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JULY 17, 2005

Latitude – Bass Strait on P-Plates

(Melbourne 17-Jul-2005): The Ocean Racing Club of Victoria (ORCV) is introducing a new Bass Strait yacht race, targeted at people who want to start Ocean Racing.

Melbourne’s Port Phillip, with its sheltered waters and all year round sailing, is one of the best places in the world to learn to sail and, for many, provides an ideal environment for cruising or racing. But, for those who want to step up and try ocean racing, next door is Bass Strait, a stretch of water that continues to command the respect of even those who have tackled it many times.

“Getting started in offshore racing is a steep learning curve for the newcomer even though they may have plenty of experience sailing in Port Phillip and the Rip certainly constitutes a huge psychological barrier”, comments Angus Fletcher, Commodore of the ORCV. “It’s definitely a huge hurdle to clear, but once you’re over it the door is open to a vast array of new and exciting sailing experiences in Bass Strait, Tasmanian waters and beyond.”

The Latitude Race, starting off Queenscliff at 0900 on Saturday 26th November, is uniquely structured by the ORCV. “We designed the Latitude Race as a quick dash into Bass Strait in daylight, returning through Port Phillip Heads about six hours later”, explains Mike Gill, the ORCV’s Latitude Project Manager. “It has been timed for the yachts to go out and come back safely through The Rip at slack water, the period of relative calm through the entrance to Port Phillip”.

The narrow entrance to Port Phillip, known as The Rip, is a turbulent, seething stretch of water which separates the Bellarine and Mornington Peninsulas. The entrance between Point Lonsdale and Point Nepean is 3.5km wide but the reefs projecting from these points reduce the navigable width to about 1km. Through this narrow funnel, 1000 square kilometres of water gushes in and out at 7 knots, four times a day. The tides have worn a 100-metre drop - an undersea waterfall that causes the seas to boil, even on a calm day. When a swell is running, "The Rip" becomes the largest white-water rapids on Earth.

To help the Bay racers safely make the step up to Ocean Racing, the ORCV is running a support package which includes a series of three seminars on top of their normal training program. These seminars cover: Yacht Preparation; Crew Management and Participating in an Ocean Race. Each skipper who joins the Latitude program will be offered mentoring by one of the ORCV’s many experienced Ocean Racing skippers. “Training gives you the knowledge to be safe”, says Richard McGarvie, the ORCV’s Mentoring Team Leader. “Mentoring gives you the confidence to use that knowledge wisely.”

The ORCV is holding a Latitude Briefing at 1900 on Thursday 18th August at Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron in St. Kilda. Mentors will be allocated to skippers at this session and crews will receive a briefing on the Latitude support package and the Latitude Race.

To register for Latitude, go the ORCV website, www.orcv.org.au, and fill in the online registration form or contact the ORCV on (03) 9689 1622.

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