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

Race Report

Kirk Marcolina

It was an amazing balmy sunny April afternoon, but a tricky day for racing, with the wind shifting nearly in a full circle during the course of the day.  The race committee took the unusual step at DBSC of raising the AP on shore while waiting firstly for the breeze to come in, and then for the northerly breeze that appeared to be replaced by the predicted E / SE breeze scheduled to arrive from nearby Botany Bay.  The AP came down at 1.45pm and racing was underway a little late at 2.20pm in a 6-7 knot easterly.  After some competitive racing in both fleets, the breeze began to fade, resulting in a shortened course being called at the last top mark, followed by hoisting of “N” over “A” to signify abandonment of further races, leaving time for the fleet to drift home, and enjoy a sundowner on the dock. Winners, after handicapping, were: Standards, Geoff Kirk, and radials/4.7s, Kate McHugh. Thanks to Andrew Cox, Matt Knight, Tom Beregi and Vic Whitby for their on-water race management and support.

No wind? No worries. Photo by Nick Pellow.

No wind? No worries. Photo by Nick Pellow.

This race also brought to a close the 2019 Autumn Pointscore. Congratulations to our series winners. In the Standard fleet Hadrien Bourely eked out a victory with 33 points, with Max Jura (36.5 points) and Steve London (40 points) close behind; in the Radial/4.7s: Jim Dounis finished first with 40 points over Ashton Scott (51 points) and Emily Ball (52 points).           

Upcoming Events

Kirk Marcolina

Saturday 20 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 if you are planning on attending.

Saturday 20 April, 2pm – Easter Sprint Racing.

Saturday 27 April, 2pm – Final Heats of the Club Championship followed by an end of season BBQ.

Community and Family Weekend a Huge Success

Andrew Cox

Well done and thank you to the 30+ volunteers who made our Community Fete such a success on Sunday. Well over 500 people came to enjoy the sparkling day. Steyne Park was at its festive best, with a massive jumping castle, an array of favourite carnival games, flapping sails advertising laser sailboat rides on the lawn, remote controlled sailboats in the harbour, fairy floss and sausages to enjoy, and power boat rides from the front deck of the club. 

We served over 600 sausages and made over $700 for Clean Up Australia Day. We had numerous enquiries about teaching kids to sail (which we referred to Woollahra Sailing Club) and about 8 serious enquiries about LTR and membership.

Special thanks to Kirk Marcolina, who led the initiative, and Justin Davey, who worked closely with him, both spending countless hours enabling this to happen. And thanks to the NSW Government for the funding provided. It was a very successful day for the club which was perfectly aligned with our strategic goals of member engagement, community awareness, new member origination, and fundraising. Thanks again to everyone involved, this was an incredible example of volunteer teamwork and community spirit that makes our club great. 

Ash teaches the kids all his tricks.

Ash teaches the kids all his tricks.

As a warmup to the big Community Day, we had a member’s only Family Day on Saturday after racing. A beautifully warm day and gentle breeze greeted the families and friends who came to enjoy an afternoon of fun at the club. There were perfect conditions for tandem parent / child sailing on the laser, and a plucky young teen or two who gave a red-hot solo a go. The perfect breeze allowed a rounding of Clark Island, and for those not quite ready for the Laser, RIB rides provided for some on-water fun. Back on shore the jumping castle got a good workout and the delicious BBQ, complete with gummy worms and Chupa Chup pops, went down a treat. Thanks to everyone for making the day such a success, especially to our BBQ masters Mark Gray, Peter Collie, Pat Levy and his son, Brendan, who evidently has the same incredible volunteer spirit as his dad, stepping straight onto the BBQ for an extended stint.  Thanks also to Paul Adam for keeping us stocked with an unusually large supply of sausages and bread. 

