
Annapolis Boat Show- See the J/70, J/88, J/112E
(Annapolis, MD)- J/Boats is looking forward to seeing the Chesapeake/ Mid-Atlantic members of the J/Tribe at the Annapolis Sailboat Show from October 6th to 10th. The J/112E will be making its Annapolis show debut and she will be joining the J/88 family speedster and the world’s fastest growing sportsboat class- the International J/70.
The Famous J/70 Sportsboat- 1,100 Boats Strong!! The J/70 is J/Boats’ first slipway-launchable keelboat- designed to fulfill the growing need for an easy-to-own, high-performance one-design, that is exciting to sail, stable enough sailboat for the family, and built to last. A natural evolution of its J pedigree, the J/70’s 23 feet of sailing length with high aspect, all carbon rig and deep lifting keel, provides spirited performance and stability that feels like a much larger boat.



(San Francisco, CA)- For starters, the expectations for the 2016 ALCATEL J/70 Worlds are truly phenomenal. In fact, they are off the seismic charts! The stage is simple- San Francisco Bay- the infamous Berkeley Circle. The setting could not be more spectacular. Surrounded by the magnificent city waterfront of San Francisco and its skyscrapers to the south, the engineering marvel known as the Golden Gate Bridge on its western approaches, the gorgeous hilly and fashionable northern suburbs of Sausalito/ Tiburon to the north, the “brainiacs” occupying the University of California- Berkeley campus on the eastern mountainsides, and, of course, the extraordinary vibe of the Silicon Valley entrepreneurs vibrating all around you, it is inescapable that you are living a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to sail amongst the world’s best sailors.
The talent? Mind-blowing, truly. World-class talent from across all spectrums of the sport of sailing. The short list of the fleet’s credentials? America’s Cup winners, Olympic Gold Medallists (and everything in between), World Champions, European Champions, North American Champions, and any number of National Champions (Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, Chile, Peru, United Kingdom, Russia, Italy, Sweden, Norway, German, Spanish, French, Japanese, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong- China). There are more, we know, but we lost track!
For the seventy-nine teams entered, it’s like visiting the Holy Grail of Sailing and living to tell the tales to your friends and children (grand-children in some cases) after the experience. By default, it may be the world’s biggest reunion of so many top sailors; perhaps one could describe it as the “Woodstock” of sailing since so many rock-stars are participating!

“Expectations are high for this event,” said Lynn Lynch, St. Francis Yacht Club’s Race Director. “Model sailing conditions, world-class talent, top-level race management and unbelievable socials will all come together to result in a World Championship worthy of the fastest-growing fleet in the world of one-design sailing. The anticipation is palpable, and we are expecting people to come ready for some serious competition.”

“The class’ level is going up very fast, with more talented sailors joining every year,” said 2015 J/70 World Champion and 2016 J/70 North American Champion, Julian Fernandez Neckelmann; a former J/24 Mexican National Champion from Valle de Bravo (west of Mexico City). While this surge in numbers and skill levels could overwhelm some classes and hosting clubs, there’s a reason this hugely popular class chose its hosting partner. “The St. Francis Yacht Club and the J/70 class will certainly provide excellent race management,” continued Neckelmann. “San Francisco is one of my favorite racing scenarios in the world… It would have been hard to choose a better place! Plus, you cannot beat Mel’s Drive-In for breakfast in the morning- a San Francisco classic!”

With such an extraordinarily diverse group of sailors from across the planet, it can be safely said that everyone will have a fun, competitive time! No question, the StFYC bar afterwards will be full of “sea stories” about how they navigated a 79 boat starting line and went the right (wrong) direction! Time will tell the tale soon enough! Watch this space next week, starting on Tuesday! For more information about ALCATEL For more ALCATEL J/70 World Championship sailing information

(Porto Cervo, Italy)- Europe´s top sailing clubs will compete in the finale of the SAILING Champions League in Porto Cervo, Sardinia from 23rd to 25th September (prior to the J/70 World Championships for some of the team members!). The aim is to win the sought-after silver trophy by Robbe & Berking and earn the title of Europe´s "Best Sailing Club".
Thirty-two teams representing some of Europe's most respected yacht clubs will meet at the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda this weekend for the final showdown. Clubs from twelve nations, including Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy and Sweden will gather in Sardinia to attempt to take the title from defending champions the Royal Norwegian Yacht Club. The teams competing in the grand final in Sardinia are champions that have qualified over the past year via their national leagues as well as the best clubs from the preliminary round held in St. Petersburg, Russia (Act I) in August!

The 2015 European final was also held on the waters of the Costa Smeralda and the winners, Royal Norwegian Yacht Club, will certainly be one of the teams to beat. The team representing hosts the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda will also be one to watch as will Russia's Yacht Club Navigator Team, their crews placed second and third, respectively, last year.
Technical partners for the event include AUDI MOTORSPORTS, SAP SAILING and QUANTUM SAILS. For updates on social media- #bestsailingclub #sclportocervo #yccs. Sailing Photo credits- Francesco Nonnoi For more SAILING Champions League sailing information

