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June 17, 2010

The 35th Vintage Regatta; QCYC Shorncliffe, Brisbane, 13-14th June, 2010

Filed under: Sailing — Tags: , , — Dr Roger KA Allen @ 4:08 pm

The regatta reminded me of the poem, “The man from Snowy River” as all the cracks or in this case, forty or so wooden boats had gathered for the fray. With the winter solstice only a week or so away, it was as if the wood nymphs that live in our wooden boats were drawn to meet in the morning chill of a Brisbane winter which to a southerner is like a summer.  It was a chilly 10⁰C for Brisbane, on Saturday morning as I threw my sailing bag on the deck of my boat, Wee Barkie, lying in what is affectionately known as the “pig pen” at QCYC, Shorncliffe, where itinerant boats can pull up instead of taking up a mooring. It was high tide in Cabbage Tree Creek, with its tall mangroves on the southern bank, the Boondall Wetlands Park beyond, and red and blue steel-hulled trawlers just up stream from the club. It is a pretty place; one of the loveliest creeks I know although a devil to get out of a mooring in unfavourable wind and the wrong tide although these minor adversities make for a better sailor. I think most of us there did not come to win. I certainly didn’t. We were more like a pack of dogs let off the leash in a playground, bounded not by wire netting but of an imaginary triangle described on Bramble Bay and fenced in by time, tide and wind and a few buoys shouldering the ebbing tide.

The first race was scheduled for noon on Saturday, 13th June but as usual, it seemed that the starting boat dithered and the number one flag (red circle on a white pennant) went up what seemed to be late, confusing some, until after an eternity the Blue Peter fell and the starting hooter sounded in the still air which made the start a mere formality. We crossed the starting line and headed for the fist leg, south-west to windward. The forecast was 10-15 knots SW but as often happens on Moreton Bay in winter, the sea was like glass and my Red Ensign hung sulking from my jackstaff. It took us about half an hour to get over the line and I think we should have got line honours for spending so much time on it as I think we drifted back over it again while the starting boat seemed to be our constant companion. However, everyone was in the same boat so to speak and for most of the afternoon, only the sleek greyhounds in the fleet of forty boats were able to harness the faintest breeze.  It is an ill-wind that blows nobody any good and as result we boiled the kettle on my gimballed spirit stove and had lunch of salami, biscuits and Brie as the winter sun in the clear blue sky made us remove our jumpers, and although it as it was forecast 21 degrees, it felt hotter in the still air and later noticed Peter Kerr sailing pastwithout a shirt in a “plastic” Folk Boat. It was strange to see this familiar figure of the sun-tanned, long-haired shipwright from Cabbage Tree Creek go over to the dark side as his elegant wooden yacht, Pagan was temporarily hors de combat.

The wind picked up a little as the afternoon progressed but the course was shortened to two laps rather than three as the bigger boats on the larger triangle of the course, billowed forth with the odd disobedient spinnaker failing to fill on the run to the line and finishing boat.  The relatively short course of about a mile or so on each leg made for a great spectacle as all the boats were kept in close proximity although it was somewhat daunting to be lapped by the bigger boats who crept up behind with their surging bows and billowing kites. There were the gracious lines of the more classical yachts replete with dazzling varnish and generous overhangs at the stern. There were some double-enders like my Colin Archer and a beauty called Four Winds and the elegant old schooner, Blue Nose on which the father of my crew mate, Ken Fraser  had died from  a heart attack many years ago. One of the few with tan sails was a Bolger cat-rigged ketch, and there was a small version of Joshua Slocomb’s Spray called “Rosinante” after Don Quixote’s steed and the name of one of the boats of L. Francis Herreshoff in his charming book, “The Complete Cruiser”.  A sleek beauty called Archinar II slipped by above us to later win the Best Presented Vintage Yacht. No boats bared their bottoms that day as the wind was slight but the spectators lining the cliffs at the headland just south of the creek were treated to lovely scene. As usual for the end of the race, the tide was dead low as the boats headed back in down the channel to the creek while on both sides, wide sand banks at low tide etched innumerable parallel waving lines which is at its best from those landmark cliffs which date back to the late Jurassic.  We were in no hurry to come in and as result were the last boat in and revelled in the stiffer breeze which had sprung up late. When we reached “The Basin”, a widening in the creek near the Sandgate VMR, we passed a yacht struggling like a beached whale embarrassed at the indignity of being aground. We offered a tow but she was free before we could throw a line.

