After drifting around Goat Island in the Balmain Friday afternoon series we had a minute of chaos when a 40 knot gust came out of the storm clouds and flattened us. The one saving grace was that Avalon had already passed us and was directly ahead so I could see them lay flat with the breeze and prepare by having the novice sheet hand dump the main ahead of the gust. Dumping the main was not enough to stop us laying on our side so we had to dump the genoa. That got us back on our feet but heading for the rocks on the Balmain shore. Prudence called for a start of the motor to have steerage to get away from the shore which we did all within a minute of the gust hitting.
From 3:30 pm to 4 10 pm the breeze at Sydney Airport was above 19 knots peaking at 43 knots at 3:40 pm but it hit us much faster with no time to prepare by dropping the genoa. I had to do this once we cleared the Balmain shore under motor and while the wind was still blowing 30 knots.
Fortunately all was captured on the Gopro camera and so the minute of chaos is accurate. From the time the 40 knots hit to motoring into the wind safe from the Balmain shore was just one minute and the only damage was a single eyelet on one of the genoa piston hanks.

There was some damage to my pride as I had thought Avalon had taken down their genoa and retired also but alas they just soldiered on around the course under main and completed a shortened course while the rest of us retired. I am quietly hoping they get no wind for their twilight tonight but don’t blame me if that happens that is what is forecast.

There were quite a few firsts this afternoon. Our Grandson had his first yacht race and first as mainsheet trimmer at which he did a great job including handling the storm well. The second first is to be laid the flattest on record since Passion X was launched. Also a first was to start the motor in a race for safety reasons and the last first was to retire from a race for other than lack of wind.

Short and furious storm

Short and furious storm

In the thick of the storm

In the thick of the storm

More of the one minute of the storm

More of the one minute of the storm

Calm before the storm

Calm before the storm

About to hit

About to hit

More water over the Gopro

More water over the Gopro

Passion X from the deck of Tartan showing the light air at the finish

Passion X from the deck of Tartan showing the light air at the finish

we got what was promised which was 17 knots of wind for the Wednesday Twilight at GFS. Using an excess of caution we set the No 3 jib and applied plenty of backstay to flatten the main. In this mode we had a quite pleasant sail around the course if you exclude the heavy work of the mainsheet hand managing the gusty conditions.
The fleet made a very good start spread out along the line with perhaps the exception being Sweet Chariot who was a bit high on the line and possibly in the wind shadow of the hill behind the start line. The rest got away well with the ones lower down the line doing comparatively better again due to the wind shadow combined with a bit of a lull at the gun.
Through Humbug there was also a good line across the river with Jackpot directly to leeward and Utopia a bit forward.
Our run to Cockatoo was in fresh conditions and we particularly enjoyed surfing down Meridian’s stern wave but they were not about to let us pass.
Along the back of Cockatoo Island we did better wide out until the three J boats picked up this huge gust right against the shore and jumped ahead. Fortunately that ran out before the corner and we caught them again at the point but could not sail around Jackpot. Meridian having nosed ahead of the group of three J boats did best around the end of Cockatoo and emerged with a substantial lead.
We setted in for the long leg to Goat Island following Joli as best we could making ground in the lifts and losing in the knocks such that by Goat Island they had pulled out at least a minute and did another minute around the back of Goat and down the Snails Bay shore.
From Long Nose it was our turn to pick up a bit of fresher breeze and do some catching so that by the time Utopia entered the wind shadow of the end of Cockatoo we had gained on her and the three J boats. Then it was our turn to fall into the wind shadow and it took quite a time to emerge due in part to us being in too close and in part due the the small size of the No3 jib which does not like anything under 15 knots..
Back into the breeze we stabilised our position to finish eight over the line and sixth on handicap.
We were happy to be around 3 minutes behind Utopia, 2 minutes 20 seconds behind Jackpot, 2 minutes behind Joli and a minute and a half behind Meridian. That was enough to beat the three J boats on handicap but not the Sydney 38 who now must be heading for the top of the leader board and with a good drop to go. And while we did gain one point on Joli they have a bigger drop so realistically we are third.

Much Ado V and Infotrack in first and second place today must come under the influence of the handicap algorithm. Sweet Chariot obviously got going as they finished ahead of Passion X on handicap and Fireball suffered from a reefed main as the breeze faded and finished last fastest and last on handicap. A bit more courage from the fire fighters is on the cards for future races.

