Wind speeds Ensenada race to finish line
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Deirdre Newman
A local racer snagged second place in his class in the Tommy Bahama
Newport to Ensenada Yacht Race this weekend.
Peter Bretschger, his wife, Kari, and their crew navigated Karisma
to its best showing in four years. The time it took them to finish,
including their handicap, was 23 hours and 3 1/2 minutes, Peter
Bretschger said.
The final, complete list of winners was unavailable Monday but
would be put together today, race officials said.
The wind conditions were conducive to sailing at high speeds for
most of the race, Peter Bretschger said.
“We had phenomenal wind at the start of the race and it took us
off at an extremely fast pace,” he said. “We just sailed into a hole
off of the Coronado Islands. And it took us about two hours to get
through it and after that, the sailing was pretty good.”
Peter Bretschger, 49, named Karisma after Kari, although his
mother-in-law sees the name as “Kari’s Ma” in her honor, he joked.
The first two years in the race, Karisma came in fourth. Last year,
it came in 10th, he said.
This time, second place tasted sweet, especially based on the
competition, he said.
“We’re just elated we took second because the fellow who beat us
is the one who designed and built our boat,” he said.
And the Irvine couple only got beat by 1 1/2 minutes, he said. He
and his crew opted to run their engine for about two hours to get
through the hole off the Coronado Islands, as they are allowed to do
in their class, as long as they don’t mind getting penalized for it.
For this race, Peter Bretschger was joined by his brother and one
of his nephews, Kari, their son Peter Jr., and three other crew
members. The magical experience of sailing at night remains one of
the most cherished experiences of the race, Peter Bretschger said.
“In cruising class, we leave toward the end of the fleet,” he
said. “When you’re sailing along, by 6 p.m. that evening, you’re
surrounded by about 200 boats. You know there’s an armada of boats
out there.”
Mary and Richard Compton’s yacht was the first Monohull to cross
the finish line. The Santa Barbara couple and their 15-member crew
also earned two other trophies based on the type and class of their
boat.
“It was great,” said Richard Compton, 63. “We loved it.”
He has raced in 36 Newport to Ensenada races. His wife has joined
him on about 10 of those, he said. For this one, they sailed their
new boat, Alchemy, named after Richard’s profession as a chemist.
Richard Compton called this year’s run a “typical” race and said
he finished in about 18 hours, including their handicap.
The exciting part was beating another new boat, he added.
“We went the right places and stayed in front of them,” he said.
“They were the only boat rated faster than we were.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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