DF65’s
A small group of 6 sailors had a surprisingly good morning of sailing while those carrying out domestic chores, on holiday, still in bed etc etc missed out on some un-forecasted great conditions. I say un-forecasted because the forecast suggested a south westerly breeze which should be straight across the lake ….. and therefore pretty horrible. In reality it was more north westerly and straight down the lake towards the clubhouse, albeit with the usual Gautby Rd shifts, puffs and lulls which ensured that nobody could ever relax when at the front.
A+ rigs were selected which initially seemed a bit optimistic but proved to be correct with only a couple of puffs overpowering the unlucky ones downwind, who happened to be in the way.
The usual course was sailed, with no preferred way up the first beat apart from working the shifts and avoiding the lulls which became more prevalent towards the windward mark. Downwind was pretty straightforward while the leeward gate choice favoured the port rounding to the finish.
Alan came out top with 3 wins closely followed by Clive who also had 3 wins and was never out of the top 3, but obviously bettered by Alan who had more seconds. Dave beat Stuart for 3rd, on countback with 2 wins. Andrew was garbage suffering from some home boat tuning during the week that clearly didn’t work, getting caught in irons in the puffs too many times and a couple of unlucky races with a bag in the water and a wipeout downwind into the leeward mark while leading. Thanks to Dave for managing to take a few photos whilst trying to keep a straight course and also for putting the results together.

DF95’s
Six skippers got rigged for an afternoon of sun and sailing. Unfortunately the wind had eased from the morning DF65 session but the direction was similar with the wind swinging between North and West. A rig was the only choice. The same standard course was set as used in the morning. We were fortunate that Neil Westbrook popped down and volunteered to be our RO for the afternoon, and flexed his muscles on a couple of occasions to keep us in check.
It was great to see John Carlin on the water for the first time in quite a while and he didn’t hang around in race 1, showing that he hadn’t lost any of his touch by taking the win. Competition throughout the fleet was strong and 5 of the 6 helms had at least 1 race win, and this was demonstrated in the first 4 races with 4 different winners, John, Alan, Clive and Stuart. Only Steve missed out but did manage a third in race 3 before having to retire with rigging failure in race 4.
Clive then got into race mode and posted 2 firsts in races 5 and 6, before Paul found good boat speed to win race 7, meanwhile John continued his consistency posting 3 seconds whilst Alan picked up 2 thirds.
The final 3 races saw Clive take 2 wins and Andy taking the other, with Stuart picking up a second, John finishing with 2 thirds before missing the last race.
Summary
Sunny, T-shirt weather provided a good but tricky afternoon sailing. With the skill / luck, depending on your view, in picking the correct wind shift to tack on and which to leave could cost you dearly.
Thanks to Neil for acting as RO, Dave Williams for tabulating results in A Fleet and Clive for the photos.