Saturday, December 24, 2011

Seasons Greetings

It's hard to believe it's already the holiday season! After the Worlds in Perth I spent some lovely time catching up with friends. I'm now up in northern NSW for Christmas with my parents and then I'll be heading up to Brisbane for the Nationals.

Thank you for your continuing support, I am so very grateful.

Wishing you a very merry Christmas,

Gabe

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

NSWIS awards night

Well its been a busy month full of sailing, exams and travel.

Sail Melbourne was on at the start of November. It was the first chance in a while to do some nice big fleet racing and we had quite a good fleet in the radials. It was a valuable regatta to do with some tricky conditions and tight racing, definitely a good platform to identify and address some weaknesses. A major achievement for me was making some major progress in my starting which hopefully I can carry over into the Worlds. I also came away feeling quite confident in my speed in most conditions, especially on the downwinds.

From Sail Melbourne it was straight back home to sit my uni exams (thanks to UNSW for being so accommodating). It's definitely nice to have that out of the way so I can now just concentrate on sailing, as during Sail Melbourne I was studying before and after sailing.

I also attended the NSWIS awards night where I was a finalist in the Academic Excellence category. I was thrilled to win the award! It was a fantastic evening full of inspirational people all pursing excellence.

Now I'm in Fremantle (WA) in the final days of preparation before the Worlds. The weather here is glorious and I've had some great training with Laura Baldwin (coach) and Krystal. Today is a rest day and I've been enjoying curling up on the couch reading a book.

Looking forward to racing starting on the 5th!

Cheers,
Gabe

Monday, October 17, 2011

Coasts

On the weekend I went up to Toronto on Lake Macquarie for the NSW & ACT Laser Association Coast Championship. Lake Macquarie was as beautiful as always and Toronto Amateur Sailing Club were very welcoming and made everyone feel at home.

Day 1 was light and tricky. My speed was good and I had a fairly good overview of what was going on and managed to get two bullets. Day 2 was also tricky, with the breeze coming and going and shifting around a lot. I was trying to put myself in tricky situations that I would normally avoid and so ended up doing 720s in 2 of the races. But it was good because I learnt a lot about what works and what doesn't and I'll be able to take that into the major regattas coming up where I want to know my limits. I was also trying to really push my starts, and got done on an individual recall in one race. Again, I'm very happy about this as it means I'm starting to get over my long-term fear of the start line. But it did mean I spent a lot of the day playing catch-up...

I finished 2nd overall and 1st woman. I had a great weekend, really enjoyed the tricky conditions, and it was great having some other boats to play with.

Thanks,
Gabe

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Ladies Laser Clinic


On the weekend I went up to Sunshine on Lake Macquarie where SLMASC was hosting a Ladies Laser Clinic. Well Sunshine held up to its name and we had beautiful weather and a great turnout with 20 ladies showing up. Coaching were Laura Baldwin (who organised the event), Alex South and myself. I had a fantastic time meeting some new people and being able to give back to the sport that I love so much. Thanks to YNSW, the NSW&ACT Laser Association and PSA for supporting the event. 

Aside from that I’m still busy studying and training continues as normal: spending time on the water, in the gym and on the bike. I’m really looking forward to the Summer regattas and competing again, with the main focus being a good result at the ISAF Worlds in Perth (our final selection event for the Olympics). 

Cheers,
Gabe

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Kiel

Kiel Week continued the trend of wind in Europe and was a fantastic regatta to finish my Europe Campaign on. It has such a great atmosphere with all the festivities of Kieler Woche going on, and any regatta that has strawberry picking and crepes is going to be good!

It was a smaller fleet then Sail for Gold, but tricky racing kept everything tight, and meant it wasn't over until you crossed the finish line. The clouds had a lot of (confusing) influence on the wind, and most days we saw 4 seasons in a race as the weather went from sunny to rainy to cloudy and back again, and the wind strength varied to suit. One race in particular a massive rain squall came through on the last upwind, and my motivation was "got to get to the top mark before the rain stops and the wind dies." Luckily hiking hard pays off, and I came 4th in that race.

There were some long days on the water, as 10 races were scheduled in just 4 days. So we kicked off the regatta with a monster 3 race day. On the plus side, it made 2 races the next day seem like a breeze!

Day 4 saw us go out and bob around on the water waiting for the wind to come. After over 5 hours on the water the race committee cancelled racing for the day. In some ways it was a relief as it looked like it was going to be a very random day, and I sitting in 7th with a nice buffer. So it was on to the medal race!

