In Russia, owing to the rough ice, a sail area of 600 to 1000 square feet is necessary, and ice-boats are heavily built with side-bars, and carry twenty people. But on the great expanses of ice smooth spots of about the size of an ordinary lake form and on these are used the lightly constructed racing craft of American design.
In Stockholm, Sweden, the preference is for the 250 square feet class. The Swedish style of boat has been discarded in favor of an American type. There is some ice-boating in Germany, but the boats are as yet very crude, and up-to-date American boats can outsail them with ease on every point.
To-day ice-boating is more popular than ever in America, especially in the Middle West. The great event there is the meet of the Northwest Racing Association, which is composed of the principal clubs in Michi-gan, Illinois and Minnesota. The races are sailed each year on a different lake in each State for valuable and numerous prizes, and all kinds of rigs are tried out. First came the spritsail. Then a jib was added, which gave way to a large jib and a gaff mainsail, which in turn was followed by the same rig with a reduced jib. Previous to this last change the mast was stept at the center of the runner-plank, which necessitated a large jib to balance the mainsail. But later the mast was stept three feet farther forward of the runner-plank so that a smaller jib could take the place of the large one. Then came the lateen rig, which was popular for a number of years, but was replaced by the present sloop rig, which is practically a cat rig with small balancing jib and a leg-of-mutton mainsail with a spitfire jib. At present all sails are hoisted with flexible steel rigging; the boats carry steel shrouds and runner-plank stays; the cockpit is oval and built to hold two men; the backbone and spars are hollow.
A race in a stiff breeze is a most inspiring sight. Numbers are drawn for the desira- ble windward position; the boats are smartly shoved up in line and headed into the eye of the wind with an intervening space of four or five feet between each boat. The chairman of the racing committee and the linekeeper are stationed aft of the line of boats. “All prepare,” the official cries. “Gentlemen, you start at crack of the pistol.” Three minutes later bang! goes the gun. The steersman and sheet tender grip the side of the cock-pit, dig their spur-shod shoes into the ice-shove the boat ahead and jump aboard. A slight twist is given the tiller to fill the sails, she jumps into increased momentum by seconds, and is off, as the boats go scooting over the ice like live things, all fighting for the windward position for the first leg of the course, which is a triangular one sailed over several times. (The length of course depends on the size of the boats. The smaller go ten miles; the larger, twenty; but sometimes, owing to faulty ice, the triangle has to be made smaller, hence it is necessary to sail over it more times.) The second leg is a free run and the boats fly before the breeze in a snakelike course, for an ice-boat can not sail to advantage dead before the wind, but must go in long curves, gybing at each turn of the curve. The third is a free run with the wind a-beam.
Around this triangle they rush with with windward runners high in the air and the lee runners shooting out sprays of fine ice to the accompaniment of the buzz of their cast-iron shoes, which is taken up and intensified by the hollow backbone, and the runner-plank, which acts as a sounding board. It is sweet music for a true ice yachtsman. Two or three boats are fighting for the lead as they come into the home turn; the others are strung out a short distance apart. On they come, with a rush and finish only ten or fifteen feet apart. They have fought it out, inch by inch, for twenty miles, but with an actual sailing distance of twenty-eight or thirty miles. Nowadays the class boats are built so nearly alike that the races are mostly won by the good judgment and superior ability of the crew.
Strange to say, it is more difficult to find a good sheet tender than helmsman. The former is born and not made. The mainsail must be manipulated with every puff to win a race.
The latest craze is for a leg-of-mutton mainsail rig, and of course this class will be greatly developed in the coming yeers; but at present, altho an able rig for working to windward, it is very slow in the leeward sailing. Whether it can equal a sloop rig with the gaff mainsail and small jib is yet to be learned.
Source: Outlook, 2 January 1929