
44th
Transpacific Yacht Race
Los
Angeles to Honolulu
Starts July 9, 12 and 15, 2007
2,225 nautical miles
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The
44th Transpac: trophies and tribulations
HONOLULU---A
Pyewacket crew posed with its third Barn Door in the last six
Transpacific Yacht Races to Hawaii, and Transpac Commodore
Even as the hardware
and native Hawaiian-carved prizes were distributed, four of the 73
starters were still racing, five others had retired and two---a very
thirsty Locomotion and a battered but upbeat Traveler---had just blown
in, bringing relief to friends and family that they had made it at all.
Among those
recognized were the race's oldest and youngest crews ever---Tango: Mike
Abraham and Philip Rowe, both 70, and youngest (On the Edge of Destiny:
Sean and Justin Doyle, Roscoe Fowler, Cameron Biehl and Ted White,
average age 19.8.
Abraham and Rowe
played it for laughs. They mounted the stage with feigned difficult,
using canes.
Several veteran
navigators agreed it was the weirdest Transpac for wind conditions in
memory, not the usual pick-the-best-southern-route-under-the-Pacific
High, hook-up-the-chute-and-fly drill, but a frantic search for breeze
through a maze of pockets of light or little wind.
In general, the
various types of boats took two more days to sail the 2,225 nautical
miles than they normally would.
"The best way to
look at,"
For a while, the
erratic conditions made Locomotion's prospects touch and go.
Jim McLeod, a crew
member on Ed Feo's Andrews 45 from
Worse, McLeod said,
"Our water maker didn't work . . . went to use it and the membrane was
shot. We had 30 gallons of water for eight guys and a week to go"---in
sub-tropical temperatures.
Feo's crew was
navigator Steve Rossi, Steve Beck, Chuck Simmons, MacLeod, Chris Deneen,
Erik Berzins and Dave Millett. They started on Sunday, July 15.
"Our water maker
checked out before the race," Feo said. "We got more concerned when
Sunday [July 22] and Monday were really slow days, and we started to do
the math. So I called the Coast Guard to see what our options were if we
had to be supplied. [Then] we ran out of our tank water and got into our
emergency supply. I monitored everybody for signs of trouble, making
sure they were urinating on a regular schedule and things like that."
Simmons said, "The
biggest disappointment was when I came up on deck one day. We had a
six-gallon jug tied to the steering pedestal and it had sprung a leak.
The third or fourth day we tried to make water and figured out, uh,
we've got a problem."
Near the end they
had one or two gallons of water left, but they had nothing else until
the race committee inspector had checked their boat and they could go
ashore for . . . mai tais or beer?
"Water," McLeod said
while waiting to disembark. "Just a drink of cold, fresh water."
At the same time,
Traveler's log was an 18-day litany of trouble. Owner/skipper Michael
Lawler of
But their troubles
weren't over. Lawler's log continues:
"Day Two, on the
west side of San Clemente Island, Traveler accidentally headed into the
middle of a major naval training exercise with live ammo and were forced
by an escorting Navy helicopter to divert their course by 10 miles out
of the direction they were heading.
"Day Six (July 14)
at 2:00 a.m., Barbara Burdick, Traveler's helmsman at the time, shouted
out to her crew mates, 'I've lost the steering.' Next to 'we're sinking'
or 'man overboard,' those are probably the most dreaded words you want
to hear when you are over 400 miles out at sea. Within a few seconds,
the entire crew of six men and two women jumped into action, identified
the problem and got the boat under control. Somehow the threaded
steering arm became disconnected from the rudder post.
"Day Seven, again
with Barbara at the wheel and at about 2 in the morning, she called for
help from the off-watch crew. The spinnaker pole had become separated
from the mast . . . and the spinnaker with the pole still attached to
the clew were dangerously flying around the foredeck out of control.
Again, within a couple of minutes, the problem was fixed.
"On Day Eight, the
steering failed yet again, but it was an entirely different problem. The
nut holding the sprocket to the chain somehow came loose so the steering
wheel was not turning the rudder. This was fixed in about 10 minutes.
