A 2-Year Sailing Itinerary onboard a new Bali catamaran by Trevor Joyce.
Looking at buying a new production-built catamaran and want some tips on saving hundreds of thousands?
Stop dreaming and start sailing! We’re unveiling an extraordinary opportunity – a hand-selected yacht and a bespoke itinerary, revealed by none other than charter mastermind, Trevor Joyce.
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Be in time for a brand new, fully optioned Bali 4.4, coming off the production line in La Rochelle, France, this April, to be delivered to Marmaris in Turkey—the starting point for your mediterranean odyssey to Las Palmas in Spain.
Turkey, Greece, Croatia, Montenegro, Italy, and France will weave a tapestry of cultural existence, culinary delights, and sailing adventures, a cruising ground unmatched in its diversity.

Allow a full season to meander towards the start of the ARC Rally in Las Palmas, before crossing the Atlantic to the Caribbean. Spend the entire tropical winter cruising the endless easterly trade winds across the electric blue Caribbean Sea, letting the Reggae sounds of your Bali’s 6-speaker Hi-Fi system resonate through the passages.
Then, pass through the Panama Canal into the Pacific, charting a course for Tahiti, with the tantalizing chance to visit the Galapagos on the way south.
Few will experience the extraordinary Tuamotu and Society Islands, where the reason for the mutiny on the Bounty will become vividly clear. Leaving Tahiti is not a thing easily done.

The southern hemisphere winter is perfect through this neck of the woods, and Bora Bora will undoubtedly offer the most spectacular harbor entrance you’re ever likely to see. The lagoon around each of the Leeward Islands offers flat, coral, palm-studded motus, where you might expect to stand up in 5 meters of water!
Once you hit 18 degrees south latitude on an easterly heading, simply set your rolling Code Zero and your autopilot and head for Brisbane or Sydney on the same southeasterly trade winds I mentioned earlier.
You can’t miss Tonga, however, where the Vava’u Island group boasts 50 anchorages inside the barrier reef, and you just might find yourself perfectly content with your anchor stuck.

I once met an American there who never finished his Pacific crossing on the way to New Zealand. He didn’t pass Tonga, where he has been ever since.
Provided you take more than two years on this journey, and anything less would be unimaginable, you might get some pleasant surprises when you come to pay the cost of entering Australia. Duty and sales tax will be based on an assessed market value.
You’ll also save about $180,000 in freight and have the trip of a lifetime.
This Bali 4.4 is a rare opportunity, available ex-factory in La Rochelle, France end of March 2025.
The numbers across the board are very appealing.
If you want the adventure of a lifetime, whilst saving some some serious dollars, get in contact with us.
Daniel Howcroft – Yacht Broker
M: +61 (0)451 846 620
E: [email protected]