JANUARY 15TH WITH JOE COOPER

“Cooper’s Winter Day of Sailing”

A day of thinking, watching and talking about sailing in the midst of winter

10:00: West Marine, Middletown: SEMINAR

379 West Main Road, Middletown, RI: No Charge

Sailing consultant Joe Cooper will present a seminar on preparing yourself

and your boat for your next longer passage. All of us are always dreaming of

taking our boats (and ourselves) on something a bit longer than we have done

before, be it out to Block Island, over to Nantucket, or up to Maine. For

many folks on the East Coast, a trip to Bermuda is the highlight of many

years of sailing locally. In this seminar, Cooper will address how to think

about pushing yourselves to go further.

Refreshments will be available.

12:30-14:00, The Daily Shake, Middletown: LUNCH

883 West Main Road, Middletown, RI (about a mile north of West Marine)

Treat yourself to a healthy lunch that every sailor should know about;

priced $6-$12 for high energy herbal tea, a nutritious meal replacement

shake, protein bar, and more.

15:00-17:00, Seamen’s Church Institute, Newport: O.S.T.A.R. 2009-The MOVIE

At the Seamen’s Church Institute (Newport’s best kept secret) located on

Market Square (between Bowens Wharf and the Newport Harbor Hotel and

Marina), in downtown Newport. Tickets: $20.00 per person with the proceeds

going to the Seamen’s Church Institute and the Short Handed Sailing

Association. Copies of the video will be available for purchase following

the screening.

The Original Single-Handed Transatlantic Race is the original solo ocean

race. Here Cooper introduces this 50-minute movie that was produced by Marco

Nannini, a competitor from the 2009 race, and his brother, a movie man. It

is NOT fire-breathing walls of water with pulsing rock-and-roll music a la

the VOR movies; rather, it is a measured & reflective look at the normal

folks who spend their own time and money putting together their dream of a

solo passage along the historic route in relatively normal boats, much like

the ones we own.

Refreshments will be available after the movie

Please register your interest with me, Joe Cooper at cooper-ndn@cox.net so I

can start a head count.

Thanks!

Cheers,

Coop

Joe Cooper

401 965 6006

Joe “Coop” Cooper

Newport Dream Nutrition

At the Daily Shake

883 West Main road

Middletown RI 02842

Tel: 401 965 6006

cooper-ndn@cox.net

www.shopherbalife.com/joecooper

INJURIES ON BOATS

I don’t know about you but I was one of those people who believed that people never got hurt on boats. (I never wore a safety harness until more recently in my life)

Somehow I link this topic with the idea that sailing is not really a sport. So how can one be injured sailing?

Long time friend Dr. Garry Fisher has had a long and abiding interest in injuries on boats and how to treat them and better still avoid them. He has written and spoken over the years on this topic; collecting statistical data on the subject.

Particularly with the evolution of yacht design, the behavior of the hull forms at sea has changed how we manage ourselves onboard. The motion of “newer” shapes is unfortunately conducive to more injuries. The clearest illustration of this are the Volvo 70’s.

Back to the “sailing is not a sport” idea; It was always a sport and like everything today that has only accelerated with time. Look at college sailing, and the ultimate challenge: Volvo 70’s. These are very physically demanding.

doctor at work

ARGUMENT FOR “IS SAILING A SPORT”

When we need information, we tend to use our favorite internet search

engine. And when the information cannot be found, there are websites where

you can ask your question. Here is what somebody asked on Answers.Yahoo.com:

“Okay, so I personally know sailing is a sport, although some a-hole in my

school (excuse my French) is deliberately trying to explain to me that it is

in fact not a sport because all you do is move a tiller around. Obviously

this is not true.

“His argument is based upon that he does not see any ‘professional sailors’

around on TV all the time, and he doesn’t watch Olympic sailing. He also

says he does not see sailing in the sports column on the internet. We argue

on the bus, and so far on the bus they say that sailing is not a sport (they

did a survey with five people), and I did admit it was not a popular sport

in America.

PROVIDENCE, R.I., Jan. 6 (UPI) — Seventy-nine percent of dinghy and keel sailors report at least one injury in the last year, but most of the injuries are minor, U.S. researchers say.

