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A Sigma 33 One Design keelboat racing on Dublin Bay Photo: AfloatA Sigma 33 One Design keelboat racing on Dublin Bay Photo: Afloat

Displaying items by tag: J109

The first large regatta weekend of the year in the Solent is the Warsash Spring Championships weekend held over two weekends, the 8th and 9th of April and the 22nd and 23rd April.

Each weekend is Individually counted with an overall prize, plus an overall between result counting the two weekends.

Mark Mansfield, from Royal Cork, was calling tactics on John Smart's J109 Jukebox in the competitive J109 one design class. Five races were sailed in mainly 10–14 knot conditions and Jukebox ended with a 1,1,1,2,4 scoreline to take the first weekend by nine points over their next rival.

Mansfield has considerable J109 experience as he calls tactics on John Maybury's Joker II who is the 2016 ICRA Boat of the Year having regained her ICRA class one crown in 2016 previously won in 2015. He also sailed aboard David Cullen’s Euro Car Parks, also a J109, when she won her class in the 2016 Round Ireland Race.  

More here

Published in Royal Cork YC

Despite two attempts to start its impressive 74–boat fleet Dublin Bay Sailing Club (DBSC) was unable to get its final sixth race of the Rathfarnham Ford series away on Sunday due to lack of wind. As a results the previous results stood, giving J109 designs the top three places overall. National IRC One champion Joker II (John Maybury) was the overall winner. Results are downloadable below.

2016 12 19 PHOTO 00000008D–Tox from the Royal Irish Yacht Club

Published in Turkey Shoot
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The J/109 has proven herself to be well suited for sailing in Irish waters for several years, achieving major successes in the main offshore races and championships allied to starring roles in top regattas. Yet it is only now that the class seems to be taking full account of the fact that it has the potential to be Ireland’s premier one design class, in the stellar tradition of a golden thread going back through the Dublin Bay 24s, the Belfast Lough 25s, and the Cork Harbour ODs. W M Nixon takes a look at a very likeable boat.

It has taken the J/109 a dozen years to become an overnight success in Dublin Bay. For it was back in 2004 or thereabouts when George Sisk appeared with the first one, fresh out of the package. But as the next one, also brand new, was brought in by James and Sheila Tyrrell whose loyalty to their Arklow base is unshakeable, the Sisk initiative towards a possible class in Dun Laoghaire remained a matter of ploughing a lonely furrow.

Yet very soon George and his veteran shipmates discovered that the business of sailing a new boat with a masthead assymetrical flying from a rather long retractable bowsprit was a much more manageable challenge than had at first seemed the case. So as the Sisk equipe were more accustomed to racing boats in the 40ft-plus size range, they were soon seduced by the well-organised J/Boats product range and production line into moving up to a J/133.

Yet others around Dublin Bay and adjacent ports continued to dream of the J/109 as being ideal for the area, including Afloat Magazine and Afloat.ie, where we were pushing the idea from the moment this writer saw the Tyrell family’s Aquelina emerging at the head of the fleet in the Lambay Race of 2004, or maybe it was 2006, for on both occasions they went straight on to do the Dun Laoghaire to Dingle Race the following day.

Whatever the year, we were smitten by the entire combination of functional good looks, manageable size, fantastic yet seemingly effortless performance, good cockpit ergonomics, and excellent accommodation.

In other words, what’s not to like about the J/109? Although the production of new boats is winding down - for the well-run J/Boats organisation well knows that even the very best things must one day come to an end - the J/109 is probably the world’s most successful 36ft class, sailed as a one design in ten countries, and much loved for club, regatta and offshore racing, and fast cruising too.

J109 drawingThe sense of a balance well drawn between performance and comfort is a feature of the J/109. Many out-and-out cruising boats would not have such good accommodation

J109 line drawingThe J/109’s hull profile reveals that she can continue to be competitive despite not having a torpedo ballast bulb at the foot of her keel, a significant advantage when you’re sailing in lobster-pot-strewn Irish waters

j 1094And this is a top racing boat? The J_109’s accommodation (above & below) is comfortable and welcoming

j 1095

Her success will continue for decades, for J/Boat-built craft last well, and almost all the range continue to have timeless good looks. They call the J/109 a racer-cruiser, and when we take a look at that accommodation layout, we realise that here is a sensible and liveable arrangement with which a fortnight’s good cruising is a perfectly feasible proposition.

