• About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Tawny Frogmouth
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
The Tawny Frogmouth
Home » Online Articles » The Hobie 18 Catamaran reimagined
Adventure

The Hobie 18 Catamaran reimagined

Rodney BennettBy Rodney BennettJune 25, 20243 Mins Read
The Hobie 18 female team ripping on one hull
The Hobie 18 female team ripping on one hull
The Paris Olympics might be starting soon, but Bayview Olympian John Forbes is returning to the grassroots of his sport.

Three-times Olympic sailor, John Forbes, winner of Bronze in Barcelona and Silver in Sydney, is giving back to the sport he loves, encouraging students to possibly one day don the green and gold. John has breathed new life into school sailing as coach of the Hobie 18 fleet at the Australian Combined High School (CHS) Sailing Championships, the fleet taking to the water at the annual regatta at Lake Macquarie in April.

The resurgence of these boats began several years ago with John buying 20-to-30-year-old Hobie 18s, fixing them up, and sailing them in local regattas. What began with just one boat gained traction and soon there were five or six Hobie 18s competing in the Miscellaneous Class.

During his career, John won seven World Championships and travelled the world sailing for 22 years. He began sailing with his father Bob, at the age of 12. Following the Athens Olympics, he didn’t sail for 11 years but again picked up the ropes after his youngest daughter said she’d never been on the trapeze – he says it was a ‘bad parenting’ moment! 

“That’s when I noticed the same people were in the sport who were there 15 years earlier,” he says. “It wasn’t healthy for sailing. I don’t think there are enough sailors wanting to go to the Olympics.”

 

Olympian John Forbes in teaching mode
Olympian John Forbes in teaching mode

This began John’s quest to see more women and kids enter the sport. He says the Hobies already possessed a furling jib, meaning its front sail could be retracted if things got a little hairy. John pioneered other changes that were officially introduced in April, making sailing catamarans more appealing to women and children.

“Kids just want to have fun,” he says. “It can be a little daunting going from an O’pen Class skiff (smaller dinghies) to the catamarans. The last thing we want is to scare them away.”

Shortly after meeting these O’pen Skiff kids, John says they suddenly had 11 boats at regattas, a very friendly atmosphere, parent and child teams, a great community and a stunning, brightly coloured fleet. The Hobie 18s is now one of the biggest classes in the catamarans at these events.

“Then a couple of kids approached me and asked if they could sail the Hobies at the Combined High Schools Regatta,” says John. “I said if they could get four or five teams together, I’d come up for the week as a coach, helping them transition from the monohulls to the catamarans. It snowballed from there.”

John, who also happens to be a talented rock bassist, says he’ll be watching the sailing at the Olympics primarily to chart the progress of friend and Sydney and Athens Tornado partner Darren Bundock, current coach of the Australian catamaran team.

Does he have any advice for Aussie sailing hopefuls in Paris? “Perfect preparation prevents poor performance,” he says. “Sailors need to set realistic expectations, and make sure they absorb the Olympic experience as much as possible.”

Keep up to date with John’s Hobie 18s fleet by following
@Hobie18catamaran on Facebook

Issue 40 Olympics Sailing
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Related Posts

Manly Surf School: Front foot, safety first

Cromer’s Top Gun Cooper Ottaway

Beaches local Lara Giltinan tearing up the US Pickleball scene

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Stories from Past Tawnies

CUBA ushers in a new wave of Curly frothers

May 24, 2023

Be like Bobby McFerrin

April 30, 2023

The pandemic’s end breeds chaos for rescue pets

May 30, 2022

Meet Kamaroi School Principal, Vanessa Snaith

September 30, 2022

Hoop dreams alive in Brookvale

April 25, 2025

Cover Artist… Lydia Hicks

March 27, 2025

Film Review: The Fabelmans

March 28, 2023

Cover Artist… Brentos 4.0

November 27, 2024

Reason, Season or Lifetime?

December 1, 2021

True Blue, an Aussie EV future to drive towards

March 28, 2023

Surviving Holiday Gatherings

November 27, 2024

Aussies were surfing Down Under well before the Duke hula’d in

November 27, 2023

Cover Artist… Vanessa Wolfe

December 31, 2024

Awe-struck at the views below

July 20, 2023

Scamps’ serious push to cut taxes for 33,000 Northern Beaches small businesses

March 2, 2025
Our Mag

Online Articles

Back Issues

Media

Advertising

Advertising

Media Kit

Say Hi!

Contact Us

Support Us

Tip Jar

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 The Tawny Frogmouth

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.