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			<P><IMG SRC="cover2.gif" WIDTH="176" HEIGHT="408" ALIGN="LEFT" ALT="Proa " BORDER="0"
			HSPACE="8" Whigmaleerie""><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">My wife
			and I arrived at Heathrow airport on Friday, October 9 with just three days available
			to rent a van, travel across England to pick up and assemble my 16' kite powered
			speedsailboat, meet and organize the four man international crew (with their wives),
			practice launch procedures and be ready to sail flat out Tuesday morning in the 16th
			Annual Johnnie Walker International Speedsailing Event at Portland Harbor, Dorset,
			on the south coast of England.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">No sweat. Except that the boat
			didn't clear customs on time. This meant 300+ extra miles of driving (no freeways)
			to pick it up on Saturday. Nobody in England works on Saturday. We had to unload
			and assemble the boat on Sunday. Of course, the crew with their strong backs and
			tools arrived Sunday <I>evening</I>; the boat had to come off the van and be put
			together Sunday <I>day</I>. Monday practice sailing was a bust, there was no wind
			at all. The crew understood their jobs well enough as each had done it many times,
			but only two had ever worked together. No sweat. This is just business as usual,
			in international speedsailing competition.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">Speedsailing, no holds barred,
			timed racing over a 500 meter measured course, has been my avocation, some say vice,
			for twenty years. Wind direction, wind speed, boat configuration, even boat type,
			all are optional. The entrants must only be powered by the wind, be man-carrying
			(no models), and be capable of accelerating from rest.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">Way back in January, 1978,
			I met a British kite manufacturer, Keith Stewart, at a trade show. I'd been thinking
			about inclined sail rigs on conventional catamarans (inclining the rig to windward
			can make a boat more stable, and thus able to sail in more wind and, maybe, faster).
			Keith was selling big 150-300 square foot delta kites with inflatable leading edge
			tubes, for pulling three wheeled trikes over beaches and marshes. I looked through
			his exhibit and something clicked. Here was my inclined rig, available right off
			the shelf! I'd take Keith's kites, my boat and controls, and &quot;look out world!&quot;</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">I designed and Keith built
			boats for the '78 through '82 international speedsailing events at Weymouth. We didn't
			break any world records, but the development work, Keith with his kites and me with
			my boats and controls, was invaluable. We lost funding in 1983 and I started my own
			self-financed project. I came to Weymouth the next time on my own with the boat brand
			new, untested, and the entire crew picked up off the beach. There was absolutely
			no wind for 3 weeks and I went home skunked (and $12,000 lighter). I knew this happened
			occasionally, but preferably on someone else's budget! It was very hard to sign the
			checks to do it all again the next year. To say the very least, I was pretty hopeful
			of good weather and a good showing. Minor things like customs snafus, international
			logistics problems, and adverse weather before the event meant nothing. I was ready.</FONT></P>
			<P ALIGN="CENTER"><IMG SRC="crowd.jpg" WIDTH="385" HEIGHT="136" ALIGN="BOTTOM" ALT="In the crowd"
			BORDER="0"></P>
			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">Dawn Tuesday; the wind was
			blowing 25 mph, gusting to 30, from the preferred direction. This was directly offshore,
			over the low shingle dunes, creating nearly flat water with strong, non-turbulent
			wind right down to the water (really only perfectly &quot;clean&quot; down to about
			20' altitude. Friction with the water itself causes some turbulence, but only kitesailors
			can really appreciate this). The 75 best boardsailors in the world, culled from some
			500 applicants, plus 15-18 sail &quot;boats&quot; (a rather loose term, as no two
			shared any common attributes. &quot;Sailboat&quot; here is defined as non-sailboard)
			were on the course trying to get timed runs in while the wind was blowing.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">For traffic control purposes,
			sailboards must sail near shore in one direction during timed runs and offshore on
			their return. Larger sailboats normally sail even further offshore in rougher water,
			due to their greater draft requirements and to avoid congestion. Not me; my boat
			was custom designed just for Portland Harbor and can sail in one foot of water. I
			planned to sail inshore with the boards, in the flattest water.</FONT></P>

