R2AK: A horn blown, a cannon fired
Published on June 13th, 2024
The 8th edition of the 750 mile Race to Alaska (R2AK) began June 9 with a 40-mile “proving stage” from Port Townsend, WA to Victoria, BC. For those that finished within 36 hours, they would be allowed to start the remaining 710 miles on June 12 to Ketchikan, AK. Here’s the Stage 2/Day 1 report:
If you were to have invented, patented, then produced a new geiger counter that measured the levels of nervous energy instead of radiation, then deploy that device on the docks in Victoria for the 24-hours between noon on Tuesday and noon on Wednesday (June 12) at least two things would be true:
• You would have spent a lot of time and resources inventing something of marginal value.
• We could have just told you. Saved you your life savings, your marriage, and all of VC money for R&D.
Until the yet to be developed field of Nervemetry™ catches up with your dreams, we can tell you on good authority that the energy reading on the docks was drastically different between Tuesday and Wednesday mornings. – Full report
Event information – Entry list – Tracker
The 8th edition of the Race to Alaska (R2AK) returns again in 2024 for the 750 mile course from Port Townsend, WA to Ketchikan, AK.
Stage 1: The Proving Ground – June 9 start
Port Townsend, WA to Victoria, BC (40 miles)
R2AK starts with an initial jaunt across open water, two sets of shipping lanes, and an international border. While not a race in itself, the Proving Ground is designed as a qualifier for the full race and as a stand-alone 40 mile sprint for people who just want to put their toe in.
Stage 2: To the Bitter End – June 12 start
Victoria, BC to Ketchikan, AK (710 miles)
Racers start in Victoria at high noon and continue until they reach Ketchikan—or are tapped out by the sweep boat. Unlike the 2022 and 2023 races, the western side of Vancouver Island is no longer an option as the course has returned to the original format with two waypoints at Seymour Narrows and Bella Bella.
Source: R2AK