Of course her motion would tend to be livelier than a boat with heavier displacement, and you’d need to look at the option of an additional but removable bladder tank to carry extra fresh water. But as most of the boats have a heater and other comforts, the cruising option is not just an empty salesman’s claim.

j 1096.jpgGenuine cruiser-racing. Chris Moore’s J/109 Powder Monkey off the West Cork coast on her way to a podium place in the Fastnet Race (Calves Week version….)
That very experienced sailor Brian Mathews, who a week ago brought former SB 20 sailor Andrew Algeo’s recently-acquired J/109 back to Dublin Bay from St Malo in north Brittany, is very much a fan of the J/109.

“She’s just such a complete and successful concept” he says. “In fact, the only change of any significance I’d suggest is that you fit a little hatchway into the fore-and-aft bulkhead on the starboard side of the engine to enable easy access from the toilet compartment to change the oil filter on the aft side of the engine. Other than that, she’s spot on”.

The great thing is that you can buy this race-winning boat off the shelf, so to speak. She’s completely normal and seamanlike in appearance without any distortions in her hull shape to take advantage of some temporary quirk in the measurement rules, she has proper accommodation, and yet you can go out and win in open handicap racing against a whole fleet of fancy hull-distorted stripped-out racing machines.

And sailing her is such a joy. It’s about 450 nautical miles from St Malo to Dun Laoghaire, and Brian Matthews and his crew saw it off in 52 hours. That included a four hour pit stop in Newlyn, so they averaged better than 9.3 knots. They’d north’easterlies with fog in the English Channel, but that didn’t stop them from logging a speed burst of 18-knots-plus when the wind gusted to 38 knots. And the stop in Newlyn allowed the wind to back to the southeast which blew them home in comfortable time for pints in Dun Laoghaire last Friday night, and never a bother out of the boat the whole way.

Yet long before the current wave of new arrivals which holds out the real possibility of a class of between 15 and 20 boats in Dublin Bay by next season, other pioneers have been quietly preaching the J/109 gospel simply by having one of the boats, obviously enjoying sailing them, and doing well while they’re at it. We’ve had people like John Hall, Declan Hayes, John Maybury and several others in Dublin Bay, Ian Nagle in Cork, Glen Cahilll in Galway Bay, and more recently the Shanahan family in Dublin Bay.

But one particular family from outside the loop of Dublin Bay itself have quietly and successfully promoted the J/109’s quality by example ever since 2008. For it was in 2008 that Pat Kelly of Rush was walked down a pontoon by his sons to see a J/109, and he was enchanted. “That’s the boat!” he enthused. “There’ll be no more GP 14s after this….”

j 109 sailing The Fingal Flyer. Pat Kelly’s J/109 Storm from Rush Sailing Club has been a major force in Irish sailing since 2008.

The Kelly family from Rush is a force of nature. Aboard their boat Storm, Pat is crewed by his five sons, while his background in sailing is deep and broad. Like everyone in Rush he was into Mermaids, but being in the orbit of the legendary Peter Dunne, GP 14s might also be on the menu. Then his first keelboat was a Shipman 28 which he had for twelve years, following which he’d a Puppeteer 32 and then a First 30, all of which had mooring near his home at the Rogerstown Estuary. But increasingly he also used the marina at Howth, and the new J/109 Storm has remained almost totally Howth-based, but everybody quite rightly thinks of her as the J/109 from Rush.

To campaign a J/109 seriously, you need to think in terms of a crew panel pushing towards 15, and the Kelly clan of Pat, David, Ronan, Paul, Paddy and Pat’s grandson David also make adopted brothers of Kevin Sheridan, Mark Ferguson, Alan Ruigrok, Sean Murphy, Marty O’Leary and Joss in order to keep the Storm show on the road.

J 109 sailingGut-wrenching stuff aboard Storm. Racing in the Dublin Bay J/109s is now so close that every last ounce in the right place helps towards success

But like many lively sailing families they like to add to the complications with extra boats, and David Kelly is in partnership with Pat Boardman on the classic Half Tonner King One, which drew a considerable Rush presence to Falmouth for the Worlds in August, while David Jnr is also in the national Laser Radial squad.

