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Belgian Grand Prix - Race 1
Having never been to
Zeebrugge but heard a lot about the conditions there, we were
looking forward to some rough and challenging racing. We should
be careful what we wish for in the future!
It started out very
grey in Zeebrugge, the sea was grey, the sky grey and it all
seemed a bit miserable. However, the Belgians really pulled out
the stops for us and their professionalism and friendliness made
up for the weather! Testing on Friday took the form of a quick
whiz out on the course, getting fuel and whizzing back. It was
pretty rough and we did not want to break anything just before
the race!
With the conditions potentially staying the
same we set the boat up for rough weather the following day.
Again we tested in the morning to try a bit more of the set up,
and again it was rough. It was with some nervousness we went to
the start expecting the worse, only to find that the conditions
had flattened out a fair bit, very lumpy on the North of course,
furthest out, but better by the pier inshore.
Now that the starts are separate from
Evolution it’s so much better. You have a chance to get a good
line and it’s a pleasure to actually see where you’re going for
a change! (ummm, no brakes, no visibility, 20 big boats all
around…we must be mad!)
We waited for the Evolution class to start
then it was our turn. For a change the startboat shot off
quickly and I could not catch up! I was panicking as suddenly
the green flag was up and we were behind. Fortunately, the outer
leg was hard work, perhaps 6 feet in places and tricky to read
which we excel in. As we got our speed up we took the gap
between Roscioli Hotels and Buzzi Bullet and sped past, the boat
behaving well.
We were in the lead. We had a long run to the
first mark (F). We were going well until I got the turn totally
wrong and ended up hurtling across the spectator fleet with Mike
screaming at me to go LEFT LEFT LEFT!! Oops, I was not popular!
We were now increasing our lead but it was
hard going. From ‘F’ we went towards the shore in a fairly lumpy
following (surf) sea, which was great fun, the boat travelling
well and hitting some good speeds. We took a great turn at the
‘G-G1’ turn gate and raced through the lap gate. Here the leg
looked flat but was a bit beamy (waves hitting the side of the
boat), we lurched from side to side a few times but nothing
horrendous.
Taking the next turn worked well, a nice
sweeping turn at maximum speed at ‘B’ helped us gain more ground
on the pursuing boats.
I looked behind me and saw that whilst
Roscioli was not that close, he was pushing us hard, one wrong
turn, one moment of backing off too much and they would be
there. We took the chicane for the first time which was great,
better than it looked and we swept around the turns in the big
swell really well. So now I had a good idea of the course,
tricky on the northern side with some big old holes which could
catch you out but fast nonetheless.
Several more laps went by, Roscioli there but
not catching us. It’s so hard when you are in the lead. The
pressure’s on and there’s no room for error…..well I thought so!
The ‘F’ turn kept on catching me out, I could
not turn it well, we kept lurching hard to the left a couple of
times really landing heavily and losing far too much speed. Each
bad turn must have cost us time. I just leant on the throttles
to get going again to make up for it.
After a few more OK laps we were heading
towards the now infamous mark ‘F’ and, as we approached the
mark, about half a mile out I shouted at Mike ‘where are the
buoys I cannot see them’ (or words to that effect!). The next
sentence scared the hell out of me ‘I don’t know I cannot see
them!’. The grey sea and grey sky and sizeable sea conditions
with small buoys meant it was hard to see them. We were
desperately trying to pick them out from the “grey out” of the
water and sky. That distance between us and Riscioli was going
to reduce somewhat…where the hell were the marks! Suddenly Mike
yelled at me ‘RIGHT RIGHT RIGHT’ and there they were about 50
yards to the right of us. I turned hard to right (which in that
size sea was not a mean feat!) we lurched over hard (oops) and
headed towards them. All the time on my mind…..Roscioli must be
there catching us.
In a rush to make up for the mistake, I got a
good turn and once again we were on track. As the boat lightened
up as the fuel was being used she was becoming a bit of a
handful, and each mistake, was painful. The beam sea is one of
the hardest to drive in and I was feeling it. Concentration was
hard too, when a race is intense it drains you and a couple of
times I lost concentration and got the boat seriously out a
shape! ‘For goodness sake sort it out’ I kept telling myself,
‘Roscioli will be there and then its going to be harder’. I
looked across at Mike’s lap counters, one more lap to go, thank
goodness! I backed off a little saving the boat, we were ahead
enough to have a slight break. We sped through the finish but
there was no chequered flag…where was it?
