
(Seattle, WA)- The 2018 edition of the J/FEST Northwest Regatta will be hosted by Corinthian YC Seattle and J/Boats Northwest for forty-seven teams that include a PHRF class, and one-design fleets of J/24s, J/80s, J/30s, J/97E’s, J/105s, and J/109s.
For 26 years, J/Fest NW produced some of the best racing and after-race socializing available on the planet. This year it is a two-day regatta (with a Friday night PHRF fun race) open to all J/Boats owners and crew. The on-the-water activities are hosted by Sail Northwest and CYC Seattle. Shoreside activities will be at the CYC Seattle Shilshole clubhouse Saturday and Sunday.
Saturday evening’s dinner and door prize extravaganza is always a sellout. So, come on down and join us for what Northwest Yachting Magazine called “the most looked forward to regatta of the year”- J/FEST Northwest.

The eleven-boat J/24 class includes some local, notable, celebrities, like TREMENDOUS SLOUCH (Scott Milne) and TUNDRA ROSE (Carl Sheath).
With eight J/80s, it is the largest turnout ever for this class in the PNW. Some notable teams are Bryan Rhodes’ CRAZY IVAN and Mike Poole’s JOLLY GREEN (J/80 #1!!).

The always-popular J/105 class of eleven teams has just about all the movers and shakers in the PNW participating. In fact, it’s like a class reunion for 105-lovers! Amongst the 105 cognoscenti are Jim Geros’ LAST TANGO; Tom Kerr’s CORVO 105; Eric Hopper, Matt Davis, Doug Scherk’s FREE BOWL OF SOUP from Portland, Oregon; Chris Phoenix’s JADED; Jerry Diercks’ DELIRIUM; and Ryan Porter’s AVALANCHE.
Similarly, the five J/109s will be sure to have spirited racing for the Pacific NW Championship Trophy! Top contenders will certainly include Stu Burnell’s TANTIVY and Jerry Woodfield’s SHADA. For more J/Fest Northwest Regatta sailing information

(Long Beach, CA)- Having one of its best turnouts in years is the annual Ullman Sails Long Beach Race Week, hosted by Alamitos Bay and Long Beach YC’s. With three race areas to manage, the club’s PRO’s have their hands full with large dinghy classes, one-design keelboats (J/70s and J/120s) and large PHRF handicap classes.
At this time of year, just about anything goes; from the classic “June Gloom” of early morning fog, ultimately burning off to provide decent sailing conditions in the local seabreeze, or the brisk “Santa Ana” conditions that whistle in from the northeast dry and hot and blowing dogs off chains- often well into the 20-30 kts range. To date, the forecast looks positively like Long Beach Chamber of Commerce conditions- sunny, moderate 6-12 kts winds from the SSE.


Looming like a raptor ready to pounce on a kill are several top teams that have notable sailors on board that were not sailing the SD NOOD event. For starters, there is West Coast J/70 Champion Bruce Golison on MIDLIFE CRISIS, then there’s Argyle Campbell (world famous sailor from Newport Harbor YC that needs no introduction), and, finally, down from San Francisco is Chris Kostanecki’s JENNIFER (a top 3 contender

In the PHRF handicap world, we find Doug & Jack Jorgensen’s J/111 PICOSA racing in PHRF B class. Then, in PHRF D class there are three J/105s (Scott McDaniel’s OFF THE PORCH, Juan Lois’ ROCINANTE, & Bill Quealy’s J-RABBIT SLIM), Heinz Butner’s J/109 RAPTOR, and David Boatner’s J/35 RIVAL. In the PHRF Random Leg C class is Paul Stemier’s J/44 PATRIOT, as well as Seth Hall’s J/124 MARISOL. Sailing PHRF Random Leg D class will be Jack Mayer’s J/109 ZEPHYR. Sailing photo credits- Erin Rustigian and JoySailing.com. For more Ullman Sails Long Beach Race Week sailing information

(Riva del Garda, Italy)- The first pan-European J/70 event took place on the spectacular waters of Lago di Garda in 2014. As usual, the host club in Riva del Garda- the famous Fraglia de la Riva- played host to a fleet of nearly 50 boats that first year. In the 4th edition for the 2018 Euro Cup Regatta, a new record fleet of seventy-three entries will be vying for the prestigious trophy.
J/70s from fourteen nations across the pantheon of Europe (Austria, Belgium, Spain, France, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Switzerland, & Turkey) and two international countries (Brazil & Cayman Islands) will be looking forward to three-days of sailing fantasia.
The famous Lake Garda “wind machine” during the summertime can be scheduled for racing like clockwork. After a lazy morning breakfast and stroll along the waterfront, the teams assemble at the yacht club and begin to saunter out to the starting area between 12 and 1 pm. As the breeze builds up to 15-20 kts from the south, the PRO simply sets the standard course and can, generally, conduct three races per day.


