUR CREW? WHAT ARE THEIR RESPONSIBILITIES? DO YOU ALWAYS SAIL WITH THE SAME PEOPLE?
We have some “steady” folks on the crew, like our runner guy. We call him Bobcat but his real name is Nick Campagna. When he drops the winch handle overboard, usually once every few regattas, we call it a “Bob-splash.” On one occasion, he dropped a VHF overboard, which we refer to as a “Bob-squawk.”
In the pit we have a rotation between Leeds Mitchell and Chase Hogoboom. Both are longtime personal friends who would bail me out of jail if afforded the opportunity. (I hope to avoid this.)
On bow, we usually have Norm Berge. We have been fortunate to have him aboard… and like all the folks on the boat, he has a positive attitude.
Usually on main trim we have Pete Levesque, who is one of our two Cat 3s. His knowledge of rig tune gives us a leg up, and sometimes we share dad advice between starts.
In Annapolis, Charlie Enright trimmed main and trimmed the kite downwind. Every day on the water with Charlie I consider a privilege.
On headsail trim, we have many “friends and family” helping with different events. In Annapolis, Chuck Swanson did a good job in this position. Sometimes the headsail trimmer becomes the whipping boy for the tactician, but in reality, any boatspeed problems upwind are usually the owner/helmsman’s fault.
Over the last year we’ve had a range of folks calling tactics and I have learned different things from each of them. In Annapolis we had Mike Buckley. Mike is able to raise our level of competition without unduly raising our personal stress levels.
HOW WAS YOUR SPEED THROUGHOUT THE COURSE OF THE EVENT?
On the last day, we had some sort of asymmetry in our rig setup, which hampered our speed on one tack. Otherwise, our upwind boat speed was an effective weapon against the competition. Over the last year, I have really improved with our team in a range of different wind conditions, and also in tight tactical situations where you need to “live in a tight lane.” I feel like we definitely have this gear in all conditions now.
Off the breeze, we have moments of greatness for sure, but it’s not yet the strength I know it will be with a bit more work.
HOW CRITICAL IS RIG TUNE THROUGH THE RANGE OF CONDITIONS?
The boat is highly sensitive to rig tune adjustments. You have to live with your rig tune for the entire race, so part of this means skating to where the puck is going to be. Having the right rig tune won’t win races on its own, but having the wrong tune can lose them.
You looked to be consistently in the top group in most of the races, how did you manage to do that in such different conditions? The biggest contributing factors to our success were: competitive boat speed, smart tactics, and not making too many bad boathandling mistakes.
WHAT ARE A COUPLE THINGS YOU AND YOUR TEAM DO DIFFERENTLY THAN OTHER BOATS?
The name of our boat is a tribute to reggae music, which is full of positive energy. We are serious about winning, but we try to have a lot of laughs. Look forward, let’s go: that’s our team’s attitude, and it has served us well, in both victory and in defeat.
Also some of our other close competitors sail with another brand of sails. On Nyabinghi, the focus with our friends at North is always on learning, development and improvement. Working with North Sails gives us a technological edge, which appeals to me as the executive of a software company.
NOW THAT YOU HAVE SAILED A COUPLE EVENTS IN THE C&C 30 CLASS, WHAT COMMENTS DO YOU HAVE ON THE BOAT AND CLASS?
The boat is a pocket rocket that offers true one-design competition. The class is owner-driver with clear, strict rules that give everyone a chance to win. The racing is close, and the camaraderie off the water is strong. And the sailors are very welcoming of newcomers.
IF YOU HAVE TO GIVE THREE POINTERS TO OTHER TEAMS ON HOW TO GET THE BEST PERFORMANCE OUT OF THE C&C 30 WHAT WOULD THESE BE?
Manage your heel angle, and get the foils working for you upwind.
Don’t get too cute at the start, i.e. don’t strike out at the plate swinging only for home runs.
Always remember it is a privilege to be able to go sailing, so have fun on the course and keep a positive attitude.
WHAT’S NEXT FOR THE NYABINGHI PROGRAM?
We’ll compete in the NYYC Annual Regatta in June, and in the Race Week at Newport in July, which are our North American championships. That event ends on July 16, just 5 days before our third child’s due date! My wife Joanna told me, “With a sufficient outboard motor, you are no more than an hour or so from anywhere the next baby may be born.” In our family, sailing runs deep.
Nyabingi races with North Sails 3Di RAW upwind and North Paneled Cloth (NPC) downwind sails.
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22 May
ADINA EXPLORES SRI LANKA PART II
After just over two weeks of exploring Sri Lanka we returned to Mirissa and worked to prepare Adina for her next leg to the Maldives. A break in our preparations involved a trip to the North Sails loft just outside Colombo. It’s not every day you get to see where your sails are made and we had heard a lot of good things about the loft so were quite excited to see it all. During our visit many things stood out giving us a fresh perspective on Adina’s new sails.
Scale: North Sails seek to manage everything in-house meaning the sheer scale of the operation immediately impressed us. But more than that, what really stood out was the combination of technology, skilled craftsmanship and quality control. Everything from sails for dinghies to large offshore racing yachts were being made with the same meticulous level of detail. Machines using bobbins of thread that took a week to set up weaved away, plotter machines precision-cut sail panels, yet more machines laminated cloth and carbon using hi-tech adhesive. At the top end, machines followed by a person suspended in the air laid out carbon on huge automated platforms modeled to replicate the exact shape of a sail.
Expertise: Alongside the technology, each and every sail was being made with some element of human craft and skill. Spinnaker panels were laid together by ladies with an eye for precision, looking up and down the panel to determine where it needed to be laid before gently but confidently pressing it down. People sat in pits in the midst of huge platforms with sewing machines carefully stitching sails or sewing parts into them. Even top of the range carbon sails were hand finished by a professional with a pair of scissors and an eye for detail.
Pride: It was all carried out in a calm focused manner, people going about their jobs, knowing what they needed to do. Stopping to ask any Sri Lankan supervisor a question soon made you realise these people took pride in their job – quite often they would lose us as they leapt into intricate detail!
