The 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race will be held from 28 February to 15 March 2026. The event is organised by the Short Handed Sailing Association of New Zealand.
How to track the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race
The race will be sailed anticlockwise around the North Island of New Zealand, starting and finishing in Auckland’s Waitematā Harbour. The course covers approximately 1210 nautical miles and is divided into four legs.
Leg 3
Explore Racing leads on line by a long shot, having recently rounded the southwest of the North Island and is now heading in a northerly direction towards the Wairarapa coast. Behind on line are three heavy-weights: Motorboat III, Vixen Racing, and Whichway. Not too far behind in fifth is General Lee, the Bakewell-White 37 sailed by Cameron Thorpe and Tim Holgate.
The boats are close. 157 nautical miles to the finish line for Explore Racing. 164 nautical miles for Motorboat III and Vixen Racing. 165 nautical miles for Whichway. Motorboat III, Vixen Racing, and Whichway are locked in a tight contest. Soon they too will be pointing northwards.
Explore Racing continues to be well in the lead with Motorboat III still in second place on line with Vixen Racing coming in third. Again this may well prove to be a close leg.
The overall PHRF leaders is now L’Avanti, followed by Indis and Ragnar. In this race if you give an inch, you might lose a mile.
Explore Racing continues to be well in the lead with Motorboat III having again taken second place on line with Vixen Racing coming in third.
The overall PHRF leaders remain Division 3, Ragnar and Indis, followed by Division 4 L’Avanti. All divisions leaderboard remain the same as we last looked.
This is our first look at the PHRF leaderboard. The overall PHRF leaders are Division 3, Ragnar and Indis, followed by Division 4 L’Avanti (I am feeling a sense of deja vu).
Division 1 PHRF leaders are Motorboat III followed by Vixen Racing.
Division 2 PHRF leaders are Whichway followed by the Dehler 41 Akonga skippered by Nick Roberts and Max Livingstone.
Division 3 PHRF leaders are the two Sunfast 3300’s Ragnar, skippered by Brett Elliott and James Glidden, and Indis, skippered by Andrew Benton and Andrew Hall. The Elliott 1050 Leg 2 PHRF leader, Kick, skippered by Brendan Sands and Andy Roff, is further back, currently in fourth.
Division 4 PHRF leaders are the Farr 1020 L’Avanti skippered by John and Richard Power, and the Elliott 10.66 Carpe Diem skippered by Rowan Smith and Lydia Boyd. The ever dangerous Motorboat 2, the Elliott 10.50 skippered by Alan Quere and Vincent Trinquet is further back than expected.
Explore Racing is well in the lead with Vixen Racing now in second dragging it out with Motorboat III, both still further towards the coastline than Explore Racing who has chosen to stay wider.
Explore Racing stays in the lead parallel to the entrance to Wellington Harbour. Motorboat III now lies in second place, further inwards towards the coastline. Vixen Racing is hot on on their tail in third, also further in towards the coastline. High 5 and Whichway make up the top five.
Explore Racing continues to lead after turning northeast to run along the Wellington coast, with Whichway following in second and Vixen Racing now in third. The ever dangerous Motorboat III sits close behind in fourth but closely matched by High 5, the Division 1 Cookson 47 skippered by Bernie and Thomas Hyde.
Explore Racing is now in the lead, with Whichway a little further back followed by Motorboat III. Vixen Racing, having gone out wider earlier is now catching up fast on the outside.
An hour into the race, Whichway holds a narrow lead, edging ahead of Explore Racing and Motorboat III.
Vixen Racing bears away to the east and is quickly followed by a tightly packed group: the Division 2 Azuree 46 Kayimai skippered by Karen Selway and Kevin Smith; the Division 2 Beneteau First 45 Catnip skippered by Geoff Thorn and Katie Mathison; the Division 3 Dehler 30OD Niksen skippered by Logan Fraser and Marc Michel; and the Division 2 Pogo 36 Pipi skippered by Steve Newcombe and Craig Parker.
They are joined by another Division 2 contender, Higher Ground, the Ross 1066 skippered by John Seely and Matthew Wilson; Division 4 entry Hotdogger, also a Ross 1066, skippered by Nigel Bish and Sinisa “Sin” Grujicic; and the Division 4 Ross 8 C U Later, skippered by Shaun Stinton and Shaun Grigg.
The fleet quickly splits into two distinct groups: one tracking lower and further east, the other holding closer to the Wellington coast.
10 minutes into the race and three Division 1 boats and two Divison 2 boats are in the lead. The Division 1 Elliott 50 helmed by William Goodfellow and Jesse Turner, Explore Racing, possibly a notch out in front, with Division 2 Whichway, the Davidson 52 with Bruce Gault and Craig McMillan, alongside, just slightly back. Out to starboard lies the Division 1 Verdier 40 Vixen Racing, skippered by Sharon Ferris-Choat and Taylor Edwards, furthest out of the top four, with Division 1 Motorboat III, the Thompson 1150 with Damon Joliffe and Josh Tucker, lying in between Whichway and Vixen Racing. Division 2’s Focus, Elliott 1350 Tourer with Craig Fraser and Rob Croft, a little further back is bringing up the rear.
Leg 3 starts with a mass, full 26 fleet, start.
Yesterday the crews took a day’s rest after the completion of Leg 2: Mangōnui to Queen Charlotte Sound.
The third leg of the race is 220 nautical miles, slightly less than half that of Leg 2, and longer than Leg 1. It starts at 1pm this afternoon. The race will start just outside Tory Channel, taking the crews back across the Cook Strait, this time aiming for Napier.
Once crews complete the crossing, they will have to deal with what the organisers describe as “the notorious Wellington South Coast” where crews can choose to sail closer inshore with the tidal rips, or go wide to avoid the rips. The crews will point their bows towards Turakirae Head, from which they will pass windy Palliser Bay, and Ngawi to Cape Palliser. After this they head up the Wairarapa Coast passing Castle Point—which was recently featured in Boating New Zealand—and Cape Turnagain.
Finally, crews will race around Cape Kidnappers into Hawke Bay to finish off at Napier Harbour. There are plenty of eateries right there, where they will tie up.

The fleet starting from Charlotte Sound at 1pm today will face a lively opening stretch before conditions gradually ease as the race progresses north toward Napier.
At the start, crews can expect southeast winds around 19 knots, building to around 24 knots with gusts reaching 30 knots. The air temperature sits around 15°C under cloudy skies. Seas in the Sound remain relatively short and steep, running 0.7 to 1.4 metres at a short four second period, which may produce a choppy start as boats clear the Marlborough Sounds and enter Cook Strait waters. The tide will be near high water at 1:02pm, which should help boats exiting the Sound.
Once clear of Cook Strait and pushing up along the southwestern corner of the North Island during the late afternoon and evening, the fleet will encounter southerly winds between 17 and 21 knots, gusting into the mid twenties. Sea state increases here, with southerly swell building to around 2.3 metres at seven seconds. This section may prove demanding for smaller or slower boats, particularly if they encounter the steeper wave trains often found off the Taranaki Bight and the approaches toward Cape Egmont.
Through the overnight hours, conditions gradually moderate. Winds ease slightly to southerlies around 14 to 18 knots, with gusts up to around 22 knots. Seas remain around 2.2 metres but lengthen slightly to an eight second period, which should provide a steadier rhythm for the fleet settling into the long offshore leg.
By early tomorrow morning along the Wairarapa Coast, the weather pattern shifts. Winds swing west at 13 to 19 knots, with gusts into the low twenties. Seas drop to around 1.4 metres from the southwest, and skies clear for a time with some sunshine. This transition could produce a noticeable change in sailing angles as boats begin turning more toward the east coast of the North Island.
