Page 1 of 1

7/8-7/12 Gorge...ous!

PostPosted: Thu Jul 13, 2006 6:49 pm
by RickHeninger
4 for 4 days! I love that place... Monday at the Doug's the swell was buttery... I had fun sailing from 4.2 to 6.7 over the four days!!! Great to see Gunar's, Suzy, Sarah and Linda, Craig, Kirk, Duane, Erin and Fam, and many others up there... I love it! And Josh Shirley and I drove up in his Volkswagon. Not bad, four tanks to get there and back!!!


Well, as far as the blowout goes... I wish that I could tell of another exciting story where I was fed by a household of Yakima Indians along the river, or that I couldn't decide where to go ashore, down current or downwind of an elongated dead rotting sturgeon corpse... Or of 60 MPH winds in the "Narrows" that narrowly would let me go with my life... But I can't...

This year, the blowout was pretty much non eventful... Maybe that's because I took a step forward by renting a Carve 133 based upon a suggestion from Bruce Peterson... Or that the wind was relatively tame the whole way through this time... Whatever the case, it was still fun and exciting... You never know what you are going to get, yeah, like a box of chocolates!

Before the race Dale Cook and others kept vascillating between TEN O's or SEVEN. EIGHTS! Well, my biggest that I brought was a 6.7 this year. Being that in 2002, when I had tried it last, I got NUKED into the boom a few times on a 5.2... In the end, Dale ran out there with his sawweeet Roberts Formula style board and a 9.9M sail.

The wind was relatively weak at the start in Stevensen's... I was the first guy over the upwind wake of the "rabbit start boat"... And one of the last ones over the downwind side of the wake!!! he he... The big sails screamed out of there and the rest (1/4 of the field) of us on smaller "slolom gear" watched. I planed quite a bit, but shlogged quite a bit... Staying on the sides where the least current was but where most of the wind would be... Sometimes tricky... Anyway, I finished the course on slolom gear... That was my goal... 3 and a half hours or so... There were a couple 40MPH gusts, but I survived them O.K. on my 6.7 Northwave and the Carve 133... When I came through the "Corridor" (Hatchery) people were on 5.0's. The Carve seemed surprisingly sluggish... A rental, probably had water in it! It's all about the correct gear... So...


CARL CHRISTENSEN... My call out is to you!!! Now that I have accomplished my goal of finishing the race in time (2.5hour cut off to viento/2 hour cut off to Event site from Viento/ overall 4.5 hour cutoff) on slolom gear, I will allow myself to do it on any gear in the future... You would actually compete very well in this race and I think that you should do it next year. I know you could finish it on your gear in under 1.5 hours... You would love it... I believe Duane Karen has done the race a few times, talk to him... But I'll tell ya, you would love it! And you would finish top 10 I'll bet. It is only a grueling race if you chose the wrong gear... If you nail the gear, it's actually a 1 to 2 hour joyride... (actually, in 2002 I think, Cook got launched... 50 wall of white water with his body planing out of it cartwheel style I've heard) ;)...

PostPosted: Thu Jul 13, 2006 7:12 pm
by Carl Christensen
yeah, that would be me for sure, launched and lunched. i'd get hit by the 40 mph puff and there wouldn't be anything left of me. either that or i'd end up in portland. my hats off to you for your courage, you're a brave hombre in my book. 5.0 at the hatch? way to represent. and thanks for the tech info, i was wondering what the big dogs were using. i saw pictures on the vmg website. which one was you? congrats on the attempt and more on your completion. sounds like fun and looked like a beautiful day.

PostPosted: Thu Jul 13, 2006 7:16 pm
by Carl Christensen
vmgevents.com

click on the blowout or something like that, it's not too hard.

PostPosted: Fri Jul 14, 2006 8:15 am
by Craig Goudie
Rick, you're (still) a stud!

-Craig

Congrats Rick...U Da Man!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 14, 2006 9:17 am
by Sarah Ranes
I was sailing at Wells Island on a 4.7 and 75 ltr board, enjoying nice swell and trying to watch for the downwinders to come thru. Missed Dale but had Bruce Peterson go by on his formula gear, doing a serious downwind angle thru the swell. I gave a big waaaahooooo, and remember thinking that it was a pretty big formula sail. That is a whole different type of sailing, and was fun to see. And goes to show that you can use almost any size of gear that you want!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 14, 2006 7:03 pm
by rob smith
Rick,
Nice job at the blow out. You actually finished right behind one of my sailing buddies in HR, Kraig Kerr. I saw your finish times at vmgevents.com. I love this time of year sailing and spending time in the Gorge. I have to nurse a shoulder a little longer then we are back up to the corridor and getting time on the hypersonic here. You were on about the same gear (as Kraig) and it sounded about right for the windy stretch but a bit short on the lower or less windy sections. Yes, we should get Carl up there to blaze a trail on the formula.

Rob

PostPosted: Sun Jul 16, 2006 4:13 pm
by RickHeninger
Cool Rob... It's quite an experience... We were lucky that the wind brought us through in time...

Carl, you would be surprised at how much fun it is... You have more experience on that type of gear than most of the guys that do the race...
Don't fool yourself... You are ready for this Carl... Start training!!! ;) Just do some good long downwinders on Utah lake... Saratoga to Provo Boat harbor or even MM19... There are a few of us who'd love to join... But there is a little PS.... IF the wind is greater than 20MPH in Stevensen's... Most of the racers were getting ready to use their smaller slolom gear.