Today there was plenty of wind but only 2 boats could make it and race. With just two boats we kept it simple and scored finish position, pretty hard to compete with the J70 on flat water and lots of wind

Today there was plenty of wind but only 2 boats could make it and race. With just two boats we kept it simple and scored finish position, pretty hard to compete with the J70 on flat water and lots of wind
Father’s day bridge to bridge is a pursuit race, and we will be using the following starting order. On-Water communications is VHF 69.
Please find the results of the Fathers Day Bridge to Bridge below. Winds were light and variable (Race day and appreciable wind seems hard to come by) but we were able to get most of the boats across the finish line. One DNF mostly due to misunderstanding of the turn-around marker.
Race 2 and 3 happened today and much to everyone’s delight we had a lot of wind. It was still quite variable with some pretty intense gusts but we had some racing. I (Dallace) completely borked Race 1 by not understanding the course, so I missed the last marker. Race 2, I lagged a bit behind the only other contender (Skyp) but thanks to my USPN Handicap, pulled out the victory!
Terrible Racecourse drawing followed by the results.
Not a lot to talk about here other than The Mighty O’Day pulls out the win. There was little to no wind, but with the Slowest to Fastest start, the O’day got a 15 minute jump and saw the only real wind and managed 1.19 miles in 1h and 42 minutes. But nobody else really made it out of Hanna Creak.
The first race of the 2024 season was held this past Sunday. Unfortunately there was a bit of a wind problem, where did the wind go from the previous two weekends? Thanks to the competitors that hung in there and completed one race. Thanks also to Paul Hemker and Bernard Normand for their race committee duty.
BLSA will be passing these flyers out showcasing our simpler social event schedule that will hopefully make it easier for anyone to attend!
My “main” 2023 winter project was to order a mainsail kit from Sailrite and build my 1980 O’Day 23-2 a new mainsail. I believe the one that came with it was the original and its quite baggy!
last year I purchased a Sailrite LSZ-1, have done a few projects but was ready to tackle the mainsail kit. The kit comes mostly complete minus a few pretty specific tools required to complete it. I purchased those also. All the Dacron is precut with printed lines showing all the seams. They send along a detailed set of instructions (printed out) and there is some fantastic YouTube videos to watch/re-watch, and re-watch to help insure everything is going as planned.
The hardest sewing part was once the sail started getting larger, getting the reef patches sewn since the LSZ-1 is definitely not a sail loft sized machine, rolling/stuffing all the sail through, and around to get the patches on was quite a feet. But overall the actual main sewing went quite smooth
Finishing work once all the panels are together includes installing the leech line, the bolt rope on the luff and foot of the sail, creating the holes for the tack/clew, reef points, the header board. And of course the, I believe 12 , holes and grommets for the sail slugs that slide into the mast track. All this work was not specifically difficult but it was quite time consuming. I did have sore fingers after wrapping the tack,clew, and reef SS rings that are the grommets with waxed twin before inserting the brass sleeve.
One remaining thing I would like to do, is get the O’Day emblem (big O) for the sail cut out of some adhesive Dacron that I also ordered. I’m not yet sure to get these cut out smoothly so that is TBD.
Below is a recipe contributed by Heide and Paul Hemker
Below is a link to a great article explaining mainsail trim