The Sun Never Sets on J's Sailing Worldwide
It has been a fascinating week of big offshore and round-the-cans events around the world. For starters, the famous biennial offshore 635nm “thrash to the onion patch” took place this past week. Co-hosted by the Cruising Club of America and the Royal Bermuda YC, over 170 boats took off on Friday, June 15th to test their mettle crossing the infamously capricious Gulf Stream on their way to the garden of paradise in the mid-Atlantic- Hamilton, Bermuda and its pink beaches. Most notably, all four J/121’s sailed well, all finishing in the top five in their respective classes, as well as one winning in “the pro division”- their Gibbs Hill Lighthouse Division class.In Europe, three major events were all taking place at the same time. For starters, the J/70 Europeans took place in Vigo, Spain for sixty-nine boats, hosted by Real Club Nautico de Vigo. Then, just north of them on the famous Solent, the IRC Europeans was hosted by RORC’s Cowes clubhouse on the Isle of Wight in Great Britain; the J/112E put on a command performance! If that were not enough excitement for the week, the inaugural Women’s SAILING Champions League kicked off as part of Kieler Woche (Kiel Week) in Kiel, Germany for ten women’s crews from seven nations across Europe.
Meanwhile, in the Americas, the craziest offshore sailing adventure yet just started off Port Townsend, WA, the 755nm Race 2 Alaska up the “inside passage” to Ketchikan, Alaska! Anything goes! Pedal power, oars, sails, swimming, anything so long as it’s wind, solar, or human-powered. A souped-up J/88 called BLUE FLASH is sailing and the updates are fun reading below. Then, there is the “laid-back” edition of Block Island Race Week taking place with an update. In addition, taking place on the same Saturday as the start of the R2AK was Sloop Tavern YC’s Three Buoy Fiasco, sailed on Puget Sound, off Seattle, WA.
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 pag Below are the summaries.
Regatta & Show Schedules:
Jun 16-24- Kiel Week/ Kieler Woche- Kiel, GermanyJun 17-22- Block Island Race Week- Block Island, RI
Jun 20-23- J/22 North American Championship- Wayzata, MN
Jun 22-24- J/FEST Seattle- Seattle, WA
Jun 22- RORC Morgan Cup Race- Cowes, Isle of Wight, England
Jun 22-24- Long Beach Race Week- Long Beach, CA
Jun 23-25- J/70 EURO CUP V- Riva del Garda, Italy
Jun 28- Jul 1- Norwegian J/70 National Championship- Hanko, Norway
Jun 29- Jul 1- New York YC One-Design Regatta- Newport, RI
Jun 30- Vic-Maui International Yacht Race- Victoria, BC, Canada
Jul 7-14- J/80 World Championship- Les Sables d’Olonne, France
Jul 7- Round the Island Race- Cowes, Isle of Wight, England
Jul 7-8- Sail Newport Regatta- Newport, RI
For additional J/Regatta and Event dates in your region, please refer to the on-line J/Sailing Calendar.

(Vigo, Spain)- Final day, final race, final leg. The dueling leaders fought a titanic struggle right to the finish line. The protagonists were Alberto Rossi’s ENFANT TERRIBLE and Peter Duncan’s RELATIVE OBSCURITY. Tied going into the final race, who-beat-who would win the championship. On the final run to the finish, it was Rossi’s ENFANT TERRIBLE crew that proved their toughness, winning the race, with Duncan’s RELATIVE OBSCURITY taking second. One could not conceivably write such an insane script to this Hollywood ending. Needless to say, it will be “party-time” back in Ancona, Italy at the Rossi family household!


“Congratulations to Alberto and his team, they sailed very well,” commented RELATIVE OBSCURITY’s Peter Duncan. “We did not perform well towards the end of the regatta and we paid the price. I must say, a big THANK YOU to the organizers, this was a well-organized event both on and off the water, and we have been made very welcome. I am sure we will see some of the top European teams in Marblehead for the Worlds. It is a venue that can give a big variety of conditions, and there will be some very competitive American teams racing.”

“The team has been fantastic, nearly all of us are under 25. In the last race we had to take a big risk, and it paid off, we are so very happy to win the Corinthian Class in our home Vigo!”
Runner-up for the Corinthian Class was Paolo Tomsic's Società Nautica Grignano (ITA) and completing the podium was Luis Pérez Canal's Abril Verde (ESP) from the host club, Real Club Nautico de Vigo. Final day- YouTube sailing video highlights Follow and share the J/70 Europeans here on Facebook For more J/70 European Championship sailing information

J-LANCE 12 Wins Class & declared Overall IRC European Champion!
(Cowes, England)- The Royal Ocean Racing Club hosted a stellar fleet of thirty-three offshore IRC racing teams from nine countries (Belgium, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Turkey, USA) at their Cowes, Isle of Wight station for the 2018 IRC European Championship.
The immaculately sailed J-LANCE 12 was crowned IRC European champion for 2018. The French J/112E skippered by Didier le Moal seemed never to put a foot wrong in the latter stages of this week-long regatta run from Cowes by the Royal Ocean Racing Club.
"It's great, I didn't expect that," said le Moal of claiming the IRC Europeans title. "First of all, we wanted to win our class. But, this is fabulous to win overall! It concludes the wonderful week we've had. If you enjoy racing, we have been in paradise. The weather, sun, light winds, heavy winds, big tides, everything you could expect to enjoy from racing, we've had it all!”
Winning Saturday’s first windward-leeward race, held in 15-20 knot winds, was the French team's sixth bullet out of ten races. For the final big breeze, double-points scoring, round-the-cans, cannot discard race, the French had the class win secured, but played it safe.
"The wind was increasing a bit, so we preferred to sail safely, because we had a big lead. We just wanted to finish well," explained J-LANCE 12's navigator and team secret weapon Nicolas Lunven, the reigning Solitaire du Figaro champion. With the wind gusting into the 30 kts-plus range, they avoided gybing the spinnaker, to avoid breakage.
In addition to Lunven, le Moal and Fred Bouvier, the J-LANCE 12 crew of Christophe and Cyrille Cremades, Jean Francois Nevo, Jean-Michel Roux and Cyrille Teston are all friends who have sailed with le Moal for years.
"It is our third season sailing on the J/112E, so we know exactly how it works," continued le Moal. "We had a very, very good navigator - to be fast is one thing, but to be fast on the right side is a good thing! Upwind the boat is so fast, it helps you recover if you had a bad leg someplace!”

