
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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Psyche,
Over a period of 24
hours Steve Calhoun's Psyche won a battle of Cal 40s, and a bold move by
John Kilroy Jr.'s Samba Pa Ti apparently put Morning Light's rival
Transpac 52 deep in arrears with only a day's sailing to go Wednesday.
Meantime,
Hawaii-based On the Edge of Destiny, sailed by five young men comprising
the youngest crew ever to sail Transpac---average age 19.8---finished in
the light of a bright three-quarter moon floating low on the horizon
just after 1 a.m. Wednesday to claim a third-place podium finish in
Division 5.
Psyche finished 54
minutes 46 seconds behind Don Grind's rival Far Far, but that was close
enough with 15 minutes 32 seconds to spare to cover the handicap time
owed it by the other Cal 40 and win Division 6.
But it was Monday's
brash call apparently by Samba Pa Ti navigator Nick White that caught
everyone---especially the young Morning Light team and its shore
supporters---by surprise. In Tuesday morning's roll call position
reports, Samba Pa Ti was so far south that knowledgeable observers
thought its posted location at Latitude 19-21 east of
Nope, just a
desperate but well-calculated end run to shake off Morning Light by
sailing farther to gain leverage in stronger winds south of the usual
path to
Actually, they're
competing for second place in Division 2 behind the current leader,
A similar but less
drastic move worked for Psyche.
Skipper Steve
Calhoun said, "About five days into the race we dipped south and lost
sight of Far Far, but heard through the morning roll calls they were
about 35 miles above us. After a couple of days they came down to
follow. We couldn't see them all the time, but knew they were there."
Psyche, which won
Transpac overall in the Cal 40s' stunning debut in 1965, then just
needed to stay in touch to correct out on handicap time.
Afterward, Calhoun,
from
"In 2005 it was the same boat, same thing," Far Far crew member Mark English said. "We match raced them in that race, too. This was a phenomenal experience, a chess match every morning. After we crossed the edge of Catalina we looked back and there they were, right behind us. They saw us, tacked, we tacked and 'game on'!"
About that time,
word was around the dock that Psyche, though finishing behind, had won
on corrected time.
"We won?" Calhoun
said. "Wow! This is
fantastic. They're [Far Far] a great team and kept us working. We
thought at times we were ahead of them. Then [Monday] we lost sight of
them. Tonight, coming through the Molokai Channel we kept looking for
their light figuring they were either ahead of us or behind. We no idea
until we crossed the finish line where they were."
Roger Sturgeon's new
STP65, Rosebud, finished a few hours earlier to take third in Division 1
behind Magnitude 80 and Pyewacket---a strong comeback from a later
Sunday start that penalized boats going south too soon.
"Our [weather]
program said the north was far more risky to us than others," said
Sturgeon, who won race overall honors on a TP52 called Rosebud two years
ago. "We thought we had more options down south. The tropical depression
[Cosme] could have worked in our favor. But I don't remember any wind
above 23 [knots]."
The good part was
that the boat performed remarkably well for the conditions it was in.
"If the wind was 10
or 11 [knots], we'd go 10 or 11," Sturgeon said. "You do what you can
with what you have."
The On the Edge of
Destiny team sailed a 1D35 owned by
Justin Doyle said,
"The wind was lighter than what we were hoping for, so we went farther
south to get around the [Pacific] High. Even the [
Nevertheless, Fowler
said, "We flew a spinnaker all the way from early morning on the second
day."
The only downside
for Biehl, he said, was with three-hour watches "you just get into that
dream state and it's time to get up on deck again."
The next youngest
crew is Morning Light, averaging 21.2 and serving as an inspiration for
the Destiny team, which started three days earlier.
"It looks like we
may have beaten Morning Light [on corrected time]," Sean Doyle said,
"but that really wasn't our goal."
Their most serious
problem was when the steering system failed and the boat spun out while
sailing under spinnaker.
White smiled at the
memory.
"The kite was down
for about half a minute while we put the emergency rudder on," he said.
"The most exciting thing was when I jumped off the bow to pull a bag off
the rudder."
Another concern
beyond their control was a protest call by David Clark's Santa Cruz 50
Adrenaline over minor contact at the rambunctious start off Point Fermin
13 days earlier. Adrenaline finished a few hours later and said it did
not plan to follow through on the protest.
Transblogs from the boats
Locomotion:
We are now
sailing in "delivery mode"---out of contention for a podium position,
and just about out of water as well. We had some fun last night watching
another spectacular green flash, followed by a very long lasting "Dreamsicle
Orange" darkness after the sunset with plenty of cumulus "garnish"
spanning the back lit horizon. Good photo ops! There was enough rain in
this AM's squall to permit collection of about a 1/2 gallon of
rainwater. Hooray! We will run out of water from our main tank by noon
[Wednesday]. We then have to break out our emergency bottled water (8
gallons), which will have to suffice until we finish. That equates to
one gallon of water for each man to sail the last 500 miles, plus
whatever we can harvest from the life raft-ditch bag (currently under
scrutiny; . . . a few more gallons at best). With an ETA of at least two
more days at sea, it will be dicey as to whether we can make it without
requiring outside assistance. Of course, we will wait until help is
absolutely needed. With a little help from the wind gods, we should be
able to hang in there and arrive without the need for a water drop,
thirsty for sure, but comfortable with our decision to go for it.
NOTE: Wednesday
morning the communications vessel Alaska Eagle contacted Locomotion
through a relay from another race boat, Alsumar, and asked, "How is your
water situation?" After some delay the answer came back: "Water
sufficient." Later, Locomotion was asked, "Are you into your emergency
water supply?" Another race boat, Skylark, repeated the question to be
sure Locomotion received it. The single-word answer: "Negative." Skylark
confirmed the response.
Pegasus 101 (
Psyche (Bill
Wright):
We jibed our way toward
Adrenalin:
Beautiful morning
with awesome sunrise and multiple rainbows! Energy is a bit higher as we
approach
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
In
order of corrected handicap time (place in 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 Wednesday)
Division 1 (Started July 15)
1. Magnitude 80
(Andrews 80), Doug Baker,
2. Pyewacket (Reichel/Pugh
90), Roy E. Disney,
3. Rosebud (STP 65),
Roger Sturgeon,
4. Peligroso (Kernan
70), Mike
5. Medicine Man
(Andrews 63),
Division 2 (Started
July 15)
1. Holua (
2. Samba Pa Ti
(Transpac 52), John Kilroy Jr.,
3. Morning Light
(Transpac 52), Jeremy Wilmot,
4. Skylark (
5. Hugo Boss (Volvo
60), Andy Tourell,
7.
8. Lucky (Transpac
52), Bryon Ehrhart, Chicago (2:05:26:28), 417.
8. 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. 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. 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. DH-Brilliant
(J/100), Tim Fuller/Erik Shampain,
5. Inspired
Environments (Beneteau First 40.7), Timothy Ballard,
6. Brown Sugar
(Express 37), Steve Brown,
7. DH-X Dream
(X-119), Steen Moller/Bob MacDonald,
8.
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 (34).
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 |
Transpac's youngest crew makes podium: (l-r) Ted White, Sean Doyle,
Cameron Biehl, Roscoe Fowler, Justin Doyle, owner
Rosebud's Roger Sturgeon
finished
3rd in Div. 1
Far Far
crew (l-r) Peter English, Mark English, Ian Rogers, Don Grind
Cirrus' Caroline Heinrich shows off her mahi mahi catch of the day
Click to
visit websites
Official
timekeeper of Transpac 2007
Shoreline YC lead mainland
host
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