Quality: And then there was the quality control. Each sail is accompanied by a ‘ticket’, essentially a number of pages explaining the make-up of that individual sail, what needed to be done, what parts would accompany it and a list of checks to make sure it was delivered as it was designed. The name of the yacht was given and the sail’s destination – literally sails being made for the world!
Chamini Kanchana (left) and Nadisha Liyanarachchi (right) measure the placement of reinforcement panels on a 3Di sail.
Dilki Kumari lays nylon spinnaker panels on a small-boat downwind sail in building eight.
A loom sits loaded in Building 2 at North Sails in Sri Lanka. North Cloth takes up one of nine buildings at the North Sails complex in Sri Lanka.
As an owner of a set of North Sails sails, it really did give us the assurance that our sail had been made to a very high standard by a factory well equipped, by talented people and that it had all been quality checked. We now look at our sails with a different eye. On our sail is a little label that has the North Sail logo and states ‘Made in Sri Lanka’. It should read ‘Made with Pride in Sri Lanka’.
Adina’s time in Sri Lanka was up far too quickly. We had thoroughly enjoyed this land of variety, its people kind, warm and welcoming – it certainly sits high on our list of countries that should be visited.
Next…Adina visits the many atolls of the Maldives before heading to the remote British Indian Ocean Territory islands, azure blue seas are promised.
At Top: Chanika Panapitiya stitches the leech tape on a 3DL RACE sail.
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20 May
C&C30: NYABINGHI'S QUICK VIBES
You are an extremely busy guy, how do you organize your program to have such a successful result?
Racing the C&C 30 is a “mind clearing event” … during my time on the water, I am in control of boat speed and the maneuvers, and everything else fades away. The key is being able to focus on sailing—and this is what attracts me. For a busy business person, competitive sailing is an oasis.
We understand you come from a wooden boat background. Has it been difficult learning a new platform?
I grew up sailing Herreshoff S Boats with my dad, in Narragansett Bay. They were the C&C 30 of their day: 28 feet long, high performance for their time, and most importantly, one design. The Narragansett Bay fleet is the oldest one design fleet in America still racing in their original boats. I thought my lack of planing keelboat experience would be a disadvantage, but I picked it up quickly thanks to good teachers. And my experience one design racing is an advantage over those with backgrounds in IRC or other handicap racing.
Who is on your crew? What are their responsibilities?
We have some “steady” folks on the crew, like our runner guy. We call him Bobcat but his real name is Nick Campagna. When he drops the winch handle overboard, usually once every few regattas, we call it a “Bob-splash.” On one occasion, he dropped a VHF overboard, which we refer to as a “Bob-squawk.”
In the pit we have a rotation between Leeds Mitchell and Chase Hogoboom. Both are longtime personal friends who would bail me out of jail if afforded the opportunity. (I hope to avoid this.)
On bow, we usually have Norm Berge. We have been fortunate to have him aboard… and like all the folks on the boat, he has a positive attitude.
Usually on main trim we have Pete Levesque, who is one of our two Cat 3s. His knowledge of rig tune gives us a leg up, and sometimes we share dad advice between starts.
In Annapolis, Charlie Enright trimmed main and trimmed the kite downwind. Every day on the water with Charlie I consider a privilege.
On headsail trim, we have many “friends and family” helping with different events. In Annapolis, Chuck Swanson did a good job in this position. Sometimes the headsail trimmer becomes the whipping boy for the tactician, but in reality, any boatspeed problems upwind are usually the owner/helmsman’s fault.
Over the last year we’ve had a range of folks calling tactics and I have learned different things from each of them. In Annapolis we had Mike Buckley. Mike is able to raise our level of competition without unduly raising our personal stress levels.
How was your speed throughout the course of the event?
On the last day, we had some sort of asymmetry in our rig setup, which hampered our speed on one tack. Otherwise, our upwind boat speed was an effective weapon against the competition. Over the last year, I have really improved with our team in a range of different wind conditions, and also in tight tactical situations where you need to “live in a tight lane.” I feel like we definitely have this gear in all conditions now.
Off the breeze, we have moments of greatness for sure, but it’s not yet the strength I know it will be with a bit more work.
How critical is rig tune through the range of conditions?
The boat is highly sensitive to rig tune adjustments. You have to live with your rig tune for the entire race, so part of this means skating to where the puck is going to be. Having the right rig tune won’t win races on its own, but having the wrong tune can lose them.
You looked to be consistently in the top group in most of the races, how did you manage to do that in such different conditions? The biggest contributing factors to our success were: competitive boat speed, smart tactics, and not making too many bad boathandling mistakes.
What are a couple things you and your team do differently than other boats?
The name of our boat is a tribute to reggae music, which is full of positive energy. We are serious about winning, but we try to have a lot of laughs. Look forward, let’s go: that’s our team’s attitude, and it has served us well, in both victory and in defeat.
Also some of our other close competitors sail with another brand of sails. On Nyabinghi, the focus with our friends at North is always on learning, development and improvement. They have a technological edge, which appeals to me as the executive of a software company.
Now that you have sailed a couple events in the C&C 30 class, what comments do you have on the boat and class?
The boat is a pocket rocket that offers true one-design competition. The class is owner-driver with clear, strict rules that give everyone a chance to win. The racing is close, and the camaraderie off the water is strong. And the sailors are very welcoming of newcomers.
If you have to give three pointers to other teams on how to get the best performance out of the C&C 30 what would these be?
Manage your heel angle, and get the foils working for you upwind.
Don’t get too cute at the start, i.e. don’t strike out at the plate swinging only for home runs.
Always remember it is a privilege to be able to go sailing, so have fun on the course and keep a positive attitude.
What’s next for the Nyabinghi program?
We’ll compete in the NYYC Annual Regatta in June, and in the Race Week at Newport in July, which are our North American championships. That event ends on July 16, just 5 days before our third child’s due date! My wife Joanna told me, “With a sufficient outboard motor, you are no more than an hour or so from anywhere the next baby may be born.” In our family, sailing runs deep.
Nyabinghi races with North Sails 3Di RAW upwind and North Paneled Cloth (NPC) downwind sails, check out the North Sails full offering for the C&C30.