Perhaps it was not as windy as I indicated in the opening paragraph as the big Ausreo finished three minutes behind Passion X but did improve on their result in the light air races with a third on handicap and we would have had to sail a minute faster to match them on handicap.

Dump Truck just ahead off the first corner of Cockatoo Island

Dump Truck just ahead off the first corner of Cockatoo Island

Passion X tacks away from Joli on the work along the Hunters Hill shore

Passion X tacks away from Joli on the work along the Hunters Hill shore

Joli tacks for the Goat Island navigation mark having pulled away a minute from Passion X

Joli tacks for the Goat Island navigation mark having pulled away a minute from Passion X

Close encounter with jackpot off of Cockatoo Island

Close encounter with jackpot off of Cockatoo Island

The Friday afternoon pursuit race from Balmain Sailing Club was conducted in the best breeze of the week. The conditions were perfect with sunshine and a consistent 12 knots of wind from a direction that gave the only true windward work from Long Nose to Goat Island. We made good progress and felt Avalon had not eaten too much into our seven minutes handicap by the corner of Goat Island but by the time we reached Long Nose on the way home they had surged up to our stern.

It did not help that we went inside the work boat too close to the lee shore but once we were out in the fair winds we resumed the chase on the long handicap yachts.
The run down the Drummoyne shore worked well as we were able to catch the fleet with the genoa winged out to windward and then gybe with just enough room for a clear ahead on Guwara and then a clear ahead on Riders of the Storm.
That left us concentrating on making up ground on Avalon which we did in the last flip to port of the leg around Cockatoo Island when we got just enough lift to clear the corner and make up some lost ground. Alas not enough lost ground but satisfying all the same.

Shaving the corner of Cockatoo hoping to catch Avalon

Shaving the corner of Cockatoo hoping to catch Avalon

Chasing Avalon up the Cockatoo shore

Chasing Avalon up the Cockatoo shore

There have been plenty of light nights for our Wednesday Twilight but this would go down as one of the most flukey light breezes with so many changes of direction. As for the promised breeze for which I set the No 1 heavy genoa well it was not delivered as promised but the genoa still did a good job on the evening.
From the start we were run over by Jackpot and Utopia and left wallowing in the left over breeze from which we never recovered. From first into Humbug last week we went to last and it only got worse on the way to Cockatoo Island. As much as we felt hard done by we still felt sorry for Fireball who went a few metres to windward into their own black hole from which no yachts ever emerg and they did not.
Next on the menu was Sweet Chariot who made it all the way around Cockatoo alongside Meridian only to go fifty metres to far. We flipped to the right while they flipped to the left and that was the end of Sweet Chariot. No skill required in this lottery.

Meridian went for the Balmain shore and was rewarded with a nice set of lifts to round Long Nose well ahead of Passion X but trailing Joli by a very long way. The flags on the bridge were blowing from the North East while Meridian was sailing on a South West around Goat Island. Here we were lucky to pick up a bit of a gust and run up to Meridian. We took their stern and went well wide of Goat Island which proved beneficial as we could now see Jackpot not far ahead.  For the runs we set our shortest whisker pole so that we could sail with it out to leeward when required and to windward when the breeze was over the stern. In this mode we caught Jackpot at the ferry wharf off of Long Nose.

Meridian retired and motored past then Jackpot started the engine while we turned to the final leg around Cockatoo. Far in the distance there might have been yachts but the only ones from our fleet we could see were Infotrack and Dump Truck who were working their way along the Hunters Hill shore making for Clarke Point and hopefully Humbug and home. Over the VHF we could hear Sweet Chariot announcing their retirement so at this stage we were last on the course.

Along Cockatoo and back along the Hunters Hill shore we had some of the most consistent breeze of the night and hit speeds of four knots but at 10 minutes past eight and still half a nautical mile out from the finish we conceded defeat and started the engine.

Motoring through Humbug we passed Joli also putting away sails and we have it on good authority via facebook posts of the race that Utopia was 200 metres from the line at the cut off time and by my estimate 700 metres in front of Passion X. Infotrack and Dump Truck finished within the time limit so the only one unaccounted for was Much Ado V which we assume was some where in the mix up front.

For all that hard work everyone except Dump Truck and Infotrack scored a 3 points for the night and as it was a pleasant evening on the water no harm was done.

