Please select your home edition
Edition
Marine Products Direct 2023 - Calypso LEADERBOARD

Clean Regattas: Round Barbados Sailing Week

by Renata Goodridge, Sailors for the Sea 18 Feb 2022 13:11 UTC 18-23 January 2022
Whistler - Round Barbados Sailing Week © Sailors for the Sea

Last month the 2022 Caribbean regatta season breezed in with the Round Barbados Sailing Week.

This year's event, held on January 18-23, 2022, featured 82 entries from eight countries in 10 classes including racing keelboats, dinghies, kite boards and even a radio-controlled fleet. The week featured plenty of parties and three days of back-to-back racing, the highlight of which is the race around the island.

Every year on January 21st—a date that celebrates the birthday of the island's first prime minister and founder of the Barbados Cruising Club, Errol Walton Barrow—sailors gather in Barbados to greet the trade winds at the Mount Gay Rum Round Barbados Race, an island tradition since 1936. For this year's event the winds lived up to their reputation—20 to 25 knots, with gusts up to 35 knots.

The roughly 52-nautical-mile course begins and ends in Carlisle Bay near the Barbados Cruising Club, on the island's southwest corner. On the clockwise course, the leeward west coast was a quiet first leg, but when the boats reached the top of the island and turned east and south, they were in the teeth of big seas from the east, with a remnant cross chop from the north, and no one stayed dry. The seas eased as the boats rounded the South Point to head up the coast to the finish line.

The race had a pursuit start format, so boats had different start times depending on their boat speeds. This brought many of them to the finish line around the same time, making for exciting spectating ashore.

Local yacht Whistler is a brand-new J/121, with a seasoned crew that has represented Barbados for years. She raced around the island and won the regatta with an elapsed time of 6 hours, 17 minutes 30 seconds, she was moving fast!

Another local yacht, Rapajam, a Beneteau First 53, has also represented our island for many years. This year, she had the youngest crew on board - three of our intrepid ocean-steward youth sailors: Anya, Francesca, and Isabella. It was a first for them to sail around their island, and they were thrilled to collect the 3rd place prize for Rapajam.

The Regatta ticked off many of their Clean Regatta bronze-level goals, including awarding practical items such as Doyle Sails' bags, Digicel umbrellas, and of course a wee bit of Mount Gay Rum. Online scoring and tracking kept the event nearly paperless, and menus reflected the local catch and ground provisions, including vegetarian alternatives. The Sailors for the Sea ocean-steward posters drew attention and several of the overseas sailors were impressed that our island yacht clubs remain a place of learning for anyone willing. We look forward to increasing our sustainability goals next year and plan to create a challenge amongst the (smaller) Eastern Caribbean regattas for sustainability achievements.

Related Articles

The Cost of Amazon's Plastic Denial
Generating 709 million pounds of plastic packaging waste in 2021 For the third year, Oceana analyzed e-commerce packaging data and found that Amazon generated 709 million pounds of plastic packaging waste in 2021. Posted on 18 Dec 2022
Eco-friendly tips to provision your boat
Damon and Janet Gannon offer tips for provisioning and living aboard We recently launched our Green Boating video series, which highlight our best practices for ocean-friendly boating! Posted on 16 Nov 2022
Keeping the Bilge Clean
Prevent fuel or oil from sneaking out of your boat's bilge This month, we launched our new Green Boating video series, which highlights our best practices for ocean-friendly boating! Posted on 16 Oct 2022
Green provisioning for cruising
Don't let perfect be the enemy of good One of the things my husband, Sailors for the Sea Skipper Damon Gannon, and I love about living aboard Fulmar, our Pacific Seacraft 37, is how conscious we are about the resources we use. Posted on 18 Sep 2022
Kids environmental lesson plans
Discover the answers to how whales have adapted to living in the ocean Roaming throughout all the world's oceans, whales are the largest animals on Earth. As marine mammals, whales are also warm-blooded and must regularly surface to breathe air. Posted on 26 Jun 2022
Deep dive into whale conservation
Q&A with Michael Moore, author of We Are All Whalers Recently, I had a chance to sit down with a fellow whale biologist and sailor, Dr. Michael Moore, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and the director of the institution's Marine Mammal Center. Posted on 19 Mar 2022
Chile and Brazil take on big plastic
Imagine every minute of every day, two dump trucks full of single-use plastic drive onto the beach Imagine that every minute of every day, two dump trucks full of single-use plastic drive onto the beach, back up to the shoreline, and raise their beds, sending a torrent of trash into the ocean. Posted on 16 Jan 2022
Clock is ticking for North Atlantic right whales
Only around 336 individuals remain, a nearly 10% drop in population in a year Earlier this month, a 39-year-old North Atlantic right whale named Slalom was spotted off the coast of South Carolina with a new calf - her sixth, and first in 11 years. Posted on 28 Dec 2021
Five tips for greener living aboard
Life aboard a boat is already pretty green, which is one of its appeals When you're away from the dock, every resource is limited and must be somehow generated and/or stored on the boat, and everything going out, like trash and waste, needs to have a plan. Posted on 16 Nov 2021
Ten ways you can help save the oceans
10 lifestyle choices that can help protect and restore our oceans Oceans cover 71 percent of the planet and are home to important species and ecosystems that we rely on for food, livelihoods, climate regulation and more. But the oceans need our help. Posted on 16 Oct 2021
Pantaenius 2022 - SAIL & POWER 1 FOOTER ROWNorth Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTERStoneways Marine 2021 - FOOTER