The Sun Never Sets on J's Sailing Worldwide
If there was one dominant theme that characterized sailing around the world last week, it might be “J/70s are sailing everywhere”! With 1,100+ boats already on the water in over four continents, that is not surprising. Simultaneously, J/70 teams were sailing in Germany, Denmark, San Francisco, Detroit and Long Island Sound last weekend! Some were sailing in league events, some in regattas- all told well over 500 sailors!In Europe, the action was hot and heavy in the national sailing league events using matched-fleets of J/70s in Germany and Denmark. The Danish Sailing League had its fourth event and finale in Skovshoved, Denmark for eighteen sailing clubs. Then, over in Germany, the Deutsche Segel-Bundesliga was sailed in Kiel with eighteen sailing clubs participating. Also taking place were the J/22 Dutch Nationals in Hoorn, The Netherlands. Then, the J/80 UK Nationals were completed in Lymington, England with host Royal Lymington YC.
In the America’s events were taking place on all points of the compass. For starters, the J/105s in Canada held their National Championship on Lake Ontario, hosted by the Royal Canadian YC in Toronto. Down south of them in Western Long Island Sound, the Storm Trysail Club and Riverside YC in Riverside, CT hosted the YRA Long Island Sound Championships, featuring one-design J/70s plus a PHRF fleet with J/88s, J/111s, J/109s, J/105s, J/35, J/80 and J/92. Out in the Midwest, the first-ever Premiere Sailing League USA event took place in Detroit, MI, hosted by Grosse Pointe YC for ten teams. Out West in San Francisco, CA, the St Francis YC hosted their famous Rolex Big Boat Series for one-design fleets of J/70s (their Pre-Worlds), J/105s, J/120s and for ORR/PHRF handicap fleets that included J/125s, J/111s, and J/88s.
Finally, taking place all this week was the J/24 World Championship in Wakayama, Japan. There is an update below with an exciting development- a German team is leading the fleet of 48 boats!
Read on! The J/Community and Cruising section below has many entertaining stories and news about J/Sailors as well as cruising blogs about those who continue to enjoy the Caribbean and the South Pacific, staying warm while others are trying to stay warm up north. Check them out! More importantly, if you have more J/Regatta News, please email it or upload onto our J/Boats Facebook page Below are the summaries.
Regatta & Show Schedules:
Sep 19-23- J/24 World Championship- Wakayama, JapanSep 22-25- SAILING Champions League (J/70s)- Porto Cervo, Sardinia, Italy
Sep 22-25- J/70 Canadian Championship- Halifax, Nova Scotia
Sep 23-25- J/30 North Americans- Eastport, MD
Sep 24-Oct 1- J/70 World Championship- San Francisco, CA
Sep 24-25- American YC Fall Series- Rye, NY
Oct 1-2- J/88 North American Championship- Rye, NY
Oct 1-2- J/22 East Coast Championship- Annapolis, MD
Oct 7-8- San Diego to Ensenada Race- San Diego, CA
Oct 7-9- US Match Racing Championship (J22)- San Diego, CA
Oct 12-15- US Adult Sailing Championship (J22)- San Diego, CA
Oct 15-16- Cleveland (216) Regatta- Cleveland, OH
Oct 20-23- J/70 Corinthian Nationals- Annapolis, MD
Oct 20-23- J/105 North American Championship- Larchmont, NY
Oct 21-23- J/105 Masters Regatta- San Diego, CA
Oct 28-30- J/105 Lipton Cup- San Diego, CA
Oct 28-30- J/Fest Southwest Regatta- Seabrook, TX
Oct 29-Nov 1- French J/80 Nationals- Pornichet, France
For additional J/Regatta and Event dates in your region, please refer to the on-line J/Sailing Calendar.

(San Francisco, CA)- The record-setting 52nd edition of the Rolex Big Boat Series got underway last Thursday under leaden skies and cool temperatures. But with a westerly wind of 10 to 20 knots blowing, the fleet of 127 boats banged out at least two races on three racing circles.
In classic Big Boat Series fashion, the race committees sent the 11 classes on long courses around San Francisco Bay with the second race finishing off the St. Francis Yacht Club. The formula for success was hard to fathom because the tide shifted from flood to ebb between races, meaning that the side of the course that played in the first race didn’t hold true in the second.

Other leaders with double bullets included David Halliwill’s (New York, N.Y.) PEREGRINE in the J/120 Class.

“Those two are going to be tough to beat,” said Chris Snow (San Francisco, Calif.) racing on fifth-placed COOL STORY BRO. “Flojito is the reigning world champion. Catapult has John Kostecki as tactician and they’ve been practicing a lot. It’s all about the build-up to the Worlds next week.”
The J/70s sailed three races all on the Berkeley Circle, where the class will hold its World Championship beginning Sept. 24. Kostecki, a past world champion in many classes, said they had good starts and good boatspeed, which allowed them to get to the head of the pack. “When you’re in the front of the pack in a big fleet, life is easy,” said Kostecki.
Kostecki, who’s been sailing on San Francisco Bay all his life, said that the Berkeley Circle racecourse levels the playing field. “Compared to some of the other courses on San Francisco Bay, the Berkeley Circle doesn’t lend itself to local knowledge. We sailed three races in flood tide, slack tide and ebb tide, and there was no set game plan. Sometimes the right worked and sometimes the left worked. It was a tricky day.”

