Copy
HEADS UP—
The prize giving for the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race is scheduled for 1830 ADT Saturday, 22 June.
Click here for -RESULTS-

THE NEXT MARION BERMUDA RACE IS SCHEDULED FOR
18 JUNE, 2021

The official source for race information… 
entry list, scratch sheet, official finishing, official scoring, official prize list… is on the web site.
https://marionbermuda.com
 
Look at Race News area below the banner picture and click on the Icons and the Photo.

Contact
Talbot Wilson
talbot@talbotwilson.com
View this email in your browser
Marion Bermuda 2019 - Day 8

Tabor Boy Bermuda By the Stars
    by Talbot Wilson

Royal Hamilton Amateur Dinghy Club (RHADC) BERMUDA, June 22, 2019:
James Geil, Master of Tabor Boy, Tabor Academy’s 92-foot iron schooner, was ecstatic about the outcome of the boat’s first Marion Bermuda Race.  
Will Tabor Boy come back for Marion Bermuda 2021? 
 
“Absolutely!” Captain Geil said. “We will block of this window of time for that… Absolutely, Absolutely.” The next race is scheduled to start June 18, 2021.
 
Tabor Boy and the Bermuda tall ship Spirit of Bermuda were both entered in the Classic Division of the 2019 race, the third Marion race for Spirit and first of any of the Bermuda races for Tabor Boy. In the past, Spirit had raced alone and this was expected to be a classic match. However, Spirit failed to cross the starting line in Marion, so the black and red Bermuda sloop was an automatic Did Not Start… DNS. 
 
Tabor Boy won the match and is flying the Classic Division’s ‘Coming Home’ Banner back home to Marion, signifying her victory.  
 
Geil has been aboard Tabor Boy for 34 years and Captain of the ship for 32 of those. The Marion Bermuda Race was a new experience. “I’ve been to Bermuda many times, Geil said, “but this was the first race. Being in competition was exciting. I wish we’d done it years ago. This time the opportunity was here. We identified that last summer and decided to go for it.”
 
“Racing is different from going on a cruise,” Geil noted. “We would have been more conservative going out of Buzzards Bay if we weren’t racing. We were driving hard going out the bay with 25 knots of wind on our nose. The vessel is very strong, she can take it. That was the most exciting part.”
 
“Well,” Geil took that back. “The start was THE most exciting. With Spirit running the line in the last minute before the start, I was very glad to have Gregg Nourjian, our tactician, right by my side. It was more congested around the starting line than I thought it would be, even with just the two vessels in the class. That together with the 25 knot wind made for an exciting start.” 
 
“We saw that Spirit was going sort off fast, reaching down the line from the committee boat end and that she was running out of starting line,” he said. “We saw her go hard on the wind and Gregg said ‘She missed the pin’. We figured they would gybe around Gun Smoke [a ‘spotter’ committee boat anchored off of the end of the line] and start on the other tack. But they kept on going.”
 
“We were a little puzzled by that,” Geil added. But Tabor Boy was off on their adventure.
 
“We have never pressed Tabor Boy this hard,” said Chip Connard. He’s the vessel’s student executive officer, Captain Geil’s right hand man, a recent Tabor Academy graduate and headed to Kings Point Merchant Marine Academy in the fall. “We’ve never done any organized racing before,” he continued, “except a couple of fun schooner races up in Maine… never any real ocean racing.”
 
“We were trying to get into the best position we could to have a quick start off the line with Spirit to beat up the bay. It was entirely different. I’ve never driven this schooner this hard. We had full sail on, everything.”
 
“Usually in those conditions, we’ve got our jib topsail down, our gaff topsail down and we try to keep things a bit more under control. So we were really driving hard, really going fast, healed way over, pushing the vessel to the limit of what she could do to have a great start.”
 
