Please select your home edition
Edition
Haven Knox-Johnston Commercial
Product Feature
Crewsaver Coastal Flare Package
Crewsaver Coastal Flare Package

Poole Week 2025, in association with Haven Knox-Johnston - Day 2

by David Harding 26 Aug 06:55 BST 24-29 August 2025

Monday Sun-Day (Again)

It's rare to have weather that's as similar on two successive days as it was on the Sunday and Monday of Poole Week 2025. Monday was, like Sunday, a beautiful day on the water (for Mamas and Papas as well as any of their children who happened to be out there - and if you don't understand that reference in relation to the title, you're too young and will have to ask your aged relatives).

It was another day of wall-to-wall sunshine and an easterly breeze that was strong enough to make life interesting but not too challenging. That said, as always, some people managed to create challenges for themselves. One RS200 managed to deposit its helmsman in the water as it heeled violently to windward in the lee of the Parkstone Platform just seconds before the start. With the crew taken by surprise, the boat then bore away, gybed and capsized. The swimming helmsman managed to hang on to the stern, the boat was righted and, after giving the rest of the fleet a healthy start, they caught up well to secure a mid-fleet finish.

Further challenges lay ahead for the fleets starting from the Platform that were sent on a harbour tour - the RS400s and 200s, fast handicap, Merlin Rockets, Wayfarers, Dolphins and Shrimpers. The course took them eastwards towards Sandbanks, then past Brownsea Castle, up South Deep and around all three islands (Brownsea, Furzey and Green) before re-joining the main part of the harbour. Here the faster fleets sailed several windward/leeward legs before finishing at the platform.

What caught out a fair few crews was the inclusion in the course of a starboard-hand post making the channel off Green Island, whereas for many years the course had simply been to round the island itself. No doubt the sponsors of the day's racing - Specsavers - would have been happy to provide the appropriate help for anyone who failed to notice the change in the sailing instructions. One competitor wryly suggested that Specsavers might also have come to the rescue on Monday for the handful of Flying Fifteen sailors who seemingly managed not to spot the difference between M and N marks. But even the best sailors sometimes sail the wrong course. It's all part of racing.

While most of the Platform fleets were negotiating their way around the islands, the Darts and the slow handicap sailed one long race, staying to the north of Brownsea.

Further west, in the Top Triangle, it was the turn of the ILCA 6s and 7s, the Flying Fifteens and the Redwings to sail two shorter races on trapezoid courses. Everything ran smoothly and the multiple fleets were successfully kept apart from each other, which is never easy to achieve when you have a lot of boats sailing on a relatively small patch of water.

Given that it was a two-race day following a single race the first day, it was no surprise to see some changes in the overall positions. It's still early days, however, and the wind is due to swing round to the west for the rest of the week, so anything might yet happen.

Related Articles

Poole Week 2025 day 6
A (Relatively) Gentle Way To Wind Up The Week After one of most consistently breezy Poole Weeks of recent years, everyone was hoping that the wind had seen the forecast for Friday and would know that it was supposed to moderate. Posted on 30 Aug
Poole Week 2025 day 5
A Jolly Hard Way To Earn A Beer As ways go to earn yourself a pint (the day's sponsor was Hall & Woodhouse), racing on the Thursday of Poole Week in 2025 was probably among the harder ones. Posted on 29 Aug
Poole Week 2025 day 4
A Wait For The Wind To Wane Whether good things always come to those who wait might be debatable, but they certainly did on Wednesday. The morning really wasn't very nice: lots of rain, and gusts up to nearly 30 knots. Posted on 28 Aug
Poole Week 2025 day 3
All Change On The Western Front If you like sailing in windy weather, the Tuesday of Poole Week was a day to savour. Some love the excitement, the challenge, the satisfaction of a job well done if you get around the course, and the sense of exhilaration and relief. Posted on 27 Aug
Poole Week 2025 day 1
A wonderful way to start the week It would have been hard to ask for better sailing conditions than those that greeted the competitors in Poole Week as they headed out into the harbour for the first day of racing. Posted on 25 Aug
Poole Week: it's time to enter
Take advantage of early-bird entry fees for the event in a month's time Poole Week - one of the south coast's biggest and best regattas for dinghies and small keelboats - is now less than a month away. Entries have been flooding in and already exceed 130 boats across the fleets. Posted on 29 Jul
Poole Week Revitalised For 2025
New race teams and new courses for the summer's big event How do you make a great sailing week even better, without losing the elements that have always made it a great sailing week? Posted on 24 May
Bournemouth Digital Poole Week 2024 overall
Studies in concentration A lot happened on the final day of Poole Week 2024. The wind was in one of its light and fickle moods, the tide was ebbing for the first starts, and the harbour was busy with traffic that had been mercifully light earlier in the week. Posted on 31 Aug 2024
Bournemouth Digital Poole Week 2024 Day 5
The wind returns It might be in the realms of fantasy to imagine that what one writes in the report of one day's racing in a regatta could conceivably have a bearing on what the weather gods dish up the next day. Posted on 30 Aug 2024
Bournemouth Digital Poole Week 2024 Day 4
Fickle winds and fluctuating fortunes Wednesday was to have been a day of round-the-harbour courses for most of the fleets racing in Poole Week. The Dolphins and Cornish Shrimpers tend to sail round-the-harbour courses anyway - none of this triangle/sausage business for them. Posted on 29 Aug 2024