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13 May
ATLANTIC CUP EXPERT PREVIEW
Have a question? Ask them here.
Never finish an ocean race in a location colder than where you started: this is one of the golden rules of offshore sailing and one which The Atlantic Cup knowingly breaks for all the right reasons. This May, the best Class 40 sailing in the United States is back for its fifth edition and here at North Sails, we are thrilled to be a part, sponsoring the “Ask The Expert” forum throughout the event. The Atlantic Cup, the brainchild of Hugh Piggin and Julianna Barbieri of Manuka Sports, challenges sailors over three weeks of sailing across all disciplines. Starting with two double-handed offshore legs and then switching to fully crewed inshore racing, it is a true test of all around sailing skill. While the Portland inshore series is crucial and weighs heavily on the overall win, it is the two offshore legs which provide the greatest variety in challenges faced. For the twelve competing teams, those who are the most studious and nuanced in their approach will find themselves entering that decisive weekend with a sizable advantage. Here is a quick guide on each of the two offshore legs.
CHARLESTON TO NYC
New York City is quite familiar to people arriving by boat, but rarely do they arrive on such toys as a Class 40. Small but powerful, and built purely for offshore sailing, the class has been hugely successful due to the boat’s versatility and stability. However, the Class 40 still suffers from the age old problem of being unable to sail when the winds are light, and the opposing current is strong. Many an Atlantic Cup have been decided in the waning moments as boats struggled against the mighty Hudson River in the light springtime breezes and this year a large number of teams and the even skill amongst them could well set us up for another nail-biting finish. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves… Let’s start at the beginning.
Read more on Pg. 3 of the Atlantic Cup Race Preview.
NYC TO PORTLAND
Leaving NYC on June 4 will take our fleet of twelve back out from the city on a route the reverse of how they came in. With a packed schedule of events while in New York, teams will be feeling as though they need some time off following the grueling Leg One. However, that is not the case. They’ll jump right back into it facing the same challenges as when they entered, as the “city that never sleeps” is an accurate description of NYC on the water as well as on land. The sailors will quickly find themselves dodging ferries, barges, and large commercial ships (not to mention one another) on their way back to the open ocean down a narrow channel.
From there, turn left and head to Maine. Sounds so simple, right? Read more on Pg. 3 of the Atlantic Cup Race Preview.
After teaming up for the last Volvo Ocean Race, Charlie Enright and Anderson Reggio are North Sails’ offshore experts for the Atlantic Cup 2016! Have a question? Ask them here.
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12 May
INTERVIEW: CHAD ATKINS ON THE NEW DN SAIL DEVELOPMENT
NORTH SAILS DN ICEBOAT SAIL DEVELOPMENT WITH CHAD ATKINS
Sail Designer Mike Marshall Interviews Chad Atkins
You just finished sailing the DN North Americans. What conditions did you encounter at this event and how prepared for them were you?
The NA’s were held in Madison, WI the last week of February on a nice sized plate that had been resurfaced by some rain, wind and warmth just prior to the event. This left a reasonably flat and slightly textured surface that was somewhat soft and would go away quick in bright sunshine but would stay hard under cloud cover and wind. We had sunshine and very light winds that we couldn’t do much with the first few days followed by full on-hold on breeze for a couple days and ending with a light to moderate last day.
I was about as prepared as I could be with two young kids and my wife Kate that puts up with this madness. There were some late nights just prior preparing and aligning runners, making sure the gear I had was in order and thinking about bearing away around that windward mark fully warped out holding on and ripping downwind! Time in the boat is king (unless your Struble- Gonna need non-human life form testing at his next event!) and I got about 6-7 days in through a range of ice and wind conditions.
You spent a great deal of time this winter working with North Sails to design a set of DN sails for the NAs. What was that experience like?
It was interesting, that’s for sure. Starting from scratch there is a lot that goes into trying to break into a well developed class of a fringe sport. I liked that none of us had designed DN sails before so any ideas moving forward were open for experimentation. Even before the boat was set up in the loft and measured to put in the program, we went over the details of the sails that most of us were using and what the goal was for these designs. The first goal was to reduce weight and windage from any external reinforcement and unneeded extra cloth. We got rid of the aluminum headboard, came up with a way to bury the inboard batten pocket caps and flushed out the outboard ends with internal RBS rocket adjusters. The second was to try and have more twist with a similar amount of power at the bottom end. We incorporated a bolt rope that slides in the mast easier and could possibly stretch some as the sail loads up.
It was great that the team over in Sweden shared files so we could use their basic triangle and window layout. The team in San Diego got sails to me on deadlines that would lineup over all the fall and winter holidays. The Rhode Island loft made this happen with modifications and re-cuts. Much appreciated, Thanks!
Many steps are involved when starting from square one to design new sails. Which of these steps was the most interesting for you and why?
No kidding! These designs just don’t fall out of the computer after an hour! The most interesting thing about DN’s and the speed these little garage rockets have is the mast and how it bends as the boat powers up and takes off. With this the mast/sail combo is key to have match through a wide range of ice surface and wind conditions. In the DN class we are allowed two sails during an event,. Spanning this range with two sails is good for the class but tough on the sail and mast design. I would say the sail testing and modification were the highlight for me as I got to take the design produced, use it, figure out what modes worked or didn’t, then come back and help tweak it on the floor, and get back after it again when the ice allowed. Taking something to battle in which you have invested time has always appealed to me and is a base for the DN class since a lot of us build and tune most of our own equipment.
How did you decide what changes you wanted to make during the design process? Were you tuning against other boats?
Since we run from stop off the line, the only way to carve or hold your lane is to get in the gym and have a sail that can keep some leech tension early but twist off evenly as the boat accelerates and mast starts to bend. We had the acceleration and speed part down out of the gates but things seemed too open all the time as height early was an issue and I had to keep the boat a few degrees hotter downwind to stay even. Through many design tweaks of what I was feeling and seeing, we were able to get to the NA’s in a very short amount of time with a couple designs that I am excited about moving forward with!
