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Monday, 12 August 2019
Falmouth Sailing Week programme
FALMOUTH Sailing Week takes place from August 11 to 17.
It's a tradition for Falmouth Week, where each club hosts a day's racing as part of the week as well as regatta teas for the competitors at the end of each day.
The Sailing
Following the race briefing on the evening of Saturday, August 10, racing will begin on Sunday and continue until the following Saturday.
The main regatta is a sequence of races over seven days, with courses laid in Falmouth Bay and the Carrick Roads.
All levels of sailor – expert or beginner – are catered for.
The Bay Fleet
The Bay Fleet races in 15 square miles of open water outside the harbour. The area has been the venue for many prestigious events over the years ranging from iconic J-Class superyachts to the Finn World Championship won by Falmouth’s own Ben Ainslie shortly before winning Olympic Gold in 2012.
The Bay Fleet comprises Firebird catamaran, IRC and YTC (South West Yacht Time Correction) yachts, Marieholm and YTC Cruising (No spinnaker) yachts. The YTC Cruising class is aimed at the less ultra-competitive and family crews. There will be both Regatta (“round-the-cans”) and Windward-Leeward racing for most classes.
Bay Fleet competitors will race on Wednesday in the Champagne Race. The Champagne Race is a longer, coastal race in Falmouth Bay and adjacent water to the NE.
Falmouth Harbour is the third largest deep-water harbour in the world, after Sydney and Rio de Janeiro. The Carrick Fleet races in the lower estuary – an area some two miles long by one mile wide – and, weather permitting, may also venture a short distance outside the harbour mouth, beyond Black Rock. Classes comprise Dinghies, Flying Fifteen, Ajax, Cornish Shrimper 19, Sunbeam, Falmouth Working Boat, Falmouth Gaffer, St Mawes One Design, Cabin Yachts, and Dayboats. On Wednesday the Carrick Fleet compete for prize bottles of champagne.
Skippers’ briefing
There will be a briefing for competitors on the evening of Saturday, August 10.
Presentation of prizes
Each day one of the clubs will host teas and other refreshments followed by presentation of prizes. Family and friends of competitors will be most welcome at the club while racing is in progress.
The host clubs
Sunday, Helford River Sailing Club & Royal Cornwall Yacht Club (Carrick Fleet)
Monday, Mylor Yacht Club
Tuesday, Restronguet Sailing Club
Wednesday, Royal Cornwall Yacht Club
Thursday, Royal Cornwall Yacht Club
Friday, St Mawes Sailing Club
Saturday, Flushing Sailing Club
The presentation of overall series prizes will take place at Flushing Sailing Club on Saturday evening. A complimentary launch service will be available during the evening to take participants to Flushing Sailing Club from Falmouth (Royal Cornwall Yacht Club) and back again.
For some 60 years Falmouth Week has included a long coastal race on Wednesday for offshore yachts, with prize bottles of champagne – the prestigious Ancasta Champagne Race.
The tradition commemorates an occasion back in 1951 when friends Lord Shawcross and H. A. J. (Jack) Silley, owner of Falmouth Docks, were competing in a yacht race off Falmouth. The spirit of competition was so keen that the friends broke away from the main race in which they were taking part, in order informally to settle the result between themselves. The loser, in good grace, presented a case of champagne to the winner, and so the legend of the Ancasta Champagne Race was born.
In 1955 Philip Fox, the then chairman of GC Fox & Co, started the first official Champagne Race, to be sailed under the auspices of the Falmouth Town Regatta Committee, by donating a case of champagne as first prize. Thanks to the generosity of sponsors, all classes racing in Falmouth Week now get their chance to win champagne prizes under the banner of Champagne Day.
For the Bay Fleet the Ancasta Champagne Race usually attracts a strong daily entry by boats drawn by the challenge that the race presents. Long courses, in keeping with the tradition of the event, are set to suit the conditions and the boats taking part. The course area will encompass the whole Bay and extend up the coast in the direction of Gull Rock. The finish is usually to the west side of Pendennis headland.
Because of the excitement, and congestion in and around the town, surrounding the Falmouth Week Air Show on Wednesday, August 14, there are no teas after racing that afternoon and no presentation of prizes.
