Find » Sports » How to Sail on the Lifted Tack

How to Sail on the Lifted Tack

Part V: The Race

By Selina Bankert, published Aug 21, 2006
Published Content: 11  Total Views: 3,465  Favorited By: 0 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.5 of 5


Now it’s time for the big thing about sailing; the race.  Sailboat racing is like chess, but a lot more physical, cooler, and strategic.  But before you race, you have to understand how a race is set-up.  First, sailboat races are usually grouped into series known as regattas.  A race usually consists of a start, rounding of one or two windward marks, then a series of other marks.  

The starting line consists of the committee boat and the pin.  The committee boat is the boat that the race committee is on. It is usually at the starboard end of the line and is marked with a blue-flag with “RC” written in yellow.  The pin is at the port end of the line and is usually a buoy and a flag.  The start of the race is different for each regatta, but is usually a 3-minute start.  But what does that mean?  Do the boats just wait at the line for three minutes and then go?  No. Think about it; if all of the boats are lined up, then leeward boats are going to be moving slower than windward boats.  A leeward boat is one that is being blocked from the wind by a windward boat.  A 3-min start fixes this problem, but also makes the race a lot more complicated.  A 3-min start means that once the 3-min whistles are blown, then there is three minutes to the start.  Usually, less advanced sailors sail back and forth until the race starts.  At the start you can start late, not lined up, or anything.  They won’t say that a boat “got a head-start” because it is your fault for not being at the line in time.  That may be confusing, but the only way to practice starts is to do them.  If you cross the line early, usually you have to dip back under the line.  A 3-min start consists of the following whistle-sequence:

3 min- Three long whistles

2 min- Two long whistles

1.5 min- One long whistle, three short whistles

1 min- One long whistle

30 sec- Three short whistles

20 sec- Two short whistles

10 sec- One short whistle

5-4-3-2-1- Separate short whistles for each

0- One long whistle

Takeaways
  • Basic race setup
  • The Start
  • The courses
Did You Know?
In a sailboat race, there are 3-min delay starts so that it is even a race before the race.
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Most Commented On