Showing posts with label Weymouth Speed Week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weymouth Speed Week. Show all posts

Monday, 5 December 2011

Boards article about Weymouth Speed Week

I have always wanted to get into Boards magazine. December 2011 is the last 'normal' Boards issue, next year they are moving to a biannual collectors magazine with more on-line content. I made it just before they finished then. Its a bit of a dream come true. There is even a picture of Kat right in the middle of the top picture.

The magazine had it spread over two pages so I have cropped and do a bit of cut and paste to get it onto one. The text is what I wrote on here about Speed week, if you cannot read it in the picture it is also found here

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

A Brief History of Speedweek



 Author: Mark  Matthews - Portland Pirates Team Cap'n AKA Swagger

All i have written here is research and open to argument.

You may like this info and you may not, in the early days around 1972 the distance for measuring the outright speedsailing record was decided to be 500m. In the Autumn of 1972 Weymouth Speed Week started with the new official distance, and was held in Portland harbour the only venue in the world to accommodate these idiots. It was an open event that allowed people to use their imagination to try and gain the top podium place.

Who was the first winner? It was 'The Crossbow', a Proa boat which was a single hull with an outrig thingy (a bit like the canoes on Hawaii Five O), skippered by Timothy Colman and achieving the record in 1972 with a speed of 26.30 knots!
Ok hang on a minute, yes 26 knots which is nothing is it? Well you would be surprised this is 39 years ago and some people would be happy with this today in a boat or on a windsurfer. Moving on a year to 73 and it falls again same boat and skipper with an increase of 3 knots to 29.30! Now this bloke is starting to shift (don't you think?).

Progressing to 1975 and yes you got it, the record falls again with a speed of 31.10knots, same bloke same boat but hang on another boat comes onto the water and gets 31.80! You would think that Tim would be gutted by this, but oh no he had been talking to a designer called Roderick Macalpine-Downie. He had the boat built in Kent, this one was called Crossbow II Timothy Colman had done it again but this time with a Catamaran with hulls that measured a staggering 60 feet and were not built square to one another. The leeward hull was slightly forward. The reason behind this was that each hull had a sail on it and didn't create a wind shadow. These people were thinking very much ahead. Using no fancy Cad design and just a good old drawing board with great foresight and imagination. 

Now moving on to 1977, the record goes to Tim again with a speed of 33.80knots and in the same week a 34.4! Now by this time I was 4 years old and I can remember the buzz that this boat and skipper used to bring to Weymouth and our very windy autumn months after our very typical busy british summer holidays(No such thing as Ibiza holidays for the majority of the population then). 

The tides were changing as there was a new kid on the block, are got you! You thought i was going to say windsurfer but no Its a........ I can't say it,........ oh go on then, you will hate me but this may have been the birth of the Kitesurfer, yep some plonker got a load of kites 50 foot up and about 70 foot in front of an Amphicat. This is no joke that it happened but the results are unknown, i imagine its on the bottom of the harbour who knows? 

Now the part you are probably waiting for, The Windsurfer arrived and did not have a very competitive start but then nor did the Kite. (I hate saying things like that)

Onwards to 1980 and the windsurfer was moving up the rankings each year, the kite had gone into a coma and Crossbow II did it again 36.00 Knot 500m in the middle of the harbour the outright record crushed. This record went unbeaten until 1986 when Pascal Maka took the record away from British waters forever(?). Now what you have to understand is that there are a couple of things to point out here. The first is for 14 years Tim Colman held the outright speedsailing record, and the next there have been only 7 people to go faster on windsurfing boards in portland harbour and load there data into gps-speedsurfing.com since it has started. I don't have much info on results for Speedweek in later years except Anders Bringdal has the official record of 38.40 knots and Pete Young has the gps record 39.52 knots (could have been faster but someone was chatting in the middle of the course so i believe).

Anyway just thought i would take the natter of Boards with Sails against Kites and Dinner trays away and back to when The Giant they called Crossbow ruled Portland Harbour and nobody stood in her way.

All the best,

Swagger....  

Monday, 24 October 2011

Weymouth Speed Week 2011 final report

Gold Fleet Winners L(3rd) to R(1st) Daniel Borgelind 33.5knt,
Kevin Greenslade 34.4knts, David Williams (kite) 36.3knts.
For myself and many others it was a long week, with good winds on a couple of days and lots of waiting on others. I have been asleep pretty much since Friday evening so I have a new found respect for many of the speed and windsurfers who stayed on over the weekend to compete in the BSA Weymouth slalom.


After a quiet weekend with very little wind on Saturday 15th and Sunday 16th, Aeolus delivered the goods for the early part of the week (google it if you dont know).

Monday was a great day and I am sure if the harbour had been quieter then the local legends would have been chasing records. As it was the harbour was busy with many people standing around (in the middle of a wind hole leaving no run up to the lead in bouy)) waiting for their runs. The wind built as the day drew on, allowing for some runs later in the afternoon quite close in to the shore where it was not so choppy. This is where the big names made their winning runs for the week, none of the top scores made on the Monday were bettered before the end of the week.

Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Weymouth Speed Week Update to day 5

It was a dream of mine to get a photo like this with the blurry background, and I didn't do it in
Photoshop. Thanks to Dave White for the pictures, image taken from the Boards Mag website.
(They pinched a couple of mine last week so this makes it fair ;-) )

Monday, 17 October 2011

Weymouth Speed Week 2011 Day 3 (mon)

Great winds today, lots of people found it really gusty, usual Portland Harbour conditions though. Will update when I can, fingers dont work, legs given up, head spinning, cant wait for results ;-) Think I did just under 30knots over 500m. Felt fine on the water as there was a safety boat so I could go for it for the first time since I was ill.

Best things of the day were 3 different competitors came and thanked me for this website. Dont care if I win or lose now that has made the week all worthwhile.

I will try to write a full day report at some point but its the charity skittles night, in aid of W4CR so Kat and I will be going to that.

Cheers, hope those who played today enjoyed it.
Good speed and winds. 'The Bus'

Sunday, 16 October 2011

Weymouth Speed Week Day 2


Another flat calm day, the wind for a brief period this morning rose to around 10knots on the shore, if that. The wall gave a reading of 12knots but this is always considerably higher due to both the height and the more open location. Quite a few people got some runs in, but nothing spectacular, most were around the 15knot mark and done with 9-10m sails on big slalom or formula kit. David Williams scored 19.299knots and was the fastest of the day.













Weymouth Speed Week 2011 Day 1

Almost perfect reflections in the marina.
Today was a really nice day, but there was no wind. No wind at all. The water this evening was glassy enough to have got a fantastic photo if only we had taken the camera, the reflections from the street lights were perfectly straight lines.

The Army and Navy teams went out, one because they couldn't be outdone by the the other. No one knows which one started that though. They were so slow across the course I was tempted to get my paddleboard out and try to get top score for the day.





Speed Boards ready for Speed Week, just add wind and fat blokes.
It was a great day to meet many people who I respect in the speedsurfing world, and a lot that I do not know of but are regular competitors at the event, from the organisers of the event to the champions and competitors of the past themselves. This quick post is really to say a huge thanks to Tris Best who organised a great evening, with a social in the academy restaurant which included Chilli, with Chocolate Fudge Cake for desert. Tris through the OTC is doing a great job bringing together the windsurfing community here in Weymouth and Portland.

Another thanks must go to Nick Povey and his team for tirelessly organising this event.

Pictures by Ant Baker,
Article by 'The Bus'


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