Tuning Partners – yeah, those guys…. I should leave it at that! Seriously though- James “Irving” Thieler or “T” as most know him and Oliver “The Kid” Moore were a big part of fast-tracking this development program forward. They have both been sailing a ton the past few years, here in the States and over in Europe. We say this sport is 50% sailing and 50% social. For the three of us based in RI I think we tip the scales towards social just to get to the ice! Once there we try our best to break out of the coffee induced conversation and get our stuff onto the ice, rigged up, ice checked, marks up, track scouted and right into it.. RI is not an epicenter of iceboating but these guys it make it a lot easier to stay on pace in a tough, warm winter!
It seemed that your results were improving during the NAs. Did you change anything to accomplish this? Did you start sailing the boat differently?
The Regatta went from super mellow, calm and un-sailable to full- on overnight. Once the Silver mini Qualifier was finished and the top finishers moved up into Gold Fleet it was time to line ’em up. It was fast and furious for the first race and a bunch of us had gear failures. I broke a mast but luckily didn’t run a shroud over (causing hours of runner work and a new shroud) or create any other havoc while cleaning up and getting back to the pits while the rest of the fleet ripped around the track. I had another mast in the trailer ready to go that Oliver got out to me in record time but racing was cancelled for the day with most of the fleet reaching into the pits on bare poles. Day 4 dawned breeze on again that saw me struggle to find my settings in the first race and gradually start clawing my way through the chain fight. Day 5 of the new NA format was going to be it. Awesome because under the old format we would have been headed home on a nice light- moderate day of sailing and it was only Friday. I woke up early and got down to the boat to move my plank forward, mast step back, and mast socket forward each one hole, tightened the side stays and had the shrouds just tight with my weight on the plank, then off for some good tuning while the breeze was settling in. I was going pretty good against “T” so left everything as is for the first few races. As the breeze built through the day I slowly tightened the headstay maybe a full turn by the last race. It was a great day and pretty cool to have to sail into the measurer’s zone race after race.
Finally, where do you currently stand in the sail design process? What’s your plan going forward and how do you improve from here?
The design and trial process was a bit of chutes and ladders going up against designs that have been proven and tweaked for the last 15+ years. I am psyched to have done what we did in just a couple of months with very limited ice time here in the east. I feel like we have developed two solid designs that are a touch on the fuller side but have tested well at the NA’s and a few times after. I think the next step will be to refine the speed sail and get that up and tested as best we can in the warmer months to roll right into the GWC the first weekend of December somewhere in Minnesota. I guess most of us can start thinking of soft water for a month or two unless you are headed to Thunder Bay, Ontario or Lake Baikal in Siberia. Good luck and congrats to Matt Struble as well. Nice to have him back in the fleet to see where the bar is set leading into a North American Worlds next year.
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11 May
GABART CLAIMS "GRAND SLAM" WITH TRANSAT BAKERLY WIN!
The French skipper chose North Sails 3Di ENDURANCETM patented composite three-dimensional sailmaking technology to claim unprecedented victory in the four pillars of offshore racing – 2012-2013 Vendée Globe, 2014 Route du Rhum, 2015 Transat Jacques Vabre, 2016 Transat.
A winner has emerged from the Transat bakerly fleet after 33 year-old Francois Gabart was first to cross the finish line off of New York City last night at 18:24 EDT (22:24 GMT)! Gabart sailed into the star-lit city skyline accompanied by cheers and celebration from the MACIF team and sailing fans.
This is Gabart’s first solo win aboard the giant MACIF Trimaran, a 100’ VPLP design that launched last summer. Although a great initial test for him and the boat, today is only the beginning of the MACIF program as the young, yet experienced, ocean sailor sets his sights on a solo non-stop round-the-world record attempt.
“It was a big challenge for me. You should have 10 or 15 people to manage these boats, and it’s just me. It was my first solo race on MACIF, and I didn’t know if I would be able to do it, so I am really proud of what I did… To arrive into New York was perfect. The boat is in good shape. Me? Well, maybe not! I’m very tired, but I’m incredibly proud.”
The similarly sized Sodebo was close at his heels, reinforcing the fantastic potential of class competition among the Ultime 100’ trimarans – indeed on a grand scale! Gabart recalled:
“The competition with Thomas on Sodebo was wonderful. It made the race incredible for me. We are working together to organize more races for these type of boats, and when we see what happened in The Transat bakerly, and how close the competition was, we know there is a place for it. This is just the beginning of the journey.”
Gabart on MACIF and Thomas Coville at the helm of Sodebo spent the first three days within sight of each other after the start in Plymouth, UK. All three Ultime trimarans in the Transat bakerly, including Gabart’s MACIF, Coville’s Sodebo, and Yves Le Blevec’s Team Actual race with North Sails 3Di ENDURANCE.
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Now, to put this initial success for Gabart and MACIF in perspective, by winning the Transat last night, François has achieved the “Grand Slam of Offshore Sailing”. In just four years he has won:
2012-2013 Vendée Globe (solo nonstop round the world race) on his IMOCA 60 MACIF establishing a new race record at his first participation and, at age 29, the youngest to ever win the race.
2014 Route du Rhum (solo race between France and the Caribbean) on his IMOCA 60 MACIF
2015 Transat Jacques Vabre (double-handed race between France and Brazil) on his new trimaran MACIF, 1st race on this boat.
2016 Transat (solo race between the UK and the US), his 1st solo race on the boat.
Only the greatest offshore sailors have achieved this level of success: Loïck Peyron, Michel Desjoyeaux, and Franck Cammas among them.
Gabart has won all of his major offshore titles using patented, three-dimensional composite sailmaking technology from North Sails. North Sails 3Di™ is the only sail on the market made with Thermoset adhesive (no delamination), precisely mapped load patterns using CNC laid tapes, three-dimensional molding, and proven durability over 50,000 miles. Patented technology with proven results – North Sails 3Di will perform better and last longer than any other sail on the market.
