The
Hobie 16 Worlds - Final Update From Eliza Cleveland,
Sailing With Annie Nelson, USA
Hello
Race Fans!!!
I am sending this report a day late because we
did not find out the results of the regatta until
late last night because there were a number of
protests that had to be heard by the Protest Committee.
The
day was going to be a challenging one. Arriving
on the beach at 8:30 to help the Brazilian Grand
Master team with whom we were switching off boats,
the wind was alread blowing hard. It was cloudy,
and the wind was still from the NE with a possibility
of going more easterly as the day progressed.
The
Masters and Grand Master teams left the beach,
and I went back to the hotel to eat more food.
Because Annie and I were only .7 kilos over minimum
weight, there was still a possibility of another
weigh-in. Which reminds me, at the end of our
last race on Day 1, we hit the beach and immediately
a gentleman from the Race Jury came up and asked
that we please get weighed again. We had promised
ourselves to be sure to drink a bottle of water
each on the way back to the beach, but we forgot,
and once you hit the beach, if they think you
might be underweight, you get weighed immediately.
If it turns out that you are underweight, all
your races for that day are disqualified. So we
went over to the high-tech scale, stripped down
to our bathingsuits, and got weighed. Luckily
we had gained a kilo...as I mentioned, we´ve
been trying to eat as much as possible!
Race
1: After the somewhat chaotic exodus from the
beach (due to the fact that they blow a horn and
all of a sudden 60 boats want to leave out of
a fairly small stretch of beach that is not near
reefs), we headed out to the race course. Suddenly
I was experiencing conditions heretofore never
experienced by yours truly. The waves were massive.
The wind was blowing about 17 knots which is a
decent double-trapping breeze, but the waves made
just staying on the boat difficult. At times when
you are out on the trapeze, the boat would fly
over a wave and both your feet would leave the
boat!
Our start was good, and about half-way down the
course we headed right which was windier the other
two days. It was definately a crazier place to
be with huge waves coming at all angles due to
a very strong current running north. At the windward
mark I believe we rounded in 5th place. The boat
that actually won that race was about 100 feet
in front of us. Downwind was a rollercoaster ride.
The key is to try and surf the waves while making
sure that you don´t dig in your bows which
would result in the boat pitchpolling Annie is
very experienced at surfing the waves on a Hobie,
and it was an amazing learning experience for
me. What a wild ride downwind!
At
the gates we rounded the left one and headed up
the right side of the course to big wind and big
waves. Annie´s rudder did not go down all
the way after the rounding (it is normal to raise
your windward rudder going downwind) and so she
had to get off the trapeze to get back onto the
boat to fix it. Just as she was going in, a wave
came and knocked her completely off the boat,
so she was dragging behind it! At that point we
started capsizing, and so I unhooked my trapeze
line (so I wouldn´t get pulled under the
boat if it turtled) and swam out of the way as
the boat came down over me. We both swam to the
other side of the boat to get up on the hulls
so it wouldn´t turtle and so we could right
it. Luckily with a lot of wind that is pretty
easy to do if you have the mast pointing just
off the wind. So it only took about 4 or 5 minutes
to get sailing again, but we knew that was a lost
race for us. But we caught a lot
of the fleet and ended up 7th in that race. A
number of boats got out to the race course and
simply decided not to race in those conditions.
Race
2: We had a less-than-perfect start, but not horrible,
and all of a sudden the team from New Caladonia
was port-tacking the entire fleet. All of a sudden
there was mayhem, and people were screaming ¨starboard¨
Then people started yelling ¨Protest¨.
I really thought someone was going to be hurt
-- it was an incredibly crazy thing to do with
the crazy wave-wind conditions we were sailing
in.
But
the rest of that race was uneventful and we finished
in 5th place.
We
sailied six races over the three days, and thus
we were allowed to throw out our worst race. After
throwing out one of our 7s, we finished the regatta
in 6th place. There was an awards banquet last
night, and the award went to the first 6 place
finishers, so I have a wonderful plaque with a
Mayan sculpture on it. I am thrilled!
My hands and feet are completely chewed up with
blisters and cuts, but I have two days off until
the Open World Championship begins on Monday.
The cuts will certainly not heal, but my skipper/boyfriend,
Bob Merrick is bringing me some new sailing gloves
(which are actually gardening gloves apparently
that all the Tornado sailors (I think) use. I
will have to completely tape my hands and feet
so that nothing gets worse.
I
wish I could explain to you the comradrie between
all the many countries who are here and the passion
which they all feel for catamaran sailing. It
is amazing.
Liza
Cleveland
More
information including results at: www.hobieworlds.com