Tabor Boy tacked eight times going out of Buzzard’s Bay before rounding Sow & Pigs reef and heading south-southeast into the open Atlantic. The tactician Greg Nourjian and the team had already outlined the track they wanted to take down the rhumb line to Bermuda. They had put waypoints on the chart where they wanted to enter the Gulf Stream meander for favorable current and where they wanted to exit the loop and then the track from there to Bermuda.
 
“Sailing conditions were perfect,” Connard said. “There were some times when we could have used a stronger breeze because of how heavy Tabor Boy is. But we had enough to carry us through, some great breezy nights and breezy days. The weather was perfectly clear.”
 
Speaking of their arrival in Bermuda he said, “It was really incredible. When we got to where we thought we might be able to see Bermuda, we sent one of our officers aloft with binoculars to look for Gibbs Hill and St David’s Light. He found them and shouted ‘Land Ho!’ and on deck we let out a big cheer. It was gratifying for our navigators putting their skills to work.” 

“It is one thing to take the class," Connard added. "But putting it to work and seeing Bermuda pop up on the horizon… Wow! We got here using a sextant and the stars and the sun and planets. We didn’t actually turn on the GPS until we crossed the finish line. We finished the race entirely on celestial. 

Tabor Boy finished at 14:43:04 ADT on Tuesday afternoon covering the 645 nautical mile course in four days  1hr 33min 04sec., not bad for a 1914 iron-hulled schooner.
  
“Once we got out of Buzzards Bay,” the young XO said, “we set the Brass taffrail log [A mechanical device dragged from the stern of the vessel that indicates the vessel's speed through the water. It consists of a propeller, a reading unit and a stiff line connecting them.] and started plotting for our dead reckoning track.”
 
“We started our celestial navigation work doing all the calculations long hand like Captain Geil has taught us in his year-long course at Tabor. We did everything by hand the old fashioned way. We didn’t even have prerace set-up sheets to do our calculations. Everything was done with a piece of graph paper, plotting sheets, an almanac and a sextant.”
 
“We had excellent fixes especially at morning and evening twilight. Some days we had three or four LOPs [lines of position] crossing. Two or three of us were out there with sextants grabbing what we could. We’d have a think tank in the deckhouse banging out sight forms. We had three official navigators, but eight of the students and several of the adults on board could do celestial. Most learned from Captain Geil.”
 
Organizers for 2021 hope to get more classic yacht participation for the twenty-third Marion Bermuda Race set for June 18, 2021. Geil offered a thoughts on that. “I think just networking,” Geil said. “Making contacts… Now that there have been two classic vessels for the first time, maybe this will get other organizations interested and get two or three more vessels to enter. That would be great.”  
 
Tabor Academy
Tabor Academy, the owner of the vessel, is a coeducational, college preparatory boarding and day school located in Marion, Massachusetts. Tabor's academic, artistic, athletic, and community programs provide distinctive opportunities for students to achieve genuine understanding and significant skills and to identify and pursue personal goals. 
 
As the ‘school by the sea’, Tabor has a unique maritime heritage that embodies, in all its programs, the qualities a seagoing life requires: thoughtful preparation for and awareness of the wider world, perseverance, courage, good humor, a sense of direction, and humility.


CELESTIAL- Bermuda By the Stars
Jack Gordon, one of the Tabor Academy graduates onboard Tabor Boy in 2019, is making a documentary film on the race. He is now a documentary filmmaker from Massachusetts and a student at the University of California, Berkeley. He graduated from Tabor Academy in 2017 where he was introduced to the art of celestial navigation in Captain Geil’s course at Tabor.
 
Gordon is the director and producer of the short documentary ‘The Ocean Knows No Borders’ and the feature documentary ‘A Century of Tabor Rowing’. 
 
One evening at sea, as part of his documentary, Gordon and the crew even flew his drone, circling Tabor Boy. Footage near twilight includes amazing footage of the vessel under sail, making a wake out far astern and the vessel with the full moon in the background. 
 
Getting the drone back aboard was a challenge. One of the crew grabbed it from the rib hanging in the davits off the stern. That was the only clear air space to land.  
 