About North Sails
North Sails, the largest division of North Technology Group, has become the world’s leading sailmaker through an ongoing commitment to superior performance, technical innovation and elevating the sailing experience of our customers. North Sails holds the patents for 3DiTM, a unique composite construction process resulting in high-performance sails that approach the shape holding of a rigid foil. By competing at the highest levels of our sport, North Sails tests and improves our products in the most demanding environments. The success we enjoy in the America’s Cup, Around-the-World challenges, Grand Prix racing circuit and One-Design Championships translates into sails that perform better, last longer and provide more enjoyment… no matter what and where you sail. That dedication has reshaped modern sailmaking. It is what drives us to push boundaries, pursue adventure, and always #GoBeyond. 87
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01 May
BRITISH DUO STEAL VICTORY FOR 470 WOMEN IN HYERES WORLD CUP
The 470 Women delivered some dramatic action on the final day of racing at the Hyeres World Cup in France as the countdown to the Olympics reaches its climax. The French pair of Camille Lecointre and Helene Defrance had been leading the regatta, one final big event ahead of Rio, after some tight racing between some of the biggest names in the competitive class. But the home favorites went into the final race only one point ahead of the British duo of Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark, and only two points ahead of Brazilians Fernanda Oliviera and Ana Luisa Barbachan.
It was the Brazilians who got off to the superior start in the decisive medal race, leaving Mills and Clark in a dogfight to defend their position against the home favorites. However, Oliviera and Barbachan could not hold their position out front from New Zealand Olympic champions Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie. And when the Kiwis moved into the lead on the second lap, the British girls, the 2012 World Champions, were then able to take advantage of the Kiwi’s work to beat the French team to third and ensure their gold medal. The strong showing from the Brazilian pair saw them claim a silver medal overall, finishing only one point behind the Brits and tied on points with the French.
With the British pair aiming to convert their silver medal from London 2012 into more gold this summer, Sunday’s victory could not have come at a better time. “It was exciting – it was absolutely freezing as well,” said Mills. “I think some English weather may have helped us today. It was really exciting and really tight, and all the top boats were right up there in the mix so it was a ‘who beats who’ scenario. We had our eyes on what was going on and we caught the Brazilians up quite a lot on the second beat. Once we saw that the Kiwis had definitely passed them, we relaxed a bit and really wanted to protect the French to make sure we got the win.”
North Sails are the sail of choice for all the leading pairs, holding a market share in excess of 90%, and the podium of Britain, Brazil and France all use North Sails mainsails. The North Sails radial-cut offering for the Women’s 470 is designed and produced in Japan.
For more results, please visit: http://www.sailing.org/worldcup/regattas/hyeres_2016.php
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20 April
VIDEO: J/70 BOAT HANDLING WITH TIM HEALY
BASIC J/70 BOAT HANDLING WITH TIM HEALY
Spinnaker Set Up
Spinnaker Take Down
Tack and Gybe
Get in touch with Tim Healy if you have questions.
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20 April
VIDEO: HOW TO TENSION FULL LENGTH BATTENS
TENSIONING FULL LENGTH BATTENS
How to properly tension full length battens using the “rocket” batten ends
The “rocket” comes standard on North Sails mainsails for the following classes: J/70, Etchells, Viper 640, Melges 24, International 14, International Canoe and F-18.
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18 April
CLASSIC YACHT MARGA BEGINS NEXT CHAPTER
North Sails designer, Guido Cavalazzi speaks about his involvement in the yacht Marga, recently awarded Restoration of the Year by Classic Boat Magazine, as voted by readers for the Classic Boat Awards 2016.
I love sailing boats like this and in particular, this boat. I have spent a lot of my sailing career working with modern boats including lots of Americas Cup teams – I was involved with different campaigns over 7 America’s Cups finishing with Luna Rossa in 2014 so this is very different, but a great project.
This boat has a very interesting history. When the owners bought it, it needed a lot of attention. The hull had a little house thing built on top of it, which was being lived in. It’s a very sleek boat – it was a metre boat of the first rule when the rigs were gaff riggers in the early 1900’s – and very beautiful. So imagine that hull with a little house thing on top – really horrible! But that was what it was, laying in the boatyard just outside of Rome when the owners bought it and decided to restore it.
They basically ripped everything off and started to make everything as it was originally. They did a lot of research into how it looked back then, the sail plan and everything. And now you just have to look at it to see that they did a very good job.
For lots of reasons, I actually only came on quite late in the project. I knew one of the owners, he was a friend of my son’s from his sailing days in Sardinia and also, I knew Enrico who was in charge of the restoration. He has restored lots of boats in Italy and I know him, as he is very involved in association of sailing yachts in Tuscany. Anyway, I made a presentation to the owners about the sails and what
I thought we could do for them and some time later they asked me to come and start working with the project. I think they liked the work we had done on the NY-40 one design, gaff-rigged boat, Chinook, and on a 15m Int’l, Mariska. I started talking to Enrico about the sail plan and we went on from there.
You have to remember about this boat, that there are no winches – everything has to be done by hand, it is all block and tackle and no mechanics. I actually also did some consultancy with them on the deck plan as I was familiar with what this sort of boat needed. The deck plan is also very closely linked to the sails as it matters a lot what the deck layout is when you are working with just rope and nothing mechanical!
When it came to making the sails it was very different to modern boats. The modern racing boats we design sails for are done using the technique of one molded piece (whether that be 3Di, 3DL etc) so there is no stretch at all. This delivers very good power but would not work for this sort of boat as everything stretches on this boat – the wood (the hull), the shrouds – everything is moving so we have to make the sails the same. It’s nice actually as I use Dacron for these sails – it is a technique and material that I used to use when I first started in sail making, when racing sails were made in Dacron, and I have now gone back to it. Dacron started as the material of choice for sailmaking but then moved on to being used in cruising sails as racing sails changed to Kevlar and then carbon. In this case, the spars bend and then affect the sail shape and we have to take that into account when we design these sails. In fact, we have to treat the stretch in these boats as part of the design rather than a problem. It’s a bit like the fact that when you sail against a strong tide you take that into account when you work out where you put the bow, you adjust your course a bit. It’s the same for this – we have to aim the shape in a substantially different direction to make sure that with all the stretch factors we end up where we want to be.
