Regattas brew kegs of joy
- Share via
Simon Brown
For those looking for a watering hole on the water with some family
fun on the side, look no further than the Balboa Yacht Club’s Beercan
Regattas.
Held each Thursday at 6 p.m. through Aug. 26 in Newport Harbor,
the Beercan Regatta is a chance for sailors with a range of skill
levels to enjoy great racing, barbecue and great sunsets, as the club
promises.
“The race is for people who don’t normally sail,” said Ben
Benjamin, the Balboa Yacht Club’s sailing administrator and program
director. “It’s more like a cruise. Generally, three or four people
in the boat know what to do everyone else has a beer in their hands.”
While other sailing clubs have similar races, Benjamin says his
club’s version are the largest in Newport Harbor, featuring more than
65 boats. There are two different courses competitors may chose from,
one at a length of four miles, the other at 4 4/10 miles. There are
six racing classes, five of which use the Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet system, which gives each boat a handicap based on size and
skill, and one design class that is a head-to-head race. The boat
with the lowest score at the end of a four-race series wins its
class. There is even an appropriate prize for winners.
“Trophies have been beer mugs or beer glasses,” Benjamin said.
“It’s representative of the style of racing.”
The most appealing aspect of these races for sailors like Len
Bose, a fleet captain at the Balboa Yacht Club, is not the promise of
Pilsener prizes but the opportunity to be with family and friends.
“It’s about taking as many people as you can fit on your boat up
and down the bay for a sail,” he said. “But I also see this race as a
way to get my [5-year-old son Andrew] involved in sailing.”
Bose has been racing in the Beercan Regattas since 1981 and plans
to do so “for another 100 years,” he said.
“It’s like the commercial: $45,000 boat, $10 pack of beer. The
rest is priceless,” he said.
The races are open to the public provided they are members in good
standing of the Balboa Yacht Club or United States Sailing. But if
getting on a boat isn’t for you, other options are available.
“There are a lot of restaurants and commercial boats that like to
watch,” Benjamin said. “It creates quite a spectacle for spectators.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.