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SCUTTLEBUTT 2097 - May 18, 2006

Scuttlebutt is a digest of major yacht racing news, commentary, opinions, features and dock talk . . . with a North American focus.

GUEST EDITORIAL - Chris Upton
In preparation for the Bermuda Race, we spent a Sunday afternoon sailing
around a life jacket in 4 knots of breeze. It took 20+ attempts for a
crew of eight. I decided to see what it would be like to be in the Gulf
Stream. The closest thing in Newport is the YMCA pool. The test tried to
take into account as many realities of being in the water as possible. I
tried to replicate being tired and worn out from boat handling. Dressed
in full foulies, sea boots, a life jacket, a t-shirt and shorts, I
jumped in the pool.

The first surprise was the fleece neck liner was letting the trapped air
out of my foulie jacket. As the air blew out it was replaced by close to
60 pounds of water. It was nearly impossible to swim more than a few
strokes. The life jacket did its job in keeping me afloat. Removing the
life jacket made swimming slightly easier, but not enough to save your
life. Sea boots full of water weigh too much to be able to kick your
legs for swimming and treading water. Removing them helped with
swimming. It did not allow for more distance covered. Treading water
without the boots would be difficult in a seaway. The drag from the
foulies is too great. Removing the jacket and pants was the only way to
be able to swim for any distance. Just getting the gear out of the pool
was a challenge.

After spending 5 minutes in the water trying to swim, etc., getting out
of the pool required three tries. The pool has a freeboard of one foot.
The cotton t-shirt weighed over twenty pounds upon getting out. Pulling
yourself up 5 feet of freeboard without assistance is not going to
happen. The foul weather gear will add enough weight that crew along the
rail will be unlikely to get you up and out without putting themselves
at risk. Conclusions:
- Wear your life jacket before you think you need it.

- The boat has to come to the swimmer. You do not have any mobility in
the water. You will be tired from simply floating.

- Have a plan for getting a halyard onto the MOB. Putting a second
person in the water to help an unconscious or injured crewman only risks
a second crew and further limits the ability to recover anyone. The
weight of the water in your clothes is too much to lift alone.

- Wear boots that are large enough to be kicked off easily in the
water.

- Chlorine will ruin your foulies. Don’t try this with your good set.

BIDDING A KETCH FAREWELL
How do you get rid of a rotting, 101-year-old tall ship that needs $1.5
million in repairs? One way would be to put it on EBay. And that's just
what the Boy Scouts say they have done with Argus, a down-on-its-luck,
92-foot ketch that has been a fixture at the Scout dock on Newport
Harbor since 1972. "We're testing the waters — literally — to see what
sort of feedback we get," said Charlie Abbott, director of the Newport
Sea Base tall ship program, which teaches Scouts how to sail.

Argus needs work. It suffers from "iron sickness," a malady that has
rusted its bolts, leaving them flaking off chunks of metal. The ship's
frame is also weak. "It's like the ribs of your body being soft," Abbott
said.

The ship's problems turned up during a voluntary Coast Guard inspection
in February. The ship cannot carry passengers until repairs are made.
Scouting officials said they couldn't raise enough money to make the
repairs, so they turned to EBay on Tuesday. Abbott wants to lease a boat
to keep this summer's program afloat. There's no word on the asking
price, but Abbott said the Scouts were hoping for more than $250,000. -
Tanya Caldwell, Los Angeles Times, full story: http://tinyurl.com/ku3nq

IDEAS THAT WORK
When a junior regatta requires traveling on Christmas day to attend, it
must be a pretty good one, and that is exactly what the Orange Bowl in
Miami, FL has become. With 100 420s, 190 Lasers (of various types), and
288 Optis competing in 2006, you have the kind of numbers deserving of
national or international championships.

But with school schedules permitting minimal travel time, the logistics
of moving boats around the country had to be solved. Enter Vanguard
Sailboats. With the support of Vanguard’s local dealers, they provided
new charter boats for a fourth of the 420 fleet and nearly a third of
the Laser sailors.

The disadvantages of chartering boats over using personal equipment are
largely negated by the uniformity found within classes like the Laser
and 420. By eliminating the need for costly cross-country ground
transportation, charter programs like the one coordinated by Vanguard at
the Orange Bowl helped the event gain participants that either don’t yet
have their own boats (many junior sailors use boats belonging to their
club) or might not have attended due to tight school schedules.