Later in the morning and early afternoon, the breeze backs further southwest around 11 to 17 knots, with moderate seas near 1.3 metres at nine seconds. This period may offer some of the most manageable conditions of the race, particularly for the faster boats expected to be pushing toward Hawke Bay during this window.
Through the afternoon approaching Napier, the breeze freshens again from the south, increasing to around 20 knots with gusts up to 25 knots, accompanied by 1.4 to 1.8 metre seas. Boats arriving during this time may find a firmer finish with pressure building along the coast.
Closer to Napier itself, conditions ease markedly. Winds drop to southeast 7 to 12 knots during the afternoon, decreasing further through the evening to around 6 to 9 knots with relatively calm seas around 0.5 metres. Boats finishing later into the evening or overnight will encounter increasingly light and variable breezes.
By Tuesday night and into Wednesday, winds become light and variable across Hawke Bay, generally between 2 and 9 knots, with calm seas and mild temperatures. Boats still racing at this stage may experience slower progress in the lighter conditions.
Overall, the race presents a strong opening phase with fresh southerlies and moderate swell, followed by gradually easing winds and seas along the east coast. The fastest boats are likely to benefit from the stronger early breeze, while slower competitors may encounter lighter and more tactical conditions closer to Napier.
Leg 2
2026 Doyle Sails RNI Leg 2 delivers strategy, survival and a thrilling finish
PHRF results
The corrected race was tight at the top. Kick (Division 3) won in 2 days 19 hours 6 minutes 46 seconds. Ragnar (Division 3) was only 56 minutes 38 seconds behind. Niksen (Division 3) was 1 hour 39 minutes 33 seconds back. Pipi (Division 2) in fourth was 2 hours 37 minutes 19 seconds behind. Äkonga (Division 2) in fifth was 3 hours 33 minutes 37 seconds behind the winner.
By 10th place, Indis (Division 3) was 5 hours 54 minutes 55 seconds behind Kick. By 20th, Explore Racing (Division 1) was 14 hours 22 minutes 10 seconds back. Highline (Division 4), the last finisher on corrected time, was 1 day 6 hours 44 minutes 29 seconds behind.
Corrected time gaps
On corrected time gaps, the real story is the mid fleet cluster around places 6 to 8. Focus (Division 2) found itself sandwiched between the two Motorboats with 6 minutes 27 seconds between Motorboat III (Division 1) and Focus, and another 7 minutes 7 seconds between Focus and Motorboat 2 (Division 2). Those three boats finished within just 13 minutes 34 seconds of each other on corrected time after around 480 nautical miles.
Another time gap worth noting was the 10 minutes and 14 seconds between Indis (Division 3) and Carpe Diem (Division 4).
| Overall PHRF Place | Name | Boat Design | Crew | Handicap | Distance Sailed | Corrected Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kick | Elliott 1050 | Brendan Sands & Ben Roff | 0.836 | 569 NM | 2d 19h 6m 46s |
| 2 | Ragnar | Sunfast 3300 | Brett Elliott & James Glidden | 0.821 | 575 NM | 2d 20h 3m 24s |
| 3 | Niksen | Dehler 30OD | Logan Fraser & Marc Michel | 0.824 | 575 NM | 2d 20h 46m 19s |
| 4 | Pipi | Pogo 36 | Steve Newcombe & Craig Parker | 0.851 | 575 NM | 2d 21h 44m 5s |
| 5 | Akonga | Dehler 41 | Nick Roberts & Max Livingstone | 0.840 | 572 NM | 2d 22h 40m 23s |
| 6 | Motorboat 2 | Elliott 10.50 | Alan Quere & Vincent TRINQUET | 0.859 | 572 NM | 2d 23h 24m 23s |
| 7 | Focus | Elliott 1350 Tourer | Craig Fraser & Rob Croft | 0.887 | 581 NM | 2d 23h 30m 50s |
| 8 | Motorboat III | Thompson 1150 | Damon Jolliffe & Josh Tucker | 0.922 | 571 NM | 2d 23h 37m 57s |
| 9 | Perfect Storm | Stomp 38 | Ken Ormandy & Lori Ormandy | 0.900 | 574 NM | 3d 0h 21m 50s |
| 10 | Indis | Sun Fast 3300 | Andrew Benton & Andrew Hall | 0.811 | 575 NM | 3d 1h 1m 41s |
| 11 | Carpe Diem | Elliott 10.66 | Rowan Smith & Lydia Boyd | 0.782 | 559 NM | 3d 1h 11m 55s |
| 12 | Vixen Racing | Verdier | Sharon Ferris-Choat & Taylor Edwards | 0.927 | 596 NM | 3d 2h 41m 57s |
| 13 | High 5 | Cookson 47 | Bernie Hyde & Thomas Hyde | 0.940 | 581 NM | 3d 2h 52m 25s |
| 14 | Whichway | Davidson 52 | Bruce Gault & Craig McMillan | 0.885 | 604 NM | 3d 3h 31m 8s |
| 15 | Start Me Up | Ross 930 | Harri Wren & Peron Pearse | 0.748 | 562 NM | 3d 5h 3m 14s |
| 16 | Kayimai | Azuree 46 | Karen Selway & KEVIN SMITH | 0.867 | 578 NM | 3d 5h 43m 40s |
| 17 | Hotdogger | Ross 930 | Nigel Bish & Sinisa ‘Sin’ Grujicic | 0.763 | 560 NM | 3d 6h 32m 4s |
| 18 | General Lee | Bakewell-White 37 | Cameron Thorpe & Tim Holgate | 0.912 | 583 NM | 3d 7h 39m 39s |
| 19 | C U Later | Ross 8 | Ben Sinton & Shaun Grigg | 0.780 | 542 NM | 3d 8h 16m 52s |
| 20 | Explore Racing | Elliott 50 | William Goodfellow & Jesse Turner | 1.051 | 606 NM | 3d 9h 28m 56s |
| 21 | Higher Ground | Ross 1066 | John Seely & Matthew Wilson | 0.877 | 617 NM | 3d 16h 30m 26s |
| 22 | L’Avanti | Farr 1020 | John Power & Richard Power | 0.735 | 644 NM | 3d 17h 10m 36s |
| 23 | Physical Favours | Ross 9.1 | Ryan McCready & Andrew Child | 0.818 | 652 NM | 3d 19h 44m 14s |
| 24 | Catnip | Beneteau first 45 | Geoff Thorn & Katie Mathison | 0.867 | 621 NM | 3d 20h 35m 48s |
| 25 | Highline | Dufour 455 Grand Large | Andrew Mackmurdie & Jennifer Haliday | 0.792 | 591 NM | 4d 1h 51m 15s |
| 26 | Kokomea | First 40.7 | Geoff Faulkner & Stu Morgan | 0.821 | 528 NM | – |
Line honours results
The front of the elapsed race was tight. Explore Racing (Division 1) beat Motorboat III (Division 1) by just 9 minutes 51 seconds. That was a genuine race for first.
Third placed High 5 (Division 1) was 2 hours 7 minutes 28 seconds behind the Explore Racing. Kick (Division 3) in fourth was 2 hours 45 minutes back. Perfect Storm (Division 1) in fifth was 2 hours 52 minutes 33 seconds behind Explore Racing.
By 10th, Motorboat 2 (Divison 2) was 5 hours 35 minutes 56 seconds off line honours. By 20th, Hotdogger (Division 4) was 1 day 1 hour 24 minutes 1 second behind. Highline (Division 4), the last line finisher, was 1 day 22 hours 1 minute 30 seconds behind the winner.
