Sailors Run Rounds Cape HornJanuary 14, 2009 – Cape Horn, South America Readers — On December 11, Jeff Hartjoy set off from Callao, Peru, on a singlehanded nonstop trip around Cape Horn, bound for Buenos Aires, Argentina, aboard his Baba 40 Sailors Run. We'll be running his reports in 'Lectronic throughout his voyage. After New Year's, the wind built as I closed in on Cape Horn. Sailing conditions became dangerous, requiring I keep Sailors Run on a very broad reach under reefed staysail alone. At times like these, there's just three things you must do: Stay on top of it, stay on top of it, stay on top of it! One night around midnight, I awoke to a thunderous crash as what must have been a huge wave washed over Sailors Run. As I stumbled from my bunk to get a light on, I realized I was standing in water. Turns out, a couple quarts of water had been forced under the butterfly hatch. Thirty minutes later, the mess was cleaned up and precautions taken to protect against a recurrence. The same wave tore my GPS from its bracket; it wound up lodged under the dodger. Thankfully it was undamaged and gets to carry on like the rest of us "lucky suckers" on this adventure. I had other challenges on my approach to the Horn, such as when the mizzen halyard broke the tips off the wind generator blades, forcing me to climb the mizzen to figure out a fix; or when the staysail halyard shackle let go, dumping the sail over the bow in 50 knots of wind; or when I jibed without rolling in the scrap of genoa — which I had set until I could climb the mast to retrieve the staysail halyard — resulting in about six-feet-worth of new patches. Day 30 arrived with dying winds, and found Sailors Run just 30 miles from the Horn. At first I thought I might round it under spinnaker (how cool that would have been!) but then the winds increased and I thought I'd have to pass it 25 miles out. That's when the winds died down to about 10 knots. The winds down here change constantly in direction and intensity, unlike the steady trades. After 30 days and 3,582 miles, I just wanted to get there so I tried to start the engine but ended up starting an electrical fire in the wiring to the engine's pre-heater instead. I cleared that, blew the smoke out of the boat, bled the engine, and finally got it started. After two hours, the wind filled in from the north and I had a great beam reach to Cape Horn, arriving at 2130 UTC on January 9. I'd thought I was emotional when I left Callao, Peru, but that was nothing to the way I felt rounding the Horn. Not only was I still alive, but I'd fulfilled a dream. Suddenly all the frustration was gone and I was happy again! - jeff hartjoy
Rising Star in the Vendee GlobeJanuary 14, 2009 – The Big Blue
Every now and then competitors rise above their chosen sports to become media stars. Among women, the names Nadia, Mary Lou and FloJo come to mind. In sailing, certainly Ellen MacArthur. But even Dame Ellen’s fame may pale to another British woman who is currently in fourth place in one of the most brutal and carnage-strewn Vendée Globe races in memory: Samantha Davies.
Desjoyeaux is so serious and is driving his Farr-designed Foncia so hard that he has yet to post more than a half-dozen onboard photos on the Vendée website — and so far none of himself. By contrast, Sam Davies is using the site almost like Facebook, with dozens of photos of Roxy Sailing, herself, and daily life aboard. In 90% of the self-portraits, she's grinning like someone who's just won the national lottery.
Desjoyeaux rounded old Cape Stiff on January 5 and is on the homestretch up the Atlantic. He is 4,600 miles — three weeks or so — from the finish. Roland Jourdain aboard Veolia Environnement, in second, is currently in better breeze and only 230 miles behind the leader. Armel Le Cléac'h in Brit Air is third. Then, in distant fourth, smiling Sam Davies. - latitude / jr The Best of 2008January 14, 2009 – The Bay
Bay Area-based photographer Erik Simonson should be no stranger to 'Lectronic Latitude and Latitude 38 readers. His images consisently grace our pages, and for good reason — they're great! Whether he's shooting from his bright-red RIB, the Golden Gate Bridge or Howie Hamlin's helicopter, Simonson consistently comes up with great stuff — always more than we have space to use.
With 2008 in the books, he's put together a "best of" gallery showing some of his favorites from last year. It appears along with everything else he's taken — which may include your boat — on his website. - latitude / rg |
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