Tag Archives: Sabot

Playing with sailing dinghies at Aqua Marine

After a very windy and wet Easter, I finally managed to get a few boats out for a play on Lake Cootharaba with my daughters. From left to right, the boats are: Sabot (3905), Sabre (1920 but with a spare sail on — 991)), Sabre (1638 — not rigged) and Minnow (1022). Both Sabres are wooden boats and always get attention when they are on the beach.

Playing with sailing dinghies at Aqua Marine

Playing with sailing dinghies at Aqua Marine

Playing with boats on the front lawn of Aqua Marine

I went up to Lake Cootharaba to do some maintenance work around Aqua Marine. The magic winter weather enticed me to pull some of the boats out on the front lawn to do some work on them too. Unfortunately, there was not enough wind to go sailing though.

Playing with boats by Lake Cootharaba at Boreen Point

Learning to sail on Lake Cootharaba

Both my daughters have been participating in the Learn to Sail program at the Lake Cootharaba Sailing Club on Sunday mornings. Practice makes perfect, so I try to take my girls sailing when the weather is suitable.

Today was a perfect day for teaching my daughters to sail on Lake Cootharaba. Just little cats whispers of wind across the lake. There was enough wind to sail; but not enough wind to scare them. This was the middle of winter, so both girls are wearing wet suits.

We launched our Sabot and Minnow at the little beach about 70 metres from the front of Aqua Marine.

Learning to sail on Lake Cootharaba

Launching boats from Aqua Marine — Lake Cootharaba

If you are staying at Aqua Marine and bringing your own boat, following are a few places to launch. We have framed a Camtas Boating and Recreational Guide map of the Noosa River and Lakes (including Lake Cootharaba) and hung it on the wall of Aqua Marine for reference by guests.

Danger! If you use the front lawn of Aqua Marine as a rigging area, be aware that there are powerlines and overhanging trees. We just fit the MG14 and Sabre masts under the powerlines in front of the property! Beware!

Aqua Marine is on the northern side of the Boreen Point township so the launching areas are in relation to the house location.

Sandy beach

A small sandy beach (it does not appear to have a name) that is perfect for launching small sailing dinghies and kayaks is about 70 metres east of Aqua Marine.

The beach is protected by bollards so you can not drive a car down to the beach. The bollard spacing is only 1.6 metres wide, limiting the size of boats that can be launched. Our Sabre, Sabot and Minnow fit through the bollards; our MG14 is too wide. Most catamarans would also be too wide.

Rocks are to the south of the beach and a seam of rocks runs south-east from the point about 20 metres into Lake Cootharaba. Make sure you are beyond the rocks before putting your centreboard down! It is possible to walk your boat in between the two groups of rocks, turn left and hop on your boat without touching any rocks. We tend to walk our boats over the seam of rocks and hop on from there — the water is probably waist deep at that point.

Likewise, when returning to shore, make sure you do not leave your centreboard down and sail right up to the beach! My girls have been taught to turn their boats into the wind and hop out before the seam of rocks.

My daughter preparing to sail her Sabot from the sandy beach near Aqua Marine

Boat ramp

The local concrete boat ramp is about 50 metres west of Aqua Marine. The boat ramp is visible from the deck of Aqua Marine providing hours of pleasure watching the huge variety of craft come and go!

If you have a power boat, a large sailing dinghy or trailer-sailer, the boat ramp is the best place to launch. Many large sailing dinghies and catamarans launch from the dirt ramp area beside the concrete ramp. I have also seen people launch from the boat ramp, then spend the day sailing to and from the sandy beach on the other side of Aqua Marine, returning to the boat ramp to pull the boat out of the water.

The concrete boat ramp is at a very shallow angle. At the end of the boat ramp is a large patch of very soft mud where power boat propellers have chewed up the bottom. You can walk either side of the mud patch and be on relatively firm bottom.

A number of large submerged rocks are to the west of the boat ramp — you will often see pelicans standing on some of them! If you follow the channel markers out from the boat ramp you should be fine, but it does stay shallow for quite some distance from shore!

The Boreen Point boat ramp (in the gap in the trees) is diagonally opposite Aqua Marine and can be seen from the front deck

In front of Aqua Marine

Kayaks can be launched directly in front of Aqua Marine, but you will need to carry them down a rocky bank to the lake. The water is more than deep enough for a kayak and there are no underwater hazards that I am aware of once you leave the shore.

Kayaks can be launched directly in front of Aqua Marine, although they have to be carried down a rocky bank before reaching the water

Main Beach

Main Beach is on the southern side of Boreen Point and is where Lake Cootharaba Sailing Club sails from. Main Beach is about 300 metres from Aqua Marine following the road.

When we are sailing with the sailing club, we often roll our boats on their launching dollies along the road to Main Beach. Powerlines cross the road in a couple of places and there are numerous overhanging trees if you are planning to roll your boat down with the mast already up.

A seam of rocks runs parallel to Main Beach — it is marked at either end with underwater obstruction signs. A cluster of rocks is also to the south of the beach, with a number of submerged rocks also to the north of the channel markers at the northern end of the beach. The best idea is to simply launch your boat and wade past the underwater obstruction signs, boarding in waist deep water from there.

Aqua Marine is available for holiday rental through Boreen Point Real Estate.

Our sailing fleet

Lake Cootharaba provides some of the best flat water sailing conditions in the world. Many guests of Aqua Marine stay at Boreen Point to attend sailing regattas held by Lake Cootharaba Sailing Club.

At the time of the photo, our own sailing fleet consisted of a Minnow, Sabot, MG14 and 125 sailing dinghy. The 125 required work to get it back on the water and a few days after this photo was taken, I gave the 125 to a local resident who was going to repair the boat and get it sailing again.

Our sailing fleet

Please note that these boats are not available for use of guests staying at Aqua Marine.