“Ondine” and the Norfolk Broads “3 Rivers Race”
I have created a small website with pictures to
illustrate this newsletter article and also included links to some other sites
with information about the Norfolk Broads in the UK for those of you who may be
interested. It may be useful to look at
these sites before reading the article to get a feel for the Norfolk Broads,
the sailing conditions and the traditional (and extreme) boats involved.
I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank
members of the Australian Timpenny Association for the advice and guidance they
have kindly given to me which led to me buying my Timpenny in the first place,
one of the best decisions I’ve made, and subsequently helped me to get her into
race worthy condition.
My temporary web site to accompany this newsletter
article
http://mysite.freeserve.com/nbroadsman/
A semi photographic guide to the Norfolk Broads
Photo Gallery of Traditional Broads Sailing Cruisers
http://www.ea-cc.org/default.asp?id=0&ACT=2&pic=0
Another Norfolk Broads site with some superb detailed
maps
http://www.shorebase.co.uk/broads/broadsintro.asp
I live in Norfolk in England and, as far as I am
aware, am currently the only UK member of the Timpenny Association. I first learnt to sail on the “Norfolk
Broads” as a boy well over 30 years ago
and after living in various locations around England, mainly based around
living near the sea and good sailing locations, moved back to the area with my
young family nearly 5 years ago and became reacquainted with the joys and
peculiarities of Broads sailing.
Those of you who are fans of the Arthur Ransome
stories may have read some of the sequels to “Swallows and Amazons” including
“The Coot Club” and “The Big Six” which are both based on the Norfolk
Broads. The area is described extremely
accurately in the books and both the locations and the Traditional Broads
sailing cruisers are still easily recognisable today. The annual “3 Rivers Race” which is the focus
of my article actually starts from Horning village, the home of Ransome’s
Norfolk characters, and in fact the sailing club which organises the “3 Rivers
Race” is the very one where the twins in the book, nicknamed Port &
Starboard, raced their dinghy “Flash” with their father.
The Norfolk Broads themselves consist of about 125
miles of navigable Rivers and shallow lakes (called Broads) formed from flooded
medieval peat diggings and which today are a National Park and designated Site
of Special Scientific Interest as they form a wetland habitat unique in
Europe. With the picturesque landscape
dotted with the ruins of Windmills (or more accurately Windpumps) formerly used
to drain the marshland it is also a tourist destination with a large number of
hired motor cruisers plying the waters in the hands of novice mariners (making
for frequent interesting encounters!).
When I first moved back to
Norfolk, having spent many years sailing on the sea, my first priority was to
buy a small sailing cruiser so I could rediscover the joys of Broads
sailing. Broads sailing it has to be
said is an entirely different matter from sea sailing and rapid tacking and
dexterous close quarters boat handling are the order of the day. The first boat I bought was a little 17’
Seahawk, 2 berth, centreplate cruiser.
It was a delightful little boat to sail and easily manageable in the
confines of the Broads. However, it was
at this point that a friend of mine mentioned the annual “3 Rivers Race” which
was to become something of an obsession with me and was eventually directly
responsible for me becoming the proud owner of a Timpenny 670.
The “3 Rivers Race” itself
is the premier event in the Broads Sailing Calendar and has been run annually
for the last 43 years. It consists of a
race over about 50 miles (much more through the water with the large amount of
tacking involved) covering 3 different Broadland Rivers, The Bure, The Ant and
The Thurne. It requires you to lower and raise the mast 4 times to negotiate
bridges and you can tackle the course in any order you like so as to make best
use of wind and tide as long as you pass through all the checkpoints and start
and finish at Horning Sailing Club. The
snag is you have to complete the race within a 24 hour time limit to be classed
as a finisher. Any mono-hulled sailing
craft between 14 feet and 40 feet is eligible to enter (although the race is
“by invitation” and single handing is not allowed) and the entries range from
Enterprise dinghies to production grp cruisers like the Timpenny.