They play hard, they work hard, and Storm worked extra hard in 2016 as she was chartered to Dave Cullen to race as Euro Car Parks in the Volvo Round Ireland race in June, in which she was the only Irish class winner.

In an exceptionally busy season, the Kellys were winning here there and everywhere (they’ve been ICRA Boat of the Year in times past), but it all reached a new peak with the J/109 Nationals 2016 in the first weekend of October, hosted by the Royal Irish YC in Dun Laoghaire.

It also marked a new peak for the J/109 class in Dublin Bay, as the fleet has seen the addition of some of the more noted Dun Laoghaire sailing families in recent years. Of course, the Shanahan clan from the National have been on the J/109 strength since 2009, and have carried off such trophies as the ISORA championship and the Dun Laoghaire to Dingle win overall, as well as a very close second overall in the Round Ireland race. But through 2016 class newcomers with Dun Laoghaire sailing links which come down through the generations joined the J/109 fleet, including the legendary Tim Goodbody from the Sigma 33s, and Andrew Craig from the Dragons.

Thus it may well be that what was holding the J/109s back from acquiring the critical mass of an independent class in Dublin Bay was the simple fact that these top stars felt they still had more to get from the boats and classes they were already involved with. But once they’d made the decision that the time was ripe to join the J/109s, a threshold was crossed.

For what these people who were pure One Design in outlook discovered was that in Dublin Bay, the J/109s didn’t necessarily see themselves as a One Design class. Under DBSC rules, the class divisions are made on IRC Rating, and this meant that while most J/109s were in Class 1, a few were up in Class 0.

As well, the fierce loyalty to Dublin Bay SC meant the J/109s were reluctant to even think of, let alone push for, a separate identity as a class of their own, as it would leave Class 1 with just a pitiful handful of boats. And anyway, some J/109 crews actually get extra enjoyment out of racing within a disparate group rather than on a purely boat-for-boat basis.

Thus this high profile and hard-raced J/109 Nationals 2016 may well have high-lighted the J/109s’ potential to became Dublin Bay’s premier One Design Class, but it also brought into focus the problems inherent in doing so.

Before it even got under way, the Class’s majority wish to have a strong Corinthian ethos – even though championship rules permitted professional sailors – resulted in the boat which should have been the defending champion not racing in the Nationals, as that boat had been wont, in major events, to use the services of a top professional sailor, though not in a helming capacity.

It’s an issue which it’s hoped will be resolved at the AGM in January, with the feeling being that the majority will favour the Class National Championship in Ireland being a totally Corinthian event. But meanwhile as the Nationals drew nearer, Class Captain David Stewart (a non-owner, he crews on Ronan Harris’s Jigamaree) found he was faced by the problems of some boats using over-lapping headsails while others don’t, which contributes to the disparity of their IRC ratings.

j 1099The veteran crew on Storm have been racing the boat since 2008, but former Dragon helm Andrew Craig with Chimaera is a newcomer to the J/109 scene

If the One Design movement in the class continues to gain traction, January’s AGM may well see a ruling in favour of everyone having the same overlaps, which will assuage the feelings of those bred in the highest One Design traditions. But equally if total standardisation is accepted over time, the movement towards sailing as a separate class will inevitably build, to the detriment of numbers in DBSC Class 1.

For the J/109s, it’s arguably a problem of success, whatever effect it may have on cruiser racing on the bay. But with class numbers increasing in late summer, and rumours of further boats on the way, with the Nationals 2016 coming up the agenda the various issues were parked in August until the January AGM, and the class got itself into championship mode for the first weekend in October.

For the Kellys from Rush, it was the perfect time of year, as their A Team were all available to race Storm. Far from struggling to keep down to the crew weight limits, they were below them. The racing was red-hot – several races saw the entire fleet across the finish line within three minutes – and at the end, Pat Kelly’s Storm rounded out a magnificent season to win the J/109 Nationals 2016 with 12 points to the 15 points each for Tim Goodbody’s White Mischief and Ronan Harris’s Jigamaree, both of the RIYC, with White Mischief taking second overall on the countback.

