Episode 1: A New Hope
It was back to the water (at last!) on 17th April.
I know I was feeling a bit rusty, but it was a chance to try out 13941 after a long break due to the COVID lock-downs.
Luckily, the boat appeared in good shape. A new tie-down was required for the port spinnaker sheet. We have a new bowsprit - to keep the spinnaker sheet from falling in the water - made from an old burgee mast bent back on itself, and the burgee needed to be replaced. Other than that, we were good to go.
Winds were light - F1 with gusts of no more than F3.
The day was three races back-to-back: A, followed by B, followed by the final A race.
Romek Kowalewski offered to crew for me, and he made a good job of keeping the boat flat. Romek is currently learning how to fly the spinnaker, and he preferred to just crew today, so we "cruised" around the "B" race, but were able to keep track of the rest of the fleet.
For the third race, we apparently fouled a Laser being helmed by a friend of mine - I guess neither of us were properly paying attention, as I was not even aware of having been in anyone's way. That third race was compounded by snagging the bow of the committee boat with the main halyard on the downwind spinnaker run.
Apart from that, it was good to get out in the water. Hopefully, the cobwebs have been cleared out, and we can look forward to a season of learning how to sail again.
Episode 2: The Phantom Menace
I was looking forward to the following racing on 24th. The plan was A, B, with a tea break and final A race.
Winds were F3-F4 with some exciting gusts. Tom Lohan was crewing for me, and looking forward to his own race later on in the afternoon.
In the first race, we had a middle-of-fleet start, and were taking time before we got control of the boat in the slightly stronger winds compared with the previous week. Although I have never been front-of-the-fleet, I did feel that we were holding our own on the beat to the Eastern part of the lake.
On the spinnaker run down towards the number 2 buoy, we were still holding off a few other boats. Then a gybe round number 2, down to number 1 on a quick reach, and back into a beat heading east again. Then it happened.
As we got onto the beat, the boat did not feel right. Looking at the genoa luff, there was a huge curve where the rig tension luff wire should have been. It was as if the rig tension had been let off going downwind. I do sometimes let out the genoa tension downwind (something that is more common in a boat like a Star than a GP14, I know...), but could not remember having done so this time. Nevertheless, I yanked on the rig tension - to find that nothing was reponding. Clearly something was very wrong.
It took quite a while as we drifted around trying to master the boat and get back on the beat. Then it became clear what had happened. The pulley sheave block for the genoa - that controls the entry of the genoa halyard into the mast - had completely pulled out of the mast.
I guess that was primarily a case of "wear and tear" - to boat itself is 14 years old - and the rig tension that I had put on had simply pulled the sheave out of the mast. The block was only held in place by two self-tapping screws. Maybe my enthusiasm with the halyard had been a last straw. Game over.
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