
January 17, 2001
Photo of the DayJanuary 17 – St. Barts The lovely young couple in the photograph taken at the original Anyway, the week before New Year’s, Mark Delgiudice – who |
![]() Andrew Connell and Franciane Gréaux at St. Barts’ Cheeseburgers in Paradise Photo Latitude/Richard Andrew now offers the boat – renamed ‘Corcovado’ – for sailing |
Cruising
The Big Green Cruising MachineJanuary 17 – Alameda Some sailors think that green boats are bad luck, but that’s Dewey has a long history of racing small boats, and he and Darlene |
![]() Photo Latitude/Richard |
Sail With The Wind You’ve GotJanuary 17 – South Africa We don’t know about the rest of you, but we’re always inspired |
![]() Photo Courtesy Suntrekka |
Baja Ha-Ha VIII
January 17 – Tiburon
The folks over at Baja Ha-Ha, Inc., keep getting SASEs and
checks for entry packs for the next Baja Ha-Ha. Unfortunately,
they are in hibernation until May 1, so sending them anything
is useless. A full announcement about Ha-Ha VIII will be made
in the May Latitude
and in ‘Lectronic Latitude.
The Ha-Ha will start from San Diego on October 30 and end with
the awards ceremony in Cabo San Lucas on November 10.
YOTREPS
January 17 – 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/
Racing
Oracle Racing
January 17 – Ventura
Ventura Harbor, long one of the best kept secrets on the California
coast, is going to become famous in March. In a somewhat surprise
move, Oracle Racing has selected Ventura rather than Long Beach
as their summer training base for their 2003 America’s Cup campaign.
This means that Dickson, Cayard and many of the other rock stars
of sailing will be calling Ventura – where farmland butts up almost
against the marina – home for much of the summer.
This information comes from John Scheibe of the ‘Ventura County
Star’, who quotes the mayor as saying there is an agreement between
Oracle Racing, the Ventura Port District and the city. Oracle
is to make an announcement in the next couple of days.
Ventura has some of the most reliable afternoon breezes in
Southern California, and it’s only an hour or so to Los Angeles.
Oracle will reportedly contribute $75,000 to the cost of dredging
the entrance, as their boats need 16 feet of water. Ventura Boat
Yard apparently has an agreement to transport two sailboats between
the water and a warehouse.
We kept a boat in Ventura Harbor for a year or two, and it
has a lot going for it. It’s quiet, there’s great surfing and
bodysurfing across the street, there’s good afternoon sailing,
and it’s only about 11 miles to the closest of the Channel Islands.
Good for you, Ventura!
The Race: Club Med in the Roaring
Forties
January 17 – Southern Ocean
The big blue ‘Club Med’ catamaran, leader of The Race, is now
in the Southern Ocean. Sailing in the Roaring Forties at average
speeds in excess of 23 knots, the ‘Club Med’ lead over ‘Team Adventure’
grew to more than 200 miles at one point last night.
Over the past few days the ‘Club Med’ crew has managed to work
the boat into a position where it was able to benefit from the
prevailing westerly winds of a depression typically found in the
Roaring Forties before its closest rival ‘Team Adventure’. But
first into the weather is first to hit the next soft obstacle
ahead, in this case the back of the cold front associated with
the same depression. The difference in distance to go to the finish
between the two leaders had reduced to 154 miles today, but should
now remain stable as both boats begin to sail in similar conditions
again. Grant Dalton had this to say this morning: “We are
in it. This is the South. We have 30 knots but unfortunately we
can’t use it all. The weather is horrible, very very wet and trying
conditions. It is ugly sailing. This is a bad part of the world.
Nighttime is weird. We were sailing sometimes at 30 knots in the
pitch black. Often can’t see a damn thing; we have to be really
careful.”
The reduction in distance between the two leaders is because ‘Club
Med’ picked up the prevailing westerlies first, stretched out
and then, because of the relatively high speeds, sailed into the
back of the weather front ahead. A weather front, like anywhere
else in the world, is associated with an abrupt change in wind
direction. The established wind-driven ocean swell then needs
time to re-orient itself leaving a confused sea in its path, something
that is not conducive to easy, fast sailing. Dalton’s frustration
was expressed thus: “We are embedded in the back of this
low pressure system. We have caught it up and are now knocking
on the back of the cold front which is not ideal. The sea is very
confused and we are not able to really open her up in spite of
30 knots of wind. We just don’t have the waves to get the good
rides. The Golden Position is not so golden. We’ve lost 30 miles
overnight and this situation may continue as ‘Team Adventure’
is able to enjoy a better and more established wave pattern and
a freer wind angle further behind us.”