Instead, the prizes are presented at the Royal Cornwall Yacht Club on Thursday evening.
Sunday, 11 August 2019
Saturday, 10 August 2019
Wednesday, 7 August 2019
55th European Sharpie Championship to be hosted at Itchenor Sailing Club
This August 18th - 24th sailors and crew, with their families and supporters from across Europe will join forces with UK Sharpie Sailors at Itchenor Sailing Club for the 55th European Sharpie Championship.
The sailing will take place in Chichester Harbour, and the surrounding waters of Bracklesham Bay and Hayling Bay.
There will be a series of ten races and a great social programme with each competing nation hosting a themed evening, including a British Night, Dutch Pancake Night and more during the week culminating in a prize giving ceremony.
The 2019 Championship is being sponsored by Alan Boswell Group, Anglian Country Inns, Kraken Travel, Hilltop Outdoor Centre and Portal Comms.
The Sharpie class of boat is now sailed in the UK in Brancaster Staithe, Burnham Overy Staithe and Wells-Next-The-Sea, Norfolk. It is also re-emerging on the South Coast and in Europe in Holland, Germany and Portugal. The European Championship takes place each year and rotates between the four countries.
Sharpies - A brief history
The International 12 Square Metre (sail size) Sharpie is a classic wooden sailing boat - Initially designed as a fast two man racing dinghy, which is also suitable for day cruising.It has shallow draught and a gaff rig and is capable of standing reasonably heavy weather. Apart from toe straps, sitting out aids are not permitted.
The Sharpie was originally designed in Germany by Herr Kroger in 1931. After winning a design competition, the boat gained instant popularity both at home and abroad as an affordable but exciting class of boat with a good speed. The boat was used for German Officer training in the pre war period on the lakes of North Germany.
The first eight boats in the UK were brought into Kings Lynn Docks, Norfolk, in 1934 in Mahogany Boxes. They were then sent in pairs to different sailing clubs around the country including Barnt Green Sailing Club, West Midlands and Ouse Amateur Sailing Club, Kings Lynn.
The Sharpie class continued to grow and was chosen as a Class for the Melbourne Australia Olympics in 1956 - in fact, Brancaster Staithe based 'Chuckles' GBR 63 won a bronze medal in the 1956 Olympics and has now been lovingly restored and will be sailing in the 2019 Championship.
Althoughmost boats are in excess of 60 - 90 years old, they are all magnificently restored and maintained. Each one carries its own history, something lacking in modern boats. There is a great sense of pride in preserving something, which has survived so long. Most sailors spend as much time maintaining the boats as sailing them.
A great supporter of the Sharpie, Janet Sanderson from Brancaster Staithe built her own Sharpie with her father - Fortuna - It was Janet who had the initiative of organising the first European Championships back in 1964 - making contact with Sharpie enthusiasts in Holland, Germany and Portugal. The 1964 Championship was held in Brancaster Staithe.
A Growing Fleet
This annual event has grown into a sailing extravaganza over the years with hard and fast competitors sailing for the European title. This year there are so far 42 competing Sharpies.
Interest in Sharpie racing is certainly growing again with a host of young sailors partaking and enthusiastic yachtsman from around the UK and Europe taking on many Sharpies as restoration projects. Several Sharpies have changed hands over the past 12 months and a top condition boat for sale is becoming difficult to find.
James Nunn, Sharpie Fleet Captain said: 'Once the magic of a Sharpie enters your lifestyle you become part of it for a very long time, there's nothing that can compare.'
Chris Gibbs, Sharpie Sailor said:'There is nothing more rewarding than seeing a fleet of Sharpies sailing together and is ultimately the reason us Sharpie sailors are members of BSOA (British Sharpie Owners Association) which helps preserve the Sharpie class we all love.'
To find out more please visit sharpies.org.uk and itchenorsc.co.uk or call 01243 512400
Tuesday, 6 August 2019
Alex Thomson hoping experience and bold design of his £5.5m superboat pays off in Vendee Globe
Alex Thomson looks like a kid who has just wandered into a sweet shop and been told he can have all the gobstoppers he wants. “This is like the world’s best toy,” he shouts above the din of electric drills and saws as he clambers aboard his 60ft black carbon yacht with fluorescent pink accents and motions for me to join him – “£5.5 million. I mean, who gets to spend that kind of money on a toy? It’s insane.”