It is the success Vanguard dealers have had in selling previously
chartered boats that has enabled them to provide this program, and
further expand it to additional events. This year, their charter program
will be in place at the Laser NAs, Buzzards Bay Regatta, Laser
Midwinters East and the C420 Midwinters. Additionally, there are many US
Sailing Championship events where charter boats will either be available
if desired, or the event will be exclusively sailed in charter boats,
which might include V15s, C420s, Lasers, and Laser Radials. In 2007,
Vanguard is supplying all the boats for the US Olympic Laser & Radial
Trials. -- Complete report: http://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/news/06/cb

SPEED OF ULLMAN SAILS AT ANNAPOLIS NOOD
In a highly competitive 36-boat J/105 fleet at the 2006 Annapolis NOOD,
Ullman Sails were used on 9 of the top 10 boats. Those flying Ullman
spinnakers won every race; Ullman upwind sails finished 1st in 4 of the
7 races; and 3 of the top five boats carried full Ullman inventories.
Delivering sail power and speed enables our customers to outperform the
competition at all levels of racing. Congratulations to all! If you and
your crew are ready for the “Fastest Sails on the Planet,” contact your
nearest Ullman Sails loft and visit http://www.ullmansails.com

PILING ON THE MILES
The wind has increased for the Volvo Ocean Race fleet as they make their
way in what has been a slow trip so far across the North Atlantic to
Portsmouth. The fleet is now past the half way point of this leg and
everyone is doing 300+ mile days. As the wind rose to 25 knots, Pirates
of the Caribbean (Paul Cayard), blew out their big masthead spinnaker,
in a costly breakage which will cost them precious miles. “There was no
flogging or luffing, it just parted,” explains skipper Paul Cayard. The
Pirates are now having to sail a higher angle with their smaller,
reaching sail to try and keep their speed up. Cayard is hoping that the
wind will increase by at least two knots, so that the team can fly their
fractional spinnaker.

While second-placed Ericsson (Neal McDonald), is now the most southerly
boat in the fleet, 77 nautical miles south of ABN Amro One, movistar
(Bouwe Bekking) is sailing quickly up towards the pack, averaging over
20 knots in the last six hours and gaining 21 miles.
-- http://www.volvooceanrace.org

Volvo Ocean Race Positions at 2200 Wednesday:
1. ABN Amro One, Mike Sanderson, 1364 miles to finish
2. Ericsson Racing Team, Neal McDonald, +98 miles
3. Pirates of the Caribbean, Paul Cayard, +151 miles
4. Brasil 1, Torben Grael, +153 miles
5. ABN Amro Two, Sebastien Josse, +197 miles
6. Brunel, Matt Humphries, + 245 miles
7. movistar, Bouwe Bekking, +296 miles

A CHAPTER OF SAILING HISTORY
When Dee Caffari crosses the finish line of her record voyage alone
round the world westabout, it will mark not only the end of a monumental
six-month odyssey, but the culmination of an amazing chapter of sailing
history. After 178 days at sea in an incredibly harsh environment, Dee's
yacht Aviva will tell another exceptional story. There has been no major
damage or downtime on this record attempt and Dee is returning with a
defects list totaling just 17 items - and that includes 'one slightly
bent stanchion', 'port heads light temperamental' and 'port deck speaker
not working'.

This a vivid testimony to Dee's extraordinary seamanship, and the work
done by Andrew Roberts and his team in modifying Aviva from fully crewed
to solo mode, a job done in a mere eight weeks, on a budget of £170,000.
Along with Dee's experience and instincts, these adaptations have
produced another first for Dee and Andrew's team: on crossing the Lizard
finish line, she will earn the distinction of circumnavigating in the
heaviest displacement yacht ever to be sailed alone round the world in
any direction by a solo sailor. -- http://www.avivachallenge.com

Curmudgeon’s Comment: Dee Caffari’s Aviva is expected to cross the
official finish line between The Lizard, UK and Ushant, France between
07:00 and 10:00 (BST) on Thursday to become the first woman to sail
solo, and non-stop round the world against the prevailing winds and
currents.

A BIT OF EVERYTHING
The second day of the final series at the ISAF World Sailing Games in
Lake Neusiedl, Austria had a bit of everything. The wind started around
15 knots and quickly built, with thunderstorms and rain squalls coming
and going. Paige Railey (USA) quickly took charge of the Laser Radial
Gold fleet and holds an eight lead after three races. In the Hobie 16
Woman´s Multihull class Annie Nelson/ Susan Korzeniewski are in the
third spot - just three points off the pace, and Pamela Noriega/ Andrea
Mier y Teran (MEX) are in eight place. Nikola Girke (CAN) is in the
tenth spot in the Woman´s Windsurfer Gold Fleet while Canadians Oskar
Johansson/ Kevin Stittle hold the same spot in the Hobie Tiger Gold
Fleet. -- Complete results: http://www.worldsailinggames2006.at/results/

