TheBeachcats.com

TheBeachcats.com TheBeachcats.com is a news and support community for beach catamaran sailors worldwide, the largest and most active support for fast sailing.

Support for catamaran sailors includes a community forum, secure classified ads, and event calendar.

The calendar is available for free worldwide for beachcat catamaran related events, organizers, and venues. Make sure so...
03/23/2026

The calendar is available for free worldwide for beachcat catamaran related events, organizers, and venues. Make sure someone specific from your organization is responsible for posting and updating events so they appear on the calendar.

Calendar of events for beachcat catamaran sailing related events like regattas, long distance races, championships, and parties.

With TheBeachcats.com – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 5 months in a row. 🎉
03/18/2026

With TheBeachcats.com – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 5 months in a row. 🎉

Hard to find a complete Hobie 18 with classic sails. Get yours on TheBeachcats Classifieds. Got something to sell?
03/14/2026

Hard to find a complete Hobie 18 with classic sails. Get yours on TheBeachcats Classifieds. Got something to sell?

For Sale: 1982 Hobie 18 in good condition. Tramp has no rips or tears & sails are in great condition. Price includes a new Trailex aluminum trailer with ...

Posted on the classifieds today. Mystere 6.0 Cat is "Free To A Good Home". Great opportunity for the right sailor.
03/09/2026

Posted on the classifieds today. Mystere 6.0 Cat is "Free To A Good Home". Great opportunity for the right sailor.

Project boat 1993 Mystere 6.0 with 1994 Performance PC 20-24 trailer. Original canvas and sails (main and Jib). Fresh water sailing exclusively. Pontoons sh ...

With TheBeachcats.com – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 4 months in a row. 🎉
02/20/2026

With TheBeachcats.com – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 4 months in a row. 🎉

The Catsailor content has been migrated over to TheBeachcats.com and this page will soon also be merged. The new and imp...
10/20/2025

The Catsailor content has been migrated over to TheBeachcats.com
and this page will soon also be merged. The new and improved combined forums at TheBeachcats contain an incredible 57 Forums, 31,500 Topics, 345,000 Posts, from 42,600 sailors. It now includes the entire post history of the old Catsailor Forums.

For some time the forums at both sites have been virtually unusable, so I (Damon Linkous) humbly invite you back to share your knowledge and wit with the community. ✍️

In addition to ease of use and mobile friendly design, the forums now include the ability to easily upload images and attachments, private messages, and nice member profiles. Catsailor.com

If you had a username on either TheBeachcats or Catsailor you can use that username on the new forums, just use the lost password feature to set a new password and join the discussions.

https://thebeachcats.com/forums

TheBeachcats.com Discussion Board

Lee Wicklund, a fellow long time catamaran sailor could use some help. He's usually the guy helping others through disas...
08/07/2023

Lee Wicklund, a fellow long time catamaran sailor could use some help. He's usually the guy helping others through disasters or or daily problems but sometimes we could all use a hand. Calling on my sailing friends to take a look at this GoFundme and consider doing what you can.

Within the last week, Lee’s RV and all of his possessions inside were destroyed by… Terri Kiszer needs your support for RV Residence ... Destroyed by Fire

Nacra Sailing improving one of their classic beachcats.
10/28/2022

Nacra Sailing improving one of their classic beachcats.

https://www.facebook.com/119096004780530/posts/5288643371159075/
05/15/2022

https://www.facebook.com/119096004780530/posts/5288643371159075/

Worrel 1000: Jacksonville Beach, FL to Tybee Island, GA

It was 8am, and the PRO (Principal Race Officer) John Williams was starting the daily Skipper’s meeting. The general feeling in the air was one of mild "dis-jointedness”… just a little “off”. The reason was likely due to the fact that the start of the leg this day had been moved up to 9am - an hour earlier than usual. And, that the teams were facing the longest leg of the event: Jacksonville Beach, FL to Tybee Island, GA - Roughly 128 miles on a rhumb line. To put this in perspective, the previous legs were all under 90, although those upwind legs made for a tack fest that added another 20 or more miles over ground. Friday, the forecast called for winds that would slowly start to clock around toward a more Southerly and appealing direction - the spinnakers would finally be needed and a more direct course could be sailed. Still - the wind was expected to diminish quickly in the late afternoon and evening, making it a very real possibility that the Worrell would get its third “night leg” of the event.