After Thursday’s opening day in grey conditions, Friday saw the marine layer over San Francisco Bay burn off early and that enabled the westerly breeze to increase into the high 20s, with gusts to 32 kts, by the end of racing. With an ebb tide running in the afternoon, a short chop kicked up that made the downwind leg to the finish off the St. Francis Yacht Club a wild ride with broaches aplenty.
All class leaders, however, continued the consistent form that propelled them to the top of their class yesterday. After winning both of yesterday’s races, Halliwill’s J/120 PEREGRINE finished 2nd in the first race followed by a 1st in the second race and led the J/120 Class by 3 points over Barry Lewis’s (Atherton, Calif.) CHANCE, which had a 3-2-1-2 scoreline.

These two crews have connections that run deeper than San Francisco Bay, and the thread is Hardesty. Hardesty sailed with CATAPULT for two years, including the inaugural J/70 Worlds three years ago. He also was tactician for Neckelmann last year when he won the J/70 Worlds. Additionally, Hardesty raced Lasers against Neckelmann 20 years ago, when both were training for the Olympics.
Hardesty said that whoever gets to the right side of the racecourse on the Berkeley Circle and rounds the windward mark in the lead is able to extend. “I think there’s a shaft of wind coming off of Angel Island that makes the right favorable,” he said.
Besides watching the wind, Hardesty has been keeping a close eye on Kostecki. “He’s sailed here all his life. He knows this place like no one else,” said Hardesty. “So if I see he’s tacking one way or the other, we’re going to tack soon after.”
FLOJITO won the day’s final race in such fashion. “We lined up to start at the boat end but had a general recall,” said Hardesty. “We saw that Kostecki was starting at the pin end. So, in the second start we were at the pin end. We had a long beat all the way across the Bay to the city front. Because we started at the pin, we were able to nose into the ebb tide first and then just got swept out the Bay. Good thing we had a general recall!”

Goebel is another veteran racer at the Rolex Big Boat Series, but hasn’t competed here since 2011. In fact, his history on San Francisco Bay stretches back to the mid-1980s when he was a crewman for the Canada II syndicate for the America’s Cup and they were in town training against Tom Blackaller’s USA syndicate.

“It’s a ton of fun to travel to San Francisco and race in the big breeze,” said Goebel, who’s originally from Edmonton, Canada. “It’s a different world here from San Diego, with the waves and chop. You always have to be conscious of the current. There are some areas that are hard to handle under the Golden Gate Bridge. It’s like a washing machine.”
Third day- more epic winds!
The marine layer hovering over San Francisco Bay took a while to burn off early Saturday, causing a slight delay to racing. Once it cleared, a strong seabreeze gusting upwards of 30 knots filled for Day 3.

In one of the more compelling battles of the regatta, FLOJITO laid down the hammer on the day, winning all three races to open an 8-point lead over CATAPULT. The two boats had traded 1st and 2nd through the first two days of racing, but CATAPULT tripped up in the first race, placing 6th, followed by a 2-3.
Holding 3rd place in the J/70s is Chris Kostanecki’s (Ross, Calif.) JENNIFER, which has 63 points and trails FLOJITO by 51 points. Still, Kostanecki is happy with his crew’s performance. “Practice is paying off,” said Kostanecki, who grew up in Darien, Conn., sailing on Long Island Sound. “We’re getting off the line without drama. The first two minutes of the race are critical. It’s so important to get poked out and we’re holding our own.”
Kostanecki was buoyed today because they were trading tacks with FLOJITO. “We almost got them one race,” he said. “We came to the windward mark with them but they got inside us and just sailed away. They’re so quick changing modes from upwind to downwind. The good thing is we learned what they’re doing downwind: rocking the boat to windward and getting the angle to the waves.”
In the J/120s, Halliwell’s PEREGRINE continued to put forth a solid performance. PEREGRINE had accumulated a scoreline of four 1sts and two 2nds for the low score of 8 points, good for a 3-point lead over Lewis’s J/120 CHANCE.

CHANCE won the first race, but PEREGRINE bounced back for the win in the second race. “Chance is no slouch. They got on us in that race and kept driving us back. It’s fun stuff. In another race, we passed them on a reach going about 1.5 knots faster, just sailed right over the top of them. We hit 16 knots on that leg! That’s a lot for this boat!”
The lead also changed hands in the J/105 Class, which is the closest class in the regatta. Philip Laby’s (Oakland, Calif.) GODOT started the day in fifth place but leapt to first after posting a 1-2. GODOT had 29 points, good for a 2-point lead over Simmons’s BLACKHAWK. Bruce Stone’s (San Francisco, Calif.) ARBITRAGE was in third with 32 points and Goebel’s SANITY was in fourth with 33 points.

The regatta drew to a close on Sunday in splendid late-summer sailing conditions. After a two hour delay waiting for the breeze to fill, a seabreeze of 15 to 18 knots arrived and brought with it decidedly warmer temperatures. For the first time in four days, crews shed their foul weather gear and fleeces as they took to the racecourse.
Tim Fuller’s (Murrieta, Calif.) J/125 RESOLUTE won the City of San Francisco Trophy, one of the two golden spades used for the ground-breaking ceremony of the Golden Gate Bridge in 1933, for winning ORR B. Peter Wagner’s (Atherton, Calif.) J/111 TOPZY TURVY finished second and also was the top-scoring J/111 in the fleet. Completing a sweep of the podium by J/crews was Viggo Torbensen’s J/125 TIMESHAVER from Dana Point, CA. Taking 5th was Dick Swanson’s J/111 BAD DOG.
The Atlantic Perpetual Trophy, a ship’s bell from the schooner Atlantic, which established a transatlantic record in 1905 that stood for 92 years, was presented to Philip Laby’s (Oakland, Calif.) Godot, winner of the J/105 Class. In a seesaw battle that came down to the seventh and final race, Godot scored a 1-point victory over Simmons’s BLACKHAWK. Never recovering from a scoring penalty in race 3 and a broken sprit pole while winning a race by a 1/4 mile was Goebel’s SANITY, having to settle for 3rd place. Rounding out the top five was Stone and Breault’s ARBITRAGE in 4th and 5th was Jeff Litfin’s MOJO.


