Please select your home edition
Edition
X-Yachts Leaderboard 2024 3

Brisbane to Gladstone Yacht Race - The more hulls the merrier

by Peter Hackett on 28 Mar 2013
Secret screacher trials unplugged - watch this boat! - Allyacht Spars Brisbane to Gladstone Multihull Yacht Race Peter Hackett
The Allyacht Spars Brisbane to Gladstone Multihull Yacht Race for 2013 is heading off at 11.20 am from Shorncliffe this year. We are again sharing this end of the bay, and for the first time in years also sharing the startline with our monohull brothers who leave at 11.00 am. With any normal Easter weather pattern I would be looking forward to passing the guys on the first start, but this year the wind pattern is a bit tricky to plot such an attack.

With a light southwester at start time, we will all be bobbing around searching for good kite angles and waiting in trepidation for the fresh, but hopefully not too brief, 20 knot southerly storm change coming from the south. As with many Gladstones, the first night will dictate the order for the rest of the race, and the winning crew will be on the boat that can stay upright and in the breeze for as long as possible before it goes east and drops back to nothing on Saturday night. The next 24 hours of a slowly building northerly will then determine who gets the gold, but any boat that gets to Lady Elliot Island for a hard turn to port is going to have a very happy crew for the 75 mile (screacher please Hughie) reach from there to the entrance to Gladstone Harbour. I bag that watch on the tiller!

The fleet of nine multihulls reflects the drop in numbers in the monohull fleet to 26, these races are an exercise in logistics and the dollars needed are continuing to reduce the fleets. It is no secret that both organising clubs are looking seriously at how to bring back the big fleets that I remember from my first Gladstone in the 80's.

The fleet quality is there however, with more diversity than ever before. The stalwarts like Gary Saxby’s Boss Racing which has taken line honours in 2010 will be lined up to do it again in the absence of the ORMA 60 ‘ trimarans that have been attracting the crowds lately. A smaller but stealthy looking new SeaCart 30 aptly named Morticia will be trying to put a spell on the other boats. These all-carbon boats really fly.

The challenge overnight for the new owner Shaun Caroll will be to sail fast and upright after the only other sistership recently flipped in Bass Strait and at last report was still drifting around awaiting salvage.

The Raiders always push hard for OMR handicap honours, and Roger Overell will have his usual gun crew driving his Lightwave Raider hard on the wind line.









Cut Snake is another serious handicap challenger, a boat that looks more comfortable than fast, she has recently been optimised and owner Rob Dean is excited to be back on the start.

The new boat to our shores via New Caledonia that has caused some disruption to river traffic in front of Billy Wright’s Bulimba shipyard is the classic trimaran of Jason Gard. Spirit won the round Britain and Ireland race in 1998 so has great pedigree. Her long and thin hulls certainly look the part and a little mullet just told me that in a light wind screacher test in the bay today this boat passed the Seacart!


I am looking forward this year to an occasional stint at the blunt end of McMoggy, she is a kiwi built comfortable racer/cruiser with a lot of carbon and a glamour carbon rotating mast which by itself is worth more than all my old boats put together. Owner Alasdair Noble has been sneaking a bit higher up the score boards lately after grabbing a lot of the loot in Airlie Beach and Magnetic Island Race Weeks last year, so I am sure he will be flogging the whip (now that sounds like Morticia?).

In any case, boats of all types will be out there enjoying the ride north. I can’t write anything about sailing this year without sending a greeting to Stripey Grant recovering in hospital this year instead of pumping out the frenetic phrases that we all love to quote while hanging on to the bar. Stripey, we won’t be able to blister the paint off the decks as we blast along Fraser this year, but I promise to nip any tuck that crosses us on the start.

Get well old friend.

Yellow Brick Tracker at http://yb.tl/mbgyr2013 can be used to follow the fleet.

Hyde Sails 2024 - One DesignRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTERMaritimo M50

Related Articles

Master Lock Comanche takes Line Honours
Matt Allen and James Mayo have sailed Master Lock Comanche to Line Honours Matt Allen and James Mayo have sailed Master Lock Comanche to Line Honours in the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart, the 80th edition of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia's 628 nautical mile race.
Posted today at 7:46 am
New Spring Suit - Flexibility and warmth
Meet Vaikobi's NEW 2MM FlexForce Spring Suit Designed for surfing and foiling, the Vaikobi Springy delivers exceptional flexibility and reliable warmth so you can stay comfortable and unrestricted in mild to cool water.
Posted today at 7:00 am
Sydney Hobart – They will! Huey playing nicely
Daylight finish on the cards as Master Lock Comanche storms into the River Derwent estuary Daylight finish on the cards as Master Lock Comanche storms into the River Derwent estuary. Breeze at both the Iron Pot (10-15 knots) and in town (15-20 knots) ensures there will be no hanging around.
Posted today at 6:43 am
RSHYR 2025 | Line Honours Battle by BCM
With the leaders all wihin 'cooee' of each other, it is time to work out what time a result happens RSHYR 2025 | Crosbie Lorimer invites John Curnow to discuss the unfolding battle at the front of the fleet with four Line Honours contenders within shouting distance of each other. They also talk about some very close mid-fleet contests for IRC overall.
Posted today at 5:39 am
Sydney Hobart – LawConnect videos
An update from Tony Mutter, a sample of the conditions, and all three in super close proximity An update from Sailing Master Tony Mutter on board LawConnect, a sample of the conditions, and all three in super close proximity.
Posted today at 4:04 am
Sydney Hobart – Will they? Won't they?
Huey loves to shake things up, so here is some Maths to ponder whilst he makes up his mind... Now at just after 1110hrs AEDT on December 28, 2025, the leaders are just South of a place called Friendly Beaches. SHK Scallywag still leads, but now Master Lock Comanche is in second, with LawConnect in third.
Posted today at 12:08 am
Sydney Hobart – SHK Scallywag leaps to front
Moving from third to first is SHK Scallwag as it plays out abeam St Marys Moving from third to first is SHK Scallywag as it plays out abeam St Marys. This Editorial also includes a video interview with the great Chris Nicholson aboard LawConnect - he is brilliant and details their journey thus far.
Posted on 27 Dec
Sydney Hobart – War of attrition - plateau arrives
Looking at it and seeing Comanche doing just two knots SOG. Problem? Or realisation? Looking at it and seeing Comanche doing just two knots SOG. Problem? Or realisation?
Posted on 27 Dec
470 Class Sailing Season Review
General recap of the sailing season - key events of the year We're excited to bring you the latest updates, achievements, and upcoming events from our sailing community. This time of year is a time for reflection and summary, so let's take a look at what we've accomplished together and what lies ahead.
Posted on 27 Dec
Race Around Australia returns
Sailing over 7,000nm with five legs, four stopovers and two sprint stages with pit stops The Shorthanded Ocean Racing Association of Australia Inc (SHORAA) is proud to announce the Race Around Australia 2028 (RAA), a doublehanded yacht race, forty years after and in the spirit of the 1988 Bicentennial race.
Posted on 27 Dec