			<P><IMG SRC="jabfast.gif" WIDTH="213" HEIGHT="116" ALIGN="RIGHT" ALT="Flat out!"
			BORDER="0" HSPACE="8"><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">Alas, it
			wasn't to be. On the very first run, I was a bit too far offshore, and as I approached
			the course it was either abort and bear away offshore, or go for it. Of course, I
			went for it, right down the sailboard <I>return</I> course! Most of these guys had
			never seen a kiteboat before, none had ever sailed near one. For safety (my wire-thin
			lines sweep five feet off the water at 60 mph) most dropped their masts and dived
			into the water. I should digress here to mention that for (theoretically) faster
			speeds and simplicity in sailing the boat, I have no rudders. I think I have fair
			control without them. I can sail the boat &quot;easterly&quot; or &quot;westerly,&quot;
			&quot;upwind&quot; or &quot;downwind&quot;. I'm just not very good at swerving around
			objects smaller than, say, aircraft carriers. All of a sudden there were 30 or 40
			boardsailors, dead in the water in front of me, and they couldn't get out of the
			way! Worse, it had been eight weeks since I put the boat into its crate and I couldn't
			remember how to steer it! (Let's see . . . was it right foot to go left, or left
			foot to go right?) I only hit three sailboards, and didn't crash the kites. The boardsailors
			all waved friendily (albeit most with only one finger) and yelled encouragement (though
			most seemed to encourage leaving town). All further runs that day were met with a
			totally empty course, any sailboards being curiously deserted. I finished the day
			with a spectacular crash when I fell off the boat, the kites wouldn't crash (under
			certain conditions, they &quot;helicopter,&quot; circling fairly stably and hopelessly
			snarling the lines, and the boat flew, literally, across the course at 35 mph. The
			timers missed it, of course. No serious damage to boat or body (bent struts straightened,
			bruises survivable). No world records were in danger as I was still sorting our control
			settings and learning to sail in these &quot;perfect&quot; conditions. Early to bed
			and ready for day two.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">The second day, and the third,
			featured variable light winds, lots of rain, and no sailing. Each night lots of wind
			was forecast for &quot;tomorrow&quot; and each morning lots &quot;this afternoon&quot;.
			On the night of the third day, completely without warning (heads rolled at the English
			Met), we had 90-100 mph hurricane force winds. This storm was entirely during the
			hours of darkness and partially wrecked the cities of Southampton, London, and Cherbourg,
			France. It was the worst storm to hit southern England since 1703.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">We stayed in our rooms while
			slate roofing tiles were blowing off all over town and many chimneys fell. I simply
			wrote-off the boat. I didn't want to drive to the beach, as we had to cross an open
			causeway, and we were driving a van . . .</FONT></P>

			<P><IMG SRC="close.gif" WIDTH="205" HEIGHT="120" ALIGN="LEFT" ALT="Close-up" BORDER="0"
			HSPACE="8"><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">At dawn the wind had
			dropped to 30 mph, so we went down to to survey the damage. There were 18 boat entries,
			total, all of which were up on the beach, tied down. 15 were totally wrecked or damaged
			beyond on-site repair; three had disappeared completely. The local community had
			lost or sunk 30 yachts and innumerable small boats. We had tied the kiteboat next
			to a large balk of timber, along with several others. The boats on both sides of
			us were gone and one nearer the water was partially demolished. And there was mine,
			with hardly a scratch on it! We went to the morning briefing to see where things
			stood.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">Some 50 sailboard rigs stored
			in a large tent had disappeared&Ntilde;along with the tent, and the Porta-cabin with
			the back-up timing computer was blown flat. The main computer was undamaged, the
			timing transits still stood, the wind was from the preferred direction, and so they
			opened the course! The TV cameras were rolling and we had the only undamaged boat.
			What an opportunity! But alas, our support boat had sunk in the storm and the local
			man who owned it and who had been volunteering not only the boat, but his time as
			well was committed to helping his neighbors dig themselves and their boats out. So
			favor for favor, we wrote off the day and salvaged other people's boats. No great
			damage to the support boat (thank goodness, as I was guaranteeing its condition)
			and we built a lot of good will with the local boatmen. We were further consoled
			as the wind kept dropping and the best speeds were slower than on the first day.</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">The next day, Saturday, the
			wind was 20-25 mph, from the preferred direction and there were 2000+ people on the
			beach watching the show. We sailed both morning and afternoon and had great fun (I
			did anyhow; the crew grumbled each time I crashed the kites). I drank lots of salt
			water while being dragged underwater past the French TV cameras.</FONT></P>
			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">We kept changing rigs as the
			kites got wet and finally managed third fastest for the week in one class and second
			fastest in another. It turned out that this was the last good sailing day as the
			wind shifted direction and the course couldn't be opened. As often is the case, the
			best conditions and highest speeds for the week were on the first day. This was a
			pity since we sailed as fast or faster on each succeeding day, in lighter and lighter
			winds, as practice took its effect.</FONT></P>
			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">We sailed a lot the last two
			days, although the wind direction dictated sailing only out and back into the beach
			(the course is along the beach) in rough water. The boat is quite capable of sailing
			to windward, or downwind, but not fast. Sailboats generally are only fast across
			the wind.</FONT></P>
			<P><IMG SRC="dave.jpg" WIDTH="279" HEIGHT="225" ALIGN="LEFT" ALT="Dave Culp" BORDER="0"
			HSPACE="8"><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">In conclusion, the
			boat sailed up to its potential--30 mph--only for short distances, less than the
			length of the course, and then would fall off the wind and finish the run slowly.
			A combination of pilot error (practice, practice!) and an annoying but curable helm
			balance problem (curable by building a new boat!!) kept me fast enough to see the
			carrot on the end of the stick, but not fast enough to catch it!!</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif">However, to quote actor Arnold
			Schwartzenegger, &quot;I'll be back!&quot;</FONT></P>

			<P><FONT SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, sans serif"><I>Dave Culp-designed kiteboats
			have raced at Weymouth and other international speedsailing courses more than a dozen
			times. He continues to build faster and ever larger kite powered boats. For more
			info see:  http://www.dcss.org/speedsl</I></FONT>
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