The only piece of bad news for the whole trip is that on arriving on the morning of the medal race I discovered someone had stollen my rudder. Jared saved the day and lent me his and I'm sure Karma will catch up with the thief.

It was my first proper medal race, which was very exciting. Held on the course area close to the harbour meant there was lots of land influence and little shifts to play. I had a solid first upwind, and then an amazing downwind which put me in 2nd place, which I held for the rest of the race.

The medal race saw me move into 6th overall!

Congratulations to Paige (USA) for putting together an amazing series for the win, and Krystal (AUS) for second.

I've definitely learnt a lot through this trip, and in general have been very happy with how I've been sailing. The pieces of the puzzle are falling into place, and I know what I need to work on to make my next steps forward. Most importantly I enjoyed every minute of it!

I'm now safely back in Sydney, dealing with jetlag, and trying to study for the exams I missed while I was away. A bit of time off from sailing while I get through my exams, then back into training for Worlds in Perth at the end of the year.

Cheers,
Gabe

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Delta Lloyd

Well Delta Lloyd certainly lived up to its reputation as being a windy regatta! For the entire regatta (except day 2) it blew dogs off chains. And what fun it was! The windy weather definitely allowed the Australian's to show off how we love sailing in breeze! Unfortunately I missed the medal race, but finished 11th overall. I'm very pleased with this result as it was the first regatta for the season.

It was great staying so close to the regatta site. And I got great delight from 18 ducklings that would come and visit us at dinner time every day. They were obviously very used to people as they would eat out of our hands. Very cute.

Had a day seeing the sights in London (being a tourist is exhausting!) and am now in Weymouth. The weather here had been lovely, but its turned cold just in time for the regatta which starts tomorrow. I'm looking forward to getting racing again.

Cheers,
Gabe

Monday, May 16, 2011

Leaving for Europe

Well its the final flurry of activity before leaving for Europe on Wednesday. It's been an interesting preparation for this trip to Europe, but I think I've got my head in the right place to go over and make the most of it.

I've got three regattas lined up: Delta Lloyd, Sail for Gold, and Kiel. Will keep you all updated on how things are going over there.

Thanks for your support!

Cheers,
Gabe

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Blues Dinner

I recently attended the UNSW Ben Lexcen Launch and Blues Dinner (www.sportandrec.unsw.edu.au/news/annualbluesandsportsawards). This is sports night of nights at UNSW and is always an inspiring evening.

I am lucky to be a recipient of the UNSW Ben Lexcen scholarship, which helps me with negotiating flexible study options and special considerations so I can continue following my sailing dreams. Helen Bryson is superwoman in managing all the elite athletes at UNSW and helping make the impossible possible!

Following the Lexcen Launch was the Blues dinner. It was an impressive night for sailing with Dr Melanie Webb being inducted into the Hall of Fame for windsurfing, and Lisa Darmanin (who was a teammate at the ISAF Youth Worlds) being awarded the Female Athlete of the Year!

Uni and training are keeping me busy, and both are going well. I've been spending some time on the water with Team Singapore, which has been great for getting the motivation levels up! Unfortunately it seems more and more that we are leaving summer behind us, and I'm sure its only a matter of time before the winter woollies will be coming out.

Cheers,
Gabe

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Miami OCR

My first trip to America! How exciting! Coming from the warm Aussie summer I was met by the equally nice Miami sunshine (unfortunately things would turn a bit colder later in the week). Had a little bit of an adventure finding out where I was staying - my phone decided that global roaming was overrated leaving me hoping that everything would magically work out, which it did.

The sailing was tricky (as I'm told Miami always is) but for the first half of the regatta we had good breeze for all the racing. I had my usual issues getting of the start line, but was blessed by some good downwind speed to help pull back some places. On Day 4 of the event we sat around in glass all day and had a very long very light race (almost half the fleet didn't finish in the time limit). Day 5 saw the Race Committee pump out 3 great races in some very confusing conditions. We started off in an oscillating breeze for Race 8, which turned into a persistent lefty for Race 9, before a persistent righty switching back to oscillating for Race 10. This made for some very interesting racing, and in Race 10 three-quarters of the fleet went around the final gate mark at once, for a very intense bottom reach and a very busy crossing of the finish line!

Now I'm up in Vancouver (why did I think that coming to Canada in the middle of winter was a good idea?! Its so cold! Very pretty though...) for a weeks break before heading back to Florida for some more training and a couple more events.

Cheers,
Gabe