Winds gusting up 20 knots put Ireland's biggest sailing event back on schedule at Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta on Friday, with Dublin Bayu dishing up a full programme of testing racing for nearly 400 competing boats.
Potential winners are already emerging as the biennial regatta approaches the halfway stage across 22 racing classes, with more strong winds forecast for Saturday.
So far, the ninth edition of Ireland's biggest sailing event has delivered strong breezes to be a true test of sailors' skills despite losing the opening day for most classes due to gales. The regatta has already produced impressive performances on the water, but few class leaders can count straight wins after another day of strong winds.
Afloat has captured a lot of on-the-water action here, and a new regatta drone video of day two gives a bird's eye view of the proceedings.
With all classes aiming for two or three races today (Friday), results in the fleet were still being computed in some classes late into the night.
The Royal Ulster Yacht Final Call II leads the highly competitive 24-boat IRC Class 1 after three races sailed. The John Minnis campaign took a race win and a second today to top the leaderboard but only by a single point. The Belfast Lough crew lead Mike and Richie Evans in the J99 Snapshot from Howth Yacht Club. Timothy and Richard Goodbody's White Mischief from the Royal Irish Yacht Club lies third and the first J109 of 17 in the class.
In IRC Zero, Paul O'Higgins's JPK 10.80 Rockabill VI leads by one point from Pete Smyth's Sun Fast 3600 Searcher.
Dave Dwyer's Royal Cork Half Tonner Swuzzlebubble has found her mojo in IRC Two, but Howth's X302 Dux, skippered by Caroline Gore-Grimes, took a first-race win in the choppy conditions.
The 22-boat coastal class is led by Scottish J122 Gran Senor, skippered by Jonathan Anderson after a single 30-mile race. The line honour winner was Frank Whelan's Elliott 57, Opal from Greystones Harbour.
In the one-design classes, after four races sailed, the Flying Fifteen class, headed by Shane MacCarthy and Alan Green, sailed to the wrong mark in race two but won races three and four to stamp their authority on the 22-boat fleet.
In a six-boat Cape 31 contest for national honours, Anthony O'Leary's red-hulled Antix of Royal Cork leads from Howth's Dan O'Grady.
National Champion Chris Johnston leads in the 31.7s, and Howth's Stephen Mullaney is on top in the Sigma 33s. Royal Irish's Andrew Bradley has the lead in the 211s in Chinook.
Neil Hegarty's Royal St. George Phantom has command of a strong Dragon class turnout.
Two one-design classes have leaders with perfect scores, with Sean and Heather Craig taking three wins in the Water Wag dinghies and Jerry Dowling the same in SB20s.
The strong southerly winds are expected to continue for Saturday's races before moderating for Sunday's conclusion of the biennial event.
The Dun Laoghaire Motor Yacht Club, National Yacht Club, Royal Irish Yacht Club, and Royal St. George Yacht Club are organising the ninth Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta.
Results are provisional and subject to protest. Full results in all classes are available below.