BVI
Sailing Festival - Second Sailing Festival Kicks
Off
Tortola
British Virgin Islands, March 30, 2004 - Day one
of the BVI Sailing Festival - the three-day, low-pressure
warm up for the BVI Spring Regatta to take place
this weekend (April 2-4) - got off to a slower
than hoped for start as light winds dogged the
competitors attempting to race to the Bitter End
Yacht Club in Virgin Gorda's North Sound.
Only
18 boats out of the 60 entered recorded finish
times: some took a lie in after the kick off party
at Nanny Cay last night; others took a look at
the startline and turned on their engines; and
others took the bit between their teeth and crossed
the line only to run out of time on the course.
After
leaving Nanny Cay Marina, the presenting sponsor
and host marina for the 33rd annual BVI Spring
Regatta, the planned course was to take participants
to a mark off The Baths - one of the British Virgin
Islands' most picturesque natural wonders - and
then on to the North Sound leaving a group of
islands known as "the Dogs" together
with Mosquito Island and Mosquito Rock to starboard
and entering the North Sound via a channel through
Colquhoun Reef. The finish line would be off the
Bitter End Yacht Club.
Only
Roy E. Disney's maxZ86 Pyewacket and Bill Alcott's
Andrews 68 Equation finished in Racing A. Pyewacket
took three hours and fifteen minutes to complete
the course. While Clay Deutsch's Chippewa made
it to the line she was out of time.
As
the wind died and became more fickle the course
was shortened for all the other classes with the
race to finish at The Baths.
In
Racing B, Martin Jacobson's Swan 48 Crescendo
- first in class at this year's Swan American
Regatta - gained line honours as well as the win
on corrected time. Mick Schlens who has returned
to the BVI for the third time and the second time
with his chartered Express 37 Cosmic Warlord was
second and Beneteau 40.7 First Home with Mort
Weintraub at the helm was third.
Chris
White's Atlantic 55 Javelin was the only boat
to finish in the Multihull class.
Dot
Com, a Moorings 463 topped Bareboat A with Big
Ben, a Moorings 494 second and Beneteau 50 Sea-duction
third. Frevo, aka Team Germany from the German
office of the BVI Tourist Board won Bareboat B.
Bavaria 36 Durley Dene with Sarah Kafetz, winner
of the charter with Horizon Yacht Charters at
Cowes Week last year was second and Baronesse,
another German entry third.
With
only seven of the twenty boats in the bareboat
division finishing today, competition will be
hot on the race back to Nanny Cay on Thursday
for The Moorings Sailing Festival Cup which will
be awarded to the best performing bareboat in
the Sailing Festival.
Wednesday
is LayDay Bitter End-style with as much - or as
little - as people want to do. If the wind stays
light some may be doing more "laying"
than planned.
However
with wind, eight teams will be battling it out
on the waters of the North Sound for top honours
in the first annual Nations' Challenge Cup with
teams from the USA, the UK, Italy, France, Puerto
Rico, the BVI, the USVI and Germany flying their
national flags.
The
event will be sailed in the Bitter End Yacht Club's
fleet of Hunter 216s. With two flights, the "B"
teams will race in the morning, and the "A"
teams will race in the afternoon. Four races will
be sailed in each flight with the boats swapped
after each race.
The
Around Virgin Gorda Race is also planned. The
course is approximately 24 miles, and will provide
for some stunning spinnaker runs down the backside
of the island.
The
best performing bareboat in the Sailing Festival
will earn The Moorings Sailing Festival Cup while
the best performing Swan that competes in both
the Sailing Festival and the BVI Spring Regatta
will get its name on a perpetual trophy presented
by the Bitter End.
The
expanded seven-day format has turned the traditional
three days of racing action into a week-long sailing
festival that takes participants throughout the
British Virgin Islands. The inaugural Sailing
Festival introduced last year saw 38 boats compete.
The
three-day BVI Spring Regatta takes place on the
south side of Tortola in the Sir Francis Drake
Channel on three different courses. The largest
ever BVI Spring Regatta concluded last year with
138 boats.
For
news, results and photos on the BVI Spring Regatta
& Sailing Festival as it unfolds, visit the
official web site: www.bvispringregatta.org. For
more information on Nanny Cay Marina visit: www.nannycay.com.
The
BVI Spring Regatta is jointly owned by the Royal
BVI Yacht Club and the BVI Chamber of Commerce
and Hotel Association. The 2004 BVI Spring Regatta
& Sailing Festival is presented by Nanny Cay
Marina. The BVI Tourist Board is a platinum sponsor.
The Moorings, Heineken, Mount Gay Rum, First Caribbean
International Bank, The Bitter End Yacht Club,
and Road Town Wholesale (1975) Limited are gold
sponsors. Tortola Yacht Services, CCT Boatphone,
Maui Jim sunglasses, Village Cay Hotel & Marina
and Prospect Reef Hotel are silver sponsors.
Caribbean
Star, Fujifilm and Dasani are bronze sponsors.