With the new format of the parade lap first,
Mike had inadvertently counted this as a race lap incorrectly.
We did not know this at the time but we’ve learnt over the years
that you do not stop unless you can see the flag.
We carried on, much slower…who was wrong? Us
or P1? We looked behind, were we being followed still, it was
not easy to tell. I slowed and slowed and we had a quick
discussion and decided we would just do one more lap in case.
Thank goodness we did! After half a lap Mike yelled quick we’ve
got it wrong and Roscioli’s catching us again! My heart fell
like a stone, I was demob happy and now had to get into race
mode again! Foot hard down I drove as hard as I could, Mike
focussing hard on getting our lines right to minimise the course
and get best advantage. It worked and we sped to the end in
style to finally take that chequered flag!
I could not believe that we had won again, we
were on a roll but it had been hard. The outer leg had thrown us
about a lot and driving hard in seas you would rather take easy
was hard on the three of us (boat included!). But we survived
and with another win under our belts things were definitely
looking up!
|
Position |
Boat Name |
Laps |
Time |
Championship
Points Awarded |
|
1 |
01 Extremeboat.com |
10 of 10 |
01 :21 :57 |
100 |
|
2 |
44 Roscioli Hotels Roma |
10 of 10 |
01 :22 :18 |
80 |
|
3 |
07 VoomVoom.com |
10
of 10 |
01
:27 :01 |
60 |
|
4 |
11 Sunseeker Challenger |
10 of 10 |
01 :29 :38 |
50 |
|
5 |
33 ForONE* |
9
of 10 |
01
:28 :23 |
wildcard |
|
6 |
10 Naue Racing* |
8
of 10 |
01
:23 :24 |
wildcard |
|
7 |
46 Chaudron 2 |
8
of 10 |
01
:24 :07 |
40 |
|
8 |
47 Buzzi Bullet III |
8
of 10 |
01
:24 :31 |
30 |
|
9 |
08 Sun Lik Beer |
3
of 10 |
RET |
0 |
Belgian Grand Prix - Race 2
Sunday dawned grey
again, our hotel looked over the course and we woke to huge seas
and big white horses….a force 6-7 northerly in the North Sea,
this could be our most challenging yet. We went to get fuel
again, wow was it rough! Huge 4-5 metre seas which were really
steep and solid. Not nice, and for the first time I can say I
really was not looking forward to racing. One particularly
memorable moment was when we came gently off a wave (at just
40mph!) we seemed to just fall for ages before we hit the bottom
of a trough, I have NEVER fallen in such a deep hole in all our
years racing. I was very nervous….
On the way back to the pits we came across
Buzzi Bullet who’d gone out to have a look, we ran alongside him
keeping ourselves company. When we got back to the pits we’d
both seen each of us literally disappear in the enormous waves.
This was going to be a challenge.
P1 sensibly erred on the side of caution;
What’s the point of breaking the boats so close to the
championship finale? They needed a race in Belgium and damage or
worse to an entire fleet would have been a disaster. Safety
wise, in those seas you could never have recovered someone from
the water so a storm course was drawn up consisting of a smaller
course with 8 laps and avoiding the worse of the conditions. We
did our parade lap and it was OK. Big swells with waves on top
and some big white horses made you focus hard.
We were mulling over in our heads how to run
this. In theory rough is our favourite and what we excel in but
this was a big beam sea with some enormous holes and I would go
so far to say the most challenging yet. Not only that but
choosing a strategy was key. If we went for an all out win we
could end up not finishing, it was that dangerous, but we wanted
more points to increase our lead relieving pressure for
Portugal….what were we to do?
Off we went, green flag, foot down. Again an
excellent start, but what was interesting is no one committed to
the conditions. The fleet were being very cautious and sensibly
weighing up the waves and getting into that all important
rhythm, crucial to keep the boat together.
Eventually, we squeezed our way into the
lead, not wittingly really and there was VoomVoom right there
alongside us, SunLik Beer, and Buzzi Bullet almost level with us
and Roscioli marginally behind with Sunseeker. What to do? Do I
push early on for a lead or just go with the flow and save the
boat….we chose the latter and thank goodness we did.
The leg to ‘F’ was hard and the waves were
hitting the boat hard on its side, it was literally like hitting
rocks. We lurched from side to side and were landing hard on the
side of the boat. I was just hoping we would land the right side
up! All the time we were smashing our heads on the side of the
boat and I kept smashing my ribs against the side of the seat
such was the sheer force of the impacts we were taking. We have
some very interesting bruises!
