A wind and a sail
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT HARBOR -- Sleek vessels jockeyed for position Friday to be
among the first to pass between one of three sets of orange buoys that
signaled the start of the 126 nautical mile journey to Ensenada.
In contrast to the events of last year, when trouble with the buoys
delayed the race by more than an hour, the 54th annual Newport to
Ensenada International Yacht Race went off with out a hitch.
When the first gun fired at noon the largest of the sailing vessels
cruised past the starting line to begin their journey amid cheers and
shouts -- some friendly and some not-so-friendly, which were accompanied
by a shaken fist or obscene gestures.
“The objective of the race is fun, but it’s very competitive,” said
Reg Hasbach, the co-skipper of the “Tres Gordo,” a 30-foot cal2-30, which
he owns with Dave Price of Corona del Mar.
This was the 37th year that Price has sailed the race, having taken
first place with two boats in separate classes one year and taking first
overall in 1990 with the “Tres Gordo.”
So, although the biggest and the fastest set sail first, they don’t
always take the biggest trophy.
Skippers and crews of 438 yachts in 27 different classes are vying for
144 trophies, which will be handed out in Ensenada Sunday.
But many did not wait for the festivities in Mexico and began their
party on the docks of the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Friday morning with
spreads of cheese and crackers, lush fruits and bloody marys.
Even the overcast and ominous weather did little to dampen spirits,
although it had a few skippers concerned.
“We’d like a little more wind,’ said a grinning Price, clad in a
cheery Hawaiian shirt and sporting his boats’ name and the race she was
competing in. “It’s pretty gloomy as is.”
Others remained unconcerned with the less-than-stellar weather
conditions, which included winds out of the south at the start of the
race - not the ideal direction for a race with a southern course.
“It’s the calm before the storm,” said Joe Degenahardt, skipper of the
Lickity Split, a Catalina 38, that he would be making the 126-mile trek
in for the 30th time. “The big race is the prep for the race - more than
100 man hours.”
Sponsored by the Newport Ocean Sailing Assn. Since 1948, the race
boasts vessels up to 100 feet long and others that are just 25 feet.
The Ensenada race tradition began back in 1947, when members of the
Newport Ocean Sailing Assn. decided to organize a small, “just-for-fun”
event for sailors, who had returned from World War II. They’d expected
about 30 skippers to show up. But when the race got underway on April 23,
1948, 117 boats lined up behind the starting line.
In its most crowded year, in 1983 the race saw 675 ships set sail out
of Newport Harbor.
The quickest a boat has reached its Mexican destination was the Steve
Fossett’s “Stars and Stripes” Catamaran in 1998, which made it in six
hours, 46 minutes and 40 seconds.
The Catamaran is racing again this year, as is the ship with the
record time for a mono-hull, Roy Disney’s “Pyewacket”, a so-called
turbo-sled that made the journey in 11 hours and 54 minutes in 1998.
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