The
forty-four Dragons were expected to officially open the 34th edition of
the Régates Royales-Trophée Panerai in a light south-westerly after a
massive rainstorm hit Cannes in the morning. Unfortunately, the breeze
played hide-and-seek well into the afternoon and the fresh
south-westerly was late in setting in, later increasing and gusting 25
knots, allowing the one-design fleet to finish only one race on the
opening day. There were some high-tension moments today at noon at the Vieux Port
in Cannes as a huge, massive black cloud hovered over the pontoons and
the race village, to release its charge of heavy, torrential rain. No
more than half an hour of big raindrops, a gusting wind blowing at more
than 30 knots and then the sun came out again, warm and bright, drying
up the place.
The wind also went back to a more acceptable intensity and
the Race Committee decided to send the 44-boats strong fleet out
shortly before 3 pm. A south-easterly of around ten knots welcomed the
sailors but, as the sun went slowly down, the breeze almost completely
died out. Actually it was a new wind from the south-west to cause this
patch of very light air. The boats were then moved to a different race
area in looking for a decent breeze to race. By 4.30 pm the situation changed dramatically and the Dragons were
sailing in over twenty knots and choppy sea. The Committee quickly
launched the starting procedure, as the wind gusted to 25 knots. The
race, on a double windward to leeward course of 1,2 miles, was won by
Russian expert Vassily Senatorov (I feel Good), followed by reigning
champion Giuseppe Duca from Italy (Cloud) and by Denmark's Soren
Pehrsson (Blue Lady) while the first French crew to cross the line was
Gérard Blanc (Tsuica II) finishing in twelfth.
Old
beauties in Cannes
There
are seventeen “old beauties”, more than one hundred years old, at
the 34th Régates Royales-Trophée Panerai. They are all
splendidly maintained and restored and some have truly exceptional
stories. The oldest of all is the gaff cutter Victory,
designed by Hitchens and built in 1884 while the youngest one Esterel
that is also a gaff
cutter and is going to celebrate his hundredth birthday this year.
Between them and rigorously by their birth date: Marigold
(Charles Nicholson-1892), Avel (Charles E. Nicholson-1896),
Nan of Fife (William Fife-1896), Lulu (Raibot &
Caillebotte-1897), Pen Duick (William Fife-1898), Tigris
(Alfred Mylne-1899), Bona Fide (Sibbick-1899), Iona
(Willaim Fife-1899), Kelpie (Alfred Mylne-1902), Moonbeam
of Fife 3 (William Fife-1903), Oriole (Nathanaël
Herreshoff-1905), Véronique (AR. Juke-1907), Mariska
(William Fife-1908), Wayward (Shepherd-1908) and Mariquita
(William Fife-1911).
Twenty
countries
Classic
yachts sometimes come from very far away to be in Cannes, like the
two Canadian boats especially delivered by cargo ship to participate
to the Mediterranean circuit Aloha (Edson Shock-1923) and Lady
Van (Charles Nicholson-1928). The most represented country at the
Régates Royales-Trophée Panerai is France with thirty-three boats,
followed by the UK with twenty-seven and Italy with nine. Montecarlo
(3), Canada (2), the Isle of Man (2), Malta (2), Holland (2), the
Cayman Islands (2) are also present as well as the USA, Tortola,
Denmark, Spain, Belgium, Switzerland… not to mention the Dragons
coming from Finland, Germany, Ireland, Russia and Sweden.
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