Sailing in the UAE means we can almost always count on a
land breeze from the south in the morning and sea breeze from the north filling
in during the early afternoon – a large desert ensures that.
Last weekend it was a bit different – with a strong southerly
wind continuing until about 2 pm and then weakening a bit, but still southerly at
the time our race started a bit after 3 pm.
So, the race officer set a course accordingly with everything backward
compared to our normal windward/leeward directions. In addition, he set the gybe mark so that we
went to it from the leeward mark instead of the windwark mark.
We started in
mild winds which were weakening by the minute. We managed to get around the windward mark
and started down only to see the sea turn absolutely flat and hardly a breath
of wind anywhere. Boring, frustrating. I managed to pass a couple of boats by
letting the boom out past 90 degrees and heeling to leeward, occasionally
catching a wisp of air by the lee. But
boring.
Then, our top Kiwi sailor (who
amazingly enough was actually behind me) said – “look up by the bridge” and I
did and saw a dark patch all across the bay descending toward us. Hooray – salvation. This meant the course would be upside down,
but who cared – we would be racing.
Those of us who saw the wind coming managed to tack agonizingly slowly
to be prepared for its arrival. Then it
arrived – just like a solid wall bearing down on us – we were ghosting along at 1 knot at most
then in a solid 13 or so, instantly – and it kept up that way the rest of the afternoon,
building even a bit more, with gusts close to 20. Woohoo – great
fun ! And since the course was not the
usual windward/leeward and had several reaches, it was a blast. And I
even did well, reveling in the screaming reaches and very glad to be on the
water.
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