Family Day Fun

Family Day Fun

Winter Championship Returns 5 May

Kirk Marcolina

Just because we’re heading into winter doesn’t mean that sailing is coming to a close. Our popular Winter Championship series is back starting on 5 May. It will run every second Sunday morning from May through July. Splash is at 8 for an 8.30 start. There will be three races each week (weather permitting), in a triangle sausage format with upwind finish (usual DBSC format, minus one leg). Details are in the SIs available on the website. We will be calling on race participants to volunteer as COTD and PRO. Brett Beyer will be running the Brett Beyer Winter Program (BBWP) again in conjunction with the Championship. The cost of this is $300 for five consecutive race days through May and June.  The program involves on-water coaching during the races and fleet level GPS analysis with individual statistics. Please let us know if you’re planning on racing in the series, and to register your interest in the BBWP HERE.

Annual General Party (and meeting)

Kirk Marcolina

On Friday 24 May, the clubhouse will be rocking for our Annual General Party (and Meeting). We’ll get the formal meeting out of the way first up at 7pm. Then, after a warm hearty meal, we’ll dance the night away with a reprise by popular demand of the DBSC band, guest starring Pat Levy and Martin White on air mike and air guitar respectively. And some surprise special guest cameos from actual musicians too. Please RSVP HERE

Last Year’s AGP fun.

Last Year’s AGP fun.

Annual Dues Due

Kirk Marcolina

You should have received your invoice for 2019/20 dues last week. (Sorry for the date mix-up on the invoice, rest assured it’s for the upcoming season.) We’re aiming to have everyone pay up by the end of this month. Thanks to all those gold star members who have already paid. If you haven’t done your part yet, we’d appreciate it if you could do it today!  

Laser Race Recap

Kirk Marcolina

What a difference a week makes. After last week’s harrowing 40-knoter, sunny skies and a gentle NE breeze greeted a fleet of 47 for Autumn Pointsocre Heats 11 and 12. First over the line after handicap were: Standards: Andrew Simpson (heat 11) and Maxim Jura (heat 12); Radials / 4.7s: Chistine Linhardt (heat 11) and Jim Dounis (heat 12). Thanks to last week’s volunteers: PRO David Murphy, assisted by Christine Patton, COTD Jules Hall, CoCOTD Jack Sywak, and Canteen Assistant Mark Lewkovitz. 

Christine Linhardt shows off her winning form. Photo by Matt Knight.

Christine Linhardt shows off her winning form. Photo by Matt Knight.

The Week Ahead

Kirk Marcolina

Saturday 13 April, 2pm Start – Autumn Pointscore Heats 13 & 14. This is the last Pointscore of the season, and the competition is tight. This is especially true in the Standard Fleet, where only 6 points separate leaders Hadrien, Max and Steve London. So, make sure you come out and make the most of it.  

Big Boat Race Report

Guest User

It was an absolutely sparkling afternoon; warm without being hot, a 10-15 knot sea breeze; an almost empty harbour (the 18s are finished for the season, the summers championships are done). But the DBSC big boats were racing!

On shore, it was DBSC’s Community Day, with sausages and jumping castles and families; the wharf was crowded with young things headed for ’The Island’. Word was it was that strange site’s last day for the season. And this morning was the end of daylight saving, the turn of the seasons.

6 boats presented, all competitive; what would happen today? John Vasey kindly provided the start - from the Paul Adam - starting the start sequence punctually at 1.00pm; and he provided also a well-placed mark at Point Piper.

Corinna won the start, but proved uncharacteristically restrained upwind, rounding the first mark fourth behind Sanity, Chenonceau and T&T. She had to fight to stay in touch on the shy reach to Taylor’s Bay and on the long work from there to Sow’n Pigs, where she turned 5th, of the six boats racing, for Liaison had recovered from a blocked start to steam past the two smaller boats.. Chris then ‘flew a kite’ on the downwind leg to Shark Island and Corinna passed Time & Tide then Liaison then - late on the last leg Chenonceau. Which sounds straightforward, but he was the only skipper to fly a spinnaker, and had to manage the gybe at Shark island. So, Corinna - one of the smaller boats - finished second.

Sanity had a strong start and tacked to strike out left into the Harbour (Corinna and T&T and others headed right to pick up the breeze around Point Piper). Whichever way Sanity goes - left or right, high or low - seems to be the way we should all go, a sign of a well-sailed boat. A beautiful boat 34 footer - we have chased her all season. She was first around all marks, sailed high on the works, kept control of the off-wind legs. Finished first. 

