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February 26, 2024

Marin County Team Three-Peats at Etchells Winter Series

The Etchells Biscayne Bay Series concluded on February 16-18 with a three-peat win by a California team. Lifted, sailing under the burgee of San Francisco Yacht Club, took on 40+ boats from five countries in four events: the Louis Piana Cup Regatta in December, the Sidney Doren Memorial Regatta in January, and the Florida State Championship and Mid-Winters East Regatta in February. Etchells Fleet 20 and Biscayne Bay YC co-hosted the series.

Etchells fleet
The Etchells fleet rounds a windward mark (orange) and an offset mark (green).
© 2024 Kathleen Tocke

Skipper Jim Cunningham and the crew of Steve Hunt, Erik Shampain and Serena Vilage have sailed together as a team for all three championships. Cunningham attributed their success to the “cohesive and enduring teamwork” they have maintained for more than five years.

Lifted
Lifted in action on Biscayne Bay.
© 2024 Kathleen Tocke

The Lifted crew’s consistent performance was an important factor in the win. They never finished worse than fourth place in a regatta all season. Dave Ullman, the legendary world champion, Rolex Yachtsman of the Year and sailmaker from Newport Beach, served as their coach. Lifted and A Mac tuned up together for the second year in a row.

Etchells at windward mark
Lifted, #1504, is seen here approaching a windward mark.
© 2024 Kathleen Tocke

Lifted’s strategy included securing solid, lower-risk starts to avoid early mistakes, sailing slightly conservatively, and steering clear of the racecourse’s edges. The top three teams were separated by just two points. Fluctuating winds and equally varying results characterized the Mid-Winters East Regatta. Seven races over three days had six different winners.

Lifted crew with trophies
The Lifted crew at the prize-giving.
© 2024 Kathleen Tocke

Other teams from or associated with California included Argyle Campbell’s Rock On and Jack Jakosky’s A Mac, both out of Newport Harbor; Rick Merriman’s San Diego YC-flagged Big E; and Austin Sperry’s America One- and St. Francis YC-flagged Bayou Hustler, with John Kostecki.

Find Kathleen Tocke’s footage and photos capturing Day 1 on the Etchells North American Class Facebook page.

Check out the full results from the season and learn more at www.etchellsfleet20.org/biscaynebayseries.html.

Next Up for Etchells Sailors on Two Coasts

Next up on the Etchells’ Florida schedule is the Coral Reef Cup on March 22-24, but San Diego YC offers plenty of action too, in the Etchells West Coast Spring Series:

Sailing Education Adventures Wins PCYA’s 2023 Garrett Horder Trophy

Sailing Education Adventures (SEA) has been awarded the Pacific Coast Yachting Association’s (PCYA) Garrett Horder Trophy for its outstanding contributions to youth development through sail training. The community- and youth-sailing organization was founded over 40 years ago by Jane Piereth as a learn-to-sail program for the San Francisco Bay Chapter of the environmental organization Oceanic Society. In 1984 the program expanded to include Sail Camp, and in 1990 SEA became a nonprofit community sailing program.

PCYA Awards 2023 Garrett Horder Trophy to Sailing Education Adventures. Left to Right: PCYA’s Admiral Kimberley Milligan, SEA founder and Vice President Jane Piereth, SEA President and Adult Program Director Joe Rouse, and PCYA Junior Staff Commodore Kimball Livingston at the newly opened clubhouse of The Club at Westpoint.
© 2024

Today, SEA has 20 sailing dinghies and eight support boats for 120 children and youth who come to the program each year. Kids can start at age 8 in Mini Camp, and continue sailing through to becoming junior counselors, then counselors, then head counselors, who also get leadership development training.

Mini Camp is clearly a lot of fun!
© 2024 Sailing Education Adventures

“I feel like our little program, which has kind of existed under the radar for so many years, is finally being recognized for the comprehensive program it is,” Piereth said, giving much of the credit to SEA’s youth-program director, Meghan Hartnett.

“She encourages, supports and trains our counselors, through their sometime-rocky teen years. We have seen them become very responsible adults, and go on to great outcomes when they age out of our employment.”

“She also spends a great deal of time responding to parent concerns and questions, Piereth adds. “The parents really appreciate this.”

As part of their mission, SEA offers leadership development through its counselor program.
© 2024 Sailing Education Adventures

SEA emphasizes mentoring as a way of learning, volunteering to minimize cost while maximizing experience, and pursuing environmental stewardship as a way of life. From two locations on the San Rafael Canal, on the northern reach of San Francisco Bay, SEA operates a mixed fleet of dinghies, small keelboats and kayaks on the protected waters of the canal. For the advanced, there are adventures on the waters of the great Bay beyond.

