Thursday, September 29, 2016

Two Lovely collections of Glow Photos, With more to Come!

For those of you who would like to either re-visit your weekend or, if you missed it, wish you were there. Here are two collections of photos that are so wonderful it'll make you feel like you are still at Clinton Lake!!
Sorry for the crazy-long urls!!

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B6fLXgLcHBSGa0kzZkN4aVVUMTA

AND


https://goo.gl/photos/JsLaDgyxrZZmGvcQ6

Let me know if there is any trouble accessing these!

SmoothSailing!

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Glow in the Dark Marks End of Midwest District Regatta Season

Camping Chez Torgerson. from Left, Ben Williams, Geoff Endris and Luther Torgerson ~All photos by Erin Bauer













Well, at the risk of tooting my own (really Fleet 135's) horn, I'd say the Glow regatta was pretty much a success. The weather was a little toasty, but still reasonable for camping. We had the very able PRO Dan Goldberg squeeze two races out of the light, north-northeast winds Saturday and then two more great races Sunday when the wind finally arrived from the south.

Dan working his magic



We had 24 boats, which is a nice crowd. It goes along with what I've noticed all season: that every regional regatta we went to had 20 or more participants. We missed the Chattanooga contingent (their districts conflicted), Tom Dawson (lost his crew), the Benners (family wedding) and our own Eric Bussell (wife Nancy's birthday trip to New Orleans), but we managed to have a good time anyway.


from left, Dan, Nacho/ and Rick, Sarah and L.A. 
In Saturday's first race, in light wind, Bill Vogler and Jack McClurkin caught Bruce and Lynn Kitchen, who have been having an outstanding season. In the second race the Kitchens came back and, as the wind died, snuck up the right side of the lake, while Ben and Deb tried the left side, barely missing a few stumps and branches! It was a relief to the whole fleet when the RC shortened the course from five legs to three in dying breeze.
Bill, with white spinnaker, leading the fleet
This was the first year we used regatta network for scoring and apparently it was amazing. As soon as Trent Johnson got off the water and entered a few numbers, voila! The results were up! This is a far cry from back in the day when we hand wrote results on the white board at the pavilion.  I know not everyone loves registering on line but it sure did make scoring tons easier. ....

After everyone pulled their boats and started drinking beer we started the steak cookout, with the able assistance of Chris Tesdal. We really need to buy him a chef's hat one of these years. We had the usual amazing beers from Madison courtesy of Deb and Luther Torgerson, as well as many other adult beverage contributions, and chocolate cake to die for from Heather Johnson.

In addition to the fabulous food, we had fantastic entertainment courtesy of Jamie Cash and his wife, Jeannine. It was too dark to take a photo but it was impressive to see everyone happily surrounding Jamie and his keyboard and the bonfire and just mellowing out. Heaven. I really really REALLY hope they come back next year!
Jamie in the orange hat, on Mango, with Ken Johnson, Mango's owner.

Unfortunately this year, particularly with the light wind I think, we had to contend, not only with flies but an alarming number of yellow jackets. We have never had yellow jackets before, but I think by the end of Sunday we'd had three or four stings at least. Poor Linda Budden got stung on her tongue and Jamie's daughter also got stung. Ugh. Note to self, fix that.

Sunday's wind was a little more assertive, which made most people happy. Nothing like having a light wind day to appreciate one with a little more pressure. For those without radios there was some confusion about why the race committee kept setting up and then moving. It turns out there is a mythic underground obstacle somewhere along the shore near where the race committee set up. We urged them to move, which they did. Then, when Bryan Hunt and Tom Yeagle sailed by to check on their placement, WHAM! They hit the darn thing. So the race committee had to pick up and move again, this time farther out into the lake, which necessitated them changing the course from a W4  to a W5. For those who didn't understand what was happening, that added even more confusion when they realized boats were still racing after the fourth leg!

It's a funny thing when you complain for years and years about something and never get bothered enough to fix it. Well, that changed Sunday, and after the awards were done and everyone packed up, a few intrepid club members went out with a sonar device and marked the trouble spot. Was it a ridge? A chimney? The Loch Ness monster on holiday? It's hard to say...

Sunday was Ryan Malmgren and Stacey Rieu's day, with two bullets. The Kitchens hung tough with a second and third place and the overall win for the weekend.  Congratulations Bruce and Lynn!! I know Angie took photos at the awards, so I'll put that up as soon as I get it.
Ryan and Stacey rounding the mark and heading upwind, t he rest of the fleet trailing well behind.
In addition to the gorgeous Glow in the Dark trophies made by Frank and Marianne, we had travel trophy awards.District Governor Bronson Bowling made the funkiest trophy ever: pieces of tire tread (relatively clean!) with each participant's name and sail number attached. Hilarious!! Fabulous! Ben and I won the trophy, but I'd say the winners were all the folks who traveled hundreds of miles to party and sail with their fellow Flying Scot sailors!

That's all for now, but there is a link to some photos that Erin Bauer took. More will come, I'm sure.


https://goo.gl/photos/JsLaDgyxrZZmGvcQ6



Craig Rost rigging his new boat at the dock

Charlie sailing Mango. Charlie is planning to join CLSA and
bring Mango, his uncle Ken's boat, with him!!

Frank and Marianne getting ready to leave the dock Saturday
They brought, not only Friday's brats, but made the
gorgeous trophies this year