Displaying items by tag: HYC
#AutumnLeague - Howth Yacht Club has extended its three-year partnership with MSL Park Motors Mercedes-Benz to sponsor the club’s Autumn League for a fourth season in 2017.
“We are absolutely thrilled with this announcement and are very thankful to Dean and his team at MSL Park Motors for this extended support,” said HYC Commodore Joe McPeake.
“It allows the club to build important value-added benefits at this early stage and ensures that we are providing very best quality event for our competitors.”
Dean Fullston, brand manager for the North Dublin dealership, also hailed the continuation of the sponsorship agreement.
“We’ve got to know the club members and are looking forward to seeing them again this year. It is also a great opportunity to showcase a handful of the 27 exquisite Mercedes-Benz models which make up the extensive range.”
The Autumn League will take place over six Saturdays from 16 September to 21 October and will see some changes to the format in 2017, including additional entertainment after racing and the provision of rescheduled racing on a Sunday where the Saturday race has been cancelled due to weather.
Howth Yacht Club Team Enters Giraglia Rolex Cup
#HYC - Kieran Jameson’s Howth Yacht Club team aim to tick another one off their offshore ‘bucket list’ this summer as they charter a keelboat for the Giraglia Rolex Cup.
The core group of Jameson, brothers Darren and Michael Wright, Johnny White, Colm Bermingham, navigator Rick DeNeve and Puppeteer regular Frank Dillon will be joined by offshore enthusiast Brian Turvey, Viking co-owner Mark Patterson and Dillon’s sailing partner Ronan Galligan, as well as young guns Sam O’Byrne and Shane Diviney for the Mediterranean’s oldest offshore race.
Usually in the water on their Corby 27 Kodachi, the core team will be taking over the Spanish-owned (but Wicklow designed) DK46 Maserati Hydra for the 65th Giraglia Rolex Cup from 9 June, which comprises three days of inshore races in St Tropez before the 450km offshore sprint to Genoa via the titular French island.
The challenge comes from the unpredictable winds along the route, particularly the Mistral — making this the Mediterranean equivalent of the similarly testing Rolex Fastnet Race.
The HYC website has more on the story HERE — and below you can watch a short film on last year’s Rolex Cup:
Howth Yacht Club Elects New Commodore
The 121-year-old Howth Yacht Club, which has one of the largest yacht or sailing club memberships in the country, saw Joe McPeake succeed Berchmans Gannon unopposed as Commodore at a very well-attended Annual General Meeting in the club on Thursday December 8th writes W M Nixon.
What may well be a record AGM turnout of 275 voting members gave strong support to the new management team, which retains former officers Emmet Dalton as Vice Commodore, Ian Byrne and Jonathan Wormald as Rear Commodores, and Bernadette Condy as Honorary Secretary, while the new Honorary Treasurer is David Mulligan. He is an experienced financial administrator while also being a sailor’s sailor who actively campaigned a classic Howth 17 and then an Etchells 22, following which he has been a stalwart as an owner-skipper in the white-sail cruiser class.
New Commodore Joe McPeake – who was formerly Rear Commodore – is a lawyer and property developer who has been an HYC member for 26 years, and is a boat owner who has recently concentrated on cruising under both power and sail, his ventures including reaching the Arctic Circle along the Norwegian coast in a Contest ketch. But he has also raced locally, and in national regatta weeks, as well as racing round Ireland.
A strong committee moves into place combining much new talent with many experienced long time voluntary workers for sailing and HYC. While - like many clubs - Howth has gone through difficulties during the lean years, the meeting concluded in an optimistic mood, as the good news included the fact that a much-needed roof replacement project has come in on time and within budget.
As though to emphasise the spirit of can-do optimism which became the HYC mood around mid-meeting, next day saw the annual and decidedly convivial charity lunch organized by top offshore skipper Dave Cullen. It featured a presentation by Marcus Hutchinson (originally of Howth) about the Vendee Globe and Enda O’Coineen’s participation in it, including a live interview with the gallant man himself deep into the Southern Ocean, while the event raised €27,000 for Children’s Liver Disease Research.
