J/22 2006 News

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2006 NorthEast Championship
Lake George

Report by regatta winner Dave Nickerson

The Lake George Club hosted the combined J/22 Northeast Championship and Lake George Open September 23/24 for 36 boats from Cape Cod to Ohio. Wow – these guys really know how to run a regatta. The venue, the hospitality and the food was just outstanding – a big thanks to all the volunteers that made it happen. We’ll definitely be back.

A typical shifty lake breeze varied from about 8 to 16 knots from the SE to S on Saturday and about the same on Sunday though less shifty (except for the last attempted race with blasts well into the high 20s from the front that caused so much carnage at the J/24 NAs in Rochester).

[The boats were close together on the course and scores were tight. Dick Hallagan in 981 was going really well and won 2 out of the 4 races.

Being new to the J/22 class, this was our first “big” regatta and I had no idea how we’d go against the more experienced teams. Our local Fisher’s Island Sound fleet in southeastern CT is just getting going and has lots of great sailors, but only Rod Johnstone had traveled to major J/22 events. Frankly, I was a bit surprised by our upwind speed and height when close to other boats. Chris Field (our middle) did a great job keeping us in phase which never hurts and we could usually find the gears to deal with the changes in velocity. Set-up wise, we followed your “Lose the Tension Gauge” suggestions. However, the water was relatively flat, so we typically had the upper shrouds maybe a half turn tighter than I’d use in lumpy Fisher’s Island Sound.

Here are the results:
26 Don't Tell Mom 938 Dave Nickerson Noank, CT 2 4 2 8 1 3 11 1
30 Chibougamau 981 Richard Hallagan Rochester 1 8 1 10 2 2 12 2
29 Frosty 317 Peter Doyle Youngstown 8 1 7 16 4 1 17 3
35 Bow Down 1026(sail 1589) Jason Carminati Youngstown 3 5 5 13 3 4 17 4
25 Who's Ya Daddy 756 Randall Wallin Hyannis 5 7 6 18 6 6 24 5
28 Shark Sandwich 263 David Kerr EWYC, Ohio 4 2 12 18 5 9 27 6
12 Alternative Girlfriend C341 Larry Huibers Niagara, NY 13 3 9 25 8 5 30 7
37 Nutashif 940 Jed Hoffer Marion, MA 10 10 3 23 7 7 30 8
15 Joy 805 Bill Dutcher Lake George 11 13 10 34 11 10 44 9
27 Vamoose C312 Dan Walton Canada 12 6 11 29 9 16 45 10
34 Spaceball 788 Ben Doyle Youngstown 7 21 8 36 12 14 50 11
31 Res Ipsa 113 Jack Meade Hyannis 14 20 4 38 14 13 51 12
9 Fat Star 1084 Dave Macomb Lake George 6 9 22 37 13 15 52 13
32 Jazz C 693 Ron Harris Montreal 9 11 13 33 10 19 52 14
24 Woof 1509 Bill Griffin Stonington,CT 15 15 17 47 15 11 58 15
7 Blur 960 Ed Gardner Lake George 16 18 18 52 17 18 70 16
17 Loose Cannon 1022 Chris Hesse Buffalo 18 28 19 65 22 12 77 17
16 T 1483 Tom Selfridge Lake George 19 OCS-35 16 70 23 8 78 18
5 Steamin' 1534 Bill Zautner Lake George 23 14 25 62 19 20 82 19
10 Close Enough 689 Bill Bredenberg Buffalo 21 19 21 61 18 21 82 20
6 Brass Ring 657 Rik Alexanderson Lake George 17 16 15 48 16 DNS-35 83 21
2 Moonlighting 1094 Rex Moon Lake George 22 17 26 65 21 24 89 22
36 Wharf Rat 873 Peter Gould Ithaca 24 OCS-35 14 73 24 17 90 23
1 XRAD 1316 Harod Kunz Lake George 25 25 23 73 25 22 95 24
3 Fancy Dancer 921 Roger Greenwood Lake George 26 12 27 65 20 DNS-35 100 25
22 Fuzzy Logic 867 Christine Lund Lake George 20 29 31 80 27 26 106 26
23 White Cap 804 Mark Ackerle Lake George 28 OCS-35 20 83 29 25 108 27
20 Catchin'J's 1550 John Terrant Lake George 29 23 28 80 28 30 110 28
11 Music Man 487 George Morris Lake George 27 24 24 75 26 DNS-35 110 29
14 Knot Us 433 Tom Donohue Lake George 33 22 29 84 30 28 112 30
8 Knot on Call 1557 Rick Provenzano Lake George 32 30 30 92 32 23 115 31
19 Thistle Be It 1328 Herm Litner Lake George 31 26 32 89 31 27 116 32
33 Jupiter 1570 Amir Mujezinovic Lake George 30 31 33 94 33 29 123 33
18 # 18 896 Jason Dziadzio Buffalo 34 27 34 95 34 DNS-35 130 34
MoJo 690 Michael Dailey DNS DNS DNS DNS 135
Risky Business 236 Eric Christensen DNS DNS DNS DNS 135