We came to the dreaded ‘F’ mark and
cautiously took the turn, hit a big wave on the side and yep, we
were skyward again! We hadn’t even completed a lap yet and were
beaten up! I was trimming the drives as fast as possible to get
the bow up and out of the waves. In that size following (surf)
sea you could bury the nose very quickly and submarine or bow
steer badly losing control of the boat which when you are racing
that close to your competitors is not a good thing.
We shot down towards the shore and Voom Voom
was alongside us pushing very hard. Jeese this was going to be
really hard! As we turned the mark and headed towards the pier
along the shore I turned and there behind us were all the boats,
we had all kept together, this was real racing in true offshore
conditions, it was going to be merciless!
As we headed towards Mark ‘B’ the sea started
to get large again and we were hitting hard. Every smash beat us
up, first our heads then our bodies.
We got a few boat lengths ahead of Voom Voom
but not much. I came up to the turn and tried to take it fast
and wide, here you were turning against the sea into a big 3-4
metre head sea. No matter how hard I tried I could not keep the
hull in the water and we lurched high on our side. Whack,
another blow to the boat and us. I looked across to Voom Voom
and they had done the same, they rocketed into the air and must
have been ten feet in the air at least. I could not believe how
hard this was going to be. Again I looked behind and although
the others were starting to drop behind, Buzzi Bullet was now
catching us both.
Normally, in these conditions we run our own
race, we usually get in front and then take it easy. In fact
normally the rough conditions create big gaps between the boats
and it’s the case of survival of the fittest. Rarely do you get
a true ‘race’ in seas like this with close tactical racing.
One of the main reasons is that the boats,
despite their size and weight, fly incredibly high in those seas
and it is very easy to ‘t-bone’ i.e. land on top of another boat
which can cause serious injury or worse. You then worry about
submarining in those big seas and finally if that’s not enough,
there’s a chance that, if you get it completely wrong you can
also overturn. But you have to put all this to the back of your
mind, you are racing and if you don’t get over the fear factor
you just won’t win. That’s the hard bit!
So on we drove on, I was giving myself a load
of grief, I could not lose either Buzzi Bullet or Voom Voom, I
knew if I really drove hard I could get them, but would we
survive? To win you have to finish. We did not need to beat Voom
Voom, just Roscioli who was way behind, was it worth smashing up
the boat for a few extra points….yes!
So on we went, one minute Buzzi Bullet ahead,
then us, then Voom Voom. We did another lap and came up to the
‘B’ buoy, I took another wide, fast turn, forgot to slow down
enough and we hit a huge wave and over we went hard, harder and
harder to the left, the sea getting very close to the side of my
face. For a second everything slowed and I thought, that’s it we
are going to go over. I felt for my regulator (oxygen) expecting
the worse, this was it. What would it be like? It was weird how
everything went into slow motion and we prepared for the worse.
Fortunately, we must have a guardian angel,
the boat fell so hard and I swear beyond the point of return,
but another wave must have hit us on the left at exactly the
right time and thrown us back over to the right. We sprang back
in the air and lurched hard to the other side and settled. I
don’t mind admitting that scared me. Voom Voom saw what happened
and were ready to stop and help, it was that close.
This was within the first 3 laps and we had
another 5 to go, I was really not enjoying this one bit. Then we
hit a stroke of luck in an unwitting way. We came to mark ‘F’,
again all in a line Voom Voom, Buzzi Bullet and us. We were on
the outside, went to turn in and there was Voom Voom right in
our way going straight ahead instead of turning! How we missed
them I will never know particularly as we didn’t have any props
in the water so no steering and of course, no brakes. He took us
with him and once again we disappeared into the spectator fleet
rather spectacularly. We scattered the poor spectators in their
boats, Mike shouted directions as we tried to avoid the flurry
of scampering boats. Some of those boats must have got some
amazing close up shots of both boats as both Voom Voom and us
bashed on by within a few feet of them.
I was mad, Voom Voom had cost us a lot of
distance and now Buzzi Bullet had a good lead. I now drove like
a woman possessed. We were nearly halfway through the race, not
up there in the front. Fortunately, very quickly we both caught
Buzzi Bullet and we were back to normal with the boats up
together again. This was hard, hard work!
