42nd TRANSPACIFIC
YACHT RACE Transpacific Yacht Club
Starts July 1-4-6, 2003 www.transpacificyc.org
June 26, 2003 For Immediate Release
WINDS OF CHANGE TEASE TRANSPAC
AS FIRST START NEARS
LONG
BEACH, Calif.---A promising but unsettled weather
system awaits the first starters in the 42nd Transpacific
Yacht Race to Hawaii next Tuesday. The first 25
boats---10 Cal 40s, 10 Aloha competitors and five
boats in racing division 5---will leave the starting
line near Point Fermin on the Palos Verdes Peninsula
at 1 p.m.
Overall,
the 59 entries form the largest Transpac fleet
in 18 years. Twenty-two division 3 and 4 racers
will start Friday, July 4, followed by 12 division
1 and 2 boats Sunday, July 6. Under normal conditions,
the first boats---most likely Philippe Kahn's
defending Barn Door winner Pegasus 77 or Roy E.
Disney's record holder, Pyewacket, starting July
6---could finish off Diamond Head as early as
Sunday, July 13.
But
"normal" is a conditional term in Transpac.
Two common variables are the strength of the Eastern
Pacific trade winds and the location of the Pacific
High, the ever-changing blob of high pressure
and light wind that "normally" lies
along and north of the rhumb (direct) line to
Hawaii. The route measures 2,225 nautical miles
in a straight line, but historically that has
been the slow way to go.
In
his special Transpac preview series, world-class
sailor and weather guru Bill Biewenga most recently
noted: "The QuikSCAT satellite data indicates
a good breeze along rhumb line. There appear to
be 20 knots of wind or more along much of the
route . . . or slightly to the south of rhumb."
And
Biewenga gives the early starters something else
to ponder: "As you begin to think about how
far and how fast to go to the south to dodge or
ignore the high pressure ridge, remember to keep
an eye on your back in the tropics. [There is]
a lineup of tropical waves and one of them is
already being labeled a Tropical Disturbance.
You'll want to watch to see just how 'disturbing'
it becomes. That can rearrange the pressure gradient
along the normal location for the ridgeline. Or
it can be FAR more disturbing than that."
Bon
voyage!
Bill
Biewenga's Web site: www.wxadvantage.com/
TRANSPAC
NOTES
Challenged
America's Transpac effort will be well documented.
Independent film producer John Lutz will go along
with the San Diego team of five disabled crew
members and skipper Josh Ross, who are sailing
the Tripp 40, B'Quest. "It's that one story
any filmmaker would love to document," Lutz
said. "Their personal stories about overcoming
odds and demanding challenges to race across the
Pacific in the 2003 Transpac will surely motivate
and inspire anyone." . . .
Two
Guys On the Edge's pre-race luck is running true
to form, even though the boat has changed from
a Sonoma 30 to a 1D35. Last year owner Dan Doyle
and Bruce Burgess of Honolulu were the fastest
doublehanders on corrected handicap time after
borrowing a race-saving headfoil from former competitor
Kirk Wilson at the starting line. This time they
ordered a new spinnaker pole "but found due
to a shipping glitch it had only one pole end
fitting," Doyle reported from San Diego,
where they are prepping the boat. However, this
year they had time to get the right parts shipped
from Rhode Island. . . .
The
Aloha sendoff dinner is scheduled Saturday night,
6:30 p.m., at the new Hyatt Regency Huntington
Beach Resort, 21500 Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington
Beach. The skippers meeting will be at 5:30. Tickets
are available to race non-participants by contacting
AL GARNIER at (310) 816-6515. The price is $52.
. . .
Last
call for the final Safety at Sea seminar before
Transpac, required of 30 per cent of the crew
and both members of a doublehanded crew within
the last five years. The seminar is scheduled
Saturday at the Orange Coast College of Sailing
and Seamanship in Newport Beach. Those interested
are urged to sign up by phone at (949) 645-9412,
ext. 2.
*
* *
EDITORS:
A press/photo boat will be available to accredited
media for all three starts. Complimentary, copyright
free photos in high and low resolution also are
available. Please contact the press officer (below)
concerning either matter.
COMMODORE
Brad Avery
(949) 645-9412
brad@occsailing.com
ENTRIES
CHAIRMAN
Bill Lee
(831) 464-4782
wizard@fastisfun.com
PRESS
OFFICER
Rich Roberts
(310) 835-2526
richsail@earthlink.net
OFFICIAL
ENTRIES (as of June 25, 2003):
RACING
DIVISION
Division
1 (start July 6)
Pegasus
77 (Reichel/Pugh 77), Philippe Kahn, Honolulu.
Pyewacket (R/P 75), Roy E. Disney, Los Angeles.
Division
2 (start July 6)
Alta
Vita (Transpac 52), Bill Turpin, Santa Cruz, Calif.
Beau Geste (Transpac 52), Karl Kwok, Hong Kong.
