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August 26, 2024

Last Call for Rolex Big Boat Series This Week

It’s time to get off the fence, organize the crew, and make sure you’re signed up for the 60th Rolex Big Boat Series. There’s room for more boats in the Classic division, ORC classes, and J/Boat and Express 37 one-design classes. The event runs September 11–15. Beyond great racing, fantastic September weather on the Bay, fun parties and trophies, there’s a chance you could take home a Rolex watch!

Mark rounding at Rolext Big Boat Series.
First-class racing from the St. Francis Yacht Club starts with the Rolex Big Boat Series on September 11.
© 2024 Sharon Green/Rolex

There were 75 boats signed up as of this morning, and there’s room for you too. To be a part of the 60th event, sign up before entries close at 2100 hours on Saturday, August 31.

Looking for crew? Check out the Latitude 38 Crew List and attend the Fall Crew List Party at Spaulding Marine Center on September 4.

We’ll have a longer preview of the regatta later this week in ‘Lectronic Latitude.

What Is the Sign-Up Deadline for Baja Ha-Ha XXX?

It’s a bit of a complicated question. Let me explain. As noted on the Baja Ha-Ha webpage, the deadline is officially September 4, two months before the start of the Ha-Ha. But because the Poobah hasn’t wanted to exclude anyone, in the past he’s allowed skippers to sign up as late as a day before the start. Those were the good old days when life was simple.

While you can still do this, you can only do so under very specific conditions, the conditions being that you will have to start from Ensenada, in which case you will have already checked into Mexico. Or, after starting from San Diego, you will have to stop in Ensenada and check into Mexico by yourself. The latter means you will find yourself a day or so behind the rest of the fleet.

Another option would be to check in at Cabo San Lucas, but you could not legally stop in Bahia Santa Maria without checking into Mexico first, so you would have one long leg from Turtle Bay to Cabo. Plus, you would miss the Rock ‘n’ Roll Party!

If you want to check into Mexico at Bahia Santa Maria, which we expect almost all the fleet will want to do, and which you’ll only be able to do if you enter the Ha-Ha, there is one drop-dead sign-up deadline: October 1.

Why? Because we have just learned that our agent has to prepare the entire fleet’s paperwork for the port captain in San Carlos, the savior of the Ha-Ha, one month prior to our November 11 arrival in Bahia Santa Maria. Each boat will need to get paperwork in to Mag Bay Outfitters and make payment by October 4 or pay a substantial late fee. Everything must be paid and completed by October 11. These fees are quite a bit less than those we paid to the agent in Cabo San Lucas for many years.

no lines here
Assistant Poobah Patsy Verhoeven organizes passport stamping with the Mexican immigration official aboard Profligate at Bahia Santa Maria.
© 2024 Richard Spindler

If it makes any difference, the earlier you sign up, the easier it is on the Poobah, who has to write all the bios. The earlier you sign up, the easier you make his life.

That’s a lot of boats to check in!
© 2024 Baja Ha-Ha

Will Baja Ha-Ha XXX Be the Last Laugh?
I haven’t told Assistant Poobah Patsy Verhoeven or Head of Security Doña de Mallorca, but as the Poobah, I’m putting the odds at 75% to 25% that this will be the last Ha-Ha.

Assistant Poobah Patsy Verhoeven will scoff at this, claiming I’ve said this every year for the last several years. She has a point, nonetheless ….

I love the Ha-Ha dearly and would like to be able to do them forever. It’s brought many thousands of participants, and me, unimaginable pleasure over the years. But there is a combination of reasons that this year’s event may be the last.

While I’m in good physical health and get lots of exercise, and still have my marbles intact, I would nonetheless be 77 during next year’s Ha-Ha. At this age, so much could happen between now and then, and I absolutely don’t want to lead a Ha-Ha unless I’m in top condition.

In addition, each year outside forces and circumstances seem to make organizing and running the Ha-Ha more difficult than in the year before. It’s like death by 1,000 little cuts. And the older you get, the more serious those little cuts become.

