Beer Can Race Born From a Bar Bet

Published – May 6, 2024

Source: Scuttlebutt.com – https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/2024/05/06/beer-can-race-born-from-a-bar-bet/

When the question was asked as to when and where the first beer can race was held, there were several virtual hands raised with the same answer: Balboa Yacht Club’s Thursday evening Beer Cans Summer Series.

A 1988 story in the Los Angeles Times recalls a bar bet 25 years earlier that got it started, which would put the 2024 season as the 62nd edition. Here’s what they’ve been doing inside this Southern California harbor for a long time:

They knew their sailboats were far too big for a practical race inside Newport Harbor. But 25 years ago, over a summer afternoon cold one, the crew of the 60-foot Hilaria boasted about their maneuvering ability.

So they issued a $1,000 challenge for a race the length of the harbor back. Days later, the match between two of the area’s best known racing yachts drew a crowd of more than 200, many with their own side bets. In the end, Jack Bailie’s Hilaria won.

And for the rest of the summer, one evening a week after work, Bailie said, he was called upon to defend his record.

Editor’s note: Is this ground zero for beer can racing? If you know of an older weekday series, send an email to 

ed****@sa****************.com











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Source: Scuttlebutt.com – https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/2024/05/06/beer-can-race-born-from-a-bar-bet/

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Having sold four of the five highest-priced Newport Harbor waterfront homes during his 24-year sales career, Coldwell-Banker realtor Tim Smith has been “cleaning up,” but not in the way you might think.

An avid fisherman (he owns a Boston Whaler Realm 38’) and Dover Shores resident who “loves this harbor,” Smith has been focused on how he can help make the bay as clean as possible.

It’s surprising what you can find at the bottom of Newport Harbor.

Bicycles, toolboxes, traffic cones, even a boat. There’s lots of plastic and things that have fallen off boats—not that boaters are dumping stuff deliberately; they just wind up in the harbor.

On one memorable occasion, a diver found a gun. “We informed the police and they said don’t touch it,” explained boatman Guy Harden. “Two divers stayed there until the police showed up, saying the gun was part of an investigation. We never heard anything about it after that, sorry to say.”

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Newport Harbor Underwater Cleanup

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