While Saturday brought drizzle and little breeze, Sunday meant clearer skies and higher winds for the B.C. Sailing Championships event in Squamish.
The local event on Howe Sound has taken place on the B.C. Circuit for the provincial series of regattas the last three years. Other events take place in other communities like Vancouver, Victoria, Comox, Kelowna, Port Moody and West Vancouver between April and October.
Garry Cotter, one of the local organizers, said the event takes place with the support of a couple of other groups helping the ƵappYacht Club.
The Royal Vancouver Yacht Club provided some resources, while the West Vancouver Yacht Club stepped up to provide one of the two committee boats to oversee the races.
“It just goes to show how many people want to sail here,” Cotter said.
The event attracted competitors from the Lower Mainland, Kelowna, Victoria and Sechelt. Cotter, himself, sailed in the Laser class on the weekend.
Many of the events are geared toward younger sailors, with a few from Ƶappsailing in the Optimist events. The Optis are dinghies in which youngsters typically learn, and they are broken into different colours based on age and experience.
“They’re really easy to sail, so they’re great for learning,” Cotter said.
Locally, the number of sailors has been increasing with the advent of classes and camps in recent years. That’s how Squamish’s Arthur Akbulatov, 13, got into the sport a few years back.
“I started at summer camp here. It was just really fun, and I wanted to come back,” he said.
Another local, Adrian Conn, 13, started sailing in the Opti class but has moved on to Laser 4.7 class and now races for the West Vancouver club, as it’s the closest club with a race team for the type of boat, though he does notice a different in the sailing environment.
“It’s not as windy in West Van…. It’s not as windy as Squamish,” he said.
Saturday did not start out so windy though. The weather did not cooperate for the Optimist races on Howe Sound not far from Newport Beach (formerly Nexen Beach). They had too little wind to able to compete, though the other classes, farther out in the sound, were able to get in races
“I think Ƶappteased us,” said local Ben Sweeny, 11, who sails in the Optimist blue class.
Optimist classes are broken into colours based on age categories, with green for beginning, then moving onto white, blue and red.
Sunday’s weather was a marked improvement, as the winds were approaching 30 knots, Cotter says.
“It just howled wind. It was really good,” he said.
As far as results, Conn won two of his five races in a small field among the Laser 4.7 racers, finishing second overall among the three 4.7 racers.
Squamish’s Grayson Blann, Akbulatov and Sweeny finished in the middle of the pack of 27 optimist sailors based on their best four results of five races. Blann and Akbulatov’s best finishes were 12th while Sweeny’s was 13th.
There were more than 70 boats and approximately 100 competitors for the event, sailing in the different Laser and Optimist classes, as well as in the two-person 420s and 29ers.
Cotter, who admits he does not sail as much anymore, still fared reasonably well, winning one of his races in the Laser Radial class.
“I actually had a pretty good regatta myself,” he said.