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Marion Bermuda Full Moon Rising
Marion MA, June 8, 2019: Sailors preparing for the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race— the first warning for the first start is Friday at 12 noon— have a busy week ahead of them. Many boats will be out doing safety drills and making last minute adjustments, and all will be stowing provisions and loading offshore gear. One important task is to test all satellite phones to make sure contact with the Offshore communications team are linked and locked.
Each yacht must demonstrate that their satellite communication system operates properly by having someone from the yacht’s crew place a satellite phone call to and receive a satellite phone call from the Offshore Communications Team. They will call a designated number posted in the Race News Updates on the web site. The Offshore Communications Team will be available for the Communications Registration daily from 0900 to 1600 now until the end of registration.
Of the 42 boats entered in the two divisions of this year’s race, 14 of them will be sailing as Celestial Navigation entries racing for the Beverly Yacht Club Polaris Trophy and the Navigator’s Trophy. The Marion Bermuda Race is the only offshore race originating in a US port that has a celestial division and awards excellence in steering by the stars.
Ron Wisner, the guru of Marion Bermuda celestial navigators, has posted an excellent article — “Prepping the Celestial Boat for the Marion to Bermuda Race — Including the New AIS Rules”. This is a ‘must read’ article for all celestial entries and everyone else interested in the celestial challenge.
He writes… “Every boat owner has a winter “boat list” of projects and maintenance as the boat is being readied for the next season. However, if the owner is doing the Marion Bermuda race [by celestial navigation], the usual winter’s “boat list” has doubled.”
“The celestial boat has some additional preparations that the other boats do not. Some of this additional preparation stems from the fact that we cannot use our electronic instruments. Other preparations come from the nature and practice of the actual navigation.”
He continues with a discussion of on board networks and AIS which is required in the 2019 race for all entries.
“On today’s modern boat,” Wisner says, “the instruments are part of a network and they talk to each other. The chart-plotter sends GPS data to other instruments on board such as repeaters and radar, including the boat’s position to the VHF, making that information difficult to avoid. In order to prepare for the race, decisions must be made regarding what instruments will remain on and how to avoid seeing information which is not allowed. Ways must be found to cover up the fields with tape or placards on any instruments aboard which display positions or other GPS data.”
“This year will be the first year in which AIS is required. The rules state that every effort is to be made that AIS is continuously broadcasting the boat’s name and MMSI number, however, there is no requirement that the boat receives or monitors AIS."
"The rules additionally require the best efforts to monitor AIS for AIS-SART or similar distress signals at all times. However, this requirement is fulfilled by monitoring of VHF which will receive both mayday distress calls and DSC signals. DSC broadcasts the same information as AIS, that of the vessel name and position, and in the same line-of-sight range of up to 20 nautical miles.”
Other topics in the article focus on Boat Speed: What’s Old is New, the ship’s log the compass, paper charts and the clock… knowing GMT.
Wisner concludes, “We will have a full moon for the start of the race which will be nice for night sailing. For navigators, the full moon will offer an opportunity to take moon sights at night, especially useful if you happen to hit the Gulf Stream at night.”
Special Prizes and Awards Competition for special awards is a unique attraction for the Marion-Bermuda Race. The Notice of Race has all the details.
Go to the website for photos and descriptions of the trophies and the competition for them.
The R&W Rope Rigging Solutions Team Trophy is offered for established Yacht Clubs or Sailing organizations that form a team of three member yachts. The team whose three yachts have the lowest corrected time total will be the winner.
Yachts sailing with a crew of two, a crew of three or four or an all-female crew of any number may compete in the double-handed, short-handed, and all-female competitions respectively. Prizes are the Double-Handed Trophy, the short-handed L. Bryon Kingery, Jr. Memorial Trophy and the Commodore Faith Paulsen Trophy for the ladies.
A “family” yacht racing for the Beverly Family Trophy is one with a crew of five or more with all or all-but-one being members of a single household or a single family may race for the family prize. Persons related to a common grandparent and spouses of these “family”, too.
The Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy encourages youth participation. A "Youth" yacht has at least four (4) youths aboard with at least 66% of the crew qualified as youths. A youth sailor must be 16 years of age or older but not more than 23 years old by June 14, 2019. One or more adults at least 23 years old by June 14, 2019 must be on board.
The Beverly Yacht Club Polaris Trophy is a prize for stargazers. If a yacht has elected to be celestially navigated, she will receive a 3% favorable adjustment to her ORR rating.
About the Marion Bermuda Race
The 2019 race is the 22nd Marion Bermuda Race and the 42nd year for the 645-mile open ocean challenge for cruiser type yachts.
The first Marion-Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race in 1977 saw 104 starters cross the line. Over the forty-two years since that first race the race has evolved into a true offshore challenge for cruising yachts, amateur, family and youth sailors. Special prizes abound to emphasis celestial navigation, short handed sailing, family crews and regional competition. The race is handicapped under the ORR rating system to assure the fairest scoring available for ocean racing yachts.