In the past I’ve asked both Assistant Poobah Patsy Verhoeven and Chief of Security Doña de Mallorca if they would be interested in taking over the event. They both said no, although I haven’t asked them recently.

The thought of selling the Ha-Ha to someone else has no appeal to me. I’m vain enough to think that I, along with their enormous help of Patsy, Doña, and others, created and run a sailing event that has a unique style and flair that would be impossible for someone else to replicate. And I’m not interested in the event’s golden reputation being diminished for a few bucks.

When I started Latitude 38 magazine my goal was to run it for 40 years. Which I did. About 15 years ago Assistant Poobah Patsy Verhoeven and I set a goal of doing 30 Ha-Ha’s. This year will be 30. Maybe that’s a sign.

I’m not suggesting the likelihood of there not being any more Ha-Ha’s as a threat to try to “force” more people to enter this year. Indeed, I long ago started caring more about the quality of entries than the number of entries. I just want to give folks a heads-up that the odds are 75 – 25 that this is the last laugh.

Be healthy, keep sailing, and I hope everyone who has ever done a Ha-Ha will accept my gratitude.

Currently there are 99 boats registered for Baja Ha-Ha XXX. Will you be #100?

Visit Annapolis in the Fall for the Sailboat Show

October might seem a ways away, but it’s never too early to start planning your trip to the Annapolis Sailboat Show. This year’s show is shaping up to be a doozy with over 200 sailboats and more than 550 exhibitors expected to file into downtown Annapolis on October 10-14. Tickets and show info

West Coast Clubs Travel East to the New York Yacht Club Resolute Cup

A recent press release from the New York Yacht Club highlighted Bay Area racer Daniel Thielman and his crew from the Corinthian Yacht Club as a new invitee to compete in the annual New York Yacht Club Resolute Cup. This year, 28 teams have been invited to this all-amateur sailing event, including seven from the West Coast: California Yacht Club, Corinthian YC of San Francisco, Newport Harbor Yacht Club, San Diego Yacht Club, Seattle Yacht Club, St. Francis Yacht Club, and San Francisco Yacht Club.

Kuai with blue spinnaker
Daniel Thielman’s Melges 32 Kuai races frequently on the Bay.
© 2024 Latitude 38 Media LLC / Chris

Beyond Thielman’s active campaigning of his Melges 32 Kuai on the Bay, he’s also been active nationally, winning multiple championships in the Melges 20 class, where he’s also the defending world champion. He recently returned to the Corinthian Yacht Club of San Francisco with the IC37 National Championship title won during New York Yacht Club Race Week at Newport, RI, sailed July 17–20. This September, however, will mark the first time that his club has fielded a team in the Resolute Cup, motivated by Thielman’s desire to qualify for the prestigious Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, which will next take place in September 2025.

The CYC IC37 Kuai racing in the national championship. Now sailing for Resolute Cup.
The CYC IC37 Kuai racing in the national championship.
© 2024 ROLEX / Daniel Forster

“Members of our Corinthian Yacht Club purchased an IC37 back in 2023 to prepare for the Invitational Cup,” said Thielman. “After a year of preparation, we’ve assembled a team that is ready to make a qualifying bid.”

Thielman will be sailing with trimmers Jen Canestra and Auric Horneman, who have been his constant and trusted teammates for over 10 years of racing Melges boats together, and Nick Voss.

“We currently race in the Melges 20, Melges 14, and IC37 one-design fleets around the country, and PHRF race our Melges 32 on San Francisco Bay,” Thielman says. “We hope that adding Nick as a tactician for the Resolute Cup, with his many years of junior, college and adult team racing experience, will give us the edge we need to be competitive.”

