Syd-Hob's 120-year-old boat back better than ever

Maritimo Katwinchar, the oldest boat in Sydney to Hobart history, is back to compete again. (HANDOUT/Andrea Francolini)

The oldest boat in Sydney to Hobart history is heading back to Constitution Dock, and she's better than ever.

Maritimo Katwinchar was built by workers at an English brewery in 1904, using off-cuts of timber from the keg-making process.The first Sydney to Hobart yacht race was still 41 years away.

Measuring 10 metres from bow to stern, Katwinchar took her name from the three daughters of the brewery owner: Katherine, Winifred and Charlotte.

She was purchased and sailed to Australia by Eddie Mossop in 1951, contesting that year's Sydney to Hobart in a fleet of only 14 yachts. There will be 104 this year.

Mossop eventually relocated to Tasmania and sold Katwinchar to Frank Barry-Cotter in 1957, when she became the family's boat.

Bill Barry-Cotter, Frank's son and a highly-respected boat builder, tracked Katwinchar down on Gumtree in 2015 and headed up a team that spent 14,000 man-hours restoring her for a second shot at the Hobart in 2019.

The hard work paid off; Katwinchar placed second in the IRC Division 7, third in the veterans division and first in the grand veterans division.

Now, she returns as a double-hander for her third attempt, co-skippered by 45-time Hobart veteran Michael Spies and Peter Vaicuirgis.

Michael Spies.
Michael Spies addresses the media before skippering First National Real Estate in 2004.

"It is a special boat," Spies told AAP of Katwinchar.

"Not too many people walk past this thing and don't admire it.

"To be nominated as a temporary custodian of it is pretty special. This my 46th Sydney Hobart race and it's one I'll probably look back on with great fondness."

Katwinchar has undergone significant modifications since her last attempt at the Hobart, which she sailed as a ketch - a boat with two masts.

The mizzen mast, the smaller of the two, has since been removed and the mainmast replaced.

Spies built the new carbon fibre mast himself, working almost full-time on Katwinchar since July to prepare her for the Hobart.

Katwinchar has also been kitted out with fresh sails and a new rudder aimed at speeding the boat up.

She is expected to complete the Hobart in between three-and-a-half and four days.

"We've changed the whole thing around to be a competitive two-hander," Spies said.

Spies is cynical of Katwinchar's chances of taking a fairytale win on handicap this year, though.

The contenders are gathering ahead of the Boxing Day start of the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.

Conditions are likely to favour the bigger boats with a downwind start expected before blustery conditions hit the fleet on the first night of sailing.

Katwinchar's sister ship Maritimo 100, skippered by Barry-Cotter, is one of four supermaxis in with a chance of taking both line honours and an overall victory.

"A quality result might elude us just because of the weather," Spies said.

"We really needed a slow start and a fast finish (to win overall). Unfortunately it's looking like a fast start and a slow finish."

But Spies is confident of another strong performance in Katwinchar's division.

"We'll certainly give it our best shot and try for a good, solid place in our division," he said.

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