However, the race results
tend to be dominated by 3 extreme types of dinghies and the Traditional Broads
River Cruisers some of which are close to 100 years old. The extreme dinghies include two Norfolk specials,
the Norfolk Punt which is a development class originally based on a traditional
Norfolk duck shooting Gun Punt but now developed into a large high aspect ratio
fully battened sail double ended trapeze dinghy, and the Slipstream class a
large dinghy with 3 crew and twin trapezes. In recent years a couple of Thames
A-Raters have also been competing. The
remarkable A-Raters are even more extreme than the Norfolk classes and have
been developed over the last 100 years for sailing in the tree lined reaches of
the River Thames near London. At 26 feet
long and weighing 750lbs they carry an enormous amount of fully battened sail
on towering high- tech carbon masts and develop a phenomenal amount of power in
the merest breeze.
At the other end of the scale
are the Traditional Broads sailing cruisers.
Most of them of wooden construction, with shallow long keels, low
freeboard, intimidating bowsprits, large amounts of canvas usually with a gaff
rig and fitted with topsails and a lead counterbalanced mast mounted in a
tabernacle for fast passage through the bridges. Evolved over 100 years to be perfect for the
average Broadland conditions.
I remember as a youngster
some of the older boys at school saying they had crewed in the “3 Rivers Race”
and been suitably impressed but had not thought of actually taking part
myself. However, on purchasing my
Seahawk one of my sailing friends came out to sail with me and somehow the
topic came round to the “3 Rivers Race” and why didn’t we try it? Before I knew it I was seeking out the
organisers of the race and obtained one of the coveted “invitations” to
participate. As it happens it turned out
to be the 40th anniversary of the Race that year and they had a full
turnout of 140 yachts competing.
Somewhat intimidating especially on the very narrow stretch of river at
the start of the race. When a 35 foot
river cruiser with a 10 foot bowsprit is bearing down on you with hundreds of
square feet of canvas set you soon discover discretion is the better part of
valour!
Unfortunately the day of
the race dawned hot and nearly windless.
After 15 hours of frustratingly slow sailing we finally retired as we
drifted backwards on the tide at 3 o’clock in the morning when it was obvious we
couldn’t complete the course within the time limit. Oh well, next year!
The next year, again in the
Seahawk, it couldn’t have been more different.
It was blowing a full gale and we went out under sensible storm mainsail
and jib. We were flying along and were
4 hours ahead of our schedule after only 4 hours! Finishing well within the time limit was a
dead certainty and, as we were travelling at hull speed most of the time, we
might even get a good placing on handicap!
Unfortunately Sod’s law
kicked in and for the first time in the 41 year history of the race the
organisers decided to abandon the race!
Many (over canvassed) boats had been damaged, breaking bowsprits and
masts, boats were broaching out of control and hitting river banks. One large traditional broads cruiser even had
his bows pushed under water by the wind pressure in his sails as a large gust
hit while running downwind and actually sailed straight to the bottom of the
River and had to be salvaged later! The
worry was that if this continued on these confined waters in the dark
throughout the night someone would get seriously hurt.
The Race wasn’t going to
beat me, I had to finish at least once, even if I decide never to do it again
afterwards. I decided to buy a bigger, hopefully faster, boat for the next year
and an elderly Jaguar(Catalina) 22 (known in Australia as the Boomera 22?) in
need of renovation was purchased. Unfortunately without sailing it first as the
owner was abroad and I bought it through his broker to replace my faithful
Seahawk. It had lovely accommodation
with a lifting cabin top for added headroom and I thought I might even tempt
the family to sleep aboard occasionally. It did need lots of work though and
unfortunately because of this I’d still only sailed it a couple of times on the
Broad (lake) and never in the confines of the river by the time race day
approached.
On the ferry trip to the
race start, apart from still screwing fittings onto the boat, we found the
handling in the river left a lot to be desired.
The 150% genoa was not suited to these conditions and while she was
excellent once going on a reach or a run she was terrible tacking in light
winds especially as until way built up her bow kept bearing off uncontrollably
with no response to the rudder at all.
Race day dawned and, you’ve guessed it, light winds were the order of
the day again. We deliberately held back
at the start as we couldn’t manoeuvre easily or confidently in the crowds of
other boats. Even with the Genoa half reefed despite the light winds, to make
handling quicker at the race start, tacking was a nightmare. We only lasted 9 hours this time before my
crew had totally had enough and we retired again. I was deeply depressed having
had such high hopes of the Jaguar and having put so much time, and money, into
renovating her. I vowed in future I
would never buy a boat without actually sailing it first. The Jaguar immediately went up for sale and I
decided to get another sweet handling little Seahawk.