Bengal II (Ohashi 52 ),Yoshihiko Murase, Nagoya,
Japan.
Grand Illusion (Santa Cruz 70), James McDowell,
Lahaina, H.I. Helsal II (Adams 60), W.E. Rawson,
Melbourne, Australia. Icon (Perry 65), Richard
Robbins/Jim Roser, Seattle. Medicine Man (Andrews
61), Bob Lane, Long Beach, Calif. Pendragon 4
(Davidson 52), John MacLaurin, Marina del Rey,
Calif. Renegade (Andrews 70), Dan Sinclair, Vancouver,
B.C., Canada. Vicki (Andrews 68), Al and Vicki
Schultz, Long Beach.
Division
3 (start July 4)
Dasher
(Santa Cruz 50), Roger Groh, San Francisco.---DH.
Horizon (Santa Cruz 50), Jack Taylor, Dana Point,
Calif. Innocent Merriment (J/160), Myron Lyon,
San Diego. Jeito (J/145), Francisco Guzman, Acapulco,
Mexico. Lucky Dog (J/125), Peter Putnam, Newport
Beach---DH. Maitri (J/160), Peter Johnson, San
Diego. On Point (Schock 40), Nick Martin, Wilmington,
Calif. Pipe Dream IX (J/160), Scott Piper, Coral
Gables, Fla. Reinrag2 (J/125), Tom Garnier, Portland,
Ore. The Cone of Silence (Australian Super 30),
James and Jenny Neil, Newport, NSW, Australia.
Division
4 (start July 4)
Beautiful
Day (Beneteau 47.7), William Boyd, San Diego.
Bolt (Olson 40), Craig Reynolds, Balboa, Calif.
Cool Man Cool2! (Sydney 38), Harrell Jones, Dana
Point, Calif. Hot Tamale (J/120), Tom and Doug
Jorgensen, Glendora, Calif. Krakatoa (Young 32),
Rod Skellet, Sydney, Australia. Lawndart (Cape
Bay Fast 40), Bill Allan, Nanaimo, B.C. Paddy
Wagon (Ross 40), Richard Mainland, Marina del
Rey, Calif. Swept Away (J/120), Louis Bianco,
Seattle. Tabasco (1D35), John Wylie, San Diego.
Tera's XL (ILC 40), Antony and Daniel Barran,
Northridge, Calif. Two Guys On the Edge (1D35M),
Dan Doyle, Honolulu---DH. Wild Thing (1D35), Chris
and Kara Busch, San Diego.
Division
5 (start July 1)
B'Quest
(Tripp 40), Challenged America/Urban Miyares,
San Diego. Masquerade (Choate 40), Timothy Coker,
San Diego. Starbuck (Black Soo 31), Greg Nelsen,
Piedmont, Calif.---DH. There and Back Again (Tripp
40), Robert Rice, Long Beach. Wind Dancer (Catalina
42), Paul Edwards, Wilmington, Del.
CAL
40 (start July 1)
California
Girl, Don and Betty Lessley, Point Richmond, Calif.
Celebrity, Gerald Finnegan, Redondo Beach, Calif.
Flying Cloud, Darrell and Scott Wilson, Long Beach.
Illusion, Stan and Sally Honey, Palo Alto. John
B, Greg Boyer, Newport Beach, Calif. Ralphie,
Jill and Taylor Pillsbury/Eleanor and Davis Pillsbury,
San Francisco. Ranger, William Partridge, Richmond,
Calif. Redhead, Andrew Opple, Ketchum, Idaho.
Seafire, John T. Harrison, Honolulu. Willow Wind,
Wendy Siegal, Sunset Beach, Calif.
ALOHA
DIVISION (start July 1)
Aloha
A
Axapac
(Wylie 39), Barry Ruff, Vancouver, B.C.
Beach Music (Tayana 52), Kirby Coryell, Lafayette,
Calif.---DH. Between the Sheets (Sun Odyssey 52.2),
Ross Pearlman, Calabasas, Calif. Enchanted Lady
(Roberts 55 ketch), Andy Sibert, Seal Beach, Calif.
Incredible (Swan 53), Rick Gorman, Los Alamitos,
Calif. Lady Bleu II (Dynamique 62), Roger and
Brenda Kuske, San Diego. Marla R (Beneteau 50),
Jon Richards, Mesa, Ariz.
Aloha
B
Barking
Spider (Catalina 38), David Kory, Point Richmond,
Calif. Pipe Dream (Choate/Feo 37), John Davis,
Long Beach. Sea Dancer (Ericson 35), Alvin Wheatman,
Marina del Rey.
DH---Doublehanded.
COMMODORE
Brad Avery
(949) 645-9412
brad@occsailing.com
ENTRIES
CHAIRMAN
Bill Lee
(831) 464-4872
wizard@fastisfun.com
PRESS
OFFICER
Rich Roberts
(310) 835-2526
richsail@earthlink.net