The scheduled Corsair Class Champ / Pointscore race this Sunday has been postponed. There will be no racing at Fingal. The proposed rescheduled Corsair Class Champ/Pointscore race date is Sunday 29 March (which was the Chindy Challenge Race date).
44th Corsair National Titles
The reason for the change is that have 4 Corsairs and 12 members heading down to Budgewoi for the National Titles this weekend! We wish them all the best – expecting lots of tales to tell on their return and maybe even a trophy!
Farewell to a piece of TVSC History – 46 Fingal rd
Bill’s back yard with Boats floating where they shouldn’t!
The Corsair convoy will be departing this Thursday at 3pm NSW from “Bill’s Place” 46 Fingal Rd which is also the farewell moment to what has been the TVSC “Annex” since 2011. In the early years, this is where the after race BBQs were held and where many of us came to get our boats repaired or rigging explained or just for a general chat about boats; all the club equipment was stored in Bill’s sunroom until we got our first “club house” (an enclosed box trailer, also stored at No 46), the back yard has also been home to the club safety boats and then a sabot fleet took over the shed which kick started our juniors squad; followed by untold numbers of Corsairs and other boats made easily available for members to use.
Sabot loading was all part of running Juniors then.
Without this storage and work/meeting space the club would not be what it is today. The Commodore closes the door for the last time this Thursday join him and the Corsair convoy at 3 pm to raise a glass to the end of a TVSC chapter .. and the start of the next one… a real club house? and to give the Corsairs a big send off.
The Tweed
Valley Sailing club hosted the first race of the year on Sunday at Fingal Head,
with a very competitive fleet turning up, and some crew shortening their
holidays to compete.
The main
event today was the 3rd heat of the NS14 class championship with 5
top boats competing, and the series wide open; while a reduced fleet of 3
Lasers contested the single handers yardstick championship, and 2 Corsairs
joined the fleet for heat 6 of the summer handicap point score.
With the
championship tied after 2 races, the top boats were keen to score good results.
Sailing
conditions were good, but challenging with some big wind shifts and a strong
Flooding tide lining up with a Northerly breeze forcing crews to work hard to
get up the 3 x one mile long windward legs. It was a very hot day and the occasional
splash from the Tweed River was very welcomed.
Taking the
bullet in the Summer Pointscore Handicap series, Kate Yeomans in her Laser
“Bluey” sailed very well, as she usually does, and took full advantage of the
wind & tide situation.
Matt looks back…at the rest of the fleet.
In the
Championship Series, making sure of it and getting the bullet, NS14 “Impulsive
Max”, sailed by a determined Matt Andrews and Igor Prada, easily outpaced the fleet finishing 3 minutes
ahead of 2nd Placed “Flight 24”(Adam Hurt & Tom Busbridge),
while 3rd placed ”On & Off” (Dave Robinson & Hugh Robinson)
getting home 1 minute ahead of Pura Vida (Robert Preston & Kynan Luescher).
Two races
remain in the Class Championship and Impulsive Max now leads the series with
Flight 24 moving back to second.
Robert and Kynan on Pura Vida
Meanwhile
in the Single Handers race, Laser Sailor, Kate Yeomans on “Bluey”, was initially
challenged by Laser Grand Master Gary McCrohan until Gary decided it was too
hot and headed for a Bar somewhere; anywhere that had cold beer. Kate finished first
in this division and only a minute behind the first NS14.
Also in a
single hander today was Corsair Class Champion Monique Smith, scoring 2nd
place in a Laser, and she probably really enjoyed beating all the Corsairs.
Keenas crew
TVSC’s
Corsair Fleet were sailing today finalizing preparations and team work to
compete in the Corsair Class Australia Championships, being held in Budgeowoi
on the 1st and 2nd of February.
Sailing
conditions on the Tweed were very pleasant and all crews enjoyed the afternoon
sailing.
The Next
Race at Fingal Head will be on the 16th of February. This will be
heat 4 of the NS14 Championship and Single Handers Yardstick Championship.
Adults and Juniors are welcome to come down and
crew on a boat. No experience is necessary and you will learn to sail for free!!
Last Sunday the Tweed Valley
Sailing Club hosted its penultimate race for the year, Race 5 of the summer
Pointscore Series and heat 3 of the Corsair Class Championship.
11 boats competed including five
“3 handed” Corsairs, joined by a mixed fleet , an NS14, a Laser, a Int.470 a
Hobie 16 and 2 X3’s
Conditions were variable; wind
SE 16 to 24 knots, and an ebbing tide combined made for long beats to windward,
favouring the NS14s but hard work for the Corsairs.
Fastest by a long way, Dave
Chester and Sid Willis on Hobie 16 “Sledder”, lapped most of the fleet,
redeeming Dave for the day he was beaten by a Corsair.
