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Sports Page 
 
Golf  
 
For Golf enthusiasts, Churston golf course is a short car journey away and there are a number of municipal courses in Torbay and surrounding areas.  
 
Laid on a long strip of typical downland turf that stretches towards the cliffs at Brixham, Churston is undulating in character with plenty of natural features. The par 3 first is a testing 241 yards and can really set the seal on your round before you have even started!  
 
Clubhouse with excellent facilities, including a snooker room and splendid views over Torbay. The course itself has two really long holes of 557 and 516 yards, so even the tigers will find that there is plenty of scope for good, honest hard hitting. Most of the par four holes are well within the two shot distance for the average player. 
Sailing  
 
Paignton has a Sailing Club which has fleets of Fireballs, Lasers, Toppers, Albacores, and Laser 2000 and 4000 plus a variety of craft in the handicap fleet. Each year the Club runs a couple of weekend open events and the national championship of a major association.  
 
The Club is also host to Paignton Regatta and provides a summer and winter race programmes for people who enjoy getting out on the water and indulging in a bit of friendly competition.  
 
Racing takes place in the bay usually no more than a mile or so from the harbour on Sunday mornings and on Wednesday evenings (during the summer months). In addition there are special interest races such as the Orestone and Round the Bay race and those during the August Regatta season.  
 
Torbay, which hosted the sailing for the 1948 Olympic Games, is a superb sailing centre. It is almost tideless, sheltered from prevailing WesterliesRYA Recognised and blessed with its own sunny micro-climate.  
 
If you are without a boat you can hire one of the Club's toppers, Picos, Laser or the new RS Vision for a few pounds.  
 
The Club is RYA recognised and runs a variety of courses for all levels from beginner to the advanced sailor.  
 
The harbour was established in the 18th Century, some 500 years before Queen Victoria’s accession to the throne. The local Council has managed the harbour since 1935. Today the harbour remains a hive of activity, especially during the summer months and a vast range of different users enjoy the benefits of this unassuming maritime gem.  
 
The Harbour dries out at low tide and is well known for having an unconventional fairway approach. Unlike the majority of harbours in Great Britain the approach to Paignton is made on the port side of the fairway and not the starboard side. This unusual and interesting feature is marked by a unique looking seasonal buoy and provides for a much safer harbour approach.  
 
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