We delivered the sails in August 2015 and then the owners decided to go to Cannes to race. I went with them and to be honest we didn’t do that well, but that was really because we hadn’t done it before and we were all just learning about how to sail the boat. They are now planning for the 2016 season, which is really like the first racing season for this boat. The boat will go to Antibes for the start of the Panerai series and I am very happy they have asked me to sail with them and do again the mainsail. Like I said at the beginning I really like sailing this boat. Most Classic boats owners have a very nice attitude towards their boat – they don’t really see themselves as owners but instead custodians. Its like the well being of the boat has been assigned to them for a certain period and then it will be passed on to be sailed by someone else and in the meantime it is their duty to make it nice. It is like a 1700 Stradivari violin – its life will go on after you have used it, you would never throw it away. It’s just like that. In modern sailing and modern boats there is not that same feeling so it is very nice to be involved with a project like this.
Guido Cavalazzi has been with North Sails for nearly 40 years, the majority of which he spent designing sails. He designed 11 sails for Classic Yacht Marga including a Gaff Mainsail and a Delivery Main (Bermudian), a Jack Yard Top sail, Working Top Sail, Jib and Jib Top, Staysail, Light Reaching Staysail, Yankee, Medium Asymmetrical runner, and a Heavy Asymmetrical reacher. The upwind sails are all made of North Sails NPC COASTAL dacron product and NPC DOWNWIND were used for the runner and reacher.
Image credits: © James Robinson Taylor
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17 April
PEARSON 36 SNOEK PREPS FOR THE FIRST ADVENTURE
Onne van der Wal and his family have spent the winter restoring their 1972 Pearson 36, Snoek. This summer they will take to the waters of Narragansett Bay to stretch their legs and get to know the boat. One of Snoek’s many upgrades was a new suit of North Sails.
A renown nautical photographer, Onne spent some time on the “other” side of the lens for this project! We look forward to hearing more from the van der Wal clan as they set off on various adventures this season. Stay tuned!
Onne van der Wal and 17 year old son Adrian recently unpacked their brand new North cruising sails for their 1972 Pearson 36, Snoek. They were closely supervised by Lucy the beagle, who will join the family cruising on Narragansett Bay this summer.
While Lucy looked on from a safe distance, Onne gave each of the three sails (mainsail, genoa, and gennaker) a careful inspection, partly to familiarize himself with what state-of-the-art cruising sails look like. “The level of detail and finish work are very impressive,” he said.
Telltales have been carefully placed to provide the best trim information for a variety of sailing angles, and the gray sunshade will protect the rest of the sail from UV. The sails are made of North Sails NPC RADIANTM, a patented warp-oriented cloth with superior shapeholding qualities. The blue rope luff reefing pad maintains optimum shape when the sail is reefed.
Surrounded by a backyard full of boats, the spring lawn became a sunny sail loft for the afternoon. Adrian, a racing sailor, spotted the batten pocket detail on the main.
“I can’t wait to use this genoa,” Onne said. “The leechline and footline have been really well thought out for ease of use, without leaving any loose ends that could catch on something. And the soft clew will really save the mast from getting beat up if our tacks aren’t quite perfect.”
The genoa leechline has a purchase and retractor system, making for easy adjustment. “We’re not going racing,” Onne reminded us. “We want these sails to last many years. So it’s nice to see North has thought out how to keep the leech from fluttering, once they’re not quite as new as they are now.”
Onne and his family spent much of the winter updating the Pearson 36, so they will proudly display the Pearson logo every time they hoist the mainsail. “It’s a great classic design, so we want people to know what she is as we sail her around Narragansett Bay.”
Each sail has a unique number stamped on the logo. The serial number matches Onne’s order number and is used to reference the sail’s history and service record.
They saved the best for last: pulling the Gennaker™ out of its turtle. “The boat’s getting repainted at Bristol Marine in Awlgrip’s Stars and Stripes blue,” Onne said. “So this red white and blue kite is going to look really good.”
“Family cruising should be easy, but I like to set a kite,” Onne said. “So the gennaker’s a good compromise.” The North SnufferPlus™ will make deploying and dousing a breeze.
Once the careful inspection was complete, Adrian and friend Alden Grimes made quick work of packing the Gennaker back into its turtle.
Lucy the beagle declared the afternoon a success, though she is still wondering when her own big box of treats is going to be delivered.
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15 April
NORTH SAILS UK HAMBLE VILLAGE, HAMPSHIRE
The purpose of this new base is primarily for after sales & service care. We have chosen to open it in this location in order to support our growing customer base and have feet on the ground in this very active marina setting. Every type of yacht is catered for in Hamble and we recognize the importance of having staff there at key times.
The office will be staffed on Mondays and Fridays and any other time by appointment. Please contact Frank Gerber to make an appointment – frank.gerber@northsails.com or 07887 555 779.
During opening hours we will also be on hand to quote for new sails, be a source of information for all things North Sails and help answer any questions as they arise. There will be a stock of common items from battens and batten ends to clew straps.
Please drop by and say hello if you are in Hamble or the local area and need our assistance.
Image credit © Paul Todd / OUTSIDEIMAGES.COM
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14 April
GP14 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2016
GP14 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2016
BY ALISTAIR IRELAND
Back in 2014 I was offered the chance to become a North Sails Jockey by the Dinghy Specialist Sailingfast. Fresh out of the 420 youth class there was no better way to start the next step in my sailing career.
For the last two years North Sails powered the Flying Fifteen I was sailing. In 2015 I won the British National Championship on home waters with my Dad with a brand new set of North Sails. This was shortly followed by winning the Scottish Nationals at Loch Lomond with Philippa Benson the following month. I later found out later that both boats powered by North Sails won the Silver/Classic and the Modern class at Loch Lomond.
Following this success we decided to take on our next challenge at the 2016 GP14 World Championships in Barbados. North Sails were happy to provide our gear for the event and get behind one of the youngest teams. Turns out we were one of the lightest teams at what was to be a heavy wind event! Thankfully North had provided us with a personalised tuning guide with special recommendations from ex-GP14 sailors. Having a guide that was personally tailored gave us an advantage that was welcomed in such a high standard fleet.
Despite the heavy airs myself and Philippa finished the 2nd under 21 boat and 37th overall in a strong fleet of 105.