Jackpot comes to the line with speed and takes the wind out of Passion X sails

Jackpot comes to the line with speed and takes the wind out of Passion X sails

Last into Humbug and looking ahead at the fleet

Last into Humbug and looking ahead at the fleet

The moment we tacked away from the fleet into the direction of Fireball and the black hole of no wind.

The moment we tacked away from the fleet into the direction of Fireball and the black hole of no wind.

Flip flopping from port to starboard and vice versa while the fleet is heading off around Cockatoo

Flip flopping from port to starboard and vice versa while the fleet is heading off around Cockatoo

After the chaos at Cockatoo a quiet moment running down the back of the island

After the chaos at Cockatoo a quiet moment running down the back of the island

After a wet weekend in Sydney the rain cleared and the Sun shone enough for a pleasant Wednesday twilight race. We made a good start in eight knots of breeze and were first into Humbug but also first into the first patch of no wind. Out of Humbug we were still near the front of the fleet and held that to the corner of Cockatoo where the breeze headed causing the fleet ahead to tack away from the point in starboard. We might have picked our way through except for Jackpot who also tacked away from the point. We had trouble tacking away onto starboard because Joli was overlapped above us so we had to stall until a gap opened so we could escape the chaos. Eventually back on port we had lost Joli, Jackpot and Utopia with the fleet behind also closing. Down the back of Cockatoo we carried wind and managed to round inside Joli with Meridian trying to pass inside us. That kept us close to the Island in disturbed air while ahead Dump Truck took off first into the clear air followed by Jackpot, Much Ado V and Utopia. At this early stage in the race Infotrack was nowhere to be seen. Along the leeward side of Cockatoo we managed to hold off Meridian at the expense of some time on the fleet further out and in clear air. Once into clear air we had an entertaining tacking contest with Joli and Meridian where due to some favourable wind shifts and a bit of covering we managed to hold our own.

On the run back to Long Nose Joli drew alongside where she stayed for the leg while behind Meridian was having troubles which took a long time to fix. Reaching to Cockatoo from Long Nose was not our best leg as Joli slipped away by a couple of minutes and Fireball sprinted away from the tail and came right up to our stern.

Around Cockatoo for the last time we could see Jackpot, Much Ado V, Utopia and Joli not far ahead and in light air. Unfortunately we were not able to find any stronger wind to make any further gains and the last stage through Humbug was in almost no wind.  At this stage Infotrack had already finished in breeze with Dump Truck somewhere in between and as we finished the breeze returned bringing the tail home with a flourish.

On handicap the front and back of the fleet did well with Infotrack winning from Fireball, Dump Truck, Sweet Chariot and Ausreo with Passion X back in sixth place.

On a night like tonight sixth place was a good result and even had we finished alongside Joli who was two minutes ahead we would have gained only one place.

When the progress scores are updated we should be up with Joli and just one point ahead of Utopia with Fireball’s second place tonight bringing them in at fourth but there is still a lot of sailing to go and some big drops coming up as we approach the end of the series.

Getting a favourable lift on the way to Goat Island

Getting a favourable lift on the way to Goat Island

Nice full genoa on Utopia

Nice full genoa on Utopia

Luffing up to keep Meridian behind. Photo taken from Utopia

Luffing up to keep Meridian behind. Photo taken from Utopia

Dump Truck  gets into the breeze and takes off.

Dump Truck gets into the breeze and takes off.

Genoa fully powered up in the light breeze

Genoa fully powered up in the light breeze

The fleet is so close yet so far away.

The fleet is so close yet so far away.

It is starting to feel like the twilight sailing season now that we have had our first decent breeze and a longer course. Before the race the wind piped up to 20 knots and with plenty of gusts we opted for the safety of the No3 jib and the mainsail depowered with lots of backstay tension. At 1803 hours, two minutes before our start time the breeze died leaving us with a slow passage out of Humbug for a run around Cockatoo Island. We played catch up on the inside of the fleet and entered the working phase of the race mid fleet sandwiched between Much Ado V and Infotrack. Pretty soon Infotrack cleared away with good boat speed and we spend a lot of the work dicing with Much Ado V while Joli, Jackpot, Utopia and Dump Truck had a closer race at the front of the fleet.
Lisdillon caught us on one of the many shifts but after we took their stern we experienced a very fortunate lift and cleared Long Nose making up all the ground we had lost to Lisdillon on the last phase.

