J/111 & J/122 Lead Around The Vineyard
(Edgartown, Martha's Vineyard)- Edgartown Yacht Club held its first race
around Martha’s Vineyard Island in the summer of 1938, and except for
the years of the Second World War the race has been an annual event
since then. The 52 nm course is a splendid sail. It is reminiscent of
the race around the Isle of Wight in England, which was the course of
the first America’s Cup. The distance around Martha’s Vineyard is
similar (only a few miles longer); both courses have views of cliffs,
headlands, villages and open water; and the tidal currents and wind
effects are important in both. The course around the Vineyard passes in
sight of the seven lighthouses of Cape Poge, Gay Head, Tarpaulin Cove,
Nobska, West Chop, East Chop and Edgartown. In the morning the fleet
sails between Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket along the east beach of
Chappaquiddick. At midday they are in the open Atlantic Ocean with views
of the south coast of the Vineyard. In the afternoon, rounding the
gorgeous cliffs of Gay Head, the fleet sails up Vineyard Sound which was
the second busiest body of water in the world during the age of sail.
The report from Doug Curtiss aboard WICKED 2.0 gives you a great
perspective on what it's like to sail the race: "After a short upwind
beat, we sailed down the channel between MVY and ACK with chutes set.
We reached the sea buoy ahead of the larger faster J/122 PUGWASH sailed
by David Murphy. She became our sparing partner for the rest of the
day.
The breeze freshened out of the West, so we had a long beat to windward
for the 22 miles down the South Shore. We made the turn at Gay Head
about 3 minutes behind PUGWASH which put us in very good spot as she
owed us about 10 minutes corrected time after a 52 nm race.
We tacked down wind along the North Shore. We held our own until PUGWASH
caught some extra tide lift at Middleground by going outside near the
shoal where the tide runs stronger. She lead by about 4 minutes as we
came past East Chop and headed to Edgartown.
Then disaster. The steady 10 knots out the West we had enjoyed all day
began to die, and we saw the big boats out ahead starting to dump their
chutes. The breeze came in from the East Northeast almost 180 degrees
the opposite direction, with a big calm doldrums in between. We held
our spinnaker as long as possible in the old breeze, but then got parked
for almost 30 minutes with very little movement. PUGWASH was to
windward and in the new breeze. She sailed off out of site to the
finish.
We were very happy with a second at the end of the day. Anytime you can
knock off a Jim Swartz TP52 VESPER that sails away over the horizon,
that is a good day. But the real test was against the larger and faster
J/122. Dave Murphy's PUGWASH is a well sailed boat and we were in the
hunt till the very end. Hoping for a rematch at Buzzard's Bay Regatta
in August!"
After PUGWASH's victory and WICKED 2.0 finishing second in PHRF class,
other J's sailing in PHRF A included 3rd place finisher URSUS MARITIMUS,
a J/120 sailed by Jim Masiero, beating out the world-famous
VESPER/QUANTUM RACING TP52 sailed by Jim Swartz (a California VC
renowned for making the first investment into FACEBOOK!). Fifth was yet
another J/120, Stephen Besse's APRES.
In PHRF B, Ted Herlihy's J/109 GUT FEELING walked off with handicap
honors in their class. Lying sixth was Nick Aswad's J/105 CLIO and in
eighth was Bill Veno's J/130 WALTZING MATILDA.
In PHRF C Non-spinnaker cruising division, the two J/42s sailed all the
way around the island seemingly glued to one another. Gaining the upper
hand at the end was Tom Townsend's WINDSLIPPER, giving the slip to
their earnest colleagues, Kent Nicholas' PANASEA, to finish 4th and 5th
respectively. For more Round the Island Race sailing information