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Z-Fest Generates Funds and Fun

The SF-based Beneteau 42 Cirque got off to a good start but, like others, struggled to maintain position in the light air. Seen here approaching Piedra Negra.

latitude/Andy
©2008 Latitude 38 Media, LLC

The annual Zihuatanejo SailFest drew to a close yesterday afternoon, just in time for some members of the 60-boat fleet to slip off and watch the Super Bowl. By all accounts the six-day event was a grand success, having accomplished its two primary goals: to show visiting cruisers a rollicking good time and raise a boatload of money for local schools. The final tally is not in yet, but it will easily be enough to make a substantial impact on the educational opportunities for disadvantaged kids who live in hillside communities surrounding Zihua Bay.

Looking like a cruiser invasion, the Parade of Sail glides toward Ixtapa.

latitude/Andy
© Latitude 38 Media, LLC

While many cruisers couldn’t be convinced to raise anchor and race their heavily laden boats around Friday’s 10-mile course, those who did gave it their all. The real challenge was to race to their rating in the light air, as the contest was set up as a pursuit race. As anticipated, Chuck VanderBoom’s Lake Havasu-based F-31 Boomerang smoked the fleet, with Tom and Wendy Hoffman’s well-named  Persistence, a Kelly Peterson 44 based in San Francisco, bringing up the rear, a full three hours later.

The very best students from three primary schools earned a ride aboard the Fountaine-Pajot 75 Picante, a local daysail boat, during the Parade of Sail.

latitude/Andy
©2008 Latitude 38 Media, LLC

The big event Saturday was a Parade of Sail in which 24 cruising boats made a promenade around Zihua and Ixtapa Bays, with paying tourists and expats aboard. All funds, of course, went into the school fund administered by the non-profit Por Los Ninos. Notably, 100% of these funds go directly to help the kids, with all administration done by volunteers.

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We’re saddened to report that Alameda-based cruiser John Long, 78, was found dead in Puerto Madero, Mexico — just north of the Guatemalan border — on Saturday.
Mike, legally a parapalegic, unsnarls his chute off St. Barth about a week ago when he still had 1,100 miles to go in order to complete Wanderlust 3’s circumnavigation.