Halliwell’s Peregrine won the J/120 Class with the low score of 9 points, accumulated on five 1sts and two 2nds. Lewis’s CHANCE placed second with 13 points, followed by Steve Madeira’s MR MAGOO in third. Taking 4th place was Timo Bruck’s TWIST and 5th position was Tom Grennan’s KOOKABURRA.
Sailing PHRF Sportboat division was a trio of J/88s taking on a Soto 30, M32s and Farr36s. In the end, it was Marc McMorris’ M-SQUARED taking third as top J/88, while Gary Panariello’s COURAGEOUS and Jim Hopp’s WHITE SHADOW finished 6th and 7th, respectively. Sailing photo credits- Rolex/ Daniel Forster- danielforster.com/ Leslie Richter- Rockskipper.com/ Sharon Green/ UltimateSailing Facebook Rolex Big Boat Series sailing video summary For more Rolex Big Boat Series sailing information

(Detroit, MI)– Showcasing the stadium sailing concept that the Premiere Sailing League USA is working to bring to the U.S.A., the league held its first-ever event at Detroit’s Grosse Pointe Yacht Club (GPYC) on September 10 with ten teams of four sailors racing J/70s. In just over four hours the 10 boats rotated through the 18-race exhibition event: each team sailed a total of nine races and watched the action for a total of nine while mingling with spectators.
“This was a good first step in changing how we view sailing,” said Wally Cross, Sailing Director of GPYC. “The format is proof that you can watch our sport and make it entertaining. This was a test, and based on the success of this event we plan to have another major stadium sailing event next summer at GPYC for the Premiere Sailing League USA.”

GPYC is the first of over a dozen planned venues with which Premiere Sailing League USA will partner to stage sailing in a stadium-style setting; each regatta will be held close to shore and will utilize the latest social media technologies to engage both live and virtual audiences. For more detailed information on the Premiere Sailing League, please contact via email or visit http://www.premieresailingleague.com.

(Skovshoved, Denmark)- It was an epic final battle for the Danish J/70 Sailing League title in Skovshoved, Denmark. The duel between Frederikshavn and Hellerup sailing clubs went down to the wire, with Frederikshavn winning in the end, much to the delight of their delirious fans lining the waterfront on Skovshoved Harbour.
Frederikshavn Sejlklub sailed in Skovshoved with the solid team of Kris Houman (skipper), Rasmus Melsen, Søren Steen and Rasmus Damsgaard. Hellerup Sailing Club put up a fantastic crew that included Trine Abrahamsen (skipper), Kristian Kvid Sorensen, Ida Hartvig and Nicolas Brandt Hansen. Not only was Hellerup’s crew a highly experienced league team, but Trine Abrahamsen's big match race experience

Meanwhile, Frederikshavn Sejklub sailed “lights out”, decimating the fleet with fabulous starts, brilliant tactics and eye-opening boat-handling skills. They not only won the first round, but cleaned up in the FINAL SIX to win the regatta by one point over KDY and also win the overall Danish Sailing League championship by 7 pts! Third for the regatta was Faaborg Sejlklub, which also enabled them to finish 5th for the overall series. Fourth in Skovshoved was Hadsund Sejlklub, which brought them up to 6th overall in the series.
Behind FSK and HS for the overall series was KDY in third overall, followed by Kerteminde in fourth position. Watch the Danish Sailing League highlights here on Facebook video For more Danish J/70 Sailing League information

(Kiel, Germany)- The fight for the Deutsche Segel-Bundesliga championship continued this past weekend in the amazingly cool sailing city of Kiel. Hot duels, tight distances and amazing sailing conditions made for fast & furious sailing all weekend long in the “City of Sails”.
The first division fought in Kiel head-to-head for fifteen races with Deutscher Touring YC winning again over a star-studded cast of seventeen sailing clubs from across Germany. Their team was led by Julian

"We are very happy that it worked for us again in Kiel! We have a big strong team from which we can draw great sailors and it was nice to win in the end," said Jonas Vogt from DTYC. In fact, after posting a 2nd in Starnberg, 1st in Kontanz, 6th in Travemunde, and 1st in Berlin, DTYC is now far ahead in the standings and hope to close out yet another DSBL overall title in Hamburg in a few weeks time.
Taking second in Kiel was Norddeutscher Regatta Verein, boosting their chances for a top five finish overall in Hamburg; they currently sit in 6th overall, just 7 pts out of 5th.

