
As Reinrag2 (left) proved, small can compete with big like Magnitude 80 for
honors in Transpac
44th
Transpacific Yacht Race
Los
Angeles to Honolulu
Starts July 9, 12 and 15, 2007
2,225 nautical miles
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Reinrag2 makes Transpac a winning family affair
Late Sunday night at
the Hawaii Yacht Club that duty included Reinrag2, his brother Tom's
J/125 from
"Al said before the
race, 'My dream would be to present the big trophy to you,' " Tom
Garnier said.
And so it will be.
The little 41-foot boat-that-could upstaged all 73 starters big and
small to win first place overall on corrected handicap time. Al will
hand the Governor of Hawaii trophy to Tom at the awards dinner Friday
night.
"The gods must still
be crazy," Tom said.
Garnier spelled
backwards is Reinrag . . . or vice versa. The 2 means "squared," but
let's not go there. What's important is that even with handicaps aside,
Reinrag2's daily mileage logs late in the race surpassed those of almost
all other boats except Pyewacket and Magnitude 80 twice its size.
Doug Baker's Mag 80,
meanwhile, finished an hour before dawn Monday to clinch overall honors
in Division 1 ahead of Pyewacket. Mag 80's elapsed time was 7 days 19
hours 8 minutes 10 seconds, second only to Pyewacket's 7:01:11:56.
And there was still
considerable action at sea with a second match race between Cal 40s
heating up to the level of the ongoing joust of Transpac 52s. Both were
so tight that in each case the boat behind was ahead of its rival on
corrected time---Steve Calhoun's Cal 40 Psyche over Don Grind's Far Far
and the Morning Light rookies against John Kilroy Jr.'s Samba Pa Ti
pros. The TP52s should finish around midnight Wednesday, the Cal 40s the
next day.
Baker knew his boat
was a longshot to beat Pyewacket boat for boat and was pleased with
winning Division 1 overall. On handicap, he beat Pyewacket by almost
eight hours after following his rival's track like a determined hound
dog most of the way.
"They're faster," he
said. "It was a ratings game for us."
But, Baker added,
his navigator, Ernie Richau, had to put Mag 80 in position to compete on
those terms and did so at the start by taking the Andrews 80 north of
Pyewacket, which soon went north to cover Mag 80 and play the opponent's
game.
"You gotta give our
navigator a lot of credit," Baker said.
Frank Easterbrook's
Ladd 73 Ariadne from
"It gave me chills
when we crossed the finish line," Easterbrook said. "And when we started
the race, I was so overwhelmed with being a part of this race I almost
cried. That’s what this race means to me.”
Reinrag2 started
July 12 in Division 4, three days ahead of the biggest boats, and caught
the breeze that blessed the middle starters. Its elapsed time was 10
days 11 hours 51 minutes 35 seconds, reduced by a handicap allowance
3:22:20:02 for a corrected time of 6:13:31:33, comfortably secure for
first place even with the great majority of boats still at sea.
The trophy for
overall stands alongside the Barn Door (fastest elapsed time by a
monohull) as Transpac's two most prized awards---even bigger, some of
the small-boat owners would say, because they have no hope of outsailing
the Pyewackets with their outsized muscle and professional crews.
So how did Reinrag2
pull it off?
Five of the six crew
were adult Garnier family members: skipper Tom Garnier, Al's sons Kevin
and Darren Garnier, Kevin's wife Lashawna, Tom and Al's nephew, Jared
Lathrop, and Joby Easton, longtime friend and employee of Tom.
"But we aren't
amateurs," Tom said. "We've been sailing a while. We have five super
helmsmen on board."
"Six," a crew member
interjected. "He isn't counting himself."
With squirrelly
conditions prevailing, early strategy was all over the map. Reinrag2
chose to go south.
"Last time we had no
wind," Tom Garnier said. "This time we really had to find the wind. We
never dropped below 10 knots [in boat speed], and coming in through the
channel to finish we hit 20 knots, surfing. This is just a big Laser,
and you have to put the biggest sail up."
