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SCUTTLEBUTT 2219 – November 8, 2006

Scuttlebutt is a digest of major sailing news, commentary, opinions,
features and dock talk . . . with a North American focus. Scuttlebutt is
distributed each weekday, with support provided by UBS, main partner of
Alinghi, Defender of the 32nd America's Cup
(http://www.ubs.com/sailing).

AND THE WINNERS ARE . . .
The International Sailing Federation and Rolex have announced Laser
Radial Champion Paige Railey (USA) and Mike Sanderson (NZL), winning
skipper of the Volvo Ocean Race, as winners of the ISAF Rolex World
Sailor of the Year Awards 2006. At an Awards Ceremony in Helsinki,
Railey and Sanderson were honoured for their outstanding sailing
achievements between 1 September 2005 and 31 August 2006, when Railey
won a number of major international regattas in the Laser Radial, and
Sanderson led Team ABN Amro to a dominant victory in the Volvo Ocean
Race.

This is the second consecutive year that Paige Railey from Florida has
been nominated for the female ISAF Rolex World Sailor of the Year Award.
Last year Ellen Macarthur (GBR) pipped her to the title, but still only
aged 19, it would be no surprise to see Railey nominated again in the
coming years. Since the Laser Radial was selected two years ago as the
new equipment for the Women's One Person Dinghy Olympic event, Railey
has proven herself as the sailor to beat.

With no prior experience of Olympic level sailing, the teenager's
meteoric rise to the top of the sport has shocked Railey more than
anyone. But her lack of experience has proven no barrier to success as
she has moved seamlessly from the top of the youth sailing world to the
top of the sport at senior level. Towards the end of the 2005 season
Railey won the Volvo Youth Sailing ISAF World Championship in Korea and
then a few weeks later went on to win the Laser Radial World
Championships in Brazil.

Railey opened the 2006 season with victories at the French Olympic
Sailing Week and the ISAF World Sailing Games in Austria, although she
struggled during the summer at the European and World Championships with
some below par performances. However in August she bounced back in fine
style, to win a challenging Olympic Test Regatta in Qingdao, the venue
for the Olympic Sailing Competition in 2008.

Few teams have dominated a round-the-world race quite like Mike
Sanderson's team on ABN Amro One in the Volvo Ocean Race 2005-06.
Sanderson brought an understated yet authoritative leadership to the
campaign, as the team spent the best part of a year learning how to tame
and master the frighteningly quick Volvo Open 70 design that was
introduced for this race. Sanderson's team not only came up with the
fastest boat, but they knew how to sail the Volvo Open 70 better than
anyone. Over eight months and 31,500 hard miles around the planet, ABN
AMRO ONE won all but three of the nine offshore legs and all but two of
seven In Port races. -- http://www.sailing.org/

The other female nominees for the ISAF Rolex World Sailor of the Year
Awards 2006 were:
Dee Caffari (GBR)
Dorte Jensen (DEN)
Helena Lucas (GBR)
Daida Moreno (ESP)
Mónica Azon Canalda, Sandra Azon Canalda and Graciela Pisonero
Castro (ESP)

Other male nominee:
Peter Gilmour (AUS)
Sébastien Josse (FRA)
Yves Parlier (FRA)
Bruno Peyron (FRA)

CONFESSIONS OF A PLASTIC BOAT SAILOR
Ever since I was a kid, I've drawn boats. Not very well mind you, but I
drew boats. Throughout, I have had a "thing" for Dorade (and most of the
Sparkman and Stephen's designs of Dorade's era.) While it probably
sounds weird coming from a plastic boat sailor, it has been one of my
sailing / racing dreams to sail or race on Dorade.

As you wrote yesterday, Edgar Cato purchased Dorade and shipped her back
home to the East Coast. I was fortunate enough to be asked to sail on
Dorade 4 or 5 times. We raced her in the Opera House Cup in Nantucket
and the Museum of Yachting Classic Yacht Regatta in Newport. Both events
had breeze of 25+ knots.

Sailing on a reefed down Dorade, perfectly balanced was one thing....
Sailing in that condition with Olin Stephens on board making the sail
selection decisions was remarkable. Listening to his assessment of
Dorade as a design and how she evolved throughout the early years was
extraordinary. He told us what he would do to make her better in the
short and long run. Extraordinary and remarkable are often thrown around
words, but it really was an amazing experience.

