Stoking the fire

My blog entries about leaving team Bladerider and then getting a new Prowler have provoked a few entries on the Dinghy Anarchy Bladerider thread lately.

So I’d better try and put a dampener on any negative speculation by explaining the reasoning behind my recent decisions.

Essentially, I’m a bit tired of all the trash talk. Whether it’s the Bladerider guys bashing the Prowlers, or the Prowler guys dissing the Bladeriders, it’s just lame and achieves nothing. What we really need for the long-term success and sustainability of the class is a range of successful alternative manufacturers. Ruining anyones business and livelihoods, either directly or by implication, isn’t going to help that situation. Now I’m not innocent there either. I’ve dissed plenty in my time, but I knew I was on the way out when I was pulled up for doing it - on more than a couple of occasions.

So that’s one of the reasons I decided to support John in Perth. It might be old-fashioned in this day and age, but I’d like to see the specialist boat building skills and innovation that guys like Thorpey and John have developed - stay in Australia. Once those skills and ideas are lost, I can’t see how we could rebuild them. I’d like to see the Aussies be able to compete against the improving mass-produced products from Asia. I’d like to see viable alternatives in the market. Having a monopoly on supply is rarely good for us sailors. That’s also one of the reasons I used Baz’s Truflo on the last day (other than being unable to say no to Baz) - I’d like to see him make a go of developing Moth sails and spur a healthy competitive rivalry.

Another reason was quality. I tend to put so much into my boats that I don’t want to see them as consumables. I don’t want to see them fail, or spend precious sailing time putting them back together. My Bladerider was an early boat and they are improving no doubt, but quality, consistency and durability come at a price. In leaving no-stone-unturned in an effort to win at World Championship level, I can’t entertain the prospect of anything failing, no matter how minor. Both builders did however had issues in the Garda conditions. I’m not so interested in getting discounts and am willing to pay more for something that I can have confidence in. That said my new retail boat won’t cost me any more than my discounted last one.

That dovetails nicely into my concerns on price. There’s no doubt sailing is expensive. But as I’ve always said, I would’ve liked to have seen the mass-market boats come out significantly cheaper. They didn’t, but as I’ve also said before, the sums have probably been done and the marketing and personnel need to be retained somehow. Again it’s old-fashioned, but I’d like to see my money go to John, Thorpey, Baz, Amac and those that have the specialist skills. I don’t like it that spare (and relatively simple) parts like hydrofoils cost significantly more than their Australian-made, and arguable higher-quality equivalents.

Development is another reason. Like I said in my previous post, as with any builder, development and production are not complimentary. Although I’m not a naval architect, sailmaker or aeronatical geek, I’d like to have visibility and input into the process, knowing what changes were planned, why certain choices were taken, and what the specifics are, then have some certainty on when all those changes would be available. Given the pendulum swinging away from the Prowler in Garda, I think John may be hungrier for improvement and more receptive.

That sort of ties in with Amac’s departure from Bladerider. As I’ve said before, he is one clever bloke, and our success in Garda would not have happended without his effort. His loss from the project may not be so critical now given the stability in the production design, but it does not inspire confidence in me when a designer and founder is marginalised. Anarchy’s Mr Clean - who wrote a brilliant review for sailingworld - seems to know more than is being let on about that. I do hope Amac continues to be involved in building sails, foils and boats, and continues to help make the Bladerider project a success.

I know that my departure is probably seen as having a go at Bladerider itself, but that’s not the goal. I really do want to see them succeed, regardless of whether I’m part of team-BR or not. I’d love to see more people buy into the boats, I’d love to see a couple of hundred hitting the water every year. I’d love to see more people passionate about sailing generally - but that’s a post for another day. As I said to Rohan, I’m happy to help anyone interested in Mothing, regardless of my team status.

But continuing on in the team doesn’t sit well with me on a range of levels, so it’s better for me to step aside and let someone more passionate and committed take my place. I can devote my energy back into the 18 and back into developing a new boat, and leave PR spruiking to those who do it best.

And that all ties in nicely to the competition between Rohan and myself. Rohan was in another league at Garda. His sailing is brilliant without doubt. But I hate losing. Unfortunately I’m not going to catch and overtake his full-time sailing with my various sailing commitments and my city-office work-life-style (however skewed towards sailing I make it). Given that I can’t expect to catch him through sheer hard work alone, I need to compete on other levels. Taking a different tack on equipment is one of them. It might be seen as rash or crazy given how fast I was in Italy, but I need to improve my equipment, and leapfrog the Bladerider if I can ever expect to beat Rohan in a regatta. I don’t think the gap between the designs is so large that bridging it is unachievable.

So, after all that, let’s get on with the job of building new boats and coming up with new, different and possibly better ideas. Take a few risks, have some awesome rides, and leave all the double-speak and politics behind.

8 Responses to “Stoking the fire”

  1. emo Says:

    Hear, hear.

    That’s exactly why I went with John Gilmour’s project instead of getting a ‘mainstream’ boat - it’s completely politically neutral (for the time being), it allows moth development to keep pushing forward, and more importantly it gets some more good boats on the water fairly cheaply and keeps money and skills at home where they belong.

    The only pity I see with the current moth trend is that the HT moulds have been sitting dormant at Thorpey’s since 2004/05 waiting for someone to pipe up and ask for another HT2 or a HT3.

    The Prowler V sounds like a good way to go Scott - best of luck with it.

  2. Mike C Says:

    Well put.

  3. Diver Dan Says:

    So whats all this talk about Moths? A moth is an insect closely related to the butterfly. Both are of the order Lepidoptera. Can we talk about sailing again DD is not to keen on outta water activities. Oh and by the way The Modern English word “Moth” comes from Old English “moððe”

  4. Doug Culnane Says:

    Good points.

    Racing Moths put a lot of pressure on people and equipment and sometimes when it does not go great the cracks show. If it was easy then we would all be designing and building Moths. (OK a few of us are trying and we know how hard it can be). I hope that the openness of the class and the internet Mothing continues and that we all do not have to issue press releases, rather than what in in our head.

    DD Moths are out of the water. They fly with their wings…

  5. Grant Says:

    I like comment regarding more manufacturers of boats. I’m sure Thorpey will still build them i hope so, he does a beautiful job of it.
    There are a number of new boats coming out of the Gilmore mould. And now Phil S has sold Chainsaw. It will be interesting to see what comes out of the Stevo camp.

    I think that a bigger problem is supply of Hydrofoils. Now that Fastacraft no longer sell foils seperatly (not sure about BR) acsess to foils will be rather difficult.

    I know that Mark Thorpe Made foils for my boat, Les’s and Ben’s boat. Hopefully he may continue making them for others.

    Grant

  6. Herman Says:

    Don’t look at the mantle piece while…………

  7. Richard Says:

    re: Alternate manufacturers

    What is a Porsche without a Ferrari to embarass on the track ( and vice versa )?
    Make your next moth racing gray.

    Your points on pricing are very valid.

    If it continues on this path, there will eventually need to be some sort of secondary trophy at the worlds for best performance with smallest capital outlay ( time value of money adjusted somehow). It would help with used boat values particularly when “just add foils” is possible ( as it was until recently).
    ..rrb (a future moth buyer when I lose some more kilos)

  8. Karl Says:

    Not like I’m any expert but foils are not magic - anybody can make them with a tool and good instructions about how much of what to put where. There are enough people making them that you could certainly buy some from someone to add to a home-built boat, or gain access to tooling to make your own.

    I like the notion of a builder/sailor trophy for the highest placed person to build their own hull and foils or mast/sail combo.

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