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Skippered Yacht Charters



Friday 28 November 2014

2014 Reflections

Reflecting on the season as a whole, it has been a contrasting tale.  While the racing was frustrating and, at times, exasperating, the cruising was delightful in generally warm weather.

Turning to the former, the main source of frustration was the lack of structural integrity of the mainsail, one of Ullman's finest, which spent more time in the loft being repaired than it did on the boat.  On the start line of the first ISORA, we noticed a foot-long tear and retired.  During the Douglas to Dun Laoghaire race, we conducted further repairs to a different tear, at sea.  At the end of the IRC Nationals in Pwllheli, it ripped from luff to leach (I groaned) and then a week later, after a further visit to a sailmakers, it ripped again, but in a different place (this time I laughed out loud).  It has been a difficult relationship.  First the sail was delivered in 2012 with the wrong track fittings - so it didn't.  Then, after a couple of weeks on the boat, the leach started to delaminate, necessitating a return to the manufacturer.  The 2013 season was relatively trouble free and the sail worked well, however, there were already worrying signs of wear and tear.  In fact, rather more tear than the wear might warrant.  The rest as they say is history.

After a long hard look in the mirror this season, we have concluded:

We need to have a full (dedicated) crew to be successful round the cans (we only had 5 onboard for the Nationals and could not always fly the kite).  Additional weight on the windward rail would also be helpful during the offshore races.

The boat is faster with the weight (60m of chain and 25 kg anchor) taken out of the bow.

This makes mixing cruising and racing increasingly difficult.

We need new sails and they will not be coming from Ullman

Saturday 12 April 2014

A New Start

After one of the wildest winters anyone can remember with 2 hurricanes and several severe storms, Pipedreamer VI is back in Holyhead.  We were relatively sheltered in Victoria Dock, but still suffered some superficial damage from contact with the boat next to us, presumably during the worst of the weather.

On 29 Mar we made our way up to Port Dinorwic for a lift and pressure wash, before sailing round to Holyhead the following day.  The weather was kind for both trips and the journeys and jobs were carried out in good time.  Unfortunately the same could not be said of the following weekend when we again lifted the boat, this time to get her weighed.  The weather was wet and windy, hardly conducive to any form of waterborne activity.  Nevertheless, with the help of Eifion Owen, the local RORC measurer, we completed the task and now wait to see if our efforts will be rewarded with a drop in our handicap.  Either way it has been an interesting exercise - it took the best part of a week to empty the boat - making one realise how much superfluous kit finds its way onto the boat, adding to its weight.  Of course, there is a balance to be struck, a compromise to be made, between the requirements of cruising and those of racing.  After all Pipedreamer VI is a cruiser/racer!?  Perhaps this is a new start.