Tuning up for the 47th STIR

Published on March 25th, 2021

St Thomas, USVI (March 25, 2021) – Nearly a half dozen boats evenly divided between CSA Spinnaker Racing and Non-Spinnaker Racing took their start today in waters off the southeast side of St. Thomas for the Round the Rocks Race. This one-day race proved a great tune-up for the 47th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR), which is on March 26-28.

Sailors reveled in the 15 to 20 knots of easterly breeze on the 17-nautical mile course that traced along the south side of St. John, rounded LeDuck island off Coral Bay, and finished back off Cowpet Bay, St. Thomas. In the end, it was the Botin 52, FOX, owned and sailed by San Diego, CA-based Victor Wild, that won the Spinnaker class and the Dufour 40, Wild T’ing, owned and raced by St. Thomas’ Lawrence Aqui, that topped Non-Spinnaker.

“This is the most fantastic place we’ve ever sailed, it’s reliable and fun,” says Wild, an avid racer who holds memberships in the New York Yacht Club, San Diego Yacht Club, and Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron, and who took delivery of the brand-new FOX last year. “We’ve enjoyed the close starts and tussle with Blitz. Looking forward to tomorrow.”

Blitz, St. Thomas’ Peter Corr’s King 40 finished second and Chili Pepper, Puerto Rico’s Sebastian Sarh’s Beneteau First 10M, ended second in CSA Spinnaker Racing.

“We had a fabulous day,” says Wild T’ing’s Aqui. “It’s been a year since we’ve raced due to the pandemic. For the first hour today, I felt a bit rusty and had to get the feel of the boat again. After that, off we went.”

Hotel California Too, St. Thomas’ Stephen Schmidt’s Santa Cruz 70 placed second, and the Trinity III, the USA’s David McDonough’s Pearson 37-2, rounded out third in CSA Non-Spinnaker Racing. For complete results, click here.

Thirty-five boats are registered for STIR 2021. The fleet will sail in CSA Spinnaker Racing, CSA Non-Spinnaker Racing, One-Design IC24 and Hobie Wave. The first start for each day of racing is 11 a.m.

Chili Pepper’s Sarh is looking forward to the three days of competition ahead. “Everyone is excited to be back on the water after being locked down for nearly a year,” says Sarh whose boat is a former race winner, but many years ago when it was then named Uncle Sam.

“She is converted into a very stylish day sailor and takes people out on day sailing trips, most of whom have never experienced sailing. She cannot compete with modern designs, but we plan on having fun and hopefully competing against some older boats. Besides the first mate, the crew are a bunch of newbies that want to learn about sailing. They are very excited to come to the regatta. We love St Thomas; sailing couldn’t be any better.”

The One-Design IC24 Class will be the largest with 14 entries. One of those is St. Thomas’ Michael Finley, sailing his Aim Low You’ll Never Be Disappointed.

“It’s an old boat we had stored, and we have been rushing to get it ready,” says Finley. “Tony Coffelt (Commodore of STIR-host St. Thomas Yacht Club), Chris Curreri and I are racing together and for us, it’s just about getting out and racing. We all live here and love it here.”

Event informationSTIR detailsEntry list

Source: STIR

comment banner

Tags: , ,



Back to Top ↑

Get Your Sailing News Fix!

Your download by email.

  • Hidden
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

We’ll keep your information safe.