79 Bay St
Double Bay NSW 2028
Australia

The best ILCA / Laser sailing club in the world, located in Double Bay on Sydney Harbour.

News

Club Championship Results

Kirk Marcolina

It was the 5th and 6th heats of the Club Championship last week and 58 DBSC boats turned out for the event!  Check out the huge fleet rigging up here.

The wind was 8-12kts ENE, strengthening and moving to the right as the afternoon progressed.  Thanks to our PRO, Jonathan Stone, who was assisted by Clare Alexander, and to our COTD, Geoff Kirk, who was assisted by Tim Health (Julian’s dad).

The races were very competitive as usual, but the winners are the winners, and we saw “daily doubles” in all three fleets, with Mark Bethwaite in the Standards beating Luke Parker in the first and Rod Barnes in the second; Jack Littlechild in the Radials beating Matthew Knight in the first and Maddie O’Shea in the second; and Brooke Wilson in the 4.7s beating Mark Louis in both races.

Thanks again to Brett Beyer for another instalment of the BBSP.  Feedback from the participants has been very positive.  For those who aren’t in the program, we will be running another series from February, so start planning to be in it!  As noted on Saturday, Brett will be conducting the post race briefing on the front deck from now on, with everyone in the club welcome to attend, so please hang around for that.

And one final note, I don’t think so, Ashley ...

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Twilight Sailing

Kirk Marcolina

We had a record 19 boats for twilight sailing last week.  And it’s on again tonight.  Brett Beyer will be conducting the races, and everyone gets free coaching on the starts (and it is the starts that often decide who wins, so it’s something you want to be good at).

Come along and join us for two hours of jam-packed sprint races with the first start at 5.30pm (or whenever you can make it).  If you are coming, please complete this week's Doodle Poll here.

State Championships This Weekend

Kirk Marcolina

The long-awaited State Championships have arrived.  Thanks to all those who have helped organise this, including preparing the club house through the various working bees.

We are expecting 150 boats to descend upon our race course, with perhaps 100+ boats rigging at DBSC.  Could everyone please plan to be at the club by 9am this Saturday, 18 November to assist as needed.  The regatta briefing is at 11.30am.

If you have not yet entered, please do so here.  It is going to be a big weekend – get lots of rest, eat lots of carbs and race hard!

Brett Beyer Lecture Series

Kirk Marcolina

The next instalment of the Brett Beyer Lecture Series is at 8pm on Wednesday, 6 December.  The topic is “The Start and First Beat”, and you’d better get those right, or it’s a whole lot of catching up to do!

As usual, the cost for DBSC members is $21 for the lecture and pizza, with drinks available for cash at the usual prices.  Separate non-member tickets are available for $31.  Attendance is limited, and invitations have been sent to our sister clubs, so book early to avoid missing out.  You can get your tickets here.

Christmas Party and New Members’ Welcome Drinks

Kirk Marcolina

Please join us for our Christmas party and new members’ welcome drinks from 7.00pm on Saturday, 16 December.  All club members and their families are invited, and we are going to introduce all the new members once again.  There is no cost for this function, so put it in your diaries.  We will be sending out invitations shortly – RSVPs are appreciated for catering purposes.

Another New Member

Kirk Marcolina

This week, we welcome yet another new member, Josh Pearl.  Josh is fairly new to sailing, but loves sport.  He lives just up the road in Paddington, and has driven past for years and seen the boats all rigged in the park, and now he’s decided to come and join!  Well done, Josh.  You’ve made a great choice, and we hope we make it a fun experience for you.  Please make Josh feel welcome.

Big Boat Race Report

Kirk Marcolina

Written by Jonathan Stone

After a week’s delay, from last weekend’s rain, we did race. A few boats were lost from the fleet by the rescheduling, but the sun was out, and the Harbour was sparkling. The wind was east-nor-east but it backed and veered widely; lifted to 15 knots and dropped to just a few knots - it was not the steady nor-easter sea breeze that has shaped so much of the sailing heritage of the Harbour. More like two breezes mixing over us.

The Harbour seemed empty (for a spring Sunday) as we sailed out, but then Optimists and Tasars appeared from Rose Bay, and motor cruisers ploughed by us, seaplanes appeared off the port bow and the 18s sailed out for their start, like huge insects.