The three smallest elapsed gaps, which represent the tightest contests on the water, anywhere in the fleet were:
- Vixen Racing (Divison 1) and Focus (Division 2): 2 minutes 34 seconds
- The two Division 4 entries, Hotdogger and Start Me Up: 5 minutes 5 seconds.
- The two Division 1 entries, and perhaps the most talked about, was the time between Explore Racing and Motorboat III: 9 minutes 51 seconds
The elapsed time results show a very tight battle for line honours, a compact upper-middle pack finishing within minutes of each other, with a mid-fleet finishing with gaps of around an hour, and progressively widening separations towards the back of the fleet.
One of the most interesting section of the race was the group from fourth to seventh—Kick, Perfect Storm, Vixen Racing, and Focus— where the four boats crossed the line within about 21 minutes after more than three days at sea.
| Overall Online Place | Name | Boat Design | Crew | Handicap | Distance Sailed | Elapsed Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Explore Racing | Elliott 50 | William Goodfellow & Jesse Turner | 1.000 | 606 NM | 3d 5h 31m 42s |
| 2 | Motorboat III | Thompson 1150 | Damon Jolliffe & Josh Tucker | 1.000 | 571 NM | 3d 5h 41m 33s |
| 3 | High 5 | Cookson 47 | Bernie Hyde & Thomas Hyde | 1.000 | 581 NM | 3d 7h 39m 10s |
| 4 | Kick | Elliott 1050 | Brendan Sands & Ben Roff | 1.000 | 569 NM | 3d 8h 16m 42s |
| 5 | Perfect Storm | Stomp 38 | Ken Ormandy & Lori Ormandy | 1.000 | 574 NM | 3d 8h 24m 15s |
| 6 | Vixen Racing | Verdier | Sharon Ferris-Choat & Taylor Edwards | 1.000 | 596 NM | 3d 8h 34m 54s |
| 7 | Focus | Elliott 1350 Tourer | Craig Fraser & Rob Croft | 1.000 | 580 NM | 3d 8h 37m 28s |
| 8 | Pipi | Pogo 36 | Steve Newcombe & Craig Parker | 1.000 | 575 NM | 3d 9h 56m 40s |
| 9 | Ragnar | Sunfast 3300 | Brett Elliott & James Glidden | 1.000 | 575 NM | 3d 10h 53m 41s |
| 10 | Motorboat 2 | Elliott 10.50 | Alan Quere & Vincent TRINQUET | 1.000 | 572 NM | 3d 11h 7m 38s |
| 11 | Niksen | Dehler 30OD | Logan Fraser & Marc Michel | 1.000 | 575 NM | 3d 11h 27m 40s |
| 12 | Akonga | Dehler 41 | Nick Roberts & Max Livingstone | 1.000 | 572 NM | 3d 12h 8m 5s |
| 13 | Whichway | Davidson 52 | Bruce Gault & Craig McMillan | 1.000 | 604 NM | 3d 13h 19m 56s |
| 14 | General Lee | Bakewell-White 37 | Cameron Thorpe & Tim Holgate | 1.000 | 583 NM | 3d 15h 20m 51s |
| 15 | Kayimai | Azuree 46 | Karen Selway & KEVIN SMITH | 1.000 | 578 NM | 3d 17h 39m 5s |
| 16 | Indis | Sun Fast 3300 | Andrew Benton & Andrew Hall | 1.000 | 575 NM | 3d 18h 2m 49s |
| 17 | Carpe Diem | Elliott 10.66 | Rowan Smith & Lydia Boyd | 1.000 | 559 NM | 3d 21h 36m 16s |
| 18 | Higher Ground | Ross 1066 | John Seely & Matthew Wilson | 1.000 | 617 NM | 4d 4h 55m 13s |
| 19 | C U Later | Ross 8 | Ben Sinton & Shaun Grigg | 1.000 | 542 NM | 4d 6h 55m 28s |
| 20 | Hotdogger | Ross 930 | Nigel Bish & Sinisa ‘Sin’ Grujicic | 1.000 | 560 NM | 4d 6h 55m 43s |
| 21 | Start Me Up | Ross 930 | Harri Wren & Peron Pearse | 1.000 | 562 NM | 4d 7h 0m 48s |
| 22 | Catnip | Beneteau first 45 | Geoff Thorn & Katie Mathison | 1.000 | 621 NM | 4d 10h 48m 4s |
| 23 | Physical Favours | Ross 9.1 | Ryan McCready & Andrew Child | 1.000 | 652 NM | 4d 16h 8m 53s |
| 24 | L’Avanti | Farr 1020 | John Power & Richard Power | 1.000 | 644 NM | 5d 1h 19m 43s |
| 25 | Highline | Dufour 455 Grand Large | Andrew Mackmurdie & Jennifer Haliday | 1.000 | 591 NM | 5d 3h 33m 12s |
| 26 | Kokomea | First 40.7 | Geoff Faulkner & Stu Morgan | 1.000 | 527 NM | – |
Bow-to-bow
- The two Division 4 Ross 930s, Start Me Up (handicap 0.748) and Hotdogger (handicap 0.763): on PHRF Start Me Up finished on 15th while Hotdogger finished on 17th, but switched for Line Honours, Hotdogger finished on 20th and Start Me Up finished on 21st.
- The two Division 3 Sunfast 3300s, Ragnar (handicap 0.821) and Indis (handicap 0.811): on PHRF Ragnar finished 4 hours 58 minutes 17 seconds ahead on corrected time, and 7 hours 9 minutes 8 seconds ahead on the water.
- The two Elliott 1050s, Kick (0.836 handicap) and Motorboat 2 (0.859 handicap): Kick had the faster race on the water, 2 hours 50 minutes further ahead, and took out the entire fleet on PHRF and 4 hours 17 minutes ahead of Motorboat 2.
Highline, the Dufour 455 Grand Large with Andrew Mackmurdie and Jennifer Haliday arrives in as the 25th crew to pass the finish line near Motuara Island in the Charlotte Sound. They completed the 480 nautical mile haul south from Doubtless Bay in 5 days 3 hours 33 minutes 12 seconds, a smidgen over 1 day and 22 hours after Explore Racing crossed the finish line.
Leg 2 has been a hugely watchable stretch of the race. Crews had an early strategic call to make once they reached the top of the North Island: push further west offshore, or turn immediately south and hug the coast.
The first night quickly tested those decisions. Crews faced strong winds pushing past 30 knots, with gusts reaching 37 knots. The sea state followed suit, with what sailors described as lumpy, bumpy swells climbing beyond three metres. It was a demanding night for a two handed fleet.
From there the conditions eased. The breeze settled and the leg shifted from survival mode into a fast run toward the finish, with crews looking for every puff of wind to squeeze out a few more tenths of a knot.
Given the weather thrown at them, the fact there has been only one retirement on this leg says a great deal about the resilience of the entire fleet. Every crew out there deserves a round of applause.
And once they tie up, probably a well earned drink or two as well.
Carpe Diem, the Elliott 10.66 skippered by Rowan Smith and Lydia Boyd, has crossed the finish line. Three days 1 hours 11 minutes 55 seconds on corrected time, and provisionally first in Division 4 PHRF results.
Pipi, the Pogo 36 skippered by Steve Newcombe and Craig Parker, has crossed the finish line. Two days 22 hours 54 minutes 5 seconds on corrected time, and provisionally first in Division 2 PHRF results.
Kick, the Elliott 1050 skippered by Brendan Sands and Ben Roff, has crossed the finish line. Two days 19 hours 6 minutes 46 seconds on corrected time, and provisionally first on overall PHRF results and first in Division 3 PHRF results. Congratulations!
High 5, the Cookson 47 skippered by Bernie Hyde and Thomas Hyde, has crossed the finish line for the second leg of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race. Three days 7 hours 39 minutes 10 seconds on elapsed time; and 3 days 2 hours 52 minutes 25 seconds on corrected time, and provisionally fourth in Division 1 PHRF results.