Then next day the annual HYC Brass Monkeys Winter League – now approaching its 30th year of organisation by Pat Connolly – concluded its first half with a record fleet racing including J/80s from HYC’s own training fleet.
Following that, the noted toy distributor S Claus of North Pole Enterprises came to call on Sunday (yesterday), and then this Thursday (December 15th) sees perhaps the most legendary annual event in the HYC social calendar, the Ladies Lunch organised by Martina Gannon and her team, this year in support of The Ross Nugent Foundation. Guest speaker this year is Howth’s own Susan Whelan, who is CEO of Premiership champions Leicester City Football Club. Needless to say, the event has long been a sell-out.
In an event and at a time of the year that always promises to challenge the skills of keelboat sailors, the 37th consecutive year of Howth Yacht Club’s Autumn League didn’t disappoint the hundreds of competitors who entered and completed the six-week series this weekend. Losing two of the race days due to the contrasting weather conditions that are to be expected in September and October in these latitudes, only demonstrated that those who emerged as winners in the eight competing classes (and 15 divisions) could rightfully boast about having the ability to succeed in a variety of weather conditions, sea states and in a mix of ‘round the cans’ and ‘windward-leeward’ race courses.
The final day gave the competitors a light breeze of 10-12 knots from the southeast, increasing steadily over the 90 to 120 minutes that they would take to complete their last race of the series. The race management team cleverly utilised the race schedule to ensure that the event would be completed having given the competing teams 5 races, including two windward-leeward on one of the days – this despite having to cancel two race days as mentioned above.
HYC’s Commodore Berchmans Gannon praised the race management teams for their skillful work and relayed the thanks of the 600 competing sailors. He also thanked event sponsors MSL Park Motors Mercedes-Benz for the huge added value that they were able to bring to the event, observing how they have become an integral partner to the club and their support is greatly appreciated by the members, guests, event competitors and visitors.
The final prizegiving is always a lengthy affair and this year’s presentations were no exception with over 40 different prizes awarded, including presentations to the ‘Team Event’ winners – Howth 17 ‘Aura’, Puppeteer ‘Gold Dust’ and the Half Tonner ‘Harmony’. David Cullen’s ‘Checkmate’ won the overall event and Heineken Trophy and the trophy was presented to crew Aidan Beggan.
A special presentation was made to Howth RNLI and Rupert Jeffares by event sponsors Brendan Grace and Dean Fullston from MSL Park Motors Mercedes-Benz, with a cheque for €1000.
Competitors and their guests enjoyed the post event celebrations at the event dinner in HYC and in the very many local restaurants that were booked out everywhere in the village and then returned back to the club for the live entertainment and late DJ.
The other winners:
IRC
Class 1 Storm (Pat Kelly)
Class 2 Checkmate XV (Cullen/ Biggs)
Class 3 Alliance II (Vincent Gaffney)
Class 4 Tiger (Harris/ Hughes)
Class 5 Demelza (Steffi Ennis/ Windsor Lauden)
ECHO
Class 1 Sourfiere (Stephen O'Flaherty)
Class 2 Kodachi (Wright/ DeNeve)
Class 3 Kahera (R Camier)
Class 4 Splashdance (Howard McMullen)
Class 5 Mary Ellen (Kevin O'Byrne)
Scratch Handicap
Puppeteers Harlequin (David Clarke/ Liam Egan) Flycatcher (Frank Dillon)
Howth 17s Isobel (Brian & Conor Turvey) Silver Moon (Susan Morgan)
Taste of Racing Leahanne McHenry
Single Final Race to Decide Howth Yacht Club Autumn League
Following the cancellation of two days racing in mid-series due to adverse weather, this year's MSL Park Motors Mercedes-Benz Autumn League competitors enjoyed two races this Saturday, affording the competing teams a real opportunity to challenge the leaders in all 8 classes. Aided by an ever-increasing wind forecast, the race management teams chose to run two windward-leeward courses for both inshore and offshore fleets. Multiple windward-leeward race starts are always a risky undertaking, but the HYC teams used their considerable experience to manage two races for each fleet within the time limit.
