August 21, 2023-I can sail again
wingssail images fredrick roswold
I can sail again
I can sail again. I know now. For the last three months I have been afraid of how it would feel to sail Wings without Judy,
so I avoided that.
The boat sat in the slip, unused, since coming back from Yelapa, in April
I thought about sailing single handedly but I had said to her many times in the last 38 years;
“I have no interest in sailing singlehandedly”.
Of course I meant, without her.
But Judy is gone.
Now I have decided that if I sail it will not be single handedly, but only with another. It is the closest thing I can do to honor that promise I made.
Today I took the first step.
A young new friend, Salome, joined me and we sailed Wings.
It was a good day of sailing. We put up the sails and sheeted in and the water was flat and the wind gentle and Wings sailed well. Salome had the helm but we traded off some. We did some tacks.
Up by Punta Montoga we put up the spinnaker, and we jibed, not expertly but well enough. On the second jibe we got the sail hooked under the anchor, and we tore it. But it wasn’t bad and we continued. When we took it down we got it in the water but it was OK.
We came in after a couple of hours and sailed into the marina under main as I always do, and when the motor would not start properly, I got it going.
After docking we folded the main and put the air conditioner on board then went below. I had a beer and Salome had a coke. Salome asked about Judy and I told her the story, what happened, etc. She listened and that touched me. I felt a connection, the first in a long time.
After Salome left I poured some Laphroaig scotch. I can sail again. I know now.
In the fall I believe most of my crew will rejoin and we will find someone to take Judy’s job. While it will be painful and we will miss Judy, we will go on.
Fred, Sv Wings, La Cruz Mexico.
Click here for more images
Labels: Mexico, sailing, Salome
August 2, 2023-Remembering the day New York Yacht Club's Boat Broke
wingssail images fredrick roswold
Young America Breaking
I am going through a photo scanning project and right now I am working with a bunch of images from the America's Cup which I made when I covered that event in 2000 and 2003. On one rough day I witnessed the amazing destruction of New York Yacht club's boat Young America and I wrote a story (see below).
I was on the photo boat loitering at the weather mark during the Luis Vitton Challenge waiting for the last boats to round. It was a grey day and rough and most of the photographers were grumbling about the poor conditions for photos as they focused their lenses on the nearest boat, Young Australia.
I, however, was optimistic at the chance for some good shots; the waves were big and the boats coming upwind were bashing into it. I swung around to zoom in on Young America, New York's entry, just coming towards us and just as my shutter started to clatter on high speed continuous Young America hit a big wave and broke its back. I was the only photographer to get that shot.
We thought the boat was going to sink and we raced over to get close, and pick up crew if need be, but Young America did not sink and was towed back to the base, broken but still floating.
Read the whole story here and after that I will describe why I think the boat broke, with photos, an opinion which got me in hot water with Farr Intenational (more on that later).
Here is the story I submitted after that incident:
“What
has yachting come to? A bunch of wimps sailing fragile vessels that are
constantly breaking apart who will not race in winds above 18 knots. I am really upset.” (A comment from a Seattle
sailor in response to the racing limits for America’s Cup boats.) We love
to read the stories and see the videos of the Whitbread racers tearing through
the Southern Ocean in gales of wind with bow waves shooting high, sailors
huddled in their foulies and waves sweeping back across the decks. We all
remember Freemantle and those terrific scenes of leaping boats and amazing seamanship. So why are these guys in 1999 such wimps and why are the new boats so
unsuitable for conditions we might shrug off on a typical Gran Prix? Actually,
it’s about winning, and, as with everything with the America’s Cup, its about
money. To win
the America’s Cup a boat has to sail in upwards of 60 races. Of course the boat
has be together all the way to the end to win but statistically most of the
races will be in moderate conditions with winds under 20 and flat water. In
those conditions a light boat will be faster than a heavy boat. The IACC
(International America’s Cup Class) rule contains specifications about skin and
core thicknesses but section 18.3 states, “It is envisioned that internal
framing will be required to support the induced sailing loads...[but] it is
left to the owner to ensure that the yacht is adequately framed.” The teams
have two basic choices: Build light, go fast, take a chance on breaking, or
build heavy, ensure that you won’t break, and virtually guarantee that you will
be eliminated early on. So the obvious choice if you want a chance to win is to
cut it fine. Push the limits, take the chance. Some of the light boats might
break, but one of them will win. No yacht “built to take it” would win. What
about the boats that have resulted from this design decision? They are pushed
to the limit, and beyond it. The hulls are light, the sails are huge, the
ballast is deep and heavy, the hulls are long and lean. The forces are
tremendous. Several of the skippers, including Paul Cayard and Peter Gilmore
have made comments about the power of these boats and the strains they have to
withstand. Cayard states, “At 55,000lb, [the IACC boat] has a tendency to be
engulfed by the seas-quite an experience as you feel it shuddering as it
crashes through the waves.“ Spectators, even at a distance of several hundred
yards hear the creaking and groaning of the boats in heavy seas. And the rigs?
They don’t even have backstays, depending on runners and the mainsails
themselves to keep the rig up. These boats are extreme. Are the sailors really wimps? Not a chance.
