Ocean Racing Club of Victoria
Steb Fisher

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2015 Stanley Notice of Race (V1 00 Final)

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Melbourne to Stanley.

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Melb to Stan map

Ocean Race: 152 nm

Race Start: 2300 AEDT, off Queenscliff on Friday, 30th October 2015

Event Category:  2

 

The ORCV's Melbourne to Stanley yacht race starts off Queenscliff and finishes at Stanley in Northwestern Tasmania. It is held each year on the Melbourne Cup long weekend. 

Please also note, that this is a qualifying race for both of the Melbourne to Hobart races, the Rolex Sydney Hobart yacht race but not required for the Melbourne to Devonport race. However, some crews still choose to do Stanley as practice for Australia's oldest ocean race across Bass Strait- the Rudder Cup.

 

 

 

  

 

  

 

Final Stanley smallerRace Entries for Stanley

An extension to the Early Bird date been made to 8th October 2019.  

Boat and crew documentation (excluding bonefide crew changes) are due on by 0900, 18th October 2019. 

We draw attention to a new clause in the Stanley NoR which imposes a 10 minute time penalty on boats who are unable to complete their documentation on time.

Race Entry click here
Race documents click here
Save 15% on entry fees, Join ORCV membership click here 

For those needing life rafts, please call Harry at  West Offshore Products. www.westoffshore.com.au/contact/   Quote "ORCV" to get 10% discount on life rafts.

For all crew need to replace their sailing kit please contact Marine Plus www.marineplus.com.au/contact-us  Quote "ORCV" to get 15% discount on Gill wet weather gear, extendable tethers, life jackets plus a whole lot more.....

Stanley Poster Artwork Photo Background

Planning for a successful Hobart race

With Winter well underway and a new season about to commence many skippers and yachties thoughts are well-tuned into the new season. Some have chosen a year off, focusing on bay racing. Others set their sights north, heading to Queensland for the various regattas, perhaps doing an ocean race on the way. Many others are focused on doing “a Hobart”.

For many that will be a Sydney to Hobart, for others a Melbourne to Hobart. They are both iconic races and offer different challenges. The Westcoaster has a long history and has the added bonus of two-handed with a few taking this opportunity to practice ready for a 2020 Sydney to Hobart. Some campaigns which lack experience and training involve a two-year program with Devonport as the destination year one and Hobart year two. Whatever the plan, a successful campaign is a long term proposition.

Sure it is possible to buy a good boat and stack it with an experienced crew and tick off getting there. But we are talking racing, basically doing your very best and finishing knowing you left nothing behind. Some people focus on a podium result, the problem is if you don’t get one then people get disappointed. We found focusing on a realistic result and trying to beat that was a more enjoyable approach and any podium result was a bonus. For us, it was knowing you sailed well together, had good tactics, made minimal mistakes and were proud of your achievements. For us it was the friendship and comradery, the lifetime bonds formed which were important. That first beer, always together as a crew, proudly wearing the team shirt, that was what it was all about.

Finding crew is tricky, realistically you need every job on the boat being able to be covered by two or more people, that includes navigation etc. Crew need to get along too, so the style of person must match the dynamics of the boat and skipper. Strong, fit, experienced, don’t get seasick, ideally with Sea and Safety Survival Certification and other qualifications, sounds easy, doesn’t it? We noticed, to attract crew and keep them, you need a long term program for them to commit to. Good crew don’t like ad hoc programs, they tend to sign up to those with a long term program.

Typically for the year ahead, the program lists all the lead-up races (ORCV ones of course and we have a good mix of them), these are used to bond and train the crew as well as shake down the gear. A typical yearly program will kick off with the King Island, a relatively short ocean race with a great destination, which is handy to test for basic skills and seasickness. A sprint race to Apollo bay, a longer Bass Strait passage to Stanley or the new shorter Coastal Sprints, they are all good testing grounds. Avoid the temptation to tough it out without watches, test them too by trying different ones. Test the 2nd Watch lead, test the navigator/tactician and of course the trimmers, helm and bow.

