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PO Box 9
Red Bank, NJ
07701
Ice Line:
732-747-5665
Club House:
732-747-9845
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Last Updated:
3/30/2003
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We had a great season. See you on the ice next winter season.
Make those much needed repairs now before all those spring chores start to kick in and you find you have no time for it.
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Last Updated:
2/8/2003
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The National Sweepstakes that were rescheduled to this weekend (2/8 to 2/9) were called off due to 6 inches of snow cover on the river - see pictures of the day.
Perhaps next week....stay tuned.
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Last Updated:
1/31/2003
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National Sweepstakes Regatta called for weekend of Feb 1 & 2 . All classes
of iceboats are welcomed to compete . Registration will be held Friday
eve, January 31st, and Saturday morning, February 1st, in the club
house . Skippers meeting is at 9am and the first race is at 10 am.
The fleets are :
A stern steerer
C & D stern steerer
Yankee ( B skeeter)
C skeeter ( gambit , blade runner , ice flyer, Nite , j14J , etc)
A skeeter
Arrow
DN
Information on the Van Nostrand Cup
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Last Updated:
1/30/2003
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NYTimes article on Van Nostrand cup challenge
The Race Was on Ice, the Champagne in a Cup
January 30, 2003
By ROBERT F. WORTH
RED BANK, N.J., Jan. 25 - As the rest of the nation huddled
indoors around Super Bowl pregame programming, a group of
men dressed like Arctic explorers gathered today on a
frozen river for a much older and colder form of combat.
They were racing ice yachts - sailboats on steel blades
with the skippers lying on slim wooden frames just inches
above the ice.
And they were competing in what may be the oldest and
longest-deferred grudge match in sports history.
The Van Nostrand Challenge Cup had been raced only twice
since 1889, when a wealthy Hudson Valley ice yachtsman,
Gardiner Van Nostrand, donated a Tiffany silver cup to be
kept by the winning team of each year's race. At that time,
ice boats were the fastest vessels on earth, reaching more
than 100 miles an hour in a strong wind.
But the first and only winner of the cup, the North
Shrewsbury Ice Boat and Yacht Club here, had been loath to
risk it after winning in 1891. After defending it
successfully only once, in 1978, the club kept the cup
locked away in a jeweler's safe.
The commodore of the New Jersey club recently shocked many
of his members by accepting a challenge from the Hudson
River Ice Yacht Club. The Hudson boatmen had long resented
the New Jersey team's refusal to risk the cup. They were
eager for their chance to win it back.
So by this morning, anticipation was high as the Hudson
River boatmen wheeled their lovingly restored antique
yachts onto the Navesink River at downtown Red Bank.
Conditions were almost ideal: several inches of clear ice
on the river, a clearing sky, a temperature of 20 degrees,
and a rising breeze of six to nine miles per hour.
"There's been a change of the guard here," said John Vargo,
a tall Hudson River boatman wearing an entire coyote skin
on his head, the forepaws tied under his chin. "Until now,
they just didn't want anyone else to have the cup."
Like many other boatmen, Mr. Vargo has an encyclopedic
knowledge of his sport's aristocratic origins and faded
grandeur. Walking across the ice, he pointed out two boats
once owned by the family of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Inside the North Shrewsbury clubhouse, a cluttered
repository of old sails and yellowing photographs, the
atmosphere was apprehensive. "I didn't get much sleep last
night," said Mark Petersen, the commodore of the club. "I
don't want to be the commodore who lost the cup."
The two teams had agreed to race only the old-fashioned
wooden boats known as gaff rigs, some of them a century
old. From a distance, the rigs resemble 19th-century
schooners, with dark spruce masts and tall
parchment-colored sails.
Up close, they are more like gigantic wooden crossbows,
with a long main beam and a transverse spar running across
it for stability.
After a running start and a leap into the cockpit, the
boats accelerate at panic-inducing speed. They can go up to
six times the speed of the wind - any ice boater can
explain the physics to you. And at just 30 miles per hour,
the cold cuts exposed skin like a knife and the runners
clatter like skipped stones on water.
By midmorning, six boats - three for each of the two clubs
- were on the starting line, about a mile south of the
clubhouse. In each race, the boats would run three circles
around two markers placed a mile apart. The winning team
would be the first to win three of five races.
At 10:45, a boom from a miniature cannon set the boatmen
off. The Hudson boats tacked eastward, the others west, to
keep from colliding.
The New Jersey boats quickly took the lead, reaching the
red upwind marker first.
"It's a light wind - that's good for the Jersey boats,
because they're lighter," Mr. Vargo said.
As the boats slalomed back around the starting line,
several of them rose up on one side in the wind, like
motorcycles leaning inward on a turn. Ice boaters call this
hiking, and it can be dangerous.
If the rear runner rises off the ice, the entire boat can
turn into the wind and begin spinning wildly, sending the
driver flying across the ice. Among ice boaters, this
wipeout is called a flicker.
New Jersey took the first race, and then the second. The
heavier Hudson boats were lovely, but they seemed unable to
match their competitors.
Bob Wills, the commodore of the Hudson River club, winced
as his teammate, Reid Bielenberg fell far behind the rest
of the pack in his lovely 1885 rig, the Vixen.
"Reid looks like he's stopping for shellfish," he moaned.
The wind picked up as the third race began, and for a
moment it looked as though Rick Lawrence, the lead Hudson
boat, might win. But the New Jersey boats overtook him.
It was over: New Jersey had maintained its hold on the cup.
On the sidelines, shouts and cheers erupted, and big men
dressed in snowsuits began bearhugging each other.
Despite their loss, the Hudson Valley team members did not
seem unhappy.
"The main thing is, we got the race run," Mr. Lawrence
said. "It was a long time coming."
Back at the North Shrewsbury clubhouse, Gordon Burroughs
brought out the Van Nostrand cup. He attached it to a
silver and wood plaque, and carefully placed it on a table
in the center of the room.
"We think of this like the holy grail," he said, gazing at
it lovingly.
All around him, members of the two clubs were sitting down
together, eating a hot lunch of penne and sausage in
plastic foam bowls. If there was any lingering bitterness
over the cup, it was not apparent.
A few hours later, the two clubs held a celebratory dinner,
and drank six bottles of champagne from the Van Nostrand
cup itself.
"We had a great time," Mr. Petersen said. "You hear things
about people over the years, and you meet them and
everything is different."
From now on, he added, the teams will race for the Van
Nostrand cup every year - at least when winters are cold
enough for ice.
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Last Updated:
1/26/2003
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We wish to thank the Hudson River Ice Yacht Club folks who ventured to our
club on Saturday, January 25, 2003, for the Gardner Van Nostrand Challenge
Cup match. Our club managed to hold on to this prestigious title in this
three on three boat race. Winning boats were the "A" Class Ice Yachts were
the "Blizzard" and the "Now Then". Our club treated the Hudson sailors to a
dinner at the club Saturday night prepared by club member and professional
chef, John Gannon (Yankee class "B" Skeeter owner, sail number N536).
Stay tuned for a more proper article on this coveted race in the near
future.
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Last Updated:
1/23/2003
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Races being held this weekend:
Saturday, January 25th
Sunday, January 26th
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