Entries for this years Head of the Cam race are now open!
Saturday 30th April 2011
The Head Course - Cambridge, 2600m
3 divisions:
Division 1 10:45
Division 2 12:30
Division 3 14:15
VIIIs - IVs - Small Boats
BR, CRA and College Classes
£5 per rowing seat.
For further details on how to enter, please go to www.headofthecam.org
Entries close 7pm, Thursday 21st April
Monday, 21 March 2011
Womens Eights Head of the River Race 2011
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Saturday morning dawned bright sunny and warm, as promised by the Met Office. Our first task was to load the boat onto the trailer, and then wave it off to be driven down to London by another club. Then we all headed for cars and trains to make our way to London.
We were boating from Furnivall Gardens which has always been my favourite place to boat from on the Thames. It is close to Hammersmith Bridge which is about two thirds of the way down the course and is the best place for spectators to watch from. It also means that you get a warm up rowing to the start and not to onerous a row back from the finish. This year Furnivall only accepted 11 boats so there was a relaxed atmosphere as we rigged the boat ready to go, and we had inside space to store kit and wellies.
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Rigging Dawntreader PHOTO: Ali B |
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Blades ready PHOTO: Ali B |
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The offending component! |
Once we were roughly stationary, I tried just sticking the bare wires back into the loose half of the connector. Voices from the bow confirmed that they were getting intermittent noise from the speakers so I knew all was not lost. After a while, I discarded the loose part of the connector and tried just sticking the wires into the half of the connector still attached to the bow end of the boat, losing the part which was broken. I also cleaned the little bits of wire that were sticking out of the insulation as best I could. Stripping the insulation off would have been advantageous but I didn't have a tool to do so. Stuffing the newly cleaned wires as far as I could into the connector, I learnt from the bows that they could hear James voice. The insulation on wires provided enough friction to hold the wires in the rubber of the remaining connector and so I just hoped beyond hope that it would hold. We had another 20 minutes of marshalling and then a 20+ minute race. It held through the marshalling, and then we were off. There was nothing more I could do but hope.
The race started well, and we got into a good rhythm. Rowing on the Thames is quite different to rowing on the Cam, as the water is much rougher, and rowing with the tide means that it feels strange when you place your blade in, as if you haven't really got enough connection with the water. Still, we maintained well, and James' coxing kept us going, Soon we could see Hammersmith Bridge, where we knew our supporters would be cheering for us. We could see our club flag and also a great sign made by Simon - 'ROW FASTER, CHESTERTON, THE BAR IS OPEN!' which made me smile through the pain!
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PHOTO: Simon E |
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That's us in the middle, about to overtake Essex on the left PHOTO: Simon E |
At this point, we began to overtake the crew in front (the University of Essex) which was great fun. James thrives on this kind of coxing - when there is a real competition on our hands, and we slowly but surely passed them by. At this point in the race, overtaking was just the encouragement we needed to keep pushing to the end. It seemed to go on for ever, but eventually there was the call to wind it down. I felt pretty wrecked at this point, and couldn't speak to ask the question to which I desperately wanted the answer: Did the connection hold? Eventually I managed to gasp out the question, and got the answer that it had held, which was the best part of the race for me!
We had a bit of a row back to Furnivall but it wasn't too bad, and the sun was still shining. Our supporters met us on the pontoon and we took the boat apart to put back on the trailer before heading for a meal at Pizza Express. While we were there we learned that we'd come 271 out of 302 boats (all results by division), with a time of 23 minutes 21 seconds which wasn't too bad considering that we were a 'scratch' crew - with a sub (thanks so much, Mel!) who was rowing for one of the girls who was too ill to join us. Thanks also to our supporters on the bank and to James for his coxing.
Sunday, 27 February 2011
Norwich head

