
Welcome to the 12th Classic Yacht Symposium and Dinner 29th March 2025 Featuring Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, Marie Tabarly, Leo Goolden, Steve Tsuchiya, Claes Hultling, Barry Pickthall and a dozen other speakers!
Helsinki Music Centre and Hilton Helsinki Kalastajantorppa
We are delighted to introduce the 12th edition of the Classic Yacht Symposium. Our theme this year is ’Timeless Winds – Classic yachting around the globe’. The symposium is a tribute to the history, the present and the future of classic sailing. Together we explore classic offshore racing, restorations, designers and classes. We also cover many other current sailing topics with a roster of 15 speakers.
Organised by 12 yacht clubs and the Finnish Sailing and Boating Federation, the Symposium is chaired by:
John Lammerts van Bueren and Samppa Vilkuna.
Our mission is to strengthen the bond between the classic yacht owner and sailors all over the world. Welcome!
As of 18th January, ONLY DINNER TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE, all others are sold out.
Recommended accommodation: Hotel Hilton Kalastajatorppa (Also Symposium dinner venue)
Please book in time. Limited availability for special (-15%) discount accommodation.

Please welcome our 2025 keynotes:

Robin Knox-Johnston – A world of my own
Sir Robin Knox-Johnston made history as the first person to sail single-handed, non-stop around the world, leaving June 4th 1968 and returning 312 days later. He was the only one of nine sailors to complete the Times Golden Globe Race, the groundbreaking solo circumnavigation challenge.
With s/y Suhaili, he embarked on this extraordinary journey, ultimately securing his place in maritime history. His accomplishment marked a new era in solo ocean racing and inspired future generations.
In 1994, Sir Robin and Sir Peter Blake won the Jules Verne Trophy for the fastest circumnavigation aboard a catamaran with a time of 74d 22h 18m. In 2007 at the age of 68, he completed a second solo circumnavigation in his IMOCA 60 yacht Saga Insurance, finishing 4th in the Velux 5 Oceans Race.
Driven by a passion for ocean racing, Sir Robin wants others to experience the thrill and challenge of this sport, noting that there are far more triumphs climbing Mount Everest than rounding Cape Horn.
Among his many accomplishments Sir Robin is the founder of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race and his love of classics is expressed through his long-standing chairmanship of the Yacht Club de Monaco’s Belle Class Jury.

Marie Tabarly – Classics – A state of mind
Marie is an accomplished French professional yacht sailor and daughter of legendary sailor Eric Tabarly. She has a long history of sailing many different yachts from a young age, such as Geronimo, the French trimaran which has broken many records. She primarily sails the 52- year-old Pen Duick VI, a 73 ft ketch built for Eric Tabarly’s Whitbread Round the World Race 1973–1974.
She skippered Pen Duick VI in the Ocean Globe Race 2023-2024, winning the line honours. Prior to the OGR, she raced alongside Louis Duc in the Transat Jacques Vabre.
Earlier, with Pen Duick VI, Marie Tabarly initiated the environmental Elemen’Terre Project, an expedition documenting environmental connections. She collaborated with prominent French artists and environmental thinkers. The journey explored humanity’s relationship with nature through sailing, arts, and outdoor sports, resulting in a TV documentary series.
Away from these headline grabbing achievements, Marie has a great love and respect for classic yachts. She and her mother maintain the original 1898 Pen Duick and Marie has sailed extensively on classics, most notably the 15M Mariska

Steve Tsuchiya – “Racing with majestic urgency: The story of the 1934 America’s Cup and its aftermath
R. Steven Tsuchiya, is a yachting historian, and chair of the America’s Cup Hall of Fame Selection Committee. He is a member of the New York Yacht Club, serving on the Club’s Library, Fine Arts, Communications, and America’s Cup Committees. Steve has contributed to preserving yachting history through exhibits at the Herreshoff Marine Museum and The Sailing Museum. His latest book is the America’s Cup Deed of Gift and Related Documents (Herreshoff Marine Museum, 2024). He is also a member of the Cowan Lake Sailing Association in Wilmington, Ohio, where he races Flying Scot dinghies.

Claes Hultling – From Olympics to classics
Back in 1984 Claes dove off a jetty, struck a rock and broke his neck. Instantly he was paralyzed from the waist down. He realized he would be wheelchair bound for the rest of his life, he quickly figured what to do, 3 days later he married, already a medical doctor, he specialized in spinal injuries and became a world leading specialist professor.
He never gave up sailing his Folkboat strapping his wheelchair to the cockpit coaming. He was instrumental in bringing the 2.4m Class to the Paralympics and competed himself in Sydney. Three years ago, he flew to Tasmania to buy a 1924 Int. 8-Metre and today he sails her in the Swedish archipelago with patients and fellow wheelchair bound friends from all over the world. He’s known as the Stephen Hawking of sailing
and his story is truly inspirational.
He transformed personal tragedy into pioneering medical innovation as he co-founded the Spinalis Foundation and Clinic in Stockholm, revolutionising spinal cord injury rehabilitation.

Barry Pickthall – My favourite photos
Barry Pickthall is an award winning yachting journalist, photographer and author. The former boatbuilder and naval architect has been covering sailing for the past 5 decades from the Olympics to America’s Cup and Round the World Races. He has written 18 books about sailing.
Barry has been covering the biggest names in the sport including America’s Cup icons Dennis Conner, Ted Turner, and Russell Coutts, Sir Ben Ainslie, round the world sailors, Sir Francis Chichester, Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, Sir Chay Blyth and Dame Ellen McCarthur, to Olympic medalists Paul Elvstrom, Rodney Pattisson and Shirley Robertson.

Leo Goolden – Restoring with the help of 500 000 fans
Seven years ago, Leo bought the remains of a famous 1910 cutter named Tally Ho. While restoring her, he documented the journey and developed a strong following, enticing new viewers into the world of classic yacht restoration. Today his community is the largest yachting related community in the world with over 500,000 subscribers and tens of millions of views.
Through the extraordinary quality of the craftsmanship of his team, his philosophy on preservation, his drive for authenticity and the way the work is documented, he set a new standard in the world of classic yachts. The support he gathered on YouTube and beyond made a success of a seemingly impossible restoration.
“Hello, my name is Leo and I am a boatbuilder and a sailor” The line has been opening every Tally Ho video for over 200 episodes. One of them will eventually be about Leo and the Classic Yacht symposium!
Esteemed speakers from 2010-2024: Dawn Riley, Rüdiger Stihl, Evelyn Ansel, Charlotte Hellman, Tapio Lehtinen, Hamish Ross, Juliane Hempel, William Collier, Paul Spooner, Halsey Herreshoff, David Pedrick, Jarkko Jämsen, Alex Thomson, John Lammerts van Bueren, Juan Kouyoumdjian, Oliver Berking, Allan Savolainen, Teemu Kurkela, Heinz Ramm-Schmidt, Antti Herlin, Roger Talermo, Ilkka Suppanen, Jussi Gullichsen, Sinem Kurtbay, SIlja Kanerva, Fred Meyer, Henrik Andersin, Valtteri Uusitalo, Violetta Alvarez, Pelle Petterson, Rudy Jurg, Lars Ström, Oskari Muhonen, Per-Göran Johansson, Donn Costanzo, James Patrick Howaldt, Philipp Skafte-Holm and several dozens of other sailors, designers, builders and enthusiasts.
Media Inquiries: rea.vilkuna@gmail.com
General Inquiries: HSS Office +358 9 633 637, email: hss@helsinkisailing.com
Our Event Partners and Co-Organisers in 2025:
The full program:












