
44th
Transpacific Yacht Race
Los
Angeles to Honolulu
Starts July 9, 12 and 15, 2007
2,225 nautical miles
A second
century of racing across the Pacific
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"It was wonderful
and beautiful," he exclaimed after sailing his 28-year-old Stag's Leap
Winery---nee Chasch Mer, the first Santa Cruz 50 built---into his
hometown Ala Wai Yacht Harbor before dawn Tuesday, the seventh of nine
boats in the SC 50/52 division but 11th overall among the 73 starters on
corrected handicap time---and unsurpassed in joy.
Also Tuesday, Mike
Diepenbrock's Rancho Deluxe, a dark blue Swan 45 from
By a quirk of
timing, Tower was listed in first place after Tuesday morning's 6 a.m.
PDT roll call, about the same time Rancho Deluxe was finishing. The Swan
owed Tower about 16 1/2 minutes but finished more than three hours in
front.
"We had a great time
and walked off the boat as better friends," Grant said. "Everybody put
in a lot of hard work."
An added note: "This
boat used to live here when Don Clothier owned it," Grant said.
Roy E. Disney's
94-foot winged wonder Pyewacket had won the Barn Door for fastest
elapsed time two days earlier in an hour over seven days, followed by
Tom Garnier's J/125 Reinrag2 claiming overall honors about 10 1/2 hours
later. Bob and Rob Barton's Andrews 56
Then came the Santa
Cruz armada like grandiose ghost ships from the past, kicking butt as
they did in their good old days and ranking third through eighth
overall. Chip Megeath's SC52 Kokopelli 2 from
Tuesday's finishes
were relatively laid back, which fits Black's style, anyway.
"I'm not a sailor,"
he said after completing his fifth Transpac. "One day I'd like to be.
I'm an old-car guy. The boat's a dream, an old classic."
Among boats still at
sea, the Transpac 52 match between the young Morning Light team and John
Kilroy Jr.'s Samba Pa Ti turned weird. A questionable morning position
report relayed from Samba Pa Ti by another boat indicated that the
latter had broken away on a deep dive south in the past 24 hours and
sailed 249 miles at 10.4 knots to Morning Light's 201 at 8.4 knots---but
lost 33 miles in distance to the finish, now 499 to 530 in ML's favor.
That would place the
boats about 165 miles apart on the course with Samba Pa Ti due east of
Black said the
Thursday, July 12 start was so favored for the middle fleet, as against
the first starters July 9 and the big boats July 15, that Stag's Leap
Winery was able to hoist a spinnaker after only 24 hours and 15 minutes,
about half the normal time leaving the
"I have never raised
a kite that soon," Black said. "Every day was absolutely beautiful. The
water was in our direction; the wind was in our direction."
The youngest crew
ever to sail Transpac---five young men averaging 19.8 years---were
expected to bring On the Edge of Destiny into a hometown welcome at
about dawn Wednesday. They're running third to Rancho Deluxe and Tower
in Division 3.
The Cal 40 fight
between Don Grind's Far Far and Steve Calhoun's Psyche---only three
miles apart Tuesday---was going down to a midnight finish Tuesday.
Transblogs from the boats
Cirrus
(Lindsey Austin): I
was on the helm [when] bam,
the chute fell in the water. It seemed the halyard had busted. I called
down below to get the crew on deck . . . turned to see The Minnow (Mike Webster): We finished our work with the sextant today. A few days ago we agreed that Bob would do the calculations if I did something else. Luckily, I forgot what I agreed to do. In any case Bob finished the calculations tonight. One of them was within 10 miles of our actual GPS position.
Denali
(Bill McKinley):
Aloha to Michael and
Denyse Rey, our welcoming host committee once we hit
Psyche
(Steve Calhoun):
The
wind died to the usual 10 knots [and] Far Far started to move out on us,
but we could see her clear as day, meaning she couldn't be more than 3
miles from us. This means we are officially ahead of Far Far on
corrected time. First in class, and 22nd in fleet. Wooohoooooo!!!!!