What may have really opened up everyone’s eyes was the performance of the J/112E in the windy, blustery 60nm Round Island Race (the original America’s Cup course around the Isle of Wight). In that race, J-LANCE 12 finished 3rd boat-for-boat in the IRC 2 fleet! A commanding performance it was for the ages. In fact, in what was easily a “big-boat” race for currents and winds, J-LANCE 12 was 3rd overall on handicap time to the first two boats in IRC 1- all full-on stripped-out racing Fast 40s.
Here is a summary report from Fred Bouvier on their experience sailing J-LANCE 12 in the regatta.
“The key to our success was the following: good boat, good crew- all friends, and a lot of fun and parties ashore. While we were extremely focused while sailing, it was the great fun ashore that, for sure, was an important part of our performance.
In some way, we were amazed by our results and how we performed against very good professional teams and IRC-optimized, stripped-out racing boats.
Day One- Sunday
We had light winds and only one windward-leeward race. Our start was not good! The room at the RC boat was closed at the gun, so we had to a turnaround in just 5 knots of wind and come back to the start line. There was a very nervous feeling on board, as this was not the best way to start the IRC European Championship.
Nevertheless, we fully concentrated on our speed and we crossed most of the fleet to round the first windward mark in fifth place! We were still nervous, as we were not thinking that light wind was our best conditions. But, despite this concern, we were second at the next windward mark and, in fact, passing several IRC Class 2 back-marker boats that started ahead of us!
Then, we crossed the line just before the wind shut down, thank goodness! Meanwhile, the rest of the fleet was partially parked on the last downwind leg near the finish line, some of them anchoring/ kedging to stay in place because of the current. With no more wind, the RORC PRO wisely cancelled racing for the day.

We had medium to light winds all day and very shifty- 15-25 degree wind shifts and very streaky. It was “round-the-cans” random leg courses.
The first race was a reaching start, again not best positioning for first leg, rounding the bottom mark around 9th place. Then, we recovered to 6th at the second mark. Then, the next leg gave us a long upwind where we could play wind shifts and we jumped into second place at the 2nd to last mark. Finally, we passed the Danish X-37 Helly Hansen team to finish first.
For the second race, it was much shorter, with less upwind. This time, we finished fourth on corrected time after missing a shift and streak on the final downwind run to the finish. Halfway down the run it appeared we were winning the race, but the boats to the windward and right of rhumbline passed us.
Our conclusion was that Danish X-37 Helly Hansen team would be very strong competitors.
Day Three- Tuesday
The RORC PRO attempted the classic Round Isle of Wight Race. However, it was never going to happen, even in our own estimation. We started upwind heading west down the Solent towards the Needles, after beating for two hours against the tide in very light winds, it was clear it was not going to happen. For the first time on our navigation software, we could see that it was predicting an arrival time at the finish line as "infinite”…ha-ha! Not surprisingly, the race was then canceled!
The fleet then waited for several hours in the Solent, hoping a seabreeze or gradient breeze would fill in. Finally, late in the afternoon, a streaky wind that kept oscillating from northeast to southeast filled in, blowing 6-12 kts.
The first race was another long round-the-cans affair. It was a great one for us! We beat the Danish X-37 Helly Hansen and the French First 40.7 Pen Koent; winning both on elapsed and corrected time!
The final race was a very short windward-leeward in light, dying winds. There were a lot of issues playing with the bigger IRC 2 Class in front of us to avoid bad air from their ‘back-markers’. The X-37 was still fighting hard, but we succeeded in passing them right at the finish line, so we won another race on corrected time.
That evening, we had an amusing discussion with a JPK 10.10 owner who seemed to be interested in our boat. Since J-LANCE 12 was for sale, we made an appointment for a meeting on Friday after the races.

We had one long and intense round-the-cans race all over the Solent in medium winds of 12-17 kts. It was yet another reaching start (which we did not like, of course). We spent the entire race working hard to beat the two French teams- the JPK 10.80 Shaitan and the First 40.7 Pen Koent. Surprisingly for us, the Danish X-37 Helly Hansen did not appear to sail as well in the breezier conditions. As a result, we started to think that maybe it was optimized for light winds and the ORC rule.
Later, after dinner, I did some research on the Internet and I found the Danish X-37 was 2nd at the ORC Worlds in 2016 and was also rated lower than us in ORC! Interesting!
Day Five- Thursday- the Round Island Race!
This was an amazing day for us! Finally, we were able to sail the Round the Island clockwise in proper yachting conditions- 20 knots average wind speed, gusting to 27 kts, beating against the strong foul tide for almost three hours! The fleet split off the starting line, one group of six boats went the north shore route up to Lymington, the other short-tacking along the south shore beneath the Isle of Wight cliffs.
It was a brilliant windward leg for us- three hours to exit the Solent upwind against the tide, except for the last 30 minutes when it changed. We rounded the Needles mark first in Class 3, but as well first in Class 2 in front of the First 40 and the King 40- they were clearly shocked we were that far in front of our IRC 3 Class!
The interesting point on the long upwind leg is that we had a small failure in our outhaul purchase system. So, while we were beating in the middle of class 2 and 3 after having a not so good start, we were tacking every 5 minutes to gain places. Meanwhile, to fix the outhaul problem, I was working on the aft face of the boom, while we were passing one after another of our competitors that had all crew hiking very hard. I did see some faces on several crews, looking amazed by our performance, especially with me standing to leeward of the boom and wheel doing the repair!
Then, it was a long downwind run against the tide (again!) where a JPK 10.80 and Sunfast 3600 took the inside line below us for less tide going to St. Catherines Point. The wind against tide at the St. Catherines “overfalls” made for enormous, steep, breaking waves. As we passed the point, their position inside was a good gain for them, so we dropped to third place on elapsed.
However, from that point down to the next turning mark, we stayed within a few boats length of them for the remaining downwind run, as well as the short reaching leg, before heading back west down the Solent for the last long upwind leg. We were very fast on this leg, going higher and faster than the JPK 10.90 Shaitan and the Sunfast 3600 Redshift Reloaded.
We were just caught by one Class 2 boat by the finish line. And, we were fighting the battle to gain back first place in our class, which we did! We crossed the Royal Yacht Squadron line off Cowes about the same time as the Sunfast 3600 and the 3rd place IRC 2 class boat! Another huge win for the J-LANCE 12 team!
Our doubts about the Danish X-37 Helly Hansen were true, in more breeze the performance of the boat really dropped off compared to the whole fleet, always looking overpowered or not stable on any point of sail, they finished last in IRC 3 Class.