By the time it gets to the Stanley race over cup weekend, you should have ideally had a few training days. Everyone should know the basics of a sail change, reefing, navigation and helming. Stanley should be a serious race, a trial run for the Christmas racing. Plus, the added advantage is getting all the compliance stuff like the safety audit out of the way.

Boats don’t just magically get to the start and the finish lines. Maintenance, preparation and deliveries become the shared responsibility. For those lucky enough they can be cheque booked, for most of us, it is hard, time-consuming work. The question to our crew wasn’t “can you help” but “which days will you help”. Many owners ask for a modest contribution to costs, not only does this help the owner but we noticed that crews felt more ownership of the campaign if they contribute. Don’t underestimate the power of a branded crew shirt, it builds pride and makes people feel part of a team.

And the race itself, well that bit is up to you. It’s a great feeling to cross the start line, and an even better one to cross the finish. Live the dream, if you want to do it we will help.

If you need advice or a hand just ask us at the ORCV.

Final Stanley smaller

Registrations for Melbourne to Stanley are now open. The race starts Saturday 2nd November 2019.

Great training, crew development or qualifier for the coming Christmas Hobart races.

https://www.orcv.org.au/index.php/stanley-about-the-race



 

2018 Stanley race, its a wrap

Stanley start 1  Stanley start 2

 Stanley start 3  Stannley start 4

Thanks to Soiree Bleu for the photos

Well the 2018 Melbourne to Stanley yacht race is a wrap. With trying conditions testing the constitution of many competitors, the strong Westerlies saw a delayed start of 6 hours. In hindsight many welcomed the decision of the race director.

We saw a fleet of 14 start the race after Merlion decided not to start due to the conditions forecast. Some competitors decided to leave early, listening into a Brighton race start on the VHF repeater and mistaking it for the ORCV start. Fortunately they had time to return and prepare once again. The Heads exit proved challenging, especially for those who cut the reef close and battled 8m plus waves.

The race proved fast and wet with 2 sail being the desired sail plan, many opting for a Jib Top reacher. Patriot tried out the new reaching strut to much success, while Bandit proved why perhaps a spinnaker wasn’t a great idea. Still it provided entertainment for others nearby as they collected themselves and a very wet kite and continued on.

The race proved to trying for three yachts, Jinot, Morning Lassie and Sagred who retired and turned back for the heads. The rest of the fleet slogged it out with a couple trying the Western approach, which unfortunately for them didn’t pay off. Smithton Lions Club grabbed a few hours sleep while they could, after preparing all day for the fleet and planning to stay up all night. They are wonderful people and we couldn’t host the race finish without them. A big thank you for the cold drinks and hot food. Diets took the back burner for a while with hot steaks, hamburgers and chips proving too tempting.

Well done to Avalanche for taking out Line Honours, unfortunately not a race record (perhaps next year).
Well done to Soiree Bleu for taking out 1st PHS followed by Avalanche 2nd and Jaffa 3rd.
Well done to Patriot for taking out 1st IRC followed by Avalanche 2nd and Bandit 3rd.
Well done to Patriot for taking out 1st AMS followed by Soiree Bleu 2nd and Avalanche 3rd.
Well done to Maverick, sailing two handed and taking out 1st DHD (the only DHD competitor).
Results have been published, click here for details.

A big thank you to all the race supporters including Queenscliff Coast Guard, Sheryl Robson and the Smithton Lions Club, TasPorts for berthing and Kordia for HF radio sked support. Thanks to Nicholas McGuigan as Race Director with assistants Martin Vaughan, Simon Dryden and Ray Shaw.

See you on the water.

 

2018 Stanley Race Weather Update

Conditions are much brighter for the race crews this morning, with significant moderation of the wind and waves overnight. The forecast looks good, there is a chance of the race record being broken but that may change as the winds lighten off as the fleet approach Stanley

 

 

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3 Aquatic Drive, Albert Park VIC 3206 Ph. 0493 102 744 E. orcv@orcv.org.au