Veteran J/Sailors Love Windy, Wavy Conditions
(Hong Kong, China)- Hong Kong's largest and most inclusive sailing
event, the Tommy Bahamas Around Island Race, featured more than 200
sailing boats, together with outrigger canoes and coastal rowing boats.
All teams battled it out over the 26nm course that is known as the
“Round Island Race” (e.g. all around the islands that comprise Hong
Kong)! Cool race, spectacular vistas of the world-renown city and
breathtaking views of the ginormous, lush, jungle green mountain-tops.
Anyone looking out of their window in Hung Hom or Chai Wan on the
morning of the start would see hundreds of boats converging on Hong
Kong’s Victoria Harbour from every point of the compass for Hong Kong’s
biggest annual celebration of sail and paddle on the water.
The Around the Island Race became an annual event in 1983, however its
origins go back to 1864 when six boats raced around Hong Kong Island to
Starboard (clockwise) and Hong Kong’s sailors have since regarded this
route as a tricky challenge with unpredictable wind shifts. The race
course features a 26nm circumnavigation of Hong Kong Island to
starboard, which has been sanctioned by Hong Kong Marine Department
since 2003. This year there was record-setting breeze, so the Royal Hong
Kong YC PRO, Ms Inge Strompf-Jepsen, managed to fire off twenty
separate starts for sailboats at RHKYC’s Kellett Island clubhouse.
With
the replenishment of the northeast monsoon filling in overnight, many
competitors took one look at the conditions and decided that prudence
was the better part of valor. This included the majority of the beach
cat classes, where even the most battle hardened sailors took one look
at the conditions whipped up by the 15-18kt easterly in the harbour and
decided that the 25kts plus and two to three metre seas at Cape
D’Aguilar were not for them or their boats.
With 258 entries, this was the biggest prospective fleet recorded for
the 26nm circumnavigation. With even Cyberport Gate getting a good
20-25kt blow and the relatively flat stretch along the south and south
west of Hong Kong Island meant the entire fleet would likely be on
record-setting paces for their respective classes. Indeed, after the
finish times were recorded and handicap times applied, it was pretty
clear that most records fell from previous years.
Amongst the J/Teams, there were some excellent performances. In the
highly competitive IRC 2 Class, the J/111 MOJITO sailed by Simon Blore
had a tremendous race, taking second overall and narrowly missing the
overall win by a mere minute and a half! For more Tommy Bahama Around Island Race sailing information