We had two more identical windward-leeeward races in medium winds of 12-17 kts. In both races, the same scenario played out for us. We started conservatively and were leading by the first windward mark each time, sailing ahead of the fleet to secure two bullets.
Day Seven- Saturday Finale
We had two more races on the final day. The first one was yet another windward-leeward race. Just like the day before, in 17-23 kts of breeze, it was a conservative start, and then we led all the way around the course for another bullet.
Then, the final race was a double-counter that could not be discarded! It was a long round-the-cans “Solent Tour”, with wind forecast to 25 knots and gusting over 28 knots. With such a big lead on points, we decided to sail conservatively and avoid any wipeouts or breaking something that would force us to retire. On top of that, the previous night saw an even longer and fun party than the previous one! So, several crew were quite tired and not at full capacity!
Despite sailing one reaching leg without spinnaker, while everyone on board was feeling a bit embarrassed, we finished 4th to secure the win with a 30 points ahead of the French First 40.7 Penn Koent.
It was a fantastic week and the highlight was for sure the boat and its performance. I am still astonished by how she achieved this performance, while being a pure cruiser-racer and carrying a lot of comfort inside.
The other success factor was the crew; we know each other quite well, and we had a good experience sailing the J/112E.
Nevertheless, most importantly, we had what I called the “fun factor”- spending good times ashore all together and not taking this too seriously. We know the other professional crews went to sleep early and were up at sunrise each day. Not us! We would enjoy our morning coffees and croissants and stroll back down to the boat again in time to leave the docks each day.
Finally, the RORC Race Committee and their PRO- Stewart Childerley- deserve a strong congratulations as they ran the event better than everyone could imagine.”
Chris Stone, Racing Manager of the Royal Ocean Racing Club commented, "The IRC Europeans and Commodores' Cup have been an overriding success and all the competitors are happy. The racing has been a complete test with the full range of strong tides, heavy weather, light conditions and sun and rain. There were a couple of standout performances and I congratulate J-LANCE 12 crew as worthy winners. Otherwise, the racing was incredibly close at this third European Championship, showing that IRC remains in great health." For more IRC European Championship sailing information

1st Gibbs Hill Class, 6th Overall! 15 of 29 J’s Finish Top 5 in Class!
(Newport, RI)- The 51st running of the biennial offshore classic- the Newport to Bermuda Race was a relatively benign affair, with maximum winds barely pushing 15 kts and most of the time chasing zephyrs and wind-streaks across the Atlantic Ocean. No speed records, for sure in the Maxi class. Famous bowman on George David’s R88 RAMBLER, Newport’s Jerry Kirby, was overhead saying on the bow as they approached Bermuda, “I’ve never done a race with George where we had no water over the bow! That’s crazy! What ‘thrash to the patch’? More like a mid-summer night’s cruise to paradise- Bermuda shorts, Gosling’s dark’n’stormies, and pink beaches here we come!”
And, with 75% of the fleet finishing between midnight Tuesday and Wednesday morning Bermuda time, it was more like a giant “raft-up in company” kind of race. There were no outliers either east or west that did well. Just about everyone could see each other the whole race and if you launched a drone up to 5,000 ft (easy to do), you would have captured half the fleet in one shot!

The forecasts held true, the light northerly dying and the SSE winds building slowly from 4-6 kts at the start to SSW winds offshore overnight. Thank goodness it was a strong ebb-tide at the first starting gun at 1305 hrs. Had that not been the case, the start would’ve been chaotic. As the final Maxi Class and Superyacht Class’s started, the fleet was well on its way to the Onion Patch with SSW winds of 7-12 kts.
The vast majority of the fleet endured a rather bizarre scenario offshore. The big, fast boats basically rode the remnants of a micro-Low, then micro-High to whisk them along most downwind/ reaching to Bermuda; specifically, the Gibbs Hill Lighthouse division maxis- Rambler 88, the Maxi 72 Proteus, and the two Volvo 70s. That group separated quickly into a separate system with a moderate northerly flow and rode it to Bermuda to make up the top five overall in the Gibbs Hill division. Behind them, the weather systems simply deteriorated into nothingness, with wind veering back into the northerly quadrants and dying, with numerous “park-ups” from east to west across the rhumbline for the main body of the fleet. Ultimately, the forecasted southwesterlies and westerlies from an approaching front materialized and those that held to the west of rhumbline faired better than their colleagues off to the east.
Benefitting from that unfolding scenario was Don Nicholson’s J/121 APOLLO, finishing at twilight on Wednesday at 0322 hrs for a corrected time class win of 62:21:35 hrs (elapsed of 108:12:52) in the Gibbs Hill Lighthouse Division Class 14. Taking third in class the Leonid Vasiliev’s custom J/120 DESPERADO correcting out just 30 minutes back. As a result, overall under ORR Handicap, the J/121 APOLLO was 6th corrected time behind the obvious winners in the “breakaway” group in front of the fleet- the two Volvo 70s, Maxi 72, Rambler 88, and a TP52. Fast company, indeed! A great debut offshore for the APOLLO team!