Motorboat III, the Thompson 1150 skippered by Damon Joliffe and Josh Tucker, has crossed the finish line for the second leg of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race. A mere 10 minutes behind Explore Racing. Second place on line honours. Congratulations Motorboat III. Three days 5 hours 41 minutes 33 seconds on elapsed time; and 2 days 23 hours 37 minutes 57 seconds on corrected time, and provisionally first in Division 1 PHRF results.
At the time of writing, High 5, has 15 nautical miles before finish and is likely to finish in just over four hours time.
Explore Racing, Elliott 50 raced by William Goodfellow and Jesse Turner, has crossed the finish line for the second leg of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race. Congratulations Explore Racing. Three days 5 hours 11 minutes and 32 seconds on elapsed time; 3 days 9 hours 28 minutes 66 seconds on corrected time, and provisionally in fifth place on Division 1 PHRF results.
At the time of writing, Motorboat III, has 2 nautical miles before they finish the leg.
Taking a quick break from the 2026 Auckland Boat Show — which is looking fantastic this year and well worth a visit — I’ve checked in on the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race.
The line honours battle is shaping into a real sprint to the finish.
Explore Racing is expected to reach the finish near Motuara Island with around 23 nautical miles remaining, likely crossing the line just after 4pm today.

Right behind them is Motorboat III, only one nautical mile further back at 25 nautical miles from the finish, and projected to arrive just over sixteen minutes later if the current pace holds. (That has slipped a little since before noon.)
On handicap, Kick continues to lead the PHRF standings, with Ragnar in second and Motorboat III sitting third. Motorboat III will be pushing hard in the final miles, hunting for every patch of pressure and any wind funnel that might shave seconds off the run to the line.
This finish is shaping into a very watchable finale.
What a difference the past nine hours has made. The fleet is more widespread and the lead boats are well-passed New Plymouth and Cape Egmont. By today’s end two or more boats will have finished Leg 2, from Mangonui to Motuara Island in Charlotte Sound, the longest leg of the course.

The tiny Ross 8, C U Later, skippered by Ben Stinton and Shaun Grigg remains furthest north and second in Division 4 PHRF. Highline, the Dufour 455 Grand Large with Andrew Mackmurdie and Jennifer Haliday furthest west and the closest neighbours (nearly 35 nauthical miles) to C U Later. L’Avanti, the Farr 1020 with John Power and Richard Power are furthest east, cruising along about 15 nautical miles off the Raglan coast and sitting third in Division 3.
Explore Racing, the Elliott 50 lies in furthest south. William Goodfellow and Jesse Turner have maintained the lead line honours position over night and are currently slightly south of the small inland Manawatu town of Marton. Explore Racing is aroud 226 nautical miles from the finish line at Motuara Island and are estimated to finish at about 04.30pm this afternoon.
Motorboat III, the Thompson 1150 skippered by Damon Jolliffe and Josh Tucker lies in second, followed by High 5, the Cookson 47 skippered by Bernie Hyde and Thomas Hyde. Motorboat III is likely to finish Leg 2 today, High 5 are close to the midnight finish line so it will be interesting to track.
On PHRF overall, Kick, the Elliott 1050 skippered by Brendan Sands and Ben Roff lies in first, Motorboat III in second, although there is only an hour and a half in it. Again another matchup to watch. Jolliffe and Tucker will want to win this leg on PHRF so will be pushing Motorboat III as much as possible.
Division 1 is lead by Motorboat III, followed by Perfect Storm, the Stomp 38 skippered by Ken and Lori Ormandy, and High 5, the Cookson 47 crewed by Bernie and Thomas Hyde. The real Division 1 battle lies between Explore Racing, currently fourth in Division 1 PHRF, and Vixen Racing the Verdier 40, skippered by Sharon Sharon Ferris-Choat and Taylor Edwards, with currently just over half an hour on corrected elapsed time.
In Division 2, there have been changes. Äkonga now lies in third place while Focus has moed into first. Pipi continues in second place. Just six minutes between the three crews. Exciting racing ahead for Division 2.
On corrected time, Division 3 leaders remain unchanged. Kick followed by Ragnar and then Niksen. Just nine or so minutes separate Ragnar and Niksen on estimated corrected time.
Division 4 remains. Carpe Diem remains in the lead. C U Later is now second with L’Avanti third. They are reasonably spread in time at the moment.
This is going to be an interesting day on the water. Will three crews cross the finish line before midnight? And how will the places change throughout today as the wind circles around the course.
Tactical decisions loom off Taranaki as Leg 2 of the 2026 Doyle Sails RNIs enters fourth day
The crews must now decide how far offshore to sail as they pass New Plymouth. As they round Cape Egmont, they will need to keep clear of the oil rigs while carefully reading the weather patterns shaping the leg ahead.
Closer to the coast the wind becomes far more variable, ranging from 3 to 11 knots, with 1.3 metre swells at 13 second intervals. Further offshore the breeze strengthens to around 8 to 10 knots, with slightly larger 1.5 metre swells running at the same 13 second period.
Only three hours until the race rolls into the fourth day of racing. The lead crews are slightly north of New Plymouth.

The western most boat is Ragnar sliding along at 7.2 knots in 8 to 9 knots of wind about 100 nautical miles northwest of New Plymouth. The northern most boat is C U Later, gliding at 5 knots about 180 nautical miles north-northwest of New Plymouth. L’Avanti is the eastern most boat, at 6 knots in 10 to13 knot winds she currently lies around 13 nautical miles west of Manukau Harbour and around 115 nautical miles north-northwest of New Plymouth. Out in front, the southern most entry is Explore Racing at 8.3 knots, around 53 nautical miles from New Plymouth.
Conditions are fair. Quite a different set of conditions to the last couple of days where crews, as Marc Michel from Niksen put it were “tough both with conditions in first 24-36 hours (wet and tough physically)” and now a “very much high stakes poker with weather and tactics now as we play snakes and ladders with the leading pack as we approach Taranaki.”
On line honours, Explore Racing remains in the lead, still further east than she was previously. Currently a little over three hours (reduced by two since this morning) ahead on elapsed time from Motorboat III. Both much further ahead than now third-placed Division 2 entry Focus, the Elliott 1350 Tourer co-skippered by Craig Fraser and Rob Croft.
On overall handicap, three Division 3 entries are leading. Kick followed by Ragnar and then Niksen. Just two minutes separate Ragnar and Niksen on estimated corrected time.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III maintains its lead. High 5 and Perfect Storm have swapped places since this morning with Perfect Storm now second, and High 5 in third. The spread between the three is between three and four hours each.
Similarly, Äkonga is first in Division 2, with second and third places swapping. Focus now leads Pipi, but only by 3 minutes on estimated corrected time.
Division 4 changes as well. Carpe Diem remains in the lead. C U Later is now second with L’Avanti third. Eleven minutes on estimated corrected time separates C U Later and L’Avanti.
Poker, chess. It’s all about strategy and tactics, trying to outguess your opponents, and not giving anything away.
Good morning! This is the third day of Leg 2, where the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race started on Monday Mar 2 at 9am and will end at the top of the South Island, possibly the earliest by tomorrow.

Temperatures are cool ranging from 15 to 17 degrees. Winds are 5 to 6 knots further west, where Niksen, Pipi, and Äkonga are sailing; yet they have turned in an easterly direction to pickup the faster winds. Twelve to fourteen knots closer to the coast. Furthest west is Niksen, around 160 nautical miles from the coast. Closest to shore is Higher Ground at around 21 nautical miles from the coast. There is 134 nautical miles lying between Niksen and Higher Ground, although Higher Ground is parallel with the greater Auckland, and Niksen is further south parallel with Raglan/Kawhia.