Thomson, one of Britain’s foremost yachtsmen, is optimistic that this is the boat that will finally carry him to Vendee Globe glory.
He is getting closer each time. Having been forced to abandon his first two attempts in 2004-05 and 2008-09 due to boat damage, Thomson finished third in 2012-13 and then second last time out in 2016-17, when he would have won but for a broken foil which handicapped him for most of the race.
The 45-year-old has high hopes that the next edition will be the one that sees him break his duck and become the first Briton to win the non-stop, solo round-the-world race known as the Everest of sailing.
He would certainly appear to stand an excellent chance. His new boat, which like all his previous ones is called Hugo Boss after the team’s principal partner, went in the water for the first time yesterday and looks absolutely stunning. Built in an unassuming boatyard near to the team’s base in Gosport, it has taken a team of designers, boatbuilders and architects 26 months, 50,000 man hours and the small matter of the aforementioned £5.5 million to get to this point (although as Thomson notes: “£5.5 million and it still doesn’t have a toilet!”).
Only eight of the 30-odd boats competing in the Vendee Globe will have been built from new
Only eight of the 30-odd boats competing in the Vendee Globe will have been built brand new CREDIT: LLOYD IMAGES
It is how it compares to the other next-generation Vendee boats that matters, however. Of the 30-odd boats which will compete in the next edition of the race, only eight will have been newly built.
The race will effectively be between these eight foiling monohulls. And while there are some parameters – a length limit, a width limit, a draft limit and so on – which everyone must stay within, there is plenty of scope to play around with the design.
“The big thing is that if something is not specifically disallowed then it’s allowed,” Thomson says, as we move about the boat, stopping every now and then so that he can point out some gizmo or gadget.
“We have a chief measurer, Rene Boulaire, who is basically God.” Boulaire is one of the few who knows all the secrets. While yesterday’s launch was an opportunity to show Hugo Boss and its new pink trim off to the public, the team were careful not to show too much.
Thomson will be competing in the Vendee Globe for a fifth time
Thomson will be competing in the Vendee Globe for a fifth time CREDIT: AFP
They were happy for their rivals to see the 60 black, grippy solar panels across the deck and coach roof, for instance (Thomson is aiming to complete the Vendee Globe without the use of fossil fuels and, in doing so, prove that being more sustainable can actually have performance advantages). Or even to the cockpit, which intriguingly has been moved further forward and appears to be, to some degree, enclosed, with multiple exit points or hatches. But they were coy about showing too much of their new foils, which they believe represent a significant development from the previous generation. The foils (short for hydrofoils) are basically arms which extend out of the side of the boat and lift its hull out of the water as it moves along, reducing drag.
With new rules allowing the foils to move on two axes rather than on one axis, as was the case last time, the challenge for everyone has been to come up with a solution that allows sailors to change the boat’s “angle of attack” as efficiently as possible. This is what keeps the boat “flying” out of the water at the fastest speed.
Thomson says the idea for his foils was fleshed out while sitting in a car with Pete Hobson, his design manager at Alex Thomson Racing, and Andy Claughton, who used to design for the America’s Cup. “We were waiting for the ferry, and I’m trying to explain to Andy what I mean and he’s drawing the foil in the condensation of the car windscreen,” Thomson recalls. “We then went home, Pete drew it up and we sent it over to [French architects] VPLP.”
The stakes are high. If they have got it right, it could be the key to the team’s success. Conversely, if they have got it wrong he admits “it’s going to be hard to recover at this stage”.
Thomson says he hopes his solution will be different, at any rate. Like New Zealand in the last America’s Cup, who arrived late in Bermuda and caught everyone out with their “cyclors” – which had the crew pedalling on static bikes rather than using traditional grinding pedestals – he hopes the fact that he is based in the UK, away from everyone else, can be an advantage. “There will be 30 teams in the next Vendee and 22 of them come from one place in France,” he says. “You can’t hide anything. They all drink in the same bars.”
Thomson will spend the next few weeks testing the boat, gradually increasing the loads and seeing what happens, before racing her for the first time in the two-handed Transat Jacques Vabres this autumn.