However, it was here that
fate took a hand. I searched the
internet for another Seahawk to buy and located an advert. The example in question looked pretty tatty
but the advert above it happened to be for a Timpenny 670 which caught my
eye. I’d seen some details of the
Timpenny a couple of years before when buying my first Seahawk but discounted
it as I didn’t personally know the class, they are pretty rare in England, and
the one paragraph summary of the class in an English yachting magazine showed
it with a dagger board and mentioned sparkling downwind performance but “poor”
windward ability, something you can’t live with when constantly beating up
narrow rivers on the Broads. However,
the Timpenny fell within my budget and seemed to have everything else I was
looking for - large mainsail, small self tacking jib, dinghy like handling, 4
berths. Could I live with a 4ft dagger
board on the shallow broads, and what about that windward performance? I resolved to find out more and came across
the Australian Timpenny Association web site.
Some enquiries soon resulted in very helpful advice being kindly given
by the Australian members which allayed all of my fears and they also advised
me that some boats had centreboards which would be better for the Broads as
they could kick back without damage if encountering the thick Norfolk mud.
My heart was now rapidly
taking over from my head. I ‘phoned the
brokers and got further details, could I go for a test sail. “Sorry the boat is ashore and owner lives away. His trailer was recently totally refurbished
so he doesn’t want to get it in salt water.
If you want to sail it you will have to pay £200 to have it craned in
and out”. £200 for a sail was too steep
for me but I decided to make the 200+ mile round trip to view it anyway. As I drove into the Brokers yard I could see
the Timpenny on a trailer in front of me.
I went to the office to ask to view it and, horror, a potential buyer
had got the keys and was already viewing it.
I waited patiently, heart in my mouth, until the potential buyer decided
he wanted to look at something bigger and then eagerly stepped aboard. She needed tidying up but mostly cosmetic
things and she seemed sound and better built than the Jaguar. I noted that most of the “owner improvements”
that the Jaguar owners club recommended to improve the integrity of the Jaguar
had already been incorporated in the design of the Timpenny and that there was
very little evidence of stress cracking of the fibreglass etc. I looked at the keel and lo and behold, a
centreboard – Perfect!
I know I had vowed never to
buy a boat without sailing it again but instinct just told me that everything
about the Timpenny was right. There and
then I went back to the Brokers office and made an offer, he said he’d let me
know during the week. I was impatient, I
asked if he could ‘phone the owner now while I waited and waived my cheque book
under his nose. He ‘phoned the owner, we
haggled a little and 10 minutes later I was the proud owner of Timpenny No. 320
“Ondine” (a mystical immortal water nymph) at a very reasonable price.
One week later I was back
in the brokers yard, tow bar newly fitted, and trailed her back to
Norfolk. I launched her at a local
boatyard and motored with the mast down the mile to my mooring. During the next week I raised the mast,
rigged her up and checked her over. A
few jobs needed doing here and there but seemingly nothing of any note. A friend at work offered to crew for me
(although he’d never sailed before!) on the so we arranged to meet the
following Saturday morning.
Saturday dawned a lovely sunny
day but with very little wind. I didn’t
mind that for once as it would mean a nice slow stress free start to get used
to the boat. We hoisted the sails and
motored down the ¾ mile narrow dyke onto Hickling Broad (the biggest of the
Norfolk lakes and my home water). Once
on the open water we stopped the motor and even though the wind was very light
“Ondine” began to sail albeit only recording half a knot on the log. Nevertheless she responded to every twitch of
the rudder, went about without ever getting into irons and the self tacking jib
was working perfectly. This boded very
well and the grin across my face would have put a Cheshire cat to shame. The
boat was equipped with a cruising chute and although I had never used one of
these before, and I had a novice crew, the wind was so light I decided to try
it. The chute went up and filled
beautifully, looking very photogenic in red, white and blue and we cheered as
we hit the dizzy heights of 1.1 knot, a new record speed for the day! Around lunchtime a sea breeze piped up and
now we really started to move. The boat
seemed incredibly stiff in a breeze, far stiffer than first impressions when
stepping aboard would have led me to believe.