Then, after roll
call the shift we expected tonight started happening, so we jibed to
port tack, diverging from Far Far. Her sail sank below the horizon a
scant hour later. I must admit to some separation anxiety. Now it is
normally not a good idea to leave our competition, whom we think we are
beating, out on a flyer that might see them pick up an advantageous
private wind that could slide them right past us. But three things made
us choose to do this. First, it is the closest jibe to the course home,
by 10 degrees. Second, the wind is light, and we don't dominate Far Far
in these conditions. Staying with her in these conditions might just
backfire. Third, there is usually an intensified trade wind as we make
landfall on the
Locomotion:
Considering our
lot in the race, spirits on board remain upbeat. Clear skies last night
allowed for our best view of the incredible stars that are visible in
mid-Pacific, far away from mankind's interfering light sources.
Noticeably fewer flying fish than normal due to the calm seas. They seem
to need bumpy conditions to get air, and Lordy knows there ain't no
bumps on this mill pond today. Moving onto more sobering matters, our
water supplies are dwindling. We are cautiously optimistic that with a
little further tightening of rations (down to a little over a quart per
man per day), we should be able to make it four more days. This would
correspond with a mid-day arrival Friday. If the slow going does not
improve, we have some decisions to make regarding outside assistance,
since further rationing (to less than a quart a day) doesn't make sense
physiologically. Based on our current calculations, if we can average 7K
or better from our current location to the finish, we should be able to
both attend the trophy banquet Friday evening and not run out of water.
We are racing the "trophy banquet" clock, more than our class
competitors, at this juncture.
Pegasus 101
(Philippe Kahn):
This is the best sailing that I have ever done. It's like crossing an
ocean on a 505 [skiff]. The boat is that nimble and that "on the edge,"
and with the two of us it's exactly the same dynamics as a 505 or a 470
crew. The sails are a bit bigger. What is remarkable is that we are
pacing a fleet of fully crewed racers.
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. Place it total fleet in parentheses. All times
by days:hours:minutes:seconds.
ORR rating allowances in parentheses; subtract time allowance
from actual final elapsed time to determine corrected handicap time)
(positions at 6 a.m. PDT Tuesday)
Division 1 (Started July 15)
1. Magnitude 80
(Andrews 80), Doug Baker,
2. Pyewacket (Reichel/Pugh
90),
3. Rosebud (STP 65),
Roger Sturgeon,
4. Peligroso (Kernan
70), Mike
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. DH-Pegasus 101
(Open 50),
6.
7. Lucky (Transpac
52), Bryon Ehrhart, Chicago (2:05:26:28), 633.
8. Trader (Transpac
52), Fred Detwiler,
9. Hugo Boss (Volvo
60), Andy Tourell,
Division 3 (Started
July 15)
1. Denali (Nelson/Marek
70), William McKinley,
2. It's OK (Andrews
50), Tres Gordo Sailing,
3. Pendragon IV
(Davidson 52), John MacLaurin,
4. Cheetah (ULDB 70),
Chris Slagerman,
5. Ragtime (Spencer
65), Chris Welsh,
6. Bengal 7 (Ohashi
46), Yoshihiko Murase,
7. Locomotion
(Andrews 45), Ed Feo,
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. Tower (Lidgard
45), Doug Grant,
2. Rancho Deluxe
(Swan 45), Mike Diepenbrock,
3. On the Edge of
Destiny (1D35), Sean Doyle,
4. Recidivist
(Schumacher 39), Ken Olcott,
5.
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. Brown Sugar
(Express 37), Steve Brown,
7.
8. DH-X Dream
(X-119), Steen Moller/Bob MacDonald,
9. Shanti (Olson
911S), Jon Eberly,
Aloha A
(Started July 9)
1. Between the Sheets
(Jeanneau 52), Ross Pearlman, Marina del Rey (5:12:56:15), ET
14:16:00:06; CT 9:01:03:51 (28).
2. Ariadne (Ladd 73),
Frank Easterbrook,
3. French Kiss (Beneteau
50), Bryan Daniels,
4. 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
(310) 600-0158
ENTRIES CHAIRMAN
(831) 476-9639
PRESS OFFICER
(310) 835-2526
Cell (310) 766-6547
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Stag
Leap skipper Gib Black celebrates
a 'wonderful' race with Jackie and navigator Mark Maglin
Rancho
Deluxe (r.) and Tower finished almost this close in Div. 5
A lei
for Tower skipper Doug Grant
Calling
home to from
Click to
visit websites
Official
timekeeper of Transpac 2007
Shoreline YC lead mainland
host
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