swift-solo
[Top] [All Lists]

RE: look back at fort Desoto things I learnt

To: "swiftsolo" <swiftsolo@xxxxxxxxx>,<swiftsolo@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: look back at fort Desoto things I learnt
From: "Paul O'Sullivan" <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 28 Dec 2008 17:04:46 -0800
In-reply-to: <d953f8e30812281554s1ad4b404h4235bec2a97642b@mail.gmail.com>
Thread-index: AclpR6hJU4bOcl8uSmuIJgGPJ9rjUAACOXnA
Thread-topic: look back at fort Desoto things I learnt
Christian, hi I totally agree as it happens my center board drifted of
in the wind and waves and I had the decision as to weather I should
leave the boat and go and get the board or stay with the boat ..I
stayed with the boat !!
On the coaching I could not agree more .The plan at Huntington lake this
summer is to have Bram as the dedicated Coach which he can solely focus
on teaching  as he has no responsibilities in managing the regatta and
regretfully he is no longer competing.iam excited to learn more .Paul  

-----Original Message-----
From: swiftsolo [mailto:swiftsolo@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Sunday, December 28, 2008 3:54 PM
To: Paul O'Sullivan
Cc: keithcouncell@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: look back at fort Desoto things I learnt

Hi Paul,

I think you are more or less right on with your observations.  I've had
to
crawl under the boat (turtled) and sticking the CB back in. Its a rather
odd
feeling
being under there with only a few inches of air. :)

The one thing I think could use some improvement during the nationals,
is
the coaching on the water. I think it would be helpful to have a
dedicated
coach  to video tape, do on the water coaching as well as video debrief
afterward. There is only so much you can practice on the beach.
Encourage
new guys to be on the water
while there is a rescue boat rather than spend hours on land getting
their
rig "just right"  There appears to be a common misconception that the
boat
is totally unsailable if the rig is not perfectly right.  I think new
guys
are better off spending a more time on the water and then experiment
with
the rig. Nothing gets you up the learning curve more than go sail. Get
comfortable with the boat, get some on the water tips/coaching.

Thanks,

Christian



On Sun, Dec 28, 2008 at 4:17 PM, Paul O'Sullivan
<paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote:

>  Merry Christmas and or happy holidays to everyone Swifty or Mustomen
.its
> been a great year to meet new people and learn so much about sailing
the
> Swift , I would like to thank everyone who has helped me this year and
> particularly all the crew who went to Fort Desoto. I thought I would
start a
> list of things learnt with the idea that may be others would add to so
here
> goes;
>
> 1, the best thing about sailing is the friends you meet and keep.
>
>
>
> 2, Turn up at the Nationals with your boat finished and ready to sail;
I
> didn't and wasted too many awesome sailing days rigging the boat.
>
> .
>
> 3, Go to a Bram clinic the learning curve is unbelievable.
>
>
>
> 4. Practise on dry land, with the help of friends to sit on the boat,
gets
> out on the wire sort your foot work out,
>
>
>
> 5, Kneel on the side tanks on one knee; the forward knee .huge!! Don't
SIT
> on the tank; it's so much easier to swing out on to the wire.
>
>
>
> 6, Set the kite before you go out to check the thing fly's correctly
.Bram
> has a fool (i.e. me) proof method of rigging the kite, but I forgot
> it...Bram???
>
>
>
> 7, Check your plug and hatch covers in the excitement to launch... An
old
> one but......
>
>
>
> 8, Find someone to go 2 up with, learnt more in 30 mins with Ron Radco
> (thank you) 2 up, than hours of imperfect practice on my own.
>
>
>
> 9,Don't' be afraid of the kite , pick a light breeze and go for it ,
it is
> easier than it looks .Always steer under the kite as you get over
powered .
>
>
>
> 10, when you capsize with the kite up ,ALWAYS pull it down ALL THE WAY
DOWN
>   (from the stern ) BEFORE you right the boat Huge!!
>
> 11. Capsizing, I like Bram's method of going over the side and between
the
> jib and the mast and steadying the boat from there, you can step on
the base
> of the mast almost as soon as the main sail brakes from the water and
if the
> wind is on the" wrong" side i.e. going to blow you right over again.
You can
> grab the far shroud and attempt to stop the roll.
>
>
>
> 12, Getting up on the center board , This for me is the most difficult
part
> of sailing the swift, ideas I picked up form Keith Council. (Thanks
Keith)
>
>      A, Push your self DOWN as you grab the board the buoyancy in your
> jacket will tend to "pop" you out of the water..
>
>
>
>      B, Pull yourself on to the center board as close to the boat as
> possible, this stops the boat from coming up and still leaving you in
the
> water (this  happen to me a lot and this fixes the problem.)
>
>
>
>      C, Get fit!! Lots of push ups, Keith practices in the swimming
pool
> pulling up on a diving board!!
>
>
>
>      D. It is exhausting so Bram's advice is after 5 capsizes in a row
GO
> IN for a break!!
>
>
>
>      E, Other guys have there own techniques ,I have tried getting in
over
> stern, when the boat is upright and you are in the water ,it works if
the
> wind is light and little or on waves ,one hand on the rudder stock the
other
> on the transom .Chris Wickham does the under the boat roll method
.Chris ??
> Ron Watt I believe goes in over the side but behind the mast (he so
good he
> never capsizes!!).
>
>
>
> 13, Drop the main as you come in shore especially a Lee shore or shore
with
> breakers, I sail off a beach which is always a lee shore and this
simple
> things has stopped me screwing up!! (Including smacking my rudder on
> submerged tree stump, very costly)
>
>
>
> !4, Clothing ,I change to a very slim life  preserver by 'Jet made for
> wakeboarding it has some padding ,I put my harness over the top , that
helps
> with snags , a couples of the Musto Men had rash shirts over
everything with
> a hole of the wire hook , it look good ..Guys. IT seems to be very
important
> to reduce all the possible snag points .When sailing my Fireball 40
years
> ago we all wore thin nylon jump suits over every thing ... ideas Guys
> ..Photos???
>
>
>
> 15, Knee pads and shin guards are essential.
>
>
>
> 16.Make sure your center board and rudder will not fall out when you
are
> inverted ,very embarrassing  and has happen to my twice !!! , once I
lost
> the center board and sail to shore with out it ... the wrong shore!! I
used
> the rudder to get the boat right   side up (tricky) and then run off
down
> wind. I was on a large lake 15knots wind and no other boats out!! I
was
> using a smaller main and in my excitement to get out I forgot to tie
in the
> board. The other time my rudder fell out as with use the lining in the
> cassette has worn. Both are now tied in..
>
>
>
> That's enough for now,  please feel free to , add , comment or trash
.I
>  think I'm heading to San Diego to find some warm water and a fair
wind .......
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Paul O'Sullivan
>
> Catlin Properties
>
> 3620 Fair Oaks Blvd, Ste 150
>
> Sacramento, CA 95864
>
> (916) 485-8900 x.234
>
> (916) 599-1572 cell
>
> paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>
>

No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com 
Version: 8.0.176 / Virus Database: 270.10.1/1867 - Release Date:
12/28/2008 2:23 PM

This is the Swift Solo mailing list.  For unsubscribe instructions,
visit here: http://catzooks.com/swift-solo/

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>

This is the Swift Solo mailing list archive. Visit here to see instructions on how to subscribe and unsubscribe from the list, and to browse the mailing list archives.