There were the usual yarns around the bar, lubricated with lashings of Pusser’s rum dispensed in handsome enamel mugs with Pusser’s naval traditions around them. It seemed somewhat odd to be sipping rum and coke with ice cubes out of a mug which summed up the day’s proceedings; conviviality with a lashings of charm and nostalgia. The rich honey colour of the varnished moored wooden yachts were reflected in the mirrored surface of the creek, tinged by the soft pink glow of the setting sun, contrasted with the purple of lengthening shadows as swallows swooped after insects above the darkening water. There is something special about wooden boats that fibreglass can never replicate regardless  of their teak decks and chipboard interiors.

For those who did not eat aboard their boats, there was a BBQ dinner in the chill night air and later a band called the Baby Boomers played but despite the appeal of the name of my generation I did not stay. There was a certain paradox in the day with the mainly male participants varying from the very wealthy who just had a passion for wood to those who were equally passionate if not more so but who were of humble means, in boats with less gloss, some open to the elements or without a touch of  varnish.  The common denominator was wood and sail, and not speed or money. Somehow the latter didn’t matter although the speed of a boat is governed by that eternal truth about 1.4 times the square root of the waterline length and as length costs money, speed does too.  The slower the boat as is the case with mine, the more time spent on the water and not in the bar, a bit like a golfer with a bad handicap.

The following day saw a sullen sky and the promise of a rising southerly which was just what my boat likes. My first mate, Ken rang to say he was sick so I was lucky to have my other crewmate, Kevin bring a friend, Steve who had once sailed in 18 foot skiffs. Our mean age was about 55 but somehow it didn’t matter. We set out at 1000 in preparation for the race at 1100. We had two head sails (a jib and a Yankee) as well as the main which I did not reef as they had forecast 15-20 knots and I thought we’d be fine even with a new crew. I lent them a spray jacket each and suggested they put them on as I could see it was going to get cold with the wind picking up. I wore my Tasmanian hand-knitted sailing jumper, cabled and heavy and my woollen Breton cap and put on my  foul-weather gear before too much longer.

We had a good start on a starboard tack and found it exhilarating to be up with rest of the fleet rather than being well behind. The twin headsails were well suited to the gustier conditions and we were at one time neck and neck with a boat called Carouse who hull seemed only a short distance away as we fought it out for the second marker on a starboard tack again. We rounded the mark ahead of her and soon we were on a run down to the starting line only hampered by not setting the spinnaker as I was with an untried crew and dare not do it. The two laps of the course went quickly quite unlike the day before. We then had about half an hour before the next race and rather than sail around aimlessly, we hove to; back winding the Yankee, with the main out and the tiller to the lee. She balanced beautifully in the choppy sea and the despite the freshening wind, we sat there doing less than one knot to leeward while we were able to eat and drink in relative calm. We told another boat that came too close we had hove to but the skipper didn’t seem to understand. Only a well balance boat can do this and at times I undid the lashed tiller and saw the boat still hove to regardless.

The second race of the day was much the same only with a poorer start, which was mainly due to the confusion about the 15 minute start as we didn’t hear the siren when it went up.  The wind was still quite fresh and favoured the heavier boats like us but we were at a disadvantage down wind with the larger boats with kites up, passing us on the home leg.

When the finishing flag fell and the hooter sounded our finale, we were much relieved and then headed, not south-west back to the club, but north to the Scarborough Marina in Deception Bay where the Wee Barkie has taken up a new mooring. It was 1410 when we headed north expecting it to take us at least three to four hours and to be there after dark.  However the wind was on our starboard quarter and the sea which was up to a metre in height, was rolling in from the south east at about 25 knots pushing us at six knots and sometimes over seven down a wave. We were at our maximum speed most of the way and with not too much weather helm despite the main being full and with two head sails. When not far from North Rock Light at the top of Redcliffe, with the seas even rougher we took in the furling gib and sailed with the Yankee and main. We gibed suddenly on a wind shift but survived unscathed and were then on a port tack going around the corner on the home leg to Scarborough with the tide at dead low and the wind rising and only a metre or less under the hull. We dropped the main outside the outer leads and had motored in and soon dropped the Yankee as we were nose to the wind. It was just after 1600 hrs and we had done this in record time for us.

