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Honoring and remembering Hobie Alter

by David Schmidt, Sail-World USA Editor on 31 Mar 2014
The Hobie 16 was the late, great Hobie Alter’s most famous catamaran design Linda Renouf
The sailing world lost one of its greatest visionaries this weekend when Hobie Alter passed away at his home. He was 80 years old. Impressively, Alter influenced virtually every aspects of sailing, from beach-cat racing to the America’s Cup, and is credited as being the father of the modern fiberglass sailing catamaran. Additionally, Alter helped crack the code on creating regatta experiences that were fun for all participants, not just those lucky souls standing on the podium.

Unlike many of his sailing peers, however, Alter first found his path to the ocean through his childhood love of surfing. This love became a loose 'career plan' that fused his woodworking skills with his passion for surfing, and-eventually-boatbuilding. In 1950, at age 18, Hobie designed and built his first balsa wood-and-fiberglass surfboard in his family’s Laguna Beach garage. The boards performed well, and soon he was selling them to friends. By 1954, however, his parents had grown weary of hardened-epoxy bits peppering their lawn, so his father helped him open Hobie Surfboards, Southern California’s first surf shop, in nearby Dana Point.



The business was a success and demand for his boards grew as surfing became increasingly popular. But by 1958 balsa wood was becoming scarce. The company’s first serious breakthrough came when Hobie and his buddy Gordon 'Grubby' Clark developed the world’s first foam surfboard blanks, which they crafted into foam-cored fiberglass surfboards. Lighter, faster and more agile, these boards revolutionized surfing. Soon, Hobie Surfboards was producing 250 boards per week, all handmade in Dana Point.

Other successes followed, including the introduction of modern skateboards, a skateboarding team and an apparel line, but the real genius—and the product with which Hobie’s name would become forever synonymous—was yet to happen.



In the mid 1960’s, Hobie became interested in freestyle sailing that could be done right off the beach. After investigating different multi-hull designs, including sailing Woody 'Spider' Brown’s Manu Kai, Hobie started building fiberglass prototypes in 1967 with his buddy and fellow surfer-cum-sailor, Phil Edwards. His testing methods were simple: take it out in 30+ knots, sail it hard and see what breaks. Refine/Fix/Innovate. Repeat.

The result was the Hobie 14, the world’s first fiberglass catamaran. Virtually overnight, high-speed sailing became accessible to everyone thanks to this brilliantly simple, infinitely transportable design. To build community and promote boats, Hobie immediately started organizing regattas large and small, beginning with a July 4, 1968 race off of Dana Point, California. These now-infamous affairs, which grew to include regional and national events, as well as world championships, emphasized fun, not formality. A newly minted Hobie 14 class association and its monthly publication, The Hobie Hotline, kept sailors connected and a new lifestyle based on sailing, friends and good times emerged.



While the Hobie 14 was popular, Hobie wanted to create something bigger, faster and better suited for two. In 1970 the company unleashed the Hobie 16, one of the most important—and best loved—sailboats of all time. This two-person rocketship featured a sophisticated rig, a flat-cut jib, eye-catching graphics and a trapeze that allowed the crew to tame the boat’s raw power. Asymmetrical fiberglass hulls and kick-up rudders made beaching a snap and its portability encouraged sailors to travel to events near and far. The slogan, 'Have a Hobie Day' became a way of life.

The Hobie 16 was inaugurated into the Sailboat Hall of Fame and today there are more than 150,000 Hobie 16’s being sailed and enjoyed worldwide. Additionally, there are thousands of other Hobie-designed catamarans afloat, flying hulls, throwing spray and giving their owners ear-to-ear grins.



While Alter sold his share of the business years ago, the Hobie brand has continued Mr. Alter’s fine tradition of fast, innovative multihull designs, such as the boats that top multi-hull sailors use on the Formula 1 circuit. In the intervening years since the Hobie 14’s initial launch, hundreds of thousands of sailors have been fortunate enough to enjoy wet and wild rides thanks to Hobie Alter’s design genius, his clear understanding of sailing and his gift for introducing fun and user-friendly products that literally captured the entire world’s attention.

So, the next time you’re out blasting around on a Hobie, be sure to take a few moments to remember the great man and world-class sailboat designer who made all so many fun times a reality for so many people.

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