Regatta Sailing Instructions
This regatta will be conducted, and must be sailed, by the rules as defined in
the current Racing Rules of Sailing of the International Sailing Federation, except where superseded by these Sailing Instructions.
The Race Committee Chairman has sole authority for all decisions affecting the regatta.
As in any regatta run under ISF rules, it is the responsibility of each
skipper and crew to decide whether or not to start or to continue to race.
NIHSA cannot be held responsible for any accident or injury.
Promptly at 9:00am the Race Committee Chairman (or the Chairman's designated
representative) will meet at the dock with all skippers to review the sailing instructions
and provide any additional directives. Modifications to these sailing
instructions may be given orally by the Race Committee, either at this meeting
or on the water (this modifies Rule 88.2).
At the conclusion of the skippers' meeting, all boats are expected to leave the
dock and, as quickly as possible, sail to the designated racing area. The race
course will be set depending on the conditions: a) near the mouth of the South
River to the south off Saunders Point; b) in the South River; or c) in Selby
Bay.
Upon arriving at the race course site, each boat must report directly to the
Committee Boat located at the start/finish line by close hailing (call out your
sail number) at which time it will be acknowledged as a starter. Failure to
report to the Committee Boat within a reasonable period could disqualify a boat
from the first race. The Committee shall sound a series of short horn blasts to
signify the start of the regatta. The Warning Signal (5 minutes to Start) may be
hoisted at any time after this signal.
Letter(s) identifying which course is to be sailed (WL = Windward Leeward
Course, T = Triangle Course or MG = Modified
Gold Cup Course) will be displayed by the Committee Boat prior to the Warning Signal for each race.
The order of magnitude of the course length will be one mile. The Windward Leeward course is to be sailed once around (WL) or
twice around (WL2) depending on which signal is displayed. For
WL courses, the "reach" (or "gybe") mark shown above is NOT taken as a mark of
the course (and may not be set at all). Boats may freely chose their courses
between the windward and the leeward marks.
THE COURSE IS TO BE SAILED PORT ABOUT, WITH ALL MARKS LEFT TO PORT.
The starting and finishing line will be between the yellow flag on the Committee Boat and the
starting mark which is an 18 inch round red buoy. Another small, white, buffer mark without a flag
may be set along side the Committee Boat in the approximate vicinity of the starting/finishing
line. This buffer mark must be passed on the side away from the Committee Boat.
The committee Boat is considered a mark, as is the buffer mark. A boat is not
entitled to room between a leeward boat and the Committee Boat; nor is a boat
clear ahead or leeward entitled to room to tack to avoid hitting either the
Committee Boat, including its anchor rode, or the buffer mark. Beware - another
boat may be entitled to "wipe you off" at the Committee Boat! AVOID SAILING CLOSE TO THE COMMITTEE
BOAT.
The starting and finishing marks are not marks of the course except when
starting and finishing. All marks other than the starting and finishing marks
are rounding marks. These rounding marks are 24 inch round yellow bouys.
The positions of the marks may be adjusted either before or after the start of a race.
The Race Committee need not signal this by visual or sound signal (this modifies
Rule 33). No mark
will be moved, however, while a boat is sailing the leg ended by that mark.
| SIGNAL | VISUAL CUE | AUDIO CUE | TIME TO START |
| Warning Signal | Class Flag up | Horn | 5 minutes to Start |
| Preparatory Signal | "P" flag (Blue Peter) up | Horn |
4 minutes to Start |
| One-Minute Signal | "P" flag down | Horn (Long) | 1 minute to Start |
| Start Signal | Class flag down | Horn | Start |
Individual Recall - Boat(s) over early will be hailed by name and must
perform penalty (see Penalties below). Other boats continue racing. Committee Boat will
hail "all clear" if no boat is over early.
General Recall - A series of short blasts of the horn will be
the general recall of all boats in the race (this modifies Rule 29.3). The
restart sequence for that race will begin with the Warning Signal (Class Flag
up, horn signal, at 5 minutes to Start), and may be raised at any time greater
than one minute after the general recall is sounded.
Finishes and Subsequent Starts - The
Committee shall sound a short blast of the horn and call out the sail number of
the first boat over. Subsequent
finishers will be acknowledged by calling out their sail number. The last boat
crossing will be acknowledged by a long horn blast and calling out their
sail number. The Warning Flag for the next race in the series may be raised at
any time greater than one minute after the last boat finishes the preceding race.
Postponement, Delay of Start, or Lunch - Red and white,
Answering Pennant. Lowered with horn signal one minute before Warning Signal (5 minutes to Start).
Come within Hail - Black and yellow squares, "L". All boats report to the Committee Boat.
Use of Turtle Busters - In the interest of preserving club property, at
the discretion of the Race Committee, the use of club-owned masthead flotation
devices ("turtle busters") may be required. Use of these devices is otherwise at
the option of the skipper and crew.
To initiate a protest, a skipper must notify
both the boat being protested (by hailing "Protest" at the time of the alleged
infringement) and the Race Committee (upon completion of the race;
the protest need not be in writing (this modifies Rule 61.2)).
The Protest Committee appointed by the Race Committee Chairman shall hear both sides
immediately preceding the awards ceremony and render a decision.
Class rules provide that the same skipper shall handle the helm through all
races except that he or she may have the crew handle the helm while making
adjustments or handling the spinnaker, including setting, flying, and dousing
the spinnaker.
Penalty for being over early at the start - Return to behind the line and restart
without interfering with any other boat.
Penalty for touching a mark - Upon touching a mark, the boat must sail directly off
the course without interfering with any other boat, immediately execute a 360° turn,
and return to the course without interfering with any other boat.
Alternative penalties - If a boat infringes any rule or sailing instruction during a race,
it should either retire immediately or execute a 720° turn (360° turn for boats that
must recover a spinnaker (this modifies Rule 44.2)) as soon as it can execute that turn without interfering with any other boat.
Any boat(s) that have not yet crossed the finish line 1/2 hour after the
preceding boat will be scored DNF for that race and will be offered a tow to
the starting line (if necessary and possible) so as to be able to compete in the
following race without further penalty. The committee shall exercise its
judgment in enforcing this rule, subject to conditions, position of boats on
the course, and the intended goal of facilitating competition. (This modifies
Rules 35 and A4.1).
In each race, points will be awarded as follows (all races count):
| PLACE | POINTS |
| 1st | ¾ |
| 2nd | 2 |
| 3rd | 3 |
| 4th | 4 |
| 5th | 5 |
| 6th | 6 |
| RET, DSQ, OCS, DNF | # of boats in regatta + 1 |
RET = Retired (started at least one race in regatta, but did not complete the regatta).
DSQ = Disqualified because of failure to do penalty
OCS = On Course Side at start - did not return below line to restart
DNF = Did Not Finish the race in the alotted time
Boats that retire from the series, will receive the maximum points awarded for
each remaining race in the series. Tied scores will be resolved by applying the
following criteria in order until the tie is broken (only first place ties will
be resolved, all other ties will stand):
- The boat which beat the other the most number of times.
- The boat which had the higher number of better place finishes (numbers of
1st, 2nd, etc.).
- The boat that scored best in the last race competed by the tied boats.
SAIL SWIFTLY BUT SAFELY!
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