Daniel Thielman racing in the IC37s will now sail in the Resolute Cup.
Daniel Thielman on USA 27 Kuai gets her nose out front at Race Week.
© 2024 ROLEX / Daniel Forster

Since 2010, the Resolute Cup has served as a Corinthian championship for US yacht clubs and the only guaranteed pathway for an American club to earn a berth in the Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, Corinthian (amateur) sailing’s most prestigious international competition. The seventh edition of the biennial competition — the event was not sailed in 2020 — is scheduled for September 9 to 14 at the New York Yacht Club, Harbour Court, in Newport, RI. The 2024 Resolute Cup will utilize the Club’s fleet of Sonars, with provided sails, equalized rig tune and on-the-water umpiring ensuring sailing’s ultimate level playing field. The 2024 New York Yacht Club Regatta Association regatta calendar is supported by Helly Hansen, Hammetts Hotel, Safe Harbor Marinas and Peters & May.

While Thielman has shown remarkable ability across multiple one-design classes, the Sonar, a displacement boat with a symmetric spinnaker, is a bit of a departure from what he and his team normally sail.

The New York Yacht Club's matched fleet of Sonars will challenge the whole fleet.
The New York Yacht Club’s matched Sonars will challenge the whole fleet.
© 2024 Paul Todd / Outside Images

“Every boat we own, and every fleet we compete in, has asymmetric kites,” he says. “We have gotten in limited practices on J/22s to prepare, but with our aggressive championship race schedule in other fleets, we are mostly going to be winging it with a symmetric kite. I would not be surprised if we have a slow start, with results that steadily improve throughout the week.”

The complete list of competing teams is here: American Yacht Club, Rye, NY; Austin (Texas) Yacht Club; Bay Waveland Yacht Club, Bay St. Louis, MS; Bayview Yacht Club, Detroit, MI.; California Yacht Club, Marina del Rey, CA; Carolina Yacht Club, Charleston, SC; Charleston Yacht Club, Charleston, SC; Chicago (IL) Yacht Club; Corinthian Yacht Club, Marblehead, MA; Corinthian Yacht Club of San Francisco, Tiburon, CA; Eastern Yacht Club, Marblehead, MA; Edgewater Yacht Club, Cleveland, Ohio; Fort Worth (Texas) Yacht Club; Lakewood Yacht Club, Seabrook, Texas; Larchmont (NY.) Yacht Club; Little Traverse Yacht Club, Harbor Springs, MI; Mystic River Mudheads Sailing Association, West Mystic, CT; New York (NY) Yacht Club; Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Newport Beach, CA.; Pensacola (FL) Yacht Club; San Diego (CA) Yacht Club; Seattle (WA) Yacht Club; Shelter Island Yacht Club, Shelter Island Heights, NY; Southern Yacht Club, New Orleans, LA; St. Francis Yacht Club, San Francisco, CA; Stamford (CT) Yacht Club; Storm Trysail Club (Larchmont, NY); San Francisco Yacht Club, Belvedere, CA.

You can learn more about the Resolute Cup here.

It’s Back to Business in Barcelona With the America’s Cup

The 37th America’s Cup began in earnest this weekend: a preliminary series with all the teams competing in one-on-one match-racing eliminations off Barcelona, Catalonia. Emirates Team New Zealand “won” the event, but it wasn’t that simple, as all the challengers came away with something positive to take into Thursday’s opening Round Robin. We also learned many things over the past few days, such as that in the United States viewing the event or streaming the races wasn’t free as advertised. ESPN+ swept in and snatched the rights here, and, much like last time, forced everyone to either pony up for a VPN or pay the $10.99 per month, but with football on the horizon, all is not lost.

Emirates Team New Zealand celebrate their preliminary win.
© 2024 Studio Borlenghi/America's Cup

On the water, it was the best of times and the worst for the New York Yacht Club’s American Magic as they managed to beat the Kiwis with ease in their last race, a day after suffering a catastrophic rudder failure and having to give up a point to the lowly French, and after being “schooled” in the starting box by Jimmy Spithill’s losing to the Italians. As for the weather and the sailing conditions, it’s certainly not Auckland or San Francisco. The Spanish Mediterranean is a mix of lumpy gravy, swells and chop, with steady albeit light to moderate breezes.