Study leader Dr. Andrew Nathanson of Rhode Island Hospital said 4 percent of the injuries were considered serious enough to require evacuation from the vessel and/or hospitalization.

“It’s important to note that nearly half of the injuries reported were minor and required no treatment,” Nathanson said in a statement.

Nathanson and colleagues surveyed 1,860 sailors who reported 1,715 injuries in the last year on small boats with crews of one or two called dinghies and larger ones with a crew as many as 16 — keel boats — like those used in the America’s Cup races.

The study, published in the journal Wilderness and Environmental Medicine, indicated the most common injuries were contusions, lacerations and sprains. Injuries were mostly caused by trips and falls, collision with an object or a fellow crew member, or being caught in the lines. Seventy-one percent of injuries occurred on keel boats.

“What is most alarming about this survey is the fact that only 30 percent of the sailors who responded reported wearing a life jacket,” Nathanson said.

Another concerning finding was that 16 percent of the sailors reported at least one sunburn, Nathanson said.

Hubbard,Bill&Will

NYYC Members Bill and Will Hubbard in Rolex Sydney Hobart Race

The Hubbards’ Dawn Star at the start of the 2010 Rolex Sydney Hobart Race.
Photo Rolex/Daniel Forster.

Hobart, Australia — Jan 1, 2011 — It was a bright and windy morning today when boat owners, crews, friends and family gathered on the lawn of the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania in warm sunshine for the official prize-giving of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2010. The race’s rich 66-year history provides for an impressive collection of race booty: intricately crafted silver trophies, hand-carved half models and unique awards.

Just finishing the race makes you a winner resonated with the father and son team aboard the US entry, Dawn Star. Keen sailors and competitors Bill and Will Hubbard – NYYC members — shared a life-long dream of sailing in a Rolex Sydney Hobart, what has become known as the world’s toughest ocean going race. The 76-year old Hubbard said of the race, “I can honestly say it was the worst race and the best race I’ve ever done—and that’s the honest to God’s truth. The second day was hell on earth. I’ve never been so unhappy and thought that I made a major error in judgment.”

Bill Hubbard, 26, said the race was, “Wet! It was a test of endurance, but we got here.” At one point during the race south, Dawn Star was hit by a freak wave and knocked down, sending two crew members overboard. “Their safety gear kept them from being lost,” admitted the younger Hubbard.

And with a twinkle in his eye, the sunburned and unshaven elder Hubbard looked back on the adventure that was the 2010 Rolex Sydney Hobart and said, “The fourth day was the most fantastic day on the water we’ve ever spent. The wind was perfect. The weather was perfect and in that night every star in the sky was out. It was beautiful.”

Before leaving Sydney, Bill Hubbard’s son, Will, sailed their Baltic 46 Dawn Star from San Diego last February to be in Sydney for the race. This was the first Rolex Sydney Hobart for the pair.

The American sailing duo has always wanted to compete in the Rolex Sydney Hobart. Bill said, “There are a couple of reasons. My grandfather was Australian, and we have a number of relatives here. Over the last 10 years we’ve competed in a number of world-class races, including the Rolex Transatlantic Challenge and the Newport Bermuda Race, and have done well. The Rolex Sydney Hobart was a natural, and we thought we must add this race. It’s one of the premier, if not the premier, rough ocean passage races of the circuit. We thought, what the heck, let’s do it.”

The father and son team won the St. David’s Lighthouse Trophy in the 2006 Bermuda Race in their previous Lively Lady II.

REDEMPTION

Wild Oats are confirmed first to finish. The rest of the fleet is facing milder weather (slower)

Wild Oats XI’s line honours victory confirmed

Race committee protests against her and Ran are thrown out

Wednesday December 29th 2010, Author: James Boyd, Location: Australia

“We’re back and we’re just very happy to be here,” said Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards after the news that a race committee protest had been dismissed and that the 30.48m supermaxi owned by Bob Oatley could be officially declared line honours winner of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.