At this stage, behind DTYC overall is Verein Seglerhaus am Wannsee in 2nd with 22 pts. Third is Lindauer Segler-Club with 25 pts, who did themselves no favors for a shot at the title by bombing their performance in Kiel- a 14th place! Fourth overall is Chiemsee YC and 5th is Bayerischer YC. No question, the finale in Hamburg will keep 2nd to 5th place teams pre-occupied with one another as any bad slip will send them down the proverbial mine shaft quickly! Watch the Deutsche Segel-Bundesliga Kiel sailing highlights here on YouTube For more Deutsche Segel-Bundesliga sailing information

(Toronto, ONT)- The J/105 Canadian Championships took place at the Royal Canadian YC from September 15th to 18th. A total of seven races were sailed over the three-day event for the eighteen-boat fleet. As usual, the RCYC staff ashore and their RCYC PRO did an amazing job hosting the J/105 sailors.
Picking up where he left off in the 2015 J/105 North Americas, Terry McLaughlin and his friend Rod Wilmer sailed MANDATE to a crushing win over their fellow Canadians. Basically, they never let off on the gas pedal, blazing around the track in fine form, taking four 1sts and two 2nds on their way to a stunningly huge victory- 27 pts to be exact!!
The battle for second, however, was epic and that was where all the action took place while MANDATE sailed away over the horizon. Past J/105 North American Champion Jim Rathbun on HEY JUDE had an amazing duel all regatta with Ian Farquharson’s SONIC BOOM. Both teams sailed roller-coaster scorelines going into the last day, trading places the entire time. Not until the seventh and final race did Rathbun’s HEY JUDE crew get it altogether to take a bullet and the silver for the regatta. SONIC BOOM placed 4th and, consequently, earned the bronze. Rounding out the top five was Peter Hall’s JAMAICA ME CRAZY in 4th place and Felicity Rodness’ ROUNDING ERROR in 5th position.
With this “training” event behind them, many of these crews are packing up and headed south to the 2016 J/105 North American Championship being sailed in mid-October at Larchmont YC in Larchmont, New York. For more J/105 Canadian Championship sailing information

(Wakayama, Japan)- It has been a slow start for the forty-four J/24 teams attending this year’s J/24 World Championship in Wakayama, Japan. With a tropical storm heading toward the area, it was the calm before the storm on day one of the J/24 World Championship. The J/24 teams representing Germany, Great Britain, Japan, Korea, Peru, Singapore, and the USA kicked off the Championship in winds of 4-6 knots over two races.
Daniel Frost’s JJOne of Germany mastered the conditions with a 1,2 to grab the early advantage in the five-day event. Demichi Kousuke’s Ichimokusan of Japan held a slim lead on second place, just one ahead of Peru’s Javier Arribas on Hawky. The day’s race winners were Frost in race one and Naoto Kitazume’s Maril in race two.
For day two- Tuesday- the slow-moving tropical storm dampened the day’s proceedings. The entire fleet was kept ashore with the AP flag flying all day as heavy rains and stormy winds blanketed the area.
Day three- Wednesday- dawned with great promise. Following yesterday’s tropical storm, winds calmed to 5-8 knots over today’s three races. Keiji Kondo’s Fox of Japan won the opening race, trailed by Demichi Kousuke’s Ichimokusan (JPN) and American Will Welles on Cougar. JJOne earned their second bullet of the regatta in the day’s middle battle, trailed by Fox and Mark Laura’s Baba Louie (USA). Einosuke Morita’s Wailea (JPN) won the final duel, with JJOne and Kato Fumiya’s Lull of Japan rounding out the top trio.
With five races now on the books, the German team on JJOne had strengthened their lead over the highly competitive fleet. Daniel Frost’s crew now tallies just 6 net points, able to drop an 11 in race three and keep a skinny tally of 1,2,1,2. Kondo’s Fox moved up to second overall after a solid 1,2,4 for 15 net points. Kousuke’s Ichimokusa rests in third with 22 pts.
Two more days of racing to go and there is no question that JJOne’s fans in Germany are cheering wildly for them to be the first German World Champions ever in the J/24 class! For more J/24 World Championship sailing information

