Category Archives: Sailing

Dubai Muscat Race

When it rose in the East, the Sun dawned with a golden glow over a steel gray sea. It was my 71st birthday. Above flew the white spinnaker contrasting against the pale purple sky still dotted with waning twinkling stars and the odd planet. We were doing just over nine knots on the second day of the Muscat Khasab race, the return event of the Dubai Muscat race.

A little shorthanded on crew, I was still at the helm after three hours and steering by the spinnaker. Not as fast but it allowed my inexperienced crew to doze on watch. The other two from the earlier watch were down below one of them snoring for Germany, his home country.

Our boat, a 44 ft sloop, weighing eight tons and locally built, was ultimately headed for Dubai. This was my 18th or 19th Dubai Muscat race, so many of them that in my dotage I am starting to lose count. I have been on nearly all since the race started in 1991 and although this was the 22nd year, two races had not been completed, one of which was cancelled by the Omani authorities on a political whim only 48 hours before the start.

Back in 1988, I had conceived the idea of this race along with Andy Gibbons of the majestic Bustan Hotel in Oman. We had in mind that the race would go from the Jebel Ali Hotel slightly South of Dubai to the Bustan. Redha Attallah, the manager of the Jebel Ali Hotel Marina at the time was fully supportive and the small fleet of keel boats at Dubai Offshore Sailing Club seemed keen.

Andy and I quickly found out, particularly in those days, that trying to get agreement to sail between two countries both of whom had had a spattering war going between not long before and still had mixed relationships to say the least, was not an easy task. Andy approached the Royal Navy of Oman and their initial reaction was lukewarm as the boats would have to sail through the sensitive Straits of Hormutz, the narrow passage of water between Iran and Oman. The Straits are a magnificent natural wonder with sheer cliffs and swirling tidal currents and the Navy had strong reservations about small yachts sailing through them, particularly at night with little or no navigation aids.

Eventually, after much negotiation, Arab style, over a lot of coffee and tea, agreement was reached but then Saddam invaded Kuwait. This caused a delay but finally it was planned to start in March 1991. By this time Jebel Ali Hotel had got cold feet so I decided to start it at Dubai Offshore Sailing Club. They too were not happy with the risk and made me take it all, in writing. Fortunately I had the support of Saeed Hareb of the newly formed Dubai International Marine Club and Ali Bin Shafar head of Dubai Coastguards.

What excitement when we sailed off from Dubai after the start. On my small 8 metre yacht we felt like Christopher Columbus. We were heading for the great unknown. Few of us had ever sailed so far on an ocean trip and certainly not to Muscat.

On approaching the Straits late in the afternoon, storm clouds gathered over the mountain tops. When the Sun set these clouds were shot with bolts of lightning. The wind and the sea picked up and in our small boat we became very anxious and wished that we had played golf instead. Midnight came and the wind peaked, whistling loudly through the rigging and the reefed main flogged noisily. Suddenly there was an unbelievable cloudburst and our cockpit filled with rain that flattened the sea.

Drenched and cold we stood ankle deep in rainwater and with the wind reduced to a whisper we drifted towards the Straits. The tide took us in the direction of the mystical Lion’s Mouth, a narrow gap between the Island of the Musandam and the mainland. Our hopes were raised as the clouds had disappeared and the night was clear and the sky filled with stars that shone bright.

But our luck did not hold. The tide changed and drove us into a small bay in the lee of the island. We tried to haul ourselves by hand around the island but the tide was too strong. Stuck in the lee of the island we peered down into the deep purple colored water and watched the mayhem below as fish hunted fish illuminated by streaks of phosphorescence.

Just before dawn we had all started to doze off when we were rudely awakened by a loud slapping noise. The tide had changed and small waves were lapping at the rocky overhangs. Around us the water swirled and the tide carried us unceremoniously out of the other end of the island. We were spat out into the Indian Ocean along with all the other flotsam including a half submerged wooden pallet and a dead goat. We were on our way to Muscat.

After that I was hooked. Such an adventure, I had to do it again, and again and now next year will be my twentieth race. No matter how you approach the Straits, they are always threatening if not a little scary but always different. Careful or you might be the recipient of 20 years fucking retribution as I have been.

