The second day of racing at Key West Race Week was a little warmer and had a little lighter wind than yesterday.  We had a great start in the first race.  Unfortunately, it was too great and the race committee called nearly half the fleet over early including boats that were above us and below us.  We realized we were over immediately and were able to bail out and get restarted without loosing a lot of ground.  With so many boats being called over meant many of the leaders were at the back of the pack right at the start.

The lighter wind we today than yesterday meant the racing was a lot more about being in the right spot.  Our boat handling was a lot cleaner and we did a good job getting around the marks without getting into any drama with other boats.  We managed a 6th in the first race.

The second race was light and lumpy which required much better technique going up wind to keep the boat moving.  We were in the lead pack up the first beat, but fell off on the next two legs and ended up 6th when the race was shortened down to 3 laps from the 5 that were planned because of the dying wind.

Jon and Lud at the Southern Most Point

After racing we packed up the boat and headed back to the Condo.  Lud and I went for a bike tour of the western part of the island and rode by places like the Hemmingway House and the Southern Most Point.  Later we all stopped by the regatta party to see the awards given. Following the party we went to the Rum Barrel restaurant and had a nice dinner with some live music.

Tim Wilkes posted some photos of Lucky Dog from the first day of racing here.  Overall results from the first two days of racing are here.

Tomorrow’s forecast is for less wind than today.  We were reminded numerous times while at the party to listen to the 8:30 and 9am announcements to find out if we will be postponed on shore.  Tomorrow could be a good day to be a tourist.

Monday was the first day of racing at Key West Race Week for the J105 Lucky Dog Racing.  Last night a storm rolled through the area which left some lumpy seas around the course for the first part of the day.  The cloudy skies in the morning cleared as the day went on and with them went the wind.

At the race course we did some practice to be sure everything was ship shape and ready to go.  We were a half a boat length late at the start with Max Power above us.  We worked our way out to the middle left of the course on the first beat and were about 6th around the first mark.  We held our own downwind, but had a terrible takedown and lost 10-15 boat lengths at the leeward mark.

Upwind we were fast and clawed our way back a few spots.  We ended up 8th in the 1st race of the day in the 15-boat fleet.

Lucky Dog on Day 2 of Key West Race Week

In the second race of the day the wind and waves had subsided a bit.  Travis did a great job nailing the start and we hit the line on the front row and were able to get out in clear air.  We were right with Ghost, Savasana, Wasabi and Masquerade.  We had good upwind boat speed and led Ghost at the first windward mark by half a boat length.  On the next three legs we had clean maneuvers, good tactics and extended our lead.

On the final leg upwind to the finish, Masquerade, who was in 4~6th place rounded the leeward mark and went way left.  We covered everyone else in the fleet who mostly stayed to the middle right.  Masquerade hit the left corner perfectly and was lifted ahead of us by 5-8 boat lengths.  We continued to gain on the boats behind, but couldn’t catch up to Masqueraded leaving us with a 2nd place finish.

A second and an 8 put us in 4th overall.  Tomorrow’s forecast is for a little lighter winds which will be a bit more challenging for us.

After racing we headed back to the condos and a short time later a storm rolled through the area.  We headed over to Kelley’s for the J105 party and then went out to dinner.

Overall results are posted here.  Tomorrow, be sure to watch the Division 2 blog for updates on our course throughout the day.

Sunday was our day to get out on the water and practice.  The boat had been brought down and set up earlier in the week, so all we needed to do was some final tuning and go sailing.  We are sharing a slip with another J105, Max Power.  The RC44s are just down the dock from us as well as a few other big racing boats.

After an hour of prep work, we were ready to go.  2 minutes after getting the sails up and starting to sail, I was down below and noticed water above the floorboards.  It turns out there were 2 slow leaks on the boat and the bilge pump had not been turned on.  Turning that on along with a couple minutes of bailing and we got the bilge emptied and went back to sailing.

Practicing downwind on the J105

Our practice went well.  It gave us all a chance to sail together, we made sure all of the systems and equipment were race ready, and we got to spend time practicing some new positions for many of us.  Mid-afternoon we headed back to shore and made a few repairs and got everything cleaned up for racing tomorrow.

We ate a late lunch at Turtle Krawls and Russell Coutts (BMW Oracle) sat down at the table next to us.  Peter Holmgren (Alinghi 2003) was at another table nearby.  In the evening everyone hung out watching the NFL playoffs.  Rob went to the skippers meeting, we checked out the regatta party and after a pretty low-key evening, turned in pretty early.  8:30 dock call tomorrow.

