Prøve GULL - Gratis
From sail to summit
Yachting Monthly
|April 2020
Sam Griffiths reveals the highs and lows of Shrewsbury School Hunt Running Club’s debut in the twoday Scottish Islands Peaks Race

‘Runners!’ went the cry. Lamlash, on the Isle of Arran at first light on a Sunday is a fairly inauspicious little hamlet. Yet it would soon welcome the remainder of the 40 boats that had silently crept into the bay having sailed through the night round the Mull of Kintyre. Now the sailors waited anxiously for their runners to return from the 19-mile round trip up Goat Fell; the sails were impatiently waiting to fill, the dinghies, ready to transport the runners out, were bobbing in anticipation.
The stumbling figures of Tom Jackson, Sam Western and Simon Adney came collapsing into the dinghy, where they put their lifejackets on before a frantic row to our Pocock 45 Brown Bear. We had a crucial 17-minute lead over our nearest rivals. There was now just the small matter of a 15-mile sail across the Firth of Clyde to Troon and the finish. Surely nothing could stop us winning the Youth Section now?
First held in 1983, the Scottish Islands Peaks Race is an adventure race for teams of sailors and fell runners. Since 1992 there has also been a hotly contested Youth Section, with teams of six pupils running in pairs with an adult. The race is non-stop and starts in Oban with a short 4-mile hill run. You then sail to Mull, run 18 miles over Beinn Talaidh, sail to Jura, run 14 miles over some of the Paps, sail to Arran, run 19 miles up and down Goat Fell and then sail to Troon.
RARING TO GO
Denne historien er fra April 2020-utgaven av Yachting Monthly.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Yachting Monthly

Yachting Monthly UK
NEW GEAR
The latest sailing innovations, including in-depth reviews of comms and seaboots
2 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
How to choose the best power pack for your boat
A portable power pack is a game-changer for anyone who doesn't have shore power or want the expense of an inverter. Fox Morgan reviews 8 of the best...
9 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
ADVENTURE EXPLORING THE DANISH ISLANDS
Chris Carr ventures out to visit just a few of the hundreds of islands in the South Funen Archipelago
7 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
MG SPRING 25
Compact and affordable 1980s yacht perfectly designed for a spot of lively weekend family cruising - or racing...
13 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
WINTERISE & REFIT TO REAP REWARDS IN SUMMER
Whether you keep your yacht afloat or haul her out ashore, this quieter period of the year is ideal for essential maintenance, checks, and upgrades, says Mandy Boughton of Ancasta Yacht Services
4 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
A school sailing trip to Corsica
Jonah and his inexperienced Italian classmates set sail for a Corsican adventure
4 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
SAILING THE SHIPPING FORECAST
Celebrating 100 years of the BBC Shipping Forecast, Jane Russell takes us on a series of coastal cruises through the forecast's sea areas, exploring some of the special places on offer in each zone
10 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
A HUNDRED YEARS OF THE ROYAL OCEAN RACING CLUB
This is a magazine for cruising sailors, but even the least competitive amongst us cannot fail to recognise the powerful influence that the Royal Ocean Racing Club has had on recreational sailing as a sport and the boats themselves
7 mins
September 2025

Yachting Monthly UK
Having a blast around the CELTIC TRIANGLE
Theo Stocker reports on the YM Celtic Triangle Race, and Jayne Toyne shares her offshore check list
9 mins
45870

Yachting Monthly UK
WHY YOU DON'T NEED AN ANCHOR WINDLASS
+HOW TO CRUISE WITHOUT ONE
6 mins
September 2025
Translate
Change font size