Hi all.
I have a question regarding tacking on top of another boat that was raised at a regatta I did recently.
It was towards the end of the first beat, I was on starboard and a boat was coming in on port. I wanted to tack over to port as well but wanted to make sure he was behind me before doing so. I called starboard and he ducked me and then I tacked as soon as he had completed his duck so that when I tacked he couldn't hit me but this meant I was taking his wind. After the race he asked me at which point I was allowed to tack after he ducked me because he thought I couldn't tack immediately and had to give him space to have clear wind whereas I thought I just had to allow him to complete his manoeuvre.
If anyone knows the answer to this could they please let me know?
Cheers,
Matthew
P kept clear of S (rule 10) by ducking S's stern.
S gave P room to keep clear when she changed course by tacking (rule 16.1)
There is no obligation in the rules for a right of way boat to "give space to have clear wind." This is a perfectly legitimate tactic on an upwind leg.
I like the move Charles suggests though, I'm going to remember that.
https://www.sailingworld.com/how-to/three-winning-team-race-moves/
It's also D4 in the 2017-2020 Team Racing Call Book:
https://www.sailing.org/tools/documents/TheCallBookforTeamRacing2017digital-[21946].pdf
P crosses very close ahead of S.
S anticipates an immediate controlling tack by P.
S proactively luffs head to wind to prevent P's tack.
P must curtail her tack, or tack back immediately, either way killing boat speed,
or P will cause contact without rights or force S to take avoiding action.
Even if P's tack is completed, the resulting overlap gives S, now leeward,
luffing rights with no restrictions because the from-astern overlap was caused by P's action.