Please select your home edition
Edition
Hyde Sails 2022 One Design LEADERBOARD

Mersea Week 2019

by Julian Lord 17 Aug 2019 18:32 UTC 11-16 August 2019

The 46th annual Mersea Week finished on Friday 16th August, and like most sailing around the country, the racing was held in pretty tough conditions - quite a contrast to the sunshine and sea breezes enjoyed by competitors last year. As many as 70 volunteer helpers supplemented the organising committee to make the week happen, with the usual separate committee vessels and race areas out in the River Blackwater estuary for keelboats and dinghies.

With overall sponsorship from Marinestore Chandlery and Adnams Brewery, daily sponsors and free moorings for visitors, entry fees are kept to a fraction of some other annual regattas in order to maximise participation, and this year 138 boats of all shapes and sizes took part. These ranged from the fastest IRC Sportsboats, four classes of yacht (IRC, classic, Locally Handicapped and White Sail), Sonata one designs, traditional Smacks, three dinghy fleets and Mersea Fisherman's Open Boats. On the opening day, strong winds with near-gale force gusts saw the dismasting of a sportsboat, a man overboard in the Sonata fleet and a lot of capsized dinghies, whilst bizarrely, keelboat racing was abandoned on the following day through a lack of wind! Competitors then enjoyed the best conditions of the week on Tuesday, with a layday on Wednesday before Thursday and Friday saw the return of strong winds for the final racing of the week.

In the Smacks, the best entry for some years of 13 of these fine tan sailed boats made a spectacular sight, and despite suffering a broken boom on Tuesday, Ross Wey sailing Alberta won the class from Richard Haines' Kate and Richard Robinson's Martha II. Nick Purdie's Gracie was the leading smack in the slow group. The IRC Sportsboats needed a tie-break to determine the overall winner - Richard Matthews in his Melges 24 What A Blast drawing level on points by winning the final race by just 27 seconds from Toby Ramsay's self-designed and built Mojito. This enabled Matthews to take top slot from Mojito, with Martin Gozzett, the leading Cork 1720 in third.

Mersea Week Chairman Julian Lord with his International H Boat Humdinger won the IRC Cruisers from Scot Yeates sailing his Holman classic Stiletto and John Munns Nicholson 43 Dark Horse, whilst in the ten boat Sonata ODs, Camel (Simon Farren) dominated with four firsts to win from Aubie Too (Tony Hawkes and Pat Hill) and the Gozzett Roberts & Shipton partnership with Wet Endeavour. There was a close tussle in the Locally Handicapped cruiser class, with Paul Harrison's Beneteau 33.7 Maverick winning from Steve Johnson helming the late Frank Reed's Hustler 32 Tramp. Paul Harrison also took the prize for the best overall performance in the cruiser classes. Barry Ashmore's Algonquin was third up and winner of the division for the slower boats in this fleet.

A second place in the final race gave local boatyard owner Peter Clarke with Tasman top prize in the Classics and Gaffers class, ahead of Richard Bailey's Cornish Crabber Lahloo and Timothy Howes Buchanan Saxon Aelfwyn. Finally in the keelboats, the White Sail fleet for yachts not using spinnakers was dominated by Jon and Penny French's Oyster 26 Sea Pie, ahead of James Millar's sistership Pipedream, with David Curtis Bavaria 34 Hannelore best of the fast boats in third.

A big fleet of 24 of the Mersea Fisherman's Open Boats competed in the week. These are clinker built, gaff rigged open boats with no decking, and capsizing is nearly always terminal! Two of the races for this class were lost because of strong winds, whilst the final day's racing for both them and the dinghy classes were sailed in the more sheltered creeks of West Mersea, rather than out in the River Blackwater estuary. Bryan Sargeant's Merlin dominated the Fast fleet and as overall winner also took home the new Golly Gamble Trophy. Next up in the fast fleet was Gerard Swift's Gipsy and David Haynes Thrift, whilst Winnie (Simon Jacklin), Overproof (Lucy Struth) and Woody (Tom Fleetwood) were the top three in the slow fleet.