We would like give a big thank you to North Sails and Sailingfast for their on-going support and we look forward to the next big event!
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31 March
CALIFORNIA OFFSHORE RACE WEEK
Kicking off the first installment of this event, we congratulate the CORW race organizers and share in their excitement to see the regatta grow. Read the full release on the official regatta website.
California Offshore Race Week is the exciting grouping of three California coastal races, five yacht clubs and one in-port race under an overall trophy. We’d like to thank SD Boatworks, North Sails, Mount Gay Rum and The Pirates Lair for making this race come to life!
Starting on Friday, May 27 in San Francisco Bay, the series takes off under the iconic Golden Gate Bridge on an 88nm trek to Monterey. Here they will spend a day long layover to get rested and ready for the sled ride to Santa Barbara. Picking up on Sunday, May 29, the Coastal Cup starts in Monterey Bay and runs 200nm around Point Conception and into Santa Barbara. A multi-day layover in Santa Barbara will allow racers to recoup, repair and enjoy the local scene. Santa Barbara Yacht Club will be hosting shoreside parties and all will be invited to a ‘just for fun’ in-port race on Wednesday afternoon, which will see the offshore crews link up with the local Beer Can racers for fresh round of buoy racing. The final leg starts on Friday, June 3 with the SoCal 300 sending the fleet through the channel islands on their way to San Diego, a total trip of 254nm. The awards ceremony will be held on Sunday, June 5 at San Diego Yacht Club. California Offshore Race Week has been endorsed by the Offshore Racing Association as the official “California Offshore Championship”, hence the winner will stand as the 2016 California Offshore Champion… until next year!
Get your offshore inventory ready to go for this annual event, and remember North Sails is here to help you!
2829 Historic Decatur Rd. San Diego, California 92106-6014, USA | +1 619 224 2424
Lynsi Gibbons (Office Manager) – (T) 619-224-2424 – lynsi.gibbons@northsails.com
Eric Heim (Sail Care) – (T) 619-224-2424 – eric.heim@northsails.com
Jon Gardner (Sales) – (T) 619-224-2424 – jon.gardner@northsails.com
Patrick Murray (Sales) – (T) 619-224-2424 – patrick.murray@northsails.com – (M) +1 619 347 0399
Eric Doyle (Sales/ One Design) – (T) 619-224-2424 – eric.doyle@northsails.com – (M) +1 949 228 7185
Image Credits (top and below): © Sharon Green / Ultimate Sailing
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24 March
NEW SAILS FOR GREIG CITY ACADEMY'S SCARAMOUCHE
NEW SAILS FOR SCARAMOUCHE
London’s first inner-city school sailing club fosters on-the-water experiences for the next generation
It began approximately two years ago when teacher and program initiator, Jon Holt, began taking groups of 24 students at a time down to Poole Harbour to work toward getting their Level 1 RYA Dinghy Sailing certificates. Over 250 students completed the course. The emerging crew members set their sights on the horizon and, after spreading the word to their peers, salvaged and restored a MacGregor 26 to spend the afternoons sailing out of Poole. Holt spearheaded a fundraising effort to acquire Scaramouche, a 45ft German Frers yacht. Holt and a crew of eight 15 year old students restored and sailed her throughout the summer before they entered and won the ASTO Small Ships Race, a national training regatta. Now, with a gem of a racing boat on their hands, the group has an ultimate goal of entering the 2016 Round the Island Race and next year’s Rolex Fastnet.
“The crew have worked very hard, not just sailing but also promoting sailing to others who normally cannot access the sport. They now have delivered their presentation 30 times to 22 primary schools. They were invited twice to speak at the Royal Yacht Squadron and their talk was very well received,” said Holt.
The North Sails team in the UK has already built a new jib and are working on a new mainsail for the team with extra support from British sailing legend Lawrie Smith.
“Lawrie has been the inspiration behind this and following his input has driven my crew to not just sail when I organize trips, but to buy dinghies off eBay and sail them on King George’s Reservoir in London,” said Holt.
Nigel King, former keelboat manager of the RYA and part of the Academy’s initiative to foster experiences on the water, reminds us of the primary individuals creating these opportunities: the teachers.
“I gave them a few contacts initially. They have run with them and moved forward. It is really about the youngsters, just really ensuring they get every opportunity possible,” King remarked. “But the bit that stands out for me is that the teachers are really taking a punt. There really are a million reasons why they would not want to do this. It is scary and different. But what they are doing is planting a seed and then, hopefully, we can all help take it forwards.”
The crew of Scaramouche spent an afternoon with the North Sails UK team at the new cutting-edge sail loft in Gosport, likely spotting their new mainsail in the works. Regional sales manager, Sam Richmond, reported the young team’s enthusiasm was an inspiration, “It is truly gratifying to see programs like Greig City Academy finding unique opportunities for students to explore outside the classroom. Even more exciting is they have chosen sailing as their platform. Of course we are thrilled to help in any way we can.”
Follow the team’s progress on the Greig City Academy website and Facebook page: facebook.com/GreigCityAcademy
Images; Top: The Greig City Academy crew were invited to talk with the Duke of Edinburgh at Buckingham Palace, February 2016; Above: Montel at the helm of Scaramouche
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24 March
ADINA EXPLORES SRI LANKA PART 1
ADINA EXPLORES SRI LANKA: PART 1
Tom and Susie Partridge explore the natural beauties of Sri Lanka onboard Adina
After two months of solid work in Malaysia and Thailand readying Adina for the new sailing season, we were all set to go. Our target this year is Cape Town, South Africa, sailing across the Indian Ocean. Along the way we plan to visit Sri Lanka, the Maldives, British Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos), the Seychelles, Comoros and Madagascar, each one promising its own form of adventure. The first leg of 1120 nautical miles from Thailand to Sri Lanka is actually the longest we should undertake on our way to Cape Town. Leaving the creature comforts of South East Asia behind, the initial winds were light and sailing downwind we flew our spinnaker as we eased into our passage. The forecast for the North East trade winds to fill in directly from behind and strengthen with increasing seas soon proved to be accurate. Cruisers by nature will always chase a rhumb line – gybing way off course downwind for more speed is left to our racing brothers and sisters! In this case to keep sailing a downwind rhumb line meant sailing wing-on-wing or goose-winging as it is more eloquently known, flying one sail to port and the other to starboard. On Adina this means we pole our genoa out to the one side and pin the mainsail on the opposite side. The downside to this is that it is without doubt the most uncomfortable point of sail as the boat will roll – no escaping it, we really should learn to sail off course! We’ve spent ages researching how to reduce the roll and at the end of the day it boils down to your boat design – some boats roll more than others. We deploy a few techniques which are largely based around the sea state. In predictable seas it pays to get as much sail up as you safely can, the faster speed making for a smoother ride. In sloppy irregular seas we will bring the mainsail in so that it is trimmed for a beam reach to help reduce the roll. Another tip is to reduce any twist in the top of your genoa by sheeting on or lowering the spinnaker pole.
