Please select your home edition
Edition
Savvy Navvy 2024

12 Foot Dinghy Irish Championship 2024 at Bray Sailing Club

by Vincent Delany 26 Aug 16:36 BST 24 August 2024
Droleen 'Windyridge' sailed by Vincent Delany of RStGYC who won the Droleen Championship © Tony Garry

For the first time in its recent history, the Irish 12 Foot Dinghy Championship moved 12 kilometres away from Dun Laoghaire to Bray Sailing Club on Saturday 24th August.

Three different types of 12 footer competed:

(a) International 12 Foot Dinghies

(b) Dublin Bay SC 12 Foot Dinghies (same hull but with a 1969 gunter rig with a small jib and a foredeck and

(c) Bray Droleens from 1896

All the fleets sailed together under the watchful eye of PRO Barry MacNeeney. His first challenge was to address the weather. The forecast was for 11 knots gusting 22 knots, but the 12 foot owners believe their boats are safe in winds up to 15 knots. PRO Barry MacNeeney decided to proceed with racing for any boats which wanted to compete, and laid the course as close to the shore as possible where the waves were non-existent.

On the water, Droleen Windyridge had the best start in race one but quickly ran into light winds on the left-hand side of the course, while Mark Delany in100 year old Cora (built by Camper and Nicholson) quickly took the lead and completed the single-lap triangular course in 15 minutes eight seconds, ahead of the Magowans in Sgadan fifty seconds later. Johnson and Varian in Albany crossed the line twenty-four seconds later.

In race two, the wind gusts were getting stronger, which was an advantage for the two-handed 12 footers. This time, in a very strong gust, the Magowans in Sgadan capsized just beyond the gybe mark, and the race was won by Johnson and Varian's Albany in fifteen minutes 19 seconds, with Mark Delany 1 seconds astern.

With one win apiece by Albany and Cora, everything depended on the last race. This time Cora started beside the committee boat and was overhauled on the first beat by the two-handed Albany. Sgadan despite having recovered from her capsize, was forced to retire. Albany finished in thirteen minutes twenty seconds and Cora seventeen seconds behind. Both boats were on equal points, but on countback, Albany with two wins took the overall championship.

At the prize-giving, Peter Lundy, Commodore of Bray Sailing Club, expressed his delight in having twenty-five entries in all the classes and welcomed the classic boats to the club. Vincent Delany of the 12 Foot Association spoke about the history of the three classic classes competing. Mark Delany was presented with the Cora Trophy as best International 12 Foot Dinghy, Gavin Johnson was presented with the Edmond Johnson Trophy for the best DBSC 12 Foot Dinghy and Gail Varian was presented with the Altair Trophy for the top crew.

Related Articles

The price of heritage
A tale of a city, three towns but one theme, from dinghy historian Dougal Henshall The meeting in question took place down at the National Maritime Museum at Falmouth and saw the 1968 Flying Dutchman Gold Medal winning trio of Rodney Pattisson, Iain MacDonald-Smith and their boat Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious brought back together. Posted on 19 Apr
Irish 12 Foot Dinghy Class Championship
Racing held for these classics in Dun Laoghaire Harbour The 12 Foot Dinghy Class is not well known in Ireland today in the era of GRP boats. However, before 1947 the 12 Foot Dinghies were the preferred class of many premier dinghy sailors in Ireland in Dublin and Cork. Posted on 28 Aug 2023
County Dublin 12 Foot Dinghy Championship
Women at the helm winning at the the Royal St George YC In 1931, 'The County Dublin 12 Foot International Dinghy Association' was formed to co-ordinate sailing activities among the various clubs of the Dublin region. That modest organisation evolved into the Irish Dinghy Racing Association in 1945. Posted on 31 Aug 2022
Bosham Classic Boat Revival cancelled
Significant numbers of attendees are not able to make it Sadly, Bosham SC have reluctantly taken the very difficult decision to cancel the event planned for the weekend of 3rd & 4th September due in part to the feedback that significant numbers of regular attendees would not be able to make the event this year. Posted on 21 Aug 2022
Irish 12 Foot Dinghy Championship
Lough Ree sees visitors from Europe The first day's activity consisted of 'Sailing Round Ireland on the Inside' with six competitors from Holland, England and Ireland cruising the two miles from Lough Ree Yacht Club in Leinster to Hodson's Bay Hotel in Connacht for lunch. Posted on 9 Jun 2022
Irish 12 Foot Dinghy Championship
A celebration of 12 foot dinghies at Royal St George YC Over the weekend of 28-29 August the Royal St George Yacht Club was filled with 12 foot dinghies of four different types for a weekend of celebration of the smaller dinghy. Posted on 2 Sep 2021
Researching International 12 Foot Dinghies
One of the earliest one-design classes of dinghy in Britain I am carrying out research on the above Class which was designed by George Cockshott of South Lancs Yacht Club and was the winner of a dinghy design competition. Posted on 9 Oct 2020
International 12 Foot Class Irish Championship
10th anniversary of the revived event The Royal St George Yacht Club in Dun Laoghaire hosted the 2020 Irish 12 Foot Dinghy Championships on 13th September with two alternative rigs permissible Posted on 14 Sep 2020
10th anniversary International 12 Championship
Taking place in Dun Laoghaire on 13th September The B.R.A. 12 Foot Dinghy Class was adopted by the International Yacht Racing Union on 1st January 1920, and thus it became the International 12 Foot Class, the only dinghy class to compete at the 1920 Antwerp (Belgium) Olympic Games, at Oostende. Posted on 8 Sep 2020
The Greed for Speed
Has it taken away the fun of sailing? With dinghy racing being a competitive sport, there has always been a demand for more power and speed as getting to the finish line faster than the rest is what it is all about, so that in some ways, the 'Greed for Speed' is nothing new. Posted on 24 Apr 2020