Falmouth Week 2019
Day 1 – Helford River Sailing Club
A force 3 gusting 5
south westerly welcomed the fleet to Falmouth week 2019. The race officer set a
great course with the windward mark towards the docks in a refreshingly clear
airstream. Off the start Polyphemus managed to get away from the fleet and continued
to extend around the course eventually finishing well clear having loosely
covered Pintail for the latter half of the race. Guest helm Andy Chapman who
has chartered Vim for the week made great progress up to 3rd passing Achilles and
Redoubtable on his way round the course. We all managed to finish just before a
massive rain shower came through with dramatic skies that killed the wind off
completely and left the other fleets with a very damp and slow finish!
Day 2 – Mylor
Yacht Club
The wind had
shifted to a North Westerly for the second race of the series with a big flood
tide making an interesting tactical course. Artemis, the 2018 National Champion
showed the rest of the fleet how to start nailing the pin and getting out into
the tide first closely followed by Achilles, Redoubtable and Amalthea.
Polyphemus had a shocker of a start and were at the wrong end of the line but
managed to wriggle clear but were close to last half way up the first beat to Vilt, however by staying out in the tide and making the
most of a nice left hand shift they passed the fleet to lead at the top,
closely followed by Achilles, Pintail Vim and Artemis. The downhill leg was a
tactical battle of finding nice wind lanes and plenty of gybes before the
second beat. Polyphemus’ lead grew after a right hand shift benefited them and
was closed down before the trailing boats could use it. A shy spinnaker reach
let the heavyweight crew make the most of their size and extend further.
Pintail was now comfortably in second with Achilles third. The helm on Artemis,
Paul Scullion then had the ignominy of having one of his own company’s
commercial tugs block his way and slow his progress towards the finish line
which kept them down in 5th just behind Achilles in 3rd and Vim in 4th.
Day 3 – Restronguet
Sailing Club
Race Officer Nigel Sharp faced an up hill battle
to get the racing under way as the wind was forecast to shift from the SW to a
more westerly direction, however the wind gods decided that they would start
from the South East and then progress round to South West ish
but go via East and North East just for good measure. Fortunately we were not
set off in anything too fickle and the courses held up, although the first
start line had a massive left hand shift in the last few minutes which made it nigh on
impossible to lay the line, the race officer could have spent all day trying to
get the plethora of starts away and progress needed to be made.
Race
3
Artemis once again nailed the start, spotted the
pin bias, and led the fleet off the line and correctly crossed everyone and
made it to the favoured right hand side to approach the windward mark closely
followed by Vim, Pintail, Achilles, Hermes and Polyphemus, on the shy reach
from the windward mark to Castle a sharp left hander meant all the lead boats
would drop their spinnakers to be able to lay Castle and the boats to benefit
were to windward of the fleet the main beneficiary was Polyphemus who rounded
right on the transom of Pintail. A navigational mix up on Pintail had them
dropping their kite for the wrong mark while Polyphemus sailed on by to take a
narrow lead at the next mark. Pintail decided that staying out of the tide and
creeping up the castle shore was worth a try however this was a disastrous move
and cost them 400m at least. Down the last run Vim and Artemis closed up on
Polyphemus but couldn’t quite pass and this was how the top 3 finished with
Hermes finishing a really credible 4th and Mary B an impressive 5th.
Race
4
Once again Artemis nailed the start, Polyphemus
were determined to do a better job of starting and tried to put pressure on
Artemis but this all concluded with Polyphemus about ¼ of a boat length over
and had to dip the line and restart. This put them right at the back of the fleet
and in a hole that stayed with them while everyone else sailed off into the
distance. Now I like to keep these reports entertaining and it is important to
try and be as accurate as possible, however, yours truly in Polyphemus, was so
far back in the fleet that I have no idea what was going on at the sharp end…
Through binoculars and in passing it looked like Artemis were doing very well,
Pintail were quite close behind and then it was Vim.. and Redoubtable were there or there about as well. And once
again Mary B with his novice crew were 5th. So, an up and down day. Onwards to
tomorrow where the forecast is for a healthy F4/5 WSW.
Current scores on the doors are Polyphemus in 1st,
Vim 2nd, Pintail 3rd and Artemis 4th.
Day 4 – Falmouth
Town Champagne race
A south westerly 3 gusting 5 but averaging 4 was the
order of the day and the race officer set a testing course, having been
congratulated for not using the Sunbeam mark the day before he decided to get
his revenge and make the most of it today. The start line was positioned under
the water tower with a windward mark over by Falmouth docks. The race started
Vim, Artemis and Polyphemus all in a line, unfortunately for them that line was
not behind the start and they were all individually
recalled. This left Mary B, Achilles and Pintail to make the most of their head
start with Mary B making the best of it and gaining a healthy lead by the
windward mark. Polyphemus were making some good
progress and were picking off boats round the course. The second downwind leg
was heading all the way up to Pascoe’s Boatyard, at the entrance to St Just Creek, in fact it was so far north that the owner of
Polyphemus was convinced he was going to get a nosebleed. By this point
Polyphemus had caught up with Mary B and were beginning to extend. Pintail and
Achilles managed to move up to 2nd and 3rd respectively. Vim had been caught
out with a jib sheet issue and were struggling to make
progress. Artemis whose helm regularly sails in waters this far north (dinghy
sailor based at Restronguet) had decided that lunch
at Castaways was a more preferable option than trying to beat up to the
infamous Sunbeam, however his crew got him back in line and started sailing
back out of the Mylor moorings and back on track but
this move had cost them a few hundred metres. On the last beat up to the finish
line Polyphemus took the win, Pintail and Achilles had a great tacking battle
with Vim closing in by the finish line but not quite able to pass. Mary B held
onto 5th and Artemis were 6th.
