Riva Reports
Riva has reported at Race Rocks. Time of report 1:21:55. She is coming hard and the finish crew is waiting for her to arrive.
Rage has finished!!!!
Once again the mighty Rage, skippered by Dave Raney, has achieved another First to Finish in the 2019 Oregon Offshore. Congratulations Dave and crew, great effort, impressive finish. It was a treat to watch you cross the line!!
Rage has reported at Race Rocks
At 11:38 PM, Rage reported passing Race Rocks, She is doing 11.9 SOG on an Easterly heading. The finish crew has headed down to welcome her to Victoria!
Rage is coming on strong
Rage is approximately 19 miles from Ogden point and heading ESE at 10 knots. Finish crew thinks the mighty Rage will be at Ogden Point around 1 am Saturday morning.
Souffle is heading North
Our favorite cruiser, Phil Lewis on Souffle, is about 7.5 miles south of Duntze Rock, heading 010 at 5.3 knots. Phil's tracker has been inoperative for most of the race and I am sure that folks were wondering where he was. Well, through the miracle of AIS, we have him on screen, rolling North.
Good job Phil and crew!! We will be here to greet you when you come.
Good job Phil and crew!! We will be here to greet you when you come.
Hooray!!!! Half the fleet appears to have rounded the Duntz Rock buoy and are headed down the Straits of Juan de Fuca. 70% course completion Slow going but the progress is happening. Winds are looking a little better. Still beautiful here in Victoria. Getting ready to bring the boats in with hot towels and champagne. Our hospitality crew is ramping up with enthusiasm.
YAY!!!! On the tracker shows Rage has rounded the Duntz Rock buoy and is in the Straits of Juan de Fuca. Then we see Riva and Salient also around. Here they come down the straits. Still a beautiful day here in Victoria. We can see the wind filling in....there is some darker carpet showing up on the water!!!
Bumps on the Bar
It was an eventful day for the 43rd Oregon Offshore. Prior to the Skippers meeting on the 8th, we worked hard to come up with a reasonable solution. The problem was a big ebb starting at 4 am and continuing until noon, with 5.5 knot currents forecast in the mouth of the Columbia River. After long discussion with Mike Cassenelli and Bruce Hedrick and some head scratching on the part of your faithful race organizers, we came up with what proved to be a sort of workable solution and decided that a 9 am start would work. The trip out was fast and bumpy at the mouth but that 5+knot current helped and the fact that the wind was offshore and the seas had laid down outside made it possible. Only one boat had any problems and they managed to work through the bumps and join the race, if a little late. I am waiting for some pics of the start to come in and as soon as I have them I will post an update.
After the start, everyone took off on Starboard, heading offshore, apparently following the information gained at the skippers meeting. Wind was a light NE at the start and as the race progresses it appears that the predicted NW shift is starting to be felt by the fleet. Rage is ahead with Riva not far behind and the rest of the fleet appears well sorted per class divisions.
Party at the Rogue!!
The Oregon Offshore skippers meeting, party and raffle held at the Rogue Brewpub went off quite well on Wednesday night. The skippers meeting was a great meeting, lots of attention and many many thanks to Bruce Hedrick who did a wonderful weather, conditions and tactical briefing that was appreciated by all. Bruce is a great guy, very knowledgeable and, based on what is happening as I write this on the Race Tracker, called the conditions pretty well- more later on that!.
We had a bit of a crisis this year because the trolley that we have used in the past to ferry folks from the marina to the party was not available. We worked hard to find a suitable replacement but, up to last week, no solution was found. Then, at the last minute when we were contemplating carrying folks to the party on small beasts of burden, the Astoria School District came through and let us use one of their big yellow buses. It worked great and everyone seemed happy to relive their youth for a bit.
The traditional raffle went off well this year and we had some great items. Columbia Sportswear came through with a couple of very expensive jackets, The Sailing Foundation generously donated some text books and a discounted rate on a SAS seminar next year. Sail Flow donated some memberships to their site. The big prizes were a huge roller cooler by Yeti- we are told it is their first roller, in addition to some smaller coolers. The biggest issue was to make sure that a big enough boat won it!!. An anonymous donor gave a large print of this years T-Shirt logo that was signed by the skippers of every boat in the race. Jeff Mcdonald won the print and Jeff and Jenn decided to donate it to Kevin Flanagan, the owner of Schooner Creek Boatworks, our title sponsor. I am told Kevin loved it and I hope it shows up on the wall at SCBW.
Here is a pic
The 43rd Annual Oregon Offshore is set to go
It is 0925, May 8th and almost all the boats are in Astoria. Everyone looks ready, the boats are prepared and all that is left is the Skipper's meeting, the party at the Rogue, a good night's sleep and then hit the line! Everyone I have talked to is eager to go. This years race looks like a tactical challenge that should test the best of the fleet. For the first time we have access to Dr. Dewey of the University of Victoria's tidal flow charts. Dr. Dewey has provided these dynamic charts for the Swiftsure and this year he agreed to give us access to these extremely valuable tools. Thanks so much!! Bruce Hedrick will be providing weather information at the Skipper's meeting in person- another first for us- and everyone is really looking forward to his information- Thanks Bruce!
More to come.
The Rogue Ales Public House Party
Well, it's almost last call for the 2019 Oregon Offshore International Yacht Race sponsored by Schooner Creek Boat Works as we do the Skippers' Meeting and Crew party at the Rogue pub in Astoria on Wednesday, May 8th. If you're crew, or friends of crew, or sailors, or wanna be sailors – come one, come all – to the party on the last night before the start of the race. It all starts at 6:30 with a no-host bar and full food menu. Corinthian Yacht Club of Portland will be selling Oregon Offshore T-shirts and hats and raffling off some extremely cool sailing and outdoor gear from our sponsors. Come and raise a glass to the hearty sailors who head over the Columbia River Bar the next morning to start the race!
Hope to see you there.
The address is: 100 39th St. (Pier 39), Astoria, Ore. 97103 P: 503-468-0923
Tides - Strait of Juan de Fuca
Just added in the Race Information menu is an semi-animated visual tool showing the tides in the Strait of Juan de Fuca for the time period May 10-12. It was custom built in the last few days just for the Oregon Offshore by Dr. Richard Dewey of the University of Victoria. It is way cool. Download it, study it, use it on the race.
Thank you, thank you, thank you Dr. Dewey.
Offshore in the News
It's always fun to get recognized by the sailing media! J/Sailing News is great about finding and writing about J/Boats around the world. Check out what they have to say about The Oregon Offshore here.
Going, Going, Go...stop the presses!
While much of the fleet was enjoying the Kick Off Party, Phillip Wampold was busy typing up his entry to sneak in just before the deadline. Zaff Racing is a J/92 out of Victoria, BC and they are our 21st and last boat to enter as the entry deadline has now come and gone. Phillip describes Zaff Racing as a rag tag crew of rum dumping young buds looking for fun, fast adventures. They must put down the rum long enough to do a little sailing as they have posted some impressive results including class wins in the 2018 Pacific Cup, 2018 Southern Straits and the 2018 Patos Island Classic. See more about this program here: https://www.facebook.com/ZaffRacing/
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