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Flags 'N' over 'A' flying from yard–arms at Dun Laoghaire's four waterfront yacht clubs at tea–time was confirmation that tonight's first Thursday race of the Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) season had been cancelled due to strong winds.

Principal race officer Jack Roy cancelled all racing when 'squalls constantly hit 40+' and Dublin Bay Buoy recorded a 53–knot gust. The London 2012 Race Officer said it was 'gear damaging weather for a first night out'.

The Bay was also hit with a hail shower so there was plenty of sailors relieved not to be heading out on to slippery decks. The country's biggest yacht club has now had to cancel both its Tuesday and Thursday race schedules this week.

A good turnout of Water Wag dinghies successfully completed their own in–harbour DBSC racing last night.

More moderate conditions forecast for Saturday indicate the 2016 summer season might finally get underway in two days time.

Published in DBSC

Dublin Bay Sailing Club race officers will be monitoring this afternoon's weather forecast before tonight's first Thursday race on the capital's waters. The country's biggest yacht racing league is scheduled to get underway from 6pm with up to 300 boats in 22 classes competing but 25–mph westerly winds are expected to gust to over 30–mph at start time which may yet threaten proceedings.

Sherry FitzGerald estate agents have come on board for a three-year-deal as title sponsor of the Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) ahead of the summer season that got underway this week. Unfortuntaely, the first race on Tuesday for dinghy classes was cancelled due to strong winds. 

DBSC’s 132nd season will now have room for three keelboat fleets over previous years’ two.

The popular Thursday programme remains more or less as it has been except that the White Sails, (now re-named Cruisers 5) given their numbers and wide range of handicaps, have now been divided into two divisions, with separate results for each division.

Published in DBSC

Gusts of over 33–knots have put paid to tonight's first race of the 2016 Dublin Bay Sailing Club season. Northerly winds are currently averaging 23–knots on the Bay. Dinghy racing has been cancelled.

 

Published in DBSC

The 133rd annual racing programme of Dublin Bay Sailing Club was unveiled yesterday in the National Yacht Club in Dun Laoghaire, and it brought the announcement by incoming Commodore Chris Moore that the club had secured a strong three year sponsorship commitment with leading property and estate agents Sherry Fitzgerald. DBSC is a unique organisation which ultimately is the co-ordinator of all non-offshore racing from Dun Laoghaire, and it provides more sailing for more people than any other club in Ireland. W M Nixon reflects on a very durable institution, and the way the changes are being communicated for its “users” in 2016.

It was said somewhere recently that the most successful and enduring organisations are those which, at any given time, are neither necessarily the strongest, nor the cleverest, nor the most powerful shows in town. But they definitely are the setups which are adjusting most readily to change, and making the best of it to real advantage.

At first glance, that seems most perceptive. At second glance, it seems like the latest statement from the President of the IBO (the Institute of the Bleeding Obvious). And at third glance, you wonder just what on earth whoever said it thought they meant by “strongest”, “cleverest” and “most powerful”, when the main point of most organisations in human society is that they should at the very least endure for a useful timespan, and if through enduring they thrive, then that is as it should be.

These thoughts were already in place on the screen when some briefing notes about the Dublin Bay SC programme for 2016 arrived in from Honorary Secretary Donal O’Sullivan, and as ever the great man had put the above maunderings into a much more concise form. In outlining some quite marked changes to the way DBSC will be doing things during 2016, he states the Club’s philosophy as one of being proactive with evolution, rather than reactive to revolution.

The latest stage in this process of being proactive with evolution came yesterday, when the National YC was the setting for a lunch hosted by DBSC Commodore Chris Moore for the official announcement of the DBSC’s linkup with Sherry Fitzgerald. They may be distinguished estate agents with a strong national presence, not to mention an international profile, but “Sherry Fitz” are particularly associated with the more agreeable areas of south Dublin.

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The bay on display – Chris Moore and Philip Sherry in command as DBSC’s Mac Lir takes a tour of the harbour and Dublin Bay’s racing area. Photo: Brendan Fogarty

Therefore the company and its new sponsorship partners are fishing in the same waters, but they’re providing services of a very different kind which are totally complementary to each other. So really we were celebrating, at the very least, the beginning of a beautiful friendship, and by the time lunch ended, it was toasted as a marriage made in heaven.

