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February 17, 2003


Photo of the Day

February 17 – Oakland

Today’s Photo of the Day comes from Mike
and Janice Kranz of the Oakland-based Islander 34 Hummer.


Photo Mike and Janice Kranz

We’ll let them describe: “In all our
years around boats, we have never seen anything as tragic as
what we witnessed on the afternoon of February 2 in the Port
of Oakland’s Central Basin. There was a major fire which spread
very quickly and destroyed two boats. Fortunately, no one was
injured, although we learned later that the owner of the sailboat
was aboard his boat and initially unaware of the fire aboard
the boat in the slip next to his. Apparently someone had the
presence of mind to alert him with just seconds to spare before
his boat also burst into flames. The wind was gentle and was
blowing out of the west. Had it been blowing from the east, there
is no telling how many boats would have been lost, as it took
over 12 minutes from the time we called 911 to the time the first
fire engine arrived.

“Having witnessed this makes me want
to be sure and inspect my boat for fire hazards, including that
all fire extinguishers are properly mounted and charged, and
that electrical systems and fuel system engine compartment fire
suppression systems are functioning properly. Because the marina
gates were locked and I’m getting too old to climb barbed wire
fences, all we could do is stand by helplessly while we waited
for the fire department to respond to our 911 call. There are
more photos on our Web site at www.hummer.20megsfree.com/catalog.html.”


Northern Californians Are Rolex Sailors
of the Year

February 17 – Marin County

John Kostecki of Fairfax, and Liz Baylis
of San Rafael, have been selected by journalists from around
the world as the Rolex Yachtsman and Yachtswoman of the year.
This is a big, big, big, big deal, the equivalent of an actor
and actress winning Oscars. That they both come from Northern
California is . . . well, astonishing.


John Kostecki during the Volvo Race


Liz Baylis in Hawaii aboard E.T. at
end of the Pacific Cup, an event in which they broached “at
least 40 times.”

According to the press release, John Kostecki,
who also was named Rolex Yachtsman of the Year in 1988, made
international headlines in 2002 when he skippered the yacht illbruck
to win the Volvo Ocean Race, after nine months of intense around-the-world
racing. In addition to winning overall, illbruck won four
of the nine race legs and on the seventh leg, broke the world
monohull speed record with a 484 mile 24-hour run. Kostecki’s
responsibilities as skipper included selection of illbruck’s
14-person crew as well as management of the training program
and onboard strategy during the race. As one of the Rolex panelists
put it, “The illbruck team’s accomplishment was like
scaling Mt. Everest without oxygen while everyone else was hiking
the Appalachian Trail.”

Liz Baylis, a first-time nominee for the
award, crowned her sailing resume with a hard-fought victory
at the 2002 ISAF Women’s Match Racing World Championship in Spain.
Having originally assembled her team in preparation for the women’s
match racing discipline at the 2004 Olympics, Baylis had steadily
climbed into the top six in the ISAF Match Racing World Rankings.
Panelists also credited Baylis for crewing to a class victory
in the 2,200-mile Pacific Cup aboard an Antrim 27 with just three
people aboard. In addition, she co-helmed a Farr 40 to second
place at the Belvedere Cup, a match racing series, and skippered
to fourth place at the BoatU.S. Santa Maria Cup, also a match
racing event.


Ollie to Get Naked in Latitude?

February 17 – Zihuatanejo, Mexico

This is a photo of Ollie, ER doctor and
enthusiastic sailor. While in Zihua for Sail Fest, she told us
the following story: A boatowner on the East Coast was having
a Swan 65 or similar large yacht trucked to the KKMI yard in
Richmond. Then he got a call from the truck driver, who said
the mast was too long to carry on the trailer. “Would you
mind,” the truck driver is said to have asked the owner,
“if I cut the mast in half and when you get to Richmond
you can have the yard weld it back together?” The boat owner
reportedly told him that he could do it, and the boat supposedly
arrived at KKMI with the mast ruined for it having been cut in
half.

Having heard the story, we gave Ollie the
arched eyebrow treatment. “I can absolutely assure you that
the story is true,” she told us, “because my partner
works at KKMI, and he knows all about it. In fact, if it’s not
true, I’ll gladly pose stark naked for a two-page spread in the
pages of Latitude. I guarantee it!”

