REGATTA INFORMATION

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The easiest way to find the most updated regatta information is to use the calendar at the Regatta Central website.  In addition to general  information, you can view updated entries and the regatta schedule.  Keep in mind that many updates will be made to the schedule and entries as the regatta date grows near. 

Information for specific venues can be accessed by the direct links below:

Information for the Secret City Head Race:

Oak Ridge Rowing Association Homepage

Information for the Chattanooga Head Race:

Chattanooga Head Race

Information for the Head of the Tennessee in Knoxville:

Head of the Tennessee 

Information for the Head of the Hooch in Chattanooga:

Head of the Hooch

Information for the Tennessee Indoor Rowing Championships at UTC:

Directions and Parking

Information for all races at the Oak Ridge Rowing Association venue:

Directions and Parking

Oak Ridge Rowing Association Homepage - follow links for schedules

Information for all races at Langley Pond, Augusta GA/Aiken SC:

Augusta Rowing Club - follow "Our Regattas" links for directions/schedules

Information for races at Gainesville:

Directions and Parking

Atlanta Rowing Association Homepage

Information for USRowing Youth Invitational:

Directions and Parking

Information for Henley Royal Regatta:

Frequently Asked Questions about Henley

Website of the Henley Royal Regatta

 "When we gather for the happiest week in all the year, it is the brotherhood of rowing, the comradeship of the oar that we recall, when eight men who have trained until they have become a single drive, a single thrust of forward-flashing wrists, face suddenly the crisis towards which that selfless toil has led them, and know that every link in all that pulsing chain of flesh and blood rings true. For us, there are no centuries or duck's eggs, no goals or gallery kicks, no individual distinctions where the crew are all in all. The rattle of the riggers of the finish, the music of the tide beneath her body as she shot between the strokes, the grim yet heartening sound of splendid and unbroken strength when all eight blades crashed in together - these are the things that no one who has heard and felt them will ever forget. Some delirium. Some tremens. Some kaleidoscope." 

-Sir Theodore Cook