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The bay’s history put in perspective – DBSC Honorary Secretary Donal O’Sullivan and Philip Sherry of Sherry Fitzgerald aboard Mac Lir on Dublin Bay. Photo: Brenda Fogarty

This was in evidence in a good-humoured, friendly and mutually-informative gathering in which Philip Sherry and his team got to know more about what it is that DBSC actually does. In order to give the broader picture, before lunch there was a quick tour of the harbour and nearer parts of Dublin Bay aboard the DBSC’s senior workhorse, the Committtee Boat Mac Lir. From her, we could see the always-fascinating panorama of the Dun Laoghaire waterfront. The fleet had already launched last weekend en masse from the National, while the Royal St George’s YC fleet were poised for their launching today, with a mighty crane already set up on the quayside. In one glance, you got a very telling impression of the boat numbers – and the diversity – with which DBSC has to deal with in their annual programme, which in 2016 starts on Tuesday 26th April, and concludes on Saturday 24th September.

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A new flag aloft. Chris Corrigan (left, DBSC Committee) with (left to right) Sherry Fitzgerald’s Patrick George, Miriam Mulligan, Steven Manek, and Philip Sherry. Photo: Brendan Fogarty

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“Here’s a photo I got out on the bay” – in the National YC are (left to right) Philip Sherry, Miriam Mulligan and Patrick George of Sherry Fitzgerald with Jonathan Nicholson, Vice Commodore DBSC. Photo: Brendan Fogarty

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Stephe Manek of Sherry Fitzgerald with Chris Moore. Photo: Brendan Fogarty

Throughout the season, the overall numbers are at such levels, expressing themselves through so many classes and divisions, that it takes a well-furnished mind to clearly dispense the key information in the DBSC 2016 Yearbook, with its myriad of instructions and attached information.

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Committee minutes. DBSC Committee Member Dr Brendan Finucane with Honorary Secretary Donal O’Sullivan and Committee Member Sean Doyle. Photo: Brendan Fogarty

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Patick George and Miriam Mulligan of Sherry Fitzgerald

As you’d expect of a man who can reduce such complex concepts to their bare essentials, Honorary Secretary Donal O’Sullivan is completely matter-of-fact in reporting on the waxing and waning in the fortunes of Dublin Bay’s many and various one-design and handicap cruiser classes. But underneath it all, he’s human. Having bluntly informed us that the planning of the new programme has had to take account of the decline in “traditional” boat numbers – when traditional boats include classes like the Dragons – you feel a certain warmth in his words when he writes:

“There is one notable exception to all this. The Water Wags, that quintessential traditional boat, continue against the trend to grow in numbers. Last year, with 29 boats actively on the register, they were probably even more numerous than they were in their Victorian heyday. The Water Wags have always had an active preservation programme, allied with a strong class ethos or esprit de corps to help them grow and flourish”.

The underlying message is that while Dublin Bay SC can continue to develop and refine their racing structures on the bay - despite it becoming an ever more busy place with the volume in the shipping lane into Dublin Port up by 6.4% in 2015 - at each class level it is now up to the class members – with the Class Captains setting the pace - to show the right spirit in keeping their boat numbers and their sport at a healthy level.

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Early days. The Dublin Bay SC club “fleet” in racing action its first season, 1884

The Club’s inherited experience of encouraging boat classes is unrivalled. And at one stage of its long existence, it was in the business of direct class promotion itself. Though it came into existence with a ragbag little fleet of open boats in 1884, its efficient race administration - and maybe the fact that it had such a no-nonsense name that enabled it to do what it said on the tin - soon saw it spreading into every corner of racing in Dun Laoghaire, and going very rapidly up the social scale as it took over general racing administration from the three established clubs in their stately clubhouses.

By the 1890s, it was in the forefront of international sailing development. The unique position of Dun Laoghaire as the only outlet for the maritime energies of affluent south Dublin provided DBSC with a ready market, which in turn created a level of activity which became increasingly attractive to people from all over Ireland and beyond.

With its powerful focus and the financial muscle of its members, DBSC was able to take on board good ideas from near and far, and develop them further. Thomas Middleton of Killiney Bay may have introduced the One-Design concept for boat racing in 1887, but he concentrated on very small sailing boats. DBSC, on the other hand, was very soon showing what could be done with the One-Design ideal in larger sizes.

And even with specific boats, they took concepts from other centres, and developed them further. In July 1897, four yachts of the new and ultra-pioneering William Fife-designed Belfast Lough Class I One-Designs came to Dublin Bay, and took part in the regatta week. At 37ft overall and with 25ft waterline, these remarkably good-looking boats represented a real breakthrough in sensible yacht design and the One-Design ideal.