In the St David’s Lighthouse Division Class 6, Andrew Hall’s J/121 JACKHAMMER suffered a similar fate as INCOGNITO and ALCHEMY, getting just a bit too far to the east Monday afternoon as the southwest/west winds started to drift across the race course and power everyone in the big pack on starboard tack towards Bermuda on fast-reaching angles. As a result, they took the bronze in their class, missing the class win by just over 40 minutes- easily the distance they gave up going too far east.
In the Double-handed Division Class 3, Steve Berlack’s J/42 ARROWHEAD sailed a strong race, working their way to the west of rhumbline at the appropriate time on Monday afternoon and reaped the benefits to take the bronze! Taking 5th place was Gardner Grant’s J/120 ALIBI.
In the SDL Class 5, Fred Allardyce’s J/40 MISTY managed a 3rd, while Eliot Merrill’s J/42 FINESSE placed 5th.

With a number of Bermuda veterans, it was going to be interesting to see how the SDL Class 8 would unfold. In the end, it was Mike McIvor’s J/133 MATADOR that salvaged (believe it or not) a third place on the podium after leading boat-for-boat of all J’s for the first 2/3 of the race. Yes, it was the same SW/W gradient that nearly did them in too by getting a bit too far east. Taking fifth was Len Sitar’s J/44 VAMP and sixth was Chris Lewis’ KENAI.
In the Finisterre Division (cruising class) Class 13, Howie Hodgson’s J/160 BLUE took fifth place.
In the final analysis, perhaps the most shocking statistic is that out of the 29 J’s racing Bermuda, fully half of them managed a top five finish in class! As for podium finishes, two Golds, one Silvers, five Bronzes for a total of eight medals- nearly 1/3 of all J/teams entered podiumed. Pretty good odds/bets in the greater scheme of things! As J/sailors have learned/ discovered over time, a well-balanced boat that can sail in all-around conditions ultimately prevails, and often wins!
Sailor Girl- Nic Douglass- interview with Brad Willauer- Commodore of the CCA and owner of the J/46 BREEZIN UP For more Newport to Bermuda Race sailing information

(Kiel, Germany)- The inaugural Women’s SAILING Champions League took place at Kieler Woche in northern Germany on the southeastern part of the Baltic Sea. With 10 teams from six nations, the Royal Danish Yacht Club (KDY) and Hellerup Sejlklub made it a one-two victory for Denmark.

Each team competed in 20 races across the three days, and the Royal Danish Yacht Club rarely finished out of the top two in any race. Strangely, the final heat proved to be their worst score, although that 4th place didn’t matter because the crew with skipper Henriette Koch, Anne-Sofie Munk-Hansen, Tina Schmidt Gramkov, Helle Ørum Ryhding and Lotte Meldgaard Pedersen had already notched up a commanding lead in the standings.

Hellerup Sejlklub (Trine Abrahamsen, Christina Otzen, Katrine Munch Ejlev, Ida Hartvig, & Lærke Marie Sørensen) finished in second place. Both Danish teams were some way ahead of the chasing pack that were focused on who would grab the final podium place going into the last heat of the competition.

Nynne Desirée Ammundsen from ISLA (International Sailing League Association) said, “It’s been a blast! Following 50 competitive women on 10 teams from different nations sailing in Kiel is a really good start. This is only the beginning. We have established a strong base and a solid foundation to make sure the Women’s SAILING Champions League concept goes from strength to strength. Having sailors from different nations, classes, levels and ages is exactly what ISLA is working towards, developing the league format. It’s great to see sailors respond so positively to this format.”
SAP Sailing Analytics provided 24/7 additional statistics and data for sailors, fans, spectators and media like GPS tracking, real-time analysis, and live leaderboard combined with 2D visualization. You can find all results on SAPsailing.com (http://wwww.sapsailing.com)! For more Women’s SAILING Champions League sailing information

J/22s, J/70s, J/105s See Dominating Performances
(Cleveland, OH)- The highly-popular Cleveland Race Week started last weekend on the waters of Lake Erie, hosted by the Edgewater Yacht Club for just one-design classes- J/22s, J/70s, and J/105s.
The seven-boat J/22 class saw a near whitewash by Ryan Lashaway’s DEUCE team, posting a 1-2-1-1 tally for 5 pts. No one else was even close. It was really a battle for the balance of the podium. In the end, it was Jason Goscha’s DOUBLE-J that took the silver with a consistent 4-3-4-2 for 13 pts. Third was Anna Huebschmann’s ESCAPE with an equally consistent scoreline of 3-6-2-6 fro 17 pts.
The thirteen-boat J/70 fleet saw the dynamic duo of Lee Sackett & Dave Kerr simply eviscerate the fleet, starting off with five straight bullets, then backing off on the gas to take a deuce in their last race, closing with just 6 pts total! Ouch. Fellow family member Tod Sackett upheld the family honor by taking 2nd place with 21 pts total. Third was the “Jamaican Sailing Team- Sminchak/ Moose” on SPIFFIT with 23 pts.
The seven-boat J/105 class had an insanely inconceivable three-way tie on 4 pts after just two races sailed!! No one would ever believe this wackiness! So, Robert Mock’s UNBRIDLED scored a 3-1. Ron Carson’s DARK’N’STORMY posted a 1-3. And, coincidentally, who got the two 2nds?? Doh! The Uhlir Brothers’ TRIO took the 2-2. How crazy is that? So, the countback/ tiebreak worked in Mock’s favor, winning over Carson in 2nd and the Uhlir’s in third! For more Cleveland Race Week sailing information

(Block Island, RI)- The Duck Island Yacht Club in Westbrook, Connecticut and the Block Island Yacht Club have teamed up to co-host Block Island Race Week 2018. The event will feature five days of racing (2 per day) on Block Island Sound June 17th to the 22nd.
In a “Bermuda Race” year, the event has always been much more laid back with a smaller fleet of boats. Nevertheless, the camaraderie is proportionately greater as everyone seems to know everyone sailing in the regatta. That quaintness, in fact, serves as its appeal for many sailors that simply want a relaxing “sailing vacation.”


