Please select your home edition
Edition
Exposure Marine

And in the Beginning - A day in the life of a Waterwise class

by Richard Gladwell on 21 Mar 2013
Some watch some sail - Waterwise March 21, 2013 Richard Gladwell www.photosport.co.nz

Waterwise, although not highly rated in some circles, is the most successful program in New Zealand in pulling young sailors into the sport, at around the age of ten years old.

A typical Waterwise program will consist of six water sessions of two or three hours each, handling up to 20 children and giving them their first taste of sailing, and water sports.

Sadly the program is eschewed by many clubs, rather than embraced. With the sport heading increasingly down the path of being taken up by the sons and daughters of non-sailing families, the need for Waterwise programs is even greater. So far their record has been excellent producing several world champions and Olympic sailors. Two of the world champions came from non-sailing families and were introduced to sailing an clubs through the Waterwise program.

A Waterwise program, is the only way in which large numbers of school age kids can be taken into sailing with some 6,000 per year passing through the 15 programs that have been established in various centres mainly in the North Island and mainly on Auckland's North Shore. The first was launched in 1983 at Lake Pupuke by Princess Diana.

As well as teaching sailing, Waterwise teaches water confidence and safety, helping to reduce New Zealand's appalling downing rate of almost a hundred people per year. Waterwise is a community initiative - more can be seen on www.waterwise.org.nz The program is run by volunteers with a teacher in charge. Waterwise will teach parents how to sail, and how to instruct - and performs a double service of getting volunteers into the sport and trained at a learn to sail level.

Sail-World stopped by a Waterwise session conducted on Auckland's North Shore.












Zhik 2024 DecemberAllen Dynamic 40 FooterLloyd Stevenson - AC Alinghi 1456x180px BOTTOM

Related Articles

One thing. One big, very fast boat
One thing that opened the door, another made us enquire some more - 50 knots! Yes. It was one thing that opened the door, as it were. One thing that piqued the curiosity enough to go, ‘I'll take a look at that!' One thing that when you're trying to crack in excess of 50 knots...
Posted on 30 Jun
NYYC International Women's Championship update
The first group of invited skippers have been announced Elite-level international women's keelboat competition will return to Newport, R.I., in late summer of 2026 when the New York Yacht Club hosts the inaugural International Women's Championship.
Posted on 30 Jun
Luna shines bright in 2025 Morgan Cup Race
This was a truly international fleet with the majority of the teams from the UK and France The start of the Morgan Cup Race was a spectacular sight with over 100 boats beating to windward into the Western Solent for the fourth race of the Cowes Offshore Racing Series and the 11th race of the 2025 RORC Season's Points Championship.
Posted on 30 Jun
Freestyle Pro Tour Paros day 1
Kicking off with a nuclear single elim The opening day of the Freestyle Pro Tour (FPT) Paros kicked off exactly as forecasted - nuclear winds from morning till late afternoon, accompanied by nonstop freestyle action.
Posted on 30 Jun
New Zero Weight 2-in-1 Shorts from Henri-Lloyd
When the weather's hot, there's nothing better to keep you cool on or off the water When the weather's hot, there's nothing better than Henri-Lloyd's Zero Weight 2-in-1 shorts to keep you cool on or off the water.
Posted on 30 Jun
2025 Tiedemann Regatta
Experience shines alongside the brightwork at the Nw York Yacht Club A century ago, R Class yachts were the sports cars of the yachting world, sleek and low to the ground, nimble in the corners and quick around the course, and, above all, demanding to drive.
Posted on 30 Jun
2025 Marion to Bermuda Race - Trophy time
Recognizing the outstanding achievements of the sailors Thank you to everyone who made the 2025 Marion to Bermuda Race such a memorable success! We're thrilled to recognize the outstanding achievements of our sailors with this year's special awards, which were presented at last night's prize-giving and Gala.
Posted on 30 Jun
Foiling Week Malcesine 2025 concludes
Champions crowned and records set during the twelfth edition The twelfth edition of Foiling Week came to an end today in Malcesine with the awarding of the first BirdyFish World Championship title, showing the largest fleet ever for the occasion.
Posted on 29 Jun
Transpac 2025 opens with Aloha send off
Aloha Spirit & Naval salutes on aboard historic USS Iowa It's not every day that serious offshore sailors get the opportunity to party aboard a decommissioned WWII battleship—but it's also not every day that world-class sailors gather to race across 2,225 miles of open Pacific Ocean.
Posted on 29 Jun
Team Malizia starts Course Des Caps
Challenging race around the British Isles Team Malizia set sail today from Boulogne-sur-Mer, kicking off the inaugural Course des Caps race in light winds and challenging conditions with a solid start.
Posted on 29 Jun