But despite his
brother's dream, Tom had no illusions of winning overall.
"Hell, no," he said.
"We didn't pay attention to that stuff. We just wanted to sail our own
race and accelerate to the finish. We pushed real hard the last third of
the race, and then we could see it coming."
Anna Katarina, John
Otterson's Beneteau First 47.4 from La Jolla competing in Aloha A
division, became the fifth boat to retire Monday and was reported to be
motoring the last 1,000 miles to
Transblogs from the boats
On the Edge of
Destiny (Sean Doyle):
There hasn't been much to report lately except the frustrating shifts of
wind speed from less than 10 knots to 20+ and back again. Luckily, the
breeze is starting to be more consistent at around 19-20 knots. Over the
last couple of days, we have made some good miles and our standing has
gone up some, but the boats behind us in our division are not far back.
We saw the most wind we have seen all trip last night with a gust up to
28.8 knots, not much but we are hoping for more in the Molokai Channel.
Ted [White] still holds the boat speed record at 18.2 knots courtesy of
the 22-28 knots steady we had for over an hour last night. Less than 550
miles to go now, and it looks like we will be getting in Tuesday
sometime."
Locomotion:
Our water
situation remains closely monitored, and we are going to have to use the
emergency water and even the life raft water to make it to Thursday. Not
sure what we do if the race extends to Friday. Go without, I suppose. On
a cheerier note, we've witnessed some very nice rainbows as weak squalls
pass by to the south and north of us, but never over us, delivering much
desired rain.
Pegasus 101 (
Tango:
Having completed our morning devotions (it is Sunday and Mike is an
ex-altar boy), we got the standings this AM and they are not as bad as
we expected. We are still in the doublehanded race, probably for second
[Ed.—Actually, currently first]. We are going to put our best
"aggressive sailing" effort out for these last couple of days to see if
we can hold our position. We had to destroy our spinnaker net yesterday
to get the sail off the headstay, so we will endeavor to make a new one.
We both feel like we have started a new workout program and are sore in
places we didn't know we had muscles. With luck, it could still be an
early Thursday finish.
Pyewacket (Roy Pat Disney):
(After
Sunday's finish at 11:11 a.m.) I've done this race 17 times and I've
finished in daylight only four times.
The
Transpacific Yacht Club has joined with Casio Computer Co., Ltd., in a
sponsorship agreement to make the company's Oceanus watch the official
timekeeper of the 44th biennial race. The Oceanus is a solar-powered
chronograph watch with
a time signal-calibration function developed by making full use of
Casio's advanced electronic technologies.
News and product information:
http://world.casio.com/
Transpac supporters also include the Long Beach Sea Festival 2007,
Archived press releases:
http://www.underthesunphotos.com/Press%20Releases/PR-index.htm
More
information:
www.transpacificyc.org
Transpac 2007 standings
(By
corrected handicap time. ORR rating allowances in parentheses in
days:hours:minutes:seconds based on handicap distance of 2,300 n.m.;
subtract time allowance from actual final elapsed time to determine
corrected handicap time)
(positions at 6 a.m. PDT Monday)
Division 1 (Started July 15)
1. Magnitude 80
(Andrews 80), Doug Baker,
2. Pyewacket (Reichel/Pugh
90),
3. Peligroso (Kernan
70), Mike
4. Rosebud (STP 65),
Roger Sturgeon,
5. Medicine Man
(Andrews 63),
Division 2 (Started
July 15)
1. Holua (
2. Morning Light
(Transpac 52), Jeremy Wilmot,
3. Skylark (
4. Samba Pa Ti
(Transpac 52), John Kilroy Jr.,
5.
Hugo Boss (Volvo 60), Andy Tourell,
6. DH-Pegasus 101
(Open 50),
7.
8. Lucky (Transpac
52), Bryon Ehrhart, Chicago (2:05:26:28), 805.