The series of reaches and runs back to Cockatoo was in variable conditions and we seemed to get our fair share of favourable angles to arrive at the west end of Cockatoo inside Much Ado V and not far behind Utopia and Jackpot.

Lisdillon also enjoyed wind from behind and made ground on the fleet.

After a long time in the doldrums around Cockatoo we emerged into fresh air and took off at seven knots to windward but by now Utopia and Jackpot were well into Humbug.
We have had better transits through Humbug but were pleased to hold out the fast finishing Lisdillon who was enjoying a particularly fast work up the channel.
On handicap it was a well deserved win for Joli from Lisdillon, Dump Truck, Utopia and Passion X.
Our No3 jib was the correct choice for most of the night but there were plenty of light patches, particularly around the end of Cockatoo where there was not enough wind to blow the mainsail under the backstay and a larger fuller jib would have made us more competitive. What did work was frequent adjusting of the backstay to power up in the lulls and depower in the gusts.
Back home looking at the results there was another pleasant surprise waiting as we were elevated to second place last week after the omission of some of the fleet. As usual these events are all about neatness and punctuality and less about sailing skills and we generally do well just by turning up and trying our best.

Much Ado V goes past for the first time

Much Ado V goes past for the first time off the start line

Infotrack still in sight

Infotrack still in sight after rounding Cockatoo the first time

We did well with the small jib held out to windward

We did well with the small jib held out to windward

Lisdillon crosses on a favourable lift

Lisdillon crosses on a favourable lift

Much Ado V goes past again!

Much Ado V goes past again on the second Cockatoo Island rounding

We get our own lift along the Snails Bay shore

We get our own lift along the Snails Bay shore to pass Lisdillon

Catching Much Ado V after a good run down   the Cockatoo Island shore

Catching Much Ado V after a good run down
the Cockatoo Island shore for the second rounding. Utopia and Jackpot not far ahead

GP048800_Moment(2)

The Finish line at last

In the last Wednesday twilight we made good use of the wind shifts on the work to Goat Island up to the last one. The tracks from the chart plotter show good angles and even the angle on starboard going up the Balls head shore look good so what went wrong?
Half way along the tack the fleet was deep against the Goat Island shore in light air and pointing at our stern. Despite our good angle relative to the earlier shifts we should have tacked to cover. Not only would that have protected our gains it would have put us on starboard approaching the mark.
Having missed the opportunity of clear air to tack the next massive lift brought the fleet up and to windward. Back on port trying to make the island we had to take the stern of Utopia losing valuable windward metres and forcing us to pinch to round the island now that we were in a massive header.
The tacking angles show the extreme shift in wind direction and is a good reminder to take what you can when you can.

Caught on the wrong side of a big shift at Goat Island and paying a high price for not covering the fleet.

Caught on the wrong side of a big shift at Goat Island and paying a high price for not covering the fleet.

The take away from tonight’s race is that we did a good start and hung on for a fifth place on handicap against some pretty stiff opposition. The score sheet is currently showing sixth place due to the erroneous inclusion of Much Ado V which if you were to believe the result sheet beat the MC38 Infotrack home by six minutes. I am sure the Beck team rivalry will have that sorted out pretty soon and Much Ado V relegated back to a DNF. That will leave Infotrack only a couple of minutes ahead of Dump Truck which is a pretty impressive performance by the Ker 11.3 considering they had not read the current season course sheet and took a detour. Including the detour they still finished seven minutes in front of Meridian and had three minutes to spare on handicap.
Time will sort out the handicap for the MC38 and team Beck and aside from them the outstanding result on the night was from Meridian who turned the tables on sistership Joli from last week.
We made a well timed start from the club end and allowed for the massive header so we could clear Onion Point in the lead. Once we turned the corner there was nothing until a fresh breeze sprang up from behind and brought Dump Truck and Meridian over the top. We went high and tried to do the same with the next gust but they got their noses around the corner and took off. Dump Truck took off for Cockatoo while Meridian and Passion X headed to Goat Island.
Long before we hit the Balmain shore Infotrack came charging over the top and refused to tack away from the shore line doldrums until clear ahead and giving us dirty air all the way back to the point.
We managed to stay in phase for most of the work to Goat by which time Much Ado V, Utopia and Jackpot had made up ground.
We did well on the square to Long Nose on the shore side of the fleet and managed to round behind just Meridian and Infotrack. Unfortunately the wheels fell of a bit on the reach along the Balmain shore where we lost Utopia and Jackpot.
Humbug was our last chance to make up ground but it was not to be and we were fortunate to hold out the fast finishing Joli to the line.

