On Saturday, the IC 24 class will play part in another spectacle when they race off the beachfront at the Ritz Hotel, giving sun seekers there plenty to talk about. The IC 24s are innovative one-design boats that are indigenous to the islands and wildly popular. With a good breeze, they are physically challenging, and spectators don’t get bogged down in guessing who wins – it’s whichever team finishes first, no handicap rules to worry about here.
The handicap racing classes (for CSA Spinnaker Racing, Spinnaker Racing/Cruising and Non-Spinnaker Racing) will, however, on the same day have their own chance to impress when they thread their way through and around the cuts, cays and islands off the east end of St. Thomas and along the picturesque coast of St. John.
For Sunday, the beautiful and yet tactically demanding Pillsbury Sound Race, in and among the cays of St. Thomas and St. John, is a highlight of the regatta that finishes off the on-water excitement before racers enjoy the Sunday evening Rolex Awards Ceremony, where a giant stage magically appears in the shallow beach water at the St. Thomas Yacht Club and Rolex timepieces are presented to winners of select classes.
Throughout the event, crews are well looked after with music, meals and dancing at the club and even a giant reggae music concert and food festival at Yacht Haven Grande, the luxury marina where some of the event’s larger boats are berthed.
“Our courses are a high caliber mix of round-the-island distance races and windward-leewards designed to test a sailor’s skills and showcase the stunning shoreline, and our parties are designed to be of epic memory-making proportions,” said Event Co-Chair John Sweeney. “This is what we owe to the sailors at this ‘crown jewel’ of Caribbean races. But at the same time, we owe something back to the St. Thomians and visitors who have supported this event for 37 years. We want them to indulge in these races, too!”
High Definition Action on the Web
For those who can’t be there in person to watch, catching the action, flavor and beauty of the International Rolex Regatta at www.t2p.tv is the next best thing. Each day of the event, T2Productions is on the water filming in high definition, and each night by 9 p.m., the sailing-on-demand online network airs the race coverage plus interviews and lifestyle sidebars in a wide screen format. In a nutshell, it’s same-day coverage of one of the most talked about regattas in the Caribbean.
The international Rolex Regatta typically hosts up to 100 boats sailing in classes for IRC, CSA (Spinnaker Racing, Spinnaker Racing/Cruising and Non-Spinnaker Racing), One-Design IC 24s and Beach Cats and guarantees exceptional racing by virtue of its dependable trade winds and professional race management team. It is wholly operated by the St. Thomas yacht Club, so competitors can be certain that the organizers know a thing or two about what world class sailors look for in an international regatta.
The event is part of the hotly contested 2010 US-IRC Gulf Stream Series and directly precedes the BVI Spring Regatta and Sailing Festival, which is held next door and links the two to make Virgin Islands Race Week.