MAKEUP RACE
* In a makeup of a race abandoned last week, the American BMW Oracle
Racing team beat Italy's +39 Challenge today to complete racing in Louis
Vuitton Act 10 and extend its lead on the points table. On Tuesday BMW
Oracle Racing won Act 10, when it was determined it would win the four
way tie-break scenario at the top of the table. With today's win the
Americans are one point clear, their only loss coming to Alinghi.
Despite having won Louis Vuitton Act 10 on Tuesday afternoon, today's
race was important to BMW Oracle. That's because the 11 challenging
teams are also racing for Louis Vuitton Challenger Ranking Points and
for this purpose, ties are not broken.

This challenger ranking is used to award bonus points prior to the
challenger selection series in 2007. By finishing one point clear of its
rival challengers - Luna Rossa and Emirates Team New Zealand- on the Act
10 leaderboard, BMW Oracle Racing drives them further down the Louis
Vuitton Challenger Ranking table, increasing its lead for those
important bonus points. Racing begins again of Friday with the first
fleet race of Louis Vuitton Act 11. -- http://www.americascup.com

* As expected it was a pretty one-sided affair in the re-match that was
called off earlier in the week, between BMW Oracle and +39 Challenge. I
spoke to Percy afterwards, and asked if he had even seen a glimmer of
hope of beating BMW Oracle today. “No,” he said, matter of factly. “If
we were racing in 15 knots, yes, but in that wind? No. I don’t want to
make the mistake – which I did against Alinghi - of doing something
radical. That’s not the way to learn. Where are you in a year’s time?
You’ve got to take your weather calls, pick your right side, then you
one-tack up and make the cross - normally. Of course you’re not going to
do that when you’re 3/10s of a knot slower, but we got to sail BMW
Oracle today. You still learn from that.” -- Excerpts from a story by
Andy Rice, full story: http://sailing-talk.blogspot.com/

NER TEAM GEARING UP
While 2-time Rolex Yachtsman of the Year Ken Read races this week across
the Atlantic on the Volvo Ocean Race, New England Ropes is gearing up
for when he returns. Ken has joined forces with New England Ropes, and
will skipper the NER Melges 24 program. The new boat, to be delivered in
June, will feature all of NER’s core technical products including V100,
Endura Braid, Endura 12, Flight Line, and Salsa Line. Between Ken’s
world championship know-how and the world’s best running rigging, the
Read/NER team will be a force to be reckoned with in 2006.
http://www.neropes.com

BENEATH THE SKIRT
(The Daily Sail subscription website spoke with BMW Oracle Design
Co-ordinator Ian Burns about his experiences of tandem keels. Here are a
few excerpts.)

What is undeniable is that on the water this week USA-87 has proved to
have the turning circle of a London taxi and she also has the strange
ability to stop dead in the water almost as if a handbrake had been
applied. Both these are useful weapon's in Dickson's pre-start armoury.
The boat also at times shows the unusual sideways sliding 'shopping
trolley' movement of a boat hiding more than one steering appendage
beneath the water.

In interviews with those involved with the Amrica's Cup we have learned
the hard way that you get laughed at if you ask direct questions such as
'what appendage package do you have?' Nonetheless we sit down with
America's Cup legend Ian 'Fresh' Burns, BMW Oracle Racing's Design
Co-ordinator to talk around this particular question.

The advantages of the tandem keel is that it provides a better support
structure for the keel bulb and also it is less draggy as the combined
foil area is smaller, the sections working closer to the optimum. ".In
theory there are pretty good gains," says Burns. "There are also some
gains in not having the main lifting body right under the middle of the
trough of the wave the boat makes going through the water so combine
those two things, there is potential for it to be quite an exciting
package. If you want to turn there is twice the problem we now have with
only one control surface that steers the boat." --
http://thedailysail.com

ANOTHER IDEA THAT WORKS
Post race ice-bathing has been introduced as a recovery method for
muscle fatigued Team Shosholoza crew who are racing eight hours a day,
for ten consecutive days, in America’s Cup precursor events like the
current Valencia Louis Vuitton Acts. “Ice-bathing athletes is very
normal practice. We use it in many sports and are now using it in
sailing as well. The crew has a very long and hard physical day out on
the water and the ice bath successfully helps to minimize swelling and
inflammation of the muscles and enhances muscle recovery. It is a very
well known technique in all contact and endurance sports”, explains
Shosholoza biokineticist, Julian Calefato. In typical South African
improvisation Calefato uses a standard black dustbin as a make-shift ice
box for the arms and a garbage skip for submerging the body from the
waist down.

