The Celtic Longboat is a 4 person coxed rowing boat used for racing, training and recreation.
Longboat racing originally began in 1978 when Welsh lad Tom Sutton, working on Ramsey Island, St Davids found the remnants of an Irish Curragh (a wooden framed, tarred-skinned rowing boat) washed up on the shore. He decided to re-skin the boat and enter it in the local Solva Traditional Boat Rowing Race. The experience of the race led him to calculate that a fibreglass version of the longboat would provide a faster craft, and the Celtic Longboat was born.
Soon interest in the new boat grew and a few more were made for locals who held races around Ramsey Island – a race considered too dangerous to be undertaken these days! From this developed the Pembrokeshire Longboat League which involves boats racing around the potentially treacherous coastline of West Wales and even across the Irish Sea. In fact, Celtic Longboats are still some of the fastest entrants at the ‘Great River Race’ held annually in London.
Triton have a brand new Celtic Longboat made by Dale Sailing in Milford Haven. It is LB132, the 132nd Celtic Longboat built.
Four Triton Rowers are rowing from Bangor in Wales to Bangor in Northern Ireland on the 11th of August to raise money for the Autism Charity 'As I Am'. €3,500 raised so far.
Click the button below to see photos of the coastline of Dublin from Monkstown to Killiney. Our crews can be seen training on these waters.
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