You don’t have to be on a boat to feel Antigua Sailing Week.
You get it along the coast — music carrying across the water, sails moving in the distance, crowds gathering at beach bars as the day winds down. The regatta has always drawn sailors from around the world, but much of the action has stayed just offshore.
Now there’s a new way in.
Organizers of Antigua Sailing Week are launching a new event for 2026 called Heineken Riddim & Tides, a beachside festival set for April 25 on Ffryes Beach along Antigua’s west coast.
The idea is straightforward: bring the energy of the regatta onto the sand, and open it up to more people — not just those racing or following along from boats.
It’s a shift that reflects how the event has been evolving.
A new way to experience Sailing Week
For more than 50 years, Antigua Sailing Week has centered on the racecourse, with thousands of sailors arriving each year to compete and move around the island by sea.
But interest around the event has grown beyond the boats.
Visitors staying on land, along with residents, have been looking for more ways to connect with the atmosphere of the week without needing to be part of the races themselves.
Riddim & Tides is designed to meet that demand.
Instead of watching from a distance, you’re stepping into a shared setting — beach, music, boats just offshore — where the different parts of the event come together.
Set on one of Antigua’s most popular beaches
The location plays a big role.
Ffryes Beach stretches along Antigua’s west coast, with wide white sand and calm water that draws both locals and visitors throughout the week. It’s the kind of beach where people settle in for the day, then stay as the light changes and the atmosphere builds.
That setting carries into the event.
The stage is set on the sand. Boats gather just offshore. The beach fills in gradually as the day moves toward evening.
Everything stays in one place.
Music at the center
Live performances will anchor the event, with appearances from 3 Cylinder, regional DJs, and guest entertainers.
The lineup leans into Caribbean sounds, with sets designed to build throughout the day rather than peak all at once. You move between the stage, the shoreline, and the surrounding spaces without losing the thread of the music.
It’s less about a single headline act and more about the overall atmosphere.
On the water and on the beach
What sets Riddim & Tides apart is how it connects what’s happening on land with what’s happening just offshore.
Boaters are expected to gather in a tie-up directly off Ffryes Beach, creating a floating extension of the event. Power boats, sailing vessels, and local craft all come together in the same area, forming a visible link between the regatta and the beach.
From the sand, you see the boats anchored just beyond the shoreline.
From the water, the music carries out.
The two sides meet in the same space.
Food, drinks, and a full-day atmosphere
The event will also include a mix of local and international food vendors, along with curated hospitality areas set up across the beach.
You move between stalls, grab something to eat, and return to the shoreline or the stage without leaving the flow of the event. Drinks stay close at hand, with branded bars and beach setups positioned throughout the area.
It builds into a full-day experience, rather than something confined to a single performance window.
Caribbean Journal Staff
2026-03-30 20:32:00

