Please select your home edition
Edition
V-DRY-X

An interview with Brian Gleason on the 2022 Charlotte Harbor Regatta

by David Schmidt 1 Feb 2022 16:00 GMT February 4-6, 2022
Racecourse action at the Charlotte Harbor Regatta in the Hobie 16 class © Brian Gleason/Charlotte Harbor Regatta

Florida is home to many great winter regattas, but if you're a One Design sailor, odds are good that you've caught wind of the Charlotte Harbor Regatta, which will take place from February 4-6, 2022, on the waters off of Port Charlotte, on Florida's southwest coast. The event is being organized by Charlotte Harbor Regatta, Inc., with different events and activities taking place at the Port Charlotte Beach Park, the Charlotte Harbor Yacht Club, the Isles Yacht Club, and the Charlotte Harbor Community Sailing Center.

The event, which held its inaugural running in 2009, is currently open to Weta trimarans, F18s, F16s, Hobie 16s, A-Class Cats, 2.4mRs, and Harbor 20s.

I checked in with Brian Gleason, regatta director of the 2022 Charlotte Harbor Regatta, via email, to learn more about this exciting (and gloriously warm-water) One Design regatta.

Can you please tell us a bit about the Charlotte Harbor Regatta, its history and culture, and the kinds of teams and sailors that one can expect to find here?

The Charlotte Harbor Regatta began in 2009 as a cooperative effort between area sailing and boating clubs to promote sailboat racing on Charlotte Harbor.

In 2011, the organizing committee was asked to run the 2012 International Association for Disabled Sailing (IFDS) Worlds. We raised more than $75,000 in corporate, individual and government funding to build more than 300 feet of floating, low-freeboard docks with hand-crank lifts to accommodate disabled sailors.

The docks subsequently have been donated to the City of Punta Gorda, Charlotte County and the Charlotte Harbor Yacht Club, which operate and maintain five floating docks systems around the Peace River and Charlotte Harbor for boaters of all abilities.

Subsequently, we hosted the 2013 Laser Midwinters and the 2015 F18 America's Regatta.

2020 marked the tenth anniversary of the Charlotte Harbor Regatta.

The regatta [now] serves as a fund-raiser for local youth sailing clubs, raising more than $100,000 to fund grants for boats, equipment, scholarships, and more.

Over the years, the regatta has included 13 classes, including S2 7.9s, Sunfish, Lasers, Melges 24s, 2.4mRs, Flying Scots, Hobie 16s, Hobie Waves, F16s, F18s, N15s, Weta trimarans, [and] Harbor 20s.

The sailing level ranges from Olympic-level to local club-level sailors. As a result of the IFDS Worlds, CHYC [Charlotte Harbor Yacht Club] has hosted more than a dozen 2.4mR-class regattas featuring international Paralympic-level sailors. Many of those sailors also race in the Charlotte Harbor Regatta, held during the same time period.

We've had national champions compete in several classes and the F16/N15 class has been a training ground for young, future Olympians and Olympic hopefuls.

Weather-wise, what kind conditions can sailors expect to encounter off of Port Charlotte in early February? What are the best-case and worst-case weather scenarios?

Depending on cold fronts, the weather can range from mild, low-80s with 4-15-knot winds to mid-40s with 30+-knot winds.

Like all sailing venues, we also get occasional windless days, but fairly few over the years.

We've had both. The first regatta, we had 35-knot gusts that broke carbon-fiber masts on two Melges 24s. In the mid-2010s, we had a front come through that knocked a half-dozen F18s out of the regatta and caused a suspension of racing for three classes on another circle.

What's the reason that the regatta is only open to one- and two-person monohulls and multihulls and not to bigger One Design classes like Melges 20s, J/70s, Melges 24s, etc.?

The regatta is open to any One Design class by request, with the minimum of five boats. We tend to attract classes that travel conveniently or have local boat numbers to support a start. We've run as many as three circles with nine classes over three days.

Do you see local knowledge playing a big or small role in the regatta's outcome? Can you please explain?

Despite its name, the Charlotte Harbor Regatta is technically raced on a broad, tidal portion of the Peace River, just before it flows into Charlotte Harbor a mile or so to the west. Because of the tides, upwind and downwind legs can see dramatic changes in currents even during a race.

A deep channel runs through the courses, but the water level drops to a five or six feet in places closer to shore, where the tree-line can create dead spots at times depending on wind direction and the sea breeze fills in at different times of day and at variable strengths.

Knowing these local characteristics can mean all the difference, especially on light-wind days.

If you could offer one piece of advice to visiting (and local) sailors/teams, what would it be?

Come early, learn the idiosyncrasies of the harbor/river, and enjoy the laid-back lifestyle on the Southwest Florida coast.

Charlotte County is a small community with national hotel chains and wonderful AirBNB and VRBO hosts. Charlotte County has Gulf of Mexico beaches, miles of blueways trails and watersports rentals available for kayaking, canoeing, paddleboarding, and personal watercraft.

How many sailors/teams are you expecting this year? Do you have any sailors or teams that you are eyeing for podium finishes? What about any dark horses who you think could prove to be fast, once the starting guns begin sounding?

