Wilson Finishes Vendée GlobeMarch 11, 2009 – Les Sables d'Olonne
Rich Wilson became only the second American to finish the Vendée Globe when he sailed Great American III into Les Sables d'Olonne at 12:43 p.m. yesterday. At 58 years old, he was the oldest competitor in this year's race. One of the few true amateurs, his conservative approach nonetheless earned him a ninth — equalling that of the first American finisher in a Vendée, Alameda's Bruce Schwab — in a race so punishing that over 60% of the fleet didn't finish. While Wilson may have sailed conservatively, no amount of conservatism can prevent mishaps in a test like the Vendée; the Marblehead native sailed the race with a cracked rib which he suffered on the first night out of Les Sables. Compounding that handicap was Wilson's severe asthma, which he's had since childhood and which forces him to take four medications daily. The race didn't seem to get any easier as the former math teacher rounded Cape Horn, just a few miles away from where he'd been rescued from his capsized 60-ft trimaran Great American in 1990 while attempting to set a Gold Route record. Every weather system he encountered in the Atlantic punished him with headwinds and nasty sea states. But the indomitable Wilson saw his race through to its only logical conclusion — finished — undoubtedly spurred on by knowing how many kids were being exposed to the world of sailing and the oceans through his adventure and the interactive non-profit sitesALIVE! he founded to share the experience. - latitude / rg Who Won Class B in Cabo Race?March 11, 2009 – Cabo San Lucas
Although we can't be certain, we think that Chip Megeath's Tiburon-based R/P 45 Criminal Mischief has won Class B in the 2009 Newport Beach to Cabo San Lucas Race. According to the finish log, the 'Criminals' finished a little past 2 a.m. this morning after just over 3.5 days of sailing. The reason we can't be certain is because none of the other Class B boats had finished as of the last published 'finish log,' and the 'daily standings' link on the race's website just leads to the same log, not the actual standings. However, we do know they were in the lead as of yesterday's sked, and that they finished three hours ahead of their projected ETA from that report — leading us to believe there's a good chance they finished in the money. We are sure that top overall honors go to Jim Madden's Newport Beach-based J/125 Stark Raving Mad IV, which won the race by nearly an hour on corrected time over Paul Casanova's Newport Beach-based and aptly named SC 50 Flaca. Third up was Chris Calkins and Norm Reynolds venerable Calkins 50 Sabrina, while the top elapsed-time honors went to Doug Baker's Andrews 80 Magnitude 80, which finished in just under three days. Only 26 boats showed up for this edition of the race — down from about 50 in 2007 — this year's fleet was high quality with some pretty sexy boats. Considered in the context of the economy, the fact that the race was able to draw this many good boats is really positive. That's about all we can tell you at this point. For some reason Newport Harbor YC hasn't added any photos of the finishers, written any stories about the race, sent out any press releases, or added any content of any kind to the race's website since the start. Keep checking back to see if anything goes up later today — we anticipate that at least an updated finish log will go up sometime soon. - latitude / rg Unrest in the CaribbeanMarch 11, 2009 – Guadeloupe in Martinique More than a month of violence on the Caribbean islands of Guadaloupe and Martinique seems to be heading toward resolution. Economic woes precipitated the unrest, and unfortunately the longterm effects may make the economic situation on the French-held islands even worse in the coming months. It began in late January when a union coalition on Guadaloupe instituted a general strike for higher wages and lower food prices. Martinique followed suit with a strike of their own a week or so later. This was followed by rioting in the streets of Point-a-Pitre, the capitol of Guadaloupe, and Fort-de-France in Martinique, and that was followed by a shutdown of most banks, businesses, schools and government offices for weeks. Reports that rioters in Guadaloupe were targeting “all white people” — apparently a reference to longheld racial tensions toward colonial descendants who own 90 percent of the wealth — led to a mass exodus of European and American tourists from both islands. This was at the height of the tourist season and, said one French tourism official, cancellations for vacations in Martinique and Guadaloupe are headed south faster than GM stock. At least 10,000 tourists have cancelled vacation plans to the two islands in the coming months — and that’s just French tourists.
We have not received any reports of unrest in any port cities or any violence towards cruisers. However, local sailor Art Hartinger, who just returned from a charter in the area, said the tension was in the air and caution was the byword. - latitude / jr |
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