Ocean Racing Club of Victoria
Steb Fisher
 28

 Nexba 

John Bacon

David Sampson 

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John Bacon left David Sampson right credit Adventures of a Sailor GirlSydney based John Bacon and one of his core MC38 and Melges crewmates, David Sampson, have linked up for their first Melbourne to Osaka double-handed race aboard Bacon’s new Class 40.

The boat was designed by the French foiling guru Guillame Verdier and built in 2013 by FR Nautisme. It was lightly raced in America until Bacon purchased made the purchases late 2016 and had the boat shipped from Newport Rhode Island.

So why the Class 40? After weighing up converting an IRC boat Bacon decided he was better off buying something purpose-built so Sampson headed overseas to follow up leads. “During the process I became really interested in the Class 40, which has almost no recognition in Australia, Bacon said. “They are a box rule; fast, safe and built for offshore sailing however for this race it’s also critical to have a boat capable of good light air performance and this one was available and had good potential.”

As well as his sailing experience Bacon brings planning expertise and enthusiasm while Sampson brings his success as a professional sailor (Loki, Wild Oats XI) and project manager overseeing a number of overseas builds for owners.

Having arrived in Australia in March, Nexba, the boat’s name and the team’s major commercial sugar-free drink partner, is heading straight to McConaghy Boats on Sydney’s northern beaches for rebranding and close examination. 

After a launch at the team’s home club, the Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club on the shores of Pittwater, Bacon and Sampson will commence training offshore while ashore the project management will be in full swing until the pair leave for Melbourne and their March 25, 2018 start as part of the main fleet.

The project timeline has extensive training time at sea allocated pre-Christmas, to fine-tune navigating and become skilled at the various challenges all Osaka teams will face: short-handed sail changes, safety procedures, medical emergencies, communication, sleeping and eating.

Through their debut Osaka challenge the duo plan to raise money for the Integrated Disabled Sailing (IDS) program at  Nexba’s home club ,The Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club - RPAYC and the DEBRA Australia charity, which supports families living with the disease Epidermolysis bullosa.

Bacon reflects on the approaching adventure: “Dave and I realise it’s a big event, a long event, and it requires a lot of skills just to get to the start line let alone finish and be competitive. We’ll have to learn when to send the boat and when to look after it. It’s a Nexba1marathon after all.”

About Nexba:

Design:Verdier 40.
Boat name:           Nexba
Type:                      Tyker Evolution 3 Class 40
Designer:               Guillame Verdier
Builder:                  FR Nautisme
Year built:              2013
Sail no.:                  TBC
Skipper:                 John Bacon           
Co-skipper:           David Sampson
Club:                       Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club
Displacement:      4
tonne
Draft:                      3m
LOA:                       12.2m
Beam:                     4.5m

About Nexba:
Founded in 2011, Nexba is the story of two young Aussies, Drew Bilbe and Troy Douglas, who took the chance to shake up the beverage industry, becoming the Australian beverage company leading the fight against sugar. https://www.nexba.com

Nexba racing Facebook page

Video https://youtu.be/OpE2QIDW934 



Further information:

John Bacon
Nexba owner/skipper
e. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Lisa Ratcliff
Nexba racing media
m. 0418 428 511 e. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Team Nexba their young fans credit Adventures of a Sailor Girl

 05

 Kraken 

Todd Giraudo

David White

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KrakenCrewTodd Giraudo and his co-skiipper “Dubbo” (David White) will be taking a cake with them to enjoy on the way to Osaka to celebrate Dubbo’s 50th birthday.  Named after Kraken, the black, spiced, Carribean rum which bears the motto “I swear to be of drinking age and strong of nerve” which appealed to Todd for its unique bottle and great taste.  She is a Jeanneau Sunfast 3600 and big sister to “The Edge” (the first Kraken, and a Sunfast 3200, also competing in the 2018 Osaka Cup).  Kraken is also a mythical sea creature. 

Both from Western Australia, Todd (Albany) and David (Esperance)  they belong to Hillarys Yacht Club. Todd was keen to get involved in double-handed offshore sailing  and Dubbo had crewed with Todd on previous larger boats.    Dubbo was very impressed with the Sunfast 3200 when he participated in the 2008/09 Transquadra .  The first Kraken [now The Edge] was launched in May 2011 and Dubbo has been co-skipper since.  With Jeanneau announcing a new, larger Sunfast in the 3600, the new Kraken was delivered to Sydney and displayed at the Sydney Boat Show in July 2014.  Following a successful 2014 Sydney to Hobart race, the boat was trucked back to Perth after a delivery sail to Melbourne.  Kraken sails in all the Blue Water events in Western Australia

Kraken is set up for short-handed sailing and well suited for the race. Time, money and opportunity allows the team to “have a go” at the longest ocean race that starts in Australia – the Osaka Cup.  Both men enjoy the challenge and simplicity of double handed racing.

Todd’s has 20+ years of blue water sailing experience in Western Australia and elsewhere, including the 2014 Sydney to Hobart and with Dubbo has 6 years double handed blue water racing in WA – being the first to compete in all WA blue water races double handed.  Dubbo can also boast a Fastnet Double Handed in 2009.  The duo are entered in the Fremantle to Bali race due to start on 6 May 2017. 

Todd’s special moments include  the start and finish of the 2014 Sydney to Hobart;  and finishing the Fremantle to Albany race double handed 2015 including rounding Cape Leeuwin.  Hanging off a wire [trapeze] as crew for his father on a Quickcat going through a wave at the age of 9 stays fondly in his memory.  Dubbo on the other hand cites finishing a race and the 20th rum as his special moment!.

On the opposite side of the emotional scale, Todd rates hallucinations when really really really tired as “a bit interesting…so too driving while a sleep – just never sure for how long”.  Dubbo, nearly run over by a ship off the coast of Spain in the Transqaudra, reckons that was pretty scary.

Both competitors are married to partners who, while not sharing their love of sailing, support their passion.   Upgrades to the boat for the race include a watermaker, satellite dome, Watt and Sea Hydrogenerator;  lithium batteries and a second alternator;  AIS man overboard transponders and a new laptop with latest version of Predictwind. 

In the 2014 Rolex Sydney Hobart race, Kraken was awarded the Battery Point Trophy for 1st smallest yacht and 1st in the Double Handed division in that race from 2013 – 2016.  This team will be working hard to maintain that success.  

Kraken2

 

 

 

 11

 Dare Devil 

Sibby IIzhofer

Jon Sayer

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DareDevil

 

Sibby Ilzhofer competed in the 2003 Osaka Cup on Funnel Web a Hick50, with her then husband and co-skipper.  Now the skipper of her JohnSayerown yacht – a Farr Cookson 47 – Sailing out of Newcastle (NCYC) and Sydney (CYCA) at Rushcutters Bay, Sibby has announced that Jon Sayer – four time competitor in the Osaka Cup - will join her in 2018 as co-skipper/adventurer.


Sibby’s sporting interests early on in life included skiing – proudly serving as a ski instructor and volunteer ski patroller -  and other passions including diving, cycling and canyoning.  But once she turned to sailing in 1996, she was hooked. Sibby has undertaken numerous off shore adventures since 2000, mainly passage races along the east coast, sailing out of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, where she has accumulated quite a few miles over the years. She often sails solo, to deliver Dare Devil to the start line of another race, enjoying both the challenge and the solitude. Her first major race on Dare Devil was the 70th Rolex Sydney to Hobart in 2014, where she won the Jane Tate Memorial Trophy for being the first female skipper across the finish line; being one of only 3 female skippers of 117 contenders in the race.  Whilst the learning curve has been steep on this very competitive boat, and the challenges have been many, Sibby is determined to show, that one can overcome all challenges to follow a dream, and one can achieve whatever we set our heart on; irrespective of the hurdles we may have to overcome.

 
Jon Sayer’s credentials to compete in the Osaka Cup 2018 are very impressive. In 1983 he won the single handed race from NZ to Mooloolaba. He has delivered yachts around the world from 1985 to 2000, including from Australia to France.  2018 will be his 5th Osaka Cup!.  He competed in 1991 (1st Racing C in a Sayer designed and built yacht); 1999 (overall line honours), 2003 (1st Racer Group) and 2007 (1stOpen Racer C, Sayer 12m).  He has also competed in Sydney to Hobart and New Zealand to Fiji races.  


Jon lives in Mooloolaba and is a very accomplished boat builder and designer.  His wife and family are very supportive of Jon heading off to Japan again.  He thinks that is because they are hoping he will come unstuck and they can collect their inheritance early!   Jon’s passion for the race is based on his desire to visit the nicest race of people in the world - and to lose weight on the way!!!  He is very proud of his 6 kg loss in weight in the 1991 race.  Jon’s wife Dianne will act as the team’s shore manager, having been involved with the race over Jon’s journey.  Sibby is looking forward to what this team can achieve in this race, and looking forward to working with Dianne.


An avid fisherman, Jon will have some opportunities to put out a line on the way to Osaka.

 29

 Last Hurrah

Peter Bush

Alan Lang

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Last2 Last Hurrah

Full steam ahead for M2O 2018.

Co-Skippers Alan Lang and Peter Bush (better known as Changa and Bushy) are working hard to get to the start line in March 2018.  They have had the M2O on their ‘to do’ list for many years and previously acquired an Adams 50 and a Sayer 40 with the intention of competing in two previous events. Both campaigns were thwarted by heavy work commitments. “This time around we don’t plan to let anything get in our way!”  

About the Boat: Last Hurrah!

Last Hurrah! was launched in 1994 as Valheru. The 13m design is by Greg Elliot and built in Launceston by Milner Yachts. Ian Milner did a remarkable job on the build and the vessel is as stiff and tight today as she was when launched.  The design was a little different than most boats to come from Greg Elliot’s design studio in that some of the usual slippery running and reaching features were compromised to deliver a more all-round boat capable of performing well in the Sydney-Hobart Race. “We have found the boat to be very quick on sprung sheets outfooting bigger boats and terrific to windward.”. The vessel underwent a half-life refit under the design and management of Fred Barrett to optimise performance from IMS to IRC- new keel, rudder and carbon rig with non-overlapping headsails and asymmetrical spinnakers. The result is that the boat was stiffer and a strong performer on IRC and keeps up with bigger boats on sprung sheets- a must for the Osaka course.  

To set the boat up for Osaka, the Tuff Luff has given way to hanks, the rig has been completely refurbished-along with electronics, the underwater hull has been re-faired, the non-skid deck re done, sail handling has been simplified and a pilot and enhanced battery management system installed. Most importantly the colour of the hull was changed from ‘Jacarada’ (vibrant pink – not their favourite colour!) to white!!  Extensive modifications have also been made to the galley for easy meal preparation, coffee brewing and “happy hour” beverage making.

Changa and Bushy think that the boat is absolutely perfect for them, and they are extremely happy with the work up so far, including thinking long and hard about creature comforts, surviving endless 40 degrees in the tropics and weather forecasting 101!.  Finally, the name change to Last Hurrah reflects the crews’ ambition for the 2018 M2O!

About the Crew

Co-skippers Peter Bush and Alan Lang have been sailing together since the mid-eighties. They have raced together to Hobart 9 times and done numerous two handed races with the SSAA out of Sydney. Peter and Alan hatched their latest plan for the 2018 M2O while cruising back from the Whitsundays on a Grand Banks 36 in September 2014. The pair then spent more than 18 months scouring Australia for an appropriate boat, confining their search to yachts 38 to 45 ft LOA before settling on the Elliot.  This boat topped the list.  She was strong, stiff, and had a terrific pedigree, was proven (having competed in 9 Hobarts).  The half-life refit and optimisation and a near new sail inventory sealed the choice.


Peter Bush: Sailed skiffs as a teenager and began ocean racing aboard Casablanca with the 1978 Sydney Hobart.  Twenty years but 19 Hobart races later, having missed one year due to the birth of his son on December 30 , he ‘retired’ from ocean racing due to workload and related travel commitments. Now ‘semi-retired’ from business Peter has put aside the time to compete in the event.  Peter is a former Commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia and a life member of the Club and was chairman of the race review committee after the 1998 SHYR. He has logged over 110,000 miles in 25 years of offshore racing, including 15 Mooloolaba Races, 13 Gold Coast, 8 Montagu Island and 24 seasons of CYCA Long and Short Ocean Point Scores.  He has sailed in 3 Lord Howe Island races, one of them a being two handed event in his (then) 50 foot Adams Blind Panic. Most of his racing has been as skipper of his own vessels.   

Alan Lang: Alan has spent most of his adult life on the water. He retired from his Clearance Diver role after 20 years in the Australian Navy only to take up a position with Waterways (now RMS) driving boats on Sydney Harbour. Alan was introduced to sailing through a navy mate in 1987, stepping on to Peter’s Peterson Two Tonner Big Schott during the winter series. Al took to sailing like a duck to water and found himself on the foredeck on Boxing Day for the slog south, and never looked back. Alan has an extensive sailing resume that includes over 80,000 nautical miles sailing offshore, with 9 Sydney Hobart races, 11 Gold Coast races, 8 Mooloolaba races and 15 seasons of CYCA Blue Water and Short Ocean Championships. Alan is a talented sailor and an exceptional seaman, no doubt due to his long stint in the navy and the rigor and demands of being a navy diver.   
Alan is a member of Gosford Sailing Club and the SSAA.

Alan and Peter not only race together but always signed up for the return trips to get the boat back home to Sydney.  Invariably this meant just the two of them on board for most of the deliveries.   Prior to the 2018 M2O campaign they have clocked over 70,000 offshore miles together. The two of them also invest their time in preparing the boat for racing and have a good working knowledge of all things on board. The pair have meticulously prepared Last Hurrah! for the M2O and are confident in the boat’s equipment and most importantly the boat’s performance. As work up for the event, they delivered the boat short-handed to Sydney from Hobart where it was purchased and have also been sailing in ‘fully crewed’ events only six up- half the regular crew- as a means of learning the boat but having help on board to optimise performance. They are sailing two-up a day a week and will complete a return non-stop Lord Howe Island sail- about 850 nautical miles in the second half of the calendar year-they say ‘just to be sure we are up to it!’

“In spite of the fact that the boat is well prepared almost 18 months out, the ‘to do’ list still has over 100 entries! Most are 5 minute jobs that seem to each take an hour but others are more substantial. The plan is to have this list to zero by October 30, though every time we sail we seem to tick a few off and add a couple more!”

The co-skippers have a philosophy of keeping it simple. While there are a few redundant systems on the boat every decision focuses on finding the simplest solution and being self-sufficient and able to solve and fix problems as they occur- wherever that might be.
“We have found the information gleaned from former competitors to be remarkably valuable, particularly some of the things that are only likely to emerge in a long race through the tropics. For example, we had done a huge amount of research on power generation and management and were pretty certain we had the right solution. From previous competitors, it was clear we had missed the challenge of prolonged high temperatures below deck and completely re-though our solution as a result.”  


Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/lasthurrah2018
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 31

 Bartolome 

Keiichirou Morimura

Masakazu Omote

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Bart2 Kei left

Keiichirou Morimura (on the left) named his brand new Dehler 38 “Bartolome” on Saturday and he’ll be lining up for the start of the Sundance Marine Melbourne Osaka Cup next March together with Masakazu Omote. This makes them our first officially registered Japanese competitors.  Bartolome, a new Dehler 38 was proudly launched at Osaka Hokko Yacht Club in April.

Bart5

 Bart3

Bart4

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