(Lymington, England)- Hosted jointly by the enthusiastic Lymington J/80 fleet, the Royal Lymington Yacht Club and supported by the Lymington Town Sailing Club, this year’s J/80 UK Nationals could be summed up by misquoting the most famous Briton ever- “Never was so much packed into so little (time) by so few (organizers)!”
Having dispensed with the analogies, it is correct to highlight the fact that in just three days RLYC PRO Roger Wilson and his team ran 9 near-perfect races, in winds from 0-30kt, tides from 0-4kt, using two very different race areas set 7nm apart.
Meanwhile, on shore, competitors and guests enjoyed a genuinely “crammed” social programme with well-organized and supported functions every evening. To further help things along, organizers and event sponsors sorted out three days of sunshine to accompany the complete range of sailing conditions.
Day One
The excitable 25-boat fleet headed into Christchurch Bay for three testing races, which passed successfully as the wind ranged from 1-16kt knot and shifted around much of the compass. “Nimble but successful” would best describe the race committee’s efforts to run fair courses as the playing field tipped back and forth. At the end of the day’s three races, local boats were in the ascendant, Oly Dunford’s Purple Haze steered by Simon Shaw topping the table from Chris and Hannah Neve’s No Regrets and ‘young’ Ray Mitchell and a team of real youngsters on Checkmate.
Mitchell’s youthful team would go on to have an exceptional regatta, only interrupted when their boat was badly damaged by a port-tack rival in the strong breezes of day 2… God bless redress.
Day Two
The Weather Godz brought the breeze, and lots of it, with four fast races in the Western Solent. By now the two favorites had found their feet, multiple J/80 champion Kevin Sproul’s team scoring 2,1,1,1 and regular J/80 performer John Powell on Betty ending the day with 1,2,3,2.
As well as Checkmate’s earlier crash, there was some off-piste action for Fiducial’s crew Al Newton – builder of Iain Percy’s gold medal winning Star boats – who achieved some nice, graceful air when flying overboard during a rather too speedy gybe. While ‘Flipper’s’ crewmates struggled to dowse the kite and turn around, Chris Kirkman’s crew on Jane eventually picked up the (moderately) grateful casualty.
Day Three
The final day was a race officer’s nightmare, but that evening Roger Wilson and his race team were still smiling having completed two good races, now back in Christchurch Bay, almost pulling off one more before the morning’s zephyrs faded completely. Wilson’s patience was rewarded two hours later when the sea breeze finally filled in, with a race win for No Regrets and (more) grey hair for Kevin Sproul, shut out at the start but fighting back to 8th to take the overall win by 4pt from John Powell and Betty.
With Sproul taking his 5th UK Nationals J/80 title and Powell a worthy runner-up, the family Neve– top local boat – slotted in to 3rd overall.
The Corinthian prize duly went to Ray Mitchell in 5th- - - plus giddy merriment for the scorers who spotted some rather too illustrious T-shirts among the amateur entries!
Kevin Sproul’s polished victory aside, a big prize would also have been appropriate for those behind such an excellent event, Jim White and James Harrison, plus the Royal Lymington’s now legendary administrator Kirsty: just hours before the ‘gala’ dinner the club’s two chefs walked out– for good!! Rather than do what most normal folk would have done, order up 150 Chinese takeaways, Kirsty and a tiny team, with nicely chaotic local support, cooked and served 100 covers exactly as planned. Who wants a grumpy chef anyway!?!
Last but not least, as well as convincing superstar umpire John Doerr to interrupt his global schedule for a weekend of local entertainment, White and Harrison had arm-twisted enough sponsorship for this regatta to run an America’s Cup. So on their behalf, thank you to those who dug deep- - Skyscanner, Amis Productions, Nick Cox Chandlers with Helly Hansen, Seahorse Magazine, Berthon, Lymington Yacht Charters, North Sails, Rum Jungle, Marston Brewery, Go Ape adventures and Garmin!
The after party was “a blinder”, so to speak! Thanks in large part to all the wonderful sponsors! Checkout this extraordinarily slick Amis Productions J/80 UK sailing video summary on YouTube.

(Riverside, CT)- The Storm Trysail Club and Riverside YC hosted this year’s 2016 Long Island Championships for PHRF handicap classes and the J/70 class on Western Long Island Sound. Providing Riverside YC with additional help and support for the event were American YC and Indian Harbor YC. Much to the delight of all the competitors, the weekend weather provided uncharacteristically excellent breeze and lots of racing on Long Island Sound! The conditions were very much to the liking for J/Teams that won 3 of 4 PHRF handicap classes!
With a dozen J/70’s showing up ready to do battle for LIS bragging rights, everyone expected the racing to be fun and tactically challenging until the final race on Sunday. As it turns out, the winners were determined by a tie-breaker! After six races, Madelyn Ploch’s women’s team (SUGAR DADDY) and Kerry Klingler (MENACE) each had 9 pts with the tie-break going in favor of Klingler on countback based on 1st places! Taking third was Scott & Alex Furnary’s ANY COLOUR with 16 pts net. The balance of the top five was Scott Bursor’s SLINKY in 4th position and Dan Goldberg’s BAZINGA in 5th place.
In the PHRF handicap world, it was just about a clean sweep of all four classes for J/crews! In PHRF I, MaryEllen Tortorello’s J/111 PARTNERSHIP took 4th place, losing a tie-breaker for 3rd overall; a fantastic first outing for her as skipper on the famously fast black boat!
PHRF II class saw J/teams literally sweep the top five. Winning was Carl Olsson’s J/109 MORNING GLORY, followed by three J/88’s in succession- Iris Vogel’s DEVIATION, Kevin Marks’ VELOCITY and Ken & Drew Hall’s NEVERMORE in 2nd, 3rd, 4th, respectively. Closing out the top five was Mark Parry’s J/35 BLUE MOUSE.
Similarly, PHRF III class had Christian Uecker’s J/92 HOUND DOG take overall honors for the weekend. Next J/crew was Randy Bourne’s J/105 STRANGE BREW. Finally, in PHRF IV class, Jason Viseltear’s J/80 UPSETTER lived up to her name, winning class with nearly straight bullets! For more Long Island Sound Championship sailing information

(Hoorn, The Netherlands)- Held in conjunction with the famous “Zuiderzeeweek”, the Dutch J/22 Class held their annual “Open J/22 Dutch Nationals” on the beautiful Zuider Zee!
The class enjoyed a great turnout of thirteen boats, a big improvement over last year’s event! Teams participated from The Netherlands and Germany. After an eight race series with one discard (7 races counting), it was Jean-Michel Lautier’s FRAPORITA that showed her transom to the fleet for most of the races, compiling an impressive four 1sts and three 2nds to win the crown of 2016 Dutch National Champion!

