And away they go
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- It was one of the more remarkable beginnings in the
53-year history of the Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race.
It just wasn’t remarkable in the way its organizers had hoped.
Problems with the orange plastic buoys that were used to designate the
starting line held up the beginning of the race for more than an hour
Friday as organizers scrambled to salvage what was originally intended to
be a faster start than in previous years.
Hundreds of millions of dollars in racing yachts circled listlessly off
Newport Harbor while contest boats picked up and dropped the buoys,
trying to position them in a way that would prevent them from drifting.
At one point, an official boat motored back into Newport Harbor to pick
up anchoring cinder blocks that had been accidentally left on the dock.
Finally, at about 1:15 p.m., the 53rd annual race got underway. The
spectacle for which the event is known replaced the atmosphere of queasy
anticipation that had been afflicting many a boater.
At the offshore starting line, the biggest of the big boats cruised
smoothly, their golden Kevlar mainsails full in the wind.
Ultra-fast yachts like Pyewacket, America’s Challenge, Merlin, Christine
and Ragtime pressed together like so many floating skyscrapers.
The boats will sail for about 11 hours -- depending on the wind -- on the
125-mile voyage to Ensenada. Winners will be announced at a
south-of-the-border award ceremony Sunday afternoon.
The problems with this year’s start were the last thing organizers
wanted. The 2000 event was the first to feature three starting lines
instead of two.
The point of the additional line, ironically, was to make the start more
efficient. But the snafu with the buoys meant that some classes of boats
didn’t get a chance to cross the starting line until late in the
afternoon.
Despite the difficulties with the course, Friday’s race offered beautiful
sailing conditions. An early morning overcast layer burned off by midday
and the fairly light wind began to pick up by the time the race actually
started.
With the benefit of these conditions, the tall masts of the boats soon
shrank down to white sails on the horizon, Ensenada-bound.
REFER: For additional coverage of the 53rd Newport to Ensenada
International Yacht Race, see Terrance Phillips’ Harbor Column on Page
A15.
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