About the Marion Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race Association
The Marion Bermuda Race encourages the development of blue-water sailing skills on seaworthy yachts that can be handled safely offshore with limited crew. The Marion Bermuda Race is a 501(c)(3) organization and among other educational efforts, supports and encourages Youth Sailing programs. The Marion to Bermuda Race is organized and run entirely by hundreds of volunteering members of The Beverly Yacht Club (BYC), The Blue Water Sailing Club (BWSC) and The Royal Hamilton Amateur Dinghy Club (RHADC) for the Marion Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race Association.
Press Contact
Talbot Wilson
[email protected]
850-217-7138
Kiwi Spirit— a Family Scratch Boat
by Talbot Wilson
Marion MA, June 12, 2019: The Class ‘A’ boats in the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race hope that the new handicapping ‘Anti-Bias’ adjustment added to this edition of the race will give them a better chance of winning the Founders Trophy for first place on corrected time. However that settles out, they still have their sights set on the Blue Water Sailing Club Board of Governors Trophy for shortest elapsed time for the 645nm course.
The scratch boat this year— the one predicted by its handicap to have the best elapsed time to win that trophy— is a family sailed Farr 63 called Kiwi Spirit, skippered by 18-year old Jonathan Riley of Marion, MA. Owner Mark Riley, his dad, will be the navigator. Chuck Fontaine will also be along as a team leader.
Jo, as Jonathan is called, and his sister cut their sailing teeth at the Beverly Yacht Club in Marion. He started sailing in the third grade. She was in the seventh. Chloe will skipper Kiwi Spirit in the Marblehead Halifax race in July.
Mark Riley explained the family plan for the boat, “We bought the boat for the reason we are doing this race. It is manageable with limited experience people yet big enough that we could take a lot of family and friends on board and enjoy some nice blue water sailing.”
Jo added, “It was meant for shorthanded sailing. Since we are taking so many family members it met all of our needs…. We want to go fast and finish in our slot.”
That means he wants to finish first. He added, “We see a couple of holes [Parking lots] along the way. We hope to bridge those if we can.”
Father, son and daughter plus three cousins and a brother-in-law make up the family part of the crew. Joining them is Chuck Fontaine, a lifelong friend, who has run the Mass Maritime Sailing Program. Riley said he wouldn’t dream of going offshore without Fontaine. "He’s more than competent and very entertaining."
Mark said, “Everyone wants to do well. People do the Marion Bermuda Race because they want to be able to say they did it, not because they want to say they won. However you finish, everybody should be proud of being able to say they did it. If you did well, then fantastic... and maybe it will make you want to do it again.”
Speaking of Jo, Mark said, “There are very few people who can say they did it with their kids, and didn’t drag their kids. Jo drags me along.”
On the competitive side Jo said, “We’d like to finish Monday mid-day.” Mark agreed, “With our targets, we could make it.”
Jo attended the Oakcliff Sailing Program last summer to hone his offshore skills. He has done multiple races to Bermuda. For Mark Riley, this year will mark his 18th Bermuda race.
In his first Marion Bermuda Race in 2013, a younger Jo Riley was on the 15-person crew of line honors winner Shindig. He was the youngest sailor in the race. At 12 years old Jo stood all his watches including two at night.
This year is Jo’s fourth race from Marion. Plus he has done four returns for a total of eight Gulf Stream crossings. He’ll be the skipper and looking for line honors again.
Given the right conditions, which may actually be shaping up for this race, Kiwi Spirit could break the course Record set in 2011 by Lilla, a Briand 76 (IRL7600) owned by Simon and Nancy De Pietro of Cork, Ireland and Mattapoisett MA. Lilla set the course record for the 645-mile track from Marion to Bermuda at 68:58:45.
Kiwi Spirit was designed for Dr. Stanley Paris. His commission was for this design to be a high performance offshore passage making and cruising yacht. Farr Yacht Design “used modern design concepts and construction methods to produce a conservative but fast and sea kindly vessel that can cover oceans quickly and provide a comfortable and spacious live aboard experience.” Paris sailed her in an unsuccessful single-handed circumnavigation attempt.
Built in 2012, she has a carbon hull with a lifting keel, twin rudders and interesting hard chines halfway up the sides of the hull running from the beam max point back to the transom. The interior is designed for comfortable cruising.
The second ‘scratch’ boat is Free Range Chicken, a Perry 59 skippered by Bruce Anderson whose home is listed as Yakutat AK, as in Alaska. This is the latest of Anderson’s ‘Chicken’ boats. She’s a yacht designed for shorthanded cruising—in a racing hull—while still being appropriate for a racing crew. Cruising means this bird is free to sail the seas, thus Free Range Chicken.
