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Kayak Race Results: Mayor’s Cup New York City Kayak Championship – Strong Winds and Currents Cancel the Race

The official Mayor’s Cup Web site has not posted anything about last Sunday’s race yet, but we located this article from the NY Times Online that sums the unforeseen events of the day:

This report was originally published by the New York Times:

Kayak Race Called Off After Pileup in Hudson

By MICHAEL WILSON and COLIN MOYNIHAN
Published: October 19, 2008

A high-speed kayak race around Manhattan on Sunday morning turned into a marine rescue operation when four of the racers were ejected from their kayaks and swept by winds and strong currents that dashed them and their boats against a rusty barge moored near Battery Park, the police and racers said.

There were no serious injuries in the chain of accidents, which can best be likened to an automobile pileup on a highway. Racers said they lost control of their kayaks as they swerved or slowed to avoid a contestant who was being swept toward the barge. Other racers became so fatigued by the strong currents farther north in the Hudson River that they had to be helped out of the water.

The race, called the Mayor’s Cup New York City Kayak Championships, included more than 140 competitors, many racing sleek, lightweight kayaks known as surf skis. The narrow vessels are designed to travel extremely fast atop flat water. They are popular in areas with warm water, like California and Hawaii.

The water off Manhattan turned out to be more perilous than some of the kayakers had expected.

Sunday’s race looked promising at first, with a field that included racers from 12 countries, according to a race organizer on the Web site Surfski.info. The sunny morning seemed ideal for the race, a 27-mile circumnavigation of Manhattan, and the first group left the starting line, at North Cove Yacht Harbor at Battery Park City, about 10:30 a.m.

The wind picked up speed, however, and worked against the current to create a volatile chop, said Greg Porteus, a retired New York State trooper and the safety officer for the race. The currents in the river overtook several racers immediately after they turned north from the harbor, leaving them struggling to control their boats.

“It was a sequence of seemingly innocuous events that led up to a big event,” said Dr. Tim Burke, 40, a neurosurgeon who had traveled from Annapolis, Md., to compete.

He said the race was “pretty congested, pretty fierce,” and soon his paddle was accidentally knocked from his hand by another competitor. He said he pitched into the water and struggled to remount, a maneuver he had practiced many times, but the current drove him and his kayak toward the barge, which was moored and appeared to be carrying garbage.

“I looked up and it was right there,” Dr. Burke said. He slammed into the side of the barge and struggled for a handhold, finally grabbing a rubber tire tied to the hull, he said.

Another racer, Dr. Thomas R. Walek, 55, a plastic surgeon from Rhode Island, also fell off his surf ski in the pileup.

“I was getting pulled under,” he said. “It felt like you were drowning. I was having a lot of trouble just getting my head above water. Everything was moving so much faster than we appreciated.”

His kayak also slammed into the barge. It was unclear on Sunday how many racers capsized, but four were rescued by divers from the Fire Department, the Police Department and the Coast Guard, a spokesman for the Fire Department said.

Dr. Burke said his kayak was badly damaged, with its rudder broken off and holes punched in its side.

Other racers who had missed the accident were approaching the Harlem River when Mr. Porteus gave the order via loudspeaker and marine radio to stop the race.

“We had several people that were way out front and upset that the race had to be terminated,” Mr. Porteus said. “It was the right thing to do.”

He said that officials on his boat pulled two exhausted racers from their vessels near the George Washington Bridge.

An event organizer at the harbor declined to discuss the accident in detail, saying only that there were no substantial injuries.

The events of the day briefly rattled Dr. Burke, who said he generally enjoyed traveling rapidly through the waves in his surf ski. “It’s a good escape sport,” he said. “Very relaxing.”

We are very happy that no one was seriously injured in this kayak race!

While this race was for experienced paddlers, all kayakers and canoers should take note of how powerful and unpredictable mother nature can be, even if you’ve done all of your pre-race homework, and even if your event is professionally organized. The best thing any kayaker or canoer can do is be prepared!

Whether you’re paddling your favorite lake or river, it is vital that you check the weather and water conditions before you put in. And as always – wear your life jacket. Kayaking is a great sport – fun for the whole family, no doubt – but all paddlers must be prepared for unforeseen changes in weather and conditions. Click here to read our Kayak and Canoe Safety page.

If you were a participant or spectactor and have a report on the NY Mayor’s Cup race, please send it to us, we’d love to get a few more points of view to publish here on BornToPaddle.com. Click here to use our contact form to send us your race report.

Happy and safe kayaking to all!

It’s October and the weather is getting cooler….. but kayak, canoe season isn’t over yet!

Check out some of the kayak and canoe races and events that are happening all over the U.S.

New York Mayors Cup Kayak Race

New York Mayors Cup Kayak Race

New York:

If you live in or around New York City you may want to attend or enter the Mayor’s Cup – New York City Kayak Championship, Sunday, October 19th.

This is an elite 26.7 mile kayaking race around Manhattan Island. This event will draw some of the world’s and the region’s most accomplished paddlers. The course will offer some of the most challenging water in the region.

This event has an elite class and sea kayak class.

  • The elite class comprises of nationally ranked and /or highly competitive paddlers.
  • Participants for the sea kayak class, need to qualify through regional training centers or meet race participation guidelines.

If your not an experienced racing competitor this race may not be for you, but it sounds like an exciting race to watch. Registration closes Monday, October 13th. There is no race day registration.

Florida:

The 3rd annual Calusa Blueway Paddling Festival will take place between October 25 and November 2nd in Lee County Florida, in the waterfront communities of Pine Island, Fort Myers Beach, Sanibel and Captiva islands, Bonita Springs and Estero, Cape Coral, North Fort Myers, Fort Myers, Alva and Buckingham.

This festival celebrates Southwest Florida’s 190 mile marked paddling trail, The Great Calusa Blueway. Festival goers and paddlers will be able to participate in a wide variety of events and activities countywide. There will be nine days of festivities, including competitive canoe, kayak races, a pro-am kayak fishing tournament, paddling clinics, family activities and more.

Click here to see our dedicated Great Calusa Blueway page.

California:

27th Annual Sea Trek Regatta and ETC Paddle-a-Thon, Saturday October 25, 2008 on San Francisco Bay, is the West Coast’s largest and most popular event of the year. The annual Sea Trek Regatta and Paddle-a-Thon is a challenging day of paddling on San Francisco Bay. The event raises money for Environmental Traveling Companions’ (ETC) accessible outdoor adventure programs. This event has race classes and courses for paddlers looking to race competitively and paddlers who are new to the sport.

Sea Trek Regatta - San Francisco Bay

Sea Trek Regatta - San Francisco Bay

The Paddle-a-Thon is much like a walk-a-Thon only on water. Paddlers of all abilities are encouraged to recruit family, friends and colleagues to sponsor their paddling miles and in turn support accessible adventures for people with disabilities and inner-city youth.

****REMEMBER*** If you can’t paddle these or any events for any reason, but would still like to participate, you can always volunteer! Many kayak, canoe and paddle events and races are run by small staffs and volunteers, most probably by volunteers alone. So be sure to inquire at any event and lend a hand. It will be appreciated, and its a great way to get family and friends involved too.

Click here to find more information on all these events and their links on our Kayak, Canoe Races and Events page.

Click here to find Places to Paddle in every US state.

Got an event or a great place to paddle that you’d like to promote? Send us the information by clicking here and using our easy Contact Form. We may post it right here on our kayak, canoe and paddle blog!