Wave action is at 1.6-metres every 10.3 seconds further out west where Niksen is racing, and 1.5-metres every 8 seconds further towards the coast with Higher Ground.
Some boats are cruising along at 1.x knots, Explore Racing is for example at 1.3 knots an hour, and Motorboat III has found the most speed at 6.4 knots.
On line honours, Explore Racing is in the lead, having almost come right across to the port side of the course after hanging out much further west on Day 2. Currently a little over 5 hours ahead on elapsed time from Motorboat III, and a further 3 or so hours ahead of Vixen Racing which is currently in third.
On overall handicap, Division 3’s Kick is leading Division 4’s Carpe Diem, both ahead of Division 2’s Indis. There is all but six minutes separating Carpe Diem and Indis at the moment.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III maintains its lead. High 5 is now second, followed by Perfect Storm in third. They are separated by three hours (give or take) each on estimated time. The spread between the three is significant.
Äkonga is first in Division 2, followed by Pipi and Focus, with just over an hour difference on estimated corrected time between Pipi and Focus.
In Division 3, Kick leads ahead of Indis and Ragnar, with almost an hour between Indis and Ragnar.
Division 4 changes as well. Carpe Diem has taken the lead, L’Avanti has moved into second while C U Later is third. The gaps between the three boats on estimated elapsed time are good.
This tactical game of offshore chess will continue throughout today.
Five hours until the end of the day 2 of the second leg. Crews must be exhausted by now. So far this leg has proven to be wild, windy—”lumpy” and “bumpy” is the words most crews have described it so far.
Explore Racing has chosen to come closer to the west coast rather than out further west. Although winds are stronger further west, 15 to 16 knots versus 14 to 15 knots closer to shore. There’s not much in the wave action either: 2.4-metres at 8 second intervals (much better than the overnight conditions) further west. 2.3-metres at just under 8 second intervals closer to the coast.

Higher Ground 35 nautical miles from the coast, the closest of the fleet. While Catnip is 131 nautical miles out to sea, the furthest west. The rest of the fleet has chosen a path somewhere in the middle. The majority around 119 nautical miles off the coast.
The First 40.7, Kokomea, co-skipped by Geoff Faulkner and Stu Morgan has retired with 305 nautical miles off the finish line. They’re currently making their way to New Plymouth with a note to say “All well onboard.”
Explore Racing has retaken the elapsed time lead from Motorboat III, but only just. There is five nautical miles in it. Vixen Racing lies in third, another eight nautical miles back. This game of chess will continue until the finish line.
On overall handicap, Division 3 Niksen is on top, followed by another two Division 3 entries, Ragnar and Indis. The gaps are close, a difference of four nautical minutes (estimated) between Niksen and Ragnar. They top the Division 3 PHRF leaderboard as well. Motorboat III is fourth on overall handicap, followed by Motorboat 2.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III maintains its lead. Vixen Racing is second, followed by Perfect Storm in third. They are separated by three hours (give or take) each on estimated time.
Another change in Division 2. Motorboat 2 has retaken the lead on PHRF during today. Äkonga lies in second about half an hour ahead of Whichway estimated time.
Division 4 changes as well. Start Me Up is ahead of Hotdogger, but only by four minutes (estimated), and they are both followed by L’Avanti, less than an estimated half an hour behind.
This has been a hard leg to date. PredictWind tells me the crews are still experiencing good winds: 8 to 25 knots but expected to decrease to 17 knots after 9pm, with gusts continuing between to 30 and 31 knots. As they sail south conditions will improve—and that can only bring less lumps and bumps, and more sleep.
They’re all doing amazingly well. And soon that finish line will be in sight… just not quite yet.
Good morning. It’s a cool 11-degree morning here over in the Coromandel. Over on the west of New Zealand where the fleet continues its race south, temperatures are closer to 20 degrees. The further west the lighter the winds; both the Elliott 10.66, Carpe Diem, co-skippered by Rowan Smith and Lydia Boyd and the Ross 1066, Higher Ground, co-skippered by John Seely and Matthew Wilson have adjusted their line further east towards the coast where winds are up to 21 knots instead of the 14 knots further west where Explore Racing is positioned. Currently their positioned in 11th and 23rd, respectively, on corrected time. Let’s see if their change in line helps them pick up pace.
The bulk of the fleet have gone wider west than I had originally anticipated. Motorboat III remains in the lead on elapsed time. On the visual Explore Racing looks to be in the front of the fleet, but Motorboat III has hugged the line more closely and therefore are closer to the finish line overall. Explore Racing, in second on elapsed time, are 13 nautical miles distant from the finish line. Vixen Racing, Ragnar and Whichway have all equally 15 nautical miles distant from the finish line; only 2 nautical miles difference, and then Niksen and Indis another 2 nautical miles behind, followed by Perfect Storm. The rest of the fleet is separated by one, two or three nautical miles apart. Brilliant overnight racing to stay in the race.
On Handicap, Motorboat III has improved by three places on PHRF overall and now sits in fourth place on corrected time, behind Ragnar, Indis, and Niksen.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III maintains its lead, as does second-placed Perfect Storm.
Another change in Division 2. Whichway has taken the lead on PHRF overnight, followed by Äkonga and Pipi. Motorboat 2 has lost a little ground and now sits in fourth on PHRF.
Division 3 changes. Ragnar is now leading, followed by Indis and then Niksen. Division 4 changes. Hotdogger is back in the lead, followed by Start Me Up, and Carpe Diem.
An update from Perfect Storm.
The entire fleet is angling further west into the Tasman Sea. Motorboat III still remains closest to the coastline. They are getting minimally more wind speed than boats further west. Explore Racing may be getting the least amount of wind: at Wind-100 metres on YB, Motorboat III is getting 25.1 knots while Explore Racing, the furthest West is getting 23.7 knots.
Motorboat III‘s remains in the lead on elapsed time, with Explore Racing in second and Whichway — now ahead of Vixen Racing — in third. coastline path has not hurt their position. Motorboat III currently appear significantly ahead, four-plus hours which they will need if they want to improve their PHRF leaderboard position. Currently in seventh on the over PHRF standings, Motorboat III must improve their corrected time to move ahead of L’Avanti, Hotdogger, Start Me Up, Carpe Diem, Indis, and C U Later, as measured from the start of the leg.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III maintains its lead, as does second-placed Perfect Storm.
Another change in Division 2. While Äkonga continues to lead on PHRF, and Motorboat 2 remains in second place and Whichway now lies in third. Whichway must have only just passed Pipi on corrected time as there is just over 20 seconds difference between both.
Division 3 changes. Indis stays ahead on corrected time but Niksen has slid into second ahead of Ragnar with barely four minutes difference on corrected time. Division 4 remains the same with L’Avanti followed by Hotdogger and then Start Me Up, but those time gaps are widening.
Visually the fleet is separated into four groups — if you can call an individual boat a group? — Motorboat III by itself closer to the west coast of the North Island, Explore Racing further out to the Tasman Sea, then a group of three boats — High 5, Whichway and Vixen Racing — and then a little further back the remainder of the fleet, a little more bunched together.
So far, Motorboat III‘s coastline path has not hurt their position. They remain ahead on elapsed time and about seven nautical miles ahead than Explore Racing. The wind is fluctuating but Motorboat III are in the stronger wind position, 20.8 knots versus 19.8 knots for Explore Racing. It could be argued there’s nothing in it. But yet…
Vixen Racing has taken back third on elapsed time. Whichway is fourth and Indis fallen back to fifth.
