AfloatMagazine: Isle of Man Back on the ISORA Chart After Thrilling Dun…
YouTube Vimeo Twitter Facebook

section_headers_dublinbay

Dublin Bay Sailing and Boating News
Dun Laoghaire's new Harbour master is Captain Frank Allen, according to an announcement by Dun Laoghaire Harbour Company this morning. Captain Allen replaces Captain Simon Coate who is retiring. A native of Cork, Captain Allen has spent all his working life in shipping. His first management role was as General…
Sunday, 22 May 2011 11:21

Dun Laoghaire Events in August

Dun Laoghaire will play host to two new and exciting events this coming August. The first annual Dublin Bay Taste & Music Fest takes place at the Peoples' Park from 26-28 August. Pitched as a 'back to basics' celebration of Ireland's culinary heritage, the weekend will feature a 'boulevard' of…
New plans for the Dun Laoghaire Baths are due to be displayed shortly in County Hall. Proposals for the project, which is estimated to cost up to €21 million, include the retention and refurbishment of the existing baths pavilion to provide access to swimming and a paddling pool for children.…
A foreshore lease application has been lodged for a series of offshore windfarms in Dublin Bay. The Dublin Array, to be situated on the Bray and Kish Banks some 10km from the coast, would consist of 145 turbines, each 160m high, operated by Saorgus Energy Ltd. The project has been…
Dun Laoghaire's future lies in tourism and leisure, according to a submission on the new 'master plan' for the busy harbour. http://www.afloat.ie/port-news/dun-laoghaire-news/ The Irish Times reports that the town's top sailing and yacht clubs, who have come together under the banner of Dun Laoghaire Combined Clubs, are putting aside their…
Dublin's Lord Mayor Gerry Breen will assume the traditional title of Admiral of the Port of Dublin when he presides over the Parade of Sail on the Liffey later this month. The parade on Sunday 29 May is a highlight of the annual Dublin Bay Old Gaffers Association rally, which…
The Red Bull Flugtag celebrates its 100th event in Dun Laoghaire next Sunday, and organisers have posted details for spectators planning to spend the day cheering on those magnificent flying machines! http://www.afloat.ie/port-news/dun-laoghaire-news/item/15214-dublin-to-host-100th-red-bull-flugtag/ http://www.afloat.ie/port-news/dun-laoghaire-news/ The site for the free event will open at 12 noon, with the show taking place from…
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>
Page 8 of 13

 

newsletter graphic

If you'd like more news, views and stories about Ireland's sailing, boating and maritime scene please sign up to our enews letter, follow us on facebook and twitter

 

Dublin Bay

It was here, on Dublin Bay, that the sport of yacht racing began, pre-dating the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) itself by 30 years.

Around the world, the modern sport of sailing is governed by rules that were formulated here in Dublin in 1874.

The clubs in Dun Laoghaire established Dublin Bay as one of the world's key sailing centres. Regattas here were glorious affairs, involving the whole community. Giant yachts of the America's Cup class competed regularly here in the 1920s.

But Dublin faded from grace after the world wars, and by the early 1960s, regattas in Dun Laoghaire were only local affairs.

But over subsequent decades, Dun Laoghaire sailing has been fighting back from a magnificent base of four waterfront clubs all located in one of the largest man-made harbours in the world.

It has been helped by an increase in the amount of people taking to the water and the increased popularity of sailing but nationally this island nation has still some way to go.

In spite of our miles of coast (and a further 500 miles of navigable rivers and lakes), Ireland has one of the lowest ratios of boat ownership in Europe: one boat to 158 people. The European average is one boat to 42 people.

Lack of facilities is to blame around the coast but that's not the case in the country's largest boating centre where facilities, thanks to the 200-year old harbour are world class.

Each of the Dun Laoghaire yacht clubs stages an annual regatta and each club calendar boasts regular international fixtures of world and European dinghy and keelboat championships. In 1999, for example the Royal St. George (RSGYC) hosted

ISAF's Team Racing World Championships and last season the Topper worlds were hosted by the National Yacht Club (NYC).

The Bay's Racing organisation Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) boasts a weekly turn-out of up to 200 yachts across 21 classes, one of the biggest weekly turnouts in Europe.

The increase in leisure boating has been greatly assisted by the arrival of the town's marina in 2001, with 850 berths it's Ireland's largest.

In 2005 all four waterfront clubs joined together to put Dun Laoghaire back on the sailing map. A combined clubs regatta was organised, aiming to attract thousands of sailors back to the cradle of racing.

The revival was an immediate success and now the 600-boat biennial Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta is the largest such regatta in the Irish Sea.

This kind of team spirit is behind Dun Laoghaire's staging of the ISAF Youth World Championships which bodes so well for its future prospects.

Although Dun Laoghaire's had its fair share of waterborne visitors and hosted many top-notch events (with some home spun successes too) it has never seen the flags of 63 nations flying from its harbour walls before.

But that changed in 2012 when Dublin Bay filled with sails and a huge dinghy fleet leftDun Laoghaire harbour, marking not just the start of the 2012 Youth Worlds but the return of Dublin Bay to the world yachting scene, just as it was 140 years ago.