Inside the marina the wind dropped and we wondered what all the fuss had been about. Ten minutes before the darkening sea had looked sullen and threatening but now we were home safely thanks to Colin Archer and the Wee Barkie. When we had moored and tidied up, we drove back to QYCY about 30 minutes to the south, just in time for the presentation of prizes. I smiled to myself as we had sailed further than anyone that afternoon and in record speed and in conditions ideally suited for a North Sea double-ender.  We didn’t win a prize; not the fastest, the one with most varnish or the best dressed crew. Two of my crew didn’t even have wet weather gear and one had never sailed on my boat before and Kevin had only sailed once before on her and had never been on a boat heeling forty degrees with water coming up through the scuppers. These are the sailors who should get a prize, not just those with acres of varnish, a pea –jacket and white commodore’s cap. We had only raced a few times before and never with this crew. The names of the winners are now a blur, at least to me. What mattered to me, and I am sure to most, was not the speeches and the mugs, but just being there.

Overall we came 8th in the three races of Division 3 and in Race 2 we did out best by coming fourth out of seventeen boats. In a way, it doesn’t matter but what did was the spirit of adventure, the comradeship of fellow sailors,  the exhilaration of wrestling with the sea in the company of other boats and wooden boats at that, made from once living things re-incarnated in carvel or clinker, fashioned by craftsmen and maintained with love.  Winning is ephemeral but the experience of sailing a wooden boat is a form of respectful contemplation on the Cosmos. You learn to go with it, not against it. Fight against it, and you die.

That night as I snuggled up to my wife in bed, I reflected on those rolling, sullen seas at North Rocks Light and how easy it would be to succumb to the sea  by making a wrong move, an unwise decision or a miscalculation in navigation. It reminded me of scenes from The Riddle of the Sands, with the shoaling seas and shifting banks of the Frisian Coast.  It is this challenge which makes it so exciting, even in a relatively slow boat like mine which was designed not for speed but to bring you home to a safe harbour and a warm bed.

By Roger K.A. Allen, Skipper of Wee Barkie

March 24, 2009

Sailing Down-under; an introduction.

Filed under: Sailing — Tags: , , — Dr Roger KA Allen @ 4:36 pm

I sail a wooden double-ender, Colin Archer inspired, built in 1977 in Bundaberg, Qld. She is 26 feet long with about a nine foot beam and with an Oregan bowsprit, cutter rig, carvel, made of crow’s ash planks and spotted gum frames. I belong to the QCYC at Shorncliffe, Brisbane, the home of the Brisbane to Gladstone yacht race which starts every Good Friday. My boat will be one of those marking the beginning of the race. 

The boat called the Wee Barkie (Scottish builder) has sailed from Adelaide, in South Australia, with the Roaring Forties, as far north as tropical Lizard Island, near Cape York, or about five thousand miles in all. 

The builder, Bruce Mackay, is in his eighties and built it for himself, sailing it with compass only, no radio and no other aids except good seamanship and charts. He is currently building a wooden boat with a steam engine. Crow’s ash is Flindersiae australis after Matthew Flinders, the famous cartographer imprisoned by the French at Mauritius on his way home during the Napoleonic Wars. It was there that he wrote, “My love must wait”. He is second only to Cook as a navigator. Bligh comes close. Much of our coast line’s fine detail was charted by Flinders. Crow’s ash is very dense, easily bent with steam and very durable. Spotted gum is the same and many of our wooden trawlers are made of this. Crow’s ash is hard to come by now. 

