The 2000 Nationals were delayed for a month less than a week before the original planned date. This was because there was a petrol shortage in the UK caused by a blockade of Oil distribution centres by an informal alliance of independent truck drivers and farmers who were protesting against the level of fuel duty in the U.K. The date change and short notice resulted in the worst Nationals turnout in memory.
It seemed a long wait for the wind to fill in - at least for
those of us who'd arrived the day before - but we had to wait
for the Navy to finish distributing their ships around the bay
anyway. The wind eventually sort of filled in to a force two-ish,
but it was also always shifty and unpredictable. The tide was
also odd - very strong and in an unexpected direction. The consensus
is that it was pretty much all fresh water hurtling off the moors,
down the Tamar and out to sea.
Smart starting in race one isn't always the rule at UK Cherub
Nationals, but in this race Fizzy Shark and Dangerous Strawberry
pulled off classic port end "across the fleet" starts.
A tight bunch of five led up the first beat. At the windward mark
Shiny Beast was just leading from Dangerous Strawberry, with Pasta
Frenzy Frenzy, Pistrix and Fizzy Shark all in the near vicinity.
On the P of the P course Shiny Beast seemed to be able to go deeper
without losing speed. However Dangerous Strawberry managed briefly
to get ahead on the next leg, but was then retaken by Shiny Beast
and then by Pasta Frenzy Frenzy. On the run which is the second
part of the P Shiny Beast pulled out an appreciable lead, with
the other four all close together. Dangerous Strawberry seemed
particularly quick upwind in this race, although Shiny Beast still
led well at the end of the beat, and the race was shortened half
way through the next P leg at the gate, with Shiny Beast first,
Dangerous Strawberry second and Shark Third.
On the whole the wind dropped slightly for this one, but it
was never anything approaching consistent, and the race officers
had their work cut out moving marks between the short laps. The
same 5 were in contention up the beat, appreciably clear of the
next bunch. Fizzy Shark led at the mark, but hit it, with all
the leading three boats misjudging the tidal stream. Down the
P Pasta Frenzy led, with Dangerous Strawberry 2nd and Shiny Beast
3rd. However by the end of the 2nd section of the P Shiny Beast
had taken a small lead from Pasta Frenzy. Down the run Shiny Beast
pulled out a big lead, with the next three fighting fiercely for
second. By the finish Fizzy Shark had made second safe, with Dangerous
Strawberry 3rd and Pasta Frenzy 4th.
The wind seemed to get even more patchy for race three, which
was mostly fairly quiet, but with one leg about the windiest of
the day! Dave and Clare pulled a neat port end flyer, with Dangerous
Strawberry, Shiny Beast and Fizzy Shark going right. Dangerous
Strawberry lost out due to the Shiny Beast sitting on their wind.
Lots of place shuffling ensued as people got gusts and tide right
and wrong, Dangerous Strawberry led to the mark, but hit it! They
were closely followed by Pasta Frenzy and Pistrix, with Pasta
Frenzy taking the lead while Dangerous Strawberry did their turn.
Then gusts came through favouring one group then another. On the
run of the first P three went left and two went right, with left
definitely paying (and quite a bit of place changing amongst those
on the left), and Shiny Beast ended up in the lead at the bottom
mark.
The next beat saw Dangerous Strawberry take the lead temporarily,
but by the first leg of the P (two sail this time round) Shiny
Beast was ahead, while the second actually required gybing to
reach the mark. At the wing mark Shiny Beast held a lead, with
Dangerous Strawberry second and Pistrix 3rd. Shiny Beast and Dangerous
Strawberry held those places to the end, but Pasta Frenzy had
got to third with Shark 4th and Pistrix 5th.
The day dawned a little wet, but the breeze looked promising
and turned out to be a nice force 3/4. Out at the start, outside
the breakwater there were large enough waves to make things interesting
(or for your correspondent out on the committee boat, unpleasant...).
