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DF65 & DF95 Social Racing 2026 – 11/3/26

DF65’s

Another lovely day for sailing at Gautby road, with sun, a blue sky and a stiff and chilly N.W breeze blowing more or less straight down the lake for the 13 DF65 skippers today. The breeze called for B at most, and possibly C but as a few did not have C rigs available it was agreed to go with B at least to start with.

After the weekends sailing the top marks looked good, but the line was heavily port end biased. No one wanted to paddle so it was left as was, just about doable on starboard tack but clearly leaving only one place to be at the start. When the racing started a few made the starboard tack start work, but the heavy gusts made the tack unpredictable and as the racing progressed most preferred to start on port and pick their way through any starboard boats. Line discipline was surprisingly good, and on a few races a heavy heading gust in the last few seconds before the start left a pack of boats stalled well below the line.

Despite the line bias the beat was fairly true, requiring significant time on both tacks. There seemed to be a bit of a bend going up the lake suggesting a port tack board well over towards the far side before making a starboard cross back towards the middle of the course although, needless to say, this didn’t pay off every time. For the first race the lower set of top marks was used with rather a long spreader leg, and Dave’s suggestion to use the top mark set worked well, pulling the course slightly to the left at the top and shortening the spreader leg.

The approach to the top mark remained very shifty all day, and the run provided lots of entertainment and place changing as the gusts came through. The gate was quite close to the bank and, at least for the 65s, there was a steep chop which combined with the need to get back onto port meant it was easy to waste time getting the boats moving upwind and avoiding a stalled tack.

Mike emerged from all of this a clear winner with Clive again sailing very consistently to second just ahead of John, Simon and James in third, fourth and fifth respectively – these four boats covered by less than 2.5 points at the end. John was unlucky to have a transmitter battery failure having to take the two resulting missed races as discards, but got back out with some replacements kindly provided by Clive.

Overall a great mornings racing which tested heavy air sailing skills and setup. Very nice to welcome Martin James back after a layoff and thanks as always to Dave W, and Malcolm for the results.

DF95’s

Following on from the morning, 8 skippers including Matt Pritchard from GOMYC got their boats prepared for the afternoon. The sun was shining, the wind was generally westerly which in real terms meant straight down the lake from the far end with a slight bias from the houses. A similar course to the morning was used, the only difference being we used a different start line as the outer transit marker had drifted about 10yds downwind making the line too port bias, as fortune had it, the inner gate mark and the new position of the outer transit was a perfect line. The wind had freshened a little from the morning, which made the choice of rig a top end B. It would prove a test of durability particularly early doors when a number of rig weaknesses were found out by the strong gusts.

Before racing even started Malcolm was sidelined with rig issues, and the rest of us are very grateful to him for staying on to RO for the whole of the afternoon. Matt was the second victim of the wind, retiring in the warm up before the start of the first race, but would return for the second.

The first two races saw Clive out front with Guy and Stuart M both picking up a 2nd place and Alan taking two 3rds. Guy was the third casualty of the day with rigging failure in the second race.

Race 3, and as the wind increased further (white caps were now present on the “waves”) so the victims increased, Guy was a DNS still repairing, from race 2, Clive was a DNS with damaged rigging, and Stuart M was a DNS also with rigging problems. The score at this stage was Wind 5, Sailors 0, and we were taking a beating. Race 3, only had 4 competitors and Stuart T made the most of the opportunity taking the win, from Alan and Matt 3rd 

Race 4 and 5, and Clive was still missing in the clubhouse,  Alan and Stuart T taking the wins, with Matt picking up a pair of 2nd’s and Alan and Steve closing out the podium positions.

Race 6 saw the return of Clive albeit 20sec late for the start but still managed to sail through the fleet althoughcouldn’t quite catch Guy who took the win and the consistent Matt was 3rd.

Races 7 through 12 had a familiar ring to them with Clive taking line honours in all but race 9, which was won by Guy, both Matt and Guy taking two x 2nd places,  and Alan and Stuart M  picking up the other two 2nds.

Summary

A fantastic afternoons sailing, testing the rigs to the max, with plenty of gybing instead of tacking upwind and a fair amount of nose diving downwind. In the end the sailors won the day, and had a great afternoon, just a shame it had to come to an end.

Again thanks to Malcolm for, RO duties, photos and results, all much appreciated