NS14 On & Off Dave & Cooper Robinson , first mono hull finishers
First mono hull to finish
today, 20 minutes behind the Hobie, NS14 “On & Off”, sailed by father/son
team Dave and Cooper Robinson. These
guys won the start and established a strong early lead, getting home first and
beating the first Corsair by nine minutes.
Second to finish, one minute
astern was Laser “Siesta” sailed by “Great Grand Master” Gary McCrohan. Gary
always sails well in these conditions and was 7 minutes ahead of the first
Corsair.
The big race today was the 3rd
heat of the Northern Rivers Corsair Championship, contested by 5 boats and 15
crew.
Student Doctors, Alicia Szwalski and Sophie Todd sailed with Commodore Bill Fenelon on Corsair “Minnow”
Current champion crew “Team Swell Lady” Monique Smith, Matt Andrews & Deb Flannery, had to win today, to retain their title, but needed to enlist a “ring in” boat and 3rd crew, as Monique was away and her boat is still being repaired from damage suffered while sailing on the Clarence River. Matt Andrews took the helm of “Fine Cotton” with Courtney Tiller taking the 3rd seat. All went to plan; Team Swell Lady got the points for 1st place, wrapping up the championship for the 4th year in a row! (Aren’t there two more races yet to go and results are tied between Keenas and Swell Lady? – ed)
Second place was hard fought out by “Keenas” (Mark Reynolds, Marg Walgers & Harriet Raleigh) and “Nimbis” (Scott Jones, Deb Jones & Lex Branch). In the end “Nimbis” got the points, getting home 4 minutes behind Swell Lady and 6 minutes ahead of Keenas.
Student Doctors filling the ranks in the Corsairs!
L to R Courtney Tiller, Sophie Todd, Manisha Siriwardena, & Alicia Szwalski
Racing was close throughout
the fleet up until the final lap, and the battle to avoid last place was also
hard fought; positions at the rear changed continually throughout the afternoon
but in the end, Team “Fairlight” (Alison Blatcher, Rachael O’Hagan & Manisha Siriwardena) got home 2 minutes ahead of Team
“Minnow”(Bill Fenelon, Ali Szwalski & Sophie Todd).
A stand out performance on the
river today came from the clubs International 470 “La Spina”. Sailed by Gunner
Scholtz, Leyla Scholtz and Tom Busbridge. Team 470 finished just behind the 2nd
Corsair, scoring its’ best result with the club.
This season, Murwillumbah
Student doctors discovered sailing and just can’t stay away. We love having
them as part of the club and we couldn’t get more enthusiastic sailors. This
week they brought more fellow students to join the sailing ranks – travelling
from Mudgee to have a break from the drought.
4 of the 5 Corsairs
competing in the class championship this week had doctors on board. Courtney Tiller from Murwillumbah hospital
was thrilled to be on the winning boat. Alicia Szwalski and Sophie Todd sailed
with Commodore Bill Fenelon, Harriet Raleigh based in Grafton sailed on 3rd
placed Corsair Keenas and Manisha Siriwardena had
her taste of dinghy sailing with Alison Blatcher on Corsair Fairlight.
Student Doctor Manisha Siriwardena & Rachael O’Hagan on Corsair “Fairlight”
We look forward to
welcoming them all back after their summer break for another 6 months of fun on
the river.
Next Sunday the sailing club will conduct its
last event of the year, 3 short course sprint races, starting early at 10am
from Fingal Head
Strong gusty conditions
challenged sailors contesting heat 4 of the Tweed Sailing Clubs’ Summer
Pointscore Series. Winds increased rapidly after the start with a strong ebbing
tide raising choppy conditions. Many boats capsized or had an early retirement.
Today’s fleet of 11 boats
included 5 single handers, 6 two handers, & 3 Corsairs sailing 4 handed. Two
juniors’ teams competed, both sailing Flying Ants.
Carnage began early with many
capsizes. Corsair Capers was capsized and filled with water and struggled to
return to the Harbour. Both Flying Ants retired early, but the remainder continued
and completed the course.
3 NS ‘s contested heat 2 of
the Tweed River NS14 Class Championship in conditions that favoured boat handling
skills, old hand Adam; last year’s class champions, Adam Hurt and Tom Busbridge,
had the skills, getting home a solid 4 minutes ahead of Current class leaders Matt
Andrews & Igor Prada.
These two teams are now placed
equal first in the 2019-2020 summer championship series with 2 races remaining.
The single handers contested
their class Yardstick series. First finisher today was Great Grand Master Gary McCrohan
who showed true grit to stay on the course and finish, getting a rare win ahead
of Kate Yeomans who finished closed behind.