The Cherub fleet was expanded with a few additions, notably Robin
Russell and Will Lee in the Green Slug, and Tom Glover and Simon
Fox, who had brought out 2539 - a now venerable Hot Dog which
is now resplendent in an all white finish and a very neat false
floor conversion.
With the rest of the Final Fling classes joining us, racing for
the Cherubs was all on Windward/Leeward courses. 2651 managed
an extended capsize sequence near the breakwater on the way out,
which confused a report of "someone jumping off the breakwater".
That turned out to be some divers trespassing, and the last we
heard of that was that the Police were proposing to have a "detailed
discussion" with them...
At the gate Pasta Frenzy just overtook Shiny Beast on the last
gybe, with the Slug close behind. By the time they came through
the gate on the next beat the Shiny Beast was leading again, with
Pasta Frenzy second and Slug 3rd. There was quite a gap to the
next three, where Fizzy Shark was just ahead of Dangerous Strawberry,
and Pistrix very close again.
The finish, on the next run, saw Shiny Beast first, Pasta Frenzy
second and Slug third, all very close, and then a little gap to
the next two, Dangerous Strawberry and then Fizzy Shark. Pistrix
was close after - until they were caught by a gust near the mark,
capsized, hit the mark, drifted past the outside of the line and
had to beat back and recross, being very lucky not to lose a place.
Probably the race of the series so far, with just a little
more wave and wind than the previous one. At the windward mark
Slug was just ahead of Shiny Beast, with Fizzy Shark, Pasta Frenzy
and Dangerous Strawberry following very closely.
At the gate Slug was still ahead, with Shiny Beast still snapping
at their transom. Dangerous Strawberry was next, followed by Pasta
Frenzy, which had had a major swim - Dave had fallen out of the
transom! Fizzy Shark was next, followed by Pistrix, which also
went for a session of deck washing.
On the beat Fizzy Shark overtook Dangerous Strawberry, and these
four stayed the same to the finish, which saw a particularly pleased
Tim at the line.
The wind dropped slightly for this one, although the waves
stayed. Again Slug was leading narrowly from Shiny Beast at the
first gate, with Pasta Frenzy very close, and Dangerous Strawberry
and Fizzy Shark also close. This was the closest fought race amongst
the top group - none more a hundred yards apart with lots of place
changes, but strangely the actual order through the gates and
the finish stayed the same...
A clear start to the day, with a forecast of Force 3/4, but
it didn't really look like it on the way out to the start. There
was a long swell coming in from the ocean at about 45 degrees
to the wind. The wind oscillated steadily all day, varying from
Force two to F4 plus as squalls came through.
At the start the wind was a good F3, and it was quite an even
start, with the start line being straight at the time (the oscillating
wind was a race officer's nightmare). At the windward mark Pasta
Frenzy was leading, with Beast second and Strawberry third. At
the gate Pasta still led narrowly from Beast, with the Green Slug
coming up very quickly. At this point the wind decreased to around
F2. By the gate on the next beat Pasta still led, with Strawberry
crossing tacks closely with Beast, and Slug very close behind.
At the windward mark beast had come through to lead, with Strawberry
close behind, then Pasta. The finish, at the next gate, was Beast,
Pasta, Strawberry, Slug.
Between races Patrick Cunningham's new Paterson 7 made a brief
appearance, but had a rig problem and did not start any races.
Before Race 8 a huge squall came through, a large Cruise Liner
came very near to the course, and the wind changed. Thus there
was quite a long wait.
Strawberry pulled off a neat Port end start across the fleet.
The wind then dropped back down to f2. At the windward mark Beast
had pulled out a considerable lead, and Pasta and Slug were contending
second place tightly, and Fizzy and Strawberry equally contesting
4th. At the gate the bunch had caught Beast Appreciably, with
all four of the next group crossing gybes. The wind changed quite
considerably, making the beats and runs rather one sided, so the
race was shortened to the next gate.
Beast took the race and the Championship, at which point the wind
shifted back giving the rest a true beat to the line, with Pasta
just pipping Slug for second. Strawberry and Fizzy had a tacking
duel of practically match racing proportions for 4th, with Strawberry
just shading it.
