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Sports: Sailing

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Background of the Sport

Moored sailboats at marina

Sailing uses the wind to power the boat's motion. It's not as much by pushing the sail (as is the case when sailing downwind) but by creating forward-pulling lift using airfoil-shaped sails (when sailing across or into the wind). The joy of sailing combines the joy of being on the water, the power you feel in harnessing natural forces, and with the thrill of going fast without significant energy on your part.

Sailing dates back to the ancient Phoenician traders, though the technology of sailboats has improved dramatically over the years. Innovations in the past 50 years include fibreglass hulls, metal masts and booms, synthetic sails, computer controlled laser cut and sewn sails, and computer aided design for boat hulls have made sail boats faster, safer, cheaper, and easier to maintain.

Small sailboats under 20 feet in length come in two main configurations: either single hull or multi-hull (like a catamaran). They typically have one mast, one mainsail (the big one), and a jib (the small triangular at the front, to direct the wind around the mainsail), and sometimes a spinnaker (the large round-shaped one for going downwind). Small boats are designed for a limited number of people to crew, with them either sitting in or around the cockpit (which may be a tightly stretched tarp between the catamaran hulls), or supported from a trapeze rig over the edge of the boat (in high winds). Smaller boats with centreboards include modles like Albacores and Lasers.

In coastal waters and in larger lakes, boats can get larger (with fixed keels), more sophisticated (and much more expensive), and can handle larger numbers of people. Some such boats even have multiple masts, and complex sail configurations. Such larger yachts are suitable for a sailing on open water for significant distances, and provide sleeping, kitchen, communications equipment, even entertainment facilities.

Equipment
Yachts with gear at a marina

To go sailing, you'll need a boat, and lifejackets.


Where

Royal hamilton Yacht Club
Hamilton is ideal for all sorts of water sports and has several marinas and overnight slips.

 Hamilton Bay Sailing Club, at 275 James Street North (905-664-6218) or the Ontario Sailing Association (905-572-7245) in Hamilton.

Hamilton Harbour
Hamilton Harbour is the south west end of Lake Ontario. This large 2,000 hectare harbour is sheltered from Lake Ontario by the Burlington Beach Strip, and has depths ranging from 33 to 75 feet with a clay and mud bottom. Hamilton is a customs reporting station.

To enter Burlington Bay and access both Burlington and Hamilton Harbours, one must pass through the Burlington Canal. There are two high level bridges and a lift bridge crossing the canal. The 125 foot high Burlington Bay Skyway Bridge is 445 feet (150 meters) SW of the lift bridge. The Lift Bridge has a clearance of 10 feet when closed and is operated 24 hours a day, opening on the hour and the half hour for pleasure craft, or on-request for commercial traffic.

The upscale Royal Hamilton Yacht Club (905-528-8464) is west of the commercial dockyards, and is the home of many Canada Cup challenges. The Leander Boat Club is west of the Yacht club on a small spit of land. Macassa Bay Yacht Club (905-529 9222), with its blue and white building, is at the extreme west end of the harbour and provides facilities for members of reciprocating clubs.

Fifty Point (Grimsby)
Sailing past 5 mile (8 km) of sands beaches SE from the Burlington Canal, you pass a low bank with a narrow strip of rocks at the waters edge, and then as you approach Fifty Mile Point the shoreline returns to sandy beaches again. Watch for the 8 tall communications towers with air obstruction lights, approximately 1 mile east of the harbour. Notice the prominent land fill to the south of the entrance, and a small arms range directly south of the point. The landfill extends on a spit for 700 feet into the lake and rises to a height of 40 feet.

The man-made marina is operated by Hamilton Region Conservation Authority, and is part of a 1980-acre park and has excellent facilities.

CAUTION: The Canadian forces maintains a small arms range 0.6 miles (1 km) to the ESE of Fifty Mile Point, which extends 1.5 miles offshore and is marked by spar buoys.

30 foot high Grimbsy Harbour Light is at the outer end of the east breakwall, and has a white circular tower with green upper portion.

Contacts: Grimsby Harbour : (905-945-5284), Lakecourt Marine (905-945-5852), Newport Yacht Club Marina (905- 643-0195), Fifty Point Marina (905-643-210)


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