The helm remained incredibly light, so light that at one point I looked
over the transom to check the rudder blade hadn’t fallen off! She handled perfectly, as responsive as a
dinghy, pointed as high as anything else on the Broad and was a sheer delight
as she creamed along at 6 knots. I was
in love with the boat already and knew I had made a good choice this time! I had time to sail her a few more times
including going out single handed, sampling all types of weather conditions,
before the rapidly nearing end of the season and I was delighted with every
aspect of the boat. My regret at selling
my old Seahawk finally left me and I decided it was worth spending effort and
money on the Timpenny over the winter.
During the winter I added
some new fittings, high quality Harken Windward Sheeting Traveller car and
fittings, new Harken cam cleats for the jib traveller adjustments, Harken
ratchet block for the mainsheet, improved kicking strap, replaced some of the
running rigging, replaced the centreboard lifting strop and blocks and stripped
most of the interior out ready for a cosmetic renovation. I also replaced the navigation light bulbs
with home made LED units reducing the current consumption from around 2 amps to
about 100ma. All interior lights are
being changed to LEDs as well. This in
turn allowed me to replace my electric start, generator equipped (I can now go
a season without recharging the battery!) Mercury 7.5 sail power with a much
lighter, more economical Yamaha 2.5hp 4 stroke (perfectly adequate for Broads
use) which, when coupled with the removal of the two large metal fuel cans,
saved at least 50lbs in weight off the transom.
I also fitted two small stays from the cabin top to the mast about 3
feet above the desk to prevent the mast from falling off sideways when lowering
and raising. I had intended to fit an
A-frame, as is standard Broads practice, to allow stress free single-handed
mast lowering but, for reasons that will become clear below, ran out of time
before the Race. In any case the
Timpenny mast was very light and easy to drop with 2 people aboard.
Then horror of horrors, 3
weeks before launch date I discovered a major problem. Despite covering the boat over for the winter
I kept finding water on the cabin floor and couldn’t work out where it was
getting in. A previous owner had fitted
a through hull transducer at the rear end of the centreboard case and I had in
any case decided to remove it as it was no longer used and was a nuisance where
it was. I easily cracked the transducer
tube with a chisel to remove it and as soon as it fell out a couple of gallons
of water proceeded to pour out of the interior of my hull like a tap had been
turned on! My heart sank into my boots,
the boat had been ashore for 4 months!
On investigation it seems that the centreboard pivot pin support plates
had been removed at some time and not correctly refitted or sealed allowing
water to get through the mounting plate screw holes and fill up the void in the
centreboard casing. In addition the
transducer had been fitted so close to rear of the centreboard case that it had
breached it near the bottom. Coupled
with this the transducer itself appeared to have been bodged in with epoxy but
no sealant so that water had been seeping in via this as well and percolating
between the transducer hole and the interior of the centreboard case which had
left some of the fibreglass matting bonding in the fixed ballast very wet and
soggy (although fortunately the hull skin seemed perfectly sound). On lifting the centreboard support plate out
I also discovered, which was very lucky as it would have been dangerous and
potentially expensive had it failed underway, that the centreboard pivot pin
had been eaten away by electrolytic action and snapped off so the centreboard
was actually being supported only by the weld of the pin on one side.
A frantic 3 weeks followed,
often working in the dark with torches, trying to dry out the hull sufficiently
to seal the transducer hole and to get the centreboard pin repaired and
re-welded. I also applied fibreglass and
epoxy inside the centreboard case and filled all the old holes to ensure there
could be no leaks. Finally with a great
deal of effort and fiddling we managed to replace the centreboard and fitted
new pivot plate fixing screws with copious amounts of sealant around them. To enable a check to be kept on the internal
void of the centreboard case, and to allow any remaining moisture to evaporate,
I fitted screw in dinghy drain plugs at a couple of locations. At this point I’d like to publicly thank my
friend, and oft times crew, Ian Richardson for the tremendous amount of time
and effort, well beyond the call of duty, he put in to helping me fix the boat
over that period. Without his help I
would never have got the boat ready in time for the launch day when the mobile
crane visits our yard to launch all of the boats.
As it was the boat was
physically sound again but some of the purely cosmetic and fine tuning jobs I
had intended to do had not been finished (but as I had stripped out the
interior this meant the boat was lighter anyway!). I also didn’t have time to complete, fit and
test the wooden block to seal and streamline the centreboard slot when underway
or to rebuild my rudder as per advice given by Association members.
