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Friday, November 30, 2007

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Monday, November 26, 2007

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Friday, November 23, 2007

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Monday, October 8, 2007

After two days of racing the fleet is glad to get some rest after some fairly stiff breeze and ocean chop. My physical fitness training has paid off and I feel great after sailing. Darrell Peck, one if the nicest guys in the fleet and recent winner of the North American championships leads the Trials. Results here. A comment from Darrell summed up the day. "...tonight will be a 'four Allieve night,' my knees feel like they have been ripped apart."

The cool thing is that my knees don't. That for me is a victory today. - Mike

I am hoping for lighter conditions on Monday.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Final preparation, family send off, tow out to the race course

Getting so may boats and sailors out to the race course takes some
planning. Volunteer tow boats as well as coach boats with their clients in tow
leave at about 10:00am to arrive off shore in the ocean at 11:20 or so. The
first of two races each day is scheduled to begin at 12:00 noon.

Opening Ceremonies - October 5th at 6pm

On Friday morning I attended to a few business items and then headed to
the boat yard. Once at the yard you could easily see the difference
between the sailing professionals and the family guys with careers. The
pros had just finished buffing the bottoms of their boats - the family
guys with careers were strolling the yard with cell phones in their ear.
I was just glad to have done enough life balance to be a working,
married father who could participate in the event.

After working on my boat preparing for racing the better part of the
day, it was a great reward to see my family join me for the opening
ceremonies in the evening. My two daughters and wife have benefited
from Finn sailing as well, having met people from around the world. We
have hosted traveling Finn sailors at our home and met them on the road
in places like Cape Cod. My oldest daughter is working on her fifth
grade "State Report" and was lucky enough to be assigned New York.
Magically, Finn sailor Art Dieffendorf flew in from Casenovia, NY as our
house guest. My daughter will have a real-life citizen of that great
state that can answer questions.

Forty-two American Finn sailors gathered to acknowledge the start of the
U.S. Sailing Team Olympic Trials for the Men's Heavyweight Dinghy. The
U.S.
Olympic committee and U.S. Sailing representatives said we Finn sailors
had mustered the largest turn out of any Olympic sailing class.

"Are you helping out with the race administration?" A friend asked.
"No, I said, I have been training like a fool for 18 months and I am
sailing in this thing," I replied. Win or loose, on the race course I
already feel like a winner having accomplished my fitness goals for this
race. My cardio is much improved with a 62 bpm resting rate, my weight
is down from a hefty 205 lbs to 183, and my strength has improved
significantly. While the extra weight would have helped me in heavy
breezes, I opted toward the long-term benefit of overall fitness. Oh,
how I wish I had another year to train and sail...

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Measuring day

Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, all 42 entrants had to weigh and measure their boat (hull, mast, boom, sail), as well as do a magic "swing test" called a lambolet named after a sailor who used to sail the Finn. This test ensures not only that the boats all weigh within a certain tolerance, but ensures that they do not have ballast (weights) in different places so as to give an advantage to one boat versus another.
My boat measured in fine. Minimum weight is 120 kilograms. My boat weighed 120.1 kilos- perfect!!

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Official US Olympic Sailing Web Site

Regatta updates will be posted here for the trials in every class.

 

Cheers,

Mike

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

About the Finn - A Video

This video tells you a lot about the Olympic Finn and why people love to sail the Finn.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Friday, September 28, 2007

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Technology: My Cycle Ride Through the Canyons


I used a Garmin GPS that measured everything from rate of climb and heart rate to the time of day and sunset to help me train.  Here is an image of the data you can extract from the Garmin.  Hills and Heart Rate - that was my mantra for training.   Riding a Colnago C50.
Pretty good for a guy who is 49 - eh?