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Starcross Steamer
It was only two weeks before the nineteenth running of the annual Starcross Steamer on the Exe estuary that Haldon and Telegraph hills (only two miles from the club) were in the national press having been closed by snow, causing tailbacks and gridlock over the whole area.
Phantoms at SYC Steamer
At the 10:00 briefing there was still no wind so it was decided to postpone the 10:30 Cadet start by half an hour and hope that the predicted NW wind would arrive. As there were no Cadets entered this year, a quick check of the entries revealed that the slowest boat was the Solo, so the class start times were hastily recalculated with the Solo the first boat away.
With the planned start gone, the eleven o’clock delayed start rapidly approaching and the Exe looking serene, the race did not look very hopeful. Then miraculously a whiff of wind from the North West appeared on the water and spread rapidly across the estuary. Now two races were on, one to get on the water in time and the other the Steamer.
SYC Steamer 2010
With the wind fading slightly, it was again looking like Merlin weather, or at least so they hoped. Half way through the race the leading Solo was Stephen Refell in 4809, just ahead of fellow Solo sailor Roger Battersby in 4986, but Simon Heusen in Phantom 1275 was ominously only three and a quarter minutes behind, with the leading Merlin just two minutes further back. As the race progressed it became obvious that the faster boats were never going to be able to sail to their handicap in the lighter conditions, as they struggled to get their boats on the plane.
At the finish, two and a half hours after the start, the Phantom of Simon Heusen just managed to stay ahead of Andy Davis and Tom Pygall in Merlin 3684. In fact the first eight places were filled either by Merlins or Phantoms, followed in 9th and 10th by two RS200s.
We are always delighted to welcome entries from all over the South West and the Midlands, but congratulations must go to Bert Castleton who travelled all the way from Norwich to sail with us, obviously he won the furthest travelled prize. The first Ladies, first Starcross boat and first RS200 were Jayne Johnson helming and Nicki McIlroy crewing, and the first Junior was Amy Fitter in a Laser 2000.
Thanks as always must go to the competitors who travel to Starcross every year to make the event so memorable, the galley for producing vast quantities of hot food and drink, the rescue boat crews who were not too busy this year and not forgetting the multihull fleet who organize and man the event. A special thank you must also go to whoever organised the wind to blow just in time, it would have been nicer a little earlier but better late than never.
Next year, the difficult tides in January and February mean that the twentieth running of the Starcross Steamer will have to be delayed until the 13th March; the first start will be at 10:00. The planning has already started; we look forward to welcoming both old and new faces to the event.
Overall results
| 1st |
Phantom | 1275 |
Simon Heusen |
Lyme Regis Sailing Club | |
| 2nd | Merlin Rocket |
3684 | Andy Davis | Tom Pygall |
Chase Sailing Club |
| 3rd | Merlin Rocket | 3610 | Richard Dee | Chris Gould | Midland Sailing Club |
| 4th | Merlin Rocket | 3691 | Richard Whitworth | Olly Turner | Parkstone SC |
| 5th | Phantom | 1359 | Simon Hawkes | Chew Valley SC | |
| 6th | Merlin Rocket | 3655 | Rich Adams | Turkish | Midland Sailing Club |
| 7th | Merlin Rocket | 3983 | Chris Martin | Ben Hendon | Blithfield Sailing Club |
| 8th | Phantom | 128 | Ian Jay | Sutton Bingham SC | |
| 9th | RS200 | 960 | Jayne Johnson | Nicki McIlroy | Starcross Yacht Club |
| 10th | RS200 | 1228 | Paul Bartlett | Greg Bartlett | Starcross Yacht Club |