Having now completed 4 races, a discard now applies and allows competitors to accumulate their best 3 results before including next Saturday's last race of the six week series. The limited time to complete this week's two races made for very close and exciting racing with short legs and very busy mark-roundings. Boat handling was crucial as only seconds separated many of the classes in each race.
It was business as usual on the 'Offshore' course, with Pat Kelly's Storm winning the first race but their DNC (Did Not Compete) in the second race leaves it all to play for in Class 1 IRC. It would appear that Stephen O'Flaherty's immaculate Spirit 54 Soufriere will certainly be a contender for the ECHO prize in that class next week.
A first and second place for Dave Cullen and his team on Checkmate guarantees that the Cullen/Biggs Half-Tonner will collect the Class 2 IRC trophy next week and meant that they could pack the boat into its winter storage a week earlier than anyone else. Second place will certainly go the last race, with two other Half-Tonners The Big Picture and King One along with Richard Colwell and Ronan Cobbe's Fusion all contending for the remaining spoils. A late-season run of form sees Darren Wright and Rick DeNeve's Kodachi 'neck-and-neck' with Dux and Harmony for next week's overall ECHO result.
The application of discards certainly condenses the leaderboard in Class 3, which presents itself as anyone's game with one day to go. Always prominent at the top of the Autumn League scoresheet, Vince Gaffney's Alliance II will race the two K25 teams on their J24s Johnny Bravo and Scandal as well as Kahera and Fulmar Fever for the top prize. The fact that a 4th place IRC prize will be presented means that Fulmar Fever is also likely to be jousting for the ECHO trophy with Jonathan Wormald's Formula 28 Starlet.
The Harris/ Hughes team on their Beneteau Tiger are being hunted down by Dermot Skehan's Toughnut in Class 4, with Harry Byrne's Alphida only 2 points behind. This class is notable for the pedigree of its 'senior' racers, proving that skill and determination are more than a match for youth and enthusiasm in our sport! The ECHO prize might go to either Howard McMullen's Splashdance or Kieran Jameson's Changeling in a result that might replicate the event statistics of many previous decades.
An impressive string of wins in Class 5 means that Windsor Lauden and Steffi Ennis's Shamrock 28 Demelza is already guaranteed the trophy while Declan Gray's Sapphire and Vincent Lundy's Cheyenne lead the class for the ECHO prize and the Denis Wickham Trophy.
Nothing separates Gold Dust and Harlequin in the Puppeteer Class and it's very unlikely that the chasing boats (Trick or Treat and Yellow Peril) will manage to make an impression on the leaders, whose impressive results show them tied on 4 points each after 4 races. However in the Handicap division, the bookies won't be taking any money on Frank Dillon's Flycatcher whose results suggest a remarkable improvement in form within the 17-boat fleet.
Never a class to sit quietly, the Howth Seventeens emerged from a protest that saw just 6 boats scored in a race 2 weeks ago, and consequently many must have been glad to be able to apply their discard following the races this weekend. Two wins by the Turveys' Isobel puts their team at the top of the leaderboard, just ahead of Peter Courtney's Oona and Michael and Jane Duffy's Hera is a further 3 points behind. An effective class handicapping system means that the improved performances of Silver Moon and Eileen affords them the opportunity to compete for the Alphida Cup next week.
One of the most remarkable successes of this year's Autumn League has been the popularity of the 'Taste of Racing', a formula devised by Fergus O'Kelly and utilising the four ISA Sailfleet J80s with a selection of experienced HYC keelboat racers offering a tutorial to keen and prospective racing sailors that are new to the sport. Four of the clubs new J80s are also being chartered by members and are competing in Class 2.
