79 Bay St
Double Bay NSW 2028
Australia

The best ILCA / Laser sailing club in the world, located in Double Bay on Sydney Harbour.

News

Winter Series

Kirk Marcolina

With just over a month left in our regular season, some may be going into an early winter, lack of sailing funk… But cheer up, because the winter of 2018 will be unlike any other in DBSC’s history. For the first time, we will be running an official winter series.  

The intention will be to have races every second Sunday, starting 6 May. The first warning signal will be at 8.30am, so splash by 8am. There will be three ~30min races (wind permitting).  The start sequence will be advised pre-season based on the number of boats expressing interest. There will be a PRO/COTD roster for those participating.

Please email Ian Alexander at ianalexander1@optusnet.com.au if you are intending to sail (if you intend to sail more than once, please also be willing commit to being PRO / COTD once).  If you are only going to sail once, there is no need to volunteer – we welcome one-off casuals.

Autumn Pointscore Race Report

Kirk Marcolina

We had nearly 40 boats turn up last Saturday for heats 11 and 12 of the Autumn Pointscore. It was a beautiful, sunny day with an unsettled 5-12 knot E - NE breeze. The light breeze, a reach behind Shark Island and a big fleet of 18’s gave us some tricky racing – as our PRO, Mark Bethwaite put it, it was a thinking sailor’s course. The winners, and smartest racers (after handicapping) were: Full Rigs: Ian Alexander (heat 11), Hadrien Bourely (heat 12); Radials: Julian Van Aalst (heat 11), Zac West (heat 12). Thanks to last week’s volunteers for putting on a great day of racing: PRO Mark Bethwaite, assisted by Clare Alexander, COTD Candice Cushway, CoCOTD Josh Pearl, and Canteen Assistant Geoff Boscoe. 

Thanks to Nick Pellow and Ashley Deacon for pointing out some great footage of our fleet as captured by the JJ's race coverage. To see how crowded it was on the harbour you can check it out here.

Close encounters with the 18s.

Close encounters with the 18s.

The Week Ahead

Kirk Marcolina

Wednesday 14 March, 5pm – Twilight Sailing. Sign up here if you’re coming. Only three weeks to go before we lose daylight saving!  In the last three weeks, we have practiced drills – starts, then mark rounding, then tacks and gybes.  This week we are having a series of short races to put all these skills into practice – Brett will record the results.  Come and join our large fleet of Wednesday sailors, and make the most of the last of summer!

Saturday 17 March – Sunday 18 March – Metros at Drummoyne Sailing Club. Mike Dunne is coordinating transport and all other needs associated with the Metros this weekend.  If you need assistance (or have spare space on your trailer and can assist someone else), please contact Mike at mikedunne070@gmail.com or on 0407 016 125.

Saturday 17 March, 9am – Learn to Race. Come along if you want to learn more about Laser boat handling, balance, boat posture, trim, starts, tacks, gybes, boat set-up and any other race management fundamentals. Please email Martin White at mwhite@universalmagazines.com.au if you are planning on attending.

Saturday 17 March, 2pm – Sprint Races. While some of the fleet is sailing in the Metros the rest of us will be practicing with a series of short sprint races near DBSC.

Saturday 17 March, 4:30pm – Family Day BBQ – All welcome. See details below. 

Family Day BBQ - This Saturday

Kirk Marcolina

Following this Saturday’s Sprint Racing we’ll be hosting a Family Day. Please plan to attend, even if you don’t have kids or a loved one to bring along – we’ll have plenty to go around! After a few short sprint races for the kids, we’ll have a family friendly BBQ with sausages, party pies and jelly snakes. Plus, there will be a jumping castle to tire out the little ones and a special drawing for free movie tickets.

A jumping castle will play centre stage at the Family BBQ. 

A jumping castle will play centre stage at the Family BBQ. 

Thanks to Palace Cinemas, we have a limited number of tickets for The Mercy.  Based on the incredible true story that captivated the world, The Mercy follows Donald Crowhurst’s extraordinary journey in his attempt to win the first solo non-stop round-the-world yacht race. We will have a random draw of four double passes at our Family Day BBQ.  So, come to Family Day to have your shot at free tickets to see this brilliant new sailing movie.

Tickets to The Mercy will be won at Family Day. 

Tickets to The Mercy will be won at Family Day. 

Thanks to the JJs Canteen Crew

Kirk Marcolina

Thanks to the canteen team of Paul, Andrea and Shirley for their tireless efforts in the canteen during the JJs – 10 exhausting days straight! They were ably assisted by Tim and Christine Patton, Debra Whitley, Jan Ryan, Di Chapman, Edwina Chapman, Richard George, Maxim Dzura, and Mike Dunne. The canteen is an enormous contributor to the club’s funds, and much of the year’s surplus is made during the JJs.  We are very grateful to the team for everything they do. Thanks also to Tim Patton, Andrew Simpson, Daryl Lawrence, Luke Parker and John Vasey who helped on the RIBs during the JJs. 