I enjoy mooching around in Moreton Bay with my mate, Ken who has a 28 foot trailer-sailor (an RL 28). We go out when everyone is back at the clubhouse because it is too rough and windy. We recently went for a sail when there was a race on, in over 40 knots. One old skipper said it was the windiest day since 1974. Boats were racing under gib only and many were knocked down several times during the race. We had our normal furling gib and the main with two reefs and were not perturbed, with a 20 degree list, well balanced without much weather helm and doing up to seven knots. The boat has a full keel with lead on the bottom, and the rudder hung from the stern of the hull as per double enders. She weighs four ton and four hundred weight. I carry a storm gib and a trysail always. The bay is very changeable and shallow with a short chop. I always wear an inflatable life jacket, and carry a sharp knife, torch and Leatherman at all times. 

I sail for pleasure, not for a destination or a race, but that is how I try to live my life. I would like to sail the Witsundays and perhaps, one day, the Aegean.

 

Sunday 22nd March 2009

I went sailing today. It was a strong SE’er and the tide was going out. We had to throw a light line on a fender from a mooring opposite mine but the tide wouldn’t carry it across as the line was a little to heavy. I swam out to retrieve it and then I tied a strong nylon rope to the string line and made it fast on the stern cleat. My friend, Ken then pulled all four tons of the boat over to his side of the mooring, against tide and wind and stepped on the stern as I pulled ropes clear of the prop and off we went. We often leave under warps (ropes) as our creek has a fast tide and the wind is often unfavourable which makes it hard to reverse out. Many have said if you can sail here, you can sail anywhere. I am always aware of bullsharks in the creek too as they are the most common and the most dangerous.

There was a race on, so all the racing boys had headed out by the time we left. They are another breed. Speed is everything and as soon as it is over they are back at the QCYC with a jug of beer and a bottle of raconteur. I feel a sense of great freedom as we head out along the channel, with our friends, the red port and green starboard beacons, to guide us through. Mobile phones and humanity are in our wake.  Each time it is different. It is a bit like good sex with someone you really love. The tide was half out and pelicans and sea gulls sat nonchalantly on the fast-drying sandbank on our starboard as we passed, while fisherman stood silent with their rods on our port side. Some gave us a wave and a few girls on sea kayaks who gave us a kindly wave. The boat looked well dressed with the red enseign fluttering from the stern jackstaff and the QCYC club burgee, a triangle of yellow and blue and a blue maltese cross, the symbol of Queensland, at the masthead.  

Sometimes in summer, leaving the creek and its channel can be very rough as the north easterly trade wind is often in your face and the waves break over the bow. Today was not so bad as the wind was on our starboard quarter. Ominous clouds banked up behind us but it came to nought.

We sail for fun, not to beat the clock or some rival, or to carry a spinnaker when only a fool would do. We had one reef in the sail as the wind was rising as we tacked into a lumpy sea with waves crashing over the bow and with the bowsprit nosing under. I put my storm gear top on. My thin cotton long trousers were already wet but I had bought them as they are cool and dry quickly in the sun. At least my top was warm and dry. We pound into the wind, pointing about 35% to it on each tack. After a few hours we lay off a bit on a shy reach for something to eat. I had bought a baguette and a small Brie, which I cut in big chunks and pass them up to Ken, who is on the tiller and with his other hand on the main sheet. We wash it down with a bottle of brewed local ginger beer. We often eat ginger too as a snack. I never get sea sick but ginger is easy on the stomach and helps mal de mer (sea-sickness). 

We see the distant sails of some of the faster boats at about 1400hrs returning on the home leg of the race. Not one has a reefed mainsail, – the fools, they are now on a run with the wind behind them, skating past at 18 knots, nearly planing. We are coming straight at them on a slow beat to windward. We have finished our bread and are now close hauled. The bay is mostly shallow with about four or five metres under the keel and the waves are short and steep at about 2 metres today with the odd summation wave which is bigger and can catch you by surprise. The wind gusts higher at times as wind does. I warn Ken, “Big one”. We duck as our backs get a dousing. 