The race management team have confirmed that they will be running a single final race next week and remind competitors of the earlier first warning signal time of 13:00. There are still limited places available at the event dinner and bookings can be made by contacting the office at 01 8322141.
ICRA Surveys Members on Howth Yacht Club Championships
Following its national championships at Howth Yacht Club in June, the Irish Cruiser Racing Association (ICRA) is seeking feedback on the event via an online questionnaire.
ICRA commodore Simon McGibney says the survey aims to get views on how the event went for attendees but it also seeks the views of non attendees. The survery can be taken here
The next ICRA National Championships take place in at the Royal Cork Yacht Club in 2017
ICRA has published provisional class divisions for next week's 73–boat national championship fleet at Howth Yacht Club. The divisions are as expected but this year's class two has been forced to combine boats that in previous championships sailed in classes two and three but due to numbers in 2016 are sailing as one class next week. See full table below with divisions, IRC TCC and ECHO handicaps.
The cruiser–racer national championships is to be staged at the north Dublin venue for a record fifth time. The three day event, from next Friday, will decide eight national titles and Corinthian Cups across a combined fleet Read more about the championships here.
Sail Number | Boat Name | Model | Owner | Club | IRC TCC | ECHO | DIV | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IRL4208 | WOW | Farr 42 | George Sisk | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.123 | 1.125 | 0 | |||||||
IRL4076 | Meridian | Salona 45 | Tom Roche | Kinsale Yacht Club | 1.112 | 1.115 | 0 | |||||||
IRL2007 | Jump Juice | Ker 36.7 | Conor Phelan | Royal Cork Yacht Club | 1.109 | 1.105 | 0 | |||||||
GBR8038 | ROXSTAR | XP38i | FINDLAY & ANDERSON | Clyde crusing club | #N/A | #N/A | 0 | |||||||
IRL1507 | Aquelina | J/122 | Sheila Tyrrell James Tyrrell | Arklow Sailing Club | #N/A | #N/A | 0 | |||||||
GBR4041 | LICKS | First 40 | Jay Colville | East Down Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 0 | |||||||
IRL10800 | Rockabill VI | JPK 10.80 2.15 fin6 | Paul O'Higgins | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.046 | 1.045 | 1 | |||||||
IRL13500 | D-TOX | X 35 | McSwiney, McStay, Sherry & O'Rafferty | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.044 | 1.045 | 1 | |||||||
GBR7377 | Impostor | Corby 33 | Richard Fildes | SCYC | 1.035 | #N/A | 1 | |||||||
IRL7778 | Gringo | Archambault A 35 | Tony Fox | National Yacht Club | 1.024 | 1.025 | 1 | |||||||
IRL3061 | Fools Gold | Archambault A 35 | Robert Mc Connell | WHSC | 1.022 | 1.025 | 1 | |||||||
IRL9898 | Indecision | J/109 | declan hayes & patrick halpenny | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.021 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
FRA37296 | TRIPLE ELF | First 35 | CHRISTINE AND ROBIN MURRAY | FAIRLIE YC /CLYDE CRUISING CLUB | 1.020 | #N/A | 1 | |||||||
IRL1383 | Ruth | J/109 | Shanahan Family | National Yacht Club | 1.015 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
IRL1141 | storm | J/109 | pat kelly | rsc/hyc | 1.014 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
