May/June 2018 - Silent Rules

placeholder image

May/June 2018 - Silent Rules

This article had its origin in one of the questions I received last fall. Readers are encouraged to send rules-related questions to [email protected].

Most rules are explicit directions on how something should be done or explicit directives against an action, but sometimes a “rule” is created by something unsaid. In other words, the lack of an explicit permission means the action is proscribed. This is particularly true of the mark-room rule. This month, we will talk about barging, a “rule” for which there is no written rule.

This is what barging looks like – Blue and Yellow are approaching to start, with Blue on a close-hauled course and Yellow on a reach to windward of Blue. Yellow hails for “room to start”. Blue hails “no room”. Who is right? The committee boat is a mark of the course, so “room to start” would probably be in the “mark-room” rule, rule 18, part of Section C “AT MARKS AND OBSTRUCTIONS”, wouldn’t it?

 

Well, no. There is no rule that says that Yellow is not entitled to room, but also there is no rule that says she is entitled to room. The preamble to Section C says that its rules “do not apply at a starting mark … from the time boats are approaching them to start until they have passed them”. Blue is correct in invoking a “rule” that exists only because its opposite does not. In the absence of the mark-room rules, rule 11 – windward boats shall keep clear of leeward boats – dictates Yellow must keep clear of Blue; she must sheer off, go around and hope there is an opening behind Blue.

 

Incidentally, Blue’s most relevant hail would probably be “stay up” or “get up”, but “no room” is common and generally understood. A combination of the three could be good insurance for Blue.

 

If we have a different situation – the end of the start line is not surrounded by navigable water – the start is off the end of a pier, for instance, or there is impassably shoal water next to the committee boat – the situation is reversed. The exclusion to Section C would not apply, so the rules of Section C apply. This means that Yellow would be entitled to mark-room and rule 21 would exonerate Yellow for taking the room to which she was entitled. Blue would be disqualified for breaking rule 18.2(b) if she didn’t give room. Moral: keep the distinction between “surrounded…” and “not surrounded by navigable water” in mind if you’re sailing in a new venue.
 


11    ON THE SAME TACK, OVERLAPPED

When boats are on the same tack and overlapped, a windward boat shall keep clear of a leeward boat.

 

SECTION C

AT MARKS AND OBSTRUCTIONS

Section C rules do not apply at a starting mark surrounded by navigable water or at its anchor line from the time boats are approaching them to start until they have passed them.

 

18    MARK-ROOM

….

18.2    Giving Mark-Room

  1. When boats are overlapped the outside boat shall give the inside boat mark-room, unless rule 18.2(b) applies.
  2. If boats are overlapped when the first of them reaches the zone, the outside boat at that moment shall thereafter give the inside boat mark-room. If a boat is clear ahead when she reaches the zone, the boat clear astern at that moment shall thereafter give her mark-room.

 

21    EXONERATION

When a boat is sailing within the room or mark-room to which she is entitled, she shall be exonerated if, in an incident with a boat required to give her that room or mark-room,

 

  1. she breaks a rule of Section A, rule 15 or rule 16, or
  2. she is compelled to break rule 31.

© Copyright 2017 Andrew Alberti

Posted: 4/29/2019 3:33:08 PM by Andrew Alberti | with 0 comments


Trackback URL: https://rcyc.ca/trackback/b86b1203-becd-4dc2-9f81-ba2568b95832/May_June_2018_-_Silent_Rules.aspx?culture=en-US

This page provides links to a set of articles original published in Kwasind magazine. The versions here include animated diagrams. The original articles can be found within the original magazines which are available online back to January 2007. 

Articles before December 2020 are based on the Racing Rules of Sailing 2009-12 or 2013-2016 or 2017-2020 and have not been updated to reflect the changes that apply as of January 2021 with the publication of the Racing Rules of Sailing 2021-24. A copy of the new rules can be found on sailing.org.
ABOUT ANDREW ALBERTI
Andrew Alberti has been writing these monthly articles in the Kwasind since early 1997.  They explain the Racing Rules of Sailing. Andrew is an International Judge and National Umpire. He is a member of the Sail Canada Rules and Appeals Committees. The interpretation of the rules contained in the articles is Andrew's and not that of the RCYC or any of the committees he sits on. 

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
Send your questions to Andrew at [email protected].

 

ABOUT RCYC: 
166 Years of Tradition | World-Class Sailing | Toronto Island & City Clubhouse
 
Limitations on Right of Way Boats - Changing Course
Limitations on Right-Of-Way Boats - Establishing Right-Of-Way
After You Cross the Finishing Line II
After You Cross The Finishing Line I
Tacking III
Post Archive
December 2024(1)
October 2024(0)
October 2024(1)
July 2024(0)
July 2024(1)
May 2024(0)
May 2024(2)
March 2024(1)
February 2024(1)
September 2023(1)
May 2023(1)
September 2023(0)
May 2023(0)
January 2023(1)
April 2022(1)
December 2021(1)
October 2021(1)
August 2021(2)
March/April 2021(1)
January/February 2021(1)
December 2020(1)
November 2020(1)
September 2020(1)
July 2020(1)
June 2020(1)
May 2020(1)
March/April 2020(1)
January/February 2020(1)
November/December 2019(1)
September/October 2019(1)
July/August 2019(1)
May/June 2019(1)
March/April 2019(1)
January/February 2019(1)
November/December 2018(1)
September/October 2018(1)
July/August 2018(1)
May/June 2018(1)
March/April 2018(1)
January/February 2018(1)
November/December 2017(1)
October 2017(1)
September 2017(1)
August 2017(1)
July 2017(1)
June 2017(1)
May 2017(1)
April 2017(1)
March 2017(1)
January/February 2017(1)
December 2016(1)
November 2016(1)
October 2016(1)
September 2016(1)
August 2016(1)
July 2016(1)
June 2016(1)
May 2016(1)
April 2016(1)
March 2016(1)
January/February 2016(1)
December 2015(1)
November 2015(1)
October 2015(1)
September 2015(1)
August 2015(1)
July 2015(1)
June 2015(1)
May 2015(1)
April 2015(1)
March 2015(1)
January 2015(1)
December 2014(1)
November 2014(1)
October 2014(1)
September 2014(1)
August 2014(1)
July 2014(1)
June 2014(1)
May 2014(1)
April 2014(1)
March 2014(1)
January 2014(1)
December 2013(1)
November 2013(1)
October 2013(1)
September 2013(1)
August 2013(1)
July 2013(1)
June 2013(1)
May 2013(1)
April 2013(1)
March 2013(1)
January 2013(1)
December 2012(1)
November 2012(1)
October 2012(1)
September 2012(1)
August 2012(1)
July 2012(1)
June 2012(1)
May 2012(1)
April 2012(1)
March 2012(1)
February 2012(1)
January 2012(1)
December 2011(1)
November 2011(1)
October 2011(1)
September 2011(1)
August 2011(1)
July 2011(1)
June 2011(1)
May 2011(1)
April 2011(1)
March 2011(1)
February 2011(1)
January 2011(1)
November 2010(1)
October 2010(1)
September 2010(1)
August 2010(1)
July 2010(1)
June 2010(1)
May 2010(1)
April 2010(1)
March 2010(1)
February 2010(1)
January 2010(1)
RSS