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Gitana 13 Comes Full Circle

Gitana 13’s early morning arrival meant only a few boats came out to welcome her crew to the Bay.

latitude/Richard
©2008 Latitude 38 Media, LLC

While most folks at Corinthian YC yesterday came to catch a glimpse of the 110-ft catamaran Gitana 13 and her 10-man crew, CYC member Jim Gibbs was there on ‘family business’. Seems that the ‘Route of Gold’ record the big cat had just reset was held for 135 years by the clipper ship Flying Cloud, and Gibbs’s great great grandfather ("There may be one more ‘great’ in there") was aboard! Israel Whitney Lyon and his two sisters were among 12 passengers on the ship’s maiden voyage in 1851, when she set a new record of 89 days, 20 hours for the 14,000-mile voyage. Three years later, she lowered her own mark to 89 days, 8 hours. That latter record stood for 135 years. Israel Whitney went on to great success selling tooth powder (early toothpaste) to 49ers. Jim was at CYC to honor the memory of great great (great?) grandad by checking out the latest sailing craft to make the arduous, non-stop journey around Cape Horn.

Though both powered entirely by the wind, the two vessels could hardly be more different. The 229-ft Flying Cloud was built to carry cargo and passengers, flew 30-some sails off three masts and was built almost entirely of ‘organic’ products — wood hull, cotton sails, hemp rope. The only wood on Gitana is perhaps a couple of stirring spoons in the galley. She is all aluminum and modern composites — foam, resin, carbon fiber, synthetic line — and lightly built for only one purpose: to go fast. This she does very well. Her new record of 43 days and change is less than half Flying Cloud‘s best, and a full two weeks quicker than the previous record set in 1998. 

Flying Cloud, seen here in a James Buttersworth painting from 1860, held onto the ‘Route of Gold’ record for 135 years.

© 2008 James Buttersworth

The Route de L’Or is the first stepping stone in a series of record attempts that will take the boat round the world. The next, which will commence later this month, is San Francisco to Yokohama, Japan, a mark set only three years ago by countryman Olivier de Kersauson on the 110-ft trimaran Geronimo.

Until then, Gitana 13 will be in the Bay Area. She is currently on a mooring off Corinthian YC, where you can sail by and have a look. (No boarding without permission, though!) Sometime soon, she will head to Alameda for haulout and routine maintenance. Then, when the weather window opens toward the end of the month, she will head out for Japan.

For more on Gitana 13, her new record, her crew or any aspect of the Gitana program, log onto www.gitana-team.com/en/.

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It sort of looks like these boats were knocked over by a hurricane… © 2008 Rob & Linda Jones Rob and Linda Jones, Ha-Ha vets with their Gemini 3000 catamaran Cat’n About from Whibey Island, Washington, sent us the accompanying photo of what looks to be sailboats in Costa Rica knocked askew by hurricane force winds.