He says he is hoping to hang on to his secrets, at least until it is too late for any of his rivals to copy what he has done.
For better or worse, this is what the Vendee Globe is all about. “I think people see it as man versus the elements,” Thomson says. “And it is. But like F1, it is mainly a design race. If I hadn’t broken my foil on the last Vendee I would have won it. And I would have won it because of a technical advantage.”
After four attempts, Thomson is hoping experience and a bold design pays off this time.
Monday, 5 August 2019
Sunday, 4 August 2019
Saturday, 3 August 2019
SailGP touches down on UK waters
With just over one week to the European debut of SailGP in Cowes, the Great Britain SailGP Team was the first of the six national teams to take to the water. Sailing down to the iconic Needles, the Isle of Wight's most famous landmark off the western point of the island, the team gave a glimpse of the speed and excitement expected when the fastest sail racing boats in the world go head to head at Cowes SailGP on August 10 and 11.
After competing around the world in Sydney, San Francisco and New York, the new global sports league is visiting Cowes on the Isle of Wight for the penultimate event of the inaugural season, which sees the winning team walk away with a $1 million prize.
With new technical upgrades onboard the one-design flying boats, the revolutionary F50 catamarans are expected to hit the highest speeds yet seen this season, with the teams predicted to break the 50-knot speed barrier (60 mph) on the Solent.
The Great Britain SailGP Team will be looking to continue the successful British summer of sport. Currently sitting in third place overall, the Brits will be seeking redemption after a dramatic capsize in New York and hungry to win races in front of home crowds. Great Britain will have tough competition from overall season leader Japan, helmed by Olympic champion Nathan Outteridge, and his long-time rival Tom Slingsby of the Australia SailGP Team.
"It's quite a moment and felt fantastic to finally sail on home shores today," said Dylan Fletcher, Great Britain SailGP Team helmsman. "This is the first time that sailing of this kind has come to the UK and it's really exciting for the whole team to showcase these boats in front of a home crowd. We just hope that the fans come out in force to cheer us on and check it out for themselves."
Joining Fletcher on the British team are two fellow Olympians, CEO and wing trimmer Chris Draper, and flight controller Stuart Bithell. Completing the team is Olympic rowing gold medallist Matt Gotrel, Richard Mason and Neil Hunter.
"Cowes is an iconic sailing venue and many great events have been contested off the Isle of Wight," said SailGP CEO Sir Russell Coutts. "We should prepare ourselves for some spectacular racing. It's one thing to see it on a screen, but another when you see these boats racing around marks metres from the shore. We know Australia and Japan are the teams to beat, but I expect Great Britain to be firing here and I wouldn't be surprised if they are winning races and even contending for the final match race. I can't wait to see how this event plays out."
SailGP is redefining the sport, offering the next generation of high-adrenaline, competitive sailing. Bringing the sport closer to fans than ever before, spectators will be afforded the opportunity to witness the action up close as teams representing Australia, China, France, Great Britain, Japan and the United States battle for maximum championship points on August 10 and 11.
For the first time in the UK, racing will be live on the SailGP APP. In addition to watching on BT Sport, fans can download the next generation mobile application, giving an unprecedented insight into the revolutionary new sailing league. Along with watching the live racing, the SailGP APP allows fans to view live data and video, track performance, compare athletes, change viewing angles, zoom in on the action and watch replays - bringing them closer to the sport than ever before.
Coming to the UK for the first time marks a special moment in time for the Great Britain SailGP Team as Cowes is home to the oldest and largest annual sailing regatta in the world, expecting up to 100,000 spectators throughout the week. As an Official Feature Event of Cowes Week, Cowes SailGP will bring an added level of excitement to the event with supercharged wingsailed catamarans racing in close-quarters at speeds potentially exceeding 50 knots, just off Cowes. The Cowes SailGP Race Village will run along the seafront from the end of the Cowes Green up to Egypt Point. Activities in the Race Village start from 11:30 a.m. each day, with the races taking place from 3-4:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Ahead of the spectacular racing, an exciting pre-show will take place, when local sailors will have the chance to share the waters with the F50s and showcase their talents in front of the SailGP Grandstand. Working with the Royal Yachting Association and the United Kingdom Sailing Academy, the young sailors will go head to head as part of the SailGP Inspire programme - SailGP's community outreach initiative that aims to use sailing as a force for good - which launches at the event. Additionally, with the support of the UKSA, SailGP Inspire will be offering opportunities for local youngsters from the Isle of Wight to take part in shore-based experiential activities and on-water sessions in the lead up to the weekend. Visitors to the SailGP Race Village will also be able to enjoy the Inspire exhibits.