At the start line, 11 of the 13 boats pushed off through the surf with two pushers instead of the rule-dictated one - the Race Committee decided to allow this again as with the last leg, and it almost produced the desired outcome: 9 of the 11 made it through the surf with relative ease, and without dangerous collisions, however - Team Outer Banks (Hardy Peters and James Eaton) became sideways to the surf, flipped, and were washed back to shore. They managed to right the boat at the beach, suffering only a broken top batten in the square-top main, and off again they went. This time, getting through unscathed. Two boats weren’t quite ready to make the earlier start at 9am: Cat in the Hat, Larry Ferber and Brett White moved up to the line after all boats moved off the start, finished some last minute rigging and were on their way about 15 minutes after official start. The German Team, Way of Life (Stefan Rumpf and Andre Hauschke) had a trapeze line that they were still working on from the previous day - They worked it out and also got underway several minutes late, but made it through the surf without incident.

With the leg to Tybee, there is a wicked temptress of a rhumb line: A straight as an arrow shot, avoiding shoreline dangers and additional mileage to the island of Tybee - seemingly do-able in a slightly-curvy line under spinnaker. However, if you ask veteran Worrell Sailors…..she is a temptress not worth her wiles: the rhumb line rarely pays. Watching the trackers, it was surprising to see that only one boat decided to stay below the rhumb line and follow the coast - Team Netherlands - and they enjoyed an early lead that lasted half the day, as the remaining 12 boats headed for the temptress.

About five hours in, the leaders of the rhumb line pack, Team Rudee’s (Randy Smyth and Dalton Tebo), Team Australia (Rod Waterhouse and Chris Way) and The Clean Sailors (Chris Green and Mathieu Marfaing) all caught the gist: Gerard Loos and Fred Serafin had it right - the winds on the rhumb were hurting them. Those three jibed away towards the coast, and the pack followed. From there, the winds started to turn, and by the time the fleet was passing Little Saint Simon Island, the kites started launching. Once the fleet was on this below-the-rhumb line course, that’s when separation really started: Six boats passed The Netherlands and would maintain a leaders “pod” through the finish: The Clean Sailors, Rudee’s, Australia, Restream and Team Allen would stay within minutes of each other until the last 12 miles to the finish. And even then, the top five all finished within 30 minutes of each other:

Rudee’s at 11:46:01pm (total elapsed time 14h 46m 01s)
Australia at 11:46:47pm (total elapsed time 14h 46m 47s)
The Clean Sailors at 12:05:43am (total elapsed time 15h 05m 43s)
Team Restream at 12:15:31am (total elapsed time 15h 15m 31s)
Team Allen at 12:23:31am (total; elapsed time 15h 23m 31s)
Fast Forward Composites at 12:30:27am (total elapsed time 15h 30m 27s)

It would prove to be an overnight sail for the teams and the Race Committee, with the next 2 boats not finishing until after 2am and the final 2 boats (both, having gotten stuck on the shoals less than half a mile from the finish) not reaching the finish line until almost 5am…..

The sunrise would reach the beach at Tybee in an hour and a half and by that time, all were just starting the hazy list into R.E.M dreams….dreams I am sure of sailing into glorious sunsets just beyond a tropical island destination, on a forgiving, soft and easy breeze with no care to the time it takes to get there…..

There will be no racing Saturday, May 14th as this is a scheduled Lay Day for the Worrell 1000.
For more information about the Worrell 1000, visit www.worrell1000race.com and follow us on Social Media:

FB: https://www.facebook.com/Worrell1000/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/Worrell1000/
Insta: w1krr

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