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May 14, 2004



Photo of the Day: Troy

May 14 – Hollywood

Hooray for Hollywood! If you’ve seen the
preview of the movie Troy, the new Brad Pitt vehicle,
and if you’ve done the Baja Ha-Ha, you know there is something
phony in Tinseltown. The beach used to depict the place the ships
landed in Turkey is actually at Cabo Falso, just around the corner
from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. And we must say, the computer technician
who deleted the two lighthouses and added all the ships didn’t
do a very good job, as the boats are about 10 times larger than
they ought to be.


Photo Courtesy Warner Brothers

As for the $180 million movie itself, critics
say viewers will be bored – except for young women, who might
enjoy the way the camera endlessly caresses the body of a buffed
up Brad Pitt. The climax of the film, if it may be called that,
is said to be when viewers are allowed a peek at Pitt’s naked
butt, something previously reserved for wife Jennifer Aniston.


Sometimes You Just Can’t Make It

May 14 – San Diego

Paul Plotts of the great 71-ft San Diego-based
schooner Dauntless tried valiantly to make it up the coast
for the Master Mariner’s Regatta again this year, but the weather
just wouldn’t let him.


Paul Plotts at the helm of Dauntless in the 2002 Master
Mariners Regatta
Photo Latitude/Chris

“For two weeks we’ve tried to get
to San Francisco. In our last foray, it took us five hours to
get by Pt. Sur in 35-40 knot winds with 15-ft seas, so we had
to give up. I very much appreciate Latitude being our
sponsor, and we’ll try again another time.”

The Northern California coast can indeed
be wicked at this time of year, and sometimes it’s just more
prudent to try again another time. Although they’ll be missing
the Master Mariner’s, Dauntless is scheduled to participate
in the McNish Classic Regatta out of Channel Islands Harbor on
August 7.


The Limits of Globalstar

May 14 – The Americas

We’ve had good success using our Globalstar
SatPhone in Mexico. Beyond that, however, is another question.
If you go to their Web site, you’ll see the accompanying map
of coverage.

It indicates that the phones should work
well all along Central America, Panama, the north coast of South
America, and in the Eastern Caribbean. Alas, it’s been our experience
this winter that there is virtually no coverage anywhere south
of Acapulco to Panama, and all the way across the north coast
of South America. Once in the Eastern Caribbean, calls might
go through or not be dropped about 25% of the time. Other Globalstar
owners have reported similar problems, and have had to restrain
themselves from throwing their phones in the water. Either Globalstar
needs to put more satellites up or revise their coverage map
to more accurately reflect reality.


Help Put The Baja Bash in the Public
Domain

May 14 – Baja California

Jim Elfers, Harbor Manager at the new and
grand 270-berth luxury Costa Baja Marina outside of La Paz, tells
us that he still gets lots of requests for his Baja Bash
book, which is now out of print. Elfers says that if someone
has a complete copy, and if someone would like to scan it, he’ll
put the whole thing into the public domain via the Latitude
38
Web site and elsewhere. Does anybody have a complete copy?
Would anybody be willing to scan it?


Mirabella V
to Be Unveiled for the Press Next Week

May 14 – Plymouth, UK


Mirabella V
Photo Courtesy Ron Holland Design

The kind folks at Ron Holland Design sent
us an invitation to tour Joseph Vittoria’s new Mirabella V
at the old Vosper Thornycroft Shipbuilding complex in Plymouth,
England, next week. You’ll remember that at 245 feet, she’ll
be the largest single-masted boat in the world. And at 289 feet,
her mast will be the tallest in the world – and unable to make
it under the Golden Gate Bridge or the Bridge of the Americas
in Panama by about 90 feet. Regretfully, we’ve had to decline
the invite, as they neglected to include a plane ticket. After
the press fest, Mirabella will head to the Med, where
she’ll begin chartering at $250,000 a week. Seeing that there
are 497 billionaires in the world, and 10,000 people who are
worth $500 million, owner Vittoria thinks there’s a market for
his boat.