PHRF overall the leaderboard has remained unchanged since the last update. L’Avanti, Hotdogger and Start Me Up, measured from the start.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III continues to lead second-placed Perfect Storm.
Another change in Division 2. Akonga still leads on PHRF, but Motorboat 2 has resumed second place while Pipi now lies in third. There is three minutes of corrected time between Motorboat 2 and Pipi.
Division 3, Indis is remains ahead of Ragnar on corrected time and the gap remains similar to the 45 minute gap from an hour ago. At the moment, Division 4 still stands at L’Avanti followed by Hotdogger and then Start Me Up.
Motorboat III continues its course west but still remains at the head of the overall leaderboard on elapsed time. Explore Racing has taken the much wider, more-west route and consequently has picked up speed: right now they’re racing along at 12.4 knots versus Motorboat III’s 8.0 knots.
Indis remains in third on elapsed time. Division 3, Niksen, the Dehler 30OD co-skippered by Logan Dixon and Marc Michel has picked up pace and has passed Ragnar on line to be in fourth position.
PHRF overall the leaderboard has remained unchanged since the last update. L’Avanti, Hotdogger and Start Me Up, measured from the start.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III still leads second-placed Perfect Storm.
Another change in Division 2. Akonga has taken the PHRF lead. Pipi now lies in second with Motorboat 2 in third. There is a five minute corrected time between Pipi and Motorboat 2.
Division 3, Indis is remains ahead of Ragnar on corrected time and the gap remains similar to the 45 minute gap from an hour ago. At the moment, Division 4 continues to be the matchup to watch for now. L’Avanti followed by Hotdogger and then Start Me Up.
Motorboat III are now changing course to also head further west off the coast. The initial southward drive may have paid off as Motorboat III are currently in the lead on line honours. They’ve sailed the less than Explore Racing and have less nautical miles until the finish. But the change of line might form a different outcome in an hour or two. How far west will they go?
Indis has replaced Vixen Racing to now lie in third. Explore Racing lies in second. Three of the first four boats are from Division 1, only Indis from Division 3 breaks the streak.
PHRF overall the leaderboard has reshaped significantly. Motorboat III is no longer in the lead. At the top the Farr 1020, L’Avanti, is ahead of the two Ross 930s, Hotdogger and Start Me Up. All three are Division 4 entries. The conditions suiting the smaller, lighter boats well.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III lead second-placed Perfect Storm—replacing Vixen Racing, which has fallen further back. The corrected time gap is quite wide between Motorboat III and Perfect Storm.
And an upset too in Division 2. Motorboat 2 has been replaced as overall PHRF leader by Pipi. Currently there is only a half hour gap between the two.
Division 3, Indis is now ahead of Ragnar on corrected time and the gap has increased since an hour ago. At the moment, Division 4 seems to be the most intriguing matchup. L’Avanti has replaced Hotdogger to lead Division 4 on corrected time, but half an hour back lies Hotdogger and half an hour further back is Start Me Up.
Interesting all the fleet, bar Motorboat III, has choosen to head wider west rather than to turn south to hug in closer to the coastline. Motorboat III has chosen the coastline route. Crews are choosing their lines very carefully. There is a long night ahead.
No changes to the line honours leaderboard. None of the three leading crews, Explore Racing, Motorboat III, or Vixen Racing, seem to have gained or lost time. The gaps have remained constant.
PHRF overall leaderboard is Motorboat III, followed by Ragnar, then Indis. No changes since our last update.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III still lead second-placed Vixen Racing, but still that half hour corrected time gap remains. Motorboat 2 continues as PHRF leader in Division 2. Pipi still follows. ,
Division 3, Ragnar and Indis, are still close racing; that earlier three minutes corrected time gap is still there. Hotdogger remains in front in Division 4.
My earlier question is now beginning to be answered. It looks for the moment that there will be a split route. Some, like Explore Racing, opting to head out further west; others, like Motorboat III, who seem to be turning south earlier. Time will tell which is the best option.
Explore Racing and Motorboat III continue to lead the rest of the pack on elapsed time. Vixen Racing is putting a gap between their third position and the remainder of the fleet. Vixen Racing seems, at this moment, to be following Explore Racing for cleaner air.
PHRF overall leaderboard is Motorboat III, followed by Ragnar, then Indis.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III still lead second-placed Vixen Racing, but there seems to be half an hour in it on corrected time. Motorboat 2 continues as PHRF leader in Division 2, still followed by Pipi. Read the story of Steve Newcombe and Pipi.
Division 3, Ragnar and Indis, are still close racing; that earlier three minutes corrected time gap remains. Hotdogger remains in front in Division 4.
Explore Racing looks to have reached the north-west corner at the top of the North Island. Will they continue west or will they turn south? This is the question most crews will be asking themselves. They’ll be looking at a southerly of about 15–20 knots with gusts up to 26 knots.
Very little change in the positioning in terms of division leaders.
In Division 1 PHRF, Motorboat III still lead with Vixen Racing now sitting in second. The earlier Division 2 leader, Motorboat 2 continues but now with Pipi, the Pogo 36 co-skippered by Steve Newcombe and Craig Parker, moving into second on corrected time. You can read the story of Steve Newcombe and Pipi on Boating New Zealand.
Division 3, Ragnar and Indis, are close racing. Ragnar significantly in front on line, Indis only three minutes behind on corrected time. Hotdogger remains in front in Division 4.
Most of the fleet is now sailing along the top most point of the North Island. The Farr 1020, L’Avanti, skippered by John Power and Richard Power, and the Dufour 455 Grand Large, Highline, co-skippered by Andrew Mackmurdie and Jennifer Haliday, are following up the rear of the main group, both still to turn west.
Explore Racing continues to lead. Followed by Motorboat III. The Vixen Racing.
At the moment PHRF overall is Hotdogger, followed by Ragnar, then Motorboat III. Division 1 leader on PHRF is Motorboat III with Explore Racing close behind. Division 2 leader on PHRF is Motorboat 2 with Focus , the Elliot 1350 Tourer co-skippered by Craig Fraser and Rob Croft. This is close racing.
Ragnar, Brett Elliott and James Glidden’s Sunfast 3300, is showing her Magic and is currently leading Division 3 on PHRF and is currently expected to lead Division 3 at the finish line. Hotdogger, Nigel Bish and Sinisa ‘Sin’ Grujicic’ Ross 930, currently has a healthy estimated finish time ahead of Start Me Up, Harri Wren and Peron Pearse’s Ross 930.
Explore Racing continues to lead. At 1.00pm they have rounded North Cape and now race west along the Takapaukura / Tom Bowling Bay. Motorboat III is just over 1 nautical mile further behind. This is close racing. They’re experiencing 18 to 22 knot winds with a 1.8-metre swell at 2.3 seconds.
General Lee lies west of North Cape and has decisively taken third position, around 5 nautical miles behind Explore Racing. Vixen Racing under 1 nautical mile behind General Lee. General Lee has taken the wider line, further east. Both taking 18 to 21 knots of wind with 1.8-metre swells at 1.3 seconds. It’ll be a little rough out there.
Explore Racing leads just south of North Cape with Motorboat III a little further behind. The remainder of the fleet are starting to spread, yet that race for third position remains close. Perfect Storm has fallen a little further back and Motorboat 2 has increased its pace. General Lee, Motorboat 2 (the Elliot 1050 raced by Alan Quere and Vincent Trinquet), and Vixen Racing are all vying for that third position.
Explore Racing continues to lead with Motorboat III lying in second position. Both clear of the remainder of the fleet. Third place looks to be a tight battle between the Verdier 40 co-skippered by Sharon Ferris-Choat and Taylor Edwards in Vixen Racing (@VixenRacing), Perfect Storm, and General Lee (@MightyGeneralLee) the Bakewell-White 37 co-skippered by Cameron Thorpe and Tim Holgate.