By the following year, the first of the Fife-designed Dublin Bay 25s – with the same hull profile and dimensions as the Belfast Lough boats, but with a slightly finer midships section, and built to a higher specification – were already racing. Within a very few years, they outnumbered the Belfast Lough boats. Within a few decades, everyone marvelled at the Dublin Bay 25s, whose adherents at one stage had included the Viceroy himself. But few remembered the Belfast Lough Class I boats, let alone that they had been first on the scene.

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The height of fashion. It’s around 1900, and the Viceroy Lord Dudley is taking a lap of honour around the harbour after winning in his new Dublin Bay SC 25-footer Fodhla (number 1). Also in the mix are some Mermaids to the new design by Maimie Doyle.

Around 1900, the Belfast Lough men had retained the new designer in Scottish sailing, Alfred Mylne, to provide a simple boat around 20ft waterline with an economical gunter-lug sloop rig, the Star Class. The Dublin Bay magpies saw what resulted, and they liked it. But they got Mylne to make the stem a bit more elegant, and instead of the prosaic gunter sloop rig, they got him to design a rakelly gaff cutter complete with outrageous jackyard tops’l.

The result was the Dublin Bay 21, which pretty well defined Dublin Bay sailing for much of the 20th Century, with its northern origins forgotten. It was a classic case of what is in effect the capital of Irish sailing quite happily allowing another area to develop a good idea, but then cheerfully taking it on board and adapting it into a much more vibrant form.

Nowadays people may still argue that the Dublin Bay 21 was actually a more useful all-round boat with its later and simpler Bermudan rig configuration from 1963 until the class ended in 1986, but the reality is that the sheer off-the-wall style of the DB 21s with their full rig for sixty years from 1903 to 1963 was the image which best projected the spirit of sailing in Dublin Bay.

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“A very sensible boat with an economical rig” – this was the new Alfred Mylne-designed Star Class as it appeared on Belfast Lough in 1900………

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……and this is what happened to the Star when the DBSC took the idea on board, but decided to make her a little bit more challenging to sail, with an extravagant rig. The Dublin Bay 21 as she was in her glory days from 1902 to 1963.

In fact, the Dublin Bay SC machine was and is so powerful that they can sail on with a sort of sublime indifference to the intellectual property rights of other sailing centres when new concepts come along. Once something has become a Dublin Bay thing, it is subsequently known in Dun Laoghaire solely as a Dublin Bay thing. And if it’s pointed out to them – with chapter and verse – just how that idea came to originate somewhere else way back in the mists of time, they’ll express polite interest, acknowledge that it’s perfectly possible that someone else had the idea first, and then happily continue on their own sweet way seeing it as a Dublin Bay thing.

And this taking of ideas from other places was as readily done with sailors nearer home, for in 1906 DBSC started casting around for a smaller boat, around 17ft waterline length. They found it across the bay on the other side of the Baily with the Howth 17. But within two or three years, the already proven design had become better known as the Dublin Bay 17.

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For nine years it trundled along perfectly happily as the Howth 17, but then in 1907 Dublin Bay SC got in on the act, and by 1912 most of the world knew it as the Dublin Bay 17.

Fair play, though, in the 1930s it was DBSC off its own bat which got the 17ft John Kearney-designed Mermaids going, eventually becoming Ireland’s most popular class. And then in the late 1930s, they began working on an original idea which in 1947 manifested itself as the Mylne-designed Dublin Bay 24, an elegant Bermudan-rigged yacht which could give a good account of herself inshore and offshore, so much so that in 1963 one of them, Stephen O’Mara’s Fenestra, was overall winner of a very stormy RORC Irish Sea race.

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The queens of Dublin Bay. For fifty years from 1947 to 1997, the Dublin Bay 24s were the premier class on the bay. Photo: W M Nixon

Yet by that time, standardization and series production by glassfibre construction was taking over the scene. Some Dublin Bay 24 owners dabbled in the idea of a new OD class based on the van de Stadt-designed Excalibur 36, which could be built so totally in plastic that some examples didn’t have any wood at all.

But maybe it was a step too far. The Excaliburs never quite took off. With hindsight, we can see that perhaps a less ambitious and more orthodox glassfibre cruiser-racer like the Nicholson 32 might have rung more bells. However, such was the continuing progress and growth of Dublin Bay SC that it didn’t matter either way. With the club’s exceptional adaptability, it was more than happy to leave the promotion of boat types to the expanding commercial sector, and continue to do what it does best – organise racing in Dublin Bay in a user-friendly way in which time afloat is maximized for sporting value.

