Events and attractions The March
Labour Day weekend witnesses the Marley Point Overnight Yacht Race which is the longest overnight inland yacht race in the world. It begins near Sale and concludes at
Paynesville, some 60 km away.
Lake Guthridge is a low lying
retention basin in the city, which serves as an ornamental lake and features a park for children,
barbecues, and a walking trail around the lake and car parking facilities. Prior to refurbishment in the mid-1990s Lake Guthridge suffered a blue-green algae problem that resulted in widespread fish mortality until local joggers and nearby residents complained of the associated stench causing council to act. Lake Guthridge has never been used as a food source. The Sale Canal connects to other local rivers and lakes, leading eventually to
Lakes Entrance, an oceanside tourist resort situated near a managed, naturally occurring channel connecting the
Gippsland Lakes to
Bass Strait. Once steam boats and ocean-going craft were able to journey from Lakes Entrance to Sale, arriving at the docks at Sale to ferry passengers and goods from Eastern Victoria, although its success in such a role was short lived. In recent years, a grassroots effort helped to persuade the local council to invest in restoration of the foreshore and to protect against erosion. Prior to the rise of
Common Carp as the predominant fish species due to nutrient overload from agricultural runoff, Sale Canal featured pristine waters and native fish stocks. The
Sale Regatta is run yearly on a long straight section of the canal headed towards
Longford. Visitors to Sale are usually unaware of the Canal, including its restoration, due to roadside views of it being blocked by the former
Esso corporation headquarters, half of which is commercially let office space and the other half having been re-developed into a multimillion-dollar Library and Art Gallery. Sale is home to the
Gippsland Art Gallery, a major Victorian public gallery. The gallery presents a diverse exhibition program of contemporary, modern and historical exhibitions, with a focus on the landscape of South Eastern Australia. The gallery holds a collection of nearly 1,000 artworks, with a small selection on permanent view. A fishing contest is held at Lake Guthridge every Easter and the Sale Music Festival at Gippsland Grammar School in June. The Sale Art Exhibition is held over August and September, while the Sale show falls in October. As a tribute to the late
King George V, an elm-lined section of the Princes Highway is named
King George V Avenue. On 30 May 2009, Sale hosted
Triple J's One Night Stand at the Sale Football Ground. Sale also has a strong underground music scene; events are held every few months and attract scores of young people. The John Leslie Theatre (The Wedge) is the primary place to view live theatre, ballet and music, but also host conferences and presentations. Large events like the local Carols by Candlelight or Shakespearean performances are often performed outdoors at Fauna Park. Every Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, the Gippsland Armed Forces Museum is open, featuring local military and significant history and artifacts. In recent times it has moved from its original location on Punt Lane to a bigger building at West Sale Airfield, after the original building was purchased for development works. The museum pays homage to the
13th Australian Light Horse Regiment, among others.
Sports Australian rules football,
soccer,
basketball and
cricket are the most popular sports in Sale. The Gippsland Regional Sports Complex hosts many other sports including basketball,
Association rules football, volleyball, badminton, table tennis, indoor soccer, aerobics, group fitness and gym. The city has two
Australian rules football teams,
Sale, competing in the
Gippsland Football League and Sale City, who compete in the
North Gippsland Football League. Sale was one of pioneering centres of
soccer in Gippsland, with a rich history dating back to 1925, where the club played in the North Gippsland Soccer Association (alongside
Yallourn SC and clubs from
Maffra,
Glenmaggie and Nambrok)., with a league formed in 1926. The
RAAF Base East Sale also later competed in the LVSL.
Sale United currently plays in the
Latrobe Valley Soccer League and was crowned as league champions in 1980, as well as Battle of Britain Cup champions in 1955. The club was also the home of former
National Soccer League star
Marcus Stergiopoulos. It is home to the Sale Sonics, a representative basketball team that competes in the Country Basketball League and is renowned for developing many elite
Australian rules football and
National Basketball League players including
Jason Gram,
Scott Pendlebury,
Dylan McLaren and
Rhys Carter . The city is the home to two
field hockey clubs in the
East Gippsland Hockey Association. The Sale Hockey Club fields teams in juniors mixed under 13s, under 15s, and under 18s along with two women's teams, the Sale Cygnets and the Sale Swans, along with one open team. The Wurruk Greyhounds are the Sale district's second hockey team, located in the satellite town
Wurruk. Sale has a
horse racing club, the Sale Turf Club, which schedules around 21 race meetings a year including the Sale Cup meeting in October. The Sale Greyhound Racing Club holds regular
greyhound racing meetings at the Sale Showgrounds. The Showgrounds hosted the first meeting on 6 February 1936 with newer tracks built in 1963 and 1982. Golfers play at the course of the Sale Golf Club on Longford–Rosedale Road in neighbouring
Longford. Sale is also home to a baseball club whose baseball diamonds are located at Stephenson Park. There are both junior and senior teams competing in the Latrobe Valley Baseball Association.
Religion Several Churches serve the Sale community including
Catholic,
Anglican,
FIEC,
Presbyterian, and
Uniting. According to the 2021 census, the most common responses for religion in Sale (Urban Centres and Localities) were no religion 38.8%, Catholic 20.5%, Anglican 13.7%, Uniting Church 3.3%, and Unstated 6.9%. Overall, in 2016, 46.6% of the population nominated a religion, and 45.8% said they had no religion, compared with 43.8% and 45.7% respectively for
Wellington Shire. ==Media==