Fizzy took the port end at this start, and, followed by Slug,
sailed right across the starboard end starters. At the windward
mark Slug was first, Pasta second, Strawberry third and Beast
an unaccustomed fourth.
At the gate another squall came through, and Slug led Pasta, Strawberry
and Beast, with all very close. Pasta overtook Slug on the first
half of the next beat, and Beast overtook Strawberry towards the
end. There were no place changes on the last leg, and the Championship
ended as yet another big squall arrived, this one big enough to
dismast a passing RS600.
| place | No | Helm | Crew | Name | Design | r1 | r2 | r3 | r4 | r5 | r6 | r7 | r8 | r9 | |
| 1 | 2676 | Andy Paterson | Alex Paterson | Shiny Beast | Paterson 7 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 5 | |
| 2 | 2660 | Dave Roe | Claire Spens | The Pasta Frenzy | Pasta Mod | 4 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | |
| 3 | 2673 | Robin Russell | Will Lee | Green Slug | Slug | dn | dn | dn | 3 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 3 | 2 | |
| 4 | 2649 | Gavin Sims | Simon Goodwin | Dangerous Strawberry | Bistro Mod | 2 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | |
| 5 | 2662 | Tim Dean | Una-Mary Colclough | Fizzy Shark | Pasta Mod | 3 | 2 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 3 | |
| 6 | 2666 | Joe Snawdon | Helena Cade/Paul Cox | Pistrix | Pasta Mod | 5 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 6 | dn | 6 | dn | dn | |
| 7 | 2654 | Billy Wood | David Wood | Hong Wan Paow | Trifle | 7 | 6 | 6 | 7 | dn | dn | 8 | 6 | dn | |
| 8 | 2651 | Kathy Sherratt/Mark Watts | Alex Weir | Hoppin'Mad | Dog | 6 | 7 | 7 | dn | dn | Dn | 7 | dn | dn | |
| 9 | 2539 | Simon Fox/Derek Reynolds | Tom Glover | Team Ecocats | Hot Dog | dn | dn | dn | dn | dn | Dn | dn | dn | dn |
Andy & Alex won through two factors - boat speed, especially
the ability to go deep in lighter conditions, and spotting the
shifts. Robin was quick in a breeze, and might have done better
given three days of racing, although it has to be said that the
light conditions of day 1 would not have been especially to his
liking.
Gavin & Simon were notably quick upwind, and also good spotters
of shifts, and 4th could be regarded as an unlucky result. Dave
and Claire never really seemed to be on top form this year, but
got quicker as the regatta progressed, finally putting in a win
for the last race.
| Sail No. | 2676 | 2660 | 2673 | 2649 | 2662 | 2666 |
| Crew | Andy Paterson/Alex Paterson | Dave Roe/Claire Spens | Robin Russel/Will Lee | Gavin Sims/Simon Goodwin | Tim Dean/Una-Mary Colclough | Joe Snawdon/Helena Cade/Paul Cox |
| Design | Paterson 7 | Pasta Mod | Slug | Bistro Mod | Pasta Mod | Pasta Mod |
| Hull Builder | Bloodaxe (owner) 1999 | Owner 1994 | Owner 1998 | Ian Praine (Previous Owner) 1992 | Owner 1995 | Robin Russell (Previous Owner) 1996 |
| Mast | Superspars/Bloodaxe carbon prebent twin spreader | Owner carbon internal track twin spreader | Proctor carbon/twin spreader | Tropical carbon twin spreader extra long luff | Tropical/Dean carbon twin spreader | Proctor carbon/twin spreader |
| Sails | Caws/self tacking jib. | Batt/self tacking jib. | Batt | Batt/self tacking jib. | Batt | Batt/? Jib |
| Foils | Bloodaxe | Owner | Owner | Praine | Owner | Russell |
| Crew Weight | 125kg | 130kg | 155kg | 148kg | 124kg | 130kg |
Jim Champ
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