Got TIPS or BREAKING NEWS? Please call 1-284-442-8000 direct/can also WhatsApp same number or Email ALL news to:newsvino@outlook.com;                               ads call 1-284-440-6666

Triple Jack aims at three in a row!

Triple Jack aiming to make it three wins in a row. The 47 foot ‘one-off’ Kelsal, owned by Richard Woodridge and Steve Davis, has won the Round Tortola trophy for the last two years and in 2009 set the race record for the fastest circumnavigation in 3 hours, 33 minutes and 27 seconds.
The 42nd annual Peg Legs Round Tortola Race will take place Nov. 19.
The 42nd annual Peg Legs Round Tortola Race will take place Nov. 19.
ROAD TOWN, Tortola, VI - The 42nd annual Peg Legs Round Tortola Race organised by the Royal BVI Yacht Club and sponsored by Nanny Cay Resort, Marina and Boatyard will take place on Saturday, November 19, 2011.

Three classes, racing, cruising and multihull, will compete in the 36-mile race with all eligible for the overall prize. The much loved trimaran Triple Jack will be aiming to make it three wins in a row at this year’s race. The 47 foot ‘one-off’ Kelsal, owned by Richard Woodridge and Steve Davis, has won the Round Tortola trophy for the last two years and in 2009 set the race record for the fastest circumnavigation in 3 hours, 33 minutes and 27 seconds.

Last year Triple Jack was on course to beat its own record before disaster struck.

As skipper George Lane recalled: “It all went swimmingly well until Soper’s Hole when the boat suddenly didn’t feel quite as good as it should and we realized that we had snapped our dagger board off!”

Fortunately Triple Jack was still able to beat up the Sir Francis Drake Channel to the finish line and take first place in the racing class; she held off Igoodia, skippered by Milt Baehr and Mark Plaxton, by one minute. Jack Dusty III a Pearson 40 skippered by 84-year-old Bill Hirst won the cruising class.

With the wind gusting over 25 knots, the conditions tested even the most experienced VI sailors. Peter Haycraft sailing Pipe Dream, lost his mainsail half way up the first beat on the south side of Tortola. Diva, a modified 30 Square Meter, skippered by Dr Robin Tattersall, lost the top of her mast on the north side. Of the thirteen boats that entered four did not finish with John Hayes’ Wild Fire awarded third place in the racing class for his sporting retirement to assist the floundering Diva.

Following the same format as the last two years, classes will start in the Sir Francis Drake Channel off Nanny Cay and then head anti-clockwise around Tortola. After the beat up the Sir Francis Drake Channel, the fleet will turn the corner at Great Camanoe and head on a downward run to West End where, after a quick wiggle through Soper’s Hole, it will be a beat back to the finish line off Nanny Cay.

The first start will be 9.05 a.m. for the cruising class, followed by the racing and multihull classes at 9.35a.m. Registration for the race will be held on Friday November 18 at the Royal BVI Yacht Club, Road Reef Marina, between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. The after-race party will be held at Nanny Cay beach bar as soon as competitors finish, with the prize giving at 6.00 p.m.

While Triple Jack still holds the record for fastest circumnavigation of Tortola in the Round Tortola Race, the outright and multihull record is now held by Soma, a Formula 40. Soma, a St John-based catamaran and frequent BVI visitor, smashed the Round Tortola record on April 15, 2010 in the first, and so far only, attempt on the Nanny Cay Challenge. Soma circumnavigated Tortola and outer islands in 2 hours, 50 minutes and 15 seconds destroying Triple Jack’s record set in the 2009 PegLegs Round Tortola Race.

The Nanny Cay Challenge is an all-comers event for multihulls and monohulls. The monohull time to beat of 4 hours, 15 minutes and 5 seconds, was set by Dave West’s Jurakan, a Melges 32, also in the 2009 PegLegs Round Tortola Race; there have been no challengers since then.

Competitors must attempt the record anti-clockwise and round Beef, Scrub, Great Camanoe and Guana Islands to port. An entry fee of a $250 donation to a BVI charity of the challenger’s choice includes two night’s dockage (before and after attempt) at Nanny Cay.

As with most sailing events, the reward is in the taking part and bragging rights but record breakers are able to celebrate their feat with a free dinner at PegLegs for up to 15 crewmembers and a jeroboam of champagne compliments of Nanny Cay Marina. They will also get their name on the trophy, which will be on display year-round in PegLegs.

7 Responses to “Triple Jack aims at three in a row!”

  • edmund (10/11/2011, 10:57) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    good piece go triple jack make us proud
  • True (10/11/2011, 12:19) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    Hope Triple Jack win and dedicate it to Olaf...
  • fish (10/11/2011, 16:42) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    another programme not for our people
    • get real (10/11/2011, 20:40) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
      take a look at how many of "our" kids are on the water sailing. Maybe then that chip on your shoulder won't be as heavy to bear. Peace.
    • bvi commission (10/11/2011, 21:50) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
      u like a fish out of water..!! why it not for "our people " - u need to open your eyes and get out more
    • T2DB (10/11/2011, 22:15) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
      Who stopping you from getting involved? Not because they're not giving out 'freebs' and it's not easy stuff! There are many local blacks involved with sailing, get off your lazy a$$ and step out the box for a change! Sitting on the sidelines being jealous and talking sh$$$t doesn't make life better for anyone! Have you tried joining any of these associations or trying to learn how to sail? Do you even realize that one of the best builders of some racing kats around here includes a local young man in East End who does stellar work? If not, then shut up!!! You all talk and don't even know what you talking about! IF you never showed interest or just because you don't know of anyone involved with this on the local level, how can you make such a DUMB comment. These things bring LOTS of revenue into the BVI and create jobs! It's nobody's fault that locals pick and choose which jobs they want and which ones they don't! Travel once in a while then you will realize just how much we have become spoiled brats to our own detriment!!!! Just another excuse to make an 'excuse' for not doing something!


Create a comment


Create a comment

Disclaimer: Virgin Islands News Online (VINO) welcomes your thoughts, feedback, views, bloggs and opinions. However, by posting a blogg you are agreeing to post comments or bloggs that are relevant to the topic, and that are not defamatory, liable, obscene, racist, abusive, sexist, anti-Semitic, threatening, hateful or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be excluded permanently from making contributions. Please view our declaimer above this article. We thank you in advance for complying with VINO's policy.

Follow Us On

Disclaimer: All comments posted on Virgin Islands News Online (VINO) are the sole views and opinions of the commentators and or bloggers and do not in anyway represent the views and opinions of the Board of Directors, Management and Staff of Virgin Islands News Online and its parent company.