A Perfect Day For A Sailboat Race
Leg 6 began in a 5 knot Easterly, but the breeze built an hour into the
race and the whole fleet was soon trapezing with spinnakers flying. The
12-15 knot breeze slowly shifted from East to South during the course
of the day, offering plenty of options and some potential land mines to
the racers.
Rod Waterhouse and Katie Pettibone, of Guidant, finally beat Alexander's
on the Bay winning the 121 mile leg in close to 9 hours. Guidant jumped
off the beach to a quick start by paddling through the surf and led the
entire way. They shipped some water in their port hull during the day
as a result of a small hole in their bow that they earned in an
altercation with Alexander's while flopping in the surf at the start.
Team Tybee Island, sailed by Steve Lohmayer and Kenny Pierce, finally got the
monkey off their back and finished 3 minutes behind Guidant in second
place. Alexander's on the Bay sailed through the fleet after a horrible
start to finish third, 15 minutes off the pace. They still hold a
comfortable lead, but there are plenty of hurdles left in this race and
anything can happen.
Tommy Bahama, sailed by Nigel Pitt and Alex Shafer finished 4th with
another solid leg and they were followed by Lexis Nexis, Castrol and
Outer Banks. Team PI, Dinghy Shop and Sail for Sight rounded out the
top ten.
Early in the race Dinghy Shop looked good with a position about a mile
directly inshore of Guidant, but the breeze filled outside and then
shifted South to North and MacDonald lost distance. MacDonald had
trouble trapezing for more than 45 minutes at a time, due to pain in his
ribs. He bruised or cracked his ribs in a wipeout on an earlier leg.
As the wind filled in and the spinnakers went up, the fleet faced some
difficult choices. Most of the sailors knew the wind would shift
towards the South over the course of the day, but when the wind filled
it was still possible to sail straight down rhumb line to the finish.
It was hard to decide whether to sail optimum angle and take the lifting
wind up and off-shore to gybe later, or to sag low, sailing slower and
still lay the finish line as the wind shifted to the South. The wind
velocity exacerbated the difficult choice because it was in between
single and double trapeze conditions with the spinnaker.
These Inter 20 catamarans are sailing at close to 20 knots in 15 knots
of wind and sometimes it pays to sail higher with the spinnaker,
creating more apparent wind and thus needing to put another person on
the trapeze to keep the boat flat. If done properly the boat will head
up for a moment and then accelerate, and the apparent wind will more
forward, allowing the skipper to bear off and effectively sail the
same angle to the wind, only faster.
Team Tybee Island worked up on Guidant by sailing lower with just one trapeze.
Lohmayer and Pierce of Team Tybee Island have had some bad luck in the race
but they are quite fast and they haven't given up. "If we had 10 more
miles we would have caught them," said a satisfied Pierce at the finish.
Lohmayer believes they still have a chance to win the event, "Four hours
isn't too much in this race, there's a lot that can still happen here."
As the racers finished the long leg, the beach was crowded with at least
500 Tybee Island locals who came out to cheer on their team. The crowd ran the
gamut from formally dressed socialites sipping cocktails to a guy on a 4
wheel beach-board flying a kite-board kite and carving turns in the
sand. His board looked like a skateboard with monster truck tires and
he rolled through the crowd watching the boats surf up onto the beach.
Tybee Island loves this race. Chuck Bargeron is the owner of Team Tybee Island
and he's been chasing this race for longer than anyone. The islanders
are aware of the race and they put on a great show for the sailors and
shore crew. From the Hospitality tent with food and drinks to a band
playing outdoors and a low country boil, Tybee Island rolls out the red carpet
for the Worrell 1000. People are friendly down here. Former Chamber of
Commerce head Mike Scarborough stood on the sand waiting for the boats
to hit the beach and explained how Tybee Island looks at this race, "These
other cities should support a team like we have. Our guys have the
whole town behind them. We need to create a festival around this event
and I promise you it's going to grow bigger and bigger. If Tybee Island needs
to be the front runner then we'll show everyone how to do it."
Scarborough relayed a story that occurred two years ago when the fleet
didn't hit the beach until 3 AM, "The sailors were starved and skippers
stayed open just to feed the racers. That woman was all alone there and
she fed everyone!"
Tomorrow the fleet gets the morning off as the race makes the switch to
night mode. The start will be at 6 PM and the fleet will head up to
Isle of Palms, just north of Charleston. We'll have a report from the
start then try to beat the fleet to the finish.