“If you do just one regatta next year, make it this one.”
That’s the message Ports of Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta organisers are sending out, as they gear up for the 180th
edition of the much-loved event on Monday 27 January, 2020.
With the Notice of Race published and entries now officially open, organisers are encouraging Aucklanders to grasp the
opportunity to take part in this iconic event, whether participating or spectating.
“The regatta has always been an event for all Aucklanders,” says Executive Officer Joyce Talbot. “It’s a chance to get
out and celebrate and be part of history, whether you’re on the water or watching from the shore. People have such fond
memories of their parents taking them to watch the races on Anniversary Day, and that’s a tradition we’d love to
continue.”
The regatta, which celebrates the founding of the City of Sails by encouraging Aucklanders to take to the water under
sail, steam and paddle power, pre-dates the America's Cup by 11 years.
“People look at the America's Cup as a very special, historic event,'' says Talbot, “but they often forget we have just
as much history right here on our doorstep. The Auckland Anniversary Regatta is so closely tied up with the history of
the city and its boatbuilders, and it’s really how Auckland became known as the City of Sails.”
The very first Auckland Regatta was held on the day Lieutenant Governor William Hobson's officials raised the flag, on
18 September 1840. It was an impromptu three-race event that took place after representatives of Hobson rowed ashore
from the barque Anna Watson and took formal possession of the site in the name of Queen Victoria.
By 1940 as the regatta marked its first century, it had grown to become the biggest one-day regatta in the world,
showcasing Auckland’s boatbuilding and sailing expertise around the globe. The event remains one of the biggest by
number of participants, with over 600 boaties expected to take part in the 2020 regatta.
It’s not yet known whether Team New Zealand’s foiling AC75 Te Aihe will be on the water during the 2020 regatta. But
organisers note that the Auckland Anniversary Regatta again predates the America’s Cup in respect of ‘flying’ boats...
“In 1919, the Auckland Anniversary Regatta had the first flying race in the Southern Hemisphere,” Talbot explains. “It
was a race between a seaplane and two flying boats, which took off from Kohimarama.”
Nowadays the Ports of Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta attracts a huge fleet of vessels including tall ships, gaff
riggers, racing keelers, multihulls, sailing dinghies, radio controlled yachts, waka ama, elegant sea scout craft,
perfectly restored classic yachts and launches, and an armada of tugboats.
Spectators can watch from vantage points around the city’s waterfront, including Westhaven, Queen’s and Captain Cook
Wharves, Tamaki Drive, Bastion Point and North Head.
Anyone interested in floating their boat on Auckland’s birthday can get more information and enter now at www.regatta.org.nz.