Chenonceau was a bit late for the start but sailed fast and high upwind all afternoon. From the start she sailed past Corinna and T&T, to round the first mark in second place, behind only Sanity. She held second almost to the end; she sailed fast and high up the main Harbour to Sow’n Pigs, well clear of all the chasers. But she proved slow downwind. It was a long chase but both Corinna (under spinnaker) and T&T (goose-winged) passed her on the final leg, a run. So a slow end after a powerful upwind performance; finished fourth.

Liaison was blocked by a starboard tacker (T&T) on the start line and her helmsman chose to tack away instead of taking the starboard-tacker’s transom, in a dip and and accelerate move. This forced manoeuvre tack must have made her crew cross for, overcoming the slow start, they sailed her powerfully upwind and high; and, on the leg to Sow’n Pigs put the pesky small boats (the Hood 23 and Chris’ Endeavour 24) in her wake, moving into third place. As with Chenonceau however, Liaison - with a standard headsail arrangement (no kite, ho goose winging the headsail) proved slow. Corinna slid past to the east of her under spinnaker, T&T to the west and, on the last leg and, on the last leg, G-Force also caught her. So, after being beautifully sailed upwind legs, she was sixth over the line.

G-Force was just off the pace, for much of the afternoon. She started well enough and headed right with others, but stalled on the way across, uncharacteristically allowing T&T to work over the top over her; she is normally too fast for that. G-Force recovered composure and stayed in touch with the fleet. Finally, on the last leg, she set her spinnaker, and eased past Liaison, to claim fifth.

Time & Tide was, frankly, late for the start, yielding 50 metres to Corinna, who hugged the favoured pin end. Our start strategy was OK (sail close-hauled along the line high, then tack quickly onto port); but we took a long run at it and the wind dropped a bit and we were - late. For once, however, we found height and speed upwind; we gained two places on the first leg, passing above G-Force and then out-thinking Corinna, which is not a common event. We turned third at the first mark, with the longer boats Sanity and Chenonceau aheadOn the shy reach to Taylor’s bay the T&T held off Corinna and held her place; but, from that bay we looked north to Sow’n Pigs, the leg so long you cannot see the mark; and tacked out into the Harbour, heading across to Neilsen Park. We often lose places on this leg and so it was - Liaison sailed clean past us; but we held Corinna, to be fourth at the reef. And then came the downwind legs - T&T’s deckie did a neat goose-wing and we caught Liaison on the way to Shark Island, and Chenonceau on the leg home to Clarke Island. That would have put us in second and made our day; but Corinna - sailed solo - flew her kite to pass us, proving that - as always - a well-set spinnaker is faster. For Chris, gybing the kite after the Shark Island mark  involved him leaving the cockpit, with the tiller lashed approximately midline to move the pole across. It could have gone horribly wrong but it didn’t, though it took Chris some time and T&T moved briefly ahead. But once that spinnaker re-set we could not hold him, and he finished 15 seconds ahead. Somehow our competitiveness - on T&T we were trimming and trimming -  took both the smaller boats past another biggie (Chenonceau), and T&T finished third. Wondering whether we should have let courage be the better part of caution, and flown our big, fast, black and yellow kite. But - we didn’t. Finished third.

A great autumn race. 

Across the line:

  • Sanity

  • Corinna

  • Time & Tide

  • Chenonceau

  • G-Force

  • Liaison

We sail next on May 5. 

Family and Community Weekend is Here

Kirk Marcolina

This weekend it’s time to share a bit of DBSC. On Saturday, after sailing, please invite your family and loved ones to join us for a special kid-friendly BBQ starting around 4:30pm. There will be a jumping castle in the park as well as family laser races and RIB rides. So please join us for this special evening that will allow us to introduce our families to one another and show them why we love spending so much time at the club. 

On Sunday, it’s Community Day from 10am to 2pm (remember Daylight Savings ends early on Sunday morning) – a fete complete with carnival games, a jumping castle, fairy floss, a sausage sizzle and much more. Share our Facebook event and invite everyone to come down to see what we’re all about. Thanks to all those who volunteered to help on the day. If you haven’t signed up and would like to lend a hand, please let Kirk Marcolina know.