Andrew Craig’s Chimaera was fourth on 17, John Hall’s Something Else was fifth on 20, and Paul Barrington’s Jalapeno was sixth with 28pts. And the tough racing was matched by a high level of sociability ashore, underlining the impression that the J/109 has at last become the happening class as a class, rather than as an important part of a cruiser division.

Looking to current developments in the J/109 fleet, one of the most interesting has been the acquisition this week of Andrew Sarratt’s J/109 Jedi by the Rumball family’s Irish National Sailing School in Dun Laoghaire. Kenneth Rumball (who this weekends starts the Middle Sea Race, though in another boat) recorded this vid which gives an insight into a development which has exceptional opportunities for many aspects of Dublin Bay sailing, and should lead to a dynamic cross-fertilisation of talent and experience at every level. Among other possibilities, it will offer an ideal opportunity for a private test sail by a potential J/109 owner who might like to assess the boat without making his or her interest too public.

j 10910The champions. At the prize-giving after the J/109 Nationals 2016 are (left to right) Paddy Kelly (Storm), David Kelly (Storm), Ronan Kelly (Storm), David Stewart (J/109 Class Captain), Paul Sherry (Commodore, Royal Irish YC), Pat Kelly (Storm), Kevin Sheridan (Storm) and Alan Ruigrok (Storm)

If you’re interested in joining, the word is that the second-hand market price range is €70,000 to €100,000, with the expectation of a very good boat at €90,000. Annual running costs in Dublin Bay will usually start with the marina fee of around €3,000, but expenditure thereafter can be very variable, depending largely on how high you aim in your choice of sails.

If the AGM in January sees the main emphasis on the One Design route, there might even be – as there is with some other more traditional one design classes – a total standardisation of sails, with a reduction in costs, but somehow you don’t see that happening with a class filled with movers and shakers of this calibre.

Either way, the Dublin Bay J/109 class association structure will surely see more development, a necessary move as it changes from being part of another class into a new growing unit with its own momentum.

When you remember that all J/109s were exactly identical as they popped out of the mould, it may seem strange that the growing number of owners in the Greater Dublin area find themselves faced with tricky choices which will determine the health of the class well into the future. It is even possible to envisage a National Championship in which the fleet gets three sets of results from each race – the scratch result acknowledging the one design aspirations, the IRC result acknowledging the tiny differences between boats, and the Progressive ECHO result which will give encouragement to those who seldom reach a place on the podium.

It will take the wisdom of Solomon and a generous spirit of give and take to hit on a set of formulae which will best suit the needs of the J/109 class in Dublin Bay. But in Dublin Bay of all places, with its noble tradition of acceptance of One Design constraints going back unbroken to 1887, it can surely be achieved.

Published in W M Nixon
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After six races sailed and one discard, Rush Sailing Club's J109 Storm emerged winner of the Royal Irish Yacht Club hosted J109 Irish National Championship 2016 on Dublin Bay today. 

Pat Kelly's Storm held the overnight lead stayed and ahead in lighter winds today to end the series three points clear of two host club boats. RIYC yachts Tim Goodbody's White Mischief and Ronan Harris's Jigamaree both counted 15–points but finished second and third respectively in the 11–boat fleet.

Defending champion John Maybury in Joker II did not compete.

Full results are downloadable below. 

Published in Racing
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The blistering upwind pace of Rush Sailing Club entry Storm has given Pat Kelly a two point overnight lead of the J109 National Championships at the Royal Irish Yacht Club. Kelly was fourth in race one but followed this with two well earned race wins in blustery north-westerly winds on the Dublin Bay race track.

Second in the 11–boat fleet is the host club's White Mischief skippered by Tim Goodbody on eight points. 2016 Scottish Series winner, John Hall's Something Else, from the National Yacht Club is lying third.  

Defending champion Joker II skippered by John Maybury of the host club is not competing.

Full results to date are below. The championships will be decided tomorrow. 

 

Published in Racing
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It looks like a full fleet on October 1st and 2nd in Dun Laoghaire as the RoyaI Irish YC host a new end-of-season format J/109 Nationals 2016 for one of the most successful multi-pupose cruiser/racer classes in Ireland and on the Irish Sea writes W M Nixon.

