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Salcombe Yacht Club Summer Series - Race 1

by J.Burn & G.Cranford-Smith 16 Jun 17:59 BST 14 June 2025

Fast Handicap Report (by J.Burn)

More classic Salcombe conditions on Saturday kicked off the Summer Series in style. Plenty of sunshine and a 15-knot south-westerly saw Race Officer Simon Dobson set the course: 1-7-1-3-2-3. The only way it could have been better would have been if it had coincided with a high tide.

Just three takers: Peter Colclough and Alister Morley in the 505, and two Merlin Rockets. Seasoned pros Tim Fells and Fran Gifford went head to head with the relatively inexperienced team of John and Frankie Burn.

As the start hooter sounded, the 505 was beached on Millbay, carrying out emergency repairs to their kicking strap — not ideal, but the repairs were successful, and they eventually got underway, albeit around five minutes late.

Tim and Fran were first to tack onto port and pick up the huge lift, but John and Frankie quickly synchronised with the shifts and worked through Fells and Gifford, rounding Blackstone first.

As the pair of Merlins headed off downwind, Tim and Fran showed awesome pace and quickly regained the lead. The trip through The Bag was swift, with flat-out two-sail reaching to and from Gerston, helms and crews grinning from ear to ear.

The subsequent laps of the harbour saw the gap between the two Merlins remain fairly consistent, with positions unchanged, and Peter and Alister unable to catch the Merlins.

Race 1 Results:

1st Tim Fells and Fran Gifford
2nd John and Frankie Burn
3rd Peter Colclough and Alister Morley

Yawl Report (by G.Cranford-Smith)

Time was, not that long ago, the Salcombe Yawl fleet was inhabited by 1970s alumni of the Merlin Rocket class who had retired aged forty or so. This is no longer as true as once it was.

Of course, you can still find a strong overlap between these two venerable cohorts. But if the likes of Messrs Warren. A, Blake. P and Alsop. D are to go by it is no longer de rigeur to consider oneself beyond dealing with a Merlin in 18 knots at the age of seventy eight, plus, plus.

In some respects the Yawl is looking like the younger teams option. There is some sense to this. Superficially folk are drawn to the Yawl on the basis that it is certainly hard, (but far from impossible), to capsize a Yawl. But unlike a Merlin where it is effortless to de power the rig when required, this is far from true of the Salcombe Yawl.

Aloft, the Yawl carries a hefty expanse of sail supported by a very bendy mast which only occasionally is your friend. In dumping the main sheet it is never clear if this will reduce or actually add power. The Cunningham control for example is of zero perceptible effect. The kicking strap is entirely for show.

Sailing a Yawl in a breeze is rather like driving an early American V8 at pace (with a household budget consumption to match). Like Yank Tanks, the Yawl has a vast surfeit of power over handling. Perhaps Merlins of yore were like this too. Maybe then, the difference was not stark, but it is now. In a breeze, the Yawl is Hard Work. In these days it helps to be fit, or extremely canny. Or heavy. Or all three.

Nevertheless in recent years there has been an influx of teams with Merlin connections. Notable among these are John Burn, Ollie Turner. Recently, John and Katy Meadowcroft.

Joining the Yawl fleet may well be like early induction to a Masonic Lodge. There is a dearth of tuning information. Such that there is, is arcane. Each Yawl is unique. In some cases, each side of an individual Yawl is unique to the other.

Sage hands will tell you it takes time to become acclimatised to ones new steed. They are not wrong.

However John and Katy Meadowcroft have not read this memo. Nor has Ollie Turner. From the off, they are quick.

Last Saturday, was the start of the new Yawl summer series. In a decent 16 knot but gusty Southerly, eight Yawls lined up. John and Katy, Y175, jumped into an early lead, rounding Blackstone in a decent first place. Behind followed Will and Mandy Henderson, Y168. Somewhat remarkably, Graham and Fiona Cranford Smith, Y172, appeared next, with a wafer thin third place. (Yeah. Right).

John and Katy might have hoped to stretch and consolidate their lead. But such is the vast wind shadow of the Yawl, off-wind, the peloton drafting rules of cycling apply. But not always.

Nevertheless Team Meds hung onto their lead all the way to Gerston and most of the way back.

By Ox Point a three way battle between Teams Meds, Henderson and Turner. O/SSkelly had developed.

Uncharacteristically Will Henderson then duly parked Y168 on Ox Point itself. This was amid, presumably, much grinding of bronze centre plate and expensively finished rudder. History does not relate what effect this may have had on crew morale. However Will probably operates with a much higher credibility rating than the rest of us.

For example, your correspondent in recent past, has left the mizzen mast on a moored yacht. Credibility with ones crew is thus nil. One would not care to park the Yawl literally on Ox Point expecting to escape a robust crew verdict on helm competence.

Meanwhile, It turns out that having to disembark chest depth at Ox Point is not that fast. This allowed Turner. O/Skelly into the lead.

Two laps of the harbour failed to produce any further primary place changes; though Greg Hoare and crew, Y145, relentlessly climbed the order to fifth on corrected. Well done them.

Race 1 Results:

1st Turner.O/Skelly
2nd Will and Mandy Henderson
3rd John and Katy Meadowcroft

Mike Knowles and Nicky Bass, Y15; First Blue fleet Yawl; 4th on corrected.

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