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February 15, 2001

 



Photo of the Day

February 15 – Key West, Florida

There’s nothing exceptional about a boat
rotting gently in a boatyard,” writes Miki G. of the Santa
Cruz based catamaran Miki G. which is currently in Key
West, “until you discover that the owner is happily living
aboard! The yard workers describe the Key West wreck in the accompanying
photo as the boat with the ‘flow-through air-conditioning’. Actually,
the owner looked like a respectable dude, neatly dressed, who
showered and disappeared to work each day in his pick-up.

“By Northern California standards,
housing isn’t excessively pricey, but by Florida standards, it’s
off the chart. So people actually live aboard their boats in
the yard(!) at Peninsular Marine on Stock Island. The rates start
at $8 a day with a $5 liveaboard fee. After a couple of months
it goes up to $12 a day, for a liveaboard total of $17 a day.
It’s still tons cheaper than renting a room.



Photo Michael Beattie

“We saw several houseboats chocked
up, as well as sailboats, which had been in the yard for years!
But this one took the biscuit. Check out the shorepower cord
snaking into the boat for evidence of a liveaboard.”


Del Rey to Puerto Vallarta Race

February 15 – Pacific Ocean

Yesterday two PHRF divisions left on the 1,000-mile Marina del
Rey to Puerto Vallarta Race. Today the 50s take off and tomorrow
it’s the big guys such as Phillipe Kahn’s Andrews 70 Pegasus
and Jake Wood’s Mull 83 Sorcery. Including the cruising
fleet – which started right after a rare Southern California hail
storm back on February 9 – there’s a total of 36 boats. For a
guide to the race, check out February’s
Latitude 38
. For daily standings, check out www.dryc.org.


Saved by Mid-Ocean Trivia

February 15 – Pacific Ocean

“I had lunch yesterday with some cruiser
friends of mine who told me a story of a cruising yacht that sank
en route from the Galapagos to the Marquesas,” writes George
Backhus of the Deerfoot 62 Moonshadow currently in Australia.
“They told me the boat that sank was Italian, and carried
no liferaft, no EPIRB and no SSB radio. The story was that she
developed a sudden crack in the hull and took on more water than
could be pumped out. The crew were rescued by two nearby yachts.
. . that happened to be listening on VHF 16 because they were,
get this, playing a game of Trivial Pursuit over the radio. What
luck! We’re off cruising the New South Wales coast from Pittwater
to Jarvis Bay.” 

Can anybody confirm the basis of this story
and/or know the boats involved?


Perhaps the Whale Thought She Was Ahab’s
Great-Great-Great-Great Granddaughter

February 15 – Kauai, Hawaii

Sandra Gieb suffered a “broken knee” yesterday during
a whale watching tour off Kauai. She was sitting in the back
of a 40-foot power catamaran when a 20-foot humpback surfaced
and put its head onto the back of the Na Pali Eco Adventures
vessel. The whale swam away and Gieb was taken to a hospital.

Photo Courtesy
Na Pali Eco Tours


Hyperbole

February 15 – Treasure Island

A year or two ago, an overenthusiastic spokesperson
for the city of Oakland suggested that Oakland was fast approaching
the cultural equivalent of Paris. Having grown up in Oakland,
we know that much of the city is actually quite nice, but let’s
get real. Broadway is hardly the Champs Élysées,
and Rockridge is no St. Germain de Prés.

And now Navillus Associates and Treasure
Island Community Development are guilty of yet another case of
hyperbole, seemingly inspired by feelings of Euro inferiority.
For while presenting their vision for Treasure Island, they suggested
it would end up similar to Monaco. Could they have come up with
two places more dissimilar? Monaco has extremely steep hillsides
covered with high rises full of wealthy tax evaders who overlook
the Med. It’s also very warm in the summer. Treasure Island, on
the other hand, is flat as a pancake, currently home to people
who have no money, and has a 360° view of urbanity. Plus it’s
cold as hell in the summer. Based on their analogy alone, we would
deny them the right to develop the island.


The Race Update

February 15 – Atlantic and Southern Oceans

With a lead of more than 1,000 miles over
second placed Innovation Explorer, Club Med was
sailing slowly this morning, 400 miles to the east of Uruguay.
A particularly tricky part of the course for any boat, not because
of fickle winds, but because of the difficult sea conditions.
Club Med skipper Grant Dalton had this to say to his shore
team by satellite telephone this morning:

“We’ve had to slow it right down.
We are sailing in 20-25 knots of wind, but we can’t let the boatspeed
rise above 12 knots. We’d just destroy the boat if we did. As
a result we are sailing with three reefs and the storm staysail
set. The waves are not enormous, about 2.5 meters high but have
a really short wavelength. On a monohull the rig would be the
part that suffers the most, but on a multihull it is the crossbeams
that take the loads and shocks. The hulls are so far apart that
they are always in different wavetrains, one is rising whilst
the other is falling. The beams are the parts that keep them
together, and they are working over time right now.


Repairing broken bits and drying out
Photo Courtesy
Club Med

“Next up for us, situated on the top
of the South Atlantic High, is an increasing breeze, all the
way up to 30 knots on the wind. We are on port tack heading northeast,
we will be headed and headed and will eventually tack onto starboard
and sail up into the Trades. This will be in about 36 hours.
At this point we will be doing real damage to Innovation Explorer
as it is relatively straightforward sailing from then on.”

Ranking of Feb. 15, 2001, 15:00:00 GMT

1. Club Med / dtf 5,279.3 miles
2. Innovation Explorer / dtl 927.4 miles
3. Team Adventure / dtl 6,037.9 miles
4. Warta Polpharma / dtl 6,441.5 miles
5. Team Legato / dtl 7,091.7 miles


YOTREPS

February 15 – The Pacific Ocean and Cyberspace

Who is out making passages in the Pacific
and what kind of weather are they having? Check out YOTREPS –
‘yacht reports’ – at www.bitwrangler.com/yotreps/


Weather Updates

February 15 – Pacific Ocean

San Francisco Bay Weather

To see what the winds are like on the Bay
and just outside the Gate right now, check out http://sfports.wr.usgs.gov/wind/.

California Coast Weather

Looking for current as well as recent wind
and sea readings from 17 buoys and stations between Pt. Arena
and the Mexican border? Here’s the place – which has further links
to weather buoys and stations all over the U.S.: www.ndbc.noaa.gov/stuff/southwest/swstmap.shtml.

Pacific Sea State

Seas are normal in the Pacific. But you
might check out the Pacific Ocean sea states at: http://www.mpc.ncep.noaa.gov/RSSA/PacRegSSA.html.

For another view, see http://www.oceanweather.com/data/global.html.


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The De-Naming Ceremony
I once met a man in Florida who told me he’d owned 24 different yachts and renamed every single one of them.