Dorade is so unique, and her restoration is ongoing with Edgar and his
team working hard to keep her in perfect museum quality shape, while
also putting her through her paces in the classic yacht circuit. Dorade
is a boat that "tells you" if you are trimmed correctly or not.
Perfectly balanced and blasting along if you are trimmed correctly, and
a downright bear to sail if you are not. It was and is the prettiest
boat ever made. -- Brad Read

EQUIPMENT
Tuesday at the ISAF Annual Conference in Helsinki, Finland, equipment
was the hot topic, with the classes coming under the spotlight at both
the ISAF Women’s Sailing Committee and the Equipment Committee. Looking
towards the London 2012 Olympic Games, the Committee gave their approval
to Submission 079 to delete Regulation 16.1.6, which currently limits
the classes from which ISAF can choose the equipment for the Olympic
Games and Regional Games. Here’s the verbiage of the regulation: The
equipment for the Olympic Games and all Regional Games shall be chosen
from the following classes:
- Windsurfing: Funboard, Formula, Mistral, Neil Pryde RS:X
- Single-Handed Dinghy: Finn, Laser, Laser Radial, Sunfish, Byte,
Zoom, Europe
- Multi-Crewed Dinghy: 29er, 420, 470, Fireball, Flying Dutchman,
Lightning, Snipe, 49er
- Keelboat: Etchells, Flying Fifteen, H-Boat, J-22, J-24, Soling,
Yngling, Sonar, Star
- Multihull: Hobie 16, Hobie Tiger, Tornado
http://www.sailing.org/default.asp?ID=j8fFh?,A?
http://www.sailing.org/meetings/2006november/papers/sub_079.pdf

THE ULTIMATE CAP FROM ULTIMATE SAILING
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"tether" retracts smoothly into the cap when not needed. Microfiber in
navy or canary with our Ultimate Sailing logo. $19.95. Order Ultimate
Sailing products at http://www.ultimatesailing.com

NEAR DEATH EXPERIENCE
The Orange Project trimaran capsized in the middle of the Atlantic
Ocean, approximately 600 miles north-west of the Azores. At 0945 Tuesday
morning, the Russian tanker Okhta Bridge, which was making progress
towards skipper Stève Ravussin after having received the distress signal
emitted by the Norfolk (USA) MRCC. The rescue operation has been a
tricky one, and Stève was in a state of shock, but he's now safe and
sound, en route towards the South of England where he should step ashore
on 13 November.

Orange Project, flipped over in heavy conditions - 35 knots of wind and
short but steep waves. After a forced technical pit stop in the Azores
last week, he was free from any result-related pressure, and was as he
confessed sailing conservatively, with two reefs in the main and the
Solent, ballasts filled in order to help the boat remain flat. While he
was on the foredeck, busy tying up his gennaker to the net, the
autopilot suddenly failed and the trimaran started luffing…

Stève ran to the cockpit, but another pilot failure made the boat bear
away violently this time! Nose-diving was unavoidable, the transoms were
soon up in the air, the masthead came crashing into the sea… The boat is
now drifting far away from inhabited lands. The beacon still sends a
signal, giving its position to the maritime authorities. For the moment,
recovering what will soon be nothing but a wreck is out of the question.
"I wanted this Route du Rhum, I was prepared for it, and so was my whole
team. It turned into a nightmare", adds Stève. -- Excerpts from a story
on the Yachting World website, full story:
http://www.ybw.com/auto/newsdesk/20061007154336ywnews.html
http://www.orange-sailing-team.com/

ROUTE DU RHUM UPDATE
(Following are some excerpts from stories on thedailysail subscription
website about the Route du Rhum race, the 3,500-mile solo race for
multi-hulls and monohulls from France to Guadeloupe.)

A steady procession of 60ft trimarans followed Lionel Lemonchois into
Pointe a Pitre, Guadeloupe yesterday at the conclusion of a record
breaking Route du Rhum. Safely in second was Pascal Bidegorry on Banque
Populaire, the former Solitaire du Figaro winner dispelling critic’s
opinions of him not having had enough time racing his powerful three
hulled yacht singlehanded. Bidegorry reached Pointe a Pitre in a time of
8 days 4 hours 25 minutes and 7 seconds, 11 hours 6 minutes and 1
seconds after Gitana 11, covering the 3835 miles he sailed at an average
of 18.03 knots.

However there was no let up in the tension as Thomas Covile on board
Sodebo, found himself in a match race to reach the finish line with
Michel Desjoyeaux on Geant. Eventually Coville's red trimaran prevailed
beating the 2002 winner to the line by only 9 minutes 22 seconds. Taking
fifth spot was Franck Cammas on Groupama II.

