Kaos wrote:
Having raced this last weekend with a "round the island" regatta .... approx. +26 km, we on my trusty H18 thumped a lot of Hobie Tigers with Spinnakers having crossed the line 15th out of a total of 234 other type boats. No we do not have a spinny. But the point is, hell the H18 a tank as it is, is a force to be reckoned with when it gets going. Do I want a spinny .... hell yes but I seriously need to decide on my preferred sailing ... fun / booze cruise or serious racing in which case I would convert to the Hobie Tigers.
Congratulations. I would be with you 100% on the Tigers if it was not for the $20,000. What I am trying to do at my Club is build back a fleet of cats. Right now H18s are in the $2,000 to $2,500 range. Sure they are old, but it is a lot easier to talk someone new to sailing to pop for $2500. If we can make the old bird a little more exciting with a spinnaker? Then maybe we can get some momentum going again. At the moment we are up to 5 - H18's. 2 of them do not know how to race yet, but they are enthusiastic. I have about 3 others in the wings ... thinking about jumping in. Some spinnaker fun might be just the ticket to get these tanks to be of more interest. For old fat guys, I think the H18 is a perfect platform for fun. Races are just a real appointments to go sailing.
That sounds fantastic Kaos. We're in the same boat here on the central coast of California. We're up to six or so active racers and another 4 or 5 in the wings, up from two a couple years ago. The 18 is a beast, part of this is that I am now working for a sail loft, and while I have little motivation to design a new main and/or jib for my boat that would interfere with class racing, I can build up a spinnaker for some of the downwind distance races we do with regional yacht clubs.
It does sound like those tigers were doing something awfully wrong if you were able to beat em richard. I've sailed with a few tigers, and they're pretty quick. Good starts certainly help though.
Tom