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October 4, 2000


Photos of the Day

Fun and Excitement on the Estuary

October 4 – Alameda

If you spent Tuesday night watching
the presidential debate or watching the A’s beat the Yankees
in the playoffs, you missed the fun and excitement at the Mexico-Only
Crew List and Ha-Ha Kick-Off and Reunion Party at the Encinal
YC in Alameda.

There was an excellent crowd of in excess of 350 people, and
those who arrived before 6:30 p.m. got to see the Coast Guard
put on an excellent helicopter rescue demonstration. The Coasties
put a volunteer in the water, then had a rescue diver jump from
the helo and swim over to him. After getting a good grip on the
‘victim’, he was placed into a basket and winched up into the
helicopter (top photo). Then a hoist was lowered to retrieve
the rescue swimmer. For the grand finale, the ‘victim’ was then
lowered from the chopper to a Coast Guard 44-footer. It was another
great performance by the men and women of the Coast Guard, a
service which continues to become more mariner friendly all the
time. Bravo!

The only near hitch in the demonstration occurred when some folks
sailing a Santana 22 down the Estuary with a chute up held a
course that nearly put them beneath the helicopter’s downdraft
– which blows at about 100 knots (bottom photo). A word to the
wise: if you insist on sailing beneath a helicopter, either drop
your chute or get ready for a hell of a knockdown.

In other party action, Sal of Sal’s Inflatables provided a 4-person
liferaft for the ‘rip stop girls’ to inflate and for everyone
to crawl into. Dick Markie of Marina Paradise near Puerto Vallarta
was there to answer everyone’s Mexico questions and to report
that Marina Paradise is in the process of adding another 60 much-needed
berths. Gerry Cunningham was on hand to show off his various
Sea of Cortez Cruising Guides, and Carole Schurch of Qualcomm-Globalstar
gave demonstrations of the satellite phones that will be the
official communications system of the Baja Ha-Ha VII.


Photos Latitude/Richard


Errata

October 4 – San Francisco Bay

In yesterday’s ‘Lectronic,
we published a photo of a small boat that had sailed dangerously
close in front of a container ship, and identified the small boat
as a Pearson Ariel 26. Ed Ekers of the Ariel fleet quickly emailed
us a message saying he agreed that small boats shouldn’t cut in
front of commercial traffic, but advised us that the boat was
perhaps a 22-ft Pearson Commander, but certainly not an Ariel.
His opinion was seconded by Bill Phelon, also of the Ariel fleet.

We appreciate these gentlemen taking the time to correct us –
and to protect the honor of the Pearson Ariel fleet. Having looked
at the photo once again, we’re beginning to suspect she’s actually
a Bristol 26. Can anyone confirm this for us?


Weather Updates

October 4 – Pacific and Atlantic Oceans

Tropical Weather

Former Hurricane Keith has now moved into the Gulf of Mexico,
but with only 35-knot winds. Other than that, the Atlantic/Caribbean
is clear for the first time in several weeks.

Down Mexico way, Tropical Storm Olivia is blowing at 55 knots,
well offshore and moving further offshore.

San Francisco Bay Weather

To see what the winds are like on the Bay 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 new University of Hawaii Department of Meteorology
satellite picture by clicking
here
.

Pacific Sea State

Seas are normal in the Eastern Pacific. Check out today’s sea
state at: http://www.mpc.ncep.noaa.gov/RSSA/PacRegSSA.html.

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


Cruising

Long Shadows, Last Kicks

 October 4 – Richardson Bay

With just one look at the longer
shadows and emptying anchorage in Richardson Bay, you can tell
that summer sailing is almost over and the lucky folks are headed
south to the tropics. But there’s still a couple of good weekends
of fall sailing left, allowing folks like John and Laurie to
get their sailing kicks – and tan cheeks – on San Francisco Bay.


Photos Latitude/Richard

YOTREPS

October 4 – 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

Lookin’ Good

October 4 –
San Francisco Bay

We don’t have any racing news for you today, so we’ll share
this photo of the Hunter ‘Almond Joy’ we caught ‘racing’ across
the Central Bay last Sunday.


Photo Latitude/Richard


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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.