It results in the Bay being a great sporting arena, and also a laboratory of sailing success. It’s fascinating to note, for instance, that the Flying Fifteens – which are virtually entirely a National Yacht Club fleet – are vying with the Water Wags for being the most numerous class on Dublin Bay, and they’re certainly the biggest keelboat fleet.

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With a very enthusiastic local class association, the Flying Fifteens are successfully demonstrating what it takes to be the largest keelboat class on Dublin Bay. Photo: David O'Brien

As for the adoption and adaptation of new ideas and concepts first developed by others, this moved on to a new plane just a few weeks ago when it was announced that Dublin Bay Sailing Club had amalgamated with the Royal Alfred YC. With its origins way back in 1857, the Alfred pioneered the notion of total Corinthian – ie amateur – sailing in Dublin Bay, though as a reflection of the Victorian era in which it functioned, the rule did allow your ship’s company to include two “paid hands” – a steward and a lady’s maid.

The active minds of the club’s promoters soon went on to codifying the racing rules, which were extremely rudimentary – where they existed at all – in the middle of the 1800s. By the 1860s, the need for clarification had become so pressing that when a move arose to set up a national authority for sailing rules in in the United Kingdom – of which Ireland was then part – it was the Royal Alfred YC which played a leading role, and basically its existing rules became the foundation on which the racing rules of the Yacht Racing Association – now the UK’s Royal Yachting Association – were based way back in 1870-71.

But with this achieved, the new club which had been such a thorn in the flesh of the sailing establishment was now the Royal Alfred YC and part of the sailing establishment itself. A fresh wave of new blood was needed, and that came with the formation of Dublin Bay Sailing Club in 1884.

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A Royal Alfred YC cross-channel match in 1888. This historic pioneering club has now been amalgamated into Dublin Bay SC.

Both they and the RAYC continued to function successfully, organising and regulating races as “virtual” clubs, entirely without premises, for a hundred years and more. But the changing patterns of sailing meant that over the decades the Royal Alfred YC became less relevant, while the Dublin Bay Sailing Cub came quietly centre stage. And now, with the incorporation of the Royal Alfred – in which the utterly straightforward name of Dublin Bay Sailing Club is inevitably the dominant partner – we see the apotheosis of the way in which DBSC confidently takes on board and re-energises the visions of others.

Looking to the season ahead, in order to cope with the numbers and the diversity, DBSC is providing racing on five days per week, and on the more popular evenings, the turnout is such that they are in effect organising two regattas per week. The total between the rigs and the roundabouts is something like 800 starting sequences organised each season.

The basis of it all is in a large corps of volunteers. Fortunately for the more casual sailors on the bay, and for those for whom there is just the one weekly sailing outing as a crew on a cruiser in the huge evening programmes, there seems to be a distinct strand of the South Dublin sailing population which feels the call to help in the mountain of work involved afloat and ashore in keeping the DBSC programme running smoothly.

That said, this is essentially sport for those who realize that you’ll only get as much out of it as you put into it. Classes will be encouraged, but only up to a point – after that, they’re expected to show a certain level of self-sufficiency, and in the countdown to the new-look progamme for 2016 (which was revealed yesterday afternoon on Afloat.ie) a series of meetings have been held involving different group leaders such as Class Captains in order to ensure that the message of being transferred down the chain of communication.

But even the most quintessentially volunteer-based organisation can always use a bit of extra financial muscle, so the Sherry Fitzgerald sponsorship is both a very comfortable fit, and extremely welcome. It will allow the DBSC admin team a bit of extra breathing space, but it’s doubtful if it will provide them with a less demanding schedule.

New Commodore Chris Moore is no stranger to the demands of being top man in a large sailing organisation, as he was Commodore of the National YC from 2002 to 2005 – an exciting time as the Irish economy was beginning its crazy flight through the roof.

Back then, he was still working in a busy career. But now he is retired. Yet he cheerfully tells us that being Commodore of Dublin Bay SC is more time-consuming and all-absorbing than the combined challenges of being NYC Commodore and having a full-time day job. And on top of all that, he still has to find the time and energy for the vigorous campaigning of his J/109 Powder Monkey. That’s how it is with the people fully involved in running Dublin Bay Sailing Club.

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The new Sherry Fitzgerald standard is now aloft on Dublin Bay. Miriam Mulligan and Chris Corrigan are foreground, while aboard Mac Lir are Philip Sherry of Sherry Fitzgerald with DBSC Vice Commodore Jonathan Nicholson and DBSC Commodore Chris Moore. Photo: Brendan Fogarty.

