Please select your home edition
Edition
Sail Port Stephens 2024

Sail Port Stephens 2013 - An East Coast Low - How hard will it Blow?

by Sail Port Stephens Media on 18 Apr 2013
Closing on the mark - in company. NSW IRC Championship. Sail Port Stephens 2011 Sail Port Stephens Event Media
At Sail Port Stephens 2013, it’s Lay Day and it's fine and sunny, ahead there are three days of racing planned for the Elliott 7 Australian Championship, the NSW IRC titles, the Port Stephens Trophy series Performance Racing and Performance Cruising fleets. There is much anticipation with a high quality fleet assembled.

However in the Sail Port Stephens Race Office atop the d'Albora Marina building there has been much discussion over the last days of the three weather models that are now starting to converge for a nasty Friday forecast.

There is a classic East Coast Low forming which looks set to push southerly winds offshore into the mid to high 30´s and wave and swell combinations to 6-7 metres by Friday afternoon.

Race Committees approaches to heavy weather situations have changes over the last decades. With Duty of Care and oft heard phrase.

Back in 1999, this writer started in the Sydney to Gold coast race with 45 knots blowing, (we had spinnakers up in 40 knots), but just a few years later with a lesser Gale wind forecast the race was delayed for 48 hours.



As Sail Port Stephens Principal Race Officer Denis Thompson explains, 'the Race Committee is monitoring weather situation very closely and will assess on Friday morning, with regular updates via SMS, website, noticeboard and the 9am daily briefing.`

'It’s certainly likely to be blowing Dogs off Chains - but we won’t make a decision until the morning, as the forecast are changing very rapidly. Right now Predict Wind and Sea Breeze are pointing towards 35 knots southerlies as early as 12 noon to 2pm.

'If there is a gale warning (33 knots plus) we certainly won’t go offshore. But there are more considerations a big swell may close the bar at lower wind speeds.

'One thing in our favour is that the incoming tide running until 1630 will tend to flatten the bar, but after than as the tide flows out, the bar could get decidedly ugly.

'In years past we have run IRC windward leewards inside Salamander Bay and we´ve been looking closely at course areas for that.'

Sail Port Stephens 2024

Related Articles

Sail Port Stephens Windward-Leeward Series overall
State titles were one for the ages Age has not wearied two veterans of Australian sailing, with Marcus Blackmore and Ray Roberts claiming prestigious NSW IRC titles at the Sail Port Stephens Windward-Leeward Series over the weekend.
Posted today at 12:25 am
Sail Port Stephens Windward-Leeward Series Day 2
Light-air specialists have their day in the sun The Sail Port Stephens Windward-Leeward Series transitioned to Passage Race mode today, and with the change of pace came a change of pace, literally, as both the wind and seas calmed considerably.
Posted on 27 Apr
Swell start to SPS windward-leeward series
Action-packed opener for Part II of Sail Port Stephens with large swells adding to it all Rock fishermen were being advised to stay indoors but the sea conditions off Port Stephens made for an action-packed opener to the Anchorage Marina Windward-Leeward Series, part 2 of the 2024 Sail Port Stephens Regatta Series.
Posted on 27 Apr
Sail Port Stephens Passage Series overall
Paths to glory converge in the rain for winners With only a few points separating rivals across each of the five divisions contesting the Sail Port Stephens Passage Series, the prospect of receiving a thorough rinsing in the rain didn't deter the bulk of the 115-strong fleet from turning out.
Posted on 21 Apr
Sail Port Stephens Passage Series Day 4
Down to the wire on a sparkling day "Sheer enjoyment". That's how Nicky Bethwaite summed-up her experience of the combination inshore/offshore course set by the Race Committee for the fourth race of the five race Passage Series.
Posted on 19 Apr
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 on 18 Apr
Sail Port Stephens Passage Series Day 2
Island views, balmy sunshine and sublime sailing conditions The best aspects of regatta sailing crystallised for the record fleet contesting the second day of the Passage Series (Commodores Cup). It turned-out to be a highly memorable day of threading out through the Port Stephens Heads.
Posted on 16 Apr
Sail Port Stephens Passage Series Day 1
Light-air lottery for opener The delightful unpredictability of yacht racing in light airs ensured a nail-biting opening day for crews aboard the record fleet of 115 boats assembled for the Sail Port Stephens Passage Series (Commodores Cup).
Posted on 15 Apr
Sail Port Stephens set for light-air opening
Southerly builds to a fitting crescendo towards the end of the week Light winds and more light winds are predicted for the opening days, before the southerly builds to a fitting crescendo towards the end of the week. With it, the sunshine will make way for a few showers.
Posted on 14 Apr
Sail Port Stephens attracts biggest ever fleet
The iconic regatta has once again surpassed trends and expectations Just when it looked like the Sail Port Stephens Passage Series couldn't grow any further, the iconic regatta has once again surpassed trends and expectations with a record fleet of 115 entries gathering ahead of the Monday April 15 start.
Posted on 10 Apr