Please select your home edition
Edition
Sydney International On-Water Boat Show 2025

64th Newport to Ensenada- Cabrillo never knew how much fun it would be

by Rich Roberts on 25 Jan 2011
Steve Fossett - only boat ever to finish before sundown - Newport to Ensenada International Race Rich Roberts http://www.UnderTheSunPhotos.com
64th Newport to Ensenada is a tradition Don Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo could never have imagined when the Portuguese navigator brought the first two foreign vessels into lonely Todos Santos Bay on Mexico's Baja California peninsula in 1542.

Nearly five centuries later Cabrillo's joy of discovery will be replicated again this spring on a much larger scale in the Newport Ocean Sailing Association's 64th International Yacht Race from Newport Beach April 15-17. The total of boats competing over the years is more than 20,000 and counting. Don Juan would have been blown away.

The high was 675 in 1983, long before the convenience of online entry. It's easier now. Those looking to join the crowd can click here. The entry fee for sailboats—large or small, monohulls or multihulls---is $175 until March 31. The late entry fee is $225.

The schedule of 10-minute starting sequences fires off from Balboa Pier at noon Friday, April 15---faster boats first. Depending on the wind, those chasing records probably will finish before dawn Saturday.

A handful of high-tech ocean racers have finished before midnight, led by the monohull record of 10 hours 37 minutes 50 seconds by Doug Baker's Magnitude 80 in 2009---just 7 minutes 3 seconds faster than the late Roy E. Disney's Pyewacket III in 2003.

Only one boat has finished before sundown the same day in Ensenada. In 1998 the late Steve Fossett clocked 6:46:40 on the 60-foot catamaran Stars & Stripes just before passing a moored cruise ship in the fading light.

As recounted by former NOSA commodore Bud Desenberg in his 1978 book, 'The Ensenada Race: Thirty Years of Silver and Gold,' it's a unique event that compliments the résumé of any serious sailor pursuing competition and adventure. At 125.5 nautical miles, it's not the longest offshore race but features challenges for amateurs and professionals who say they've never sailed any two alike … offshore breeze one year, inshore breeze the next; often shifty along the way, warm weather and cold.

Speed isn't everything. Tactics and timing also weigh heavily, especially in picking the right way to go. The course can be sailed in a straight (rhumb) line, but often it's better to seek more favorable breeze offshore or inshore. Another critical decision is when to change course to enter the bay. Too soon and you lose the wind blocked by the hills; too late and you sail unnecessarily too far.

It was new for everybody in 1948. When the Pacific Ocean turned true to its name after World War II a handful of restless Newport Beach sailors led by George Michaud planned to mark the moment by racing to the little farming and fishing settlement 60 miles south of the border. Cabrillo never knew how much fun it would be.

There had been no enduring races to Mexico until the N2E. The organizers guessed that 25 or 35 boats might show up. When 117 signed on, they figured they might be onto something.

As Desenberg recounted, 20 entries had second thoughts when 'boisterous winds … eliminated 20 day-sailors' before the start and only 65 finished the race, led by movie producer Milton Bren sailing Pursuit.

But the tales told by the early competitors of sailing an overnight race to a foreign country to join their families and friends in fiesta fun surged enthusiasm for the event.

In ensuing years they were followed by celebrities such as Buddy Ebsen, Humphrey Bogart, Roy E. Disney, Walter Cronkite, James Arness and Vicki Lawrence.

But even the not-so-famous have notched their marks. Lew Comyns of the Long Beach Yacht Club sailed 51 N2E races---most on his durable Cal 40---before his death. Dr. Vic Stern of Long Beach, a key organizer of the ORCA multihull class, has done 44.

Early on the race developed into an array of big boats and small boats, keelboats and multihulls, some wooden and some fiberglass, of every practical size and speed---or lack of---sailed by West Coast sailors. From the start, handicap systems have rendered size and speed incidental to how well a boat was sailed relative to its potential.

Luck also plays a part. Small boats regularly beat big boats for the trophies. In 2009 when the wind increased after the faster boats had finished, the slower boats' handicap time cut into the big boats' speed advantage. That allowed Cleve Hardaker's modest Catalina 36 from San Diego's Silver Gate Yacht Club, sailing in the race's slowed-rated class K, to win the race's overall top prize on corrected handicap time.

That's what the N2E is about. Anyone can win.

www.nosa.org
Pantaenius Sail 2025 AUS FooterNorth Sails Loft 57 PodcastX-Yachts X4.0

Related Articles

Sail Port Stephens adds cats, keelboats, and more
2026 will be the biggest and best in the regatta's 18-year history Sail Port Stephens 2026 will be the biggest and best in the regatta's 18-year history, with new events being added to further spice up the racing format.
Posted today at 5:39 am
America's Cup: Big day for 38th Cup
Friday October 17, was a big day for the America's Cup in NZ. Friday October 17, was a big day for the America's Cup - when the Defender went sailing for the first time in the new Cup cycle; the Kiwis announced four new team members; Grant Dalton and Ben Ainslie explained more on the new America's Cup Partnership.
Posted today at 3:55 am
Hamilton Island backs next wave of skiff talent
AST 16ft Skiff is set to line up in the iconic Port Jackson Championship The Australian Sailing Team (AST) 16ft Skiff is set to line up in the iconic Port Jackson Championship this weekend, hosted by the Manly 16ft Skiff Sailing Club (Manly 16s).
Posted today at 3:07 am
Sydney to Auckland Ocean Race Day 7
Two more finish as Lucky declared overall winner Frantic and Antipodes have finished the Sydney to Auckland Ocean Race (S2A), as RPAYC declared Bryon Ehrhart's Lucky the overall winner of the 1250 nautical mile race, adding to her line honours and race record victories - a triple crown for the US entry.
Posted today at 1:22 am
Emirates Team NZ rounds out sailing team
Emirates Team NZ team are back out sailing with their AC40 from their home base in Auckland. Almost a year to the day since Emirates Team New Zealand won the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup the team are back out sailing with their AC40 from their home base in Auckland.
Posted today at 1:02 am
Transat Café L'or fleet has mustered in Le Havre
148 skippers, 74 boats, 4 classes At nine days before the start of the 17th edition of the TRANSAT CAFÉ L'OR Le Havre Normandie, all the skippers have now arrived in Le Havre, marking the start of the festivities.
Posted on 16 Oct
IFCA Fin & Foil Slalom Europeans day 1
Two perfect opening days Johan Søe leads the Men's Foil ranking, while Justine Lemeteyer dominates among the women, topping both the Foil and Fin divisions. In the Men's Fin fleet, Jordy Vonk is in the lead, followed by Nicolas Prien and Malte Reuscher.
Posted on 16 Oct
Allocation of entries for the 29er Worlds in Kiel
All countries will be allocated a minimum of three entries The 29er Class has not restricted entries for the World or European Championships in the past but due to the expected popularity of the Worlds in 2026 in Kiel we feel it is necessary to do an Entry Allocation. This is very difficult to do fairly.
Posted on 16 Oct
Exiting new product for METS
A+T Instruments is proud to be supplying instruments for some of the most advanced yachts The marine world gathers at METS in Amsterdam. A+T is proud to be supplying instruments for some of the most advanced new-build yachts. Watch the video to see how we can help you with your next project.
Posted on 16 Oct
A Day at the Allen Factory!
New and innovative products, cutting-edge manufacturing techniques The Allen factory, based in Southminster, Essex in the UK, makes many of the deck hardware and fittings that we use in our sailing, be that on dinghies or keelboats.
Posted on 16 Oct