Apart from providing excellent regular racing in Dublin Bay with a class which has been joined this year by elite helm Tim Goodbody with White Mishief, J/109s proved successful in both the ICRA Nats at Howth, and in Volvo Cork Week at Crosshaven. In Howth in June, the class winner in the Open Division in ICRA against all comers was John Maybury’s Joker 2 (RIYC) with the owner himself on the helm and former Olympic sailor Mark Mansfield of Cork in a key crewing role.

Jump the gun j109-0422Jump the Gun - John M. Kelly & Michael Monaghan of the Royal Irish YC. Photo: Afloat.ie

Indecision j109-0491Indecision – Declan Hayes, Ronan Moloney and Patrick Halpenny of the Royal Irish YC. Photo: Afloat.ie

But when the scene of the action moved in July to Cork where Ian Nagle’s Jelly Baby usually sets much of the J/109 pace. Joker 2 took on board a different crew set-up. She was one of the boats volunteered for use in the much-praised new Beaufort Cup series within Volvo Cork Week 2016 for the Defence Forces and the Maritime Emergency Service. This attracted an entry of 25 diverse crews from all over Ireland, but here again Joker won in a mixed fleet, this time skippered by Commandant Brian Byrne of the Defence Forces, who was awarded an Afloat.ie “Sailor of the Month” title for July for his success.

Ruth j109-0742Ruth – Liam Shanahan Jr of the National Ycht Club. Photo: Afloat.ie

The Beaufort Cup series included an offshore race round the Fastnet Rock, and some would argue that the J/109 is at her best in the offshore sport. In 2015 the Shanahan family’s J/109 Ruth (National YC) was overall winner of the biennial Dun Laoghaire to Dingle race, with a sister-ship from Pwllheli in North Wales, Peter Dunlop & Vicky Cox’s Mojito, second overall. And in this year’s keenly-fought ISORA Championship in the Irish Sea, the 2016 title was taken in the last race by another Pwllheli J/109, Stephen Tudor’s Sgreach, whose crew in traditional ISORA style includes offshore racing stalwart Peter Ryan of the National YC on Dublin Bay.

Jalapeno j109-0472Jalapeno –Barrington, Despard and O’Sullivan from the National Yacht Club. Photo: Afloat.ie

Another top J/109 offshore success this year was Dave Cullen’s (HYC) chartered Euro Car Parks (aka the Kelly family’ Storm from Rush SC) proving to be the only Irish Class Winner in the ferociously-competitive Volvo Round Ireland race 2016 from Wicklow, her crew including Mark Mansfield and Maurice “Prof” O’Connell. This inter-area and cross-channel mixing of talent is one of the vibrant J/109 class’s most attractive features, and it promises to be an invigorating part of the mix as the class assembles in strength in Dun Laoghaire this weekend.

Storm j109 1159Storm j109 Euro Car Parks (aka the Kelly family’ Storm from Rush SC) proving to be the only Irish Class Winner in the Round Ireland Race. Photo: Afloat.ie

white mischief2 j109-0962White Mischief – Tim Goodbody of the Royal Irish Yacht Club

Published in Racing
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The Irish J109 fleet has been boosted again this year by early season inshore and offshore Irish cruiser–racer success.

This month, Royal Irish YC skipper John Maybury's J109 Joker II successfully defended her IRC One ICRA national title in a light wind series off Howth and in the Round Ireland Race, the J109 Storm (aka Euro Car Parks) was IRC3 class winner. Both J campaigns had Olympic helmsman Mark Mansfield onboard.

In offshore racing, another J109, Ruth, skippered by Liam Shanahan of the National Yacht Club, has got off to a solid defence of her 2016 ISORA title in a Irish Sea series that has been dominated by the J-type over the last few seasons.

On Dublin Bay, although the fleet still DBSC club–race as part of a 22–strong cruisers one division, there are now 12 J109s in that class. After 16 years in the Sigma 33, Maybury's club-mate, the former Fastnet race winner, Tim Goodbody of the Royal Irish Yacht Club has moved into the J109 this season, and it's a step that has already borne fruit with individual race wins at the ICRA Nationals and a win at the National Yacht Club regatta too.

However, in what yet may be a threat to ongoing J109 domination, Paul O'Higgins's recently arrived JPK10.80 was the IRC class one winner of this weekend's RIYC Regatta. 

