Please select your home edition
Edition
Vaikobi 2024 LEADERBOARD

Australian Women's Keelboat Regatta - Queens birthday long weekend

by Lisa Ratcliff on 15 Apr 2015
AWKR 2014 fleet downwind Steb Fisher
2015 Australian Women's Keelboat Regatta - Organisers hope up to 30 teams representing every Australian state and territory plus an international team from New Zealand will head out on Port Phillip Bay over the June long weekend to mark the silver anniversary of the longstanding Australian Women’s Keelboat Regatta.

Skipper Sabina Rosser, part of the first event in 1991 and a 25 year member of the host Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron hasn’t missed a series as a competitor, and has given countless years to organising the unique women’s mixed keelboat sailing event.



In the founding years and for at least a decade Rosser hand made all the trophies. “I’d commission someone to make the clay boats and I would paint them, then I’d get somebody else to make up pieces of wood for the base and I would varnish those and get plaques made. I’ve given more time than I would like to imagine,” she recalls.

Rosser is looking forward to her annual show of support for women’s sailing, for the 25th time. “I like the camaraderie of the whole regatta, and it’s fun. Women might sail a lot but not get the opportunity to helm a boat. Being part of the AWKR gives you an opportunity to run your own race. Being part of the regatta year-on-year is second nature to me now. I’m a skier too and it was always a toss-up whether to go for the opening weekend of the ski season instead, but I worked out my priorities and have been supporting the event ever since.”

Port Phillip’s mid-winter daily temperatures range between six and thirteen degrees on average, lower with the wind chill. “Rug up” is Rosser’s first tip for surviving the nippy conditions, second is “have a little flask handy…to keep the cockles warm.” Rosser will skipper an S80 this year.

The Notice of Race is online outlining the entry process and what’s on offer to competitors. A third division for sportsboats has been added to the two keelboat divisions, a result of the Victorian Sports Boat Association approaching organisers to be involved.



Given so few women own boats the Squadron goes out to its database seeking owners willing to loan theirs. “There are normally a few who put their hand up at this point and then teams can fit in with the kind of boats that are available,” explains RMYS sailing coordinator and AWKR facilitator Allicia Rae.

“Otherwise a team will come to me, tell me how many people they have and what they normally sail on, then I hunt around. This year I have branched out to ask the other clubs around the bay if they would help in the search. Without such generous boat owners lending their boats this event simply would not happen.”

Two races are scheduled to start daily at 1000hrs June 6-8, 2015 on Port Phillip to the west of the St Kilda breakwater and east of the shipping channel. The long distance course may extend as far as Brighton.

In the lead up to June, Australian Women’s Keelboat Regatta competitors can take the opportunity for some class time via the traditional lecture series offered by the RMYS starting Thursday April 30 with a special presentation for beginner foredeckies. Over the following four Wednesdays seminars on weather; sail trim and crew work; rules; and essential skills and strategies for starting excellence will run at RMYS at St Kilda on the edge of the Melbourne central business district.

South Australian skipper Helen Willmer says women’s regattas “are a bit friendlier, and the people of Melbourne are so hospitable it makes it easy for an interstate team to feel welcome.” Recently Willmer’s crew, sailing for the Royal South Australian Yacht Squadron, has had the use of Les Norton’s Bavaria Match 38 called Mrs Overnewton for the Queen’s Birthday long weekend series.



“It’s not about being hot shots, its knowing our Squadron support us to do our best,” adds the 70 year-old, who tries to add up how many regattas she’s attended consecutively. “At least five… I’d have to go back and read my T-shirts.”

The regatta is open to women of all skill levels, offering serious competitive sailing as well as the opportunity for novices to get a taste of the sport.

Organisers really hope a NZ team can join the starter’s list given the concept for the Australian Women’s Keelboat Regatta was born from a pair of Aussie go-getters, Gai Gough and Kerry Goudge, who formed a team for the International Women's Keelboat Championship in New Zealand and then put the idea of an Australian series on the table.

Major sponsors of this year’s anniversary series include Helly Hansen, Club Marine, IBG Insurance and Logie-Smith Lanyon Lawyers, and the charity partner is the Think Pink Foundation.

Local hotels are offering competitors great accommodation deals.

Entries close at 1700hours on Wednesday May 20, 2015.

Zhik 2024 March - FOOTERVaikobi 2024 FOOTERNorth Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTER

Related Articles

UpWind by MerConcept announces 7 female athletes
For the inaugural season of Ocean Fifty Racing After four days of physical and mental tests, individual interviews, and on-water racing, seven female athletes have been selected to join the very first UpWind by MerConcept racing team.
Posted today at 1:43 pm
Last Chance for 2024 Olympic Qualification
Starting this weekend at the Semaine Olympique Française The Last Chance Regatta, held during the 55th edition of Semaine Olympique Française (Franch Olympic Week) from 20-27 April in Hyères, France, is as it says – the last chance.
Posted today at 5:42 am
35th Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta Day 1
Easy start to an exciting week The 35th Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta got off to a slow start today with unusual calm southerly winds which prompted the race committee to shorten the Old Road course.
Posted today at 3:49 am
5.5 Metre Alpen Cup at Fraglia Vela Riva Day 1
Cold start but hot racing on Lake Garda, Italy The Jean Genie (GBR 43, Peter Morton, Andrew Palfrey, Ruairidh Scott) won two out of three races on the opening day of the 2024 5.5 Metre Alpen Cup, on Thursday, which is being hosted by the first time by Fraglia Vela Riva.
Posted on 18 Apr
First six OGR finishers all Whitbread veterans
Whitbread yacht Outlaw AU (08) crosses the finish line at 13:39 UTC to claim the Adelaide Cup Former Whitbread yacht Outlaw AU (08) crosses the Royal Yacht Squadron, Cowes finish line at 13:39 UTC, 18th April after 43 days at sea ranking 6th in line honours and IRC for Leg 4.
Posted on 18 Apr
Clipper Race fleet set to arrive in Seattle
After taking on the North Pacific Ocean Over 170 non-professional sailors, including 25 Americans, are on board a fleet of eleven Clipper Race yachts currently battling it out in a race across the world's biggest ocean and heading for the Finish Line in Seattle.
Posted on 18 Apr
Alegre leads the search for every small gain
Going into 2024 52 Super Series season The first of the two new Botin Partners designed TP52s to be built for this 52 Super Series season, Andy Soriano's Alegre, is on course to make its racing debut at 52 Super Series Palma Vela Sailing Week.
Posted on 18 Apr
Trust A+T: Best in Class
Positive feedback from this Caribbean racing season Hugh Agnew recently sailed with SY Adela under Captain Greg Perkins in the Antigua Superyacht Challenge. They went on to win the Gosnell's Trophy - a great result.
Posted on 18 Apr
10 years of growth and international success
J/70 celebrates its 10th anniversary With nearly 1,900 hulls built and National Class Associations in 25 countries, the J/70 is the largest modern sport keelboat fleet in the world.
Posted on 18 Apr
America's Cup Defender christened "Taihoro"
Cup Defender named “To move swiftly as the sea between both sky and earth.” In a stirring ceremony, Iwi Ngati Whatua Orakei gifted and blessed the name ‘Taihoro' on the boat that Emirates Team NZ will sail in their defence of the 37th America's Cup. The launch event took place at the Team's base in Auckland's Wynyard Point.
Posted on 18 Apr