Yet Another Big CBTF Boat to the West
Coast

May 14- San Diego

Randall Pittman of Chicago, who has often
kept some of his boats in San Diego, has a new one headed there,
the Ed Dubois-designed, McConaghy-built 90-ft Genuine Risk.
Although she’ll have a canting keel and forward rudder, Genuine
Risk
does not comply with the MaxZ86 rule as do Morning
Glory
and Pyewacket. Like them, however, she’s very
long and narrow.

Having been completed too late for the
Bermuda Race, Genuine Risk is on her way to San Diego,
where she’ll be finished up in preparation for the Chicago-Mac
Race in late June. From there she’ll head to the Maxi Yacht Rolex
Cup in Sardinia in September. Among the rock stars from the West
Coast who will race on the boat are Charlie and Jonathan McKee
of Seattle, Mark Rudiger of Northern California, and Keith Lorence
of Southern California.

We love this line about the Genuine
Risk
program from dailysail.com:
“Original talk of flying the boat from regatta to regatta
on her own plane have been shelved for the time being.”


Profligate’s
Regress

May 14 – Golfo de Tehuantepec

“We’re tempting fate at what our Nobeltec
navigation software says is Lat 14.44.395, Lon 94.09.075,”
writes ‘Helsinkiman’ via Skymate email from aboard Profligate.
“The conventional wisdom for crossing the Golfo de Tehuantepec
is to keep ‘one foot on the beach’, as we’re told it blows offshore
at gale force an average of one day out of every two. Although
staying close to shore is much longer, it eliminates the opportunity
for big waves to develop. However, armed with a positive weather
report from Commander’s Weather and an adventuresome spirit,
the crew of Profligate decided on a rhumbline course across
the Gulf to 350-mile distant Puerto Angel, Mexico.

“So far the weather has been perfect!
The shrimp fleet has been out in force, fishing the edge of the
continental shelf. At this point the shelf drops from 260 feet
to more than 19,000 feet, making it one of the steepest and deepest
canyon walls on the planet. Some of the best fishing occurs when
currents well up from the deep. Before the weather turns bad,
the savvy fishermen are long gone back to shore, so we took their
presence to be a good omen. But it was crowded, so we had to
thread our way through the shrimpers – narrowly missing one unlit
panga that was using International Distress whistle signals instead
of the normal lights.

“Anticipating a pleasant crossing,
we turned the night watch over to John Pettitt, and turned in.
At 0100, on the 13th, John noted the perfect starry skies and
made a one word log entry – ‘Boring!’ What was he thinking?

“Twenty minutes later, we were surrounded
by tropical thunderstorms. By 0200, when your scribe took the
watch, it was time to batten the hatches, unplug the electronics
and stow them in the oven, and settle in for a spectacular light
show. The log entries for the remainder of the night were: ‘More
lightning, definitely not boring!’

“The storm passed, as all do, and
we are now moving at 9.5 knots, halfway across the Tehuantepec.
We are still drying out from the night before, including, unfortunately,
the electronics which got soaked inside the stove! John’s log
entries today have all been ‘No comment’. As he learned, in a
sea known for rapid, unpleasant changes of weather, it doesn’t
pay to tempt fate.

“We have had other highlights crossing
the Tehuantepec, many of which have been wildlife related. Coming
across a tern quietly resting on the back of a sea turtle was
great, but not half so much fun as watching Ian jumping and screaming
around on deck this morning. ‘Is he dancing to appease the weather
gods?’ we wondered. No, he had just put on a new pair of shorts
from the wash line, and discovered – belatedly – that a large
cricket had taken up residence in them during the night. The
jokes have been flying ever since. Is that a cricket in your
pants, or are you just happy to see me? As most men have special
names for their ‘privates’, we think Ian should be able to reserve
‘Jiminy’ for his.

“According to our Nobeltec Admiral
navigation software, we should arrive at Acapulco at 0630 on
Saturday, in time for showers, great food, and Mexican hospitality.”

Thanks to a more favorable current, Profligate
is now expected to arrive in Acapulco sometime this afternoon.

Commander’s Weather


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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.