J/Community
What friends, alumni and crew of J/Boats are doing worldwide
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PART 1 – RAMBLER’s, let’s get Ramblin’
As we found out in 2014 & 2015, the J/88 is a perfect boat for Lake Michigan Distance Racing and the 2016 Bi-State Race was no different. Andy Graff on EXILE, Ben Wilson on RAMBLER, & Boyd Jarrell on SLOT MACHINE were looking forward to some close racing on the 50 mile sprint from Chicago across the lake to St. Joe. That is exactly what the 88’s had – close racing. STARBOARD!!
On the evening of September 2, the night of racing was shaping up nicely. Winds 10-15kts, low sea, and good chilly weather. With St. Joe approximately 75 degrees off Chicago and the direction ENE 70-80 degrees, it was time to think tactics. When would the wind go ESE per the forecast? When will we get to use our Code 0? Do we point to sail less miles or do we foot off for speed and head way right of rhumb? Decisions..decisions..
As the 15 boats in PHRF Section 4 began, we started to see who wanted what, pin or boat. Although a distance race, RAMBLER has found that getting off in front is important with the 88’s. Right before the start, RAMBLER finds SLOT MACHINE and EXILE, EXILE looking to take off on the pin end with under 2 minutes to the start. STARBOARD! STARBOARD! RAMBLER had a port starboard issue with another PHRF 4 boat and after licking her wounds on the starboard rear aft quarter of the boat – RAMBLER decided to keep racing. As stated by Ben Wilson, “RAMBLERs, let’s get Ramblin’”. With that, RAMBLER re-focused and it was time to go chase Andy Graff & the crew of EXILE around the lake. The 88’s were off to St. Joe!
Through the night EXILE and RAMBLER traded the lead, heading right of rhumb and getting to the Michigan/Indiana shore as fast as they could. With average speeds of 7-8 knots, things seem to be moving nicely upwind. RAMBLER and EXILE were the right most boats of the entire fleet for the night and it seem to pay. RAMBLER was the first Section 4 boat to call in 1 mile from the finish, feeling good about themselves for about 5 seconds..EXILE calls in one mile from the finish! It was going to be an exciting finish and RAMBLER was fired up. WHERE THE HELL IS EXILE!?!
RAMBLER was able to pull out a victory after EXILE hit a hole a half a mile from the finish. Luck was on RAMBLERs side that night as they won section 4 honors and took 5th Overall out of 110 boats.

To say that racing was close on the way back from St. Joe would be an understatement. As Andy Graff said post-race, “We traded leads 6 or 8 times and I don’t think we were ever more than 600 feet away from each other the whole day”. Over 50 miles of racing, that’s pretty close considering the distance sailed. Boyd Jarrell from the J/88 SLOT MACHINE was right in the mix for the day too.
The Sunday morning for the second leg of the Bi-State brought some really nice weather. Sunny, low sea, ESE breeze from 10-15 knots brought welcomed thoughts of sending it home under spinnaker – and that’s just what the 88’s did. SENT IT!
Boat handling proved to be the deciding factor in this race. From the EXILE hourglass at the start, to RAMBLER shrimping a kite because they didn’t rig the second tack line for a peel, to sailing too deep…every mistake gave the opponent boat lengths and brought lead changes. With RAMBLER, EXILE, and SLOT MACHINE clipping along downwind with boat speeds of 8-10kts, life was good. At mile 25 on the way home, the little things proved to be important as EXILE was able to sail course with speed while RAMBLER sailed hotter but couldn’t find the speed to get back up to the finish. Boyd Jarrell and SLOT MACHINE brought their “A” game, never far off the leaders for the duration of the day.
In the end, EXILE proved to be too much for RAMBLER & SLOT MACHINE on the Sunday race going home – taking line Honors in Section 4 and, based on corrected times, may have taken the day on the fleet Overall. What’s also impressive on the day is that the J/88’s took the podium in Section 4 finishing 1-2-3 on the day. THE 88’s PERFECT END TO A GREAT SAILING WEEKEND!!”

“The day before the Round the Island Race, the forecast was predicting 25-30 knots from the west going southwest, but at least it wasn’t going to rain, and our start was at a respectable hour so we wouldn’t have to leave Lymington until 0700 hrs. We had a crew of seven, and fortunately a big boys crew, which would hopefully keep the boat upright! Breakfast en route was bacon rolls and brown sauce...it wasn’t going to be a day for Weight Watchers breakfast.
We thought long and hard about the start. With the wind in the west, did we start at the island side of the line where initially the current would be favorable? Or the outer end with less tacks and the advantage of the line bias? We went for the outer end. I am still not convinced it was correct. Combined with no clear air and positioned forty meters behind the line (that’s what the machine said!) at the start, this was not one of our better starts.
Beating down the Solent was uneventful except for witnessing one port and starboard collision. At the Needles, I am reminded it is my decision as to whether we pass inside the wreck. We did, but the majority of boats seemed to pass outside, other than another Lymington boat (J/109 Jumbuck) that was alongside us. Unfortunately, they were dismasted later in the race. Having passed inside the wreck, we had clear air and waited for an instance as there were no spinnakers and it appeared a shy reach that would have meant the code O. However, the wind settled and freed, so we set the fractional spinnaker and off we went with the speed at between 14-16 knots with the occasional burst of 18 knots.
Approaching St. Catherine’s, the crew noticed a drone overhead. Did the paparazzi think we were famous? A few days later, we found the clip on You Tube. Nice to see that we were travelling faster than the boats around us!
In spite of it being a shy reach, we made St. Catherine’s without having to drop the spinnaker.