IRL1206 | Joker 2 | J/109 | John Maybury | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.014 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
IRL5109 | Jalapeno | J/109 | Barrington/Despard/O'Sullivan | National Yacht Club | 1.014 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
IRL811 | RAPTOR | Mills 30 CR | DENIS HEWITT & ORS. | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.013 | 1.020 | 1 | |||||||
GBR2342 | White Mischief | J/109 | Timothy and Richard Goodbody | Royal Irish Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 1 | |||||||
GBR7709R | Justjay | J/109 | Nigel Ingram | Holyhead | 1.012 | #N/A | 0 | |||||||
IRL29213 | Something Else | J/109 | Brian & John Hall | National Yacht Club | 1.011 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
GBR8933R | Bon Exemple | XP 33 1.90 | Colin Byrne | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 1.009 | 1.015 | 1 | |||||||
IRL3470 | Flashback | First 34.7 | Breen/Hogg | Howth Yacht Club | 0.987 | 1.000 | 1 | |||||||
IR7991 | Jigamaree | J/109 | Ronan Harris | Royal Irish Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 1 | |||||||
IRL3670 | Altair | First 36.7 | Losty/Dorgan | Cove Sailing Club | #N/A | #N/A | 1 | |||||||
IRL1332 | Equinox | X 332 | Ross McDonald | Howth Yacht Club | 0.980 | 0.980 | 2 | |||||||
IRL9970 | Lambay Rules | J/97 | Stephen Quinn | Howth Yacht Club | 0.971 | 0.980 | 2 | |||||||
IRL8094 | king one | First Evolution 30 | David Kelly | rsc/hyc | 0.958 | 0.955 | 2 | |||||||
IRL2706 | Kodachi | Corby 27 | Rick de Neve | Howth Yacht Club | 0.955 | 0.955 | 2 | |||||||
IRL1343 | Arcturus | Sun Odyssey 37 | Peter & Declan McCabe | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | 0.945 | 2 | |||||||
IRL5522 | the Big Picture | MG HS30 | michael & Richard Evans | Howth Yacht Club | 0.945 | 0.945 | 2 | |||||||
IRL2016 | Checkmate XV | MG HS30 | David Cullen | Howth Yacht Club | 0.944 | 0.945 | 2 | |||||||
IRL1484 | Harmony | #N/A | John Swan | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 2 | |||||||
IRL2552 | Fusion | Corby 25 | Colwell & Cobbe | Howth Yacht Club | 0.934 | 0.935 | 2 | |||||||
IRL988 | Dux | X 302 | Anthony Gore-Grimes | Howth Yacht Club | 0.927 | 0.930 | 2 | |||||||
IRL3022 | XEBEC | X 302 | Bourke,McGirr,Ball | Howth Yacht Club | 0.927 | 0.930 | 2 | |||||||
IRL7495 | Maximus | X 302 | Paddy Kyne | Howth Yacht Club | 0.924 | 0.930 | 2 | |||||||
IRL1103 | Viking | X 302 | K.Darmody & M.Patterson | Howth Yacht Club | 0.923 | 0.930 | 2 | |||||||
IRL8223 | Kamikaze | #N/A | Peter Nash | Royal St. George Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 2 | |||||||
IRL4571 | Flyover | Sigma 33ood | David Marchant | Waterford Harbour Sailing Club | 0.913 | 0.910 | 3 | |||||||
IRL508 | Quest | Humphreys 1/4 Ton | Barry Cunningham & Jonathan Skerritt | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 0.906 | 0.905 | 3 | |||||||
IRL6559 | White Hunter | Formula 28 MOD | Joss Walsh | Howth Yacht Club | 0.906 | 0.905 | 3 | |||||||
IRL6136 | Starlet | Formula 28 | Wormald / Walsh | Howth Yacht Club | 0.905 | 0.905 | 3 | |||||||
FRA9186 | Cartoon | Quarter Ton Fauroux | Ken Lawless & Sybil McCormack | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 0.895 | 0.900 | 3 | |||||||
IRL9538 | Running Wild - Seachange Now | Impala 28ood | Brendan Foley | Royal St. George Yacht Club | 0.889 | 0.890 | 3 | |||||||