On Friday, August 9, fans will be able to see the teams hit the racecourse for the first time, for the official practise racing, sharing the Solent with royalty. The teams will race following the King's Cup - a major sailing event hosted by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in support of their charitable causes - taking place off the SailGP Race Village from 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
Magenta make Royal Anglesey's day
More than 20 female sailors took advantage of the Magenta Project day at Royal Anglesey yacht club, which will have an ongoing impact on women's sailing in North Wales.
The Magenta Project is a charity committed to creating equal access and opportunities for women in sailing, with international sailor Ellie Draper and RYA instructor Jo Powell on hand to help those taking part in Beaumaris on the Menai Strait.
Commodore of the Royal Anglesey Yacht Club, Mrs Stevie Scanlan described the day as “awe-inspiring” as one of the 23 taking part in nine boats, after the club entered a national competition to earn the opportunity to host one of the high-profile days run by the Magenta Project around the UK.
Those taking part, travelling from as far as Aberdovey and the Wirral, enjoyed instruction on helming the classic Fife 1 keel boats, racing starts and race tactics.
The Magenta Project has teamed up with the RYA, the national governing body for sailing in the UK, to help promote more women racing keelboats at club level through tailored coaching sessions at clubs up and down the country, run by RYA qualified Magenta Project coaches, to get more female club members on the water racing, more often.
“We were very excited to be hosting this day at Royal Anglesey and it was very successful,” said Scanlan.
“We had a whole day of race training and it was brilliant. Everybody said how useful it was.
“Our club members lent us their boats for the day and we hosted a barbecue after training, it was a real team effort that made me very proud to be part of such a great team."
Antony Robinson, the club's development officer who organised the event, said, “There was a mixed ability from regular sailors to people who had never sailed keelboats before, overall there was a lot of experience of different types of sailing.
“It was amazing for us as a club. A couple of people loved it so much that they have been offered crewing opportunities in our club racing since then, which is absolutely brilliant.
“It was really nice for members of the club and others to have training in the environment where it was not tactical racing.
“We do not practice starts apart from in the more stressful conditions of the club races, as a result we are thinking of organising club race training planning ahead for next season.
“The amount of experience the Magenta Project brought to the club was fantastic, there were some younger sailors who have taken part in squad training but were looking to make the leap up to bigger boats, so it was inspirational for them too.”
The Royal Anglesey also offers rowing through the Beaumaris Rowing Club and the day coincided with an important league rowing event, so the club was packed, with perfect conditions for both sailors and rowers alike.
Thanks to The Magenta Project, female sailing in North Wales certainly received a major boost.
Thursday, 1 August 2019
Learn to sail at Royal Lymington Yacht Club for just £1 each week
For over 30 years, Royal Lymington Yacht Club’s Wednesday junior sailing programme has been teaching children the basics of sailing. Children learn how to tie knots, how to row and about safety as well as how to sail.
For just £1 a week, youngsters not only get two hours of dedicated tuition from the club’s experienced instructors and willing volunteers, but they also get a cup of hot chocolate and a doughnut thrown in too.
In order to participate, children must be 8 years of age and a consent form, with photo, must be completed and submitted to Royal Lymington Yacht Club. Children must wear appropriate clothing and footwear for sailing and weather. A buoyancy aid will be provided for those who do not have their own. Long hair must be tied back and suncream applied. Ensure sufficient layers in colder weather.
Children progress through a series of levels and will have to queue each week to be admitted - numbers vary each week according to the number of volunteers. Parents/carers must stay until sure that their child has been admitted and has changed into sailing kit. During busy periods, some children may not be admitted due to oversubscription - anyone turned away will be put on the list to get in the following week.
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