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East Down Yacht Club in Northern Ireland will host the Impala European Championship on 25th/26th May next year. The event will incorporate the UK and Irish National Championships of the 28-foot one-design keelboat class.

The club has a nine-acre site on the western shore of Strangford Lough, alongside a  sheltered stretch of water inside Island Taggart, one of about seventy islands in what is the largest inlet of water in the British Isles. As well as a wide open area ideal for racing, there are the tricky tides and many small islets, locally known as pladdies, which will make for an interesting event.  

Grant McCullough's Imp was the winner of the Impala Open event at East Down YC in 2023Grant McCullough's Imp was the winner of the Impala Open event at East Down YC in 2023

It is understood that the weekend also includes a Sonata Open event, and with hopefully the nine Impalas and ten Sonatas already racing regularly in the Lough entering the event,  the addition of visitors will make a busy competition over six races in the two days.

East Down Yacht Club will host the Impala European Championship on 25th/26th May

According to the event website, a number of bursaries are available to assist travelling boats, with lift in available on the Lough and mooring for visiting boats.                            

For more information email John Patterson at [email protected] 

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Hot on the heels of the very successful Leisure 17 50th Anniversary event at East Down Yacht Club on Strangford Lough, a fleet of 12 Impalas and Sonatas gathered for a two-day Open Event last weekend (27th/28th May.

The club lies on the western shore of Strangford Lough.

Imp, owned by Grant McCullough, Philp McIlvenna and David Maxwell, won the Impala eight strong event with two firsts and a fifth.

Ian Smyth’s Sonata, MouseMary Martin’s Sonata, Mouse

In the Sonatas, the top boat was Mary Martin’s Mouse posting three firsts and a second from the five races.

The first four races were windward/leeward, and the final race was around the fixed Strangford Lough racing marks.

Commodore Keith Carr was pleased with how the event went. “A very successful event; a wind shift on the first day added fun to it. Breezy enough on the second day".

About the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race

The Clipper Round the World Yacht Race is undoubtedly one of the greatest ocean adventures on the planet, also regarded as one of its toughest endurance challenges. Taking almost a year to complete, it consists of eleven teams competing against each other on the world’s largest matched fleet of 70-foot ocean racing yachts.

The Clipper Race was established in 1996 by Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, the first person to sail solo, non-stop, around the world in 1968-69. His aim was to allow anyone, regardless of previous sailing experience, the chance to embrace the thrill of ocean racing; it is the only event of its kind for amateur sailors. Around 40 per cent of crew are novices and have never sailed before starting a comprehensive training programme ahead of their adventure.

This unique challenge brings together everyone from chief executives to train drivers, nurses and firefighters, farmers, airline pilots and students, from age 18 upwards, to take on Mother Nature’s toughest and most remote conditions. There is no upper age limit, the oldest competitor to date is 76.

Now in its twelfth edition, the Clipper 2019-20 Race started from London, UK, on 02 September 2019.