CAN THERE BE ANYTHING
WORSE than coming stone last in a sailboat race?
I had finished way down
the list before in all sorts of boats from 30 Square Meters to sliding seat
canoes, but never, ever, had I come
last.
But there we were on a
perfectly normal day, a nice warm northeasterly blowing 10 to 15, no tide to
speak of, flat water in the protected bay and a decent start at the windward
end of the line — and everybody started to come past us.
It was the brutal
simplicity that attracted me to the Mirror class. My boat weighed a little over
100 pounds, and there were hardly any strings to pull, just a gunter-rigged
mainsail and a tiny jib with fixed fairleads.
What it boils down to in
international one-design classes like this is the skill of the helmsman and
crew — basic human cunning, strategy,
and experience. It's like a cross
between chess and poker on water.
We had always done well
before. Won the offshore series outright, in fact. Came second in the
nationals. Now this.
A boat skippered by a
man we all called The Bumbling Idiot came up astern, then pointed up
unbelievably high and promptly started to overtake us to windward. I luffed him immediately, of course. Pure
reflex. He didn't respond. I hit the
moron amidships and shouted "Go home!" He smiled and shouted, "It's OK, John,
don't worry about it. Carry on. I won't protest."
HE wouldn't protest. For
God's sake, HE wouldn't protest. I couldn't believe my ears. I couldn't believe my eyes, either. He was
disappearing ahead of us.
They all came past us on
that first leg to windward, singly and in groups, going faster and pointing
higher. The last one to overtake us was manned by two very large men,
250-pounders at least. Their jib was sheeted so tight it couldn't possibly
contribute to forward drive. Their mainsail was backwinding at the mast and
flopping all over the place at the leech. And still they came past,
foot-by-foot they came past to leeward , two fat men laughing and chatting to
each other and drinking beer out of tall cans, and when they hit our lee they
simply bore off, gained speed, got ahead of us, and luffed up again to show us
their transom.
By now, things were
pretty desperate. "Sheet in the jib," I cried to my wide-eye crew. I
slacked the mainsail until it, too, was flogging uselessly like the one ahead
of us. But nothing helped. We fell
farther back. We finished last, five minutes behind the boat ahead, when the
committee boat was already weighing anchor.
To my dismay, I never
found out what went wrong that day. We checked the daggerboard and rudder for
plastic bags and seaweed. Nothing. The sails looked the same as they always
did. We weren't carrying any excess
weight. It was a total mystery. For a
long time I suspected the intervention
of some supernatural power. Maybe someone like The Bumbling Idiot had consulted
a witchdoctor and put a spell on us.
But it never happened
again, I'm happy to say. We eventually won the nationals, and The Bumbling
Idiot became the Class Secretary and learned some of the basic rules, and best
of all we never had to luff him again because he was always behind us.
Today's
Thought
If
you go directly at the heart of a mystery, it ceases to be a mystery, and
becomes only a question of drainage.
— Christopher Morley, Where
the Blue Begins.
Tailpiece
“I see your husband
finally gave up smoking.”
“That’s correct.”
“It must have taken a
lot of willpower.”
“Yes, I have a lot of
willpower.”
(Drop
by every Monday, Wednesday, Friday for another Mainly about Boats column.)
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