May 08, 2025

Hailing from Townsville where they both worked as successful Vet Surgeons, John and SallyAnne fostered a love of sailing at Townsville Yacht Club. Like many sailors heading into their golden retirement years, they planned an 18 month trip to the Kimberley and have not returned, 19 years on!

Meet the Potters-01

John & SallyAnne Potter

Learning on a 24” racing boat in Townsville, they progressed to a 36” cruiser and upgraded to a new 40” Beneteau 393 trucked into and commissioned in Townsville ready for their epic retirement journey in 2004. Practicing for their adventure with a cruise to Lizard Island and then South to Raby Bay, it was in early 2006 right here in RQYS, when John and SallyAnn plucked up the courage to embark on the Indonesian Rally.

Back in those days the sailing community largely got its information from people on the circuits or magazine’s like Cruising Helmsman. And so, registering from an internet café in Hervey Bay, they set of in 2006 with a revised18 month plan – to get to South East Asia for the season and back again. The family home was sold and a deposit placed on a

new apartment in Townsville which was, thankfully, never built as the couple have not looked back.

Based in Langkawi for over six years, the couple covered some interesting ground including the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal, Phuket, Philippines and Borneo before heading East across the equatorial North Pacific – against the common direction of travel. Life was easier than expected for the Potters and they saw no rush to get back to Australia. Their adventures included plenty of land travel in each port and they soon fell in love with the region.

As with all cruisers, the Potters decided they needed a larger boat and made a deal to trade their 40” boat for their current boat. “Capall Mara” was collected from Spain against their initial instincts – the price difference, due to tax savings, being so impressive that as John says, “they couldn’t afford not to do it”.

Christening of the “Capall Mara” in Spain

After commissioning their current boat in Spain, they enjoyed a few seasons in Turkey, Greece and Croatia to get to know their new home prior to the inevitable Atlantic Crossing with the Arc Plus Rally which took them to the Canary Islands to Cape Verde and then the Caribbean. Joining the rally was an ideal way to refresh their knowledge on safety and ensure the boat was kitted up correctly, while the trip itself meant they were backed by a group of likeminded sailors during the crossing.

With only one event memorable, for the wrong reasons, over the course of their travels SallyAnne feels their risk-avoidant nature has served them well. It occurred during a trip from Terengganu in Malaysia to Miri in Borneo with John gravely weak from a bout of Chikungunya virus, similar to Dengi Fever, after a ten day stay in hospital. SallyAnne was keen to push on with the 723nm journey so long as John could stay on his watch during the night. Famous last words!

Unfortunately, while passing though the South China Sea they had a close encounter in an oil field. Although these fields are well lit and appear on RADAR, a gas-loading terminal was hidden on the display by a bad squall in the night. SallyAnne had to get them through the toughest hours of her sailing career alone, while John was ill on the floor of the cockpit doing his best to encourage SallyAnn through the worst of it and through repairing of damage to the boat.

Nowadays, the Potters take their time to ensure they only travel in good conditions and have taken to politely refusing taking friends aboard, to remove the stress of travelling under duress. Weather routers have also become an invaluable tool for big passages to perfect their routes.

Bruce Buckley is one such person. Based in WA, he is a sailor with a PHD in Meteorology who guides route to avoid the worst and to let them know what to expect ahead. On one trip to NZ, he charted a course through five thunder storms. On another from NZ, he was quick to correct their course when they thought they knew better and tried to cut a corner, only narrowly missing a nasty squall. The Potters have seen the impacts of global warming in action and wouldn’t consider a long passage without the support of a weather router for such uncertainty.

The impact of climate change has been most visible to them in Micronesia where they have witnessed firsthand houses which now sit in the ocean below the water level. The matriarch of one village, Mary, noted to SallyAnne that she can no longer grow underground vegetables such as cassava on her land due to the rising water table bringing brackish water to her garden. That was over ten years ago, so SallyAnne wonders how they are coping now.

Also noticeably changed, the Potters have observed the younger sailing community and their impatience to learn from others rather than from experience. With the myriad of YouTube-ers taking up sailing and relying on older sailors for quick solutions, they worry about the safety of the younger set. That said, they are more than happy to pay forward the support that was once shown to them in the same position.

Covid has also impacted the way sailors interact at port, which means some folk are perhaps not quite as friendly as they once might have been. “Evening Sundowners” died away during this time and were replaced with three days of isolation for new arrivals to an anchorage, bleaching of everything that came aboard after going ashore for shopping and a “dry” environment in Tahiti meant they were down to their last beer after being forced to stay put for 13 weeks with only one other boat in sight.

The self-named “Twin Palms Yacht Club” in Raroia, Tuamotus French Polynesia

Avid divers, the Potters reckon that people who are happiest in the world could well be those from Vanuatu, Fiji, Thailand (off the tourist track) and Malaysian Borneo, while the prickliest could be officials from Indonesia.

Chuuk in The Federated State of Micronesia stands out as perhaps be the least welcoming, if you happen to come by the “Dragon Lady”. Enter at your own risk!

They were most surprised by the stunning beauty and simplicity of Raja Ampat in eastern Indonesia and underwhelmed by the Caribbean – perhaps, muse the Potters, not only because of the average diving but because of a perceived resentment toward them as “wealthy colonists”.

Planning to head off again to SE Asia after some life admin here in Brisbane, they hope to spend some quality time back home in Townsville before taking them on where the wind blows. They may even finally make it to the Kimberley after all.

Make sure to say a warm hello to John and SallyAnne in berth J43 while they are staying with us at RQYS

Related Articles

December 18, 2025
December 18, 2025