“We believe some of the top America’s Cup teams use ice jackets for
recovery purposes. But we don’t know of any others using ice baths. They
might not need to as they have bigger sailing squads. Some have A and B
teams and in the case of Alinghi two full sailing teams. This gives them
the advantage of being able to rotate and rest fatigued crew and rely on
a natural recovery period,” says Calefato who has been seconded full
time to the team by the Sports Science Institute in Cape Town.

The crew is content with this new recovery method: “It’s really helped
reduce stiffness and pain in my elbows and wrists. It’s not my favourite
five minutes of the day but something I realise I need to do,” says
grinder Shaun Pammenter. Mast man Charles Nankin founds it has
definitely made a difference for him: “We have had no serious injuries
this regatta whereas we have always had problems in the past. It is
internationally recognised recovery treatment in physically demanding
sports. The proof is in the pudding.” And mid-bowman Golden Mgedeza has
already experienced that the ice bath has worked wonders for his back
and legs. -- http://www.teamshosholoza.com

SAILING SHORTS
* Andy Meiklejohn has been awarded the Musto Seamanship Trophy for
bravely climbing the 30 metre mast on Brasil 1 during a vicious squall,
to save the vital mainsail from destruction. The Musto award, presented
for outstanding efforts of seamanship is one of few trophies in the
event presented to individual crew members – and only on major legs of
the event. Andy, a New Zealander, is a mast specialist and no stranger
to the event, having competed in Team NewsCorp four years ago.

* Twenty year old ginder Reinhardt Rauscher of Team Shosholoza is the
youngest crew competing in the Valencia Louis Vuitton Acts 10. By
comparison Alinghi’s youngest sailor is 28 years old and the youngest
with Emirates Team New Zealand is 27. Even more extraordinary is that
Rauscher sailed his first yacht race ever in an America’s Cup event less
than a year ago. Weighing in at 240 pounds, he is among the most
powerful of South Africa’s grinders. -- http://www.teamshosholoza.com

* A search throughout Canada is on to locate any of the 17ft National
One-Designs that are still alive. The National One-Design was by the
same designer of the outstanding Snipe. Anyone who knows the whereabouts
of any National Ones in Canada should e-mail Rene Serrao:
serrao@eastlink.ca.

* Hunter Marine has a new flagship -- the Hunter 49 -- designed to be a
luxurious passage maker with a versatile floor plan for total extended
offshore cruising, offering a complete range of live aboard
accommodations (49’11”, plus 14’5” beam and 6’9” salon headroom). As
part of its launch, the 49 will embark on a six week dealer and media
introduction tour along the east coast, starting in Jacksonville, FL and
ending in Newport, Rhode Island. The all-new 49 will replace the Hunter
46, a mainstay in the Hunter product line since 1997, boasting more than
250 units. -- http://www.huntermarine.com/ftp


LETTERS TO THE CURMUDGEON
(Letters selected for publication must include the writer's name and may
be edited for clarity or space - 250 words max. You only get one letter
per subject, so give it your best shot and don't whine if others
disagree. And please save your bashing, and personal attacks for
elsewhere. For those that prefer a Forum, you can post your thoughts at
the Scuttlebutt website:
http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi)

* From Ed Cesare: After reading the news piece in 'Butt 2096 about
regulating the tightness of "hiking lines" in the Melges 24 class I had
to go to the website to see if I was missing something - I wasn't. The
piece of equipment referred to was indeed what used to be known as
LIFELINES, just sort of amusing.

* From Jeff Penny (in response to Brian Watkins letter regarding
transponders for Swiftsure): This maybe a good thought, but it's the
wrong way to go. First of all this has been tried & tried again. Not
only for Swiftsure but for other PNW races, they have never worked.
There are two very specific shipping lanes in Juan De Fuca strait, which
all ships are very vigilant to follow, considering how narrow that
stretch of water is. The race instructions clearly state how to transit
these lanes, both out bound & inbound. Also most competitors are in
constant communication with ships in there vicinity, as we were last
year. So instead of confusing the poor coastal pilots with 250 plus
blips on there radar screen, lets promote better knowledge of the "Rules
of the Road" & collision reg's. Plus the logistics of supplying 250 plus
transponders & the collection & return of deposits is "Mind Blowing".
Let’s just sail smart & safe.

CURMUDGEON’S OBERVATION
"If life were fair, Elvis would be alive and all the impersonators would
be dead." -- Johnny Carson

Special thanks to Ullman Sails, New England Ropes.