One of my concerns on Wednesday night was the lack of cooling water in the engine so we were very constrained on how we used the motor. On Thursday while Elaine was at the gym I did a quick dash to the boat and replaced the water pump impellor which had lost a blade. In very quick time the pump was back in action.
A second concern on Wednesday was that the instrument brightness was out of sync and the autopilot was glowing brightly while the wind instrument was dark. Nothing ruins your night vision like a bright light in your face and in the absence of a wind direction how do you steer? Not very well is the correct answer so I checked the instrument instructions and reset the group lighting and here is the silly thing, set it very low so that in daylight they appeared to be off.
The net result was that without a visible warning in the cockpit I left the power on .
Friday afternoon I get a message that the nav lights are still on so we made another quick trip to Passion X to turn the power off. Now after 28 hours of power draw the voltage was still at 11 and the fridge was all but frozen over even with an open top.
Anyway it was a pleasant late Friday afternoon drive and drinks and cheese and bickies on board while we gave the battery a top up.
For good measure I set the group illumination on the instruments a little brighter possibly brighter than the skipper.

Drifting around a too long course for far too long only to run out of time a few metres from the finish is what hurts.
Joli, Utopia and Jackpot beat the guillotine courtesy of the last dying gasp of the almost dead breeze while Meridian and Passion X had almost nothing to take us home through Humbug.
Well done to the finishers and heaps of thanks to the crew for enduring a pretty tame night.

Winter in Sydney is better than summer in many sailing capitals with respect to warmth but what we lack for much of winter is wind. When it does blow it can be too strong for sailing so it is truly a feast or famine. We were fortunate that one windy wednesday the racing was held at RANSA where in a depleted fleet we scored a first and fastest but it was our only one for the winter. That was the icing on the cake for the shortened point score series and gave us second on countback from Krakatoa who had an excellent start to the winter series. In the individual post series races I-Super had a blinder for the first race but we got one back on them the next race after which we both lost count of who would have won had the series been continued.
The last race of the series started well for us with a long broad reach out to the South Head and a tight work back to Rose Bay. Fidelis loves those conditions even more than Passion X and was well ahead at the turn and stayed there all day. We held out Hanni until the Point Piper mark at which point Crosshaven broke our overlap and Joli followed close behind. On the reach around Shark island we tried too hard to go over the top of Crosshaven only to sail into the wind shadow while Joli wisely went wide for more consistent wind. A big gust at the mark caused us to round up and we had to do a 360 to round the mark properly. In the confusion we forgot to haul on the backstay and struggled to windward on the last leg to get passed by I-Super by a mere 2 seconds.
We did carry a lot of sail for the wind and while we were super fast on the first reach it is arguable that we could have been faster to windward on the way home with the No3 jib.
Two days later we were rigged with the No 4 jib and two reefs in the main and ready for a blast around the Balmain course in the Friday afternoon series only to have the race abandoned due to the forecast. For the heck of it we sailed the full course with just our No4 Jib and made it around in better time than in many of the drifts. The only bit of excitement was the 40 knot gust which did what 40 knot gusts are supposed to do. The wisdom of the cancellation was proven when shortly after packing the gear away a 50 knot squall came through and did quite a bit of damage around Sydney.
Monday we headed out to Pittwater sailing on the nose all the way from Sydney with the No3 jib and the vang down hard so we could ease the boom down. That proved very fast and stable and was a good start to three days of quiet up in Refuge Bay and the Coasters Retreat areas.
Thursday was a motor back home as the breeze was absent or right on the nose at just a few knots but the trip was exciting enough with whale sightings off of Barrenjoey and later just 500 metres from the North Head. The pod off the heads was in the direct line of our travel and we had to take a wide detour to avoid them. Along with the commercial whale watching vessels and other private spectators we spent 30 minutes absorbed by the antics of the pod.
Friday was the last day of the Winter Afternoon series at Balmain and a good chance to try out the boom down technique we had practiced on the way to Pittwater. The steady breeze favoured the early starters so we had a mid fleet finish but we did pass quite a few and held out Avalon and Irukandji with whom the handicapper had finally come to terms. They both beat us around the course on time but by not enough to pass. In the end this was to be a drop as we had so many sixth places that we had ones to spare and ended up second in the series to Avalon. Our win over Irukandji was due only to their misfortune at running aground in one race and not contesting another otherwise we would have been back in third place. On the other hand we sailed the series with a small crew on many days and no ballast on the rails.
This weekend is the start of Daylight saving time and the commencement of the GFS Twilight series. For Passion X it will be a new experience to race with the trimmed down pin head main and fixed backstay so we are looking forward to the racing.