Sharp eyed Association members
may notice from the photographs on the web pages that one or two things on my
Timpenny don’t yet fully comply with the class rules. I have a cruising chute not the class
spinnaker. The jib was purchased by the
previous owner and is only one year old.
Unfortunately it’s an off the peg version from “sails.direct.com” and
it’s shape and geometry is not quite right so it doesn’t set perfectly, this in
particular is an area that I need to sort out as it definitely reduces
performance. The jib traveller track is
curved to match the radius of the jib foot and is supported several inches
above the cabin roof. The mainsail
itself is the original, date stamped 1979, so although acceptable performance
could obviously be improved with a newer sail.
However, the important
thing is that once launched the boat was now water tight and sailed just as
well as I remembered from the previous season.
Unlike the Jaguar, we were confident of it’s handling abilities, and the
boat was well tried prior to the 2003 “3 Rivers Race”.
And so, very quickly, the
week of the race arrived. Ian and
another friend from work agreed to crew for me on the Friday to ferry the boat
from Hickling to Horning. It was a delightful
sail, sun shining, reasonable breeze and the boat handling perfectly and
sailing well. We negotiated the bridge
at Potter Heigham without a hitch. Not a
single thing broke or needed to be corrected on the way down. Hopes were high that finally my race duck
would be broken.
The morning of the 43rd
annual “3 Rivers Race” dawned bright and sunny.
Unfortunately it was with dismay that I listened to the weather
forecast, hot dry weather and very light winds again (this is England for
goodness sake, where is the wind and rain!).
Not the conditions I was hoping for as we all know the Timpenny likes
nothing better than a blow. Overnight I
had produced a centre board slot sealing block, as recommended by the
Australian members, but we decided against fitting it at this late stage in
case we ended up jamming the centreboard at a critical moment.
The “3 Rivers Race” starts
in sections with Groups of boats in different classes leaving at 5 minute
intervals over a period of 1 hour to try to ease the initial congestion on the
river. This year there was a lower than
average turnout with “only” 90 boats taking part. Also this year the smaller “plastic” boats,
including us, were set to leave last of all (so we didn’t get in the way of the
faster boats!). This is something of a
disadvantage as we lose an extra hour of daylight (and usually wind) and it
also shortened the tidal gate for getting to the Lower Bure buoy.
So it was that at 12:55
hours on Saturday 31st May 2003 our 5 minute gun sounded and I
headed for the start line in company with 12 other “plastic” cruisers of
assorted classes. There is one other grp
cruiser that regularly enters, a very smart and slippery modern Parker 21, that
we have always looked at enviously in the past as he has glided past us and
headed into the distance and we use him as our personal benchmark. My personal target was to be able to keep
reasonably close to him.
Unlike last year we were
confident, because of the quick handling of the Timpenny, in vying with the
other boats for a good start.
Miraculously we crossed the start line first although unfortunately,
because we had to move out of the way for a Hired traditional river cruiser who
had missed his start 5 minutes earlier, at the downwind end which let some of
the other boats sail over us at the start of the long slow beat up the first
stretch of the race which is always notoriously slow being very narrow, tree
lined and of course with what little wind there was disrupted by the 80 boats
ahead of us. We were struggling for the
first section in the very light wind, although that Parker 21 was already well
behind us, and we were by this time about midway down in our group (but not
last for once!).
After about an hour and a
half of frustratingly slow beating we got to the first wider stretch of open
river and by this time the heat had induced a sea breeze reaching the dizzy
heights of 10 knots in the gusts. Never
the less this was enough to get Ondine in the groove and now we started going
well, gradually catching up then starting to pick off the other boats ahead of
us in our group. The Parker 21 by this
time was already too far behind for us to see and we never saw him again for
the rest of our race, objective number 1 more than achieved!
The junction to the River Ant came up ahead, a short
leg of only a mile to a turning point and a mile back again but on the
narrowest river of the race, barely more than a boat length wide in
places. Last year in the Jaguar we had a
terrible time here unable to beat effectively and getting stuck in the reeds
several times due to lack of manoeuvrability.
