Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsVolunteers keep sails festival on course

Volunteers keep sails festival on course

Volunteers are the lifeblood of any community run event and more than 125 enthusiastic people joined forces to work at the 2023 Festival of Sails.

The volunteers contributed more than 4000 hours of unpaid work to help the event run smoothly from international race officials to local mums and dads prepared to make sandwiches.

Volunteers from their late teens to their eighties put their hands up to take on a wide range of jobs and responsibilities across the four days of the Geelong regatta.

Festival chairman Paul Buchholz said the volunteers played a critical role in the delivery of a successful event and he was incredibly grateful for their contribution, particularly in this milestone year.

“Quite simply, we couldn’t do it without them,” he said.

“You can’t help but be impressed that so many people are prepared to donate their time to our event, which shines a real spotlight on Geelong and our beautiful waterfront.

“For some, like our race officials, it’s an opportunity to develop and broaden their skill sets, for others it’s a chance to catch up with old mates and have some fun. Either way, we’re always incredibly grateful that they’re here and the contribution that they make.”

Volunteer coordinator Daniella d’Amore said she loved working with the broad and diverse range of volunteers.

“They’re such a terrific bunch of people and despite the challenges of wrangling so many people, it’s incredibly rewarding,” she said.

For race officer Ross Wilson, from Black Rock, the 2023 event marked his 25th year at Festival of Sails.

“My parents always volunteered, and it was just something that seemed to be an important way to give back,” he said.

“For me, coming to this regatta every year is like reconnecting with family and catching up with old mates.

“It is a beautiful part of the world here at Geelong and I’ll be happy to keep volunteering for as long as I can.”

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Revving for mental health

Registrations are now open for a Geelong motorcycle event that encourages conversations about depression and suicide prevention. Black Dog Ride’s ‘One Dayer’ will...

Community calendar

More News

Where love never dies

The ancient Greek myth of Orpheus is a story of love, loss and remembrance. In the original tale, the famous bard of the same name...

Community calendar

Ballroom dance Leopold Hall, 805-809 Bellarine Hwy, Saturday 31 January, 7.30pm-10.30pm, $10 includes supper, music Kevin. Sunday 1 February, 2pm-4.30pm, $5 bring small plate to...

Starray gives bang for buck

The Geely Starray EM-i sounds like something out of an old sci-fi movie. But it’s not and if you think that name is quirky, what...

From the archives

18 years ago 1 February, 2008 Thirty-five Geelong Aborigines will seek compensation after the Rudd Government says sorry to the “stolen generation”, according to Wathaurong Aboriginal...

Local archery legend acknowledged

Leopold’s John Womersley has dedicated his life to the sport of archery. Mr Womersley, 88, was a foundational member and two-time president of local club...

Saeid Nahavandi AO

Distinguished Professor Saeid Nahavandi contributes his knowledge and skills to tertiary education, engineering, robotics, and haptics research and innovation, as well as defence capability...

All for Geelong

Born and bred in Geelong, Michael Betts has never wanted to live and work anywhere else. On Australia Day Mr Betts, 74, was awarded a...

Buttered Loaf bring the funk

For a quarter of a century groove-based jam band Buttered Loaf have been entertaining music lovers across Melbourne. Throughout the early 2000s, Wednesday night was...

Dr Gillian Miles (AM)

For Dr Gillian Miles, the transport and infrastructure sectors present a range of puzzles that she loves to try and solve. The...

Creatives develop Surf Coast

Artists across the Surf Coast Shire can transform ideas into realities and explore new boundaries within their work through the latest Creative Development Grants...