St. Ursula Academy rows to the starting position during the 2011 Frogtown Races Regatta at International Park in Toledo. A total of 47 teams on 323 boats competed in 32 events over a three-mile course on the Maumee River.
The Blade/Lori King
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Editor's note: This version corrects the number of events that were entered in the regatta.
Dense fog on the Maumee River in downtown Toledo Saturday morning delayed an annual regatta but failed to dampen the spirits of thousands of participants, spectators, and organizers.
“I am having a great time,” said Jeff Peters, 42, of Toledo. “The sun is out so it has turned out to be a gorgeous day. It’s good to be outside. There’s nothing I’d rather be doing right now.”
The father of Ethan Peters, a 14-year-old Central Catholic High School freshman competing in the 4-man boat novice race, said the only downside of the fog was the two-hour delay of the races. He was one of the estimated 3,000 spectators who lined the river bank at International Park, watching boats race by in the Toledo Rowing Club’s 26th Annual Frogtown Races Regatta, presented by Owens Corning, which finally started at 10 a.m.
About 1,200 rowers — high school students and adults primarily from Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and Pennsylvania — raced over a three-mile course, which started just upstream of the Norfolk Southern Railroad Bridge and ended at the stern of the S.S. Col. James M. Schoonmaker Boat Museum, formerly the S.S. Willis B. Boyer.
They competed on 47 teams on 323 boats in 32 events. Of the regatta's 57 events, 15 were not entered. Boats started about every 15 to 20 seconds, with the goal of catching up with the boats that were ahead and not getting passed by those behind.
The usually less than bustling park was full of athletic-looking people having a lot of fun. Some were getting ready to race at the boat launch area by the park’s gazebo where cheers could be heard coming from group-hugging high school teams. Others were rushing to the vendors’ tents on the other side of the park, and still others were watching their competitors race.