Ambulances outside our first flight from RIC>ATLWe started the week with a bit of a bumpy ride to Key West on Saturday.  John Wake drove, Tal flew out of Texas, and Rob flew AirTran.  All of their trips were pretty uneventfully. Lud, Travis and I were on all of the same flights and we can’t say the same for our trip.  Our first flight out of Richmond was diverted back to the gate while taxing to the runway due to a passenger having a medical emergency.  An hour later we were on our way to Atlanta, but not with enough time to catch our connection to Key West.  We relaxed at the sky lounge and caught the next flight to Key West.  That flight was at the end of the runway about to take off, and they had a computer problem and returned us to the gate to fix it.  An hour later we were on our way not arriving in Key West until about 5:30, 5 hours after we were originally scheduled to be there.

Welcome To Key West

Thankfully the other guys got there on time and were able to register, check into the condos and pick up our rental bikes for the week.  After getting settled we went out to a Brazillion Steak House for dinner and then went out on Duvall street.

Key West Race Week 2011Next week I’ll be heading to Key West for Key West Race Week.  This will be my first trip to Key West and to Race Week. There will be around 135+ other boats on 3 different courses; everything from 72 footers to the mostly professionally sailed RC44s to PRHF-C boats like J24s.

I’ll be sailing aboard the Richmond-based J105 Lucky Dog from Fishing Bay Yacht Club owned and skippered by Travis Weisleder.  The J105 is a 34-foot boat that will be sailing one-design (not handicap) against 15 other identical boats on the Division 2 Racing Area. The boat sails with a crew of 6 and I’ll be in the pit mostly helping make sure the sails get up and down correctly.

Throughout the week I’ll be posting updates on my blog and when possible I’ll post updates to twitter (@jondeutsch).  There’s a few regatta blogs that will be updated throughout the week with race results, weather, rounding orders and where the full kegs are.

Ways to Follow Along:

The General Schedule for the Week:

Other Information:

2010 has come and gone and I thought I’d post some of my favorite photos from the last year:

2010 James River High Water

January 27, 2010 High Water on the James River at Pony Pasture.

Sun setting during the Moonlight Regatta

June 26, 2010  Sun setting during the Fishing Bay Yacht Club long distance moonlight race.

July 4th sparklers

July 4, 2010 Lighting sparklers on Stove Point to celebrate the 4th.

B/W Mr. Roberts Bow

July 18, 2010 Caroline riding the bow of Mr. Roberts back to Jackson Creek after a day of race committee during the 2010 USODA Layline Nationals.

Opti Nationals Starting Line

July 20, 2010 Starting line during the 2010 USODA Layline Nationals.

Shot of Mr. Roberts at the start of a race on Wednesday

July 21, 2010 Photo of Mr. Roberts and the starting line during a sequence in the 2010 USODA Layline Nationals.

Optimist Sails at Start during the 2010 USODA Layline Nationals

July 21, 2010 Optimist sails close together during one of the starts at the 2010 USODA Layline Nationals.

ECU 2010 Home Opener Panoramic

September 5, 2010 East Carolina University Football home opener against Tulsa. First game with the new stands in the end zone and the new score board.

Cape May Harbor Sunset

September 24, 2010 Sunset from the Corinthian Yacht Club of Cape May in Cape May New Jersey the night before the first day of the Laser District 11 Championship.

Mr. Roberts and Lasers on Fishing Bay

Saturday, October 16, 2010 Day 1 at the Chesapeake Bay Laser Masters Championship taken from Fishing Bay Yacht Club as the Lasers head back out to the course after a short break while the course was reset.

Washington Monument/Arlington Cemetary HDR

November 13, 2010 Arlington National Cemetery as the sun sets on the Washington Monument in the background.

Long overdue is the video from our trip to Tampa last March to sail a Front Runner in the Fireball and Friends Midwinters at Davis Island Yacht Club.  My daily recaps can be found here.  More photos here.

The reason for the delay is that this was my first and last video done with a FlipHD camera.  The file format was un-editable and after countless hours of putting the entire video together only to realize it won’t render because it was MP4. So finally I have been able to learn a bit about video editing and was able to convert the original video to .dv and then re-edit it all back together.  This has literally taken me weeks of time to get to this point.

Fear not, I have a better solution for future videos with my new camera that I should be able to edit on just fine.

Canon SD1400IS

My second of two Canon SD870IS cameras bit the dust this weekend.  It had survived boating, tailgating, snow, rain, beaches, trips to 10 different states, spilled beer and numerous drops, but it was no match for Christmas dinner.  At some point Christmas Eve the lens was scraped ruining the photo quality.

It has been replaced by the camera pictured above: a Canon SD1400IS.  This is my 6th camera in a little over 6 years. It’s not a high-end camera, but will do what I want and has HD video.  For the price I won’t feel too bad if it suffers similar fate after a year and a half.

Thanks for the memories 870IS #2. RIP.