Redhouse Yacht Club


The Redhouse Yacht Club, which is amongst the oldest yacht clubs in South Africa, hosts large dinghy races, and operates a training program that has produced international champion sailors.
The club is located in the village of Redhouse, Eastern Cape, South Africa within a fifteen-minute drive of Port Elizabeth. It is situated on the Zwartkops River, a tributary to Algoa Bay which is a popular vacation destination, and a major South African sailing centre.

Activities

The Club primarily caters to dinghy sailors, sponsors a major dinghy racing program, is an affiliate of the South African Sailing Academy
and is a member of the International Sailing Federation as well as part of South African Sailing. The climate around Algoa Bay allows for year-round sailing, and river sailing provides a more sheltered environment for smaller craft. There are about two races per week throughout the year with periodic larger events including national regattas. During its evolution the club has featured large fleets of diverse dinghies with the predominant race fleets presently consisting of Lasers, Mirrors, and Optimists.
The Club hosts the annual Eastern Cape inter-schools sailing championship, the 23rd event was held in 1999
The Club provides marina services for local and visiting boaters, and is endorsed as one of the regional attractions by the Eastern Cape Tourism Board.

History

The Club began in 1904 when a group of yachtsmen met under the leadership of Mr. R.P. Jones, at the Zwartkops Rowing Club in the Village of Redhouse, South Africa. Three types of boats were featured in the first race under Club colors: five-ton, three-ton, and two-ton though, by contrast, today’s popular raceboats such as Lasers and Optimist are limited by a minimum weight of 55 and 35 kilograms respectively.
A National Regatta was held at Redhouse in celebration of the Club’s 50th Anniversary of the Club in 1954 and the Centenary Regatta took place fifty years later in October 2004.
In the nineteen-seventies, the Mirror class became popular with more women and children becoming involved while junior sailing was boosted by the appearance of the Optimist single-handed dinghy, which has since served as the Club’s training boat. By 1975, the single-handed Laser had made its appearance at RYC and now dominates the fleet, in part since it is an Olympic class.
During the mid-1990s, Redhouse Yacht produced some of the top Optimist yachtsman, achieving exceptional results Nationally and Internationally.
The Club's facilities were damaged by a major flooding of the river in August 2006.

Notable Redhouse Yacht Club Sailors