Many sailors were backing up
from last weekends’ “Clarence River
Bridge to Breakers” Race. Conditions on the Clarence were as rough as usual, with
winds reaching 30 knots against a strong running ebb tide. Tweed River had 5 boats competing in the
Standard Mono-hulls division. Local sailor Kate Yeomans won the division in her
Laser, against very strong competition, and “Team Swell Lady”, with an all-male crew, Matt
Andrews, Craig Foley And Mark Reynolds scored an impressive 3rd
place, well ahead of the rest of the fleet.
Sailing is on again this
Sunday at Fingal Head, with racing starting at 1pm.
A big fleet is expected for the 3rd
heat of the Corsair Class Championship.
11 boats
sailed with the Tweed Valley Sailing Club, on Sunday, as the club conducted
Race 10 of its Summer Series.
It was a
very pleasant afternoon on the river with a falling tide and North Easterly
breeze, sailing was easy and fast. The racing was very close, and many boats
used spinnakers.
Fastest
today was Kate Yeomans; Laser “Bluey”; Kate dominated today, in what’s becoming
a regular pattern, she excelled in the conditions, leaving 2nd place
3 minutes behind.
Second
finisher was Laser “Silent Partner” “(John Heywood) and 3rd, Laser,
Siesta (Gary McCrohan).
The premier
event today was the 2nd Heat of the Northern Rivers Corsair Class
Championship.
6 crews
contested heat 2, the teams being slightly mixed this week; “gun” sheet hand
Matt Andrews, joining “Team Blatcher” on Alisons hot new boat “Fairlight”. Matt
seems to gravitate towards the fastest boat so this could be a sign for Alison,
trialing her new boat today for the first time.
Current
North Coast Champion, Swell Lady sailed with an all-female crew this week, and were
definitely out to stun. And did !
Meanwhile
on “Keena as” Mark had his regular crew, Craig Foley as sheet hand, & Marg
Walgers up front, these guys were meaning business and would to be very hard to
beat.
Getting top
points today in the Corsairs was “Keenas” (Mark Reynolds, Craig Foley and Marg
Walgers). This win puts Keenas in first place after two races, for the Corsair
Class Championship.
Although Keenas
got away very quickly from the start and built a strong early lead, they had to
fight for it, with second placed “Fairlight” (Blatcher, Andrews & Bernet)
only a minute back and closing with a determined effort.
The next 3
Corsairs finished within 30 seconds after a very close race, 3rd
went to “Nimbis”, 4th “Swell Lady, and 5th Epic.
Last to
finish in Melita 3 was commodore Bill Fenelon, destroying any chance in this
year’s championship, came in 20 minutes behind the first finisher. Obviously
enjoying the view from a sailing dinghy.
Juniors
sailing is becoming established on the tweed, and this afternoon we had 3
junior crews racing their own boats. These sailors are becoming skilled at the
sport and are now using spinnaker’s
The club is
supporting a Juniors team at the “Manly Junior” National Championships this
summer. We also have several good racing Manly Juniors available to interested
junior sailors.
There will
be no organized sailing at Fingal next Sunday, as the club heads south to visit
“Big River Sailing Club” at Harwood, to enjoy 2 days sailing on the Clarence.
Our next
event in Fingal Head will be on Sunday the 1st of December.
18 hopeful skippers came early to the boat ramp last Sunday morning, sniffing around for any sign of wind . The fishing community were out at sparrows fart making the most of the calm weather and the boat ramp at Fingal was overflowing.
The race start was delayed an hour and patience was rewarded – the forecast was proved wrong. An unusually steady 12-16 knot breeze came up and the fishing boats started to head back in while the river started to fill with sails.
It was the Laser & NS14 Championships week. The NS14 fleet was missing Commodore Bill Fenelon on Tornado so just 4 boats competed in this class. Last years champs Adam Hurt & Tom Busbridge on Flight XXIV fought hard to keep up with Matthew Andrews & Igor Prado on Impulsive Matt but Matt & Igor took this one with a 4 minute lead. Dave & son Hugh Robinson on On & Off took 3rd with Robert Preston and Kynan Luescher Pura Vida not far behind.
Only Deborah Flannery was missing from the Laser fleet this week – after a full day on the water the day before for the inaugural event in our She Sails program, a day spectating from the timekeepers tent was a good option. The Lasers did have a new competitor – Andrew Chillingman Jaggers was back this week to give the club Laser a go making 6 boats competing. Kate Cant catch me Yeomans was ahead of the whole TVSC fleet at the finish line – 5 minutes in front of the next Laser – John Hayward, with Gary Macca McCrohon seconds behind. Macca was obviously missing his Murwillumbah cheer squad this week.
Craig Foley on Woodcraft was the winner of the Impulse class champ – he just needs some other Impulses to compete against to make it a more impressive title!
