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

ILCA Masters Worlds Training

Chris Tattersall

Further to our recent article in the newsletter, DBSC will be hosting a group of sailors from overseas (ITA FRA GBR & USA), in preparation for the ILCA Masters Worlds in Adelaide.

Mark Bethwaite will be running sprint races on the afternoons of Sun 28, Mon 29, Tues 30, and Wed 31 Jan. Overseas Masters may also join our racing on Sat 27 Jan, subject to boats being available.

Photo courtesy of NSW ACT Laser Association

We are still looking for more people interested in chartering their hull, spars and foils to overseas Masters sailors.  The fee would be AUD50 per day.  Mark will allocate boats between DBSC charterers and overseas visitors and ensure boats are returned in original condition to owners.

Mark will also need a couple of volunteers, one to join him on the Adam and another to drive the Bergman for mark laying and safety requirements.

 

Please email rodbarnes@dbsc.com.au if you or your boat are available.

 

WHAT'S GOING ON

Chris Tattersall

Happy New Year to all sailors. There is no racing to report but our racing program resumes on Saturday. Meantime, here’s what’s coming up:

Saturday 6-Jan:
No Learn to Race
Club Sprints (2PM Start)

Wednesday 10-Jan: Twilight Sailing (5PM splash)

Thursday 11-Jan: Twilight Racing (5PM splash)

Saturday 13-Jan:
Autumn Point Score Races 1 & 2 (2PM Warning)


Thank you to the members who are sending through information for the newsletter. If you have content for the newsletter, please email it to newsletter@dbsc.com.au by Monday evening.

View all racing results here.
The club’s calendar can be viewed and subscribed to here.
Make a tax deductible donation to DBSC here.

RACE REPORT 16 December 2023

Chris Tattersall

PRO Andrew Cox reports:

It was a tough day for the last races in our Spring Point Score Series. During the day, the BOM readings hit all but one of the 16 points on the compass, miraculously only missing SE. Fortunately, during the race period, the official recordings only showed a 45-degree shift range from ESE to ENE. However, as those sailors who were backwinded into the water shortly after the first radial start will attest, we felt shifts on the course throughout the afternoon all the way from NE to the “missing” SE.

 As if that did not make course-setting (and racing) hard enough, we had the Sail Sydney ILCA 6 fleet monopolizing the Dardanelles, leaving us to set an almost due-east “average-wind” course from somewhere north of Clark Island to somewhere north of the Point Piper YA Mark. After a couple of adjustments to the start line, we were off. The fleets were well-behaved on the start lines during the afternoon, but for a general recall in the second Radials race that resulted less from over-exuberance than from a significant right shift towards the end of the sequence that compounded the outgoing tide.

 Congratulations to Kate McHugh who maintained a large winning margin in the first Radial race, followed by a commanding lead in the second until pipped somewhere in the middle by Martin White, who (as those who have the pleasure of competing somewhere near him each week will attest) has Terminator-like tenacity and effectiveness.  Meanwhile, in the Standards, Quentin Burns exhibited a dominating performance for two first-place finishes across the line. Special mention to Jasper Kinsman who pulled a 3rd and 2nd across the line in his first two outings after graduating from 4.7 to Radial.

 On handicap, winners were ILCA 6: Mike Morris and Daryl Lawrence and ILCA 7: Joshua Dorey and Maxim Djura.  Overall series winners are Peter Collie in the ILCA 6 and Maxim Djura in the ILCA 7 – nice one to them both!  Coincidentally, the PRO and Co-PRO each snagged second place in their respective series, some distance behind the winners.

Photo by Grant Lovelady

Thanks to the on-water team of Andrew Cox, Grant Lovelady, Jason Wilkins, and Jacqui Winship – particularly to Jason, whose tired arms and sore hands were evidence that he must have pulled up close to 15 mark-anchors during the day. Thanks also for the super-tasty sandwiches from the canteen team of Paul and Shirley, assisted by Isabelle Wilkins and Geoff Kirk. And congratulations to lucky Scott Hunter who received from Shirley what she declared to be her “best-ever” toastie. Jealous!

Photo by Andrew Cox

Sail Sydney 2023

Chris Tattersall

Photo by Beau Outteridge

Last week we had 24 DBSC members compete at Sail Sydney across all three ILCA classes. Nine sailors were in the Olympic classes section, and Fifteen sailors competed in ILCA 4’s and 6’s across the Open section.  There were some brilliant results, some key learnings and positive improvements, and above all…some highly competitive and enjoyable racing on Sydney Harbour. 

Photos by Sara Bruce and Dan Costandi

Special thanks to Josh Becker and Daniel Costandi, who were our on-water coaches. And a shout out to Healy Ryan who won the ILCA 6 Open Regatta!

Daniel Costandi gives a brief recap of the regatta:

Sail Sydney saw a wide range of conditions, however no day stayed under 30 degrees with one day almost cracking 40, which added to the challenge of decision-making in the extremely shifty Harbour conditions. It required the sailors to really think about their race plans and how they would attack the course.

For the 4.7 and Open Radial classes, the race committee one day set a course right under Shark Island which had the sailors going to either side of the island. The few sailors that went the riskier way made gains on the upwind, something I have never seen happen in DBSC club racing.

In the Olympic 7’s it was great to see Hamish and Quentin mixing it up with the top boys in the full rigs, sadly just falling short of making it to the medal race. In the Olympic 6’s we saw Sara Bruce make the medal race and finish 10th overall. This experience of sailing in a medal race is rare and to finish 7th in that race was a credit to her performance throughout the event. Ali Braden also sailed very well during this event and finished behind Sara in 11th. In the 4.7’s we saw a large group of sailors represent DBSC. It was good to see them all sail very well in such tricky conditions.