20 hours had passed since she crossed the finish line at 8.37pm on Tuesday to an understandably subdued reception on the Hobart waterfront. This afternoon, when she could be declared the line honours winner and receive the JH Illingworth Trophy and a Rolex Yacht-Master watch, the mood was upbeat.

The delayed recognition extends the mortgage that the 30.48 metre Reichel Pugh design has on this race:
– five line honours wins in six years;
– the most consecutive line honours wins; and
– the 2005 triple crown of line honours, the overall win and the race record of one day, 18 hours, 40 minutes and 10 seconds.

The champion supermaxi has only been beaten once across the line in the Rolex Sydney Hobart, by Neville Crichton’s Alfa Romeo last year.

“It’s a big deal, a lot of effort goes into the race, the result is a good one and we’re very happy,” skipper Mark Richards said.

Although he had always been confident he had fully complied with the rules, Richards conceded that he was a very relieved man when the final verdict was announced.

“I’m very relieved,” he said after this afternoon’s trophy presentation. “Protests are never a good thing, especially from the race committee. They had reasons to do what they did but fortunately we’d done our homework, ticked off all the boxes and got out of trouble.

“Juries are very good at making you sweat and they made us sweat today, but commonsense prevailed and the right result was made. It’s a big deal, we had a sleepless night, probably less leading into this than in Bass Strait.

“Two good things came out of this, race officials are very serious about safety and the back-up plans that are in place are working,” Richards added.

90 minutes earlier, after the international jury had dismissed the race committee’s protest against her and a similar one against Niklas Zennström’s Ràn, Cruising Yacht Club of Australia Commodore Garry Linacre said justice had been done. “It was the right decision. We’ll now sit down at some stage and have a good look at the rule book and see what changes need to be made to the wording in relation to the use of HF (High Frequency) radio.

“That’s not to say safety of crews, and the ability of one yachtie to go to the aid of another yachtie in distress, will not always be paramount in the eyes of the race committee. The safety of all boats and competitors remains a top priority. In this case the chair of the race committee felt that the two boats involved had not complied with the race rules and opted for the use of satellite phones.

“The race organisation maintains that HF radio is still to be used as a primary function of communicating between boats and officials until such time as new technology comes along. But there is also a place for satellite phones,” Linacre said.

Wild Oats XI was in danger of becoming the fourth boat to have been first across the line but to have been successfully protested – Jock Muir’s Wild Wave in 1953, Marvin Green’s Nirvana in 1983 and Lawrie Smith’s Rothmans in 1990.

more withdrawals, race committee protests

Ragamuffin in Cowes 1969

Wild Oats and Ran to be protested

Rolex Sydney Hobart race committee bring proceedings

Tuesday December 28th 2010, Author: Di Pearson, Location: Australia

The Race Committee of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, announced that they have lodged two protests; one against Bob Oatley’s Wild Oats XI and one against Niklas Zennstrom’s Rán.

Tim Cox AM RANR, Chairman of the Race Committee explained that both yachts had breached Rules 44.1 (a) and 44.2 of the Sailing Instructions which relate to ‘Mandatory Reporting from Green Cape’ via HF radio.

“The Race Committee met this morning and we lodged a protest against Wild Oats XI and Ran for not complying with Rule 44.1 (a) and Rule 44.2,” Cox said this afternoon. “Both have reported only by telephone, which does not comply, so the protests were lodged at 5.05pm today.”

“We broadcast the protests to the Rolex Sydney Hobart fleet at 5.00pm and advised David Kellett on the Radio Relay Vessel to advise the two boats of the protest against each one.”

Questioned whether protesting was a harsh measure, Cox said the rules had been put in place because of the fatal 1998 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race and that it was a matter of safety. “This is a fundamental safety issue,” he said. “Should a situation occur, we cannot organise search and rescue operations via telephones. I consider this a serious breach,” he said.

Cox said the protests had been set down for 1.00pm on Wednesday 29th December and would be heard by the International Jury at the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania.

more (windy)sydney-hobart

40-50 knots in the Rolex Sydney Hobart

Nine retirements to date, while the JV52 Shogun leads on handicap

Monday December 27th 2010, Author: James Boyd, Location: Australia

With the wind building to 40-50 knots and a lumpy sea state developing in Bass Strait over the course of today, so the attrition has begun in the Rolex Sydney Hobart with nine retirements reported at the time of writing.