Even at one time having to gybe back on ourselves 3 times to get enough
speed to go about! No such trouble this
year, although we did touch bottom a couple of times but with the fast lifting
centreplate this was no problem. Ondine
surged down the river going from run to beat and back again as the narrow river
twisted and turned. Pointing well and just able to pinch high enough on several
occasions to avoid putting in another tack. As the turning point came up we
could see the second and third boats in our group just ahead of us. We took 3rd place within a few
feet of the turning point, 2nd
place was ours only 4 or 5 short tacks
later (the self tacking jib and the superb manoeuvrability of the Timpenny
really helped here).
Now there was only the leader of our group ahead of
us but she was a good half mile ahead having had much superior light wind
performance to us in the earlier slower section. Having rejoined the main River Bure within
only 200 yards it was time to branch off again to the next check point on South
Walsham Broad (a small lake) where we had to round a buoy (dropping a plastic
tally tag into the bucket planted atop it) and come back to the River Bure
again. Unfortunately to get to the Broad
you have to negotiate another mile long narrow, winding dyke surrounded by tall
trees
Again though progress was slower, unlike last year,
we had no real problems and as we reached the entrance to the Broad we could
see the leader of our group coming back towards us having already rounded the buoy. The Broad was like a breath of fresh air,
literally, as we picked up the breeze again and surged round the mark
successfully dropping our tally tag in the bucket and shouting our race number
to the marshall in the guard boat checking the competitors progress. A fast run back towards the dyke with the
leader still in sight as she had slowed right down now as they got to the dead
air. We decided to pop open the cruising
chute even though we knew we could only use it for a couple of minutes before
we reached the dyke and the wind funnelled round the trees turning a run back
into a beat again. Even so this gave us
a little extra drive to gain more on the leader. Then we hit the dead air again but this time
within 25 yards of the leader. We were
very slowly gaining on them when they tried to cut a corner and went aground
(only fair, after all we’d been stuck aground for about 2 minutes earlier on in
the race when I handed the helm over to my crew, who is a very good light airs
helmsman, saying “see what you can do with her” only for him to put her hard
aground in thick mud deep within 30 seconds!).
The few seconds they were aground was enough and we went past to take
the leading position on the water in our group.
A first for me and what ever happened from now on in no one could take
that feeling of satisfaction away!
Soon we were back to the main river and that lovely
sea breeze again. The previous leader
was on our tail but we were maintaining our lead and heading for the 3rd
River, the River Thurne. Now came the
decision point, to turn right and head towards the sea and the Lower Bure mark
where the tide runs really strongly or to turn left and head for Hickling
Broad. My original plan was to go
seawards but time was getting on and this year they had made that leg longer
than normal. Because we had been in the
last start we might not now be able to reach the turning point before the tide
turned, especially as we had to negotiate a bridge on the way, and if the wind
dropped in the early evening as it normally did we might be in real
trouble. We dithered, we took one tack
towards the Sea then reckoned we wouldn’t make it so gybed round and headed the
other way. Cruising chute now up (red,
white and blue, very photogenic in the sunlight but no one with a camera to
take a picture of us!) we had a glorious run up to Potter Heigham Bridge the
lowest bridge on the Broads with barely 6’6” at the centre of the arch. Rig down, dropped the mast, paddled against
the remaining tide through the ancient bridge then paddled further 100 yard
under the new road Bridge, mast back up, re-rigged, sailing again, total time
22 minutes, not too bad (but much slower than the traditional broads boats
who’s masts pivot in a tabernacle with a large lead counterbalance and the
brave ones sail straight at the bridge, drop the mast at the last moment, glide
through under there own momentum then re-hoist immediately. Superb to see when they get it right, very
amusing for the spectators lining the bridge when they don’t!).
Very frustrating now, remainder of the ebb tide is
still against us, another set of trees in front of us hiding the wind. Sail past the same riverside bungalow about 4
times as we lose ground every time we try to go about on the windless side of
the river. Occupants of the bungalow
think it is very amusing and keep trying to offer us refreshments as we go
past! Small gust comes through, just
enough to get past the trees now we are moving again. Turn into candle dyke leading to Hickling
Broad, my home water and the Northern most point of the course. Cruising chute back up, amazing 21:00 hours
and the wind is still here. 5mph reading
on the log as we cross Hickling Broad and we are going well. Drop the chute and round the turning point
dropping another tally tag in the bucket on top of the buoy. The Marshalls ask us which parts of the
course we have done and we tell them everything but the lower Bure Buoy then
back to the finish. They remark that we
are doing well to have got here in the time and ask what class of boat she
is. Glowing with pride we beat back
across the Broad. 22:00 and still 10mph
wind in the gusts although it’s starting to get very dark now and there is no moon
tonight. We congratulate each other, we
are going to do it this time, the wind hasn’t dropped as it normally does by
about 21:00. It must be set in for the
night, we are going to complete the course easily within the time limit at this
rate.