In the dinghy classes, James Sparks Phantom Q won the Fast class (and the best overall performance by a dinghy) ahead of Michael Izatt's RS600 Le Surf and Dan Woodcock's RS400 Hotblack Desiato. Top slot in the Medium Fast class went to Janek Payne's Laser Radial, ahead of two regular Mersea Week Enterprise dinghies - those of Brian and Linda Cummings and Peter and Elaine Dolling. Like the MFOBs, the conditions meant that the Medium dinghies lost two of the five scheduled races, and Charlotte Allen and Julia Martin's RS Feva XL was the only boat to complete all three races, winning overall from another Feva XL, that of Alex Canham and James Humphreys.

The week concluded with the main prizegiving at West Mersea YC, with a full range of trophies and glassware for all the leading boats, supplemented this year by some fabulous additional prizes provided by Marinestore Chandlery, having been sourced from their suppliers including Marlow, Dubarry, Barton, Helly Hansen and Musto by the company's MD Eleanor Callus.

Full results can be found at www.merseaweek.org

Related Articles

Action-packed 24 hours in Regata dei Tre Golfi
The race had five different leaders, with massive reshuffles Light weather yacht racing can easily be frustrating or boring. But the 69th edition of the Circolo del Remo e della Vela Italia's Regata dei Tre Golfi was definitely not. Posted on 18 May
2024 Formula Kite Worlds in Hyères, France Day 5
Triple-bullet boost for Newland before final Defending champions Max Maeder and Lauriane Nolot go into the final day of the 2024 Formula Kite World Championships in pole position. Posted on 18 May
Worrell 1000 Race 2024 Legs 5 & 6
Not only a physical and strategical challenge, but one of mental endurance On Thursday morning, May 16th - Teams lined up on the beach in Jacksonville, Florida, ready to set sail on the longest leg of the event: JAX Beach to Tybee Island, GA - 120 miles. Posted on 18 May
RS 30th Anniversary Regatta Day 1
What makes the RS Classes so special? The sailors! Three decades of fun later and RS Sailing's passion for our sport has been unwavering. But what makes the RS Classes so special? The sailors! Posted on 18 May
North Nova Freeride wing launched
A balanced, easy-to-use all-round wing Master of the lumps and bumps, glide upwind, roll through tacks, float through gybes or lofty jumps with bonus hangtime. Whatever goal you're chasing, the Nova will send you there faster. Posted on 18 May
America's Cup: I name this boat 'Britannia'!
INEOS Britannia have formally christened their America's Cup Challenger in Barcelona INEOS Britannia have formally christened their America's Cup Challenger 'Britannia' in a short ceremony at the team's base in Barcelona. Posted on 18 May
Clarisse Crémer approaches Transat CIC finish line
A race she began over 19 days ago in Lorient, France Clarisse Crémer is now less than 200 miles from crossing the finish line of The Transat CIC, a race she began over 19 days ago in Lorient, France on April 28th 2024. Posted on 18 May
Banque Populaire Grand-Ouest Trophy Preview
Paul Morvan and Tom Dolan pair up for the 735 nautical mile marathon At 735 nautical miles long, the Banque Populaire Grand Ouest Trophy race which starts Saturday 1300hrs local time, is one of the longest offshore courses of the 2024 season for Ireland's Tom Dolan. Posted on 18 May
World Sailing Transgender Participation Policy
The World Sailing Council has voted to adopt new eligibility rules for transgender athletes World Sailing Council has voted to adopt new eligibility rules for transgender athletes at the federation's 2024 Mid Year Meeting. Posted on 18 May
Cup Spy May 16: AC75s struggle to foil in seaway
Thursday session was not hugely productive in actual sailing time compared to time on the water The US and British teams sailed on Thursday in a session that was not hugely productive in actual sailing time compared to time on the water. The issue lay in a storm - with thunder and lightning - that didn't hit the teams, but certainly affected them. Posted on 18 May
J Composites J/45Rooster Wetsuit RangeVaikobi 2024 FOOTER