That was until last Saturday when I received a call from a member of the club who was down to be RO on the following Wednesday and for family reasons needed to swap with someone and would I do it. OK well I knew that I had to do it so I said yes. I meant to read up on the RO instructions and even downloaded the pdf from the club website, I even skimmed through it but not enough to really know it. But work pressure pushed it back and in the end I planned to give it my full attention on Wednesday afternoon after the informal races and before the evening race for which I was to be RO. I never got the afternoon races and arrived at the club with just an hour to prepare for the race.
Fortunately a long standing member of the club with lots of experience was on hand and gave me a run down on what to do. Gradually the rest of the team turned up and I began to assign tasks and responsibilities.The winds were light and from the SSE direction, which was excellent for the club start line, but it meant that there were a number of dead patches close to the south and east banks, also the north end of the lake had dead patches pretty much all around the edges. I set a windward mark in the middle of the south end and laid a course which stuck to the areas where I could see there was wind and put the course up.
Pretty soon we had started the start sequence, fast handicap fleet first then the slow handicap fleet. Everything went smoothly, two boats over the line in the slow fleet and only one went back, the other, even though he was clearly ahead of all the boats, decided that as he hadn't heard his number called continued.
All was going well, I even had time to tack some pictures, until I noticed that the windward mark was no longer where it was supposed to be and the lead boat was on the last leg of the first lap! We called up the rescue boat to reposition the wayward mark and watched in agony as they did their best to get past the fleet at dead slow speed to avoid creating the annoying wash that disturbes the sails in light winds. With only a few minutes to spare the mark was repositioned and this time with enough warp to stop it from drifting again.
The rest of the race went without a hitch. We shortened course after 45mins and all the boats finished within the hour just as the wind piped up! Typical!
With the aid of a teenage mind with a calculator the corrected times were computed and then checked with the aid of an older, slower and more experienced mind (and a calculator) and the few errors corrected. Job done. Not exactly a baptism of fire but the beginnings of a new skill maybe.
The lead boat demonstrates how to roll tack in light winds - so smooth!
1 comment:
It's always fun to move the windward mark while boats are racing towards it. I've heard some very interesting nautical expressions that way.
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