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts. To order your J/22 sails online, click here.

 

2006 J/22 EAST COAST CHAMPS
NORTH SAILS 1,2,3!

Report by Greg Fisher

This weekend 22 boats sailed the J/22 East Coasts in Annapolis. Though the turnout was down a bit (many boats were driving to the NAS in Minneapolis that race this week), the talent was up, and the racing was tough. The sailors had a bit of everything, especially shifty and complicated light lumpy stuff...typical Chesapeake Bay in the hot summer.

When it was all done North Sails dominated the regatta with a 1,2,3 overall. Pete Mchesney, with team mates wife Margart and Scott Snyder won in a tiebreaker with Todd Hiller with wife Lynda, Lesley Cook and Emma Jones sailing. In third was Lightning Champion Al Terhune with wife Katie and Jason Werner.

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts. To order your J/22 sails online, click here.

2006 J/22 MID ATLANTIC CHAMPS
NORTH SAILS 1,2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,14,15 !!!

Report by Greg Fisher

This past weekend 30 boats sailed the MidAtlantic Championships in Annapolis. There was a little of everything, breeze wise but when it was all said and done Pete McChesney with wife Margaret and Scott Snyder as crew won by 11 pts over North Sails Chesapeake's service manager Jeff Todd. Alon Finklestein was 3rd, also with Norths.
In fact North Sails were 1,2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,14,15 overall! Congratulations Pete for yet another victory in the J/22!!

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts. To order your J/22 sails online, click here.

2006 J/22 EASTPORT YACHT CLUB ONE DESIGN REGATTA
NORTH 1,2,4,5 OVERALL!

Report courtesy Todd Hiller

The J22 event June 10th was the Eastport Yacht Club One Design Classic. They did a bang up job given the breezy and shifty conditions. There was major ebbing current which made for a really shitty port tack upwind. The boat would just bounce all over the place. The downwind legs were fun. It was nice to sail the thing downwind like a Laser and by the lee in the lighter stuff.

Full results, click here.

Division: J/22 (12 boats)

1 USA 1060 Leading Edge - Hiller, Todd 1 1 1 3.00 1
2 1504 RHYTHMIC PUMPING - King, Aden 2 2 3 7.00 2
3 1467 VC Performance Rigging - Van Cleef, David 3 3 2 8.00 3
4 1036 Indecision - FINKELSTEIN, ALON 4 4 5 13.00 4
5 USA 1329 Hot Toddy - Todd, Jeffrey 6 5 4 15.00 5

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts. To order your J/22 sails online, click here.

2006 J/22 DAVE COOL ICEBREAKER
CONGRATULATIONS LARS HANSEN!

Report by Greg Fisher

Long time North customer Lars Hansen won yet another Dave Cool Icebreaker J/22 regatta in Minneapolis, MN April 22/23. It was a great turnout with great weather. The competition, as it usually is on Lake Wayzata, was tough. We were proud that North sails helped Lars win the event and that 5 of the top 10 sailed North Sails!

The link to the regatta site is http://wyc.org/j22/cool.htm Lars' report of the last race is below. Nice job Lars!!
Everyone is enthused as the NAS will be at WYC this September and it will surely be a great regatta and a super turnout. Don't miss it!!