Sara Bruce also gives us her account of the regatta:

Sail Sydney 2023 done!!! This was my first experience in an Olympic, female-only fleet and the racing was amazing. I was surprised by how close and competitive it was. I learned so much from the experience, and it was a great chance to test my skills and knowledge amongst high performance athletes. The top 10 sailors at the end of the qualifying series competed in an extra medal race of ~20 mins. Sitting in 10th at the end of the series, I qualified for the medal race. With lots on the line and double points, the top athletes were really going for it. The vibe was so professional the whole regatta, both on and off the water.

I finished 10th overall in the medal race fleet after getting a 7th in the medal race. I’m super proud of how I sailed this regatta!! Big congrats to DBSC sailors Brooke Wilson and Sylvie Stannage in 4th and 5th also in the medal race fleet who finished one point apart, and Ali Braden in 11th, who took out 1st in the qualifying fleet.  In the Olympic ILCA 7s, Campbell Patton was 3rd overall, Alexander Bijkerk was 4th, and Quentin Burns and Hamish Crabb came 16th and 17th respectively.

For the full results for Sail Sydney CLICK HERE



Casual Boat Maintenance

Chris Tattersall

Maxim Djura will be working on his Laser over the holidays and is hoping for some company:

“I will be doing maintenance on my boat in the morning and early afternoon of 30th and 31st of December. Anyone who has boat repairs to do, is welcome to join me. I have epoxy, flow coat, a polish solution, degreaser and masking tape to share. Please note that I don't give any professional advice on repair, just the materials.”

WHAT'S GOING ON

Chris Tattersall

Wednesday 20-Dec: Twilight Sailing (5PM splash)

Thursday 21-Dec: Twilight Racing (5PM splash)

Saturday 23-Dec: Informal Sprint Racing (1:30PM splash).

Monday 1 Jan - Monday 8 Jan: Oceania & Aust. Open & Youth Titles - Adelaide SC

Saturday 6-Jan:
No Learn to Race
Club Sprints (2PM Start)


Thank you to the members who are sending through information for the newsletter. If you have content for the newsletter, please email it to newsletter@dbsc.com.au by Monday evening.

View all racing results here.
The club’s calendar can be viewed and subscribed to here.
Make a tax deductible donation to DBSC here.

RACE REPORT 9 December 2023

Chris Tattersall

TyRrell & Rousso Race Day

PRO Ian Alexander reports:

The Double Bay Sailing Club's annual Tyrrell and Rousso event was held last weekend. The two races - the Richard Tyrrell handicap race and the Mano Rousso yardstick race allow all three classes to be pitted against each other in novel formats that pay homage to two of our great former members of DBSC.

Conditions were challenging, with Sydney Harbour turning on a full NE'er gusting up to 25 knots. Despite the tough conditions, the sailors put on an impressive display of skill and determination weathering many capsizes and near misses, but were impressively well-behaved on the start line and around the race track.

In the Tyrrell handicap event, the sailors battled it out on the water, with the name of the game being to overtake and stay upright. There were many thrilling moments navigating not only the DBSC fleets but also fleets from neighbouring RYSC, Historic 18s, and CYC to name a few. In the end, it was one of our 4.7 sailors Jasper Kinsman who took the top spot!

The Manno Rousso yardstick race was equally exciting, with the sailors pushing themselves to the limit in the challenging conditions. In the end, it was James Tudball who emerged victorious in the ILCA 6 with a commanding win over the 7's.

Overall, it was a fantastic day of sailing, with the sailors putting on a great show for the spectators. I would like to commend and thank my on-water race team for putting on such a well-organized and exciting day's racing and we look forward to another classic T&R event next year.

Tyrrell Trophy winner Jasper Kinsman (left) and Rousso Trophy winner James Tudball (right) flanking our commodore Steven London.

Photos snapped by Max and edited by Diana. See more on DBSC Instagram/Facebook.

2023 DBSC Christmas Party

Chris Tattersall

After a very physical day on the harbour (see previous article), sailors, partners, friends and family gathered for our annual Christmas Party. As the sun receded, the air cooled, and a lovely evening unfolded with great food, fine wine, cold beer and a little bit of dancing.

Thanks to all members (and their families) who helped set up and pack down the party.

Festivus Sailing 23 December

Chris Tattersall

Luke Parker reminds us that as our families give us a leave pass to sail each Saturday, it’s our obligation to use it. 

There is no official club sailing on 23 December as it’s the Christmas weekend, however as Seinfeld fans know, 23 December is also Festivus (Gen Y, Z and younger sailors might want to click this link to understand what we’re talking about: https://youtu.be/1njzgXSzA-A). To celebrate, we’re planning an old school twilight-type experience, and everyone is welcome to join in.  

Details:

1.30PM launch from the club, rabbit starts, windward-leeward around the fixed buoys in the Harbour. The start sequence is the tricky bit… the nominated lead boat (aka rabbit) will yell and wave to attract attention and then round the bottom buoy on port and sail upwind. The fleet should be lined up on starboard, and each boat ducks the rabbit to start. We’ll rotate the role of rabbit amongst the experienced sailors.  Very important tip: stay close to the port layline as the rabbit arrives sooner than you might expect. 

There is unlikely to be a support RIB so please consider your skill relative to the conditions before you launch.