Yearly Dues

Kirk Marcolina

You will soon get an invoice for your 2018-19 dues. We’d appreciate your prompt payment as the funds allow us to do much needed work over the winter season. Thanks in advance for your help with this. 

AGM - 25 May

Kirk Marcolina

DBSC’s Annual General Meeting and end of season dinner will take place in the clubhouse on Friday May 25 at 7pm. Please save the date. More details to come.

Big Boat Race Report

Guest User

It was a sparkling autumn afternoon, sunny and bright. The sea breeze came in about 12.30pm and was well established by the time we started; it then blew 10 -15 knots all afternoon.

The start was uneven - not the skippers’ fault, or the PRO; more about that later. 

Chenonceau took off like a startled rabbit and out-sailed the fleet all afternoon. On the clubhouse deck, after the race, her skipper denied any new sails or measures taken, except moving the blocks for the headsail sheets - I forget which way. But she outran the fleet, without a spinnaker. Behind her, G-Force started late but started fast; she was in third place as we reached the Point Piper mark, and on the way to Taylors Bay - a very close reach - she went low under T&T, into second.

Corinna (which is Aboriginal for Tasmanian tiger) started late and (for her) slow; she was in fourth position at Point Piper and still there at Taylors Bay; but she surged on the long, upwind leg to Sow’n Pigs, turning second. Chris then hoisted her kite and set off after Chenonceau, who was so well ahead that her skipper settled for a goose-winged run, leaving her spinnaker below decks.

Smitten too was late off the line; she loyally chased the fleet, but her speed of the last couple of races was missing. 

On T&T, our start was middling but - Chenonceau aside - we seemed to be competing well for a leg or two. But we lost our rhythm on the leg to the reef and turned downwind in 4th place, very disappointing. So we flew our big yellow-and-black spinnaker for the chase to Shark Island. The set was a bit rusty but uneventful and the little boat ran well until we hit some heavy traffic off Neilsen Park. The 18 footers had just started the last race of their Giltinan series - their world championship; everything was up for grabs apparently, and the fleets crossed, the Double Bay boats all on port tack and running, with no rights at all. Spectator boats added to bedlam and a separate fleet of Tasars out of Rose Bay. Mat steered us through some close encounters as David and I trimmed and eased the spinnaker sheets, to keep the kite engaged as the wind shifted our little hull heaved and dropped through the chop.

To get home we all had to gybe at the Shark Island mark. This was a real challenge for Chris on Corinna, who was sailing solo, and by the time his spinnaker had reset, G-Force had slipped through into second, and T&T was closing under spinnaker. But once Chris’ spinnaker was set he would yield no further ground, and and we crossed the line:

  • Chenonceau
  • G-Force
  • Corinna
  • Time & Tide
  • Smitten

n T&T we dropped the spinnaker and headsail and sailed to the mooring under the mainsail. Unrigging was uneventful, except that the tender boat from the Marina was unwilling to go anywhere near the ferry wharf. A police boat was drawn in at the wharf, a crowd of young party go-ers on the wharf. Was it a drug sweep? or over-boisterous behaviour? It turned out to be the latter, with excited and emotional young men jumping in the water around the wharf. Visiting Americans, someone said. Not serious stuff, except that the water around the wharf is used by NSW ferries coming and going and 18-footer tender boats and camera boats and eventually the 18 footers themselves. Any of them could have run over a stupid swimmer.

So we had to wait nearly half an hour for a ride to shore on a Club RIB (thank you John, again); and were still there waiting when hoots and sirens from the Harbour signalled the end of the 18-footer series. The first two places went to NZ boats apparently; was this the first win by overseas boats? The series has been going 80 years now.

For the DBSC fleet it was a fun race and quite demanding - very Sydney Harbour, with the sea breeze, the sun and the 18s and some 12-foot skiffs and Tasars and ….. and ……

We race again the Sunday after Easter, Sunday 8 April.

Race Report – Club Championship 11 &12 and Pointscore 9 & 10

Kirk Marcolina

It was a busy Saturday on the harbour with 18 footers everywhere. Because of the congested boat ramp the race start was delayed until 2:15 – giving the early birds plenty of time to check out the course. When the 40+ boats did start, they were greeted with an 8 – 15 knot NE breeze. The course area was set farther to the South, bringing Pont Piper into play, and later in the day the wind shifted left, making for some good gains if you chose the correct side of the course.

The winners were: Championship – Standards: Rod Barnes (Championship Heats 11 & 12); Radials: Jack Littlechild (Championship Heat 11) and Campbell Patton (Championship Heat 12).  Pointscore (after handicap): Standards: Maxim Dzura (Pointscore Heat 9) and Murray Stone (Pointscore Heat 10); Radials: Justin Davey (Pointscore Heat 9) and Yves Stenning (Pointscore Heat 10). Thanks to this week’s race volunteers — Jonathan Stone (PRO) and Clare Alexander on the Jazzman, Pat Levy and Peter Speed on the RIBs, and Mike Dunne in the canteen.