Saturday, March 31, 2012

Training in Palma

The last month has been an exciting and busy one. Prior to our arrival in Palma de Mallorca, we knew that it was going to be a critically important segment of training as we crescendo towards the Olympics Qualifier in early May in Croatia. When we arrived here on March 4th, we were busy for several days rigging our new boat, ‘Cahow’- she’s looking real good! After sailing 1042 for so long, we long forgot how stiff a new boat feels! We are happy to say her and the masts’ performance during our training have been very promising.

Following the preparation of the boat, we had 2 1/2 weeks of probably our most productive tranche of training to date in the beautiful bay of Palma. Almost all of the top European boats were present for at least portions of our sailing, constantly allowing us to weigh our progress. Although the weather has been a little chilly at times, we have had numerous valuable sessions on the water in light, windy, shifty, steady, flat and choppy seas. Since there are constantly world-class boats out practicing, we have been able to consistently assess our quality in both speed and maneuvers up and downwind.

In the middle of our training, we were able to test our progress in a ‘Training Camp Regatta” that fielded many good teams. The conditions through the three day event couldn’t have been more different from one another as we saw light, shifty winds on Day 1, steadier 8knots on Day 2 and concluding with a real wavy 14-18knots! We ended up finishing mid-fleet with a couple good results. A real standout out for us was our starting and speed. But again, we were plagued with some little mistakes that cost us a few top tens, specifically downwind in light winds. With some good critical evaluating of what went wrong, we prepared for Ramon’s training that began 2 days after the event.

Our week of training with Ramon couldn’t have been better timed. After feeling a little exhausted after our first half of training, Ramon’s arrival sparked us into form again. With more practice races with quality teams, we again were able to practice our skills- except this time under the watchful eye of our coach. His keen observations of our maneuvers, tactical decisions and sail trim were incredibly beneficial to us.

After Ramon left on Tuesday, we finally took a few days off to rest and relax. While European teams can just take an easy 2hr flight home to recuperate, Bermuda isn’t so close! However, we were able to escape the confines of the boat park and explore the other, less developed and more beautiful coasts of the island.

Yesterday we did our pre-regatta check of all our equipment, and gave ‘Cahow’ a good polishing prior to the Princess Sofia Regatta beginning on Monday. With a day of training today, following by a day off tomorrow, we are very excited to get racing. Keep posted for daily updates on our Facebook page (Kirkland Brothers Sailing)!
Here are a few shots of the training (Photos courtesy of Ramon)



Monday, March 19, 2012

Mallorca Update




These past 2 weeks have been an exciting one. We have put together our new boat together in Mallorca, Spain and are gearing up for the first major World Cup Event of the European Season. Most of the major players of the fleet are here or showing up in the next week or so, thus making for great practice races every afternoon in de Bahia de Palma. The event starts here on April 2 and runs through April 7th and will serve as a great “dry-run” for the World Championships (Croatia – May 7-12), which will be our Olympic Qualifier.

Ramon, our coach will be here tonight for a week of training to help us continue to refine the new boat, improve our boat handling and analyze our practice races. Further, it will be good to have him here to start the mental preparation for Croatia and make sure we are approaching the event in the right way.

Back to the new boat! The early feedback on the boat is promising. The boat has come out of the box pretty ready to go and we were able to transfer our tuning numbers from our old rig. She feels immensely stiffer (less energy lost and able to hold rig tension) than the boat we were sailing in Miami and the new style wing construction makes for a more stable platform for boat handling operations. Lining up with top teams now, with correct rig tuning, we have confidence to hold our position. That is easier said than done, but if we can consistently stay on top of our tuning, our boat speed should put us in tremendous shape.

So over these next few weeks, we will continue to tweak the boat, but also focus on our boat handling and keep our sailing ‘tidy’ (to keep the speed through all turns) around the race course. This is vital to maintain the good positioning that our speedy boat has given us with the margin for error so minimal at the top of the fleet.

All in all, we are energized about this final stage in the qualification phase and are looking forward to making Bermuda proud over the next few months!

Thank you so much for your support which has gotten us to where we are today and please standby on our progress as we aim towards London this summer!!