Day 5 – Royal
Cornwall Yacht Club
The committee boat set up just off Carricknath
with a NW force 5/6 for the first race of a 2 race day and a windward mark up
towards Falmouth Docks.
Race 1 - Once again, the start maestro on
Artemis, got the best of the fleet and headed up the beat playing the shifts
nicely to gain an early lead followed by Pintail, Polyphemus, Hermes, Mary B
and Redoubtable. There was then a good long run down to Zone just south of St
Anthony lighthouse where a nasty short chop had
developed, Pintail now made some good gains from 3rd putting pressure on
Polyphemus on the beat up to Headland, south of Pendennis
point, this was really hard work with the short sea and with the wind shifting
regularly through 20° and gusting well above the mean wind speed. Artemis were holding onto their lead proving they were going to be
hard to pass. Then a long white sail reach had plenty of action in the mid
fleet with a really close tussle between Hermes, Mary B and Redoubtable, helmed
by a class stalwart, Hereward Tresidder, showing much
tenacity in tricky conditions a couple of years after recovering from a major
spinal injury. The last beat up to the finish line had Polyphemus applying
pressure to Artemis but never quite getting in front and eventually they held
on to take their second bullet of the week from Polyphemus in 2nd and Pintail
in 3rd. Vim finished in 4th and have now a very consistent series of results.
Race 2 – by now
the flood tide had started in earnest and their was
now a healthy pin bias, Artemis Polyphemus, Vim and Pintail were all at the
correct end and a clean start meant they were vying for the lead, Artemis were
just ahead but Polyphemus found a lovely lift on the approach to the windward
mark and managed to squeeze in with a late tack onto the lay line just ahead of
a very congested windward mark, Artemis and Pintail were next round followed
closely by Mary B, Hermes, Redoubtable, Achilles and Vim. At the reach to reach
gybe at Pendennis mark Polyphemus completed a lovely
gybe and extended away in testing conditions. The next windward mark was the
notorious Sunbeam and anything could happen at this point but the lead boats
all negotiated with obligatory swearing at the race officer for sending us
here, to be fair he might like us as a fleet because we only went to Sunbeam
once! The following run and short beat to the finish at Trefusis
had Artemis close up to Polyphemus but could not find a passing lane, Pintail
tried to attack but let Vim, in 4th, head over to the left of the course and as
they approached the finish line find a lovely shift that let them squeeze up to
3rd.
By now the series was pretty much sown up for
Polyphemus with two races to go, however the forecast for Friday looked
terrible and was likely to be cancelled. 2nd to 4th were
separated by 1 point with Pintail holding a very narrow lead over Vim and
Artemis. Achilles and Mary B were also level on points for 5th and 6th.
Day 7 –
Flushing Sailing Club
The final day of Falmouth Week 2019
concluded with a fresh force 4 south westerly and a start line just north of
the narrows although this breeze was due to build during the day. Polyphemus
had already won the week and one of their crew was enlisted onto Mary B to
ensure that as many boats could make the last start of the week as possible.
Off the start Vim, Pintail and Artemis, who were all battling for 2nd place
with only one point separating them, all made good
progress to the front of the fleet, Achilles and Polyphemus went right after
the start but this strategy didn’t pay at all and at the windward mark they
were well down in the pack. The short-handed Polyphemus tried to shoot the
mark, made a complete Horlicks of it and ended up impeding Hermes who were
coming in on starboard, penalty turn ensued and Polyphemus was dead last on the
shy reach to Carricknath. Artemis tried to fly her
kite, but this just lost them distance, Vim rounded in first with Pintail 2nd
and Artemis 3rd. The next beat from Bohella up to Pendennis had a few changes, Polyphemus had made it up to
6th just sneaking past Redoubtable and Amalthea, Mary B was also making good
progress and Artemis were back challenging for 1st. A short run and another
short beat around Governor which was directly in the wind shadow of Pendennis Point, this resulted in
ridiculous shifts of up to 50° and comical gusts which by now were hitting
solid Force 6 levels. On the next downwind leg Pintail who had slipped behind
Mary B launched their spinnaker and the spent the next few hundred yards trying
to sail over the top of Mary B who, only 2 up, were being cautious in the gusty
conditions and relished the chance of luffing their competitor up the Penryn
river, in the end Pintail slipped through and closed up on the lead pair of
Artemis and Vim. The final beat to the finish had the lead 3 boats of Artemis,
Vim and Pintail keeping a watchful cover on each other, Artemis who won the
race secured 2nd place overall and Vim and Pintail finished on identical points
with identical results and they were only separated by the final race finish
where Vim who had been exceedingly consistent all week claimed 3rd overall and
4th went to Pintail.
This had been a fantastically
testing week with big breeze and unstable winds meaning very hard work for
helms and crews alike. Huge congrats to all the competitors and especially to
the Race Officer, Nigel Sharp, who had managed the week with great aplomb
setting some first rate courses, and also to all of the race management teams
and crews on mark laying boats and rescue boats, you all did a brilliant job.
HUGE THANKS FROM THE AJAX CLASS!