[C38] Annapolis C38 Fleet?

Brett bikahoga at aol.com
Wed Jun 8 23:05:55 EDT 2011


Wow Mike. I hope a pic like that would never get out.  Haha 
He now just gets the beer!

Brett
UnKnown boat. 



On Jun 8, 2011, at 5:43 PM, Michael Norcross <manorcross at gmail.com> wrote:

> Annapolis C38s,
> I know of 5 boats still in the Annapolis area, and 2 others from here that sold, including the race ready Black Pearl. With some interest we have the potential to make a class. Three of us sailed in the Good Old boat regatta 2 years ago as a class, its was fun for most of us..well except, for a certain unnamed overburdened skipper whose spinnaker went up..upside down (Yes, we have a photo). (Question: how do you trim an upside down spinnaker?) If there is some interest in racing we could get together to practice with the spinnaker for those who need a refresher, including me. The Pearl (Pam Morris) was gracious enough 2 years ago to teach my crew some spinnaker basics which was helpful and only cost a case of beer. In any event, it would be fun to get a fleet together even if just to have a good time. C38s on the Bay, speak up where ever you are.
>  
> Mike
> Escape #318
>  
>  
> On Wed, Jun 8, 2011 at 3:11 PM, Brett <bikahoga at aol.com> wrote:
> Mike, I'm not sure why the others sold but mine is for sale simply because I'm not living on it anymore. I spent the last 3 years as a live-aboard and just recently purchased a hous, I also have a J22 that I plan on racing up and down the east coast next year. So unfortunately I'm trying to free up some money. I really don't want to sell Jazz  but I can't justify 2 boats  and a house.   
> 
> Now I can say if there are any other 38s on the Chesapeake  bay that would like to get together for a 1 design race this year I would love to be a part of that or at least a get together on the water. 
> 
> Cheers 
> 
> Brett
> Jazz 313
> 
> On Jun 8, 2011, at 2:21 PM, Mike <sailcrusader at aol.com> wrote:
> 
>> Mike 
>> What's with the shoal and reguular 38's leaving the Chesapeake Bay. 2 shoal draft boats sold up in Annapolis this spring and a deep draft sold down here on the Southern Bay now Jazz is for sale up your way.
>> Mike Barber
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: manorcross at gmail.com
>> To: Catalina 38 Listserve 
>> Sent: Wed, Jun 8, 2011 8:19 am
>> Subject: Re: [C38] Deep keel - 6'9"
>> 
>> Hi guys, We too have a deep draft and mainly sail the Annapolis area. Luckily most shoals are mud,
>> since we had a bad habit of trusting the GPS completely and have stuck it several times. One shoal off the South River has shifted dramatically, allowing us to rename it according to whoever is at the helm when we go aground. The last time, my friend Colin was driving, we were double reefed on a beam reach with 30 K true wind at full hull speed, I say " Are we ok on depth." Yes!" in return..and then the chutes deployed for rentry. I of course ranted and raved as we tried motoring, but finally we hoisted more sail to heel the boat, and off we went. I have a cool video just before we parted the mud if anyone is interested. In general, the deep keel is always in the back of our mind in the shallower parts of the bay, but its great with 20K head winds, with a full moon overhead, as we comfortably beat our way home. Usually at this time, we are the only boat on the bay, well, except for Rob Cornelson in his Cat38. 
>>  
>> Mike Norcross
>> Escape #318
>> Annapolis
>>  Jun 8, 2011 at 8:14 AM, <Steve.Ribble at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hi Marci. 
>> 
>> In Maine we've got about 30 sq ft of soft bottom and the rest is hard, irregular and [to a great extent] unmarked by aids...so a chart is usually close at hand...and of course it's further complicated with 16'+/- tide swings. That said, there's only so many places to sail for day and weekend trips and you quickly learn where to go and where not to go (the other sailing I do is offshore racing throughout the Gulf of Maine, so plenty of water there, but also many different ports). For my two cents about the keel, I wouldn't go any other way than the deep draft. I prefer the performance and maneuverability of the fin over the shoal version (haven't sailed a C-38 shoal, but have done others).
>> 
>> You can also set depth alarms (at whatever depth you want) on your sounder and/or GPS as a back-up warning system so you don't need to use the chart quite so much.
>> 
>> Steve 
>> 
>> Steve Ribble
>> Tittravate #64
>> Boothbay Hbr, ME
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