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Idyllic sea breezes, exciting racing, and fun vibes at 2023 FOIL Bay of Islands - Final Wrap



FOIL Bay of Islands 2023 kicked off with three days of beautiful sea breezes, and although a tricky southerly bucked the trend on the final day there was no complaints from competitors, the general vibe coming off the water on Sunday of 'happy exhaustion'.

The annual event now in its fifth year is hosted by the Bay of Islands Yacht Club and is open to all foiling classes, ages and abilities.

Event coordinator and race officer Chris Fewtrell says he's always overwhelmed with the support and gratitude of the competitors, and still gets a buzz out of the foiling spectacle.

“The Bay of Islands delivered some of the best weather we’ve had all summer, and although the breeze kept us on our toes with a tricky offshore southerly to finish on, we’re proud to have got away a full series of 18 races for the kite foilers and 16 for the Wind foilers, Wing Foilers, and Waszp sailors. It was a pleasure to facilitate an event with so many enthusiastic foilers,” he said.

The regatta kicked off with the 'About Being Seen' Island Race on Thursday, which consisted of a 6.5 nautical mile blast out to Motorua Island and a thrilling downwind run back to the Bay of Islands Yacht Club.

Competitors stopped off at Motorua Island for a quick snack and a rest before a few laps of the island and downwind run home.

The next three days saw a mammoth effort from the race committee to run up to six races across four divisions for the course racing.

Wing foil division winner Sean Herbert said the final day was a challenging note to end a fantastic regatta on.


“It’s such a great event up here and the racing is quality. It was pretty patchy and shifty on the last day, but overall it’s been awesome to get out there, and also have a few more wing foilers turn up for the weekend to boost fleet numbers,” the Manly Yacht Club sailor said.

Herbert was one of seven wing foilers to enter the event, with fellow competitor Travis Gillbanks offering some stiff competition at the front to come away with 2nd.


Overseas additions to the kite foiling fleet this year included Fung Yang and Adam Becker from Hawaii, and youth sailor JJ Rice who is campaigning to represent Tonga at the 2024 Paris Olympic games.


The kite foiling division was won by current NZ national champion Lochy Naismith who also scooped up the foiling week trophy for the most guns, with twelve wins from 18 races to comfortably finish on 20 points.


The battle for 2nd and 3rd came down to the wire between NZ female national champion Justina Kitchen and Andy Robertson who ended up tied on points, with Justina claiming the final race to earn the 2ndplace and 4th place getter JJ Rice claiming first youth.


A solid turn out of wind foilers had 21 sailors split between gold and silver fleets, with Liam Herbert taking out the overall prize.

“It’s been a good couple of days, a little frustrating today but good little battles within the fleet and it’s been really entertaining. Stoked to come away with the win,” he said.


Rounding off the podium was Ben Rist in 2nd and Stellar Bilger in 3rd, who also took first female.


Bilger held off a late charge by Thomas Crook who entered the regatta on the weekend, carrying a heavy scoreboard from missing the first day of course racing.

There was no room for improvement in Crooks performance as he swept the scoreboard clean on Saturday and Sunday – narrowly missing out on third place by one point.


Across in the Silver fleet local youngster Sol Douwes claimed third place and first youth, just behind Alin Misescu who took the second to Devan Pickmere.

Waszp sailors Storm Douwes and Toby Clarke also had a solid tussle, with some match racing manouevers thrown in there at times to keep things interesting.

Prizegiving saw a full house in the Bay of Islands Yacht Club with plenty of praise for the sponsors and volunteers who put in a mammoth effort to run the event.

The event was proudly sponsored by About Being Seen, NZ Sailing and Max Coffee.


Dates for the 2024 event have now been set, and foilers of all ages, stages, classes and abilities are encouraged to come up from 22-25 February and experience FOIL Bay of Islands first hand.




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