In his director’s statement for the film, Gordon explains his vision:
“Like the main characters in the film, I attended Tabor Academy for high school and was introduced to celestial navigation through Captain Geil’s course my junior year. Throughout four years of high school, that class remained the most interesting and exciting course I had enrolled in. Though I have had a few opportunities to experience offshore sailing, I never got the opportunity to put my celestial navigation skills into practice.”
 
“As my documentary and video career has accelerated over the past two years, I’ve had an urge to eventually create a film about celestial navigation in the Marion to Bermuda Race. Growing up in Marion, I was well aware of the race and its unique character as the only race that maintains a celestial class. When I learned this past winter that there was a group of Tabor students preparing to compete in the celestial class of the race, I knew it was the perfect opportunity to make my idea into a reality.”
 
“It is my hope that this film will raise awareness of the fascinating art of celestial navigation and grow an appreciation for a purer form of sailing that deepens one’s connection to the sea. The fact that Tabor Academy continues to give students the opportunity to learn such a unique and transformational skill is truly unique, and it is something that should be appreciated tremendously by those that have had the opportunity to take the course.”
 
“This film will speak to the deep connection people have to the sport of offshore sailing, the way it can intimately connect you to the sea and the stars, and the sense of freedom and adventure that it instills. To see the joy and passion of the students from racing and navigating the vessel will show the value in disconnecting from the technology around us and rediscovering this traditional form of offshore sailing.”
 

Upon completion of the film in September, it will be submitted to film festivals in October of 2019. Though the list of festivals is subject to change, and acceptance to a festival is by no means guaranteed, the following is a list of expected festival submissions for Celestial:
 
Festival Submission Deadline Event Date Premiere Status
International Ocean Film Festival October 2019 March 2020 World Premiere
Bermuda International Film Festival October 2019 March 2020 International Premiere
 
Results—
Founder’s Division
Class A— 
  1. Abigail— Robert Buck, Aquidneck 52, Marion MA - Celestial
  2. Kinship — Francis Selldorf, Baltic 52, Padanaram MA
  3. Sunflower — Mark Lenci, Beneteasu Oceanis 523, Harpswell ME
Class B —
  1. Gallant, Christian Hoffman, Navy 44, USNA Annapolis MD, Celestial
  2. Momentum, Paul Kanev, Hinckley Sou’wester 51, Newport RI
  3. Defiance, George Hamilton/Kevin Navarro, Navy 44 MKII, USNA Annapolis MD, Celestial 
Class C— 
  1. Pinnacle— Peter Torosian, Tartan 4100, Rye NH, Celestial
  2. Escapade II— Tom Bowler, Morris 46, Ocean, Marion MA
  3. Scappare— David LeBlanc, Catalina 42 MKII, Stillhouse Cove RI 
Class D— 
  1. Cordelia— Roy Greenwald, Valiant 42, Marion MA, Celestial
  2. Frolic— Ray Cullum, Dixon 44, Marion MA, Celestial
  3. Silhouette— David Caso, Cherubini 44, Portsmouth RI
 
Classic Division
Overall Class and division
  1. Tabor Boy— James Geil, Schooner 92, Tabor Academy Marion MA, Celestial
DNS Spirit of Bermuda—Jordan Smith, Tall Ship 118, Dockyard, Bermuda
 
The official source for race information… 
entry list, scratch sheet, official finishing, official scoring, official prize list… is on the web site.
https://marionbermuda.com
 
Look at Race News area below the banner picture and click on the Icons and the Photo.
 
RESULTS
https://marionbermuda.com/2019-race/results-2019
 
Races within the Race
Competition for special awards is a unique attraction for the Marion-Bermuda Race. The Notice of Race has all the details.
Go to the website for photos and descriptions of the trophies and the competition for them.
 
The R&W Rope Rigging Solutions Team Trophy is offered for established Yacht Clubs or Sailing organizations that form a team of three member yachts. The team whose three yachts have the lowest corrected time total will be the winner.
 
