Gill in the OSTAR
Wednesday May 11th 2005, Author: Peta Stuart-Hunt, Location: Transoceanic
Gill is sponsoring two exciting multihull entries in this year’s Original Single Handed Transatlantic Race - better know as the OSTAR - that starts from Plymouth on 29 May.
Ross Hobson from Kirkley, Northumberland is preparing to do battle with the Atlantic again - this time alone. He has been supported by Gill for a number of years and forms an important part of the company’s R&D team, testing prototype products on endurance races such as the OSTAR.
Hobson, a Senior Lecturer and Consultant at Newcastle University, will start as hot favourite to win the Faraday Mill OSTAR, sailing his 43ft trimaran Mollymawk from Plymouth Sound to Newport, Rhode Island, USA.
For Ross Hobson this race is unfinished business. “I was leading the 50ft class in the 2000 OSTAR when the mast came down,” said Ross. “As this will be my last race with Mollymawk before we build a new boat, I'm all out to win.”
Meanwhile, 25 year-old Lia Ditton has caught the imagination of the team at Gill. They were intrigued and impressed by her unusual sailing programme that includes her entry in the OSTAR on the 34ft trimaran Shockwave. For the Race Lia will be wearing Gill’s high performance 5-Dot™ Ocean Racer Smock and Salopettes in conjunction with a full three layer system.
Lia and Shockwave are involved in an extraordinary sailing project that will form the final year of her Sculpture degree at London's Chelsea College of Art. Once they return from the OSTAR, Shockwave will be painted with a five coat system including UV coating and lacquer, the top coat being satin black. The paint is such that whenever waves pass down the hull or it rains, it will streak, revealing and mixing the different layers of paint beneath. After it is painted, Shockwave will be delivered to London where she will be exhibited from the end of August in the huge courtyard outside Chelsea College at its new base next to the Tate Modern on London's South Bank. The display of the boat also coincides with the Turner Prize being held at the Tate Modern.
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