IRL3060 | Jumpin' Jive | J/24 | Mark Usher | Greystones Sailing Club | 0.887 | 0.885 | 3 | |||||||
IRL4794 | Hard on Port | J/24 | Flor O'Driscoll | Howth Yacht Club | 0.887 | 0.885 | 3 | |||||||
IRL4115 | K25 HYC Johnny Bravo | J/24 | White Ciaran | Howth Yacht Club | 0.887 | 0.885 | 3 | |||||||
IRL4384 | Gala Racing | J/24 | Simon McGibney | Foynes Yacht Club | 0.884 | 0.885 | 3 | |||||||
GBR9612 | Bambi | Impala 28 I/B 1.78 | Richard Harding | National Yacht Club | #N/A | 0.885 | 3 | |||||||
I8709 | Cri Cri | #N/A | Paul Colton | Royal Irish Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 3 | |||||||
IRL8245N | Asterix | #N/A | Boushell, Counihan, Meredith | Dun Laoghaire Marina | #N/A | #N/A | 3? | |||||||
IRL6556 | Challenger | Europe Challenger | Paul Rossiter | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | 0.845 | 4 | |||||||
IRL35 | ELEINT | Trapper 300 | Michal Matulka | Dunlaoghaire Motor YC | #N/A | 0.830 | 4 | |||||||
E127 | OctopussE | E Boat | PATRICK O NEILL | Howth Yacht Club | 0.824 | 0.825 | 4 | |||||||
IR3052 | Tobago | #N/A | Ray, Costello, McShera, Quigley | Malahide Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | ? | |||||||
WHITESAIL | ||||||||||||||
GBR1345 | Samatom | XC45 | Robert Rendell | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 5 | |||||||
IRL3335 | Bite the Bullet | #N/A | Colm Bermingham | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 5 | |||||||
GB58571 | Spellbound | #N/A | H. & G. Burrows, L. Skeffington | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | #N/A | 5 | |||||||
WHITESAIL 1 | ||||||||||||||
IRL6001 | REBELLION | Nicholson 58 | Hughes, Hanlon & O'Mahony | Howth Yacht Club | 1.051 | 1.055 | 5 | |||||||
IRL4007 | Tsunami | First 40.7 Distinction 2.40 | Vincent Farrell | National Yacht Club | 1.042 | 1.055 | 5 | |||||||
IRL4073 | Splashdance | Dufour 40 | Howard McMullan | Howth Yacht Club | 1.011 | 1.030 | 5 | |||||||
IRL1166 | edenpark | Sun Odyssey 36i | liam farmer | Royal Irish Yacht Club | 0.976 | 0.985 | 5 | |||||||
IRL1357 | Humdinger | Sunfast 37 | Michael Mc Cabe | Carlingford | 0.971 | 0.980 | 5 | |||||||
GBR3550 | Lolly Folly | Hanse 350 | Colm | Howth Yacht Club | #N/A | 0.965 | 5 | |||||||
IRL1333 | White Lotus | Elan 333 | PaulTully | Dunlaoghaire Motor YC | 0.956 | 0.965 | 5 | |||||||
IRL3339 | Indulgence | Elan 333 | David Sargent | Howth Yacht Club | 0.952 | 0.965 | 5 | |||||||
IRL2706 | Kodachi | Corby 27 | De neve | Howth Yacht Club | 0.937 | 0.955 | 5 | |||||||
WHITESAIL 2 | ||||||||||||||
IRL2070 | Out & About | First 38 | Terry Mc Coy | Howth Yacht Club | 0.929 | 0.950 | 6 | |||||||
IRL5643 | Calypso | Oceanis 361 | Howard Knott | Royal St. George Yacht Club | 0.927 | 0.930 | 6 | |||||||
IRL1502 | Vespucci | Dehler 31 | Sean + Kristina O'Regan | Royal Irish Yacht Club | #N/A | 0.890 | 6 | |||||||
GBR4183 | Poppy | #N/A | John Roberts | Whitehaven sailing association | 0.902 | #N/A | 6 | |||||||
IRL100 | Demelza | Club Shamrock | Windsor & Steffi | Howth Yacht Club | 0.876 | 0.875 | 6 |
CIT Win Student Yachting Nationals & Represent Ireland at SYWoC
CIT won the IUSA Student Yachting National Championships at Howth Yacht Club, Dublin last Friday by a single point and qualified to represent Ireland at the Student Yachting World Championships in La Rochelle, France in November 2016.
