The prospect of sailing against 30+ in a beautiful location coupled with the possibility of reviving the old Thistle team or John Burhani or Jay Foght sealed the deal for BNAC 2014.
BNAC 2014
Preparation for BNAC 2014 began while the snow was still on the ground. Brushing up on new race rules and reading Jim Daus’s notes were critical to the success we ultimately achieved on Lake Dillon. I can’t stress enough the benefit of what Jim had written. If you’re new to the Buccaneer or just set in your ways with some habits that hold you back, you need to read his overview. The area that helped us the most was on keeping the boat flat and shifting gears quickly. This was critical in Dillon. I worked the main hard. When a puff approached I immediately released the main, we hiked the boat hard, and sheeted the main back in. This kept the boat flat and shot us forward vs. loading up, healing over, and staying slow. Fast begets fast. Slow begets slow. I also feathered up in the puffs to keep the boat flat. If you keep the boat moving its amazing how high you can point.
We expected Lake Dillon to be a shifty place and somewhat puffy. The term “somewhat” was a mistake. Having spent my life sailing in shifty locations we were well prepared for the frequent 15 – 30 degree shifts. I not sure what can prepare you for a puff that appear from nowhere taking a steady 10 mph wind to 30 mph. As BNAC 2014 progressed, we found ourselves on constant alert.
At one point the fleet was becalmed waiting for wind to start a race. Sailors took the opportunity to relax, catch some rays and eat lunch. With no warning a ~ 10 mph puff appeared and knocked over 2 or 3 boats that just happened to be in the wrong position with their sails sheeted in. That lesson ensured we always stayed alert when on the water but it didn’t prepare us for the micro/macro burst that hit on Thursday.
At the start of the regatta Jim Daus gave the fleet a stern briefing on what to do if a microburst hits. Typically if one hits, it can blow 30 – 50 mph for 10-15 minutes, then dies down. Jim told everyone that if it hits, quickly drop your sails and raise your centerboard. Dropping sails made sense but several folks thought it odd to raise your centerboard. That said, a 50 mph blow can tip over a Buccaneer with bare pole. So if you raise your centerboard, the boat will just slide sideways until the wind dies back down in a few minutes. Try it, it really works.
Thursday was our third day of racing. It was the second race of the day. The wind was blowing ~ 10-15 mph as we rounded the windward mark. Point totals has Blind Squirrel in 1st place with Atrevida one point behind in second. Stella was only a few points to third with several other boats in close contention.
We rounded the windward mark and set our spinnaker as did the others. One quarter of the way down the leg we saw a puff ~ 20+ arrive behind us and prepared to take off planning. Then a 30+ puff took down a few boats behind. We considered dropping our chute but with our competition so close, we just hunkered down and crossed our fingers for a wild ride. Then the third puff hit which registered on the committee boat 41 mph