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The 13th Biennial Dragon Boat Races

Hear the drums. See the waves. Feel the energy! More than 20 teams paddle for glory after months of preparation. Welcome to the 2025 Dragon Boat Races!
Join us on September 13 to share in the excitement and root for our racers. Teams will practice for 8 weeks leading up to Race Day at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. Thousands of spectators will witness several hours of crazy competition.

Race Schedule

  • 6:30AM
    Team Registration Begins
  • 7:45AM
    Welcome
  • 8:30AM
    Round 1 Time Trials
  • 10:00AM
    Round 2 Time Trials
  • 12:30PM
    Semifinals
  • 1:30PM
    Championship Races
  • 2:45PM
    Award Ceremony

The Race Teams

Some of Baltimore’s most philanthropic companies build teams to 
paddle together for victory and to support Catholic Charities programs.

2025

  • Presenting Sponsor

  • Platinum Sponsor

  • Gold Sponsor

  • Team Sponsors

    • Archdiocese of Baltimore
    • PNC Bank
    • PwC
    • T. Rowe Price
  • Non-Profit Team Sponsors

    • The Annie E. Casey Foundation
    • Catholic Charities
    • Catholic Relief Services
    • Mayor’s Office (City of Baltimore)
  • Club Teams

    • Johns Hopkins University Dragon Boat Club

Food and Entertainment

Enjoy Food, Drink, & Music

 

Food & Entertainment

  • Jimmy's Famous Seafood
  • Bar Movement
  • All Fired Up Pizza
  • Go Melvo Snowballs
  • Caricatures by Rick Wright
  • US Jow Ga Martial Arts Lion Dancers
  • Murals by Hand (face painting)

History of Dragon Boat Racing

Dragon Boat racing is a reflection of a memorable historical event that occurred more than 2,000 years ago. Numerous supremacy wars were erupting during the fourth century B.C. when Emperor Chu’s kingdom was one of the mightiest remaining. It is a story of self-sacrifice.

A man of great respect, Qu Yuan, a poet, minister and counselor to Emperor Chu, was cast into exile because of his politically sensitive poems. Distraught and inconsolable, Qu Yan grasped a large stone and threw himself into the Mi Lo River in an act of desperation and sorrow. His last poem can be translated:

Qu Yuan was loved so by the people that local fisherman raced to the tragic scene in their long, swift boats, beating their drums and splashing their oars to scare the many fish away from his body. They threw also tossed rice into the river some say in an attempt to protect Qu Yuan’s body from the fish and others to feed his soul.

Dragon Boat Festivals are held in China on the fifth day of the fifth month of the lunar calendar, the same day Qu Yuan is said to have drowned himself in the Mi Lo River. Many of the original rituals are still practiced today at festivals all over the world. As part of the opening ceremonies, a common practice is to “Awaken the Dragon” by dotting the eyes of the Dragon’s heads of each of the boats. Historically, the Dragon was the favored symbol of the Emperor, and the best Chinese artists were commissioned. Shortly after one such artist put the finishing touches on his work by etching the eyes on his exquisite stone Dragon, thunder and turbulent weather swept the land. It was believed the mythical beast was “awakened” and had “come to life”. Also, the significance of the eye dotting was to impress the boats and their crews with the strength of the Dragon and the blessing of the Goddess of the Sea.