We expect 40-plus sailors in seven classes on two circles, but it could grow.

We get many returning sailors each year, so there are familiar faces in the winner's circle, including skippers Jeffrey Scholz and Christi van Heek in the Harbor 20 class, U.S. Paralympian Dee Smith in the 2.4mR class and Kenneth Hilk and Greg Thomas in the Hobie 16 class.

John O'Donnell, who owns W.D. Schock, manufacturer of the Harbor 20, finished fourth in 2020. He recently purchased a home in Charlotte County, joined the CHR board and is working to bring a Harbor 20 Nationals to Charlotte Harbor as soon as 2023.

Obviously organizing and running a big regatta amidst a still-churning pandemic isn't easy. Can you tell us about the biggest logistical and organizational hurdles that you've had to clear to make this happen?

The major challenges we've encountered during the pandemic have been low registration numbers and dwindling race committee volunteers. We canceled the 2021 regatta due to these factors and they remain challenges as we gear up for the 2022 Charlotte Harbor Regatta.

We're taking all necessary precautions, including reducing the number of social events to a Saturday dinner and Sunday outdoor barbecue awards luncheon.

Is there anything else that you'd like to add, for the record?

Charlotte Harbor Regatta would like to thank Charlotte County, which is a co-sponsor of the regatta, for its support of sailboat racing on Charlotte Harbor. The county recently built a $750,000 sailing center at Port Charlotte Beach Park, the site of the regatta desk, multihull launch site and social events. The center is leased to the Charlotte Harbor Community Sailing Center, whose president, [a] former Sunfish national champion and winner of the U.S. Sailing 2018 Community Sailing Award, is a founding director of CHR and a competitive racer in the 2.4mR class, of which he is past-president.

I'd like to thank additional sponsors including W.D. Schock, manufacturer of the Harbor 20, and the Punta Gorda/Englewood Visitor and Convention Bureau and the dozens of volunteers who form the backbone of the race committee and spend much of the rest of the year sailing in local club races to keep sailboat racing alive year-round on Charlotte Harbor.

Related Articles

The power of tech
What is the cost of safety? How do you measure it? More importantly, how do you appreciate it? What is the cost of safety? How do you measure it? More importantly, how do you appreciate it? Posted on 2 Jul
An evening with the Scaramouche Sailing Trust
Sailing hasn't always been a sport for inner-city state schools like the Greig City Academy Sailing hasn't always been a sport for inner-city state schools like the Greig City Academy (GCA). But they've shown it can be accessible to everyone, with amazing results. Posted on 2 Jul
Jazz Turner completes Project FEAR
Drama right to the end in her non-stop, solo, unassisted navigation of the British Isles Jazz Turner has completed Project FEAR, her non-stop, solo, unassisted navigation of the British Isles in her Albin 27 yacht. A flotilla of supporters met her in Seaford Bay, which grew and grew the closer they came to Brighton Marina. Posted on 1 Jul
Project FEAR is in the final few days
Charity circumnavigation almost over, in record time, with a record total raised Jazz Turner is expected to reach home (Brighton Marina) on Monday 30th June or Tuesday 1st July. She has sailed round the British Isles - all round Ireland and the Shetland Islands - without any assistance in 27 days so far. Posted on 28 Jun
Funding for clubs transforms sailing opportunities
During the latest RYA Participation Webinar we heard from UK clubs about their experiences During the latest RYA Participation Webinar we heard from a range of UK clubs, walking through their case studies, and then heard from experts in finance who talked us through the opportunities and pitfalls of acquiring funds. Posted on 26 Jun
A brief history of marine instrument networks
Hugh Agnew has been involved since the outset, and continues to develop at the cutting edge One man who has been involved since the outset, and continues to develop at the cutting edge, is Hugh Agnew, the Cambridge-educated mathematician who is one of the founders of A+T Instruments in Lymington, so I spoke to him to find out more... Posted on 25 Jun
Project FEAR turns southwards
Charity circumnavigation progress report from the Shetland Islands Last month I didn't even know that Muckle Flugga existed. Yet today, the very name of the island brought tears of emotion to my eyes, as I heard Jazz Turner scream it out in victory, in a video she took when passing the lighthouse. Posted on 22 Jun
The Big Bash
Every summer the tournament rolls into town. A short format of the game. Fun and excitement abound. Every summer the tournament rolls into town. Local and international players. A short format of the game, run over a relatively compact six-week season. Posted on 15 Jun
The oldest video footage of Kiel Week
A look back into our video archive at the Kieler Woche of the 60s and early 70s In our series of articles looking back in time through our video archive, we visit Germany. Kiel Week is been a crucial event on the world circuit, and here we look back at the Kieler Woche of the 60s and early 70s. Posted on 15 Jun
Jazz Turner's fundraising target is smashed
Already £30k raised for Sailability, so it's time to up the ante Jazz Turner has now passed the northern-most tip of Ireland and is on her way to the Shetland Islands, and at the same time her fundraising total of £30,000 has been smashed! Posted on 15 Jun