One hour into Leg 2 of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race, William Goodfellow and Jesse Turner lead in the Elliott 50, Explore Racing — progressing at 8.8 knots. Leg 1 corrected time leaderboard champion, Motorboat III, a Thompson 1150 sailed by Damon Jolliffe and Josh Tucker lies in second at 8.3 knots. Third is Perfect Storm, the Stomp 38 co-skippered by Ken and Lori Ormandy, sailing along at 7.9 knots.
The wind is between 15 to 18 knots SSW, and wave action is 1.2 metres SSW every 3 seconds. Fair weather for racing.
You don’t often come across Stomp 38s, so I thought I’d take a look to see what Perfect Storm is capable of. You can see the crew racing along in the race below. @PerfectStorm
Designed by TBoats which is based out of the Hauraki Gulf, TBoats describe the Stomp 38 as a lightweight 11.58m offshore racer capable of matching many 40 footers upwind while delivering powerful downwind speed. Displacing just 1,740 kg, with nearly 100 sqm upwind and 227 sqm downwind sail area, it offers strong pointing ability and genuine planing performance. A deep keel with optional trim tab enhances lift to windward, while the articulating carbon prod drives fast asymmetric running. Built for IRC and PHRF racing, it suits full crews or short handed offshore campaigns.
Leg 2, starting from Mangōnui, Doubtless Sound, and ending in Queen Charlotte Sound. All 26 crews are back on the line, with Äkonga having rejoined the fleet in time for the start.
Leg 2 of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race is said to start on Monday 2 March at 9.00am. This leg is where the tone shifts. This is the long 480 nautical mile haul south. 212% longer the Leg 1. That’s a whole lot more exposure, strategising and fatigue.
But will the leg reshape the leaderboard?
In 2023, Wired crewed by Andrew Duff and Chris Bassett, flipped the switch and took the Leg 2 overall line honours and overall handicap lead from Equilibrium.
In 2020, Wired crewed by Angus and Chris Bassett maintained their Leg 1 win on overall line honours in Leg 2, but Clockwork lost its overall Leg 1 handicap leadership to Mr Kite, a Cape 40 canting keel carbon fibre racing yacht, co-skippered by Nathan Williams and Craig Satterthwaite — but only by a little under one-and-a-half minutes.
After regrouping in Mangōnui overnight, the fleet will start off the harbour entrance and clear Doubtless Bay before turning toward North Cape. From there, they round both North Cape and Cape Reinga, the northern tip of Aotearoa, before making a key decision around Pandora Bank. Inside or outside. It is rarely straightforward, and tidal flow can make or break that call.
Once past the top, the fleet commits to the Tasman Sea and heads south past Cape Egmont towards the top of Cook Strait before entering Queen Charlotte Sound, and finishing in the outer sound near Motuara Island. From there they cruise a further 18 nautical miles to Waikawa where they will have a chance to sleep and relax.
For readers tracking the race, this leg is rich in tactical layers. Pandora Bank routing, the tidal gates at the top, positioning off Cape Egmont, and Cook Strait timing will all influence corrected time outcomes. Small decisions mean alot over 480 miles.
The first part of Leg 2 does not look like it will be a pleasant ride for the crews.
Leg 2 opens under mostly fine skies with light southerlies overnight in Mangōnui, 5 to 13 knots and slight 0.5m seas. Conditions build steadily through the morning. Off Cape Reinga, expect southerlies rising to 19 knots with gusts to 25 knots and a 1.8m south west swell. By afternoon down the west coast, winds strengthen further to 20 to 28 knots, gusting above 30 knots near Poutū Peninsula, with seas pushing past 3 metres. Into the evening near Manukau, strong southerlies persist at 23 to 29 knots with gusts to 37 knots and a solid 3 metre sea running. How wide will the crews need to or even want to sail?
We also expect Äkonga to have rejoined the fleet after completing repairs at Marsden Cove. Their return adds another dimension to the contest as the race stretches into true offshore mode.
This is where the Round North Island race will start to feel very real.
After a hard-fought leg, the crews will enjoy an evening dinner and prizegiving hosted by the Mangōnui Cruising Club.
After retiring during Leg 1, Äkonga has “smashed out repairs” overnight, and is currently making haste to Mangōnui to rejoin the fleet and take on Leg 2.
Leg 1
Highline crosses the finish line to complete Leg 1 of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht race. 8 hours and 51 mintues behind the first crew over the line, Explore Racing.
With just one entry, Highline, to complete Leg 1 of the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht race, we thought we’d take a look forwards to the start of Leg 2.
Leg 2, a 476 nautical mile race from Mangōnui to Waikawa (found at the top of the South Island), will be a mass start but only at the discretion of the Race Officer, a 24 hours minimum after 60% of the yachts have finished. Hotdogger being the 16th boat to reach Mangonui as my guide; they arrived at 06.56am Sunday Mar 1 which suggests the race will start no earlier than Monday Mar 2 at 06.57am.
6 hours 8 minutes 39 seconds after Explore Racing completed Leg 1, Hotdogger, the Ross 930 co-skippered by Nigel Bish and Sinisa ‘Sin’ Grujicic, finished the race. Although 16th on overall line honours, they finished first in Division 4. Their corrected time of 15 hours 38 minutes 33 seconds puts them only 29 minutes and 27 seconds ahead of Harri Wren and Peron Pearse’s Ross 930, Start Me Up. This too will be an intriguing battle to watch.

16 hours 11 minutes 42 seconds after the race started in Waitematā Harbour, Motorboat 2 the Elliott 10.50 co-skippered by Alan Quere and Vincent Trinquet provisionally cross the Mangōnui finish line on corrected time. This places them first on line honours and corrected time in Division 2.

In Division 3, Ragnar the Sunfast 3300 co-skippered by Brett Elliott and James Glidden is showing what she’s got out on the race course. Coming in fifth on line overall in Leg 1, 3 hours 44 minutes behind Explore Racing, Ragnar is pushing those in higher divisions — it’s a pleasure to track!
She sits only 17 minutes 45 seconds behind the PHRF overall leader, Motorboat III, though that margin offers little comfort. Indis, the second Sunfast 3300 in the fleet, co skippered by Andrew Benton and Andrew Hall and also racing in Division 3, is just 5 minutes 40 seconds adrift of Ragnar on corrected time.
This will be an gripping contest to follow across the next three legs.

Although Damon Jolliffe and Josh Tucker’s Thompson 1150, Motorboat III, complete the Waitematā-Mangōnui leg 1 hour and 20 minutes after Explore Racing blistering run, they take Leg 1 honours on handicap. On PHRF they finish Leg 1 to Mangōnui first overall and first in Division 1, posting a provisional corrected time of 14 hours 52 minutes 24 seconds. This is just 59 seconds shy of the 14 hours 51 minutes 25 second time set by Motorboat 2 in the 2019 Round New Zealand race.
On provisional elapsed time they stopped the clock at 16 hours 17 minutes 54 seconds. A cracking time in itself.
This is definitely a crew to watch as they tackle the second leg of the race.

Explore Racing, the Elliot 50 co-skippered by William Goodfellow and Jesse Turner, are first to cross the finish time at Mangōnui at a provisional elapsed time of 14 hours 47 minutes and 38 seconds. A result faster than the preceeding three RNIs and one worth checking against the record books. This result places them first on line honours overall and in Division 1.

