Please select your home edition
Edition
Palm Beach Motor Yachts

Shearwater and Tornado National Championships and open handicap meeting at Minnis Bay Sailing Club

by Steve Cooke 26 Aug 07:20 UTC 7-10 August 2025

Over the four days of August 7 to 10, Minnis Bay Sailing Club set itself the challenge of hosting the National Championships of two classic catamaran classes, in the shape of the Shearwaters and the Tornados, and, so that some of the club members, who were well known previous contenders in those classes, could also participate, a handicap open was also run alongside them, which attracted F18, NACRA 17, Hurricane 5.9SX and Dart 18 sailors to compare notes and past glories.

The welcome sight, and sound(!), of over 70 visitors and club members filling the clubhouse, dancing to homeboy DJ Busby's tunes, a beach games night, scoffing fish and chips, BBQ, chili, and a final prize-giving dinner, tested the resources of the friendly Kent club, not least its bar stocks!

The racing, ably controlled by RO Stuart Offer and his hard-working mark-laying team, tasked the competitors with strong tides, swinging wind and, on one day, none of it, and a fantastic finale of force 3-4, flat water and sunshine giving a perfect twin-trapeze memory.

The Tornado and handicap fleets only raced over the weekend, so the Shearwaters had two days to themselves. They arrived, mostly on Wednesday but a couple early Thursday morning, ready for ten championship races over four days but easing in gently with a short practice race and the first two championship races to familiarise themselves. They had asked for Olympic courses to make full use of their symmetrical spinnakers, so these were duly laid each day while on the weekend the other fleets were set long windward/leewards with a spacer mark, but both used a common leeward gate and a start/finish downwind of it.

Thursday was overcast with an offshore SW F2 but occasional gusts of top 3 and 20 degrees shifts mixed in. A tricky day made more so by the 2.5Kn tide diagonally across the track tempting some of the Shearwaters to try and lee bow it out to sea but eventually over the three races, all found the convergent bend inshore more beneficial.

Pete and Josh Jary ignored the practice race omens and hit the finish line first, but in the first championship race James Gibbons/Reuben Stuart, showing superior speed in the stronger pressure, particularly upwind, banged two firsts while next best Nigel and Sarah Stuart counted a 3 and 2, leading a very tight group of Ben Farnborough and Jenny Allen on 6 and Shaun and Emma Allen on 7. The first race exposed some rusty teamwork on some of the boats, some spinnaker hoists and drops not going smoothly, and with the close groupings in the peloton, mark roundings offered opportunities for grabbing places if the manoeuvres were well planned.

Friday was a contrast - W F1 half and sunshine was enough to just make over the tide. Norman/Tulley remembered what they did best and hit two bullets; in contrast Gibbons/Stuart scored a 4 and 10, dropping them down the standings, while Farnborough/Allen counted a 2 and 3 and the Stuarts a 5 and 2. Other encouraging performances were from the Allens who, despite an unfortunate incident at the start of the first race for which they exonerated themselves, hit an 8 and 4, and Richie Hanmore and Anna Allen with sail no 200 made a 3 and 8. Sadly, before the planned crews' race could be held the sea breeze cancelled the gradient, the AP over A drooped from the committee boat mast, and the towlines were deployed on the support boats. Inevitably a gentle F1.5 NE sea breeze established after everyone was ashore. The points before discards kicked in put Farnborough/Allen in first, on 11, the Stuarts second on 12, Norman/Tulley third on 14 and Gibbons/Stuart fourth on 16 so all these had a strong chance of chocolates.

Saturday brought a W F2+ with wind wiggling 10-15 degrees as the sea breeze tried to take over, giving the RO another head-scratching day, but as he is growing his hair for charity, he couldn't pull it out. After the first race the gradient wind calmed the wiggles down and all enjoyed some high-speed hull-flying. The Tornado and handicap fleets joined in, making the track more crowded, another reason to keep heads out of the boat. The top of the Shearwater fleet had a big moving day as Gibbons/Stuart put the burners on in the increased pressure, scoring a 2, 1, 1 and Norman/Tulley held on with 1, 3, 2, but Farnborough/Allen and the Stuarts faded slightly, managing 3, 5, 3 and 6, 4, 4 respectively. As the first discard applied, Gibbons/Stuart moved back into the lead with a net 10 but a big discard of 10 made their position a little uncertain, while Norman/Tulley dropped to second on 14 but only dropping a 6. Farnborough/Allen were another three points back but only discarding a 5. The final day would be interesting!

In the Tornado fleet, the entry of four boats kept the same order for each race apart from the second race. 410 sailed by Paul Palmer and Dan Tindale, dominated the fleet with three bullets, Robert Govier and David Figgis, 402, were second each time and Peter King with Tom Oliver sailing 404 third apart from the second race when they had a DNS, letting Adrian Howe and David Foster with 422 into third.