Last night saw the first with the Bakewell-White designed Z39 Jazz Player, after her mainsail tore in strong winds.

This morning Colin Apps, a crew member on the NSW yacht She, suffered a head injury in a fall. The crew were liaising with the police launch Vanguard, which is following the fleet. Vanguard tows an 8m RIB, which was to be used to transfer Apps off the boat and on to Ulladulla where an ambulance was set to be waiting.

This afternoon, as conditions deteriorated off the south coast of New South Wales, the retirements started to come in thick and fast:

Nick Athineos’ 66ft Dodo (The Stick) was heading to Eden to drop off an injured crew member. Their ETA was 1900 is this evening. They have not retired from racing and were going to assess the situation once they reached port.

Tony Donnellan’s Victorian Reichel Pugh 47 Shamrock advised they were retiring with rudder bearing damage and heading to Sydney, where their ETA is 0800 Tuesday. Andrew Wenham’s Volvo 60 Southern Excellence retired from racing, citing rig failure.

Steven Proud’s Sydney 38 Swish reported that their radio wasn’t working and they were withdrawing from the race. The Sailors with DisAbilities crew on the TP52 Wot Eva reported that diesel issues have brought their assault on Australia’s best-known blue water event to a sudden halt.

Jim Cooney’s Jutson 79 Brindabella retired this afternoon with a torn mainsail. The 1997 line honours winner is returning to Sydney. Robert Reynolds’ DK46 Exile has pulled out, navigator Julie Hodder reporting “our steering wheel was smashed by the boom when we took off our main. We are very disappointed.”

Martin Power’s Victorian Peterson 44 Bacardi has also retired after being dismasted 35 nautical miles east of Batemans Bay on the New South Wales south coast.

One of the most dramatic races was that of Ludde Ingvall’s maxi YuuZoo. This morning the former Whitbread Round the World Race skipper reported: “A bit shell-shocked from yesterday’s mishap with two men overboard. Greg Homann and Will Mueller spent about ten minutes having an unauthorised swim. Both are well and in good spirits. We are waiting for the worst to launch into Bass Strait. We aren’t happy with our boat speed at present, as we are still learning about the new settings. Otherwise all okay onboard.”

If YuuZoo hadn’t had enough drama, Ingvall continued: “We just woke up to the forward compartment being full of water. Log thru-hull fitting has either broken or popped though its fitting leaving a 40mm hole in the bow. We think that we have it fixed, but half a metre of water between the keel and the forward hatch. What drama. Not funny. What on earth have done to deserve this?”

Finally at 15.25, YuuZoo retired from the race, advising the race committee they had a torn headsail. They also tweeted from the boat that they had structural and rigging problems.

This morning Rodd & Gunn Wedgetail’s navigator, Will Oxley reported: “We have had no wind instruments since the pre-start, which has made driving overnight more challenging. The boys did an excellent job of helming. We also had an alternator issue with the batteries not charging, so that caused us a worrying two hours while Jeff Scott sorted it out.

“As for sailing, we’ve had a pretty good night and have just tacked onto starboard about 15nm north of Montague Island. Wind has started to come around as predicted, but we have a nasty head-sea left over from the earlier south-south-easterly wind. We are looking forward to dawn so we can see the tell tails! The boat is going well and we are settling in for a long haul on starboard.”

At 0900, race leader Wild Oats XI, complying with Rolex Sydney Hobart race rules, radioed in at Green Cape prior to reaching the Bass Strait, and what was to prove the most difficult part of this grueling race so far.

Co-navigator Adrienne Cahalan, a mother of two young children who has 19 Hobart races to her credit, subsequently described the crossing of Bass Strait as possibly the worst she has experienced. She said the only way to describe the punishment to Bob Oatley’s 30m supermaxi had been dealt by a south-westerly gale was “violent and awful”.

