Can I add one more, admittedly with less frequent use:1) Sail lifted in oscillating breeze
2) Sail to the shift in a persistent shift
3) Sail on the breezier side of the course
4) Connect-the-dots to stay in pressure regardless
5) Play prominent geographical shifts due to course setup
Of course! Current and tide can turn this entirely upside down.Can I add one more, admittedly with less frequent use:
- Play changes in current and wind strength.
In a recent race we were in ghosting conditions most of the day. At the start of the last leg the wind filled in nicely, but I was skeptical that it would hold. The current was from the north, so while the wind was blowing we sailed on starboard to get way North, ignoring bigger wind lines on the water south of us. Eventually the whole course was becalmed again, but we were able to drift down over the finish, coming back from nearly a 10 minute deficit to take first. The boats that played for the middle of the course or followed the dying wind south were stuck coming back against 1 knot of current in a 1 knot wind, making virtually no progress.
North U and Offshore Sailing offer winter courses geared towards racing. Last year I participated in Offshore Sailing Performance Race Week. It was a good course, and learned a lot on tactics esp in practicing race starts. I am still working with my boat on which we are attending for this winter.Wow David, awesome job! I don't have current where I race, but that is an excellent factor to consider. thanks to you, JD, and everyone else for the lessons in this thread.
My boat's crew were joking during our last race of the year last week that we should find a week long on-the-water racing clinic somewhere in the Bahamas this winter. Some of the experts in this thread could be the instructors!
You won't be able to tell just by one shift whether it's an oscillation or persistent. The best way to tell is to look at the weather forecast beforehand, and to pay attention for a while before the start to see what the trends are.Frankly, I am just now getting enough brain power free from sailing the boat to try and assess the wind shifts so I can react to them. Can you help me understand what to look for in deciphering the difference between oscillating and persistent when on the course? I am thinking about assigning someone on the crew to try and figure out where the best pressure is on the course but this one really needs some attention and thought to make the best decisions. Dan
Sure.Frankly, I am just now getting enough brain power free from sailing the boat to try and assess the wind shifts so I can react to them. Can you help me understand what to look for in deciphering the difference between oscillating and persistent when on the course? I am thinking about assigning someone on the crew to try and figure out where the best pressure is on the course but this one really needs some attention and thought to make the best decisions. Dan
You might check with J-World. They specialize in crew oriented, week long clinics. They also have some interesting offshore racing programs. Besides San Francisco, Annapolis and San Diego, they have a school in Puerto Vallarta now... that sounds like fun.My boat's crew were joking during our last race of the year last week that we should find a week long on-the-water racing clinic somewhere in the Bahamas this winter. Some of the experts in this thread could be the instructors!
..and keep records. BEFORE the race, so you can predict oscillations for that day, and AFTER the race so you can log and start to recall the local conditions and trend conditions, boat settings etc. Not difficult, a simple and disciplined approach.Sure.
Big persistent shifts are often forecast, like the one I posted. Or they happen locally with great regularity as the sea and land breeze swap during the day. SF is a great example of where this happens. Locals will know.
Oscillating can be seen by sailing upwind before the race and watching the compass. If the wind is going to oscillate, normally in a 10 minute beat it will swing through 10-15 degrees, with the median being the 'average angle' on that side. Do the same on the other side. When you are on the wider side of the average angle (AKA knocked), think about tacking. That will put you tighter side on the other tack (AKA lifted).
If you have clouds look up.predict oscillations for that day
Different but the same. It's only different if you're teaching a noob with "sail the lifted tack when oscillating, and the headed tack if persistent... Easier to remember to sail towards the next shift in either case.In oscillating wind of course you are always sailing toward a shift. But the overarching goal is to stay lifted. When sailing to a persistant shift, you actually drive through a knock to get there. That’s different