Steve's first run, clearing the pelicans.
Dot took a few sequence shots of Steve and me gybing.
Here's Steve coming to the end of his run.
And gybing.
Me preparing to gybe.
And gybing.
And this is the run at 3pm Sunday, 18 to 22knots, nice flat water and nobody out.
Tide was lower than when I was there in March, but it just meant moving S.E. a few 100 metres, however it made the NM undo-able without a gybe. Not that it was too shallow, but the weed too heavy and too close to the surface, for my low aspect 45deg fin anyway, a short 50 deg fin might not be slowed down as much by the weed.
The weed here is also abrasive, unlike Lake George's weed. If you intend to spend any time here take some 400 wet and dry with you to keep the leading edge smooth. My fin is rough not just at the tip, but most of the way down, it's only the last 2cm or 3 cm that is still smooth.
There's also a mysterious little creature with a needle like sting, one got up my loose wetsuit leg, I didn't see it but I sure felt it when I tried to get it out. And the pain increased as I sailed away, pain only lasted a bit over an hour, but I could have done without it.
The Pics are little bit misleading, looks like a typical sand bank speed strip. but you can't get all that close to the bank because of the dense weed.
It's the weed that makes it smooth. In March the water was over the bank and it was just as flat.
In theory it should be great for hours and alphas, (well Elmo got his alpha PB here). But you need more discipline than I've got, if you're on a good run, it's very hard to go into a gybe, that flat water downwind is just sooo tempting!
I was only going for alphas when I wasn't all that powered up.
Same goes for hours I'm fairly sure the speed downwind is more than cancelled out by the upwind slog