“We have spent the entire day trying to protect the yacht from damage and the crew from injury. It’s been an enormous challenge and every one of us has been roughed up. The wind has reached 40 knots – gale force –and the seas have been between four and five metres, so we’ve spent the day in damage control for boat and crew.”

Cahalan said that Wild Oats XI’s skipper, Mark Richards had done a remarkable job maintaining a conservative approach to the race during the rough weather. She said that while everyone knew when they left Sydney on Boxing Day that things were going to be tough, it was not until you are out there that you realised what ‘tough’ really meant.

“Because of Ricko’s approach we’ve had no breakages and everyone is okay – a bit battered and bruised, but okay,” Cahalan added. “Wild Oats XI is 100 feet long and in these conditions it’s extremely difficult keeping a boat this size and this fast from not launching off one
wave and crashing into the next. When you do it’s like a truck hitting a wall. That’s when damage happens to the yacht and the crew, so preventing this from happening has been our priority.”

Tonight the sailing conditions were improving for Wild Oats XI. The wind has dropped to between 20 and 25 knots and the waves are down to three metres. At the last report she was still racing under greatly reduced sail about halfway across Bass Strait.

The 2020 sched showed Wild Oats XI to be to the east of the rhumb line with 273 miles left to go before she reaches the Hobart finish. Most of those chasing her in the race for line honours are on a similar course with Sean Langman’s Investec Loyal 20 miles astern, with Peter Millard’s Lahana and Matt Allen’s first generation Volvo 70 Ichi Ban some 25 miles behind the leader. Grant Wharington’s fourth placed Wild Thing however is sticking closer to the rhumb line.

On handicap it is Rob Hanna’s Judel Vrolijk 52 Shogun, the former Wot Now, that leads by a substantial margin, however she has just started her Bass Straight crossing. Second on corrected is Stephen Ainsworth’s second-placed Loki, in turn followed closed by Ichi Ban, Alan Brierty’s Limit, Lahana, Bill Wild’s Rodd & Gunn Wedgetail, with the British favourites on Niklas Zennstrom’s JV72 Ràn holding seventh place. Less than nine minutes separates the second from eighth placed both on corrected. Ràn has separated from the rest of the fleet and is the only boat among the front runners to be sticking to the rhumb line course south. At the latest sched she was one third of the way across Bass Strait.

Tomorrow, Boxing Day, Sydney-Hobart

Southerly buster forecast

Skippers look forward to Boxing Day’s Rolex Sydney Hobart

Friday December 24th 2010, Author: Lisa Ratcliff, Location: Australia

Image above courtesy of Tasman Bay Navigation Systems (Expedition) and PredictWind

A hot and humid Boxing Day will give way to a traditional thundery, southerly buster during the first 24 hours of the Rolex Sydney Hobart – the Bureau of Meteorology gave its race outlook to skippers and crews today at the official race briefing, which must be attended by four crewmembers from each boat.

When the 1pm gun sounds on Sunday, the 87 boat fleet can expect a light harbour start to their 628 nautical mile journey. The first of several fronts is expected to hit the fleet during the first night, with winds dialling up to 35 knots and squalls driving the wind strength higher.

The bureau’s NSW regional director Barry Hanstrum told media that crews should prepare for tough conditions: “Things will change very dramatically on Monday evening with the arrival of an old fashioned southerly buster off the New South Wales coast. There’s a 20-30 knot southerly wind expected to be around Wollongong at 8pm and that will herald a period of strong winds and rough seas for the next 36 hours or so.”

Conditions should temper by Tuesday, which will slow the boats at the back of the fleet and potentially rob them of a chance to be rewarded for the hard slog south with a trophy haul at the finish, once finishing times are corrected to produce the overall winner.

The 60th anniversary Rolex Sydney Hobart in 2004 was the last time the fleet hit the brick wall of a southerly buster during the first night. From 116 starters just 59 completed the course and, for the smaller boats, 56 hours of pounding headwinds took their toll.

Two years later the fleet started in a southerly which intensified on the first night, claiming early high profile scalps Maximus and ABN AMRO One, plus seven other boats, all within the first 24 hours.

