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October 23, 2000


Photo of the Day

The Smile of a Youngster

October 23 – Caribbean

Is there a more beautiful thing in the world than the smile
of a youngster? What brought a smile to this young lady’s face
is fooling around in the rigging while on charter in the Caribbean.
We should all be so lucky.

Angela Lammers
of Antigua checks
out a shroud.
Photo Latitude/Andy


Weather Updates

October 23 – Pacific and Atlantic Oceans

Tropical Weather

It’s all quiet in the hurricane regions of Mexico as well as
the Atlantic/Caribbean.

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

Seas are normal in the Pacific, but you might check at: http://www.mpc.ncep.noaa.gov/RSSA/PacRegSSA.html.

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


Cruising

Have Two People Navigating

October 23 – Tuamotus

A couple of years ago we ran this
photo of George Backhus’ Deerfoot 62 ‘Moonshadow’ aground on
a reef in a remote part of the Tuamotus. She had gone up at 10
knots as a result of a navigation error. Always have two people
navigating independently when in dangerous waters.

As much as it appeared ‘Moonshadow’ might have been a goner,
she was eventually pulled into deep water and over to Tahiti
by a tug, then put on a ship and sent to New Zealand for repairs.
After the better part of a year and several hundred thousand
dollars, she was as good as new and has been cruising the South
Pacific again, most recently Fiji.


Photo George Backhus

YOTREPS

October 23 – 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 http://www.bitwrangler.com/yotreps/



Racing

The World’s Most Beautiful Race Course

October 23 – Mediterranean

When Ted ‘the mouth of the South’ Turner did the Middle Sea
Race in the early ’70s, he said, “The race is run over probably
the most beautiful race course in the world.” The Middle
Sea is a 620-miler that starts in historic Malta, takes the fleet
north to Syracuse and the narrow Strait of Messina that separates
Sicily from Italy, rounds Stromboli, heads west around the western
tip of Sicily, south past the islands of Pantelleria and Lampedusa,
and back to Malta. In other words, you start in Malta, round Silicy
counterclockwise, and head back to Malta.

In the 21 year history of the race, there have been many great
winners: ‘Stormvogel’, ‘Pen Duick III’, the ‘American War Baby’,
‘Mistress Quickly’, ‘Bumblebee IV’, ‘Nirvana’, ‘Saudade’, ‘Sagamore’
and ‘Riviera di Rimini’. It was in ’98 that ‘di Rimini’ set the
course record of 72 hours, a record that is threatened this year
by Northern Californian Robert McNeil’s R/P 75 ‘Zephyrus’. McNeil
is sailing with many of the same crew that raced ‘Zephyrus’ earlier
this year to an new record in the Cape Town to Rio Race. The big
green boat was last seen leaving a coastal mark at 17 knots.

The sponsoring Royal Malta YC was formed perhaps as early as 1835,
but was disbanded several times since – for example, when Malta
was attacked during World War II and a bomb destroyed the clubhouse.


Latina


Providence


Robert McNeil’s Zephyrus (of Pt. Richmond)
Photos Anthony Camilleri


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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.