J/109 Horizon Jobs Class!
(Seattle, WA)- Yes, indeed, the Sloop Tavern YC’s Three Buoys Fiasco race course of NSJMN for a distance of just 13.46nm was a fiasco in the making. In the end, it seemed like just about every boat from a J/27 up to J/109s completed the course in about 2 to 2.5 hours, such were the conditions, a range of 5.38 kts to 6.73 kts for any boat that floated! LOL.
In the end, it’s supposed to be “fun & games”. Which it was. Chalk it up for the notoriously fun-loving Sloop Tavern YC in Seattle, WA to host another laid-back “Three Buoys Fiasco” race!
After a rather “reachy” course setup, even an Optimist dinghy might have covered the course in 2-2.5 hours. Seems like everyone could do around 6.5 kts on this one.
Organized chaos it was. In the Class 4 FS division, Ulf Georg Gwildis’ J/30 IMPULSIVE secured a 4th.
The Class 5 FS division had Leo Morales immaculate J/27 WIZARD snatch the silver, while Lek Dimarucot’s J/80 UNDERDOG closed the podium with a bronze.
Class 6 FS had a trio of J/105s. At best they could manage was a third- with Jeremy Boyne’s’ AVALANCHE landing on the podium. Fourth was Jim Geros’ LAST TANGO and fifth Phil LeMouel’s LIFTOFF.
Finally, in Class 7 FS it was Jerry Woodfield’s J/109 SHADA that won by far with the largest margin of any class winner in the race- over 11 minutes on the short course on corrected time. That happened to be at the expense of J-colleague Bill Daniel’s pretty J/100 TOURIST that took second! For more Three Buoy Fiasco sailing information
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(Port Townsend, WA)- On Saturday, June 16th, the infamous Race to Alaska started off Port Townsend, WA for the first qualifying leg of 40nm. Then, on Monday, June 18th, the “real race” took off to Ketchikan, Alaska for over 735nm up fearsome straits with currents up to 15 kts, tornado-puffs pealing down hillsides like 40 kts microbursts gales, and even snow midsummer off the Canadian maritime provinces of British Columbia and the “inside passage” north to Alaska. The weather can be fearsome. A race not for the faint of heart, that is for sure.

June 18th- Monday- 2035 hrs Pacific
Quick update for those who didn't stay up half the night watching the tracker :)
The team made an incredible start out of the harbor, and worked really hard to build a lead in super light air and against current in the early going. Really good stuff.
They had a tough decision to make at Turn point, and in the pre-race briefing, we had discussed going out of Boundary pass if they were late to this point.....but they went inside in a gamble to get up to Active pass before the current turned against them.....and it almost worked!!

They made a choice to go north to the next pass, Portlier, which had a 3 am window of slack to allow them through...but they were fighting the ebb current in light air and you can see on the tracker that they bailed out and just hung around Active pass for hours waiting for their chance to get through there instead. I'm pretty sure that was a decision based on fatigue from a long hot day of pedaling and light air sailing.
In reality, if you got to turn point late and elected to go inside, you needed to 100% commit to going up to Portlier (as the race winning PT watercraft did). That would have put them right where he is now, literally 25 miles at least ahead.
But as luck had it, the outside boats got just enough breeze to creep up north overnight, and the tough luck is that today the southerly boats haven't gotten the wind (as we expected) and so the boats in front will extend the lead and things look pretty grim for now.
BUT, that same idea works both ways, and here is my two cents on what's up next.

PLUS, the next big "gate" to get past is Seymour Narrows....and if the leaders get there any time other than slack, they have to wait up to six hours. So once again, a little luck can either get you way up the course or bring back the fleet to you.
The next wild card is the actual Johnstone Straight. They can get past the narrows by pedaling (it's short) but all the teams will be very challenged if the light air continues as forecast and they have to manage the entire straight under mostly human power..... The team knows this, and the pre-race plan was to pack in the sleep today/ tonight so they can power thru.
Once the leaders (whoever they are) clear that hurdle, they will be very hard to catch. It's been a crazy race so far!

Wow! Big gains overnight for Team Blue Flash. As expected, the southerly breeze came and brought them back into this race. I'm sure there are smiles onboard this morning, as they are finally getting a chance to show they are good sailors.
They took 10 miles out of almost everyone, sailing away from the Olson 30 Dreamcatcher, and taking time out of the leaders.
I'll reveal my secret weapon now: It's called the A2PHRF kite. At 103 sq meters, it's much bigger up top than the typical 89 sqm J/88 kite. Great for this stuff. Version one took us to several victories (until Cal Offshore week when it went from 20 to 30 knots quickly and Andrew H (included here so I can tease him yet one more time :) found out that at 19 knots boat speed even he can't keep the J/88 from wiping out when the rudder cavitates!) So, we shredded that one.
But version two was cut even better for some reaching, and used only in the Mac race (served us well). New sails are fast!
The big story: The girls are nearing the tidal gate at Seymour Narrows, but they are going to miss the 10:30 ebb by a hair! That means they get their turn to sit while the Blueflash gets until 4:30 to get there. So, it's race restart at Seymour Narrows!!!
Then they all go thru and guess what? It's a 10.6kn flood! So, they all sit on the other side in Brown's bay until 11pm. Then when they finally get the ebb....there won't be any real wind!
So, it's river sailing in light wind and current. Sean and Grant have been racing in that condition since they were 8! I like their chances. Going to be tricky at night too.... This just got interesting.....

