Festival of Sails at Royal Geelong Yacht Club - Day 3
by Lisa Ratcliff 24 Jan 2016 09:42 GMT
22-26 January 2016
The solo seal ducking traffic in the Hopetoun Channel as 276 boats of all sizes cut through the waters of Geelong's inner and outer Corio Bay could not be blamed for wondering about the illogicality of humans - it was hard enough for some of them to work out where each fleet was going on day three of racing at the 173rd Festival of Sails.
Seventeen different divisions and around 2,500 sailors competed over five course areas using every available race management official and Royal Geelong Yacht Club volunteer on what's traditionally known as 'Super Sunday'.
Monohulls and multihulls meandered around passage course marks in the 12 knot average afternoon sea breeze, creating a brilliant spectacle in the summer sunshine when their multi-coloured spinnakers were full. Others ticking off tight short course races had less time to think and act as their race officers peeled off quick starts.
Full results for every division at www.topyacht.net.au/results/2016/fos/index.htm
Optimum Time Super 11 Series
Consistent top three results for Rod Warren's J111 Joust have them leading this newly introduced division based on a concept that has "a mixture of boats that are similar yet dissimilar," Warren explains. "We are the only Cat 1 offshore capable boat among the fleet; it's an interesting mix but it seems to be working, and it's good fun." National Taser champion Aaron Linton is doing a top job for Warren as tactician.
Second is Damian Thomas' Melges 32 PP1 and third is Cam Rae's repaired Thompson 920 Poco Loco thanks to a 4,2,2 scorecard in today's three windward/leewards.
This is the first major Australian regatta for the new FarEast 28Rs and Queensland skipper Gerrit Veenemans and his crew built on yesterday's opening outing to be eighth overall among the Super 11 fleet. Downwind rides of 16 knots of boat speed were a highpoint of their day on the rare north-facing bay.
Rex Gorell Land Rover Rating Series
Rating Series leader Geoff Boettcher has a chip on his shoulder; Tony Kirby's Sydney based Patrice.
Boettcher's TP52 Secret Mens Business from the Cruising Yacht Club of South Australia sits on 9 points at the halfway point of their division 1 series, and Kirby's men who are hounding them are also on 9 points.
Both skippers have stacked their crew list with talent, mainsheet on Barney Walker is one who has done the miles and his take on today was, "It's all going well; it's going to be a close finish for sure. We did well on the 50-footers. We are smaller and don't have a clear air and we were bounced around a bit. The boat did the work and we stayed clean, and kept the mistakes down."
The situation is far more comfortable for Max Peters' Adams 10 Top Gun, the clear division 2 Rating Series leader.
Rain squalls on outer Corio Bay shifted the breeze from ESE to SSW but it mostly stayed sou'easterly with a maximum of 15 knots reported on IRC rating course F.
Peroni Cruising AMS division
Day two of the Festival of Sails was intense for Cruising AMS division 1 pointscore leader Mark Bulka and his Dufour 44 Balance. "Our for'ard hand rang in sick this morning so we had rock paper scissors on who would do the bow. We have a boat full of helmsman so we've got plenty of tactical ability but not so much mechanical ability. It's been a great regatta so far, the Royal Geelong Yacht Club's doing a great job."
Steve Copley's topscoring 5.5 points places his Primo Beneteau First 36.7 at the front of the Cruising AMS division 2 pointscore from Rory Thomas' Reckless.
All divisions race tomorrow, Monday January 25, on multiple courses starting from 1100hrs. An early evening twilight race off the Geelong waterfront will mark the stunning series finish for the large cruising fleets and the key Bausele VX One and Morris Finance Sydney 38 Australian titles.
Australia Day on Tuesday, January 26, 2016 is not just a day of national celebration marking the anniversary of the 1788 arrival of the First Fleet of British Ships at Port Jackson, New South Wales. It is also the final day of the Festival presented by Rex Gorell Land Rover and end of the regatta for the Rating, Performance Racing, S80 and Super 11 divisions.
Eyes on the national prize on penultimate day
The penultimate day of competition for the two fleets contesting their Australian championships, being held in conjunction with the Festival of Sails presented by Rex Gorell Land Rover, was all about the top boats maintaining focus and consistency.
Today's conditions were the best the fleets could want with Corio Bay's flatwater complementing the ideal sea breeze. As a result, the focus of the racing turned fully to smart tactics and smooth crew work for the Bausele VX One Australian Championship and the Morris Finance Sydney 38 Australian Championship fleets.
Bausele VX One Australian Championship
Rob Deussen and The Beast's early regatta lead is gradually being whittled away by Brett Whitbread's Sticky Fingers and Andrew York's Speedwagon.
Whitbread and crew Joel McDonald lived the dream today to finish with a third, a second and then a first to place equal second overall. "In the first race there would have been only a second or two between the first three boats," Whitbread. "Then in the second race The Beast took us past the finish boat. In the final race we were a lot quicker downwind; we are lighter than them by about 30 kilos."
Joining Whitbread in second place is York. Their fourth place in the final race on the inner Corio Bay track due to a late tactical decision hurt them. They went out right on the run, thinking they were following the pressure and "The other guys went left," York said.
Tomorrow's final three races can still upset the top spot. "There is a bit of ground to make up. We are only four points behind The Beast and anything can happen. If we get light air, we have a good chance," York added.
Morris Finance Sydney 38 Australian Championship
Defending national champions, Brenton and Jen Carnell's Phoenix, are Boat of the Day and at the top of the Sydney 38 leaderboard with three races remaining. The Geelong crew finished with a first and two seconds on the outer course area to place them first overall with a one point split to Kirwan Robb's Ikon.
Consistency is the key word for the Carnells. Across the changing pressure which went from 10 up to 15 knots and as the mostly sou'east breeze clocked left, they sailed smart. "Today we kept our eyes in our boat and didn't worry about anyone else," Brenton Carnell said.
The breeze stabilised in the last race and with that the fleet condensed. "We had to get our way back up the fleet. When the breeze is up a bit the other boats come back into play. There was really close racing today with plenty of passing. Awesome racing," a chuffed Carnell said.
Greg Clinnick's Audacious recovered from sixth place in the first race of the day after making a 720 penalty turn at the top mark to avoid a possible protest between White Knight and themselves.
Unperturbed and under the guidance of their Danish tactician Ken Christensen, Audacious went on to take out first place in the closing race of the day. "I think it was the biggest finish margin of the regatta. In that last race we led at every mark and finished clear ahead," the Australian class President said.
Tomorrow's final championship day starts at 1230hrs for the VX Ones and at 1300hrs for the Sydney 38s.
Tomorrow's forecast is southerly winds 15-20 knots with seas around 1 metre and cloudy.
Shoreside Festival
Shoreside there was plenty of entertainment for festival goers young and old – from beach volleyball and children's entertainment to waterski shows, live music, paddle boarding and Rex Gorell Land Rover's four-wheel driving experience at the Terrapod. The flyboarders were a crowd favourite, attracting plenty of cheer with their daring hydro-board acrobatics.
Monday promises even more excitement at the Shoreside Festival - made possible by Geelong Connected Communities - with beach volleyball tournaments, three flyboarding shows, live performances from Children of the Sun and Taxiride, plenty of food trucks and market stalls as well as Geelong's spectacular fireworks display on Australia Day Eve.
All information relating to the 173rd edition of the historic regatta is on the website www.festivalofsails.com.au