Weather-wise this has been a highly unconventional Route du Rhum with
the normal Azores high pressure system initially not evident and then
putting in an appearance well to the north of its usual position. This
has allowed competitors to take a route more direct than normal towards
Guadeloupe and there's been none of the normal 'going south, til the
butter melts' before turning west. -- http://www.thedailysail.com

Event website: http://www.routedurhum.com/en

STAMM EMERGES FROM THE DOLDRUMS
The Swiss leader of the Velux 5 Oceans solo round-the-world race,
Bernard Stamm, crossed the equator at 16.14 GMT Monday but, more
significantly, he started to stretch out his lead again after failing to
find an easy path through the Doldrums. Stamm's Cheminees Poujoulat lost
ground to the only other competitor not forced to stop in the storms of
the first week, Japan's Koji Shiraishi in Spirit of Yukoh, as well as
Britons Mike Golding and Alex Thomson.

"This time I am really out of here," Stamm said yesterday after a couple
of false starts in wriggling free of the Doldrums. Shiraishi was 246
miles behind Stamm yesterday afternoon, while Golding had clawed back
more than 200 miles to sit 325 miles off the pace as his Ecover picked a
better path through the Doldrums. -- Tim Jeffery, The Daily Telegraph,
full story: http://tinyurl.com/tb6ek

* Mike Golding will yet again go into the record books, as the only
Briton who has raced more times across the Equator than any other
professional sailor. This evening will seem him cross the Equator for a
record 17th time. However, the Equator crossing was second in Mike's
thoughts this morning as he was trying to solve a problem with the
engine that has not been working properly for a few days.

Velux 5 Oceans Leaders: 1. Cheminees Poujoulat, Bernard Stamm, 8,101
miles to finish; 2. Spirit of Yukoh, Kojiro Shiraishi, 291 miles to
leader; 3. Ecover, Mike Golding, 340 mtl; 4. Hugo Boss, Alex Thomson,
580 mtl; 5. Saga Insurance, Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, 1423 mtl. --
http://www.velux5oceans.com

MULTIHULLS
(Glenn Bourke, CEO of the Volvo Ocean Race talks about the Volvo Extreme
40 class in connection with the round the world race. Here are some of
his thoughts.)

“We were so pleased with the success of the Volvo Extreme 40’s that it
is very likely that they will again participate in the Volvo Ocean Race
2008-09. We are in discussions with the board at Volvo and working hard
to make sure it happens again. The Volvo Extreme 40 embodies everything
that is important about the Volvo Ocean Race.

“For the Volvo Ocean Race 2008-09 we are currently looking at the kind
of venues that allow racing in close proximity of the shore so
spectators get full view of the in-port race and the Volvo Extreme 40
grand prix. This will be particularly important in territories such as
Asia where it will be harder to get public interest as the sport is not
so well known. In these territories we will definitely be looking to put
more into the package and look at introducing video boards and public
prize givings to help build momentum for the race.

“I think if we changed one thing about the Volvo Extreme 40 series it
would be to make it compulsory for Volvo Ocean Race teams to have one as
it would be a greater platform for them to take out guests and for
corporate entertainment during the stopovers, but we wont make it a
mandatory option. It adds a different dimension to what they can do. The
business to business relationships have become so important now and big
deals are made throughout the duration of the race. Corporate guests can
sail onboard the Volvo Open 70 for in-port races but the numbers are
limited, so if the teams also had a Volvo Extreme 40, it would mean that
corporate guests can sail every day in between the key days and it would
add to the in-port hospitality package.

“Next time around we would also look at increasing the profile of the
Volvo Extreme 40 teams and hope that they again attract Olympic sailors
and top multihull sailors. We would definitely be looking for guest
appearances from Volvo Open 70 team members and of course be hoping that
each team has their own boat that they would then get behind and
support.” -- Glenn Bourke, http://www.volvoextreme40.org

IF BMW ORACLE RACING WINS THE CUP…
Interviewed by Las Provincias, Chris Dickson wants to remain open to all
possibilities in case of victory. "The city made a great effort to build
the infrastructure", the New Zealander said about Valencia. "I think the
America's Cup will be linked with the City during the next years,
through others acts or for another edition". A very "politically
correct" answer from a Spanish point of view. But Chris Dickson also
remains very cagey about the expressing his position as an "open
subject".

"The question was neither examined nor discussed in the Team", he said
and then added that Larry Ellison never shared any information about
that. "Valencia is an option but I repeat that nothing is decided yet",
Dickson said. "We have first to win the Cup".