After eight days of exhilarating sailing we made landfall in Galle, a port located in the south-west of Sri Lanka. A night time arrival, we slowly and carefully found ourselves a protected spot to drop the anchor and get some sleep. Lengthy formalities complete, the next afternoon we headed fifteen nautical miles east to the delightful fishing harbour of Mirissa which was to be Adina’s home for four weeks. Sri Lanka represented a new cultural experience on our trip and we were excited to explore the country renowned for its many sights and friendly people. In fact it wouldn’t be wrong to say we took one look, smiled with glee and ran at it, arms waving madly. Tuk-tuks – bring it on; mad local buses – we’ll try them; spicy food – we’ll eat it!
Sri Lanka is often referred to as a gentler, calmer version of India and we think that’s an apt description. Except when it comes to the driving. Our tuk-tuk driver, Suranga, took us to visit the old fort at Galle and demonstrated why Formula One racing should seriously consider Sri Lanka as a place to source their drivers. There’s definitely a pecking order on the roads here. Tuk-tuk drivers are bottom of the ladder and to survive they need fast reflexes; buses and vans will happily mow them down but they duck and dive here and there finding gaps, dodging pedestrians and dogs. Next up the pecking order are vans and cars – probably the most comfortable form of travel, they have to keep their eyes on the tuk-tuks and bigger buses. Buses rule, they are bigger and they know it. Through the mountainous interior they tear along, throwing themselves around corners, seemingly determined to run man, dog, stray monkey and tuk-tuk down. A town centre doesn’t mean they slow down – they keep going! It’s a brave man who sits at the front of the bus looking forward. Yet we always felt safe and it made us smile and chuckle as we hurtled and bounced along.
The old fort town of Galle where Adina completed formalities
Black lake in Mihintale, the birthplace of Buddhism in Sri Lanka
Elephant in Yala National Park
Spending time with the ladies
Sri Lanka has a wide variety of sights to be seen. Temples old and new abound and religion is an important aspect of life with people taking time to pray, reflect and make offerings. There are countless national parks to explore and we were fortunate enough to tick off sightings of leopard, elephant, deer and more crocodiles than we had expected! Up in the hilly interior temperatures are cooler and with Sri Lanka being the world’s third largest tea producer a visit to a tea plantation to learn more about this product we English so enjoy was a must!
A highlight for us was walking up Adam’s Peak, a pilgrimage site for the people of Sri Lanka, climbing 5500 steps to see the Buddha footprint that sits at the top of it. We had timed our visit on a weekend – or should we call that planning gone awry? Thousands turned up with us to complete the pilgrimage! The goal is to see the sunrise from the top so we duly set off at 1.30am. What we found most impressive about the pilgrimage is that the entire family comes along, and we mean the entire family; junior, the teenagers, boyfriend, girlfriend, Mum, Dad, Aunty, Uncle and the grandparents too! We saw little ones less than five years old and old ones well into their eighties.
After two hours of focused climbing, the mass now five people wide came to a complete halt as far as the eye could see. We saw some teenagers scampering off down a side path and were able to follow them and make it to the summit using a different approach to enjoy a magnificent sunrise. Walking back down we could still see long queues waiting to reach the top. And lots of tired weary bodies slowly going down. We went as fast as we could, fired up by the thought of the tasty local dish of pancake-like hopper, banana and honey waiting for us at the bottom!
Travelling around, we opted to stay in local homestays which gave us the chance to meet local people. On Adina we like to cook recipes that we collect from around the world and our hosts were always only too happy and proud to show us how they prepare their curries. Sri Lankan curries take a long time to prepare and the reason quickly becomes obvious. Rice and curry (not curry and rice) always consists of three to five curries (and sometimes ten on special occasions) whereas in most countries it’s just one curry. The individual curry sizes are smaller but three to five curries takes a lot of preparation. And tasty they certainly are.
After just over two weeks of travel we returned to Mirissa and worked to prepare Adina for her next leg to the Maldives. A break in our preparations involved a trip to the North Sails loft just outside Colombo. It’s not every day you get to see where your sails are made and we had heard a lot of good things about the loft so were quite excited to see it all.
Below: Looking out from the fishing village of Mirissa, on the south end of Sri Lanka
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22 March
NORTH CREW: QUENTIN PONROY
A qualified engineer, experienced sailmaker and sail designer, Quentin Ponroy is also a very good sailor. In 2014 he won the J/80 Europeans (tactician) and the Tour de France à Voile (mainsail trimmer). He also enjoys sailing famed French boats such as Multi50, Mini, Figaro Bénéteau II or Open 7.50 with great success. This week you will find him on the Diam 24 course at Spi Ouest.
Pictured left with Thomas Coville on the 102ft trimaran Sodebo Ultim’, Quentin is also making great strides in the ocean racing sphere.
“At North Sails, I am fortunate to be involved in very different projects from the Mini 6.50 to the Maxi Sodebo, including IRC boats or the Figaro for example,” he said. “My job on the design team is to work fast and perfect sails by using different shapes and materials in the design. I enjoy this job because it’s never finished and I also spend time sailing.
When asked for his advice to a young person with big aspirations in sailing, Quentin had the following recommendation:
“Spend time on the water no matter the boat. And be conscious that the technical dimension is more and more important to understand modern boats.”
Image credit © Jean-Marie Liot
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