Just off our bow, an orange inflatable buoy bounces in the waves-our weather mark at the Melges 15 Midwinter Championship. The port-tack layline is not the smartest place to be, especially when there's a wall of starboard tackers visible beneath the boom. With 65 boats converging to a single point on Florida's Indian River, seemingly all at once, I know this approach is borderline stupidity, but we manage to tack into a miracle gap beneath a pack of fetching boats. Our rushed maneuver isn't pretty, but this is only my second day racing the Melges 15, and my dinghy skills are feeling a little rusty.
Up to this point, two days into the regatta, my teammate and I have made countless errors around the racecourse: bad starts, lousy gate decisions, and some pretty suspect fleet management-like that one time we took the low road out of the offset to hoist the spinnaker, only to get steamrolled by a third of the fleet. I haven't raced in a class like this since I was a young punk on the Club 420 circuit, and that was a long time ago. Here and now, at 32 years old, I'm lacking the muscle memory and spryness of my teenage dinghy years, and I sure could use them.
Somehow, we manage to round the mark with the leaders, and as we approach the offset this time, we make sure to stay high before hoisting. We wait for a gust to fill our neon-pink spinnaker before working down into a clean lane.
Bu hikaye Sailing World dergisinin Summer 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Sailing World dergisinin Summer 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Tips for More Successful Epoxy Projects
That have nothing to do with epoxy mixing or application techniques
Auxiliary Rear Station Build
From past fishing experiences, I've learned that quick changes in speed and direction are often required when retrieving a hooked fish.
TARGETED PERFORMERS
Defending their title at the 420 Youth Worlds in July, Freddie Parkin and Asher Beck were on a roll-until they weren't.
BALANCE ON THE PINNACLE
The path to gender equity in the Olympics has been a long and twisted one, but when the sailors assemble in Marseille next year, we'll finally see what's been a long time coming.
SIMPLE STEPS TO CONSISTENT SPEED
Boatspeed is the magic ingredient for winning races because we can get away with bad decisions if we are fast, but we can't make good choices if we're slow.
THREE-DIMENSIONAL JIB-LEAD ADJUSTMENTS
Floating jib leads give trimmers more dynamic control of the headsail profile.
BETTER TOGETHER
Success over three decades comes down to making it meaningful.
JUSTINE THE MACHINE
This self-effacing Swiss sailor has-in her quiet and understated way become one of the stars of offshore ocean racing in recent years, whether as part of a winning crew in The Ocean Race or building her credentials as a top-class solo racer.
THE MULTITASKING MULTIHULL MOM
Competing in Olympic sailing's most challenging discipline is one thing, but doing so with a tyke in tow takes the campaign hustle to a higher level.
CONNECTED COAST TO COAST
From sunny St. Pete to historic Marblehead, the 34th edition of the Regatta Series linked sailors and friends across the country, with a few new twists.