This is the first time CIT have claimed victory at the event in five years. Competing against four other colleges, CIT managed to successfully win the event by a single point over UCD1 and UCD 2. In a day that saw varying weather conditions with both strong and light air sailing, consistency was the key to winning the event.
In a fleet of 7 teams, CIT scored a 3, 2, 2, 2, 1 over 5 races. Coming into the final race of the day, the wind had increased dramatically and shaped up to be a pivotal race where CIT needed to just beat UCD by one place to take home the trophy. The extremely close race saw CIT and UCD alongside each other for the entire race until the last leg of the course where CIT extended a small lead and managed to claim the win by just one boat length gifting them the title of IUSA National Yachting Champions.
The team consisted of:
Skipper: Jay Stacy (Architectural Technology 3rd year).
Main Trimmer: Marcus Ryan (Marine Engineering 4th year).
Jib Trim: Pearse O’Flynn (Business Information Systems 4th year).
Pit: Amy Harrington (Business Information Systems 3rd year).
Bowman: Louis Mulloy (Energy Systems Engineering 4th year)
Final Standings
1. CIT 10 points
2. UCD 1 11 points
3. UCD 2 11 points
4. DIT 12 points
5. TCD 17 points
6. CIT 2 21 points
7. NUIG 35 points
The SB20s will also be looking to use the event as a 'shake down' and to get in some quality racing time on the water before their Northern Championships which are being held in Carlingford Lough on the weekend immediately after the Spring Warmer Series.The winner for the last two years, Michael O'Connor on Sin Bin, and new Class chairman Peter Lee on Seriously Bonkers are among the line up.
Irish Sailors Up For It In RORC Caribbean 600
For those reared in the simple certainties of the course in the offshore classics like the Rolex Fastnet Race and the even more clearly defined Volvo Round Ireland Race, the multi-island RORC Caribbean 600 which starts tomorrow (Monday) morning at Antigua is a strange beast writes W M Nixon.
Set against the straight-line austerity of other long-established classics such as the Newport-Bermuda and the Rolex Sydney-Hobart, its weaving course makes it seem almost fussy. But in a typical February in the Northern Hemisphere, people will happily race round as many islands as are required to make the magic 600 miles total. Just so long as it’s in those marvellous Caribbean sailing and climatic conditions which contrast so totally with what many other areas of the Northern Hemisphere are experiencing in this dank dark cold month.
It’s a busy course – with so many islands to be ticked off, navigators could usefully employ the services of a continuity director…
Eleven islands are required to act as race marks in order to put sufficient mileage in the course. But with 77 boats – many of them noted superstars – tuned up and ready to go, it’s clear that the huge variety of legs both long and short which have to be sailed is no deterrent, and Irish interest is high both in terms of participation, and in the presence of international contenders expected for the Volvo Round Ireland Race in June.
Then too we’ve a certain proprietorial interest. The Caribbean 600 having been inaugurated as recently as 2009, it’s a modern classic. And the fact that on its first staging, it was won overall by Adrian Lee’s Cookson 50 Lee Overlay Partners from Dun Laoghaire, makes it extra special. For in her previous life as Ger O’Rourke’s Chieftain, the Lee ship had been overall winner in the Rolex Fastnet Race 2007, providing the rare if not unique situation that the same Irish boat won two classics in the space of just 18 months.
Six years later, the ever-green Cookson 50 is such a good all-rounder that she’s still very much in the hunt, and Lee Overlay Partners is in the listings for tomorrow’s start, the smallest boat in the six strong canting-keel division which includes such giants as Jim and Kristy Hinze Clark’s mega-powerful hundred footer Comanche.