Published in W M Nixon

Sherry FitzGerald estate agents have come on board for a three-year-deal as title sponsor of the Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) ahead of the 2016 summer season that gets under way in a fortnight.

The announcement comes with changes in this year’s sailing programme for Ireland’s biggest racing club, as heard today at the launch of its 2016 yearbook in the National Yacht Club, Dún Laoghaire.

‘Be proactive with evolution rather than be reactive to revolution’ is the slogan to bear in mind as the DBSC moves to accommodate demand for speedier, lighter craft, and increasingly popular asymmetric rigs, over classes that have seen continued decline over the past five years.

One notable exception, however, is the Water Wags class, the quintessential traditional wooden boat that’s bucking the trend.

Last year, with 29 boats on the register, Water Wags are probably even more numerous than they were in their Victorian heyday. The Wags have always had an active preservation programme which – allied with a strong class ethos, or esprit de corps – helps them to grow and flourish.

As for the DBSC’s 132nd season, which begins in the last week of April, Saturdays will now have room for three keelboat fleets over previous years’ two.

This follows the committee’s decision to support a new Mixed Sportsboat class that joins the Green Fleet along with Dragons, Flying 15s, Squibs, SB20s (who previously raced on Sundays) and, on occasion, Mermaids.

The biggest change for the established Red and Blue Fleets sees Cruisers 5, formerly White Sails, move from the latter to the front of the former for Saturdays only. Both fleets will continue to race as before, alternating between MacLir and the West Pier for their starts, though courses have been revised, with the assistance of Tim Goodbody and Brian Mathews, to exclude Zebra mark.

The Green Fleet will race from the Freebird and will compete for the most part­ on windward/leeward courses. The sailing instructions provide for triangular courses and even, if the opportunity arises, for trapezoid courses in the North East quadrant to the east of Zebra mark.

On Thursdays, the Mixed Sportsboat class joins the Red Fleet, while Cruisers 5 have now been split into two divisions, with potentially different courses, to manage their varying speeds and wide spread of handicaps, and make for fairer racing. The split does not apply on Saturdays when there is less possibility of boats being timed out.

On Sundays, and inspired by the success of the DMYC’s Frostbite series during the winter months, the DBSC hopes to encourage dinghy turnouts this season with two starts: PY/IDRA 14 at 2.15pm, and Fireballs three minutes later. The club also aims to accommodate any other interested centre-board boats.

The sailing instructions and course cards have been revised to cover the above, as well as a number of changes for class flags.

In 2016’s other big news, the Royal Alfred Yacht Club (RAYC) has now officially been incorporated into DBSC. The move should not affect racing to any noticeable degree.

This year will see three designated coastal races – on May 28th, July 30th and August 12th – which will carry the ‘Alfred’ label to mark the continuation of its ethos in the DBSC programme.

In addition, the once annual RAYC Bloomsday Regatta on June 16th will now be held by the DBSC in years when there are no other waterfront club regattas.

Read also: tomorrow's WM Nixon's Sailing on Saturday Blog on DBSC's 2016 Season 

Published in DBSC

The Mitsubishi Motors sponsored Dun Laoghaire Flying Fifteen fleet has introduced a new initiative for the 2016 Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) racing season that starts in two weeks time. With a nod to The Tour De France, the lead boat in the DBSC series will fly the eye catching yellow spinnaker donated by the fleet sponsor.

The use of the trophy spinnaker will be spread among the gold, silver and bronze fleet during the season. Last season's winners Niall Coleman & Michael Quinn (Thursdays) and Ian Mathews & Keith Poole (Saturdays) will start with the new spinnaker in the first race on Thursday, April 28th.

Published in Flying Fifteen

The Team INSS win in last weekend's 46–boat Dublin Bay Sailing Club Spring Chicken Series represented much more than just a win as it represented an important milestone in an offshore racing campaign. Look closer at the INSS 1720 crew and you will see that it was largely made up of those that will race onboard LYNX, the Reflex 38 owned by the INSS, which is giving five people the chance to race Round Ireland on a thoroughbred race boat.

Kenny Rumball, who skippered the 1720, and will skipper LYNX this June, elected to use the DBSC Spring Series as training for the Round Ireland Campaign. Now that the experienced crew are in shape for the season, INSS thoughts are turning to bringing the whole crew together.