There is news this week of another of Dun Laoghaire's international keelboat sailors joining the J–ranks next season. 

 

 

Published in Racing
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Round Ireland Race J/109 crew consisting of six national champions from three classes from last weekend's ICRA championships at Howth Yacht Club is setting its sights high for Saturday's race start.

The well known Howth based J/109 Storm has been chartered for the 700–mile circumnavigation and rebadged as 'Euro Car Parks'. The entry is skippered by ICRA class two champion Dave Cullen from the half–tonner Checkmate V.

Cullen's crew line up is: Mark Mansfield (currently at the Quarter Ton Cup in Cowes), Maurice O’Connell, John Murphy, Eddie Bourke, Aidan Beggan, Franz Rotschild and Gary Murphy. 

As a further boost to race hopes, last night Cullen's campaign announced Windward Hotels as a 'major sponsor'.

Windward Management is one of Ireland's leading hotel operators owning and managing hotels both in here and abroad. The company has just completed the purchase of the Hilton Dublin Airport Hotel.

Euro Car Parks joins a fleet of 65 boats, nearly double the 2014 entry, for Saturday's Round Ireland start off Wicklow at 1pm.

Published in Round Ireland

J109 Dear Prudence leads the 46–boat DBSC Spring Chicken sailing cruiser fleet into Sunday's third race. Joint second is another J109, the ICRA champion Joker II, tied with an Irish National Sailing School 1720 sportsboat.

Another two races sailed will allow a single discard before the series concludes on March 13.

Full results are downloadable below together with handicaps and start times. 

Published in DBSC
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#j109 – Perhaps the fact J109s race for IRC handicap honours as part of the ICRA national championships and separately for the class national championship title may have contributed to wires getting crossed at last weekend's Sovereign's Cup and ICRA Nationals event in Kinsale.

Irish J109 fans are currently on a high with Royal Corks' Jelly Baby winning the UK National Championships and the National Yacht Club's Ruth winning offshore in the Dun Laoghaire to Dingle Race but after another good showing of the class last weekend (first and third for Js in ICRA Div one) there was confusion over the status of the Irish championship when Kinsale Yacht Club declared Joker II the winner of the J109 national championships. [See KYC press release HERE].

John Maybury's Joker II won the ICRA division one crown off Kinsale in fine style, but J109 class captain Martin Carey has been quick to point out the 2015 J109 National Championships – a season highlight – has not yet been sailed. The J109 Irish championships will be sailed next week as part of Dun Laoghaire Regatta. 'The Nationals are part of Volvo Dun Laoghaire, they always were going to be, as we get our own start,' Carey told Afloat.ie

Published in Racing
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How to sail, sailing clubs and sailing boats plus news on the wide range of sailing events on Irish waters forms the backbone of Afloat's sailing coverage.

We aim to encompass the widest range of activities undertaken on Irish lakes, rivers and coastal waters. This page describes those sailing activites in more detail and provides links and breakdowns of what you can expect from our sailing pages. We aim to bring jargon free reports separated in to popular categories to promote the sport of sailing in Ireland.

The packed 2013 sailing season sees the usual regular summer leagues and there are regular weekly race reports from Dublin Bay Sailing Club, Howth and Cork Harbour on Afloat.ie. This season and last also featured an array of top class events coming to these shores. Each year there is ICRA's Cruiser Nationals starts and every other year the Round Ireland Yacht Race starts and ends in Wicklow and all this action before July. Crosshaven's Cork Week kicks off on in early July every other year. in 2012 Ireland hosted some big international events too,  the ISAF Youth Worlds in Dun Laoghaire and in August the Tall Ships Race sailed into Dublin on its final leg. In that year the Dragon Gold Cup set sail in Kinsale in too.

2013 is also packed with Kinsale hosting the IFDS diabled world sailing championships in Kinsale and the same port is also hosting the Sovereign's Cup. The action moves to the east coast in July with the staging of the country's biggest regatta, the Volvo Dun Laoghaire regatta from July 11.

Our coverage though is not restricted to the Republic of Ireland but encompasses Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and the Irish Sea area too. In this section you'll find information on the Irish Sailing Association and Irish sailors. There's sailing reports on regattas, racing, training, cruising, dinghies and keelboat classes, windsurfers, disabled sailing, sailing cruisers, Olympic sailing and Tall Ships sections plus youth sailing, match racing and team racing coverage too.