The handicap fleet, consisting of three F18s, a NACRA 17, a Hurricane 5.9SX and a Dart 18 S/H, generated some sibling and intra-club rivalry; the Northrop brothers, "Nobby" and Oli were sailing F18 and NACRA, and they both shared club membership with the Hurricane and Dart. The long W/L course did not favour the Dart against all the others flying kites downwind, but the leading two F18s and the NACRA virtually raced boat for boat on the water. The F18 of Nobby Northrop and Caleb Cooper, 067, started the day with a 1 half minute win over Adam Piggott and Reece Webb, also on an F18, 524, with Oli Northrop and son Will on the NACRA just under 2 minutes behind. Kevin Skinner and Mandy Cox on the Hurricane were fourth, sailing one less lap but crossing the line first using the average lap system. F18 560, sailed by Richard Golden and Justinian Tomegea, were fifth, and the Dart, as expected, was sixth.

The second race, with slightly less wind, gave Piggott/Webb the advantage over Northrop/Cooper and also the Hurricane was able to beat the NACRA on the water to claim third, otherwise positions were the same. Piggott/Webb were able to win the third race as well, while the NACRA and Hurricane reversed order again. The first day points total showed the top two and the third/fourth positions each with one point difference.

As hinted at above, the Sunday finale was bright sunshine, a flat sea and a NE F2 veering E and the sea breeze enhancing the pressure a notch.

In the Shearwater fleet, Shaun Allen, helm of 1999, sadly had to dash back home, so after having rerigged his mast the day before following a broken forestay, he generously offered the ride to anyone to keep the fleet numbers up and give his young crew Emma another day's experience; Andy Fitt, the Dart 18 sailor in the handicap fleet, jumped in, probably relishing the opportunity to sail in something competitive, and promptly scored a 2, sliding to a 7 and 8 but enjoying the chance despite being nagged by Emma in the crews' race. In the main battle, after the first two races Gibbons/Stuart had reinforced their leading position, with a 3, 1 against a 4, 3 for Norman/Tulley, a 7, 2 for Farnborough/Allen and 1, 5 for the Stuarts, but the final race brought in jeopardy for Gibbons/Stuart as a startline incident protest was resolved against them leaving them with a DSQ and 14 points, meanwhile Norman/Tulley won, Farnborough/Allen were second and the Stuarts third. The Jarys rediscovered their earlier form with a 4 in both this and the previous race but by now their inconsistency gave them too much of a hill. So, although their total points put them in fourth place, the two discards (total 24) allowed Gibbons and Stuart to win by 4 points from Norman and Tulley with only 12 points dropped.

The Tornados continued their race order from the previous day with one slight change - Govier/Figgis swapping second and third places with King/Oliver in the first race of the day but resuming second for the last two, so Paul Palmer and Dan Tindale had a nice picket fence and a 1 to drop., Govier/Figgis were second and King/Oliver third.

The handicap fleet saw Piggott/Webb - F18, Northrop/Cooper - F18, and Northrop/Northrop NACRA 17, continue their first, second and third places from the day before, ending overall in that order, while the Hurricane of Skinner/Cox listed two 4s and a 5 against Golden/Tomegea finishing the day with a 5, 5, 4 on their F18. Fitt on the Dart had jumped ship to the Shearwaters so ended way behind on points.

Big smiles were visible as the tired crews came off the water having completed their full quota of three races each day, with in addition the Shearwater crews also brave and fit enough to swap ends for their crews' race, won by Stuart and Gibbons, after the serious stuff had finished.

Overall Results:

Shearwater Nationals
If you finished in the top ten at the Shearwater nationals then enter your Gear Guide information here

PosBoat NameSail NoHelmCrewClubR1R2R3R4R5R6R7R8R9R10Pts
1stNew Flame2000James GibbonsReuben StuartBrightlingsea SC114(10)21131(DSQ)14
2ndBarTab2002Mark NormanCatherine TulleyRYA(6)(6)1113243116
3rdGenesis1990Ben FarnboroughJenny AllenHastings and St Leonards24233(5)3(7)2221
4thCrowns2010Nigel StuartSarah StuartNetley SC32(5)2(6)4415324
5thNebuchadnezzar2011Pete JaryJoshua JaryWeston SC(10)595425(10)4438
6thCarbon Footprint1999Shaun AllenEmma AllenFelixstowe SC43845(DNS)(13)27841
7thShear Flamboyance2008Darren TulleyTheo TulleyRYA5(9)67(9)6759954
8thRuby200Richard HanmoreAnna AllenStone(11)(10)38786910657
9thCajensa1976Sam VaughanBen AllenRYA987(RET)(RET)121088567
10thTake 52005Dion AllenEdward AllenThorpe Bay YC77106878(DNS)(DNS)DNS67
11thForeigner1988William StuartGrease MonkeyRoyal Caribbean YC8(13)(12)9101091161174
12thSim Sek2007Chloe StuartTom StanfieldNetley SC(13)(12)1111.511911611777.5
13thAirflow1989Louise CurryHeidi WinranChipstead SC(12)11(13)11.512111212121091.5