We eventually go about and head on a shy run with the wind on our port quarter. The boat behaves well and is reaching its maximum speed which is dictated by the length and nature of the hull. We are hitting over 7 knots and more down a wave. I don’t look behind as the waves look bigger. It is like life. I feel the weather-helm on the tiller. It is still manageable and the main is right out, with the boom’s aft end nearly in the water. 

We drop the main outside the main channel, and sail in under gib with the motor in neutral. The main in a gust makes the boat round up and as the channel is narrow I don’t want to run aground on a day like today. I watch the depth sounder constantly and line up the leads;’ two white triangles, one inverted in the distance. The tide is coming in so we don’t have the usual waves breaking both sides of the channel like some days. Sometimes it can be unnerving like you’re running the gauntlet with a breaking surf and perdition on both sides. 

My face is caked with salt and my sunglasses too, slightly impairing fine detail. There is no time to clean them. I underdo my life jacket harness and unzip my red jacket but leave it on. More than one trawler has sunk in this channel on such a day with all hands lost. The wind is now 30 knots and gusting more. The afternoon sun is burning my right cheek despite the pink sunburn cream. 

Ken, goes through the usual routine of tying fenders in position and gathering up the thick black nylon bow and stern mooring lines. I watch the channel and dodge a crab-pot float some fool has left mid-channel. There is no one else out. Only the racing boys. It has been too windy. The forecast was some rain but they were wrong. It is still quite hot but the breeze is cooling. 

We both feel a little tense at this point. The gib is furled up as I motor on low speed towards our mooring. It is a tight turn between two fingers but luckily the tide will be on the nose as we come in and the wind on our starboard beam. I am watching the tide and the turning circle of the boat which needs speed to have steerage. Lose speed and you can’t turn, go too fast and you run the risk of ploughing into the concrete and steel of a floating mooring or worse, the yacht on my port side. It is like landing a plane on an aircraft carrier sometimes. Ken, steps off, as I quickly put the engine astern for a second and then off. I jump off too and grab a line. We are always careful not to let a line drag overboard. We have learnt that lesson and I know what it can do to a prop shaft and cutlass bearings. 

There is a silent ritual that we both go through. It is the same before leaving only in reverse. We open portholes, put away the red enseign, the U-shaped life buoys with Wee Barkie on them, stow the gaff and  the danbuoy at the stern, turn off the engine, check fuel lines are off, close engine intake, log off on the radio, turn off the electrical system, check the bilges and bilge pumps, open air vents, remove the rubbish bag, take off bags, wet clothes, put away winches, make sure the mooring lines are all secure, put away the autotiller, the winch bags, cover the winches, zip up the main sail bag, put the wash boards in the main companionway hatch. It’s always the same.

We lug our stuff up to our cars, go to the bar and finish our bread and cheese. I have a Coke and Ken has a double sars as usual. We feel the cobwebs have been cleaned from our brains. My trousers are still wet and my face gravelly with salt. 

I drive home to find my wife lying on the sofa reading, my son doing some homework and my daughter on the computer. I try to tell them how windy it was and how we were going as fast as ever I have been in the boat and with one reef in the main to boot. My wife looks up, “Was it windy? I didn’t notice it here. There’s been hardly a breeze all day”. 

I have a shower and soap off the salt, sunburn cream, and adventure.

Men, and perhaps women (I can speak only as a man) need adventures. It’s what being a bloke is all about. We think differently. Men also need men to talk to. My friend, Ken doesn’t take offence if I don’t notice he has had a hair cut or is wearing a new pair of boat shoes. I can understand how Achilles felt when his friend, Patroklos was killed in battle.

I like to feel I have wrestled with the wind and sea and come out, not triumphant, but competent and alive. There are so many ways you can err in sailing and it can kill you and your fellow sailors and you can lose your boat. I think many people would be happier and more content if they had such challenges to contend with but I realise each to his own. My great grandfather was a Norwegian seaman and I have a Norwegian designed boat. I believe in atavistic memory which now has substance with the discoveries in this new area of human genetics.

I am reminded of Odysseus. Homer starts off thus, 

“Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story

of that man skilled in all ways of contending,

the wanderer, harried for years on end, 

after he plundered the stronghold

on the proud height of Troy.” 

(trans. by Robert Fitzgerald).

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