When asked about the time schedule for the next America's Cup, Chris
Dickson was more affirmative and explained that the Alinghi's calendar
was not wanted by the American syndicate. "After Alinghi won the
America's Cup, we explained when we agreed to become the Challenger of
Record that we don't want to wait until 2007", the New Zealander said.
"On the contrary, we considered 2005 as the really good year for the
Cup. If we win the cup, we will choose the shortest possible time
interval", Dickson concluded. "2009 seems to be the best time for me".
-- Cup in Europe website,
http://www.cupineurope.com/NewsEN/2006/Ac33.htm

TOO BIG TO CHANGE SAILS
The 120-foot J-boat “Shamrock” has just ordered new UK-Halsey loadpath
laminate sails from our Hamble loft in England, putting us on a historic
America’s Cupper and a current contender (“Team China”) simultaneously.
”Shamrock” wanted higher performance (J-giants are racing again) without
needing to swap to cruising sails for chartering. Understandable:
Shamrock’s mainsail has a 140-foot luff, is 4375 sq.ft., and requires a
crane to be moved. Whether you have a J-giant, a J/Boat, or something
in-between, contact UK-Halsey. For the same single-inventory convenience
on yachts under 70-feet, UK-Halsey’s Spectra Tape-Drive offers proven
racing performance and cruising durability. 800-253-2002,
http://www.ukhalsey.com

SAILING SHORTS
* It is rumored that the combined 2008 29er/49er Worlds for Sydney,
Australia are apparently in doubt after the NSW Government pulled their
$200,000 of funding ($151,644.47 USD) Is this what it takes to host a
world championship these days? -
http://scott.projectsomewhere.com/13120,02,2-0-Latest.html

* Photographer Carlo Borlenghi is an elite shooter, and whenever he
submits photos to Scuttlebutt, they are always worth a view. His latest
effort is from a sportboat event in Italy, where he captures the trapeze
crewing, mast-breaking, hull planning action. He even pulled out his
underwater housing for this event. Enjoy:
http://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/photos/06/1107/

* For those seeking a free source of GRIB files (a coded file that gives
current and forecasted weather info), Scuttlebutt has come across a
website where you can 'cut' a file to the exact area you want and get
the file immediately - for free. The data is purportedly high quality
0.5 degree data from the GFS model. To get access, send an email with
details of your intended use to mailto:request@grib.us


LETTERS TO THE CURMUDGEON
Letters selected for publication must include the writer's name, and may
be edited for clarity or simplicity (letters shall be no longer than 250
words). You only get one letter per subject, so give it your best shot,
don't whine if others disagree, and save your bashing and personal
attacks for elsewhere. As an alternative, a more open environment for
discussion is available on the Scuttlebutt Forums.

-- Scuttlebutt Letters: editor@sailingscuttlebutt.com
-- Scuttlebutt Forums: http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/forum

* From John Turvill: Emma Paul’s letter reminds me of the parental
guidance provided at the beginning of Arthur Ransome’s wonderful story
of ‘messing around in boats ’Swallows & Amazons’. The telegram from the
absent father in response to a request for permission to go sailing was
(from memory): Only duffers drown. Better drowned than duffers. Through
many adventures which I recommend to all, the children demonstrate what
I suspect is one of the Curmudgeon’s Observations: the consistent
exercise of good judgment requires experience. Experience is most
frequently obtained through the exercise of poor judgment.

* From Jordan J. Dobrikin: Gary Jobson is Opening Pandora's Box with his
story, “Going to Extremes to Win” (‘Butt 2218).. Just what is ethical/
unethical, moral/ amoral, acceptable/ unacceptable, fattening/
nonfattening as well as legal/ illegal in sail racing? Especially in
boat preparation and enhancements as well activities on the water whilst
racing.

The Sport allows and encourages sail development as well deck layout/
hardware, optimization as well as the use of modern marine electronics
and computers. The Sport regulates weight/ displacement in a somewhat
inconsistent and haphazard way. It is also inconsistent with racing
activities on the water varying from little or no recognition of the
Rules with to many No Protest events thru to too many Judge Boats
beating up on the peloton & "also rans", in "big" Regattas.

I am curious about the change of keel/ ballast materials. Is another
heavy, but not radioactive material acceptable? Is a composite mixture
for keel/ballast acceptable? With respect to weight/ displacement
reduction and/or redistribution; What is acceptable and what is not?

The Sport and Handicap/Rating Systems mandate/require a clean, smooth
bottom and rates boats with the assumption that the Boat is
participating with a clean smooth bottom. When, how can one be too clean
or too smooth? What is needed is some discussion in Scuttlebutt and the
in a Forums on the ethics of boat preparation, handicap/ rating
Optimization as well as activities on the water.

CURMUDGEON’S COMMENT
I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian.

Special thanks to Ultimate Sailing and UK-Halsey Sailmakers.

Scuttlebutt is also supported by UBS, main partner of Alinghi, the
Defender of the 32nd America's Cup.