by kenonstott » Mon Sep 07, 2009 9:32 am
With gusts into the 30’s the 5.5 was definitely a handful but I don’t have a 5.0 anymore. I also didn’t bring the little HiTech gorge board which would have settled things down. But the little 85L Sonic race board absorbed the gusts and turned them into some spectacular speed runs. Dimo doesn’t have a 5.0 either as he found himself swimming in a big hole in his. Turning in the SE corner was a trial and I saw lots of wild crashes in that area. The wind has a vertical vector in that area, especially when the lake is low. I got knocked senseless when I spun out in a jibe in the corner and had the whole rig come down on top of me. It is quite a sport when you come out of a crash, gently twist your sore neck around to make sure the crunching you heard was the Styrofoam in the helmet, then go right back to sailing. Call me geeky but I love my helmet. It was a day for great ripping speed runs, plenty of wind to hit the full planning jibes, and some great company. But boy is it a short reach, a long walk to the launch, and the dam looks like a 100’ wall coming at you. Still, where else can you drive over in the dark, rig while you admire the moon, be on the water at 7:30 in 25-29 mph winds, and watch the sunup while screaming across the water at 35 mph. Dimo was an animal, borrowing a 5.0 from Grant and heading for Sulfur. I stayed around until 3:00 hoping it would come back in but, in spite of decent readings on the wind meter, it was a whole lot of nothing with an occasional windline.
Ken Onstott
Sailing both the Gorge and Utah on my 8'2" HiTech and my 3 Starboards; Sonic 85L, S-Type 115L, and Carve 135L. Small quiver is Northwave, larger sails are Ezzy and Sailworks. Often in my white Odyssey but also in my wife's motor home.