SEA president Joe Rouse observed that children often start out afraid but turn around quickly as they experience safe sailing, make new friends, and discover a larger world. By age 16 some become paid counselors, and if they earn their US Sailing Level 1 Certification, they become head counselors.

“Our instructors rarely come from outside,” Rouse said. “We develop our own. Meghan Hartnett teaches sailing but also teaches ocean ecology.”

Harnett herself is a product of the organization’s programs, having started as a camper and worked her way through the program to become youth-program director.

A perfect example of the program’s outcomes. This photo was taken five years ago at a Safe Boating event. The girl on the left is now a junior counselor, and the younger girl on the right is a mini camper.
© 2024 Sailing Education Adventures
Sailing Education Adventures camp kids on sailboat
From 8 to 18 and beyond, SEA encourages kids to grow and develop through sailing.
© 2024 Sailing Education Adventures

As with any nonprofit or community organization, success also hinges on support from many areas. Piereth notes the many SEA volunteers who maintain the boats and engines, attend work parties, check on camp during the week, and provide gas for the safety boats. “SEA is largely volunteer-run,” she says, before continuing, “Big thanks to Marin Yacht Club for partnering with us for over 25 years, Loch Lomond Marina for supporting the program, and the California Division of Boating and Waterways for their financial support. Matt Butler at San Rafael Yacht Harbor hauls our boats for us, allowing us to keep them in good maintenance.”

Camp enrollments for the coming summer are now open at SEAsailing.org. “We welcome new and returning campers!”

PCYA Junior Staff Commodore Kimball Livingston said, “SEA is one of those special operations that will start kids when they’re little, keep them through their high school years, bring them back in their college years, and bring them back again as adult leaders. I say ‘one of those’ because SEA was not our only entry with that track record to brag about. But we like it that SEA was launched with not much more than a vision and grew into something fine and valuable.”

Garrett Horder trophy
The Garrett Horder Trophy.
© 2024 Pacific Coast Yachting Association

The Garrett Horder Memorial Trophy is a 19th-century Currier and Ives print of the sail/steam vessel San Francisco, displayed in the library of St. Francis Yacht Club. It has been awarded since 2000.

The Ficker Cup Leads Into Long Beach Yacht Club’s Congressional Cup

Sailing offers an immense array of participation options, with the one-on-one match-racing format being one of the most unique and challenging. The pinnacle of match racing has been the America’s Cup, but Long Beach Yacht Club’s (LBYC) Congressional Cup remains one of the most coveted prizes in match racing. The Congressional Cup is coming in April, preceded by the Ficker Cup, with both attracting a strong field of world-class match-racing competitors. Many America’s Cup skippers have also been Congressional Cup skippers and winners. Past Congressional Cup winners include Dennis Connor, Bill Ficker, Gerry Driscoll, Rod Davis, Dean Barker, Taylor Canfield and many more.

Ficker Cup
The discipline of match racing is rules-intensive, with on-the-water umpiring keeping a close eye on close action.
© 2024 Long Beach Yacht Club

The Ficker Cup was introduced in 1980 to honor Bill Ficker, a legendary yachtsman, Star Class world champion, and America’s Cup and Congressional Cup victor. This year, the three leading finishers in the Ficker Cup will qualify for an invitation to the Congressional Cup, where they will face off against nine other top-ranked match-racing skippers in five days of fiery competition.

Long Beach YC selected a field of eight skippers culled from the top male, female and youth skippers from around the globe to compete for the Ficker Cup. The competitors are Rocco Attili (ITA), Aurélien Pierroz (FRA), Megan Thomson (NZL), St. Francis Yacht Club member Nicole Breault (USA), Cole Tapper (AUS), Peter Wickwire (CAN), Long Beach Yacht Club’s Dave Hood (USA) and Scott Dickson (USA).

2024 Ficker Cup Regatta Chair Steve Meyer commented, “Thomson took second in the 2023 Ficker Cup and made her Congressional Cup debut last year, followed by a stunning third-place finish in the World Match Racing Tour (WMRT) Finals in December. Breault earned her Ficker Cup berth by winning the 2023 California Dreamin’ Series, and is a three-time Ficker Cup veteran. Hood qualified for Ficker Cup with a victory in the 2023 Butler Cup, and already has an invitation to the Congressional Cup. His credentials are just as impressive off the water as on; he is a senior staff commodore at LBYC. And Dickson, although he hasn’t been active on the match-racing circuit in recent years, has won more Ficker Cup trophies than any other skipper in history. You will see some of the best sailing talent once again coming to Long Beach, California, for our renowned match-racing events!”

