Sailors begin their journey from Chicago to Mackinac Island, Michigan during the Race to Mackinac
© Karen I. Hirsch/Alam
Ahoy! It’s time for the ‘Mac’. Batten down the hatches
The athletes on these boats are jockeying for position at the start of the Chicago Yacht Club Race to Mackinac (pronounced ‘Mack-i-naw’). The ‘Mac,’ at 536 kilometres long, is the world’s oldest and longest annual freshwater boat race. It’s an amateur event, but make no mistake, these sailors know their stuff. Many go on to race in the America’s Cup. This year’s race is held today, and the boats set sail, smallest to largest, just off Chicago’s Navy Pier passing by the city skyline as we see in our image. When crews pass under the span of the mighty Mackinac Bridge—connecting the Lower Peninsula to the Upper Peninsula—Lake Michigan becomes Lake Huron, and the island appears.The official finish line is Mackinac Island’s Yacht Club, but many say the race ends at the Pink Pony Patio Bar, where an armada of sailors gather to boast and toast each other. It’s about then that locals prepare for the merrymaking by locking up their bikes. On Mackinac Island, bicycles are a hot commodity because motorized vehicles are outlawed (even police pedal around). The few motorized vehicles on Mackinac are for emergency use, such as ambulances and firetrucks.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
Salcombe Harbour on the south coast of Devon, England
The Cutty Sark in Greenwich, London, England for her 150th anniversary
Toronto sign in Nathan Phillips Square by the City Hall, Toronto
Aerial view of central Oxford, England
The shoreline of Cahuita National Park, in Costa Rica
Boats resting between the Granville Bridge and the Burrard Bridge in False Creek, Vancouver
Boats massing for the Barcolana Regatta in the Gulf of Trieste, Italy
Remains of Mulberry Harbour from the D-Day invasion, Arromanches les Bains, Normandy, France