Perry’s design brief says Free Range Chicken is designed so people remain dry in the cockpit under almost all circumstances. It also likes to be set free to fly downwind as often as possible. The easily driven hull is happy in light winds, but strong aft sections should keep her happy running off in big trade-wind breezes.
The third ‘scratch’ boat is Jay Hansen’s Imagine from Jamestown, RI. The Azuree 46 is considerably smaller than Kiwi Spirit or Free Range Chicken. She’s another hard-chine cruiser-racer with a full run aft.
These three big boats are in the running for line honors, an overall win and possibly a new record. After the race everyone will be able to review the new “Perfect Race” review feature.
This new H0 (zero) GRIB file analysis will help skippers learn post-race where they went right or wrong. A new ORA computer analysis will actually show each boat’s percentage of efficiency calculated against the computer’s predicted “best course” elapse time. After all boats finish, the graphic will be printed and distributed “almost immediately” for each boat and the public, too.
Races within the Race
Competition for special awards is a unique attraction for the Marion-Bermuda Race. The Notice of Race has all the details.
Go to the website for photos and descriptions of the trophies and the competition for them.
The R&W Rope Rigging Solutions Team Trophy is offered for established Yacht Clubs or Sailing organizations that form a team of three member yachts. The team whose three yachts have the lowest corrected time total will be the winner.
Yachts sailing with a crew of two, a crew of three or four or an all-female crew of any number may compete in the double-handed, short-handed, and all-female competitions respectively. Prizes are the Double-Handed Trophy, the short-handed L. Bryon Kingery, Jr. Memorial Trophy and the Commodore Faith Paulsen Trophy for the ladies.
A “family” yacht racing for the Beverly Family Trophy is one with a crew of five or more with all or all-but-one being members of a single household or a single family may race for the family prize. Persons related to a common grandparent and spouses of these “family”, too.
The Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy encourages youth participation. A "Youth" yacht has at least four (4) youths aboard with at least 66% of the crew qualified as youths. A youth sailor must be 16 years of age or older but not more than 23 years old by June 14, 2019. One or more adults at least 23 years old by June 14, 2019 must be on board.
The Beverly Yacht Club Polaris Trophy is a prize for stargazers. If a yacht has elected to be celestially navigated, she will receive a 3% favorable adjustment to her ORR rating.
About the Marion Bermuda Race
The 2019 race is the 22nd Marion Bermuda Race and the 42nd year for the 645-mile open ocean challenge for cruiser type yachts.
The first Marion-Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race in 1977 saw 104 starters cross the line. Over the forty-two years since that first race the race has evolved into a true offshore challenge for cruising yachts, amateur, family and youth sailors. Special prizes abound to emphasis celestial navigation, short handed sailing, family crews and regional competition. The race is handicapped under the ORR rating system to assure the fairest scoring available for ocean racing yachts.
About the Marion Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race Association
The Marion Bermuda Race encourages the development of blue-water sailing skills on seaworthy yachts that can be handled safely offshore with limited crew. The Marion Bermuda Race is a 501(c)(3) organization and among other educational efforts, supports and encourages Youth Sailing programs. The Marion to Bermuda Race is organized and run entirely by hundreds of volunteering members of The Beverly Yacht Club (BYC), The Blue Water Sailing Club (BWSC) and The Royal Hamilton Amateur Dinghy Club (RHADC) for the Marion Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race Association.
Press Contact
Talbot Wilson
[email protected]
850-217-7138
Do Day for Marion Bermuda Racers
by Talbot Wilson
Marion MA, June 13, 2019: When the race office at Beverly YC in Marion MA opened Thursday morning 12 of the 41 boats still had to do their final registration check-in and final paperwork. The rush was on.
Skippers also had to pick up their YB tracking transponders, so race officials, friends and families and other race watchers on land and at the Royal Hamilton Amateur Dinghy Club, the Bermuda partner in the race, can follow them to Bermuda with the Race Tracking app.
It was Do-Day for all the Marion Bermuda racers, the day they did all the last minute chores they had left to do. And weather was nasty on Sippican Harbor in Marion, too. Yachts were tossing on their moorings and rain showers were preparing crews for the wetness of the Gulf Stream crossing that’s just over the horizon.
Day 1- Bermuda, Here They Come
by Talbot Wilson
Marion MA, June 14, 2019: The fleet of 39 Marion Bermuda yachts is on its way to Bermuda. 38 of the boats are in the Founders Division and one is a Classic yacht. The first start between the classicsTabor Boy and Spirit of Bermuda set the pace with an aggressive move by Spirit running down the starting line, crossing close ahead of Tabor Boy.
But the maneuver didn’t pay off for the big black Bermuda Sloop. She ran the line in front of Tabor Boy clear ahead. Then when she got to the pin end of the line and hardened up into the wind, she actually sailed outside of the yellow pin, beyond the starting line.
Whoops! She did not start properly, but continued to sail the course southward on a beat out of Buzzards Bay.
Failure to cross the starting line means that Spirit of Bermuda did not start.
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