Yachts sailing with a crew of two, a crew of three or four or an all-female crew of any number may compete in the double-handed, short-handed, and all-female competitions respectively. Prizes are the Double-Handed Trophy, the short-handed L. Bryon Kingery, Jr. Memorial Trophy and the Commodore Faith Paulsen Trophy for the ladies.
 
A “family” yacht racing for the Beverly Family Trophy is one with a crew of five or more with all or all-but-one being members of a single household or a single family may race for the family prize. Persons related to a common grandparent and spouses of these “family”, too.
 
The Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy encourages youth participation. A "Youth" yacht has at least four (4) youths aboard with at least 66% of the crew qualified as youths. A youth sailor must be 16 years of age or older but not more than 23 years old by June 14, 2019. One or more adults at least 23 years old by June 14, 2019 must be on board.
 
The Beverly Yacht Club Polaris Trophy is a prize for stargazers. If a yacht has elected to be celestially navigated, she will receive a 3% favorable adjustment to her ORR rating. 
 
About the Marion Bermuda Race 
The 2019 race is the 22nd Marion Bermuda Race and the 42nd year for the 645-mile open ocean challenge for cruiser type yachts.
 
The first Marion-Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race in 1977 saw 104 starters cross the line. Over the forty-two years since that first race the race has evolved into a true offshore challenge for cruising yachts, amateur, family and youth sailors. Special prizes abound to emphasis celestial navigation, short handed sailing, family crews and regional competition. The race is handicapped under the ORR rating system to assure the fairest scoring available for ocean racing yachts.
 
About the Marion Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race Association 
The Marion Bermuda Race encourages the development of blue-water sailing skills on seaworthy yachts that can be handled safely offshore with limited crew. The Marion Bermuda Race is a 501(c)(3) organization and among other educational efforts, supports and encourages Youth Sailing programs. The Marion to Bermuda Race is organized and run entirely by hundreds of volunteering members of The Beverly Yacht Club (BYC), The Blue Water Sailing Club (BWSC) and The Royal Hamilton Amateur Dinghy Club (RHADC) for the Marion Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race Association.
 
Press Contact—
Talbot Wilson
talbot@talbotwilson.com
850-217-7138
 
 
 
 
Tabor Boy, (2), the 92-foot iron-hulled schooner from Tabor Academy in Marion MA won the Classic Yacht Division of the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race. Her captain, James Geil, said Tabor Boy would defend her title in the next race scheduled for 18 June, 2021. 
Any Challengers?
Photo by Talbot Wilson
Roy and Gail Greenwald’s Valiant 42 Cordelia has finished first in fleet on corrected time in the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race. She will win the Goslings Founders Trophy. The Greenwalds sail out of Mairon MA. 
Cordelia is also the Class D winner
and winner of the  Beverly Yacht Club Polaris Trophy 
Photo by fran Grenon, Spectrum Photo
The classic schooner Tabor Boy from Tabor Academy in Marion MA finished as the winner in the Classic Division and will proudly fly her 'coming home' banner on her return trip to Marion MA. Presented by RHADC Commodore Willie Forbes, left. Student XO Chip Connard and Captain James Geil are in the center 
Photo by Fran Grenon, Spectrum Photo
Kiwi Spirit was the line honors leader from start to finish in the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race. The Farr 63 finished off St. David’s Lighthouse at 2:27:59 Tuesday. 
Photo by Talbot Wilson
 Class B winner and second in the Founders Division was the US Naval Academy's Gallant, a Pearson Composite Navy 44 skippered by Christian Hoffman. 
Photo by Fran Grenon, Spectrum Photo
Winner in class C was the Tartan 4100 Pinnacle, skippered by Peter Torosian of Rye NH, Celestial
Photo by Fran Grenon, Spectrum Photo
 
The tabs on the marionbermuda.com home page are direct links to tracking, reports and results.
 

Contact
Talbot Wilson
talbot@talbotwilson.com
Copyright © 2019 Talbot Wilson and Associates. Inc, All rights reserved.


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences 

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp