Ocean Racing Club of Victoria
Steb Fisher

Unprecedented wins race to King Island

by Jane Austin

King Island 2025 41

King Island fleet starting, Photo by Al Dillon

While the eastern seaboard has faced the hostility of Cyclone Alfred over the last week, the Melbourne to King Island fleet had a superb sail in near perfect conditions in the 54th anniversary of the race.

Unprecedented, the double-handed Sunfast Jeanneau 3300 co-skippered by Andrew McGrath and Ben Thompson from the Safety Beach Sailing Club will be celebrating the 54th race to King Island for years to come.

Unprecedented

Unprecedented, Photo by Al Dillon

Unprecedented was the last boat to cross the start line but clever sail choice and tactics saw them move back through the fleet to finish 12th across the line.

This on-water manoeuvring was enough to propel the popular sailors into first place on AMS handicap to win the coveted King Island Trophy, just over two minutes ahead of Ginan, on a corrected time of 12 hours, 44 minutes and 17 seconds.

The race started in a light easterly breeze of about 11 knots which slowly built to a consistent 18 to 20 knots across Bass Strait, conditions which suited Unprecedented and most of the fleet.

Success in the race was a first for the duo who have been sailing with each other on various yachts for nearly twenty years, with the spoils extending to victory in the Double-Handed Division on performance handicap and second on ORC handicap.

“We had a terrible start, last across the line, but we clawed our way back going from a J1 [spinnaker] to a J2 and eventually going to an A4 [asymmetric spinnaker], taking it all the way through to the finish line,” said McGrath.

Unprecedented stayed left of the rhumbline which set them up for a nice run towards King Island.

“We couldn’t get down to the finish line with the A4 but we ended up about 100 metres away, and at that point we doused the A4, put up the J2, sailed through, and did one gybe to the finish line and in we went,” said McGrath.

McGrath and Thompson had one-hour shifts on the helm and used their autopilot more than usual which gave the team more time to fine tune the mainsail to take advantage of the wind gusts.

“The boat reaches very well – once we put the A4 up our top speed was about 15 knots which pushed us along through the pack,” said McGrath.

Unprecedented was purchased during COVID with the name a nod to frontline health care workers closely connected to the team and a reflection of the difficult times endured across the globe.

McGrath, who delayed his interview with ORCV Media to take advantage of the infamous steak sandwiches, was savouring all that King Island had to offer, and was thrilled with their race win.

Pecadillo

Pecadillo, Photo by Al Dillon

Peccadillo, the Chris White 46 multihull skippered by Charles Meredith, dominated this year’s race, leading the fleet out of Port Phillip Heads and simply outpaced the rest of the fleet, finishing nearly three and a half hours ahead of her nearest rival in a time of 10 hours and 16 minutes in a powerful performance.

This year’s race will also be etched in the memory of all onboard Jac Hoi, the Solaris 47 from the Royal Geelong Yacht Club, which was the first monohull across the line in her first ocean race.

Jac Hoi

Jac Hoi, Photo by Al Dillon

Skipper Danielle Fraser who celebrated her first ocean race success with her close-knit team on King Island, will cherish the win which was made even more special as they crossed the line first on International Women’s Day.

Women sailors

Amazing women sailors of the King Island fleet, Photo by Andy Roche

The usually exuberant skipper, Fraser was lost for words as she made her way to the race presentation when asked to describe the feeling of winning line honours in her first ocean race.

“It was a great race, just beautiful … it’s quite surreal really because it’s our first ocean race…I’m just enjoying King Island and the beautiful hospitality… [our win] just hasn’t really hit yet,” said Fraser who highlighted trust and friendship as key to the team’s success.

Jac Hoi team

Jac Hoi crew, Photo by Belinda Duivenvoorden

Fraser sailed alongside Chris Carroll, James Hannah, Jamie Bennett, Jason Boyle, Peter James, Stuart Richardson and Stuy Lee in this year’s race.

Ginan, skippered by Cameron McKenzie from the Mornington Yacht Club, had another strong performance with the J111 the second monohull to cross the line, taking second on AMS handicap, and third on ORC behind Toecutter (Robert Hick) and Unprecedented.

It was close racing on PHS in the Double-Handed division with Streetcar Racing, skippered by Aidan Geysen and Jeremy Walton, finishing less than 30 minutes behind Unprecedented on corrected time with Foggy Dew (Robert Darcy / Janet Wilks) taking third.

Race Director Martin Vaughan was happy with this year’s race and the tight racing across Bass Strait.

“Jac Hoi, Ginan and Shimmer [skippered by Steve Twentyman], must have had a fantastic battle – it is always more fun yacht racing when you have a rival close by, it pushes you that extra bit.

“I would also like to say a big thank you to the King Island Boat Club with volunteers who worked all night to welcome the fleet, which arrived in the early hours of the morning, and ensured they were made very welcome,” said Vaughan.

The sun was certainly shining on King Island this weekend with lots of community events, cheese and crayfish, and a more buoyant community with the announcement that the future of the King Island Dairy has been secured.

Full results here

Fresh Air, Crayfish, and Top Quality Sailing - Geelong Yacht Jac Hoi Enters ORCV 2025 Melbourne to King Island Yacht Race

Jac Hoi

Photo by Salty Dingo

If fresh air, crayfish, fine produce, and a challenging race with friends excites you then get your entry in now for the Ocean Racing Club of Victoria’s (ORCV) 54th Melbourne to King Island Yacht Race.
The popular ocean race starts from Queenscliff at 2:30pm on Friday the 7th of March with the fleet taking on the short but challenging 114 nautical mile tactical race to Tasmania’s King Island while fighting for the coveted King Island Trophy.

Sailed under AMS, ORC, Multihull, Double Handed, and PHS handicaps, the race is a fixture on the ORCV sporting calendar.

The ORCV fosters sustainable destination ocean racing and nurtures partnerships built over many years including a strong relationship with the King Island Boat Club forged over many decades.

Legend has it that a group of sailors moored in Grassy, the largest town on the island, 54 years ago and were befriended by some locals with fresh crayfish from the pristine waters surrounding the island.

This friendly gourmet interaction coincided with the establishment of the King Island Boat Club and from there the Melbourne to King Island race was born accompanied by the catchphrase ‘…through tides and currents we race, to the land of meat, cheese and rugged beauty’.

Wild and rugged, King Island is the largest of three islands in the New Year Group off the northwest tip of Tasmania famous for its world-class gourmet produce including beef, cheese, and crayfish, with the island also earning a global reputation for its magnificent golf courses.

While one of the shorter ocean races in the ORCV Offshore Championship, the race from Port Phillip to King Island presents some unique navigational challenges with the race often won or lost on the approach to Grassy Harbour due to wind and tidal influences around King Island.

And did someone say steak sandwiches?

24 boats have so far entered the race and while several are yet to finalise their crew lists, the start line will reflect a who’s who of Victorian sailing.

Scarlet Runner, skippered by Rob Date from the Sandringham Yacht Club, is in top form following recent wins in the Melbourne to Hobart ‘Westcoaster’ and the Melbourne to Port Fairy race with Date looking for his fourth King Island Trophy and his first on the new sustainable Carkeek 43.

While several double-handed entries will miss this year’s race as they take on the challenges of the 2025 Melbourne to Osaka Cup, Toecutter, skippered by Brad Bult and Robert Hick, will provide a menacing presence on the start line and is likely to be an early leader.

The race to King Island will be the first ocean race for Jac Hoi, a new entrant to the ORCV fleet, the Italian-built performance-cruiser Solaris 47 is skippered by Danielle Fraser from the Royal Geelong Yacht Club.

“We did Hamilton Island [Race Week] last year and I thought, this is really fun, I really like this, so I put it to the crew that we think about doing the King Island Race – it’s not a big race - and everyone wanted to do it!” said Fraser.

Teamwork, fun and great camaraderie exemplify the culture onboard Jac Hoi, an approach that has developed over many years sailing together in Geelong including in the Etchell Class and in Club racing.

“The reason why I am keen to get to King Island is to visit the [King Island Dairy] Cheese Factory and to get stuck into a steak sandwich too,” said Fraser.

Fraser has been spending time completing the safety audits and getting herself ready for the race and will be looking for more ocean racing opportunities in the future.

“I have spent a lot of time on the boat recently learning how to service the winches, and understanding engine maintenance, it’s all new preparation for being a skipper compared to when I’m crewing…..We haven’t set any goals really other than to get there safely, we are just testing the waters to see how we go, it’s about having fun and lots of laughs at the end of the day, and it doesn’t get much better than that,” said Fraser.

The race is part of the ORCV Offshore Championship which also includes the Melbourne to Devonport ‘Rudder Cup’, the Westcoaster, and the Melbourne to Port Fairy races.

Primitive Cool holds the race record with a time of 09h 50m 21s set in 2014. Click here for more race information.

2025 Melbourne to King Island Final Reminders

                          

Have you read the latest Sailing Instructions?

It is amazing how often people haven’t read them or haven’t read the latest version, its all on the race web site including Notices to Competitors.

Arrival and berthing information

Refer to appendix D of the SIs.  Remember to use VHF72 after finishing and talk to KIBC.  Follow exactly the instructions given by the tender driver and berth where they ask you to.  We are using the fisherman’s moorings so follow their instructions to leave the moorings in good order.  DO NOT use moorings other than those directed to.

Tender Service

The water police are monitoring the event, the KI boat club have asked everyone to wear a life jacket on the tender transfer service to avoid a fine.  Consider bringing a waterproof bag for your personal gear.

Biosecurity on King Island

Biosecurity Tasmania will provide a biosecurity bag to King Island Boat Club for crew to dispose of any biosecurity matter (fruit and vegetables) that may still be onboard upon your arrival on King Island.  Please use the yellow biosecurity near the wharf area.  Better still take nothing of concern on shore with you and take it back with you.

For more information: click here

Meals at KIBC

King Island Boat Club is putting in a huge volunteer effort to provide hot meals and drinks for you.  Please show courtesy by at least coming in for an hour or so after the race (even if you are keen to head home straight away).  Let them know how much we appreciate them doing so.  A smile and a word of thanks goes a long way. See the menu at the end of this page.

Leave at Home document

There is a Leave at Home document available for you to fill out and leave at home with your family and emergency contact, see the ORCV race web site to download.

Skeds

Similarly, the Sked sheets are also available on the ORCV race web site.

Race tracker

Supporters can follow the race using the Blue Water Tracks link on the ORCV web site.

Don’t forget to add your photo to your Blue Water Tracks profile as well as ensure your boat and crew profiles are up to date. Details of how to update are found here:

Skipper & Crew Tracker Instructions - ORCV

Race Director contacts

The Race Director phone numbers (for operational needs only) during a race are:  

  • Race Director 1: 0418 396 605 carried by Martin Vaughan
  • Race Director 2 (Start only): 0418 396 465 carried by Ray Shaw
  • Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Media matters

Please join the competitor WhatsApp Channel, the link has been sent to you via SMS.  The best photo/video will win a prize.  This allows us to share your experiences with a wider audience in order to grow participation in ocean racing – so thank you.  This WhatsApp group is for competitors only so please don’t add non-participants.

Send any photos or articles to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Presentation

We have moved the presentation event to 7pm Saturday, any further changes will be notified by SMS.

Safety related matters

Keep your VHF on Ch16 and ensure the volume is turned up.  We may need you to help others or you may need them to help you.  Keep your mobile and Satphones on too and ensure you can hear them ring.

 King Island boat club menu March2025

Another Chapter wins slow dance in Melbourne to King Island Race


Another Chapter, Neil Sargeant’s Beneteau 44.7, has won the Ocean Racing Club of Victoria’s slow and fluctuating Melbourne to King Island Yacht Race, while Paul Buchholz’s Extasea took line honours. 

Another Chapter last right won the King Island race Steb Fisher pic

Another Chapter (far right) won the 2023 King Island Race.  Photo Steb Fisher

Sargeant can breathe easy now after an extremely close race between the top three overall, decided under AMS. Just 11 seconds decided the winner from Scarlet Runner (Rob Date) and Solera (Stuart Richardson), which placed second and third respectively.

Sargeant, who was surprised when told Another Chapter had won, gave a good synopsis of the 114 nautical mile race that started off Queenscliff at 5pm on Friday, “The worst of it was bobbing up and down going nowhere – and backwards - for eight hours,” he said.

“The best part was coming into Grassy (where the race finishes) on the wind in a nice breeze. The crew was on the rail, we were fully powered up and going like a dream. We finished while it was still daylight (at 7.12pm).”

Another Chapter crew Melissa Fahey pic

Another Chapter Crew in King Island Photo Melissa Fahey

Paul Buchholz from Royal Geelong Yacht Club got an early jump with his Cookson 50. Extasea increased her lead in the weak and capricious conditions to take line honours at 1.26pm on Saturday. Rob Date’s Scarlet Runner was next, at 4.14pm. Charles Meredith’s multihull, Peccadillo, was next.

Extasea’s result means Primitive Cool’s (John Newbold) now 10-year-old race record of nine hours 50 minutes 21seconds stays intact for yet another year.

“It was a bit slow and painful. We did a couple of 360s and spent an hour and a half going round in circles,” confessed Buchholz, who also won IRC and ORC overall.

“It was fine when we left the Heads, but at 10pm it started to fizz out. By 2am it was all over the place. We just kept going south in the easterly and it paid off for us, because a south-westerly breeze came in. When I say ‘came in’, it was only 3 to 4 knots.”

If you followed the Blue Water Tracks race tracker, the tracks of the yachts were a mass of contradictions, loop the loops, backwards, sideways and sometimes forward were part and parcel of this frustratingly difficult race.

Extasea took line honours Steb Fisher pic

Extasea took line honours Photo Steb Fisher

These conditions explain why Extasea sailed 175 nautical miles to complete the 114 nautical mile course with an average speed of 3.8 knots! The rest of the fleet had similar and even more extreme times.

The breeze finally reached some of the fleet before midday on Saturday and at least it was a beautiful sunny day in Bass Strait – and it’s not often you can say that!

Michael Culhane’s Northshore 38, Weekend Option, brought the race to a close, crossing the line at 2:37am this morning.

The King Island Race started off Queenscliff at 5pm on Friday. At the end of the difficult race, competitors received manna from heaven - sirloin steak sandwiches with the various winners also on the receiving end of prizes that comprised of crayfish and King Island cheeses. Way to go!

Some of the fleet after the start Cyrus Allen pic

Some of the fleet after the start Photo Cyrus Allen

Results: (amended 16 March)

Overall Winner: Another Chapter (Neil Sargeant)

Line Honours:  Extasea (Paul Buchholz) 

Overall AMS
???? 1st Another Chapter,
???? 2nd Scarlet Runner,
????3rd Solera
AMS Div 1,
????1st Another Chapter (Neil Sargeant),
????2nd Scarlet Runner (Rob Date),
????3rd Solera (Stuart Richardson)
AMS Div 2,
????1st How Bizarre (Scott Robinson)
????2nd Aileron (Leo Cantwell)
????3rd Foggy Drew (Robert D'Arcy)
IRC
????1st Extasea,
????2nd Solera 3
????3rd How Bizarre (Scott Robinson)
ORC Div 1,
????1st Extasea (Paul Buchholz),
????2nd Ryujin (Alex Toomey),
????3rd Solera (Stuart Richardson)
ORC Div 2,
????1st How Bizarre
????2nd Aileron
????3rd Maverick (Anthony Hammond)
Overall ORC
????1st Extasea,
????2nd Ryujin,
????3rd Solera
PHS Div 1,
????1st Soiree Bleu (Douglas Lithgow),
????2nd Another Chapter,
????3rd Arcadia
PHS Div 2,
????1st How Bizarre
????2nd Maverick,
????3rd Foggy Dew
PHS Overall
????1st Soiree Bleu,
????2nd Another Chapter,
????3rd How Bizarre
Double Handed ????1st Maverick (SM3600)
 

Full results and all information at: https://www.orcv.org.au/

11th March 7am Race Update

 
As predicted last night, the fleet has endured a very light, and somewhat frustrating night at sea, with the lead boat only advancing 36nm in the 10 hours since the 21:00 Radio Sched.
 
Whilst the leaderboard has not change significantly since our last update, with Paul Buchholz’s Cookson 50, Extasea leading from Scarlet Runner and Ruyjin, with MRV and Hartbreaker poised, ready to take advantage of the first sign of the new breeze.
 
The handicap honours are still wide open with Michael Culhane's Northshore 38, Weekend Option team leading on AMS from Scott Robinson's Seaquest Pf36, How Bizarre and Leo Cantwell's Sydney 36Cr, Aileron.
 
7am 11th Mar race map
 
The forecast is for more breeze to freshen from the west as the morning develops, which will greet the fleet with champagne sailing conditions, and should see our lead boats approaching the finishing line by mid-afternoon.
 
The first retirement of the race due to the light conditions, Tai Tam, are motoring to Grassy Harbour, and are currently on track to be the first to experience the warm hospitality awaiting the rest of the fleet.
 
As daylight slowly creeps into the overcast sky blanketing Bass Strait, the anticipation of being met with the Best Steak Sandwich In The World, is sure inspire even the most disheartened of crews, and reward them for their perseverance.

10th March 9pm Race Update

A little over four hours into the race and it is Damien King’s, Frers 61 MRV leading the fleet, ahead of Extasea and Scarlet Runner.

Even in this early stage, the overall AMS positions are much more interesting, with Xenia in Div 2, a X4.3 skippered by Koos Theron’s leading the two RMYS boats, Weekend Option (Div 2) and Arcadia (Div 1).

 
The light conditions have prevented the large boats from getting away, and are keeping the smaller boats in the fleet well in touch in these early stages.
 
race update map
A close race in the early stages and light winds.
 
With the light conditions expected to continue well into daylight tomorrow, all eyes will be on the larger boats, (MRV, Hartbreaker, Extasea, Scarlet Runner) to see who will reach the more consistent breezes expected closer to the top of King Island by around 9:00am Saturday, and which team will capitalise to make a claim for race honours.
 
The lighter boats in the 40ft range should not be under estimated (Ryujin, Lord Jiminy, Alex Team Macadie, How Bizzarre, Soirée Bleu, Arcadia and Cadibarra) have all proven to be very effective in light conditions, so this year’s race remains wide open for those that hold their concentration through the quiet hours overnight.
 
Stay tuned for our next update early tomorrow morning and keep an eye on the tracker https://race.bluewatertracks.com/2023-king-island-race

 

Friday 10th March 6pm

1 hour after the start. 32 Yachts competing in the Melbourne to King Island have got underway with blue skies, sunshine and winds 7 - 10 knots Easterly. It was Scarlet Runner, the Carkeek 43 skippered by Rob Date who led the fleet through the heads with MRV and Ryujin close behind.
Start Photo Neville Rose
Assys and Code 0 were the calling for the light air conditions at the start  Photo Neville Rose
 
A sea of Assy's and Code 0's were flying throughout the fleet as the next group of How Bizarre, Bandit, Solera, Cadibarra, White Spirit and Soiree Bleu.
 
Paul Buchholz's Cookson 50, Extasea had a slower start but 1 hour in has started to move through the pack and chasing the leading group.
 
With a flat sea state and light winds, we expect the fleet will hug the coast and head towards Apollo Bay before turning towards King Island.
Follow the fleet on the tracker here https://race.bluewatertracks.com/2023-king-island-race
 

orcv logo reversed

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