American Magic’s unique deck layout and controversial cockpit fairings.
© 2024 Ricardo Pinto/America’s Cup 37

Louis Vuitton returns as title sponsor, and though the next-generation AC75s have changed dramatically (the boats still look like radical Dali sculptures), the races haven’t for the most part. The starts are critical and then it’s make, shake and bake; over and out!

When there is action, it is quite exciting, but in the modern era of the America’s Cup with foiling monohulls and their insane closing speeds, rubbing isn’t racing, as the Italians [Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli (LRPP)] discovered on multiple occasions in their championship match against ETNZ. Each boat has a “buffer” zone or invisible force field that incurs the wrath of the race umpires if infringed upon.

American Magic leads Emirates Team New Zealand in a convincing win.
© 2024 Ricardo Pinto/America’s Cup 37

The Italians survived a scare earlier in the day from Red Bull Alinghi. They were uncharacteristically over early and had to restart with a penalty, but then the chase was on. It took a huge bobble from a quick wind blast to drop the Swiss off their foils and allow Spithill and LRPP skipper Bruni to sweep by, and even after incurring another penalty, to stave off the Swiss at the finish.

In the title race, New Zealand were still licking their wounds from that stinging loss just an hour or so previously, and as the race began, the Italians again incurred a penalty in the start box and the Kiwis grabbed a short lead. LRPP refused to go away, and after a poor jibe by ETNZ they caught up and it was game on! With the Italians on the charge, we finally got a taste of what these boats can do in close quarters. Unfortunately, with these “arm-stretched” AC 75s, close becomes too close, and Italy copped a boat-length penalty as they ducked in from behind and broke the virtual boat boundary. UGH!

Another penalty on the Italians occurred on the very next tack, with the Kiwis luffing from leeward and LRPP failing to keep clear as Burling took advantage of his right of way and pounced. ETNZ’s Taihoro managed to stay ahead for the remainder of the race to win by 34 seconds in a taste of what lies in store for the next two months.

“I think just incredibly challenging to sail in those conditions; we had a few issues we were managing on the boat, but we lucked out in the pre-start and got a penalty on them,” ETNZ skipper Peter Burling said. “We were expecting it to be tight and we were struggling to get the shifts right, but it’s going to be a close regatta. It’s all about making sure you get the phases right and sail the boat in the right places.”

“It was painful to lose that race; we fought hard and I’m very sorry for the whole team because obviously part of those penalties are due to mistakes I made,” said Bruni, who needs no apology. “We have to review deeply all the situations because we have very small screens on board that are super-hard to judge if the penalty was for you or for your opponent. Hats off to New Zealand, for a great race. I think it will be a very interesting America’s Cup.”

American Magic sailed well for most of the weekend, but against the French on Saturday it was a different story. A loud bang at the back of Patriot in the pre-start sent shudders through the afterguard as they fought to control their boat, which hobby-horsed briefly before dropping off its foils. Either something had struck the rudder or there was a technical issue. The team retired, leaving the French to claim the race unchallenged. Magic bounced back from their DNS to give the Kiwis on Taihoro a taste of their own medicine after a brilliant dip start put ETNZ on their back foot. Magic then picked up a favorable wind shift to sail away and win by .28 seconds.

Bad day for American Magic as either something hit the rudder or there was a technical failure. The jury is out.
© 2024 Ian Roman/America’s Cup 37

The cockpit fairing issue still is out there, and now that the Americans have shown good speed it is not likely to go away. At issue is the legality of the honeycomb fairing covers used on the four side-by-side recumbent-cycler cockpits, which ironically have been on Patriot all summer, but the protest was lodged just last week, seemingly at the last minute. More than likely it will be little more than a “bee in the bonnet,” but it wouldn’t be the America’s Cup without a design controversy.

All in all, an interesting start, but it gets really serious from Thursday, as one of the challengers will be eliminated in two short weeks!

Great Reads
"Everything about the room was optimized for reading old books: the comfy leather chairs, the good lighting, and even the "old yacht club" smell, although it had probably been decades since anyone was allowed to smoke a cigar in that space."