Photo: Lars and his team mates Jon Noller and Rod Komis.

REPORT BY LARS HANSEN:

It was down to the last race and we were ahead in points but if Bill Allen won the race then we had to be 4th or better. First mark Bill led and we were deep, breeze was dying. First run we passed a huge pack by staying right downwind and were up to third, Bill in light air had a lead of about a leg. There were also boats behind us by a leg as well. On the next beat we lost a boat but we were still ok for the regatta. Then the world collapsed, the two leaders a leg ahead were out of wind and took down their chutes and were beating in no wind on the run to the finish. We were making rapid gains on them but the boats a leg behind were making bigger gains on us.

At the finish we came to a stop with the leaders. Each boat that had stayed further to the right side passed those in the middle . To add to the excitement the RC was calling out the minutes to the end of the time limit. With 35 sec. to go Terry Foster from way outside managed an "end around to finish first and then the avalanche of finishers started the next ten boats finished overlapped. Bill went back to 6th we got hammered back to 11th. Bill and I both used that as our throwout and we won another Cool regatta. Dave Cool would have been pleased. Six different race winners in 6 races, North 3 wins and 5 of the top 10.

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

 

2006 TENNESEEAN REGATTA
North Sails 1,2,3!

Report by Greg Fisher

Congratulations to Sean Clare and his team for their win at the Tennessean regatta this past weekend. Below is a report from Sean. North sails were 1,2,3!

The Tennessean Regatta, HIYC, Nashville, TN
April, 8 & 9, 2006

Things were a bit bumpy on the afternoon before the regatta. There was a severe outbreak of tornadoes in Middle Tennessee. Our thoughts go out to the families that lost so much from the storms.

The most affected area was about 2 miles from the race area. So needless to say, it was close to home.

Our turn out was a bit down from what was expected but the folks that made it to this regatta got a chance to experience all extremes and fantastic race management.

Saturday the temperature was in the mid 50's and the wind was blowing from the north at 15 to 20 mph with gust to 30. Needless to say the rides were amazing. We managed to get in 3 loooong races. Among the casualties from the breeze was a brand new spinnaker on the Morang boat that went to shreds, the entire sea-hood ripping out on the Trotter-Borquin-Harrison boat, and the amazing pirouette on the Clare boat just to see how many flips Kyle Meyhoefer could do down below.

Once we came in, the beer flowed and the fish stories grew.

Sunday showed us the opposite conditions. The temperature raised and the wind velocity fell. Old Hickory Lake is famous for the term “Jackson’s Revenge” It will Givith and it will Taketh away!

The conditions were very shifty and you had to commit to a side. The middle was dead. The Freeman-Robertson boat did a great job working the shifts throughout the day.

When the racing was over the results with a throw-out for the top 3 stood as 1—Clare, 2—Freeman-Roberson and 3--Carson.

For complete results, click here.
For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 ROLEX WOMEN'S KEELBOAT CHAMPIONSHIP
North Sails powered Sally Barkow to a brilliant victoy!

Report by Greg Fisher

By now many of you have read how Sally Barkow with her team mates of Carrie Howe, Debbie Capozzi and Annie Lush dominated the 2005 Rolex held in Annapolis last week. They built had such a lead that they had the event won before the last race.

Cory Sertl, winner of the 2001 Rolex and a past Yachtswoman of the Year was second and she too, clinched her title without having to sail the final race. 2005 Rolex Yachtswoman of the year Jody Swanson was third with 2004 US Yngling Olympic rep Carol Cronin in fourth. New Zealand Olympic Yngling Rep Sharon Ferris rounded out the top five. My wife Jo Ann Fisher was sixth and fellow Annapolis skipper Lorie Stout was seventh.

Up until the very last day the 42 boat fleet enjoyed some of the best racing we've seen all summer on the Chesapeake Bay. On Friday, the sea breeze was not destined to appear and the fleet was finally towed in. It truly was a great series with some tremendous racing.

It also couldn't have been much better for North Sails...

North Sails finished 1,2,3,4,6,7,11,12,13,14*,15,16,19,20
26 boats sailed North
North Sails won 9 of the 10 races

This was also a good event for North Sails here in Annapolis. A true team effort in handling the regatta between One Design and Chesapeake made for some great exposure and service for all teams racing.