Norwich head is what you get to if you turn right; if you turn left you get to the half marathon (and if you go by train you meet the foul-mouthed old ladies). But we turned the right way and (unlike Press) had remembered to bring our riggers and (unlike the nameless Quad) we remembered not to turn turtle. And I was unaffected by the rain while waiting for the start because I'd brought my collapsible umbrella, and even if everyone else mocked me I was dry.
However, after this comprehensive list of things we got right, I now have to come on the the rowing itself. We had a good strong steady row, nothing spectacular, but it didn't feel as though we weakened. The Essex Boys came up on us off the start, and were on our tail after ~1/3 the course. Then we pushed back a bit and maybe they tired and we had the corner and we held them for a bit, before finally they had the inside of a bend and got past us. That took us to about 2/3 of the course, which is nearly back; just under the motorway bridge and home. The course itself is pleasantly rural.
And the end result? 15:28 for us and we were 5th in Division 2 4th of IM3 VIII's. I suppose we might have hoped for better, but we are just one small town boat club and Essex are an entire university, and only beat us by 30 seconds.
In the evening afterwards, a crew curry in the Maharajah. Here we all are:

Photo credit: William D's camera, photographer: Emma? L to R: Tom Watt, Andy Southgate, Chris Wood, Simon Emmings, William Dulyea, James Howard, James Tidy, Ollie Crab, William Connolley, Ralph Hancock (yes I know we all know who we are but I write them out sometimes so the search engines will find us).
You see from this (and the top pic) that it was really fairly muddy or (as James T put it) "like the Somme".
Refs
* Norwich head
* Norwich Rowing Club
* William D's pix
Sunday, 12 December 2010
Christmas Head

We also entered a Womens VIII, two mixed VIII's, and two pairs, all of which performed creditably:
104 Chesterton Rage Against the Machine cra m IM3 8+ 1 7:02
103 Champion of the Thames campbell cra m IM3 8+ 1 7:02
225 Chesterton Band Aid cra mx Nv 8+ 2 8:08
218 Chesterton Westlife Invitational m IM3 2- 2 8:10
224 Chesterton Slade cra mx Nv 8+ 2 8:29
133 Chesterton Girls Aloud cra w Nv 8+ 1 8:35
245 Chesterton East 17 Invitational m Nv 2- 2 8:37
Refs
* William's blog
Saturday, 13 November 2010
Thursday, 28 October 2010
2010/2011 Club Committee
At the AGM, the following people were voted into club positions:
Club Captain:
Chris Wood
Men's Captain:
James Tidy
Women's Captain:
Freya Morrissey/Amy Tillson
Secretary:
Amy Tillson
Treasurer:
Sarah Coates
Equipment Officer:
Andy Southgate
Webmaster:
Andy Southgate
Kit Officer:
Beverley England
Water Safety Advisor:
Paul Holland
Social Secretary:
Becca Scourse
Club Captain:
Chris Wood
Men's Captain:
James Tidy
Women's Captain:
Freya Morrissey/Amy Tillson
Secretary:
Amy Tillson
Treasurer:
Sarah Coates
Equipment Officer:
Andy Southgate
Webmaster:
Andy Southgate
Kit Officer:
Beverley England
Water Safety Advisor:
Paul Holland
Social Secretary:
Becca Scourse
Friday, 1 October 2010
Winter ergo league
Fired by excess beer at last nights AGM (doubtless to be blogged soon) Gary finally completed the last phase of the much-heraled Winter Ergo League: actually organising the first session. And so this lunchtime Paul, Gary and I went down to Queens, found out how to work the new safe, sat around for a bit, then finally confessed that we would actually have to do an erg. It was raining.
Out mighty awe-inspiring distances (for 30 minutes, of course) were:
all of us are about 100 m off our years best. The rules of the competition aren't quite clear: the aim is that we all put in £10 and the winner - he (or she) who improves the most by Christmas - wins all. Improves meaning fraction, or distance, or sheer good looks - this has yet to be decided.
The rest of you are invited to join in.
Out mighty awe-inspiring distances (for 30 minutes, of course) were:
William C 7,582
Gary D 7,307
Paul H 7,240
all of us are about 100 m off our years best. The rules of the competition aren't quite clear: the aim is that we all put in £10 and the winner - he (or she) who improves the most by Christmas - wins all. Improves meaning fraction, or distance, or sheer good looks - this has yet to be decided.
The rest of you are invited to join in.
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