Please select your home edition
Edition
Selden 2020 - LEADERBOARD

Sail Port Stephens at the Corlette Point Sailing Association - Day 5

by Lisa Ratcliff, SPS media 18 Apr 2015 22:26 BST 13-19 April 2015

Tempo change

Something's brewing at Port Stephens, and not just the crazy crew costume plans for tonight's dress up 'P party' at Vues on the Bay on the eve of Sail Ports Stephens' final day.

Light winds and unseasonably warm temperatures belie the southerly change that's heading up the NSW coast to change the tempo after five easy competition days, three in the opening Commodore's Cup and two days of Port Stephens Trophy events.

Forecasted blowy northerlies were blocked by the heavy cloud cover over the Hunter region today, Saturday April 18, 2015. Skipper of the 20 ton Kaufman 58 called Pilgrim, Paul Ley, had been keenly awaiting anticipated fresher conditions to push the weighty beauty around the track. "We are a lot of boat," Ley nodded.

Pilgrim and the rest of the Performance Cruising fleet eventually began their Nelson Bay inshore course an hour and a half after the scheduled start time. Starting against the outgoing tide meant race officer Elaine Fowler needed enough wind to push the boats upstream. A window opened up and though light there was enough breeze to run the race and finish everybody, with just one retirement.

The IRC and Performance Racing divisions out on the open water north of Cabbage Tree Island and off Hawks Nest beach managed three slow windward/leeward races in light northerly winds tending nor'east and averaging six knots. It was a long day. A stunning sunset and the usual evening cacophony of Rainbow lorikeets in the waterfront trees greeted the fleet as they motored into d'Albora Marina just before dark.

Two current IRC national champions made their move. Roger Hickman's IRC class C national champion, the Farr 43 Wild Rose, is now second in the IRC division 2 progressive series results and Bob Cox's DK46 Nine Dragons, the current Audi IRC Australian class B champion, leads division 1 thanks to a 'blinder'.

The classy Middle Harbour Yacht Club crew of Nine Dragons came ashore with a 3,1,2 score sheet that knocked PMA Yeah Baby back to second. Stephen Barlow's Farr 40 called Forty is now in the division 1 mix in third.

Nine Dragons' tactician Bobby Wilmot admitted "it was hard to tell how we were going; we haven't had electronics all regatta. We are doing it the 'old boys way' so may not be as sharp tactically, but we are hanging in there."

"Thanks to Bobby and the boys, they have been flying by the seat of their pants," said the delighted owner, adding "it's a better result than we could have hoped for. This calibre fleet is one of the best we've raced," Cox added. The dragons are getting stuck into a big roast leg of lamb tonight, Cox feeding the team up before expected tougher conditions for tomorrow's deciding race.

On the penultimate day of Sail Port Stephens for 2015 Mark Griffith and his Old School Sydney 38 crew have stamped IRC division 2 theirs, an awesome three wins from five races plus a second and third place putting them out of reach with a day spare.

John Egger, owner/skipper of the Jenneau 31 Eggsilante that took out today's Performance Cruising division 2 inshore race celebrated the surprise victory with his crew on the dock. "We had a great race, very testing with the fickle wind; it's the first time I've ever deployed an anchor to stop the boat going backwards. That was a classic. We sailed our race and the crew were fantastic. Fancy coming all the way up here and getting first...woo-hoo!"

Some in the Sail Port Stephens fleet, including Eggsilante from Gosford Sailing Club, are bugging out a day early, motoring south tonight to avoid the front and associated thunderstorms and large seas that are going to make delivering boats back to the southern ports next week very uncomfortable.

The Sunfast crew, a Performance Racing entry, will be remembered at this regatta for their good fashion sense rather than performance (though they score a third in race four today), reckons skipper Glenn Smith. The photogenic red and white 36-footer is sailed by crew always in matching attire – red shirts one day and white the next, which lets them wash at night.

So, which is faster – red or white? "Well the red shirts are tighter and there's less resistance...designed to streamline the skipper," Smith says with a pat on the tummy.

Adrian Walters' 11m Shaw design Little Nico leads Performance Racing from Tony Lobb's Farr 40, PT73.

Due to the weather turning, the original on-water program has been re-jigged so all three Port Stephens divisions have a single final race tomorrow followed by an early trophy presentation and then the 500 or so yachties can disperse with their families.

Pantaenius' sponsorship of Sail Port Stephens is one of the event's major commercial partnerships and business development manager Adam Brown says, "we are very happy with the attendance this week and the weather is excellent. Pantaenius has been a part of Sail Port Stephens since its inception and we will continue our support."

The regatta is also proudly supported by the NSW Government through its tourism and major events agency, Destination NSW.

www.sailportstephens.com.au

Related Articles

Revised dates & format for Sail Port Stephens 2023
The iconic Commodores Cup series is being extended to five days Sail Port Stephens (SPS) is revamping its event schedule and revising dates for racing in April and May 2023, having outgrown the previous week-long format that remained largely unchanged since its inception in 2008. Posted on 30 Sep 2022
Sail Port Stephens overall
Spectacular week of racing comes to fading finish As so often happens in yacht racing, the story is denied a fitting finish due to a lack of wind when it's needed most. And it was certainly the case at Sail Port Stephens today, with a predicted 10-knot sou'easter failing to materialise. Posted on 10 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 6
Change as good as a holiday on Sailebration Saturday The best laid schemes of mice, men and race committees often go awry, especially in the fluid environment of yacht racing, and Day 6 of Sail Port Stephens 2022 was one of those days. Posted on 9 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 5
Pantaenius Sail Port Stephens Trophy Series off to a bright and breezy start Pessimists were predicting showers and light winds but the optimists and opportunists seized the day as the Pantaenius Sail Port Stephens Trophy Series and NSW Yachting Championships got off to a mostly bright and breezy start. Posted on 8 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 3
Commodores Cup finale is yacht racing at its best Queensland has Surfers Paradise, NSW has Sailors Paradise. It's located just outside the headlands of Port Stephens, where a cluster of Hawaiian-style islands from the set of Jurassic Park create an idyllic racecourse for yachts Posted on 6 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 2
Postcard conditions as paradise finds some breeze They say history never repeats but a 'lightening' breeze can certainly strike twice, as 120 yachts competing in Sail Port Stephens' Commodores Cup Race 2 discovered today. Posted on 5 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 1
Off to gentle start and bunched finish Rarely has there been a parting as sweet as watching 120 yachts slide down a sparkling Port Stephens under spinnaker in Race 1 of the 2022 Bannisters Port Stephens Commodores Cup. Posted on 4 Apr 2022
2018 Sail Port Stephens day 7
Huey has the final say After six days of sublime sunshine and sailing, a wild westerly has put paid to any further racing across all divisions, leaving overnight results standing. Posted on 15 Apr 2018
2018 Sail Port Stephens day 6
Super Saturday of Sail Port Stephens 2018 was as good as it gets If you like your sailing fast and flat, with uninhabited islands and surfing beaches added for good measure, then Super Saturday of Sail Port Stephens 2018 was as good as it gets. Posted on 14 Apr 2018
NSW IRC Championship day 1
Patrice toasts champagne conditions at Sail Port Stephens Fittingly for a fleet boasting Wild Oats X for the first time, the NSW IRC Championships at Sail Port Stephens enjoyed champagne sailing conditions on the offshore race course for three windward-leeward races on day one. Posted on 13 Apr 2018