This is a USRowing registered regatta. The Regatta will be conducted in accordance with USRowing Rules of Rowing.All pre-registraton is done at Regatta Central. Details at Competitors | Registration.
There is no on-site registration at the regatta, but you are welcome to check in with us at the regatta HQ tent at the Canoe Club.
USRowing junior definitions apply: A junior is a competitor who will not attain the age of 19 in the calendar year, or who is and has been continuously enrolled in secondary school as a full time student seeking a diploma. A junior 16 is a competitor who will not attain the age of 17 in the calendar year. A competitor's age is determined as of December 31 of the calendar year.
USRowing master definitions apply: A master is a competitor who has attained or will attain the age of 21 in the calendar year. AA = 21-26, A = 27-35; B = 36-42; C = 43-49; D = 50-54; E = 55-59; F = 60-64; G = 65-69; H = 70 and over. Average age of the crew determines eligibility. The age category of a masters crew shall be determined by the average age of the crew, rounded down to the highest contained integer. Time handicaps will be applied in any masters event that combines two or more categories. A competitor's age is determined as of December 31 of the calendar year.
Masters crews are reminded of the rule requiring them to report any line-up changes in writing not less than 2 hours prior to the start of the race. This allows the regatta committee time to recompute the age handicap and announce it to the other competitors prior to the start of the race. Violators risk disqualification!
The adaptive singles events are open only to adaptive rowers with a disability who meet the criteria set out in the FISA rowing classification regulations. The Independence Day Regatta fixed-seat adaptive singles races are intended for TA (trunks & arms) and AS (arms and shoulders) rowers.
A novice is a rower who has never rowed in a rowing race prior to January 1 of the calendar year. Specifically excluded from the "novice" category are rowers who have raced before as sweep rowers but are racing for the first time as scullers.
"Intermediate" and "senior" are "classifications by skill" defined by Rule 4-105 of the USRowing Rules of Racing. Basically, if you have to ask, you're probably an intermediate. Everyone is an intermediate until they win a national championship or at Canadian Henley.
The octuples scull event is an open event. In order to encourage more participation, handicaps will be assigned by the regatta director, at his sole discretion, to all masters crews. Mixed crews will be allowed. Handicaps for junior crews will also be considered. You must notify the regatta director if you change your line-up, with names and dates of birth.
Malta Boat Club has offered a trophy. Girls crews are welcome.
The Betty Shepherdson Memorial Award will be presented to the winner of the master's mixed double. The names of each year's winners will be permanently inscribed on a bronze plaque to be displayed at Malta Boat Club. Special individual awards will be presented to the winning contestants. USRowing masters age handicaps will be used in determining the event winner.
Lightweight men shall weigh no more than 160 lbs. Lightweight women shall weigh no more than 130 lbs. Averaging is not required.
Weigh-ins will be held from 8:00 to 2:00 pm Friday, 6:30 to 2:00 pm Saturday and 6:30 to 10:00 am Sunday at the Canoe Club. Competitors must weigh in each day they compete. Only one weigh-in per day is required. Coxswains do not weigh in.
Per the recommendations of the USRowing Sports Medicine Committee, athletes must be within two pounds of the required weight on the first try, or they will not be allowed to weigh-in again. If they are within two pounds they are allowed to return up to two additional times.
Sponsored by Mariner Insurance Group, the trophy will be presented to the club earning the most points in the regatta. All events will count towards the points total. Composite boats do not count. Here's how points are calculated, per the USRowing Rules of Rowing:
| Type of Event | Points |
|---|---|
| 1x | 10 |
| 2x, 2- | 15 |
| 4+, 4x | 20 |
| 8+, 8x | 30 |
| Number of Boats in Event | Percentage of 1st Place Points | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | |
| 2 | 20% | ||||
| 3 | 40% | 20% | |||
| 4 | 60% | 30% | 5% | ||
| 5 | 80% | 40% | 10% | 5% | |
| 6 or more | 80% | 40% | 20% | 10% | 5% |
We'll have a running tally at the regatta HQ tent at the Canoe Club on Saturday and Sunday. Composite crews are not eligible for points. Please let us know if your crew is a composite.
If fewer than three entries are received or if all the entries are from the same club, the event will be scratched and the clubs will be notified.
No competitor may represent two different clubs in the regatta. Boats composed of members from various clubs should register as composite crews.
No shell may launch without a bow ball and no shell may race without its appropriate lane number affixed to its bow. It's the only way we can tell who you are as you cross the finish line. Any crew reporting to the starting line without a bow number will be assessed a warning ("false start"). A second warning will result in exclusion from the race. Each crew must supply its own bow numbers. Bow numbers will not be provided; however, bow numbers will be available for sale at the Regatta Headquarters tent at the Canoe Club, $12 for a set of 6.
A ll crews must wear matching shirts. "Matching" means identical in style, color, and detail, including any insignia. No crew will be permitted to race in violation of this rule.
Bow-coxed boats must adhere to USRowing rules governing the size of the opening, i.e., minimum 2.3 foot long longitudinally, minimum 1.64 foot length as wide as inner hull, inner surface smooth and free of obstacles.