There were just three of us, T&T and Corinna and Smitten.  And, we kept the racing informal and did three short races, around Shark Island. T&T finished first in all three, but only because Corinna gave us generous starts. Chris’ Endeavour 24 is from a class that appeared on the scene, circa 1970, about the same time as the Hood 23 (T&T) - the first all-fibreglass small yachts. There has been a long rivalry between the classes; both have enjoyed large fleets, and national or state associations (Corinna has won the Endeavour 24 Nationals, T&T the Hood 23 States); though the fleets are now much diminished, as faster boats with cleverer rigs have been produced. Young sailors can choose foiling boats like Moths, or overpowered, too-tender-to-go-to-sea lifting-keel yachts capable of 20 knots, or just more modern one-class boats like Etchells.

Still, both classes are real sailboats, able to work upwind at ~40°, with options like spinnakers or goose-winging, and a range of sail adjustments. T&T and Corinna have raced together for nearly 10 seasons; and, even allowing for Chris’ long-honed skills as a helmsman, it is clear that the Endeavour 24 is stiffer and faster upwind, not much faster but able to sail a few degrees higher; and the Hood is faster off the wind. The difference is not large; if either of us neglects to have our hull cleaned between races, the growth-induced drag leaves us totally uncompetitive. So the racing is close.

In each of Sunday’s races, T&T was allowed a 1-2 minutes start, from Clarke Island; Corinna gained upwind and was on more or less even terms as we battled shifty winds around the ‘wedding cake’ structure at the north end of Shark Island. Then, as we rounded Shark Island and ran for home goose-winging, T&T pulled away; each time.

Smitten stuck with us for the first race; but she is a bigger boat (at 33 foot) and her sails are cruising-small; in stronger winds she is all over the smaller boats; but not yesterday.

So, we made good fun of the conditions; and look forward to a larger fleet on December 3.

 

A Few Miscellaneous Items

Kirk Marcolina

Don’t forget to sign up to our private group on Facebook, “Double Bay Sailing Club – The Top Mark”.  There is lots happening on here.

Has anyone borrowed Yves Stening’s vang and forgotten to return it?  It was in his boat and now it’s not.  If you borrowed it, can you please return it.  If you have seen a spare vang floating around, can you please put it on Yves boat?

There is a function at the clubhouse in the afternoon and evening on Monday, 20th November, so please do not come down for boat repair or a sail that day.

Victory vs Vaucluse

Kirk Marcolina

DBSC hosted the latest edition of the Vaucluse Challenge on Saturday, and it was a challenge indeed with 54-boats competing in a gusty, shifty southerly in that tricky 10-15 knot range.  The 16 Vaucluse Yacht Club (VYC) members sailed against the much larger DBSC fleet in one 90-minute race.  A new scoring system was in place where the first five boats in each fleet counted towards the score, with the first four in each fleet being allocated a score of 1-8 in their relative order of finishing, irrespective of actual place in the fleet, and the fifth boat in each fleet being allocated a score equal to its actual finishing place in the fleet. The final result was a clear DBSC victory with 35 points to VYC’s 84 points. Rob Barns was first in the Standards and Jack Littlechild won the day for the Radial Fleet. Thanks to Peter Collie, Clare Alexander and Mark Gray for running the race. After the sailing action concluded, VYC hosted us for drinks, awards presentations and a delicious meal, all with a fabulous view from their newly reconstructed clubhouse.

But just because it was a special race didn’t mean Brett Beyer’s coaching stopped. Brett was out on the course and gave a great wrap-up of the day during the VYC post-race drinks. He also captured the start on video, and has graciously allowed us to post the vision online. You can check out the radial start here and the standard start here.

Peter Collie, our resident award-winning photographer, also snapped some great shots of the action. Here are a few of the highlights: 

This Week’s Sailing and More

Kirk Marcolina

Tonight, we have our weekly Wednesday Twilights. Last week we had 15 boats, and it would be great if you could join us tonight. Racing starts at 5.30 with a splash at 5.10 (or whenever you can get there). If you’re coming, sign up on our Doodle Poll here.

This Saturday brings us Club Championships Heats 5 & 6. Please plan on arriving at 11am to help at the working bee – we’re getting the club in tip top shape in preparation for next week’s States.