Then we came up to the scary ‘B’ buoy, I was
very nervous as we approached. We were now also being pushed
into a very tight turn with both Buzzi Bullet and Voom Voom on
our outside. Mike said you are going to have to take this turn
very tight and get inside Voom Voom. I slowed right down to
about 50mph, every sense telling me not to slow but I had to. We
took a fantastic turn steered through the big head sea and
suddenly we were nearly ahead again! Now I’d figured how to take
those turns…it worked!
We headed out north again, but suddenly Buzzi
had dropped back, must have broken something? And we were once
again in familiar territory alongside Voom Voom. This was great,
racing alongside, leaving the water at the same time and
glancing across at each other, for a few seconds it was really
enjoyable! Poor Buzzi though, to have got so far and then had
their race ruined by a broken throttle cable, I felt for them.
Then BANG BANG and again we were out of shape
all over the place, and a sharp reminder not to relax. The
annoying thing about this race was that you could not get into a
good rhythm and there was no restbite. The waves were coming at
all angles and the minute you were settled and going well,
another would get you and take you skyward and out of shape.
For two more laps we fought like two demented
teams! Voom Voom pushing us very hard, each boat taking the lead
then losing it, blocking on the turns and playing tactics, this
was amazing, fast racing style in a Force 6 wind with massive
waves. I questioned our sanity for a second!
Finally we had two more laps to go, I prayed
we had the lap numbers right this time. I was now thinking about
the boat, one of the engines was down on revs a lot and she was
getting harder and harder to handle, the weaker engine
unbalancing the boat very badly and perhaps something else
wasn’t right? I settled a bit and said to Mike, ‘lets save the
boat, we don’t need this win at the expense of the boat’. Mike
sensibly agreed and just said don’t lose him. So we took it a
bit more carefully letting Voom Voom take the lead.
Then I thought about it, those extra 20
points could be very useful in a few weeks, hell lets see what
we can do, we only had one more lap to go, so surely it was now
or never and the sea was easing a bit.
I floored it and again we started to catch
Voom Voom. We’d gone wide then tactically taken them on the
inside at the ‘F’ buoy before and I knew they would not let us
do that again. But I went for it just in case. They fended us
off by turning hard left, but to their cost we had a good wide
approach and took the turn spot on. Sadly for them their boat
lurched forward and bow steered causing them to hook hard to the
left and they missed the buoy completely, literally by inches. I
felt for them, one tiny mistake and if I drove hard now the race
was ours, they had driven like demons. It just goes to show how
there is absolutely no room for error.
As we flew down the last leg and across the
finish line I have never been so pleased to see a chequered
flag! Mentally and physically that was one tough race for all of
us. Buzzi Bullet, Voom Voom and ourselves had driven the race of
our lives, but it was another double win for us! However, at
what cost, how was the boat? There was a terrible noise from one
of the engines but we’d finished, that was the most important
thing, quite how I do not know! Just saving the boat for those
last crucial laps before our last assault had been a wise move,
with the damage we could well have not finished.
I have to mention a young lady and her father
who came all the way over from the UK to support the British
teams, we didn’t get their names. We cannot tell you how great
it felt to see a Union Jack flying from the pier proudly,
whoever you were, thank you!
Now it is the turn of the mechanics and team
to be heroes The boat suffered some damage to the hull and the
engines, as did everyone, we all had our horror stories to tell.
It did, however, explain the unbalanced nature of the boat in
the last few laps as the hull had delaminated slightly where we
had hit something. One of the engines had blown a gasket which
also explained a lot and we had a pretty spectacular oil leak
just to add to the mix.
We are now very fortunate in that we are now
110 points ahead, but experience tells us that this is not over
yet by a long way…..
|
Position |
Boat Name |
Laps |
Time |
Championship
Points Awarded |
|
1 |
01 Extremeboat.com |
8 of 8 |
56 :03 |
100 |
|
2 |
07 VoomVoom.com |
8
of 8 |
56
:17 |
80 |
|
3 |
44 Roscioli Hotels Roma |
8 of 8 |
59 :20 |
60 |
|
4 |
08 Sun Lik Beer |
8
of 8 |
59
:37 |
50 |
|
5 |
47 Buzzi Bullet III |
7
of 8 |
58
:46 |
40 |
|
6 |
11 Sunseeker Challenger |
7 of 8 |
01 :04 :34 |
30 |
|
7 |
46 Chaudron 2 |
1
of 8 |
RET |
0 |
|
8 |
33 ForONE* |
0
of 8 |
RET |
wildcard |
|
9 |
10 Naue Racing* |
0
of 8 |
RET |
wildcard |
|