22:45, we spoke too soon. We are heading seawards again but the weak
flood tide has now turned against us.
Worse, the wind is little more than a breath. We have reached another very narrow stretch
between trees. We have tried to beat
through them for the last 30 minutes and are exactly 20 feet further back than
when we started. We acknowledge that it
is unlikely that the wind will come back until dawn. By the time we get to the Lower Bure buoy
the tide will be changing against us yet again (Ebbs for 7 hours and floods for
5 hours on the Broads). There is no way
then that we could complete the rest of the course within the time limit
especially as the last leg is back through the slowest very tree lined section
towards Horning. My crew says he has had
enough as it’s definitely stopped being fun now and is just extremely frustrating. I reluctantly have to agree (maybe helped
somewhat by the fact that we are less than 30 minutes under motor from my
mooring rather than the 4 hours away we will
be if we complete the race, and that after sailing for another 13 hours
first!).
We watch a couple of the traditional Broads River
Cruisers go through now. There really
isn’t any substitute for huge sail area in these conditions but even with their
hundreds of square feet of sail up above the trees they are struggling now,
barely making way against the tide through the trees. Engine on, find the nearest guard boat to
register our retirement, rather subdued boat heading back to the mooring.
Still we console ourselves, we were first across the
start line, we did lead our group on the water and for the first time ever we
left that Parker 21 in our wake, pretty good compared to previous years! And
still plenty of scope for more fine tuning yet.
I didn’t however stop me from agonising for days after about whether we
should have tried to carry on or whether we should have taken a different route
and if we had would we have finished?
One of my friends crews on one of the fastest traditional River Cruisers
(with electrically operated mast lowering!) with a mammoth amount of sail and
they still took over 15 hours to complete the race so perhaps our decision to
retire was the right one after all.
Haven’t seen the full race results yet, it usually
takes several weeks for the handicaps to be calculated and result sheets
printed and posted out, but I have heard that about 60% of the starters retired
of failed to reach the finish in time this year so that makes me feel better
about it. The extreme dinghies however
managed to finish the race still in daylight on Saturday evening so didn’t
suffer from the loss of wind overnight!
Not unexpectedly one of the Thames A-Raters was the first boat home
incredibly managing to complete the course in only 8hrs 54 minutes – now that
is performance (and makes the race seem a lot less of a marathon event!)!
Shall we do the race again, what about doing it in a
fast dinghy next time instead, has anyone ever put a bigger rig on a Timpenny
(I’d seriously like to hear if anyone has)?
We can’t let the race beat us so we will have to try again next year
(and the next until we finally finish it and get one of those finishers plaques
to fit on the boat!). The annoying thing
is that the week after the race it was reefing weather almost everyday and the
wind stayed with us all night!
In a moment of madness last week I bought an old
International 505 trapeze dinghy to see what the performance would be like on
the rivers! Truth be told having bought
it I’m too scared to sail it now!! On top of that my 3 Rivers crew has just
emailed me to say he capsized his Contender single handed dinghy at the weekend
and has broken his arm (obviously took the phrase singlehander too literally!)
so he wont be able to sail again for weeks.
Last weekend I spent the night on the Timpenny
anchored in the peace and tranquillity of Hickling Broad. I woke up at dawn to one of those idyllic
mornings with a glorious sunrise and a light mist gently drifting over the
water. Watched a Marsh Harrier
quartering the reed beds hunting for his breakfast and waited until the wind
filled in a little. I then spent a
wonderful couple of hours in the sunshine under a bright blue sky and
surrounded by wildlife sailing single handed.
Now I remember why I love my Timpenny. For most of my sailing she’s
ideal and when sailing for pleasure I would be moored up somewhere with a cool
drink in my hand or motoring in the conditions we try to sail in sometimes in
the 3 Rivers Race. In a force 5 or 6 I’d
confidently pit her against anything!
Mind you, I can just picture that 35’ mast and fully battened high roach
Mylar sail on her, anyone want to buy a 505?!