Chris Hobbs Sails to Victory Against all Odds

Story by Mathew Channer

Photos by Christian Bonin

Christopher Hobbs was the last person he thought should be competing in the J80 North American Championship (NAs) in September 2024, even if his teammates disagreed. Despite placing 13th and being the top Canadian boat in the J80 World Championship at Rhode Island in 2022, a series of life challenges had kept Hobbs off the water for two years.

The J80 North American Championship is a 9-race regatta in which sailors from Canada and the US compete for overall victory. It’s highly competitive, and Hobbs was considered a top Canadian contender. But six weeks before the event began at the National Yacht Club, Toronto, his J80 sailboat, Lifted, which his teammates were expecting to race on, was still sitting in his driveway with mould on its hull.

And things were about to get worse.

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this article FREE in the digital version of Canadian Boating June 2025


Related Articles


Nimbus 365 Coupe – A real long-stay cruising boat for exploring

By Andy Adams

There is no shortage of fun and exciting new boat designs hitting the market, but for the last few years these have been mainly outboard-powered day boats. Some are day cruisers; some are centre console fishing boats or designed for tow sports. A new live-aboard cabin boat has become a rare item these days.

So when I heard that Pride Marine in Orillia, Ontario, had a Nimbus 365 Coupe in the water, I jumped at the chance to get out on it.

Read More


Destinations

Tahiti—Updates from Paradise

By Zuzana Prochaska

I’ve been to Tahiti seven times—six on charter and once as crew for a couple of yachties. Over the 25 years that I’ve been visiting, it’s changed dramatically. Yet, inexplicably, it has also stayed the same.

Lounging on the flybridge of our Sunsail 454, I had time to think about this dichotomy as I toasted the nighttime skies of Bora Bora and specifically the Southern Cross, a constellation that never fails to hypnotize. As the Crosby, Stills & Nash (1982) tune reminds us:

…you understand now why you came this way.

Read More