Ficker Cup
The Ficker Cup features close match racing in matched Catalina 37s among top-ranked world match-racing champions.
© 2024 Long Beach Yacht Club

Between the Ficker Cup and Congressional Cup events, 13 of the world’s top 20 match-racing skippers will be onsite at LBYC this April. This profusion of sailing talent promises excitement for participants and spectators alike, as the teams compete in the thrilling game of match racing held directly off Long Beach’s Belmont Veterans Memorial Pier.

Ficker Cup racing begins Friday, April 19, and continues through Sunday, April 21, with matches from noon until 5 p.m. daily. The Congressional Cup follows shortly after, with racing April 24 to 28.

For more information go to https://thecongressionalcup.com/ficker-cup. For details on the World Match Racing Tour visit https://wmrt.com.

Learn more about Nicole Breault and match racing when you tune in to Episode #80 of our Good Jibes Sailing Podcast.

The Resourceful Sailor Secures ‘Sampaguita’s Drop Boards

Whether cruising or racing, it’s good practice to have the ability to secure the companionway drop boards to reduce the chances of their being lost in a capsize or a knockdown. They play an important role in preventing water from going down below. I know, for example, the rules for the big Vancouver, Canada, Swiftsure Race, on the sometimes-gnarly Juan de Fuca Strait, require this feature on its participating boats. There are no rules for offshore cruisers, but once you’ve had a wave on your aft corner slosh a surprising amount of water over the cockpit coaming, and watch it wash unrestrained along the inner edge, over top of the bridge, and down below, you’ll appreciate not losing those precious boards.

Off-the-shelf hardware can be purchased to lock the boards in, but you should know by now that The Resourceful Sailor rarely takes that route. I recognize that all boats are custom, and generic hardware may or may not fit. And if it says “marine,” it automatically costs more. I also didn’t want anything hard and angular that would scratch everything they touched as the drop boards got stowed, stacked, slid, and tossed around the boat.

The solution I came up with had to be inexpensive, simple, effective, and non-marring. I would add it to Sampaguita’s main drop boards and her transparent ones, written about in a previous installment. Admittedly, I can no longer remember what the inspiration was, but it doesn’t get much simpler than this.

First, I bought three Sea-Dog Line nylon mini clam cleats for a few dollars each and three Sea-Dog Line nylon eye straps for about a quarter each. I chose nylon because these would be the least marring to the boat, drop boards, and person. I mocked up the placements along the starboard side with the eye straps on the boards and cleats on the inside framing. I had small stuff from the ditty bag, aligning the hardware with a fairlead and aesthetically acceptable placement, then fastened each item in its place. I then discovered that the boards still wanted to hinge out of the slot on the port side. Back I went to the store to buy three more eye straps and clam cleats. These were added to the port side, and each board could quickly and easily be secured. This allowed for a one-, two- or three-board arrangement without depending on the top board to hold the others in. I followed suit with the transparent drop boards.

A very simple, inexpensive, effective, and non-marring solution.
© 2024 Joshua Wheeler

There were some nuances. The lines sometimes wanted to get caught between the boards or between the boards and the sides when installing. I waited to seize the lines securely to the eye straps in case I found this too tedious and only wanted to add the lines when I might need them. Through the repetition of living aboard, I developed an installation technique that generally solved this annoyance, so I decided to seize the lines permanently. I figured this best to not lose or misplace them, and attaching them when in dire need might be too late.

The drop boards are easily secured.
© 2024 Joshua Wheeler

I used flathead brass screws on the eye straps and stainless steel oval heads on the cleats. I probably should have used stainless steel on the eye straps. The brass screws look great, but corrosion may be a problem. The decision had as much to do with availability as anything. My local marine store, which to its credit still allows you to buy singles at a great price, sells mainly stainless steel square drive screws. The tradespeople like them because they stay on the drive bit, especially when reaching. I have an aversion to the aesthetics of square drive screws. I have been forced into them for a few instances on Sampaguita, but not where I have to look at them. As Sampaguita was built in 1985, she’s mostly a straight blade or Phillips head sort of girl. For tool simplicity and aesthetics, I try to keep her that way.

The Resourceful Sailor presents this simple design as an option for securing your companionway drop boards, whether to appease racing rules or for your own sense of security.

This video shows the drop boards in action:

Remember, keep your solutions safe and prudent, and have a blast.

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San Pedro to San Diego
The Southern California coastal racing season kicked off with the 2024 Islands Race, co-hosted by Newport Harbor and San Diego Yacht Clubs.