 

 


Photo Latitude/Richard 

Well, Ollie, start primping, because Paul
Kaplan over at KKMI tells us that he has no idea what you’re
talking about.


Del Rey to
Vallarta Race

February 17 –
Pacific Ocean

The Mac 65 Joss’s 18-year old record
in the Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta Race is under severe
challenge this year, most specifically by Roy Disney’s R/P 76
Pyewacket. The big sled is in turbo mode, which means
a ton has been removed from her keel and her spinnaker pole is
now 43 feet (!) as opposed to the 27-footer they used to race
to Hawaii. In the early going, Pyewacket is on a record
pace, but the trick is always carrying the wind past Cabo San
Lucas over to the mainland.

For the latest standings and Rich Roberts’
always excellent coverage, visit www.dryc.org.


Pyewacket started
on Friday


The PHRF-B start on Wednesday
Photos Rich Roberts


There’s Always Nice Weather Somewhere
in the World

February 17 – BVI


Photo Devon Mullin

We don’t know if it has anything to do
with global warming, but the folks in the Northeast are snowed
in to beat the band. On the other hand, as this photo shows,
it’s sunny and warm in the British Virgins where these folks
are having a salubrious time while the warm tradewinds push their
charter cat between islands.


Jules Verne Action Tightens Up

February 17 – Southern Ocean

In the early going of their attempts on
the Jules Verne Around the World course record, everything was
going well for the maxi-tri Geronimo, as they had great
weather, while Ellen MacArthur’s maxi-cat Kingfisher2
was tortured by light air. Although Geronimo still has
a big lead on Kingfisher2, and a nearly 2.5-day lead on
the record held by Orange (now Kingfisher2), the
trend is changing. Having finally gotten great wind in the Southern
Ocean, Kingfisher2 is starting to post better runs than
Geronimo when she was there, and Geronimo’s 2.5-day
lead over the Orange record will dip in the next few days
as the big tri is in slow conditions and this is where Orange
really put the pedal to the metal. It’s very interesting action.


Kingfisher2
Photo Jacques Vapillon

It’s not easy sailing in the Southern Ocean,
particularly when all your wind instruments go out. MacArthur
describes what it was like effecting the repairs:
“Unfortunately, all the wiring connections are in a tiny
compartment inside the main beam. There was a small hole which
I was able to climb through – then a space just big enough for
me to fit my shoulders in. I went in to do what I thought might
have been 20 minutes soldering – but extracted myself from the
hole after just two hours! The hardest part was getting tiny
4-strand electrical wires into a connection box as we pounded
along. Each time a wave came up and hit the underside of the
beam, a jet of water squirted up through the drain holes beneath
me, and the only way I could communicate with the guys was by
radio as it was far too rough to hear anyone’s voice.”


Fossett and PlayStation Ahead of
Record Pace

February 17 – Canary islands

While the the other two maxi-multihulls
attack the Jules Verne record, Steve Fossett and the maxi-cat
PlayStation are going after the Spain to San Salvador
east-west transatlantic record. And doing well. Although in the
early stages, having just passed the Canary Islands, they are
4.5 knots ahead of the record pace.


YOTREPS

February 17 – The Pacific Ocean and Cyberspace

Who is out making passages in the Pacific
and what kind of weather are they having? The YOTREPS daily yacht
tracking page has moved to www.bitwrangler.com/psn.


Weather Updates

February 17Pacific
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.

The National Weather Service site for San
Francisco Bay is at www.wrh.noaa.gov/Monterey.

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/Maps/Southwest.shtml.

Pacific Winds and Pressure

The University of Hawaii Dept. of Meteorology
page posts a daily
map
of the NE Pacific Ocean barometric pressure and winds.

Pacific Sea State

Check out the Pacific Ocean sea states
at: http://www.mpc.ncep.noaa.gov/RSSA/PacRegSSA.html.


For views of sea states anywhere in the world,
see http://www.oceanweather.com/data.


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38 Publishing Co., Inc.

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.