Explore Racing will cross the Mangōnui finish line in 15 nautical miles estimated to be a little after 11:45pm this evening; with a VMG of 11.4 knots their estimated elapsed time is 13 hours 47 minutes 56 seconds. At this stage in the race it looks like Explore Racing will beat the 2023, 2020 and 2019 (Round New Zealand) leg 1 elapsed times.Motorboat III is nine nautical miles further behind with Vixen Racing another five nautical miles behind. Ragnar and General Lee continue to race neck-and-neck, both looking to arrive just after 2.00am. At this moment it looks as though Ragnar will be slightly in ahead. But this is close racing.
Around thirty minutes back, Indis, Motorboat 2, and High 5 are locked in a tight battle of their own.
On handicap Ragnar is in the lead and will finish with a corrected time estimated at the moment to be 13 hours 10 minutes and 1 second—over an hour ahead of Motorboat II‘s corrected time in 2019 (Round New Zealand)—followed by Motorboat III, and Indis. Vixen Racing and Motorboat 2 is over a little more than half a minute apart on corrected time.
Nine hours into the race, on line honours the top 12 boats have crossed half the distance to Mangōnui Harbour. The top three: Explore Racing, Motorboat III, and Vixen Racing with very close racing between the later two. They are making good time, with Explore Racing currently expected (YB forecasted) to cross the Mangōnui finish line just after 11pm this evening after racing just over 13 hours.On line fifth, sixth and seventh, High 5, General Lee, and Indis are racing neck-to-neck.
On handicap Ragnar is in the lead, followed by Motorboat III, and Indis.
Looking back to the 2023 race, Equilibrium finished the first leg in 25 hours 05 minutes 17 seconds (on line), and 26 hours 10 minutes 01 seconds (on honours).
In 2020, Wired finished the first leg in 16 hours 14 minutes 34 seconds (on line), with Clockwork (now General Lee but with different co-skippers) ahead on handicap with a corrected time of 16 hours 18 minutes 39 seconds.
In the 2019 Round New Zealand Race, Motorboat II completed the leg on an elapsed time of 17 hours 14 minutes 07 seconds and a corrected time of 14 hours 51 minutes 25 seconds.
Gallery of (all, raw and full download) of Boating New Zealand’s photos from the start of the RNI.
Boats are gathering around the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race start line, settling into the conditions and sizing up the competition.
The faces powering the miles in the 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race.

Weather forecast for Leg 1: Devonport Harbour to Mangōnui Harbour
The 2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race starts tomorrow at 10am. The fleet will start at Devonport Harbour, quickly finding their way past the Rangitoto Lighthouse on their starboard, having turned north for Mangōnui Harbour in Doubtless Bay.
Conditions begin relatively light. Early easterlies are forecast at around 7 to 15 knots, building through the morning. Seas will be small at first, with a chance of showers. By early afternoon west of Kawau Island, the easterly strengthens to 12 to 18 knots, gusting over 20 knots.
Through the afternoon and into the evening off Whangārei Heads, winds increase further to 16 to 20 knots, with gusts in the mid twenties. Waves are expected to build to around 1.5 metres. It will not be extreme, but it will be a solid working reach for a two handed fleet managing sail changes, navigation and rest between them.
Overnight the easterly holds steady before easing slightly near Paihia on Sunday morning. Approaching Mangōnui, winds drop back to around 8 to 13 knots with more moderate seas.
Leg 1 looks fast, honest and demanding from the outset.
Final checks
SSANZ indicate that the final race checks have all been ticked off, and skippers briefed.

Event briefing
The 2026 Round North Island Yacht Race fleet gathered at 1000 hours this morning at the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron for the main mandatory briefing, with both co-skippers from each yacht in attendance. The session covered key safety requirements, navigational hazards including fairway marks, and specific instructions for all four legs of the race, which includes stopovers in Mangōnui, Waikawa, and Napier.
The Race Committee also confirmed that additional briefings for Legs 2, 3, and 4 will be held during the respective stopovers. All required documentation, including Category 2 safety certificates and life raft inspection certificates. Crews were reminded of the twice-daily check in schedule at 0700 and 1900 hours and the requirement for all hulls to be cleaned prior to the start.
Skippers farewell function
Both co-skippers attended the official farewell function at 1900 hours on Thursday 26 February 2026 at Westhaven Marina. The event marked the formal send off for the 13th Doyle Sails Round North Island Race, bringing together the 26 boat fleet before the 1,250 nautical mile challenge begins on 28 February in Auckland.
Inspection

2026 Doyle Sails Round North Island Two Handed Yacht Race entries
Division 1
Division 1 – PHRF 0.9500 and above
| Boat name | Sail no. | Shorthanded base | Boat design | Crew |
|---|
Perfect Storm95650.9Thompson 38Ken Ormandy, Lori OrmandyGeneral LeeNZL010.912Bakewell White 37Cameron Thorpe, Tim HolgateMotorboat III285380.922Thompson 1150Damon Jolliffe, Josh TuckerVixen RacingO760.927Verdier Class 40Sharon Ferris Choat, Taylor EdwardsHigh 559550.94Farr 47Bernie Hyde, Thomas HydeExplore RacingK88991.051Elliott 50William Goodfellow, Jesse Turner
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Motorboat III and the call of the Round North Island Yacht Race
Division 2
Division 2 – PHRF 0.8600 to 0.9499
| Boat name | Sail no. | Shorthanded base | Boat design | Crew |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ākonga | 9407 | 0.84 | Dehler 41 | Nick Roberts, Max Livingstone |
| Pipi | 9933 | 0.851 | Pogo 36 | Steve Newcombe, Craig Parker |
| Motorboat II | 641 | 0.859 | Elliott 10.5 | Alan Quere, Vincent Trinquet |
| Catnip | 10141 | 0.867 | Beneteau First 45 | Geoff Thorn, Katie Mathison |
| Kayimai | MH46 | 0.867 | Azuree 46 | Karen Selway, Kevin Smith |
| Higher Ground | K6883 | 0.877 | Ross 10.6 | John Seely, Matthew Wilson |
| Whichway | 1248 | 0.885 | Davidson 52 | Bruce Gault, Craig McMillan |
| Focus | K9160 | 0.887 | Elliott 1350 | Craig Fraser, Rob Croft |
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Division 3
Division 3 – PHRF 0.7900 to 0.8599
| Boat name | Sail no. | Shorthanded base | Boat design | Crew |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indis | 9877 | 0.811 | Sunfast 3300 | Andrew Benton, Andrew Hall |
| Physical Favours | K8976 | 0.818 | Ross | Ryan McCready, Andrew Child |
| Ragnar | 10082 | 0.819 | Sunfast 3300 | Brett Elliott, James Glidden |
| Kokomea | K9619 | 0.821 | Beneteau First 40.7 | Geoff Faulkner, Stu Morgan |
| Niksen | 30040 | 0.824 | Dehler 30 One design | Logan Fraser, Marc Michel |
| Kick | 8349 | 0.836 | Elliott 1050 | Brendan Sands, Ben Roff |
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Division 4
Division 4 – PHRF 0.7899 and below
| Boat name | Sail no. | Shorthanded base | Boat design | Crew |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| L’Avanti | K6515 | 0.735 | Farr 1020 | John Power, Richard Power |
| Start Me Up | K4903 | 0.748 | Ross 930 | Harri Wren, Peron Pearse |
| Hotdogger | K4812 | 0.763 | Ross 930 | Nigel Bish, Sinisa Sin Grujicic |
| C U Later | K8586 | 0.78 | Ross 8m | Ben Sinton, Shaun Grigg |
| Carpe Diem | K8380 | 0.782 | Elliott 1060 | Rowan Smith, Lydia Boyd |
| Highline | 10084 | 0.792 | Dufour 455 Grand Large | Andrew Mackmurdie, Jennifer Haliday |
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