It could be the dead of night, moonless, the only the eerie flash every ten seconds of the Telegraph Island light with a jet black sea, as smooth as a mirror, that seamlessly merged with the dark sky. Around a rocky crag a village lights up as if it were on fire then disappears as quickly as it came. Or strong winds against the tide, standing waves as high as the gunwale, a reefed main and a blur of spray.

Sailors on the Dubai Muscat race have witnessed whales blowing, sharks, dolphins, turtles, smugglers, pirates, the US Navy aircraft carriers and on one occasion an abandoned half submerged fishing boat. The Indian Ocean off the coast of the UAE and Oman teems with plankton that draws a huge variety of fish. Similarly, the wealth of Dubai draws illegal migrants like a massive magnet, many of them chancing the hazardous trip on small boats operated by people smugglers across dangerous shipping lanes full of giant oil tankers and container vessels. Some don’t make it. Some are captured by the Oman Navy. Some drown after being thrown overboard by the smugglers to avoid capture by the navy. Some do make it. And a very few send back a small fortune to their families in India, enough to lure more on this perilous trip.

Satisfied with the stringent safety requirements and the professional race managers appointed by the Organizers, the Royal Ocean Racing Club has recognized the Dubai Muscat race as one of their qualifiers. Local sailors can benefit from this to gain the sea miles they need to join the RORC, as I have done, filling a long held wish.

If, by chance, you have the luck of passing through Dubai in the month of November and you are an experienced sailor, boats are always looking for crew. You could do a lot worse than spending a couple of weeks on the Dubai Muscat Race.

Barnacles and Seaweed

Should Children Compete?

With the advent of yet younger and younger sailors setting off to sail the world single handed, creating another record of dubious significance, the world of sailing is mumbling about the sense of it all. I am one of the mumblers.

It reminds me of the long and acrimonious debate held in the International Sailing Federation some 7 or 8 years ago, I’m a little foggy about when bit it was during the reign of Paul Henderson as President. Paul was horrified by what he described as child abuse and cited an incident he claimed he saw during a major youth regatta when a coach gave a cigarette to a young teenage competitor to calm her nerves.

Fired with his usual passion, Paul challenged the Youth and Development Committee of which I was a member, to the task of coming up with a solution. The wise and judicious Chairman at the time, my colleague from Portugal, Carlos Ribeiro Ferreira, quickly passed it on to me.

Surprisingly, it was an interesting project. After considerable research, I could not find any survey that would back an argument showing that high level competition stress situations would harm young children. In passing, there is strong evidence on a daily basis that it is harmful to their parents and any other adult that is involved. But that is another story. Look as I may I could find very little except that a few other sports like gymnastics were investigating the question.

But inclined to ignore the thunder clouds on the horizon, I sailed on and put the proposal that children under the age of twelve should not be allowed to compete in World Championship Sailing events.

When the paper hit the table, all hell broke loose. At the next Youth and Development
meeting, the normally empty galleries were packed with what looked like a pride of hungry lions out on a hunt.

Unperturbed, I embarked on my monologue unaware of the grunts and groans and general
rumbling from the cheap seats. Immediately I had finished, a sea of hands shot up from the observers all wanting to air their strongly held views. From the general tone of their remarks I almost came to the conclusion that I was the thing from the dark side seeking nothing else but the souls of their loved ones. I was shocked but, and here’s a real but, not daunted.

For the next year, the email exchange was fast and furious. The camps were divided by those
who only wanted my blood and those who wanted my head on a plate as well.

The strongest opposition came from the International Optimist Dinghy Class Association,
hotly pursued by the International Cadet Dinghy Class and a myriad of other minor players.

At the Barcelona ISAF AGM, the atmosphere was so tense that Paul decided that there
should be a working party to solve the differences. It was made up of primarily, of the President of the IODA Class, Helen Mary Wilkes, for the opposition and me for the defence. The late Nucci Ceppellini, a Vice President at the time and no faint hearted woman, was to be the umpire.

Very little was accomplished and finally, when my proposal hit the Council table they gave
up in disgust and it was defeated with a sigh of relief.

What I subsequently realised and should have known as a parent, is that both the parents
and their children crave the stress. Yes, that’s right, forget all the nonsense you read about having a calm and peaceful parent and child relationship, both love the adrenalin rush of madcap adventures and anybody, like me, that stands in their way is likely to be drowned in the tidal wave.