Be careful what you wish for...
In my career of sailing and organizing ice sailing events for well over a decade, the vast majority of incidents I've witnessed or seen evidence of are systemic in cause...
- The large area of ice is sailed upon, (1,000 acres or so) is too large an area to be completely checked for flaws. Collisions with previously unknown flaws in the ice, holes, cracks, etc. account for the vast majority of property damage and personal injuries I've seen, and, the most perilous condition we all encounter while iceboating. It seems every major regatta I've competed in has several of these incidents.
- 90 and 180 degree crossings: port starboard crossings always seen on the first beat, and upwind downwind crossings below the first weather mark, (the 1995 DN Worlds in Montreal, where the left side of the course was clearly favored, causing burdened, Starboard, off the wind boats to cross upwind privileged, port tack boats head-on was classic life threatening threat conditions caused by the system).
Perpetuating these systems, as we see them on the NIA/IDNIYRA official course, at Iceboat speeds is: absolutely absurd; profoundly dangerous; and proves nothing. I understand that's the way it's always been done, but looking thru my goggles, it's also difficult to find any other rationalization.
Capturing incident facts will quantify at some macro level the nature of the threats we do encounter on thin ice. As such, I wholeheartedly support Jim's suggestion.
The larger challenge is then to do something that makes this wonderful sport a little bit safer. There are better and safer ways to test our skills.
Shorter Courses, and uniform boat direction on the course make for better and safer racing, some of us are in the process proving this.
Carpe DN
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