Two juniors boats also sailed today – Morgan & Miles Bushnell on Manly Junior M&M are looking really good. They’ve been training hard for the MJ Nationals in Sydney next month. Sidney Willis did well despite missing his crew and completed the 2 laps on his Flying Ant. A really fun day for everyone involved.
Goodbye to 470 La Siala… Over the last 8 years generous people have donated boats to the club. One of the best ones was the Olympic class 470 La Siala donated by Bill Foley. This class of boat is sailed by both female and male crews in the Olympics and La Siala has provided many a wild ride on trapeze for TVSC members. We’re losing our storage area so all our non-essential club boats are being sold and sadly this one has to go too. We also have a more stable design 16ft Corsair for sale call 0434 982 922 if interested.
On Saturday 9 November, TVSC held their first SheSails sailing day, the Sisterhood of Sailing. It was a very casual day, with two lasers and one corsair sailing the beautiful waters of Tweed River.
When we set sail it was over 16 knots, sailing up the river towards Chinderah, returning for a bite to eat at the Sheoak Cafe, where the girls sat and chatted in a more relaxed atmosphere. After lunch, the girls went out again, with dolphins following the boats – it was magical!
The day’s participants were Kate, Deborah, Alison, Rachael, Karen and Monique. The day was a huge success, with Alison saying she hadn’t enjoyed sailing so much for a long time.
Another sailing day will be held in the new year and we encourage our other club members to come and going the sisterhood of sailing.
If you have any ideas or enquiries for future events, please contact Monique via the club website.
Last weekend 5 boats and 9 sailors from the Tweed travelled to Ballina for Richmond River SC’s Annual Regatta and the celebration of the 50th year of their club house. Andy Lamont and Craig Foley tried their luck on a Tasar for the first time – they may not have won any prizes but plenty of fun was had and at least they completed the course. Also attending, all defeated by the tricky conditions, were Gary-Macca-McCrohon on Laser Siesta, Corsair Melita III skippered by Alison Blatcher with Courtney Tiller & Sebastian; Andrew-Chillingman of Chillingham-Jaggers and Bronwyn sailed a Pacer, also for the first time.
TVSC’s Kate Yeomans on Laser Bluey showed her stamina in completing a course that many of the other sailors faltered on and took first place overall – showing her skill at holding the boat flat at top speed even in 20 knot gusts. Thanks to RRSRC members for an excellent day – followed by tall sailing tails on the club balcony watching the sunset with live music from local band Broadfoot.
The next day, back in Fingal Head, was the second heat of the popular Sprint Series – short back to back races honing everyone’s start-line skills. All were relieved that the wind had eased off (no one wanted another 30 knot race) and 13 Boats with 24 crew competed on the tight course.
Congratulations to NS14 Impulsive Matt skipper Matt Andrews and Igor Prado from Ocean Shores who took out first place on scratch in all 4 races. Adam Hurt and Tom Busbridge on NS14 Flight XXIV from Fingal Head almost had them in race 3 – only 3 seconds behind – four 2nd places for them. Gary McCrohon (Tyalgum) was first in the Lasers for 3 of the 4 races with John Hayward (Fingal) taking a hard fought 1st in the 2nd race.
Four boats competed in the Corsair class with Scott, Debbie and Sahara Jones coming first on Corsair Nimbus for 3 of the 4 with Peter Skinner never far behind on Epic with crew Doug Haig and Gail Bernet. Gail has recently taken up sailing at age 70+. She keeps coming back even after the wild rides and capsizes of the last few weeks.
Our very much appreciated support team, safety boat driver Reg Court, Lex Branch and timekeeper Suzanne Blatcher enjoyed the day too. Suzanne has been the club’s regular timekeeper for the last few year – at age 86 she enjoys being involved with the club but can’t be tempted onto the water any more.
Apologies to all for the recent lack of sailing news especially our avid sailing report readers Noel and Christine Fenelon. We look forward to having our usual reporter back from sea and hard at work on the keyboard in a couple of weeks. Want to sail with us or join the support team? Contact tvscmail@gmail.com Next race at Fingal Sunday 10 Nov 10am.
At the briefing, with an average reported wind speed of 21 knots, but gusts reaching 29, we decided that racing was on! Eight boats with 19 crew readied up on the beach, including two junior crews in their Flying Ants, who could just not be dissuaded from having a go.
Eight rigged on the beach, who will make it all the way?
However, before the start, three boats were already out with capsizes and gear breakages.
Sid and Skye, in Sid’s Flying Ant, made it to the top mark of the first leg. A tremendous effort.
Every boat went for a swim, except for the Weta and Mark and the crew on the Corsair, Keenas.
The across the line finishers were Monique and crew on the Corsair Swell Lady, followed by Dave and Isaac on the Hobie 16, followed by Keenas. Three finishes. Total.