I have way to many glasses and little things that collect dust.  My favorite 
small prize is a Rainier Beer can with a small bronze sheet metal cut out of a 
sailboat on top given away after a Friday night beer can series.

Recently Seattle Yacht Club awarded hats embroidered with the series name, 
finish place (1st, 2nd, 3rd) and the burgee.  For a low key regatta or series I 
suspect many participants would enjoy the hat/shirt/vest type of soft award 
that is usable/wearable and slightly unique.

My favorite big trophy (perpetual, shared by all of us on the charter over 2 
years then returned) was the compass on a teak binnacle awarded for being first 
to finish, class B, Transpac 1985.  IIRC the trophy was specifically awarded to 
acknowledge excellence in navigation and weather routing but we the equal 
charterers all collected it together.

Martin
Calypso
1970 C&C 43
Seattle

-----Original Message-----
From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Knowles Rich
Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 10:05 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Stus-List Racing prizes

On a slightly different racing tack: Prizes

I was at a club meeting last night at which prizes for racing came up for 
discussion. The talk ranged from glasses and flags to club services such as 
hull washes, and sponsored prizes like coats and other swag. 

I'm in the glass and little flag group which is a throwback to the 70's and 
80's. Others would like much bigger/ more opulent awards. 

What does your club do for the weekly races, series and regattas? 

Rich Knowles
Indigo. LF38
Halifax

On 2013-04-12, at 13:54, OldSteveH <oldste...@sympatico.ca> wrote:

This has been a really good thread, highlighting the risks of casual racing.
There are some good lessons and solid reminders of the situation we're in when 
we do these casual races.

I started racing again last year after many years away from it.
That made me an experienced but rusty racer, and what's worse, racing amongst 
folks with a wide variation in experience and acumen.
For example on one race I starboarded two boats just after the start, 
completely in the right, but now realizing in hindsight completely ignorant of 
the abilities of those skippers and whether they would respond. Although there 
was no problem at the time, I won't do that again. Years ago we raced against 
the same competitors week after week and everyone knew everyone else. The crews 
were generally the same from week to week, even from year to year. It produced 
very close and well run races. I now realize I cannot expect this beer can 
stuff to be the same.

I have to say a couple things about the video. It does not appear the leeward 
boat called out in any way. Should they have called "hardening up"
to the windward boat? They did not give any warning of their movements. It 
didn't look to me like Blue was barging, they were on a close reach. Blues crew 
were indeed clueless, as was the helmsperson, but the tactician also made 
mistakes. He appeared to see the other boat but did not do or say enough until 
it was too late. I think he acknowledged this in his post. No question about 
windward leeward rule though, Blue was in the wrong but also agree leeward boat 
seemed to do nothing to avoid the collision.

Cheers,


Steve Hood
S/V Diamond Girl
C&C 34
Lions Head ON




----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Fri, 12 Apr 2013 15:26:59 +0100
From: Wally Bryant <w...@wbryant.com>
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Race video
Message-ID: <516819b3.8020...@wbryant.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Yup, it's a bummer about Mike (tactician.)  He owns the sail loft in La Cruz 
and does the morning weather on the local radio net, and is a great guy.

Banderas Bay is a major winter cruiser hangout, and the crews on these races 
are almost always pickup crews that don't know the boat and have never sailed 
together.  Probably not a good time to get aggressive at the start.

Wal

Chuck S wrote:
> <snip> The whole crew looked rather distracted and inexperienced. No 
> one is looking for traffic. That's everyone's job. <snip>




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