The eighteen to twenty five knot breeze provided quite a challenge for the fifteen yachts in Division 1 of the RANSA Winter Wednesday race. Adding to the challenge was the wind direction which was straight down the course so it is a real credit to the crew of Amanti that they got around in an hour and ten minutes. It is not the best direction for Passion X but we have been more competitive with the pin head main and fixed backstay and were not disappointed with ninth on handicap.
Like a lot of the fleet we hoisted a No 3 jib and reefed main but later shook out the reef, again like a lot of the fleet.
The pin was the correct end to start and we were well lined up when Amanti charged back into the fleet from windward. To avoid a collision we had to give up our safe starting position and go to leeward barely making the pin in the process. The tight pinch to the pin was not pretty and we stalled out in the dirty air of the fleet. When the breeze knocked we tacked and were among the leaders well to windward of the fleet. Leeward came across on starboard and being unable to duck her we went back in a safe leeward position but she kept driving towards Bradleys Head and did not stop until we were both becalmed behind the point.
This was a disappointing pointless exercise as it put us right at the back of the fleet and in the full dirty air of Leeward. After a long slow work back into clear air we set off after the fleet. In the far distance Hanni picked up a nice shift off of Steele Point so we headed that way hoping to get into the lift.

We did get back into the lift but it was short lived and back on port tack we were convincingly bested by Fidelis and Tula out wide.

Coming back into the top mark I set my sights on Allegro as a possible target to catch on the run home. Downwind with the jib poled out we held Fidelis and passed Tula. Into Rose Bay and in lighter air we shook out the reef in the main and jumped away from Fidelis and Tula. Along the reach to Point Piper the fast reaching Fidelis came up to our transom and it was touch and go to round ahead. On the beat around the island we tacked back to Shark Island while Fidelis carried out mid stream. In the chase we made up ground on Allegro but were run over at the mark by Fidelis.

The last run for home  was a chase after Allegro and Fidelis and while we were not able to catch them we did make up enough time to beat them on handicap.

Leeward collected second place which is typical of their heavy air performance but we were happy to stay within two minutes of Joli, to make ground on Allegro and to beat Hitchhike over the line.

We were indeed fortunate with the weather on the rain front as there was a prolonged break in the rain during the race. On the other hand the breeze was well under forecast. Joli and Passion X both had crew numbers appropriate for the 20 knot forecast breeze but a bit over the top for the 10 knots we had. That did not stop us getting first and second on handicap and while Joli was a clear winner Passion X had to fight for every second to beat Allegro on handicap.
On Passion X we made the chase a bit harder than it should have been by being 15 seconds behind the line at the start. We went low to avoid the dirty air of the fleet to windward and sailed parallel to Fidelis, Joli and Allegro to the top mark.
At the rounding we continued on starboard enough to get clear air on the leading three and were rewarded with a lift above the leaders. In hindsight we should have used the lift to get more boat speed and try to get ahead of the next shift but alas we went too high and sailed into the quiet air in the lee of Steele Point.
Joli and Fidelis out wide tacked on a big knock and came back ahead. Allegro chased Passion X along the shore and we had an extended passage side be side sailing into Rose Bay. As we approached the Rose Bay mark Fidelis dropped down on our line giving us a dose of dirty air at which point Allegro started to nudge ahead to leeward. As we tacked for the mark Amanti came in on starboard so we stayed high giving them room to round but they managed to touch in the rounding and went back for a second go. That gave us room to chase Fidelis and try to stay ahead of Allegro. Around the Point Piper mark Joli, Fidelis and Allegro went deep while Passion X went straight to the mark. In that phase Joli drew further ahead, Allegro passed Passion X to leeward and effectively sailed around us while Fidelis did not enjoy the detour and dropped two places. The rest of the way home was a drag race chasing Allegro and trying to stay ahead of Fidelis.
We never caught Allegro but managed to cross the line ahead of Fidelis and Amanti who never made up the extra turns in Rose Bay.