We’ve interest throughout the race, as in addition to Lee Overlay Partners, the fleet includes two Howth Yacht Club crews. Howth sailors with the likes of Kieran Jameson on the strength have already got involved in past seasons in the Rolex Middle Sea Race with a Performance Yacht Charter’s First 40, and now with two of PWC’s boats of this proven marque on the other side of the Atlantic, there with PYC’s Lucy Johnson on Southern Child are Howth men raring to go Caribbean island-rounding. Much of the Howth team assembled by Darren Wright for the 2014 Rolex Middle Sea Race are re-joining the same boat, Southern Child, and their lineup incudes Kieran Jameson, Frank Dillon, Rick de Neve, Jonny White, Colm Bermingham, while new talent in the form of Michael Wright, recently-retired HYC Commodore Brian Turvey, and young Howth K25 squad member Luke Malcolm are also on the strength.
One of the two Howth crews will be racing the First 40 Southern Child, which they’ve already campaigned in the Rolex Middle Sea Race
Howth Yacht Club Headquarters for the RORC 600: Villa Touloulou
Up against them to provide a spot of in-club competition is HYC’s Conor Fogerty who is doing an Atlantic circuit as a mix of racing and cruising with his new Sunfast 3600 Bam, a boat which might have been designed with RORC Caribbean 600 enjoyment in mind. Bam’s racing crew coming out from home include Simon Knowles, Daragh Heagney, Paddy Gregory, Roger Smith and Anthony Doyle. After Bam sister-ship Red Shift’s success in last year’s race, Conor Fogerty has great hopes for his stylish boats showing once tomorrow has seen the start – usually a very challenging business in itself – get cleanly away.
Conor Fogerty’s Sunfast 36 Bam from Howth is doing the RORC Caribbean 600 as part of an Atlantic odyysey
Ireland’s own RORC Commodore Michael Boyd of the RIYC, who won the Gull Salver for best-placed Irish boat in last year’s Fastnet Race with the Grand Soleil 43 Quokka 8, is helping to pass the time while waiting for delivery of his new JPK 10.80 by racing the Caribbean as navigator on Andy McIrvine’s Grand Soleil 46 Bella Donna.
As for pointers towards the Volvo Round Ireland Race in June, the two MOD 70 trimarans already signed up for it, Lloyd Thornburg’s Phaedo 3 and Concise 10 (Tony Lawson & Ned Collier Waefield) are both g0ing for the Caribbean 600.
Lloyd Thornburg’s MOD 70 Phaedo 3 is one of two sister-ships entered for the Volvo Round Ireland Race 2016 which are also doing the Caribbean 600, the other being Concise 10.
In fact it’s a very eclectic fleet, as Eric de Turckheim’s noted Commodore’s Cup contender of 2014, Teasing Machine from France, has somehow got herself to the Caribbean after being far away to cut a successful swathe through the recent Rolex Sydney-Hobart Race. And up towards the top of the fleet, the 72ft mini-maxi Momo, which was best of the bigger boats in last summer’s Fastnet, find herself up against Hap Fauth’s similarly-sized superstar Bella Mente, which had to scratch from the 2015 Fastnet Race for personal reasons after a blisteringly successful Cowes Week, but is now set to go in a race in which she is the defending champion.
Back to the fray. Having been forced to scratch from the Rolex Fastnet 2015 in which she was a favourite, Hap Fauth’s 72ft mini-maxi Bella Mente is very much in the hunt in tomorrow morning’s RORC Caribbean 600, in which she is defending champion.
The 72ft mini-maxis seem to be the favoured size of boat o the most recent peformances, as Nik Zennstrom’s Ran won in 2012, George Sakellaris’s Shockwave won in 2014, and Bella Mente won in 2015. But the evergreen Cookson 50 is a good steady bet, with Lee Overlay Partners; win in 2009, and Ron O’Hanley’s with Privateer in 2013.
The RORC Caribbean 600 starting process gets under way at 1030hrs local time tomorrow morning off Antigua, and there are going to be 77 very busy crews having more than a few dry-mouth moments before they get clear away around this island’s beautiful east coast.