Spring regatta developments

Alaistair Abrehart updates us prior to this year's BVI Spring Regatta

Wednesday February 25th 2004, Author: Alaistair Abrehart, Location: Caribbean
With the BVI Spring Regatta and Sailing Festival only 33 days away, work continues apace on one of the Caribbean's pre-eminent regattas.

New Beach At Nanny Cay

Big boats will be docking together and competitors will be partying with sand between their toes in six weeks' time following the completion of the new beach. Regatta host and presenting sponsor Nanny Cay Marina dredged the marina to 14 feet and created a new beachfront for the regatta village for the thirty-third outing of this popular Caribbean regatta.

The deeper access will allow many, if not all, of the big boats expected the ability to dock at the heart of the regatta's shoreside activities.

This new area is larger than the existing regatta village site 'further inland' and the additional space will provide an ample 'dinghy park' for the beach cats and plenty of room for a new and improved regatta village.

Nanny Cay has a two-year plan to develop the premiere event facility in the British Virgin Islands which includes creating permanent booths for vendors, bars and restaurants, running power throughout the area and building a permanent sound stage. Although all the initiatives will not be in place for this year's event, competitors will see a marked improvement of the infrastructure over previous years together with the beach frontage.

Watch regatta developments with Nanny Cay's webcam

Lay Day Around Virgin Gorda Race Announced

On the Sailing Festival LayDay - Wednesday, 31 March - the Bitter End Yacht Club will be hosting an Around Virgin Gorda Race. While not formally part of the BVI Spring Regatta scoring, this race will be open to all Sailing Festival and Spring Regatta competitors. According to the Bitter End's John Glynn, "we've injected one more very scenic distance race to the schedule to allow the bigger boats to stretch their legs."

The highly tactical Around Virgin Gorda Race is approximately 24 miles and will provide for some stunning spinnaker runs down the backside of the island. A number of maxi+ raters, such as the new Pyewacket, transatlantic record holder Mari Cha IV, sleds Equation and Titan, and Aera, are expected to race. Early reservations are recommended and potential participants should contact John Glynn at the Bitter End Yacht Club, by email here.

As an aside John added: "People that are planning on doing the Sailing Festival portion (as it looks like many are), and don't plan on sleeping aboard, should begin the process of securing accommodations up in North Sound. Rooms at Bitter End, Saba Rock, and Leverick Bay are going quickly."

Nation's Challenge Cup On Track

Seven teams are now confirmed to battle it out on the waters of the North Sound in Virgin Gorda for top honours in the first annual Nation's Challenge Cup also scheduled to take place on the Sailing Festival LayDay.

While some sailors may be 'laying' about during the Layday of the second annual BVI Sailing Festival and precursor to the BVI Spring Regatta, teams from the USA, the UK, Italy, France, Puerto Rico, the BVI and the USVI will be flying their national flags.

The Sailing Festival Nation's Challenge Cup, is open to two-boat teams representing their country of entry.

The event will be sailed in the Bitter End Yacht Club's new 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. Crew weight per boat will be no more than 675 lbs.

There is one team slot left and the entry fee is $100 and includes boat usage and backstay national flag.

The 2004 Sailing Festival - a low-pressure, three-day warm up for the regatta - starts on Monday, 29 March with a welcome party at Nanny Cay. Three days of destination cruising, racing and Layday fun including the Nation's Challenge Cup, lead up to the main three-day BVI Spring Regatta starting on Friday, 2 April. 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 this year saw 38 boats.

The three-day regatta takes place on the south side of Tortola in the Sir Francis Drake Channel on three different courses. The regatta will see it largest ever entry with 138 boats.

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