Tornado Nationals
If you took part in the Tornado nationals then enter your Gear Guide information here

PosBoat NameSail NoHelmCrewClubR1R2R3R4R5R6Pts
1st 410Paul PalmerDan TindaleThorpe YC and Stone YC(1)111115
2ndZest402Robert GovierDavid FiggisWhitstable YC222(3)2210
3rdGeneral Lee404Peter KingTom OliverWhitstable YC3(DNS)323314
4th 422Adrian HoweDavid FosterHayling Ferry SC(DNS)3444419
5th 431Jenny BallDavid BallMarconi SC(DNC)DNCDNCDNCDNCDNC30

Handicap Open

PosBoat NameClassSail NoHelmCrewClubPYR1R2R3R4R5R6Pts
1stEdgeF18524Adam PiggottReece Webb 678(2)111115
2ndNorthrop SailsF18067Nobby NorthropCaleb CooperMBSC6781(2)22229
3rdLiquidatorNacra 17201Oli NorthropWill NorthropMBSC6753(4)333315
4th Hurricane 5.9 SX482Kevin SkinnerMandy CoxMBSC69143444(5)19
5th F181421Richard GoldenJustinian TomegeaHayling Ferry SC678(5)5555424
6thRock OnDart 18560Andy Fitt MBSC810666(DNS)DNSDNS36

Related Articles

Fountaine Pajot FPY 70S: an iconic yacht
Combining a bold signature with a high level of personalization The FPY 70S introduces a new way of living at sea. True to the Fountaine Pajot signature, it blends elegance, sailing excellence and the quiet experience of eco-navigation. A catamaran yacht built to last. Posted today at 1:44 pm
First World Odyssey crews depart La Grande Motte
Seven crews are on their way to the Canary Islands The fleet will meet up in Lanzarote in mid-November for a first technical stop before the official start of this second edition of the Grand Large Yachting group's round-the-world rally. Posted today at 9:41 am
Discover the new Fountaine Pajot FPY70S
A new benchmark for luxury sailing catamarans The Fountaine Pajot FPY70S is destined to set a new benchmark for luxury sailing catamarans, blending elegant design, performance, and sustainable innovation. Posted today at 6:23 am
Bulwarks and Bulldust – Show 2 Season 3
Alice Parker the Navigator on URM Group talks Fastnet, Hammo, Malta, Hobart and a loads more... On the back of busy schedule, the über-effervescent Alice Parker talks about all the happy times, the not so glorious moments, pathways into sailing, changing careers, sometimes being the only female on board, Ugg Boots, and cups of tea. Posted today at 12:28 am
FPY 110S - A grand gesture. A new horizon
Marking the beginning of a new era for Fountaine Pajot Yachts The FPY110S marks the beginning of a new era for Fountaine Pajot Yachts. A manifesto for those who seek understated elegance, bold architectural design, and living spaces crafted in harmony with your desires. Posted on 2 Oct
Multihull Regatta at Nedlands Yacht Club
It's Cat Summer in WA, and we're off and racing The club summer season is about to begin in Western Australia as sailing clubs around the state prepare for their annual Opening Day events. Posted on 1 Oct
Excess Asia Pacific - Monthly update
The new Excess 11 Hybrid, the new Excess 13 and the Excess 14 displayed at Cannes At this year's Cannes Yachting Festival, Excess presented a fleet of 3 models, the new Excess 11 Hybrid, the new Excess 13 and the Excess 14 to our visitors in uplifting Excess vibes. Posted on 29 Sep
Multihull Cup 2025 overall
Allegra achieved her ambition, winning the title Allegra achieved her ambition at the Multihull Cup 2025 today, taking the title by a clear margin after consistent sailing and a trio of race wins earlier in the event. Posted on 28 Sep
Multihull Cup 2025 Day 2
Brisker wind conditions and two races held Brisker wind conditions and two races gave the second day of Multihull Cup 2025 added impetus today with close racing across the board. Posted on 27 Sep
Multihull Cup 2025 Day 1
Allegra takes win in calm but enthusiastic start On what proved a mellow if challenging introduction to the delights of the Multihull Cup for the trio of first timers taking part, it was the Mallorcan event veteran Allegra which showed the fleet the way to go. Posted on 26 Sep
Palm Beach Motor YachtsMaritimo S Series