When this event's results are coupled with the wins at the recent East Coasts, the MidAtlantics and just this past weekend at Lake George, it gives us great confidence that North J/22 sails are indeed the fastest!

Read more at the event's website.

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 EAST COAT CHAMPIONSHIP
North Sails 1,2,3!

Report by Greg Fisher

Great news from lumpy Chesapeake Bay!
North sails finished 1,2,3 at the 44 boat J/22 East Coasts held in Annapolis this past weekend! While it was anything but a windy series, 4 races were still sailed in some typical light, choppy, challenging Chesapeake Bay conditions. And as usual, Pete McChesney sailed a consistent series to win by 7 points over North Chesapeake's Jeff Todd.
In third was 2005 Yachtswoman of the Year, Jody Swanson.
There was certainly no lack of talent racing this past weekend...past Yachtswoman of the Year Cory Sertl, 2005 Yngling World Championship runner up Sharon Ferris, Collegiate All American Anna Tunnicliffe ( with John Bertrand crewing) were all tuning up for the Rolex.

Not only were North Sails on the top 3 boats, but also 7 of the top 10 and won every race! Here's the top 10:

1) McChesney
2) Todd
3) Swanson
4) Jim Barnash
5) Dave Van Cleef
6) JoAnn Fisher (Yes, I am proud!)
7) Carol Cronin (Carol had a 1,2,3 and an unfortunate 32nd the last race)
8) Phebe King
9) Sandy Azdick
10) Tim Libby

Did you notice that 5 of the top ten were women? In the top 20 there were 10 women's teams...8 of them sailed North.

We have 3 clinics set up this week as we roll into the Rolex. Measurement starts Saturday and the practice race is Sunday. We are definitely enthused about the outlook for the Rolex. Coupled with our buddies from North Sails Chesapeake, we are hoping for not only great results, but also providing some super service.

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 DILLON OPEN
North J/22 sails finished 1,2*,3,4,5

Report by Brian Bissell

Earlier this month (Aug. 6,7) the Dillon Open Regatta was sailed on Lake Dillon in Colorado. Surrounded by picturesque mountain ranges, Dillon Lake boasts the highest elevation sailboat racing in the country. Over 100 boats entered the competition in classes ranging from Stars, Santanna 20s, Melges 24s, J/24s and J/22s. Chris Snow and Andrew Kerr of North Sails provided a clinic on the Friday before the regatta. The opening ceremony on Saturday included an impressive airshow. While jets flew overhead performing arial acrobatics, sailors where busy checking the starting line and pondering first beat strategies for the first race. Two races were sailed on Saturday and one was raced on Sunday before the breeze died. It was a great test of skill, however, since each race was a completely different wind range. In the J/22 class, there were 12 teams, two of which were preparing for this years Women's Rolex regatta. North Sails had an impressive showing taking the top five spots. Fun was had by all and it was great to see the high level of competition on the man-made lake in the middle of our country.

Some pictures can be found at this website... http://www.dillonopen.com/

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 J/22 MID-ATLANTIC CHAMPS
North 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9 !!!!!

Report by Greg Fisher


Pete McChesney, Dave Van Cleef and Joe Gibson finished 1st.


Team Carol Cronin in second for only 2 points!
Photos Alden Bugley

This past weekend the J/22 MidAtlantics were held in Annapolis and hosted by Severn sailing Association. 29 boats sailed in some very trying conditions...Saturday was a hurry up and wait day until a light sea breeze developed in the afternoon. It was light and quite lumpy to say the least. Sunday started out with a bit more breeze up to 12mph but faded through out the day. Still, 5 races were sailed and Mark Hasslinger, the PRO, should be commended for doing a great job getting them all in. Great party Saturday night too!

When the smoke cleared it was a true complete North customer domination with overall finishes of 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9 overall! All North boats sailed the NB1 main, the Big Foot jib and the FR-1 Airx spinnaker.