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There is a network of over 70 sailing clubs in Ireland and we invite all clubs to submit details of their activities for inclusion in our daily website updates. There are dedicated sections given over to the big Irish clubs such as  the waterfront clubs in Dun Laoghaire; Dublin Bay Sailing Club, the Royal Saint George Yacht Club,  the Royal Irish Yacht Club and the National Yacht Club. In Munster we regularly feature the work of Kinsale Yacht Club and Royal Cork Yacht Club in Crosshaven.  Abroad Irish sailors compete in Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) racing in the UK and this club is covered too. Click here for Afloat's full list of sailing club information. We are keen to increase our coverage on the network of clubs from around the coast so if you would like to send us news and views of a local interest please let us have it by sending an email to [email protected]

Sailing Boats and Classes

Over 20 active dinghy and one design classes race in Irish waters and fleet sizes range from just a dozen or so right up to over 100 boats in the case of some of the biggest classes such as the Laser or Optimist dinghies for national and regional championships. Afloat has dedicated pages for each class: Dragons, Etchells, Fireball, Flying Fifteen, GP14, J24's, J80's, Laser, Sigma 33, RS Sailing, Star, Squibs, TopperMirror, Mermaids, National 18, Optimist, Puppeteers, SB3's, and Wayfarers. For more resources on Irish classes go to our dedicated sailing classes page.

The big boat scene represents up to 60% of the sail boat racing in these waters and Afloat carries updates from the Irish Cruiser Racer Association (ICRA), the body responsible for administering cruiser racing in Ireland and the popular annual ICRA National Championships. In 2010 an Irish team won the RORC Commodore's Cup putting Irish cruiser racing at an all time high. Popular cruiser fleets in Ireland are raced right around the coast but naturally the biggest fleets are in the biggest sailing centres in Cork Harbour and Dublin Bay. Cruisers race from a modest 20 feet or so right up to 50'. Racing is typically divided in to Cruisers Zero, Cruisers One, Cruisers Two, Cruisers Three and Cruisers Four. A current trend over the past few seasons has been the introduction of a White Sail division that is attracting big fleets.

Traditionally sailing in northern Europe and Ireland used to occur only in some months but now thanks to the advent of a network of marinas around the coast (and some would say milder winters) there are a number of popular winter leagues running right over the Christmas and winter periods.

Sailing Events

Punching well above its weight Irish sailing has staged some of the world's top events including the Volvo Ocean Race Galway Stopover, Tall Ships visits as well as dozens of class world and European Championships including the Laser Worlds, the Fireball Worlds in both Dun Laoghaire and Sligo.

Some of these events are no longer pure sailing regattas and have become major public maritime festivals some are the biggest of all public staged events. In the past few seasons Ireland has hosted events such as La Solitaire du Figaro and the ISAF Dublin Bay 2012 Youth Worlds.

There is a lively domestic racing scene for both inshore and offshore sailing. A national sailing calendar of summer fixtures is published annually and it includes old favorites such as Sovereign's Cup, Calves Week, Dun Laoghaire to Dingle, All Ireland Sailing Championships as well as new events with international appeal such as the Round Britain and Ireland Race and the Clipper Round the World Race, both of which have visited Ireland.

The bulk of the work on running events though is carried out by the network of sailing clubs around the coast and this is mostly a voluntary effort by people committed to the sport of sailing. For example Wicklow Sailing Club's Round Ireland yacht race run in association with the Royal Ocean Racing Club has been operating for over 30 years. Similarly the international Cork Week regatta has attracted over 500 boats in past editions and has also been running for over 30 years.  In recent years Dublin Bay has revived its own regatta called Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta and can claim to be the country's biggest event with over 550 boats entered in 2009.

On the international stage Afloat carries news of Irish and UK interest on Olympics 2012, Sydney to Hobart, Volvo Ocean Race, Cowes Week and the Fastnet Race.

We're always aiming to build on our sailing content. We're keen to build on areas such as online guides on learning to sail in Irish sailing schools, navigation and sailing holidays. If you have ideas for our pages we'd love to hear from you. Please email us at [email protected]