Once sorted, up went the spinnaker again, and off we went to Bembridge Ledge buoy. At this stage, we were in company with our main J/105 and club rivals— Andy Roberts and Bill Edgerley’s Jin Tonic. The adrenalin kicked in, and we managed to sneak ahead. Afterward, they claimed they had delayed their spinnaker hoist following their gybe to have lunch!
From the Needles to St. Catherine’s, we had not been passed by any boats, but now the wind angle was more favorable for a spinnaker (thought this would change). We considered changing to a masthead spinnaker, however checking the true wind speed at 29 knots quickly thought otherwise, and continued with our fractional spinnaker. The sea was much smoother on the way to Bembridge, so having to gybe four times before reaching the buoy was not a problem.
At Bembridge, down came the spinnaker, and a reach in the direction of the post near No Mans Land fort. The wind had not abated in spite of being in the lee of the island, so we put in a reef. From here, it was a beat along Ryde Sands to the finish, only having to tack three times. At this stage, an absence of boats around us was unusual, but a pleasant change from previous years of continuous tacking in traffic.
The erratic wind off Norris, as always, questioned as to why we didn’t sail further out into the Solent and the adverse tide. We didn’t—just kept trimming and made the finish line without tacking, and continued to sail on to Lymington. We texted in our declaration, and, as always, we were glad to receive confirmation. There is always a concern that we might have been OCS or entered a prohibited area. At that moment, out came the drinks and cake.
During the dreadful return journey to Lymington (all upwind against chop), we received the odd text saying we had done well. Nobody seemed that bothered. We realized it had been a fast race, completing the 55nm in 6 hours 50 minutes. The most important thing was we had enjoyed ourselves, and other than losing two hats and a few bruises, all was well!
Arriving in Lymington, we retired to the yacht club to finish the cake and have another beer, and confirm that we had won class 2B. With our fellow club members on Jin Tonic (J/105) and Boomerang (Adams 10), who won the second place team prizes for the Royal Lymington Yacht Club, a time for champagne!
It is interesting to note in our class 2B (46 boats) that the first four boats were J/105s. And of all the J/Boats competing under IRC, the second and third boats were J/105s (the winner was a J/111 by two minutes). Not a bad performance for a 25-year-old design!!
J/Cruisers
J Cruisers continue their adventures around the world, below are a selection of most excellent "blogs" written by their prolific publishers. Some terribly amusing anecdotes and pearls of wisdom are contained in their blogs. Read some! You'll love it.
* The J/40 HERON REACH sailed by Virginia and Jerry is participating in the Blue Planet Odyssey project and have recently joined them in the Marquesas Islands in the Eastern Pacific. Learn more about their adventures and experiences here- http://heronreachodyssey.blogspot.com/


* J/160 AVATAR headed for the Caribbean, again, for 2015/ 2016! We LOVE these updates from our cruising J sailors that continue to criss-cross the Seven Seas. This one comes from Alan Fougere, sailing his beloved J/160 AVATAR. Alan sent us an email update regards their various improvements and refit to the boat (see above). They will again be based at Proper Yachts in St John, US Virgin Islands.

Retiring on the Sea: Answering Readers' Questions
Advice about selecting a boat, ocean crossings, itineraries and safety

WSJ- "What kind and make of boat did you use? Looking back, would you have picked a different boat?"
Bill- "In 1995-96, J/Boats of Newport, RI, came out with a new cruiser/racer model, the J/42. We bought hull No. 6 of this popular 42-foot sailboat and named it JAYWALKER. This was our fourth boat since beginning sailing in 1975.
Although long-distance cruising wasn't what we had in mind when we purchased JAYWALKER, it soon became apparent it had the ability to carry us easily and safely anywhere we wanted to go. Because the boat is light, it sails well in light winds, which means very little motoring is necessary.
People often ask (and argue) about what boat is best for cruising. Any boat that is strong, safe, fast, comfortable and easily handled by two people should fit the bill. One thing for sure, fast is fun—and important when trying to avoid bad weather."
READ MORE ABOUT BILL'S INSIGHTFUL COMMENTARY AND THOUGHTS ON WSJ ONLINE HERE
* The J/42 JARANA continues their epic voyage around the Pacific. Continue to read about Bill and Kathy Cuffel's big adventure cruising the South Pacific headed for New Zealand. Their blog is here: http://www.svjarana.blogspot.com/
* John and Mary Driver are sailing their J/130 SHAZAM for extended cruising in the Atlantic basin. At this time, John and Mary finished their double-handed crossing of the Atlantic, landing in Portugal on their J/130 Shazam after completion of their ARC Rally. Read the latest news at http://www.sailblogs.com/member/shazam/.
- Bill and Susan Grun on the J/160 AVANTE are also sailing in the Pacific archipelago, read more about their great adventures on their blog (http://web.me.com/susangrun). Read about their latest adventures as they've gotten to New Zealand- "Avante Cruises the Pacific".
- Eric and Jenn on the J/160 MANDALAY also sailed the Pacific archipelago, read more on their blog at http://www.sailmandalay.com. Eric and Jenn are J/World alumni took MANDALAY up and down the West Coast (Mexico, CA), then to the South Pacific and New Zealand. MANDALAY is back in San Francisco now, and in the J/World fleet--she is available for skippered charters, private instruction, and corporate/executive groups.