Since 2006 the fleet has had an easier time and some might have developed a false sense of security, but the seasoned sailors, including Investec Loyal skipper Sean Langman and Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards, have never let their guard down.

pastedGraphic.pdf

“It’s not the best of forecasts but a classic Sydney Hobart,” said Richards today. “People forget that in 2006 we spent eight hours in 45 knots of breeze – the boat has been there before.”

Sean Langman was positive about the forecast and the potential for Investec Loyal as long as he can protect the assets – the 100 footer he co-owns with Anthony Bell and the crew he needs to deliver it to the finish line. “I believe it’s going to be a good leveler for the front running boats,” said Langman. “With this forecast we are a very good chance because of the way Investec Loyal was constructed.”

Langman agrees the conditions could mean the race to get to Hobart first may take a back seat when the weather turns. “There is a time when boat racing stops and seamanship takes over and certainly with the big boats there will be more seamanship than boat racing until we get the other side of this thing [the southerlies],” he said.

pastedGraphic_1.pdf

For the highly experienced Will Oxley, navigator on Bill Wild’s RP55 Rodd & Gunn Wedgetail, which was built for this particular forecast, the practicalities are as important as plotting the best course to Hobart.

“We will eat early [on the first night] and eat well because the next time we will be able to eat well will be off the Tassie coast,” said Oxley. “We have changed around the meal program so that we can cook when it is easy to cook and the rest of the time it’s freeze-dried.”

19 year old Lachlan Hunter, crewman on Rod Skellet’s Pogo 40 Krakatoa II, embodied the ‘butterflies in the stomach’ feeling which is building amongst near 1000 competitors making final preparations. When asked his thoughts on the forecast, Hunter responded with laidback charm.

“I’m just really excited,” he said. “I’m not really phased [by the forecast], I think it phases my mum more.”

The 16 foot skiff sailor admitted his friends are a touch jealous, and that going south isn’t hurting his chances with the ladies either.

pastedGraphic_2.pdf

pastedGraphic_3.pdf

pastedGraphic_4.pdf

pastedGraphic_5.pdf

pastedGraphic_6.pdf

pastedGraphic_7.pdf

pastedGraphic_8.pdf

Latest Comments

Add a comment – Members log in

Natural Helmsman?

The conclusion of this article is that there is no such thing as a natural helmsman, while everything in life is learned, some people seem to have learned very well.

Loki’s helmsman Gordon Maguire is one of the best in the business. He has a

feel for driving a boat that allows him to react to changes in boat speed

instantly, long before the instruments tell him the Reichel Pugh 62 has

slowed that fraction of a knot.

There is no substitute for feel, he says. “The information from the

instruments is all historical. It takes four to five seconds for the

instruments to do the calculations from when the cause of the drop in speed

occurred. People who drive on the instruments are always four or five

seconds behind. They are reactive and the boat is slow. The brain is so much

faster at processing all the information coming in at once than the onboard

computers.

“Reacting early is as important going down wind as up. People tend to get

carried away as the boat accelerates down a wave, but you should already be

looking at the exit and how you will catch the next wave. I never look at

the dials going down wind.”

Maguire says that another problem with focussing too much on the dials is

that they are more likely to engage the front half of the brain, and the key

to driving fast is the subconscious.

“You have to get the intellect out of the way. We drive for long stretches

at a time but doing very precise things over and over. If you consciously

concentrated for that long you would go mad in half an hour. I switch my

mind off. I am not really concentrating. Sometimes I don’t know what has

happened in the last 30 minutes.

“It is like driving a car through an intersection that you go through all

the time. When you are through it you think, was there a green light? Did I

just drive through a red light? But subconsciously you saw a green light and

you did what you usually do without thinking.”

Yet while it is all about feeling the boat under you, Maguire doesn’t

believe that there is any such thing as a natural boat driver.

“Steering a yacht is totally unnatural, just like it is totally unnatural to

hit a golf ball. It is only natural if you practice teeing off thousands of

times. After a hundred thousand miles you know a boat is going to slow down

when it hits a wave and what to do about it.” — Read on:

http://rolexsydneyhobart.com/news.asp?key=5080