Pete McChesney , with teammates Dave Van Cleef and Joe Gibson sailed a consistent series to win by only two points over US Yngling Olympic representative Carol Cronin with crew Jamie Haines , Kim Couranz, Linda Epstein and Margaret Podlich( filling in for Linda on Sunday). My wife Jo Ann, with her crew of Lesley Cook, Emma Jones and Morgan Wilson sailed to third overall. Yes, I am a proud Hubby! In fourth was Aden King with Todd Hiller and Colin Robertson.

Some cool other stats:
Jeff Todd, Service manager at North Chesapeake won two of the races! Mchesney and Carol Cronin each won one.
This was a major tune up for the upcoming Rolex- 12 of the 29 teams were women!
North Sails were sailed by 17 of the 29 boats!
I did the coach boat routine this weekend and I realized two things: 1) my wife sails much better without me on the boat 2) when you have a cooler full of beer and there's no breeze you're everyone's buddy!

Final Results: http://savvyoutlook.com/photoGray/aldenBugly/2005/j22MidAtlantics/

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.


JoAnn Fisher, 3rd place.

Aden King, 4th place.

Start line

Greg Fisher on power boat

Photos courtesy of Alden Bugly's photoGray.

2005 J/22 YOUNGSTOWN LEVELS
What a weekend!!!!

Report by Greg Fisher

Cory Sertl (2001 Rolex winner) just emailed me about her win at 25 boat Youngstown Levels in Youngstown, NY. She won with 3 firsts out of 5 races and 13 points less than Dick Hallagan who was second. Hallagan, a top Lightning sailor, was second followed by 2004 Lightning North American Champion Jody Swanson. All three sailed North sails!!!!

More cool J/22 stuff!!

North Sails dominate the summer One Design regatta hosted by Annapolis YC this past weekend. North Sails were 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,11,12,14,15 overall!!! Carol Cronin won, followed by Al Terhune ( past Lightning NA Champ and a new resident of Annapolis) and Jeff Todd ( North Chesapeake service manager). We are especially excited as many of the teams sailing were gearing up for the Rolex...lots of great activity with lots of enthusiasm!!

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 J/22 WORLDS
North Sails 2nd, 4th!

Report courtesy J. Den Engelsman

This event was a truly North event where roughly 60% of all sailors sailed with our design.
North sponsored goodies ( caps and tiller cover) for all sailors and prices for daily winners. Especially the North books , rudder-and keel covers were much appreciated by the sailors. We had great exposure at the web site and some student teams from the TU DELFT raced with big North one design logos in the spinnaker. ( One of them won the silver fleet).

This was the third time the worlds were organized in Holland and besides some 60 boats from Holland there were boats from Belgium, bermuda, Cayman islands, France, germany, South Africa, and USA. The dutch J22 class has a strong fleet and still growing. More sailors start to appreciate the true one design and cheap racing which the J22 offers. Also easy trailering ( a small car can tow the J22) and easy set up of the boat all makes this class by far the biggest one design keel boat in our country ( 200 boats).

On friday 1st July measurement started most boats had no problem, while others had to change small things either on keel, rudder or sails. By Saturday everybody was in the water and ready for the practice race on sunday.

The racing started on monday but after serious warnings form the met office about squalls and thunderstorms the race committee decided to cancel all races for this day.

On tuesday the qualification was going to be decisive with only three races sailed nobody could afford an OCS or DSQ which meant everybody started conservatily and there were little protests. Still it meant some sailors did not make the cut for the Gold fleet among them Edgar Westerhuys and Mark Tighelaar normally top 20 in Holland. All other favorites qualified however Tjarco timmermans ( team magic marine) had the best score after one day. Followed by Huib Bannier and ourselves ( John den Engelsman) team Leventi on the third spot.

On Wednesday the racing continued with 3 more races. We started and sailed very much thru the middle of the beat resulting in top 5 finishes but at the end of the day this was not enough . Team magic marine sailed three good races and team Nic Bol was the day winner with a score of 1,4,1 finding themselves at place nr 2 after 6 races sailed. We were still in third spot only two points behind nr 2 with still 5 races planned it promised to be some intense racing.

However on Thursday bad luck was with us , NO WIND, no races meaning the leader was in firm position, he didn't sail a bad race yet and only needed one more good race out of the two. For us and team Bol only left to fight for second place on the friday.

