Please select your home edition
Edition
March to end August 2024 affiliate link

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Zefiro seeks full blooded southerly

by Jim Gale, RSHYR Media on 20 Dec 2013
Jeri Bakker and the Zefiro crew are hoping for southerlies. CYCA Staff .
Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - It is said that gentlemen do not go to windward - and quite so - it is a bit like scrum time in the rugby, best suited to miners and the unashamedly agricultural who can only gawp at the nonchalant elegance of wingers in stainless white shorts.

Yet on Zefiro, the most elegant, most gentlemanly of yachts, come Boxing Day and the Rolex Sydney Hobart, they want a full blooded southerly. The thought of skipping down the New South Wales coast in a sundrenched sea breeze is anathema.

The racing bug will do that to you.

The drop dead gorgeous Farr 100 Zefiro is a yacht to lust after. Her wide, powerful white hull looks like she is going fast even when tethered to the dock at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia.

Her blemish-free teak deck goes on for ever. The faultless timber joinery below, the plush cabins, the cavernous galley and the eight separate heads (toilets) are Swan like in their understated extravagance. This is a yacht designed and built to circumnavigate the world in absolute comfort.

Which is exactly what German/Cypriot owner Gerhard Ruether is doing.

Built by Italians in a Cape Town yard, Zefiro first cruised north, to the Mediterranean, competing in all the super-yacht regattas that circle the fabled Sea in summer. Then across the Atlantic for more cruising and racing, down to Cuba and on to New Zealand by way of Panama.

In New Zealand she won the Millennium Cup, and now she is in Australia for the Rolex Sydney Hobart. Next year it will be swimming with whale sharks off the West Australian coast before exploring Indonesia, racing in the Kings Cup in Phuket, and then Myanmar.

Ruether’s multinational shipping management group has offices in Cyprus, Germany, Singapore and Myanmar, where he has a maritime training academy that has produced 5000 graduates over the years, who now work all round the world.


Racing was always part of Ruether’s cruising plans, especially the Rolex Sydney Hobart, 'The Hobart has a history of being a hard race,' says Zefiro’s boat manager, Jeri Bakker.

'You have so many weather patterns and tactics to think about. The start on Sydney Harbour, down the coast in a current, across Bass Strait which is very shallow and then around an island. It is a lot of races in a relatively short distance. For us, the 628 (nautical) mile distance is not an issue. We do passages of 3000 miles.'

Of course, these are 628 very intense miles. Lots of weather, potential storms, countless sail changes. And Ruether and Bakker have assembled anything but a cruising crew for the race, with loads of local knowledge and Sydney Hobarts under their belts.

'Our first goal is to get there, and to give it 100 percent,' Bakker says. They are all there to win.

A huge amount of gear has been stripped out of the boat. Spare parts, essential for long distant cruising but surplice to race requirements, will go to Hobart in a truck, as will Ruether’s 600 kilos of books.

Not all the creature comforts will go though. Proper beds, not pipe births, a well-stocked freezer and capacious commercial oven stay.

'There will be no dry food,' Bakker declares. 'We will have proper meals.' Even in racing mode Zefiro will be a palace compared to the no-frills purity of the four other 100 footers and the V70s in the race.

With all that weight, Zefiro is not a line honours contender, unless the going gets very tough and the winds are coming from in front of the fleet. But a good rating gives her a big shot at winning on handicap.

'The rating reflects the kind of boat she is,' Bakker says. 'We have the same handicap as the 60 foot Ichi Ban,' he says of Matt Allen’s new state-of-the-art grand prix racer and one of the race favourites. 'If you sail to the best of your abilities and the handicap is right, yeh. Maybe we can do some good.'

This is why those on board Zefiro want southerlies. 'I don’t mind a nor-easter across Bass Strait, but for the first day and a half I want wind from the south east,' Bakker declares.

'Up wind we can do 13 knots. In fact making the boat go faster isn’t the issue, but slowing her down, depending on the sea state is.

Downwind in a 60 tonne boat, though, is an altogether different matter. Upwind, weight can translate into power. Downwind it is all drag.

'If it is blowing from the north-east we will go below, put a suckling pig in the oven and sit back,' Bakker sighs, thinking of all the good meals that have gone down on Rolex Sydney Hobart website

X-Yachts X4.3Rolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTERHenri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed

Related Articles

America's Cup Defender christened "Taihiro"
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 ‘Taihiro' 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 today at 1:35 pm
New Allen Topper Race Packs
Developed in collaboration with a handful of top sailors from the class The six packs have been developed in collaboration with a handful of top sailors from the Topper class over the last few seasons and the result is a selection of high-performance, easy-to-install packs which will help elevate your boat's performance.
Posted today at 11:25 am
Entry list grows ahead of Superyacht Cup Palma
New entries sign up for the Mallorcan festival of sail from 19 to 22 June With just two months to go to the start of Superyacht Cup Palma 2024 anticipation is growing as new entries sign up for the Mallorcan festival of sail from 19 to 22 June.
Posted today at 10:46 am
Sail Port Stephens Passage Series Day 3
Getting into the groove toward sailing perfection By day three in regattas the cobwebs have been shaken-off, the crew dynamics are coming together and the muscle memory of putting-in an optimum tack or bear-away set should be kicking in.
Posted today at 12:51 am
More flexible? More durable? More comfortable?
Next Gen FlexForce offer the ultimate in versatility, comfort, durability and stretch Our Next Gen FlexForce wetsuit tops and long johns offer the ultimate in versatility, comfort, durability and stretch.
Posted on 17 Apr
2024 World Match Racing Tour season kicks off
The Ficker Cup Regatta racing starts Friday The 2024 World Match Racing Tour kicks off this week in Long Beach, California with 17 teams and over 100 of the world's top match racing sailors competing across back-to-back events.
Posted on 17 Apr
RS Venture Connect to carry Olympic Flame
Mare Inseme, an inclusive sailing association in Corsica, has been selected for the torch relay Mare Inseme, an inclusive sailing association in Corsica, has been selected to carry the Paris 2024 Olympic flame during the torch relay in the build up to the Olympic Games.
Posted on 17 Apr
Cup Spy Apr 16: Radical Swiss AC75 revealed
Alinghi Red Bull Racing was revealed in daylight - showing some very unique design features Alinghi Red Bull Racing was revealed in daylight on Tuesday in Barcelona - showing some very unique design features - and looking to leapfrog the other design teams, and make a two generation advance in AC75 design.
Posted on 17 Apr
Cup Spy April 16: Luna Rossa revealed
The first tow-run reached a boat speed of 20 knots before turning around for a second run The first tow-run reached a boat speed of 20 knots before turning around and proceeding with the second one at 25 knots and finally increasing to 30 knots.
Posted on 17 Apr
Who better than a J owner to talk about a J?
Chatting with Denis R., currently the owner of a J/99 and soon to be of a J/112E We asked some questions to Denis R., currently the owner of a J/99 and soon to be of a J/112E. He shares his feelings about why he chose the J/99 and why he is staying in the family with his next boat, the J/112E.
Posted on 17 Apr