Courses and Markings
Defining courses and markings is one of the central tasks of every race committee. A well-set course ensures fair competition, manageable protest situations, and smooth timing. A poorly positioned mark, on the other hand, can distort an entire race – from unfair laylines and mass Protest handling to abandonment due to safety risks. This guide explains how organizers and race officials plan courses, set marks, and communicate changes during a regatta day.
Why Course Planning Is Decisive
Every regatta is based on a clearly defined racing area – the zone in which races may take place. Within this zone, the race committee establishes the concrete course: start line, turning marks, optional gates, finish line, and the sequence of roundings. These specifications are set out in the sailing instructions and are binding for all participants.
Professional course planning takes into account:
- the expected wind strength and direction on race day
- the boat classes and their speed as well as maneuverability
- safety distances from land, shipping lanes, and swimming zones
- the number of races per day and the available fleet of Mark laying boats
- TV and spectator requirements at major events
Those who know the basics of regatta organization will find the broader context in Planning and Running a Regatta. The boundaries of the sailing area are described in Regatta Areas and Limits.
Course Types at a Glance
Not every regatta uses the same course layout. The race committee selects the format according to discipline, wind conditions, and time budget.
In-depth articles on the most common formats: Windward-Leeward Courses, Trapezoid and Slalom Courses, and Inshore and Course Regattas.
Comparison: WL, Trapezoid and Slalom
Windward-Leeward as the Standard Format
WL courses dominate modern fleet racing because they are symmetrical, repeatable, and easy to follow for protests. The race committee typically sets:
- a start/finish line near the leeward zone
- a windward mark to windward
- a leeward mark or gate as the lower turning point
Course length depends on the boat class: Optimist and ILCA often sail 0.8–1.2 nautical miles total distance per lap, larger keelboats 1.5–2.5 nautical miles.
Mark Types and Rounding Requirements
Marks are the physical or virtual points around which boats must sail according to the sailing instructions. Their correct position and identification is legally relevant – missed roundings lead to protests and penalties.
Floating Marks
The most common mark types in regatta sailing:
- Inflatable buoys: Lightweight, quick to deploy, in orange or yellow; standard at club and championship regattas
- Rigid buoys: Robust in swell, heavier to transport
- Staff and pin marks: Slimmer variants for tight match race courses
- Gate marks: Two buoys parallel, passage from windward; tactical choice for the crew
Fixed Marks and Lines
In addition to floating buoys, the race committee frequently uses:
- the committee boat as the end point of the start line
- fixed navigation marks or dock pilings in sheltered harbors
- GPS coordinates as virtual marks in offshore or coastal races
Mark categories:
- Racing Marks
- Physical Marks
- Buoys (inflatable, rigid)
- Gates (two parallel buoys)
- Fixed objects (dock pilings, navigation marks)
- Virtual Marks
- GPS waypoints
- Virtual gates (two coordinate points)
- Physical Marks
Rounding Direction
The sailing instructions specify whether boats must round a mark from port to starboard (left) or from starboard to port (right). This requirement affects Rule 18 and the entire tactics at the windward mark. Details on the rules can be found under Mark Roundings and Penalties and Mark Roundings.
The Process: From Plan to Set Course
Planning Before Race Day
- Publish notice of race and sailing instructions with possible course options (Course 1, 2, 3 …).
- Coordinate racing area and safety zones with authorities and the organizing committee – see Permits and Authorities.
- Check mark inventory: number of buoys, line lengths, anchors or weights, spare marks, radios.
- Crew briefing for mark boat skippers: positioning commands, radio channels, emergency protocols.
Setting Out in the Morning
The race committee typically goes on the water 60–90 minutes before the first start. The Senior race officer (PRO) decides based on current wind measurements which course option is activated. Mark boats receive GPS coordinates or visual reference points (church, crane, headland).
Important rules of thumb for course length:
- The windward mark should be positioned so that the upwind leg takes at least 6–8 minutes in moderate wind
- Start line bias (favored end) may deviate a maximum of 5–10 degrees from wind direction, otherwise extremely one-sided starts occur
- Gate spacing: 60–100 meters for dinghies, 80–150 meters for larger boats
- Safety distance from land: at least two boat lengths more than the longest expected layline
Communication to the Fleet
Before each race, the RC communicates the selected course via flags, radio, and the notice board. The morning briefing is the central moment – described in Morning Briefing and Course Discussion. The PRO explains:
- the course number and the rounding diagram
- the number of laps
- special limits (e.g. "do not navigate north of the red buoy")
- changes compared to the previous day
Important: Every course change after publication of the SI must be communicated through the designated channels (flag "C", radio announcement, notice board). Silent changes without notification lead to protests and reputational damage.