Chasing Fidelis

Chasing Fidelis

Nose by nose with Allegro into Rose Bay

Nose by nose with Allegro into Rose Bay

Allegro goes deep and around Passion X

Allegro goes deep and around Passion X

That is the gap from first fastest back to Passion X in a very bunched fleet. On handicap it was even tighter with just 12 seconds separating Joli in second place and Passion X in fifth. Meridian in third was five seconds in front and Coco in fourth just a single second ahead. The handicapper will be very proud of his work tonight.

The race started in northerly winds gusting to fifteen knots and a little more. On that angle Passion X performed well under full main and No 1 heavy genoa where we hung onto the tail of Agrovation and Meridian until the breeze shifted to the north east and we had to work to the top mark. At the shift the yacht to leeward flopped over and passed ahead of Passion X but it was close at the top.
On the run back to Steele Point we travelled well with the genoa poled out and pulled a few metres ahead of Hanni. On the gybe we left the pole up to leeward and gained on the fleet only to have Amanti drop their pole and reach up under us. On the reach to Point Piper we managed to sail out from under Amanti but on the work around the island they were too smart and too fast while we were locked down by the high pointing Hanni just behind.
Around the island and on the reach home it was anyone’s race. We managed to reach out from under Hanni but could not make an impression on the leaders.
At the finish it was a well enjoyed race with the only surprise the narrow loss to Joli and Meridian on handicap.

Despite the increased restriction on sailing events due to the Covid 19 virus a large fleet was able to take to the water at Balmain today for a glorious Friday afternoon sail around the West Harbour. There are a lot of people well past retirement age enjoying these events and to the organizers we extend our grateful thanks. For today we were down to three Zone D sailors. For those uninitiated in the rituals of Covid 19 sailing zones that mean we all live in as odd quadrilateral designated by Sailing Australia NSW as a zone where we are allowed to associate for sailing purposes. It is fortunate that for our Wednesday sailing we are predominately Zone D people and for the upcoming twilight series also Zone D persons.

The wind was favorable for our designated start time and by the first island rounding we were hard on the stern of those that started a minute earlier. That sense of achievement was soon extinguished in the cut and thrust of the windward work up the Hunters Hill shore as Irukandji found the right side of a couple of wind shifts and went on to win the afternoon.

Our next crack at fame came on the reach along the Balmain shore back past the club when we went wide and found more wind to run through the lee of a  large proportion of the fleet. Odyssey was just in front and Avalon to windward but we hung on to their tails for the run down the narrow passage between Drummoyne Yacht Club and the islands. At the “No Loitering”sign where Irukandji parked last week we ran out of wind which was extremely disappointing as we watched Odyssey and Avalon charge off into the distance for second and third place respectively. Meanwhile we had caught Van Demon and were having one hell of a fight with here for one place in a friendly Friday sail. They skimmed across our bow and tacked onto starboard giving us dirty air. When they tacked away we hung on to a progressive lift and came back strongly so they tacked again to close out the passage to the line. We dared the wrath of the sailing gods and drove to the very edge of the Cockatoo Island wall and tacked back trying to get a starboard call on them but alas they snuck through for fifth place leaving us pretty pleased with a sixth place for the afternoon. It was perhaps fitting that we started together and finished together and in the interval had a very enjoyable afternoon on the water playing for sheep stations not.

Our mate Geoff was out on the water running the motor on Capriole and took some great sailing photos for our enjoyment.

The genoa we were using for the afternoon is one we took off of the old Passion so it has done a lot of miles. It was built by Ben Gemmell back in the day and we had it repaired late last year and put aside as a cruising sail. When the Covid 19 virus struck we pulled the sail out of retirement into service as it is high clewed and skims the life lines. The repairs by Sydney Sailmakers have added years to the life of the old Genoa.

The other Covid 19 related change was to remove the fat head from the main so we could sail with a smaller crew and that has been a success as far as enjoyable sailing goes. This is the first good photo of the modified mainsail.

Nice photo of Passion X in one of the fresher patches of wind. Photo courtesy Geoff Lucas

Nice photo of Passion X in one of the fresher patches of wind. Photo courtesy Geoff Lucas

Trying to get some twist in the sails for the light shifty conditions. Photo courtesy Geoff Lucas

Trying to get some twist in the sails for the light shifty conditions. Photo courtesy Geoff Lucas