Got a great text around noon from the team: "Team is in really good spirits. Great trip so far". After worrying about them half the night getting thru the Seymour Narrows and Johnstone Straits, that was a good text!
Sean started dreaming about this race two years ago, watched every video, analyzed all the tracks, talked to prior participants, and set out with one goal: Create an all youth team and be the youngest to finish R2AK.
I bring that up because, naturally, in the prep and early stages of this R2AK, they clearly were out there with competitive ambitions. I'm thinking right about now they are stepping back and realizing that R2AK is really all about challenging yourself in the company of like-minded (crazy) people. And, they are having a great adventure!
For the moment, they look good coming through Johnstone Straits without getting into big headwinds. The leaders are about 30 miles up the course, but considering the team stopped for a few tidal gates on the race so far, it's actually pretty cool there is this much company near the front of the fleet.
I think things could get closer, actually, as the leaders enter back into the channels to Bella Bella and the chasers look like they'll be reaching fast. And, a forecasted gale will slow the others down, while the J/88 can keep sailing!
I think Russell Brown on PT Watercraft (solo guy on a Gougeon catamaran, who stops every night) is sleeping more than I am this week!
Remember, they will lose cell coverage soon, so not likely to hear much until Bella Bella. I'll relay any sat phone updates I receive.

I got a call from Sean. All good. They tried to get out of Johnstone Strait, but got flushed back. No wind, much more current than charts suggest.
Trying again on this next cycle.
Conditions change quickly and don't reflect what we see online. Talks five minutes, then wind built from dead to over 15 kts. “Gotta go Dad”!
He confirmed they missed Active Pass by 45 minutes, so the ten mile lead turned into a ten mile loss. They tried for Portlier, but couldn't make berthing/ docks against the current. Their pedal drive is not up to the other leaders level- like the “girl power” in front of them.
He said the leaders went thru Seymour Narrows with nearly max ebb in no breeze (up to 15 kts!). Gutsy call. They would have had double that current, so they waited. They skipped the next slack to flood, as they didn't think they could get into Brown's Bay and would get flushed back through Seymour Narrows!

They know about the dissolving omega block, approaching Low (depression), gale warning for Johnstone Strait. That should help them a lot against the leaders- the J/88 can handle that, not so sure about the others!
They are going to need water and battery recharge in Bella Bella and plan to stop.
They are thinking things through and playing it conservative.
They told me to tell Stu Johnstone that you can hit a large floating tree at 5 knots going upwind in a J/88 and it doesn't leave a scratch!
I guess that proves the logs don't go away at night....Go BlueFlash!
More news when it’s fit to print next week! Or, follow “LIVE” at the links below. Fascinating race!!
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Richie sailed the J/88 HOKEY SMOKE in this year’s J/88 class at the Chicago NOOD on Lake Michigan. His crew was comprised of the following women:
- Denise Anhurst - first NOODs
- Annie Baumann- crew chief
- Kristin Camarda- first NOODs
- Marcella Grunert
- Freya Olsen
- Ann Zeiler
- Joy Wilson
Chicago, the home of many competitive fleets and active sailing, recently hosted the 30th annual Helly Hansen NOODs, June 8th-10th. A popular and successful event, which many Chicago racers hibernate throughout the arctic winter to rally to enjoy their first sip of summer, the Chicago NOODs is always looked forward to as a hallmark of the beginning of racing season. True to Chicago’s knack for unpredictable weather, this year’s NOODs had its fair spread of conditions including: storms, light and moderate air, rain, and the unusual, but always surprising, fog.
The fog was not the only surprise. This year, J/88 HOKEY SMOKE owner Rich Stearns made the decision to build his program off the strength and fitness of “girl-power”. Bringing various levels of experience together was going to be a challenge, his all-women crew ranged from mid-twenties to mid-fifties. Racing with an all-women crew is not common in the male-dominated sport of sailing.