"Day Eleven, the
spinnaker broke at the head and was in the water being dragged. Traveler
has a spare spinnaker, but they were unable to launch it until they
could see what the problem was at the top of the mast. Kurt [Roll]
volunteered to go up to the top of the mast to inspect and repair the
problem at dawn."
They finished
without further woes, but wait.
"The spinnaker blew
out in a gust when we were taking it down after the finish," Lawler
said. "Then we tried to start the engine and it wouldn't start.
Fortunately, we had a couple of power boaters on board and they got it
going."
Lawler's crew
besides Scott, Burdick and Roll was David Beek, Jim Palmer, Kathy Smith,
Schubert and Phillip Laplante. They're on their way home by air, but
Lawler and Burdick, not discouraged by the experience, plan to sail on
from here. After all, their sail number is 7305.
"That's the number I
picked for my boat for the day I met the love of my life," Lawler said.
"I was walking down this very same dock two years ago when I saw her on
another boat. I asked her if she wanted to go to breakfast at the Hawaii
Yacht Club, and she said yes. Right away we started planning to do this
race. It's the first leg of a three-year world cruise [continuing] to
Then there was
another intrepid competitor, Lady Liberty, also in Aloha B, whose
skipper, John Wallner of Calabasas, Calif., reported Friday morning:
"Just as we were triumphantly calling in our 100-mile [to go] report the
whisker pole bent double in a strong gust and crashed to the deck. The
jib went wild, and the boat spun out of control. The whisker pole is
bent beyond repair. The lifeline parted due to the impact of the falling
pole.
"As soon as we
secured the wreckage, I tried calling Transpac at Ala Wai to verify they
got our 100-mile report. In the middle of the conversation a huge wind
gust came and knocked me over and the satellite phone out of my hand and
across the room and gave us a near knockdown. We don’t know what our new
ETA is, but it’s going to be later than we thought. As I write, another
large squall is making our life interesting. We are in no danger, within
sight of land [and] our cell phones work."
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 Saturday)
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. Samba Pa Ti
(Transpac 52), John Kilroy Jr.,
2. Holua (
3. Morning Light
(Transpac 52), Jeremy Wilmot,
4. Skylark (
5. Hugo Boss (Volvo
60), Andy Tourell,
6.
7. DH-Pegasus 101
(Open 50),
8. Lucky (Transpac
52), Bryon Ehrhart, Chicago (2:05:26:28), ET 11:10:38:40, CT 9:05:12:12
(44).
9. Trader (Transpac
52), Fred Detwiler,
Division 3 (Started
July 15)
1. Denali (Nelson/Marek
70), William McKinley,
2. Pendragon IV
(Davidson 52), John MacLaurin,
3. It's OK (Andrews
50), Tres Gordo Sailing,
4. Ragtime (Spencer
65), Chris Welsh,
5. Locomotion
(Andrews 45), Ed Feo,
6. Bengal (Ohashi
46), Yoshihiko Murase,
7. Cheetah (ULDB 70),
Chris Slagerman,
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.
7. DH-Tango (J/133),
Michael Abraham/Phillip Rowe,
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.
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 (45).
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. Traveler (North
Wind 47), Michael Lawler,
3.
Lady Liberty (Catalina 36), John Wallner,
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 OFFICE
(310) 835-2526
Cell (310) 766-6547
(310) 834-6682
Cell (310) 367-9079
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Oldest
(70) and youngest (19.8) crews to sail Transpac (l-r) Mike Abraham,
Roscoe Fowler, Cameron Biehl, Philip Rowe, Sean and
Justin
Doyle. Ted White absent
TP
Commodore
Traveler
skipper Mike Lawler was happy to step on shore
Locomotion skipper Ed Feo (l.) enjoys an ice water toast with crew
members Steve Beck, Steve Rossi
Click to
visit websites
Official
timekeeper of Transpac 2007
Shoreline YC
lead mainland host
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