Committee Boat and Mark Boats
The committee boat is the command center on the water: start signals, timing, radio coordination, and protest intake. Mark boats are smaller vessels or RIBs that position buoys precisely and monitor them during the race.
Ideal division of tasks:
- Committee boat: signals, start clock, finish, PRO decisions
- Windward mark boat: sets and holds the top mark, reports drift
- Leeward / gate mark boat: positions gate marks, observes gate roundings
- Pin-end boat (optional): holds the pin-end buoy of the start line
- Safety boats: patrol outside the racing area
The organizational role of the race committee is covered in depth in Race Committee and PRO.
Tip: Use a radio with a fixed channel and a backup channel for each mark boat. Hand signals do not work reliably with 30+ boats in fleet racing.
GPS Marks and Modern Course Management
At larger offshore regattas or events with live tracking, GPS waypoints increasingly replace physical marks on long legs. Virtual gates consist of two coordinate points; sailing software automatically detects whether a boat has correctly passed the line.
Advantages of virtual marks:
- no physical logistics on the open sea
- exact reproducibility over multiple days
- integration into live tracking apps and spectator overlays
Disadvantages and limitations:
- dependence on GPS accuracy (3–10 meters under ideal conditions)
- less intuitive for beginners without a plotter
- unsuitable for inshore fleet racing in dense traffic
GPS accuracy on regatta courses:
Accuracy is increasingly improving through Galileo and RTK systems.
Safety and Common Mistakes
A mark that drifts in shallow water or capsizes at tidal change endangers the entire fleet. Mark boats must monitor drift and anchor holding throughout the entire race.
Typical race committee mistakes:
- Upwind legs too short: fleet compresses at the windward mark, mass protests
- Start line too long or too short: unfair bias or OCS chain reactions
- Gate too narrow: collisions during simultaneous passage
- Unclear rounding requirements: protests due to "Which mark is the mark?"
- Too few spare marks: no adjustment possible when wind shifts
Safety Checklist for the RC Before the Start
- All marks visually identifiable and correctly positioned
- Radio contact with each mark boat confirmed
- Racing area clear of obstacles, divers, restricted zones
- Safety boats in position with MOB equipment
- Weather and wind limit per SI defined and communicated
- GPS coordinates of all marks documented and transmitted to PRO
- Spare marks and reserve anchors on board mark boats
- Course diagram on notice board and explained in briefing
Course Adjustments During Race Day
Wind shifts, dying wind, or changing current require course shifts. The PRO can move the position of the windward mark, realign the start line, or switch to an alternative course option.
Procedure for course shift:
- PRO decides and communicates via radio to mark boats
- Mark boat moves the buoy; new position is confirmed
- Flag "C" or announcement to the fleet before the next start
- Update of the notice board with new diagram
- For major changes: new sailor briefing at the committee boat
In extreme conditions (thunderstorms, fog, excessive wind), safety takes priority. The PRO postpones or abandons – regardless of the state of course planning.
Frequently Asked Questions About Courses and Markings
Who may change the course layout?
Only the PRO or the race committee.
What happens with a drifting mark?
The RC resets the mark or abandons the race.
Must all boats take the same gate side?
No, the gate is a choice of passage.
How wide should a start line be?
Approx. 1–1.5 boat lengths per boat.
Are GPS marks subject to protest?
Yes, if they are defined in the sailing instructions.
Checklist: Course Planning for Organizers
Complete planning checklist before the regatta:
- Racing area defined on chart and in SI
- At least three course options prepared for different wind directions
- Mark inventory calculated (incl. 20% reserve)
- Mark boat crew trained and assigned
- Radio and emergency protocols written and practiced
- Rounding diagrams in SI and on briefing slides
- Coordination with Race Committee and PRO on decision paths
- Documentation of GPS coordinates for post-race evaluation and protests
- Weather and tidal forecast incorporated into course length planning
- Debriefing process after each race day for course optimization