Friday started with more waiting for stronger stable winds. Finally around 12.15 hrs the silver fleet started. With some A- typical weather for already the whole week meaning big gains could be made once you find yourself on the right side of the course. Tjarco decided to go left while we were sure to tack to the right side of the course! Only finding ourselves in the back of the fleet at the end of the 1st beat. Tjarco did the right thing and rounded in 4th place with both Nic Bol and ourselves some 500 yards behind on place 30 and 34. Tjarco managed to gain two more places and finished 2nd. Both chasing teams could not gain places in race nr 7 and so Tjarco is the new world champion 2005 with one race still to sail. He did a fantastic job , didn't sail worse then a fifth place and was beyond any doubt the best all around sailor for this championship. Nic Bol and ourselves now had to fight for the second place but both couldn't afford a bad result while this would mean we dropped to place nr 7th or 8th. We started at the committee boat and immediately tacked to the right. Nic followed but we had a nice clear lane and had first opportunity to choose. Rounding the 1st weather mark in 1st place , Nic followed in place nr 12. Now we were in second place and we only needed three boats between Nic and ourselves to assure the silver medal.

Diederik Forma (also North) had the best day result and finished 4th in the final ranking with Menno Bron on the fifth place. The lady cup was for Marijke Manuel ( 6th position) who sailed an exceptional worlds with an all ladies team. Albert Kooijman ( North) , european champ 2004 ,finished on spot nr 7.

With North (Goldfleet )on 2nd,4th and 7th place this was a good event for us.

The silver fleet was showing an even better performance with North sailors on nrs 1st, 2nd ,4th and 5th place.

The price giving was very professional and all sailors stayed while a big lottery went on and much was to win , a spinnaker, Tacktick compass, watches and other goodies were at stake.

After this Tjarco and his team were , as by dutch tradition, thrown into the water winning the well deserved Gold medal for this worlds.

For full results see www.j22.nl

Next year the worlds will be sailed in France, La Trinite first week of july. This will give a big boost to the French class.

2005 J/22 NORTH AMERICANS
North Sails 2nd, 3rd!

Report Greg Fisher

The J/22 North Americans were held at Oklahoma Boat Club in Oklahoma City, OK last weekend. 56 boats sailed in some reported very tough conditions. For the practice day, the expected 15-25mph winds greeted the competitors. However, once the event started the breeze dropped and became quite challenging shift wise. In fact, Friday was abandoned due to lack of wind and the remainder of the series was sailed all on Saturday.

North customers finished second place Marvin Beckman and third Kelson Elam. Both teams won a race as well. Marvin's accomplishment was especially praiseworthy as he just put his brand new North Sails on the day before the event started.

Marvin said:
" We were always fast...which was great since we had just unrolled the new sails the day before the regatta started! These sails are also very forgiving and easy to trim...we haven't sailed but once in the past year and we just basically followed the tuning guide and had the speed we needed."

While I would have liked to have been in Oklahoma at the NAS, my daughter was originally due Sunday so sticking close to home was imperative for me!

Again, this result along with the results we sent out in the enews last week demonstate that our sails continue to perform...with our customers doing the scoring! Again, the NB1 main, Big Foot jib and the FR-1 Airx spinnaker were the sails of choice!

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 J/22 DAVE COOL REGATTA
Congratulations Lars Hansen!

Report courtesy Lars Hansen

Winner Lars Hansen sailing his J/22

We had a great regatta here on Lake Minnetonka this weekend. There were 22 boats out for our annual Dave Cool Memorial Ice Breaker Regatta. We sailed 4 races on Saturday and 2 on Sunday in winds about 7-16 out of the Northwest. On Sunday in the second race it snowed ice pellets enough to accumulate on the deck during the downwind.

During the weekend most of the big pressure seemed to come from 30 degrees to the left of the course but in-between there were some nasty holes in the pressure. Changing gears was really important and I thought your sail really worked well. I still try to over sheet it when coming out of tacks but was very pleased with the main.

It was an interesting regatta as our fleet gets better and better, 6 different boats won races and we almost won the regatta without ever winning a race. Inspired by my terrible start in race 5 we did win the last race by the biggest margin of any of the races and sealed the deal to win the regatta.