The boats are scary and they are undermanned. When the winds get up into the
20’s there are not enough crew to trim the sails as fast as the skippers want
to turn, or as fast as the competition demands. Peter Gilmore, a veteran 12
meter sailor, said that compared to those older boats, these were undermanned.
That’s interesting since they had 11 sailors on the 12 meter boats and these
new boats carry 16. In 20 knots of wind there is 30 apparent across the
foredeck, eight feet wide, slanting, no lifelines, leaping 10 or 15 feet in the
air on the waves. Would you want to wrestle a 1500 square foot genoa on that
foredeck? But they do it, and they go up the rigs in any conditions, and the
sailors are clearly willing. So then
why don’t they just take their chances and sail in whatever weather presents
itself? I think this is where the money comes into play. These syndicates have
all (even the poorest teams) spent a lot of money to get here, and they all
want to win. No one wants to see their $4 million yacht broken or lost, and
they don’t even want to lose one race through an equipment failure. New York
was lucky, they have a second boat waiting in the wings. But what about America
True or Spain? One boat, no second chances. Then there are the personal stakes.
There have been a lot of sacrifices made to get here, a lot of reputations and
careers on the line. No one wants to throw it all away being macho. So in the
end there is tremendous pressure to save the boats for the finals. Sitting at
home watching it on TV, I’d like to see them battle it out with huge waves.
However, if it was my $4 million, I’d probably be thinking about reducing the
risk too.
I was
watching Young America when it broke. The conditions were bad. The wind was only 20 but this is the ocean and it had
been blowing for days from the NE. A good swell had built up. The tide was
running out of the Harbor and the waves were short and steep, the big ones were
six to ten feet high. In fact it was too rough for us on the photo boat, a 45
foot aluminum hulled, 750hp inflatable. We almost didn’t make the run back up
to the top mark, too punishing for just a few shots of two boats rounding, and
the light was bad for photos anyhow, gray and dark. None of the other photo
boats went up there, but we did. Nippon and Young America were engaged in a
terrific tactical duel, both yachts approaching the mark on port tack, just
below the layline, with Young America leeward and ahead by a length or two.
Timing of the tack was critical. There was a big set of waves but Young America
couldn’t wait for flat water. As Baird said later, “We needed to tack for the
mark”. The yacht disappeared behind one big wave, then came off the top of the
next wave right as the bow passed through the wind. I shot off a couple of
frames as the boat dropped into the trough, and as I looked through the
viewfinder I saw a huge splash and the boat broke before my very eyes. The crew
looked stunned. I yelled at the driver of our boat. “Get us over there fast,
right now!” We expected Young America to sink, it looked that way. No one saw
Nippon round the mark, all of our eyes were on the disaster unfolding on Young America.
In
seconds we were along side, Chaos. Crew leaping in the water, the mast swinging
wildly, the cracking sound of carbon fibre like shotguns as the hull continued
to fold. But then it stabilized, and it was clear that it wasn’t sinking, yet.
The crew cautiously went back on board and began passing off sailbags. They
took down the sails and rigged a tow line. Within a few minutes there were
pumps on board and airbags in the hull. Amazing stuff to see, I’m am lucky I
was there.
wingssail images fredrick roswold
Comparison and details
Reinforcement on the New York's Other Boat
So why did the boat break? None of the other boats broke. I believe a design decision which was unique to these boats, was made which contributed to the failure. On a very choppy day on the Hauraki Gulf New York’s USA-53 came off a wave and as it crashed down onto the next one it broke just aft of the mast. The first shows the boat breaking as it landed on that wave. The upward impact on the bow and the downward force of the mast and the keel cased the side decks to break and the hull folded. Fortunately the hull skins stayed intact and the boat did not sink. The damage can be seen in collage, Photo 3 and 4.
Since no other boat broke in the way were there any unusual design or construction characteristics of USA-53 that may have contributed to this failure? The answer is yes and I wrote about it at the time.
The Farr organization scoffed at my assessment, rightfully noting that I was neither a marine architect nor possessed knowledge of the engineering which went into the boat, however there were some striking and obvious differences between USA53 and other AC boats of the time. Other AC boats in Auckland that year had cockpits which formed a box with a forward bulkhead and side walls connecting the cockpit floor with the deck, adding stiffness to the midships area of the hull. USA53 had none of this structure. There were no sidewalls to the cockpit and no forward bulkhead. This can be seen in Photo 1. Further, the cockpit of USA53 ran farther forward, nearly to the mast, leaving much less deck between the cockpit and the mast. For a comparison the walls and bulkhead of La Defi can be seen in Photo 2. Imagine a cardboard tube, like a paper towel tube, with half of the top cut out. Then press down on the middle while holding the ends up. It will break right in exactly the same way as USA 53. Now imagine the same cardboard tube with a smaller cut out and a box structure taped inside. It will not break as easily.
That is not to say that this is the cause. Farr organization criticized the team for not reporting cracks which had previously appeared in this area and also proposed that the lamination of the hull and deck were in adequate.
But the end result of this was that the crew were spooked and subsequently treated the back-up boat USA58, with trepidation, leading to some speculate that they didn’t push as hard. They lost the Louis Vuitton series.
https://www.nytimes.com/2000/01/28/sports/yacht-racing-young-america-designer-ends-silence-on-mishap.html
Labels: America's Cup, New York Yacht Club, New Zealand, sailing, Young America
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