9. Trader (Transpac
52), Fred Detwiler,
Division 3 (Started
July 15)
1. Denali (Nelson/Marek
70), William McKinley,
2. It's OK (Andrews
50), Tres Gordo Sailing,
3. Cheetah (ULDB 70),
Chris Slagerman,
4. Ragtime (Spencer
65), Chris Welsh,
5. Pendragon IV
(Davidson 52), John MacLaurin,
6. Locomotion
(Andrews 45), Ed Feo,
7.
Bengal 7 (Ohashi 46), Yoshihiko Murase,
8. Yumehyotan
(Nelson/Marek 68), Yasuo Sano,
Division 4
(Started July 12)
1. Reinrag2 (J/125),
Tom Garnier,
2. Cipango (Andrews
56), Bob & Rob Barton,
3. Verizon Wireless
(ex-Stealth Chicken; Perry 56), Timothy Beatty, Rancho
4. Ruahatú (Concordia
47), Ricardo Brockmann,
5. Raincloud (J/48),
Lorenzo Berho
6. Bolt (Nelson/Marek
55), Craig Reynolds,
RETIRED ---Lucky Dog
(J/125), Colin Shanner,
RETIRED---Delicate
Balance (Andrews 56), DBB Transpac LLC,
Division 50/52
(Started July 12)
1. Kokopelli 2 (
2. Horizon (
3. Tachyon III (
4. Passion (
5.
6. Hula Girl (
7. Stags' Leap
Winery (ex-Chasch Mer;
8. Adrenalin (
9. Relentless (
Division 5 (Started
July 12)
1. Rancho Deluxe
(Swan 45), Mike Diepenbrock,
2. Tower (Lidgard
45), Doug Grant,
3. On the Edge of
Destiny (1D35), Sean Doyle,
4. Paddy Wagon (Ross
40), Richard Mainland,
5. Recidivist
(Schumacher 39), Ken Olcott,
6. DH-Tango (J/133),
Michael Abraham/Phillip Rowe,
7.
8. DH-Narrow Escape
(Fast 40), Allen Lehman Sr. and Jr.,
9. Uncontrollable
Urge (
Division 6 (Started
July 9)
1. Psyche (
2. Far Far (
3. Peregrine (Hobie
33), Simon Garland,
4. Inspired
Environments (Beneteau First 40.7), Timothy Ballard,
5. DH-Brilliant
(J/100), Tim Fuller/Erik Shampain,
6.
7.
Brown Sugar (Express 37), Steve Brown,
8. DH-X Dream
(X-119), Steen Moller/Bob MacDonald,
9. Shanti (Olson
911S), Jon Eberly,
Aloha A
(Started July 9)
1.
Ariadne (Ladd 73), Frank Easterbrook,
2.
Between the Sheets (Jeanneau 52), Ross Pearlman, Marina del Rey
(5:12:56:15), 171.
3.
Windswept (Sean 57), Maxwell Phelps,
5. Enchilado (Jeanneau
54), Cesar de Saracho,
6. Ho'okolohe (Farr
58), Alyson and Cecil Rossi,
7. Alsumar (S&S 70),
Bill and Ted Davis,
8. Anna Katarina
(First 47.7), John Otterson,
Aloha B (Started July
9)
1. Cirrus (Standfast
40), William D. Myers,
2. Lady Liberty
(Catalina 36), John Wallner,
3. Traveler (North
Wind 47), Michael Lawler,
4. Mysteré (Swan 42),
Jorge Morales, Dana Point,
RETIRED---Ginny
(Calkins 50), Chris Calkins/Norm Reynolds,
RETIRED--Gaviota (Cal
2-46), Jim Partridge,
.
DH-Doublehanded.
Multihull
LoeReal (Jeanneau 60
trimaran), H.L. Enloe,
The Minnow (Catana 52
catamaran), Bob and Mike Webster,
Complete position
reports:
www.transpacificyc.org
COMMODORE
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Reinrag2
crew one happy family
Ariadne
first Aloha boat to finish
Cirrus:
click to check out the bathing suit edition of the blog
A
late-night finish for Cipango
Click to
visit websites
Official
timekeeper of Transpac 2007
Shoreline YC
lead mainland host
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