Stearns’ green crew, started at the bottom of the pack, and worked their way together as a team to finish the final race of the regatta with a third in fleet!
But, as with any good result, improvement takes time and focus.
On Day 1, the weather, crew work and maneuvers proved to be challenging and offered lots of opportunity for improvement. The AP was signaled at 08:45 and not dropped until 12:00. As HOKEY SMOKE went out to course, they went through the responsibilities of positions, but with limited time before the first sequence to practice tacks, trim and sets. With the first practice set, and a shakeout of some cobwebs, the chute finally came down. It looked like a cat on a leash. It just did not look right.
Annie, trimmer, commented to her pitman, Freya, and fellow trimmer, Joy, that it just did not fall well. “That’s gonna be a not good for me,” Annie stated in low, stern voice.
Freya quickly replied, “That’s gonna be a no for me, too, dawg!”
And, so the expectation of real crew improvement was born. The team quickly debriefed and checked the kite. With little time before the start sequence, a little more banter was exchanged and the crew agreed there would be no more cats on the leash.
“We gotta put a dawg on it ladies!” the crew chief kept coaching. As the first race would sound off, the HOKEY SMOKE team would see where stood against the rest of the pack.
Placing last in the first race, the boat was moving slow. But, the crew attitude and spirit was eager to improve their performance. Small communications and adjustments were made. And, trust was being built.
“The secret sauce to competitive sailing is crew mates trusting each other,” commented Denise, first time NOODs competitor. “What is unique to HOKEY SMOKE is Rich and his crew’s commitment to establishing a learning environment whereby each crew member can improve their skills.”
Rich debriefed after each race and encouraged crew participation, both to learn and figure out the key boat mechanics and sail trim that were contributing to our lagging performance.
He communicated in layman's term clearly. Cool as a cucumber, never once did he stress his decibels during a foul or slow maneuver. Ever so patient, he carefully identified and provided insight to teach and support his crew. To which his team responded well and followed suit, each of the teammates respectfully teaching another, never squishing toes.
The biggest challenge for the boat would be the roundings. The leading boats BANTER and EXILE were a guide as we saw their spinnakers wonderfully fill and launch right at the mark. It was clear the HOKEY SMOKE chute was not getting that pop-out like the other boats, and was a failure to launch. The halyard was either too quick on the hoist, filling the chute halfway, or too delayed, the clew catching on the lifeline. The starboard jib sheet was another factor. So was a graceful and clean douse.
The timing of hoisting a spinnaker happens very quickly, and when it is done just right, it’s “Goldie Locks”.
During the first two days, we had switched the positions at the mast; which changed up the tempo and groove. The command to hoist was getting confused with nearby boats hoisting, as well as “get ready to hoist”. The women crew, as great communicators, quickly established key words and lexicon to clarify the timing and the execution of the maneuver. Ironing out any confusion, the term “bang it” was defined as the proper announcement of when to hoist. By the last race of the day, we were in a groove and were able to dance around the weather mark with a good chute set.
Another flaw that we witnessed was that the starboard jib sheet was loaded on the winch at the roundings, not being released when we were furling the jib. The sheet stalled the process, causing some confusion and, more importantly, shadowing the spinnaker from filling and letting the boat take-off. We figured out that the sheet was being loaded from former port lay line tack approaching the rounding. But on a starboard lay line, it had been left on, when there was no need for it. As a crew, a good team is constantly figuring out the “go fast” tricks, or slips that might be dragging you down, keeping the sheet free while approaching the mark was the solution.
The take down of the chute always requires careful coordination. Although it’s a step-by-step process, part of racing is that not everything goes as planned. Another source of excitement was “just in time” communications from back of the boat regarding the style of douse. From leeward to Mexican, it was important that the front of the boat be ready on the correct side, and that if a last second decision was made, the crew in front was synchronized with the back of the boat. The bowman on the first day, out of sync, began to bring the chute down by the clew and the leech. During a debrief, a crew-mate went up to explain that, collapsing the foot first on the chute during the leeward roundings is the quickest way to decrease the sail area of a spinnaker, making it ineffective as a sail. Making a triangle with her hands, she collapsed her the thumbs (foot), and showed how the head of the sail theoretically collapses easily down.
Although elementary to a veteran racer, there were many small, yet significant maneuvers that were crucial to boat speed and performance against the competition. The numerous examples of women teaching and trusting each other to create solutions were a wonderful affirmation that sex doesn’t determine skill. To achieve skill is the opportunity to experience, to be given the chance, to improve and become a good racer. A good racer, is eager, willing to learn, and passionate. Over the weekend, there was no lack of passion, good humor, and competitive desire on HOKEY SMOKE. It can be said that some ladies are like cats, but this crew was determined to play with the boys, and “put a dawg on it.”
Over the series, the HOKEY SMOKE crew concluded that whenever beginning something new it is much like, a cat on the leash. But, the effort and motivation to succeed, to do better, to work together, and to have fun while doing it, is what racing is about in any team and sport for that matter. To, “put a dawg on it”, is not only about having a positive humor to improve, but also to do it with a little sass and style, and willingness to identify things that are not working on the boat, and to overcome the obstacles. The phrase became a mantra for the ladies and Stearns, and was a tool that reinforced the new crew skills and communication.
After a few lumps, bumps and a cat’s meow or two, let the record show that HOKEY SMOKE showed up to play, took that cat off the leash, and “put the dawg on it.” They look forward to all the catcalls and barks throughout the season. Congratulations to teams BANTER, EXILE and WINDSONG for their standing on the podium. Thank you to Chicago Yacht Club and Helly Hansen NOODs for running a wonderful, competitive, fun regatta. And greatest thanks to Rich Stearns, for improving and growing the presence of women in sailboat racing. Watch a fun, amusing video of the HOKEY SMOKE team on Facebook here

“The Samui Regatta (http://www.samuiregatta.com) is a major event in the China Sea, located in the Doldrums latitudes, with light winds and a few violent clouds and thunder showers in the mid-afternoons- typical of our climate here.
As a boat owner, I had the great happiness to have my J/41 SOUAY1 sailed singlehanded up to Thailand. I also felt very proud to invite guests for a ride on her after I installed a full teak deck with an integrated elegant and comfortable teak cockpit (all Burma teak, of course, of the best grade possible I could find!).

To keep weight low, the strategy was to have a limited crew for the Samui Regatta. We had aboard:
- Ray Waldron, an Australian wave surfer, who also races his Etchells,
- Cedric Rimaud, a passionate French owner of three classic 6-meters, and
- Guido Wedekind, a German professional fighter, who lived for years on his 54 ft wooden sailboat.

We hope you enjoy some of the photos from our experiences sailing the famous J/41 here in our waters off Thailand and winning the famous Samui Regatta Cup. Wonderful boat. Fantastic, fun crew! Thank you all.” Thanks for the contribution from proud J/41 owner- Jean Rheault.
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