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Vaikobi 2024 LEADERBOARD

St. Thomas Yacht Club gears up for 45th St. Thomas International Regatta

by St. Thomas Yacht Club 16 Jan 2018 09:30 PST 23-25 March 2018
Over 20 IC24s are expected to race in STIR 2018, possibly the largest one-design class in a Caribbean regatta © Dean Barnes

If your bucket list includes having a drink at the 2017 Favorite Yachting Bar in the Caribbean, then tick that box with us March 23 to 25 at the St. Thomas International Regatta.

Announced on January 3, 50 degrees North, creators of Wight Vodka and Scuttlebutt Europe announced that the STIR-host St. Thomas Yacht Club won its annual contest in a special Caribbean category to recognize bars that were hard hit by the hurricanes last fall.

"It's an honour to have received this recognition, especially as the Club is still recovering from the after effects of hurricanes Irma and Maria," says regatta director, Bill Canfield. "As a result, this will not be our biggest STIR, but we can guarantee everyone a special time. For those who have never visited, Cowpet Bay is a beautiful place to finish a race and the Club and its bar are located beachfront here. Plus, for those that are long timers, think back to your first Caribbean regatta and what a great experience it was. We are offering this same vibe this year with an emphasis on 'simple fun and great sailing'. That's why we love it here!"

IC24's a plenty

A sampling of who's registered so far shows what might be the largest one-design class in a Caribbean regatta. Over 20 IC24s, with sailors from around the Caribbean and World, are expected to compete in up to a dozen races over three days with a mix of windward/leeward and island races.

"This event gathers the largest number of IC24s in the Caribbean, offers great race courses, good variety and organizers keep it fun both on and off the water," says Puerto Rico's Jaime Torres, who will helm his Smile and Wave with a strong team, consisting of Alejandro Carrera on bow and Gretchen Ortiz in the pit. "It's a long-standing tradition for my family and I to race and enjoy the spectacular hospitality of the St. Thomas Yacht Club for the St. Thomas International Regatta. Now, we have a new tradition. That is, we ask talented kids or women to come in and drive the boat, thus giving the class a source of new talent."

The IC24 fleet at the St. Thomas Sailing Center, located at the St. Thomas Yacht Club, were expertly repaired post-hurricane to their racing best by famed fiberglass specialist, Chris Small, of Chris Small Boatworks, in Ipswich, Massachusetts. IC24s are still available for charter from the St. Thomas Sailing Center. The STIR charter package fee of $2100 with decent sails and $2800 with new sails, includes a ready-to-race IC24 for the three-day STIR, a practice day the Thursday before and a 30-day Bluewater Membership in the St. Thomas Yacht Club.

New boats debut in racing class

Teams from Canada, the U.S. mainland and Puerto Rico are all looking forward to racing new boats at the 2018 STIR. One of these is Rob Butler's Touch2Play racing team.

"The J88, which we raced last year in STIR, has been replaced with a Reflex 38," says Larry Huibers, manager of Collingwood, Ontario-based Butler's team. "It's a slightly larger platform, which will host our crew in a little more comfort and make transiting to the other events easier. The blend of great tight racing and fun shore side activities makes coming back a priority for us."

New to owner Emanuele Bianchi, of Chicago, Illinois, is the 2015-built Tartan 101, Red Hot Caribe, which Bianchi describes as a 33-foot high performance fractional sloop with a very generous carbon rig powered by top notch North Sails.

"We are a mix of fun, avid sailors, mostly based in the Great Lakes, peppered with East and West Coast, Canadian and European flavor," he says. "Our team is comprised of a group of highly competitive, qualified amateurs with broad experience that includes a mix of ocean, buoy, medium to long distance and one-design sailboat racing. STIR 2018 will be one of the highlights of a season spend enjoying fun island-hopping deliveries as we explore the beauty of the Caribbean."

Back after a year's hiatus is STIR 2016 racing class winners, Puerto Rico's Jonathan Lipuscek and his team aboard a new Dark Star.

"The new Dark Star is a recently purchased McConaghy 38, which is larger and faster than the previous Dark Star, a J/105," explains Rafael 'Rafi' Martinez, who like many of the team's crew have raced in STIR since the early 1990s." Our core crew will remain the same and we are pumped to see what this boat can do in the Caribbean trade winds."

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