• Adults Only Website 18+

    If you are under 18 you are not permitted to submit personal information to us or use this website. If discovered you will be banned.

    We will ban and report anyone posting illegal content.

    We will ban any forum user who breaks our terms.

    Freedom of speech should be wide open as long as it doesn't incite violence.

    We have a 15 year old thriving community here with 400,000+ members and hundreds of people online at any given moment, we encourage you to join!, there are 1000's of topics to discuss. Please be aware before registering and read our terms of service and privacy policy.

    By dismissing this notice and proceeding, you agree to the above.

1998 Sydney Hobart yacht race

The 1998 Sydney Hobart yacht race was hit by a massive weather bomb that destroyed the fleet. Ensued the biggest maritime rescue in Australia's history.

I'l post pics and some interesting police interview transcripts by survivors. Any one who sails will be interested in this.

Midnight Rambler doing it tough. She won on handicap

1672298302128.png

Stand Aside demasted and roof torn off

1672298330450.png


Unknown boat in heavy weather

1672298576443.png


boat and wave size comparison


1672298667595.png


Stand Aside again
1672298816619.png


Sayonara at the start

1672298898226.png




and in the middle of the shit

1672298948374.png


Nokia in the shit
1672299021550.png




Buisnes Post Naiad trashed.
a dead crew man stayed on board.

1672299147685.png


Expert witness


ABC 4 Corners report



FOX coverage:
 
Last edited:
Winston Churchill, which sailed the very first Sydney Hobart, was thrown off a wave and smashed down into a trough was holed by the violent impact and sank. Her crew abandoned ship but the life rafts disintegrated with two old boys basically holding onto two remaining rings and spent ages in the water. Loss of life for a number of the boys.

Winston Churchill at the start of the race

1672330789796.webp


 
Last edited:
This is cool, thanks for posting.

I'd like to think of myself as being moderately brave and enjoy a healthy bit of risk but I've never had any desire for recreational or competitive boating. I don't mind being on the water, I don't get seasick but little boats make me nervous and there's too much sketchy shit that can happen.

I used to have a boss who was into competitive sailing and based on the videos he shared & his trophy wall I gather he was quite good. One of the videos was of a race from Hawaii to the mainland. I don't know if it was a hurricane or just a particularly violent storm but it effectively chased the race from start to finish. A few boats sank, a few dropped out, few guys died.....fucking crazy to see this completely black as a sambo's ass sky as a backdrop these relatively tiny boats.

The other thing my boss shared was that sailors are apparently thieving dinks. I guess its reasonably common for recreational and completive boaters to steal inflatable lifejackets off airplanes. They're compact & light so attractive as a backup. Not that it matters much since if your plane hits the water chances are you're not swimming away.
 
This is cool, thanks for posting.

I'd like to think of myself as being moderately brave and enjoy a healthy bit of risk but I've never had any desire for recreational or competitive boating. I don't mind being on the water, I don't get seasick but little boats make me nervous and there's too much sketchy shit that can happen.

I used to have a boss who was into competitive sailing and based on the videos he shared & his trophy wall I gather he was quite good. One of the videos was of a race from Hawaii to the mainland. I don't know if it was a hurricane or just a particularly violent storm but it effectively chased the race from start to finish. A few boats sank, a few dropped out, few guys died.....fucking crazy to see this completely black as a sambo's ass sky as a backdrop these relatively tiny boats.

The other thing my boss shared was that sailors are apparently thieving dinks. I guess its reasonably common for recreational and completive boaters to steal inflatable lifejackets off airplanes. They're compact & light so attractive as a backup. Not that it matters much since if your plane hits the water chances are you're not swimming away.
Glad you liked it.

I've done a bit of crewing on mates boats including a race from Darwin to Indonesia but nothing in cold water and nothing storm worthy.

Bass Strait is a notorious stretch of water. Once a land bridge linking main land Aus to Tasmania it flooded over at end of last ice age 10 000 years ago. It's shallow (average 300 ') and when the winds come up from antarctica the waves rear up when they reach the shallows. Throw in some fast flowing currents against such winds and waves and the waves just get steeper.

If you like books about sailing when things fuck up I highly recommend Voyage for madmen A Voyage For Madmen

About the first solo circumnavigating race. One guy becomes psychotic and walks off his boat in the middle of the atlantic.

Also, anything of Shakleton's boat journey. I know of no other voyage that compares to the modified 20' open lifeboat decked with canvas that carried 4 men from Elephant Island on the coast of Antarctica across the southern ocean to the Falklands in the middle of winter...

The author, Worsley, was one of the crew.
178027209X.jpg


1685566619172.webp
 
Back
Top