The American Canoe Association is now made up
of divisions, each one of which has a yearly meet. The
general ACA meet is held in the territory of each
division in successive years. The division meets are
more or less local, and occupy from three days to two
weeks time. The general meet is always for two weeks;
the regatta and trophy, or championship, races occur
the second week. The first week is devoted to cruising
and general fun, and scrub races.
Besides the regular class sailing and paddling
events that always find a place on the regatta
programs, there are other races that perhaps call for
a word of advice.
Any canoe is allowed in the upset race. The lighter
a canoe is, and the finer the lines, if of the usual
length, the easier it is to paddle. A small cockpit
takes up less water than a large one when the canoe is
turned completely over quickly. The two points to be
kept in mind in an upset contest are: the paddling
fast at the beginning when no water is in the canoe,
to get as great a lead as possible, and the getting in
quickly after the canoe is turned over. The upset part
can be done in five seconds by a skillful hand at the
business.
It is much easier to upset and right a canoe under
sail when heading well up into the wind than when
running free, as the wind pressure on the sail is less
in bringing the canoe to an even keel after the roll
over. If running with a beam wind when the signal to
upset comes, luff the canoe up almost into the wind
before upsetting it, and thus relieve the sail of
pressure.
With two bulkheads five or six feet apart, a canoe
can be upset under sail, righted, and then float with
deck well above water, and bailing out is possible.
Generally in an upset sailing race it is not worth
while to hail out, as the distance to be covered is
too short.
In the recover race, where a half paddle is thrown
overboard well aft, it is better to jibe first than to
tack and then jibe to get back to the lost article. It
takes less time and is surer to jibe first and then
tack. Try it and see for yourself.
More practical knowledge can be obtained by
attending a two weeks' canoe meet of the ACA than by
reading all the articles and books on the subject ever
written. The builders go there to get new ideas; and
every canoeist, no matter how well informed in the
matter of rig and handling, learns something from his
neighbors. The cost is slight; the time, a regular
business vacation; the fun immense, and the profit
great, both in point of health and canoe
information.
Since this book was first published the
International Races of 1886 have taken place. Those
races, in which two of the crack English canoe sailors
took part, proved many things finally. Both Englishmen
and Americans learned something. The Americans
discovered that the sit of the British sails, the rig,
cordage and fitting of the foreign canoes far outdid
anything the Americans could show. They learned also
the advantages of a smooth skin canoe perfectly
polished. The flying start in sailing races, timed
with stop watches to a second, enabling a canoe to
cross the line at the signal near the windward mark
and under full headway, was much better than the old
methods adopted at ACA races. This trick the
Englishmen had down to the finest possible point. The
lead at the start in a sailing race is a very good
thing to get -- and hold.
The Englishmen found out that their bulky canoes
with heavy ballast and heavy centerboards carrying
large sails and crew inside were no match in point of
speed for the light and slim canoes of the Americans,
carrying little or no ballast, having very light plate
centerboards, comparatively small spread of muslin and
crew on deck to windward. Since those races nearly
every sailing canoe built here is fitted with a plate
centerboard housed in a wooden or metal trunk. The use
of ballast has greatly diminished, and speed with the
smallest sail spread is aimed at. Light spars, simple
rig, a large drop rudder, fine lines, flat sails,
perfect trim and skillful handling are depended on to
accomplish great results, and they have done it, with
the help of a smooth finish on the canoe's bottom to
reduce skin friction to a minimum. This last is a very
important item.
A heavy canoe heels over before the speed is
increased when a squall strikes the sail. A puff of
wind will instantly increase the speed of a light
canoe, and consequently heels it over less. It is for
this reason that many very light canoes seem actually
stiffer than heavily ballasted boats.
Light canoes needing no ballast, and carrying
simple small rigs, are so much more convenient than
the heavier craft that it was only needed to show them
better in point of speed to entirely run out the old
style sailing machines, as some extremists have been
pleased to call them. The heavy canoe is fast
disappearing, except in sizes larger than Class B.
Great improvements in all sorts of canoe fittings
have been made since the first edition of the book
appeared, and builders generally can now furnish
excellent plate boards, good cleats, neat rudder hangs
and drop rudders, to say nothing of all the beautiful
"canoe jewelry" made for mast and spar fittings. The
best rudders are hung so that there is no "dead water"
between rudder and sternpost, and they are arranged to
drop easily, or be run up out of the way if necessary,
so that a canoe can be beached stern first without
damaging the gear.
A rockered keel is almost universal now, enabling
quick turning, where the old straight and flat keel
was formerly used. The trim of a canoe depends on the
disposition of sail area, the position of the
centerboard and ballast, if any is used -- three
things. The position of the board is fixed when the
canoe is built, as near the center of the canoe as
convenience will allow. Then the sail area is designed
with reference to the board, and arranged to balance
as nearly as possible by the light of former
experience. The ballast or crew can be shifted to
perfect the trim. The greatest speed can only be got
out of a canoe when it is balanced -- in perfect trim
in other words .
After a yacht is built it often takes months to get
the trim perfect, and this is accomplished by close
observation when the yacht is sailing, and constant
experimenting with ballast. The same must be done in a
canoe. Slight changes in sails may help greatly to
arrive at the best results. No positive rules for trim
can be given. The general methods of handling canoes,
as all other boats, must necessarily always remain
pretty much the same. Paddling cannot change; it is a
simple performance, and is now -- what it always has
been. The model of paddles may change a little, the
length and make, but the action of paddling is not
capable of much, if any development. Sailing is
sailing and likewise cannot undergo much modification.
The rules of the road remain the same from year to
year, and the action of the wind is what it always has
been. Rigs and the cut of sails may undergo slight
modifications to gain a half a point here or a pound
of pressure there, but the principles remain
unaltered.
As some modifications of the sails described in the
text have proved themselves worthy of a place in a
book on canoe handling and rigs, they will be here
touched on lightly.
When a man over seventy years old builds a canoe
himself, cuts and rigs his sails and makes all the
fittings, the fact is worthy of note. But when this
same canoe and man come to a general canoe meet, and
carry off all the sailing honors from a fleet of
thirty crack canoes, the man and boat deserve more
than a passing word of comment. The man is N.B. Cook
of Chicago, the boat the Kenwood, and the feat was
performed at the Western Canoe Association meet at
Ballast Island, Lake Erie, July, 1887.
The sails were laced to the mast. The peak was held
up by a sprit running to boom instead of to mast as is
usual with spritsails, thus keeping all flat and
preventing the boom from lifting. The objection to the
sail is that it cannot be reefed, a fatal objection to
any sail intended for general use, and not designed
for a special kind of racing and
water.