The LYNX yacht itself has undergone a few changes ahead of this year’s race and the first training weekend for the crew is coming up on the 16th & 17th of April. Four of the five slots have been filled and there is still one spot up for grabs for a budding offshore racer who wants to compete in the Round Ireland and learn, all while being part of an experienced offshore racing crew.

With an intensive training programme coming up, including two training weekends and four ISORA races including deliveries, the crew should be well honed prior to the start of the campaign. There’s more details on the Round Ireland Campaign on Lynx available here.

Published in Round Ireland

Team INSS, a 1720 sportsboat skipperd by Kenny Rumball, emerged as winner of the 46-boat Rathfarnham Ford sponsored DBSC series that concluded in light airs and low cloud this afternoon on Dublin Bay. The Sailing School entry was followed home by another 1720, Deja Vu and the Beneteau 34.7 Adelie in third place.

Full overall results now downloadable below.

Published in DBSC

Communications in Irish sailing clubs and classes are changing. For example, this year the Lasers on Dublin Bay SC will only be via an opt–in 'WhatsApp' group organised by Paul Keane from the Royal Irish YC

DBSC racing for the growing class will be the same format as last year; Tuesdays, two races each night, Full rigs and Radials (times adjusted) and attractive entry fees of €163 or €107 for under–25s.

The aim is to build on last year’s 30 entries and regular turnouts in the teens. First race is April 26, 7pm first gun.

As Keane commented on Afloat.ie: 'Credit where credit is due. The Dun Laoghaire Moths have been using WhatsApp since they started their fleet and the Cork Monkstown Laser Fleet also use it to great effect. I am lucky to be included on both of these conversations and what continually strikes is the constant friendly chat. Setting up a group for the Leinster Lasers and trying something new seemed a simple thing to do. I hope now we can re-create some of the camaraderie I've been privy to in the other fleets and see bigger turnouts at all of our events'.

As well as Tuesday nights there is four Waterfront club regattas on Saturdays in late June/early July as well as two other key dates for Bay Laser racers:
May 21/22 Laser Master (Over 35) Irish Championships, National YC.
July 16/17 Laser Leinster Champs, also NYC.

email Paul your mobile number at [email protected] for DBSC Laser updates. Nightly results will be available on Afloat.ie in our dedicated DBSC results section.

Published in Laser
Tagged under

Dublin Bay Sailing Club's (DBSC) Spring Chicken series is heading for its conclusion this weekend and if the last race is sailed this Sunday morning a discard kicks in to add extra spice to the overall handicap results. (See handicaps, starts and results files downloadable below).

The prizegiving for the Rathfarnham Ford sponsored series takes place in the National Yacht Club after racing where DBSC organisers have promised a few extra prizes to boot! 

 
J109 Joker takes Line Honours

John Maybury's J109 'Joker' sailed a faultless race this morning to eventually overhaul the 1720s of Colin Byrne (Lady A) and Ben Cooke (De Ja Vu) in this mornings battle on Dublin Bay.

Posted by Boatshed Ireland on Sunday, 6 March 2016
Published in DBSC
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The Irish Cruiser Racing Association (ICRA) Information

The creation of the Irish Cruiser Racing Association (ICRA) began in a very low key way in the autumn of 2002 with an exploratory meeting between Denis Kiely, Jim Donegan and Fintan Cairns in the Granville Hotel in Waterford, and the first conference was held in February 2003 in Kilkenny.

While numbers of cruiser-racers were large, their specific locations were widespread, but there was simply no denying the numerical strength and majority power of the Cork-Dublin axis. To get what was then a very novel concept up and running, this strength of numbers had to be acknowledged, and the first National Championship in 2003 reflected this, as it was staged in Howth.

ICRA was run by a dedicated group of volunteers each of whom brought their special talents to the organisation. Jim Donegan, the elder statesman, was so much more interested in the wellbeing of the new organisation than in personal advancement that he insisted on Fintan Cairns being the first Commodore, while the distinguished Cork sailor was more than content to be Vice Commodore.

ICRA National Championships

Initially, the highlight of the ICRA season was the National Championship, which is essentially self-limiting, as it is restricted to boats which have or would be eligible for an IRC Rating. Boats not actually rated but eligible were catered for by ICRA’s ace number-cruncher Denis Kiely, who took Ireland’s long-established native rating system ECHO to new heights, thereby providing for extra entries which brought fleet numbers at most annual national championships to comfortably above the hundred mark, particularly at the height of the boom years. 

ICRA Boat of the Year (Winners 2004-2019)