The current weather forecast is for the depression to fill and
ease as it moves to the east, which will see both boats sailing
in similar conditions again which will allow ‘Club Med’ to exploit
its lead to the full. Dalton’s optimism about the future: “We
are sailing in those puffy frontal conditions. Hopefully this
system will slack off soon and yield a more stable set of sailing
conditions.” But handling this big and powerful catamaran
is not for the faint-hearted and extra vigilance is required at
all times now that the crew are in the South. Earlier today the
crew had a warning of what can happen when you push too hard in
difficult conditions: “We stuck it in once, sailed into a
wave and the boat stopped. I was in my bunk and ended up standing
on the bulkhead at the front of my bunk. Neil McDonald was on
the mainsheet and went flying straight down the hatch. You have
to watch it in this place, one bad wave and it is all over. It
will bite you on the backside if you let it.”
The pace and the concentration shown by the ‘Club Med’ crew have
yielded good results over the past few days. The Race is now very
much between ‘Team Adventure’ and ‘Club Med’ as ‘Innovation Explorer’
continues to struggle to sail free from the South Atlantic High
more than 500 miles back: “Relative to Loïck Peyron
and the ‘Innovation Explorer’ crew, I feel sorry for them. We
are a whole weather system ahead of them now.”
| Positions at 1100 GMT
1- Club Med 18,225.5 miles from the finish line For the latest images (including the latest photos from onboard) |
![]() Graphic Courtesy Team Adventure |
A Tactician’s Kind of Day
by Rich Roberts, ‘Yachting’ Key West Race Publicity Director
January 17 – Key West, Florida
A mischievous summer storm blew in from the Atlantic Ocean
Tuesday and brought the Bermuda Triangle with it. Everyone involved
in ‘Yachting’ Key West Race Week 2001 agreed that it was a tactician’s
kind of day when speed was second in priority to location. As
the light rain fronts rolled progressively over the four courses,
laid out east to west over a seven-mile expanse, each saw varying
conditions with one thing in common: a lot of navi-guessing going
on. The day belonged to those who were lucky or smart – or both.
Winds fluctuated from 5 to 19 knots and swung through about
60 degrees left and right. The 37 Farr 40s were typically flipped
inside out until conditions settled down to a steadier 8-10 for
the second race in the afternoon. George Carabetta’s ‘Diana’ from
Meriden, Conn., was last and 21st in Monday’s first two races
but won Tuesday’s first race by 23 seconds as Philippe Kahn’s
‘Pegasus’, an Admiral’s Cup contender from California, went from
a 2-7 Monday to a 20-12 Tuesday.
Harry Melges, 1-1 among 59 Melges 24s Monday, was 10-14 as
dark horse Neil Sullivan of Annapolis ran his string to 3-4-1-4
for the lead.
Footnote: Kahn’s tactician is San Diego’s Mark Reynolds, an
Olympic gold medalist and the Sperry World Sailor of the Year,
which shows how crazy the gods were Tuesday. ‘Diana’s tactician
is Stu Bannatyne, a recent addition to John Kostecki’s ‘illbruck’
America’s Cup team.
James Richardson’s ‘Barking Mad’ – ‘Pegasus’ rival for the
Admiral’s Cup slot – charged to the front of the Farr 40 fleet
with a 5-4 effort. George Andreadis’s ‘Atalanti XII’, with Robbie
Haines, slipped to an 8-22 day but was awarded Boat of the Day
honors for Monday’s 1-5.
Doug DeVos of Holland, Mich., owner of the 1D35 ‘Windquest’,
was away on business for the day, but Dan Cheresh, a former national
champion, had the boat out in front through the first windward-leeward
lap until a shift of 50-60 degrees skewed the course. As W.S.
Shellhorse of Lake Wesley, VA, sailed ‘Avalanche’ to victory,
‘Windquest’ settled for fifth, and tactician
Dobbs Davis lamented, “We couldn’t cover 20 boats.”
“It was pretty weird,” said Ken Read, helmsman for
Makoto Uematsu’s Farr 50 ‘Esmeralda’, which leads the IMS class
with a string of 1-1-2-1 finishes. The IMS course was third in
line for the weather, enabling those who stayed alert to see what
was coming. Read said, “Binoculars were a valuable tool.
[Tactician] Tony Rey and [navigator] Ian Moore kept their heads
out of the boat all day.”
Sometimes amateurs figure it out better than the pros. Tom
Coates, sailing the J/105 ‘Masquerade’ from Newport, RI, scored
a 1-3 because he listened to his tactician, Chris Perkins. They
took a port-tack start at the committee boat and went hard right,
as most boats went left. “Chris was right, as he usually
is,” Coates said. “We didn’t look back. On the other
hand, on the same course, Woody Bergendahl, on the J/29 ‘Tomahawk’
from Ludlow, VT, was 1-4 because he decided that “for the
most part, the left paid off.”
For complete results see: www.Premiere-Racing.com.
Weather Updates
January 17 – 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 Ocean Weather
You can view the University of Hawaii Department of Meteorology
satellite picture by clicking
here.
Pacific Sea State
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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