North sails won 4 0f 6 races and were on 7 of the top ten. Both Judy Wollner and Rick Lucas were impressed with their new sails. Judy won a race and Rick had a pair of seconds.

Click here for complete results.

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

 

2005 J/22 NOOD - ANNAPOLIS
North Customers 1st and 2nd!!!

Report by Greg Fisher

Last week the NOOD was sailed in Annapolis as you know. While the J/22 fleet was a bit smaller than years past (39 boats), it was still one of the bigger fleets sailing. The conditions were challenging for sure with a little bit of something for everyone: breeze and cool temps to sun and some near drifters.

The great news was that North sails ( actually North customers to be exact!) finished 1,2 overall.

Pete McChesney, with his wife Margaret and Allan Terhune ( past Lightning NA Champ) finished up an impressive series with a first in the last race. They sailed a very consistent series to finish second over Henry Filter with Moose McClintock and North Chespeake's Matt Beck. Both Pete and Henry used full North inventories.

Ray Wulf from Annapolis was third, Tim Libby, also from Annapolis, fourth and Chris Doyle from Youngstown, NY rounded out the top five.

North Sails were on 5 of the top ten boats, more than any other sailmaker!

My team of Tood Hiller and my longtime crewmate Jeff Eiber could only sail Friday as my wife became ill and my presence was needed on the home front. She is ok now.

For more information on our North J/22 sails please contact our J22 experts.

2005 J/22 MIDWINTERS

Report by Greg Fisher


Henry Filter, second 2005 Midwinters


Justin Damore winning the second race of the 2005 Midwinters sailing his new North Sails for the first time! Justin finished 9th overall.


Terry Schertz, winning the third race of the 2005 Midwinters using her brand new North Sails for the first time.

Photos Tim Wilkes

 

 

27 boats sailed in the 2005 J/22 Midwinter's sailed in Miami and hosted by Shake a Leg. Although participation was well down from year's past, the competition was tough and the weather great as well ( though we lost the last day to lack of breeze). The consensus was that the lack of attendance was due only to circumstance and not a sign of "tough times". There were 9 boats from Annapolis, 4 from Cleveland but only 2 from Texas. Congrats, though, to a great event managed by Jack King and the staff at Shake a Leg.

Scott Nixon with Mike Wulf and Andy Horton, won the event with 12pts followed by "top amateur" and North customer Henry Filter, with Doug Clark and Phil Wherheim and 27 pts. Terry Flynn was third with 28 pts, tied with ourselves. We lost the tiebreaker and wound up 4th. Dave Van Cleef of Annapolis rounded out the top five.

North Sails were 8 of the top 14 and 15 of the fleet of 27. A couple high points were our two newest customers, Terry Schertz from Colorado and Justin Damore from Annapolis, each won a race with their new Norths on for the first time. Justin went on to finish an impressive 9th overall.

Here's what Terry has to say about our sails:

"Our experience with our new North Sails couldn't have been more positive. I am thrilled with the the wide range of wind conditions where they performed very well. But, the generous attention from our North rep Greg Fisher is what made buying from North the best value out there.” - Terry Schertz

Here's what Justin Damore, winner of the second race has to say about his new sails:

"With this being my first time using North Sails on my J-22, I was amazed at how easy the sails were to set up and fast they were out of the box. The North team made it easy with the great support they offered at the event, which was key to our sucess at the Midwinters.” - Justin Damore

My team, comprised of US Yngling Olympic skipper Carol Cronin, Todd Hiller (one of our top J/22 skippers in Annapolis) and my daughter Martha on the bow, sailed a brand new US Watercraft boat -1586- in the regatta. We were very pleased with how everything "worked" and once we got dialed in our speed was fine. It was interesting how the boat required a much different setup than our old boat. Much more rake with the leads further aft became important, especially in the breeze. It certainly will be an advantage to be able to help set our customers up tuning-wise, no matter what vintage of boat they sail.

For more information on our North J/22 sails or help with tuning your J22 to speed please call our J22 experts.


 

For more information on J/22 sails, contact the North J/22 experts.

 

 

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