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PEGASUS 77 WINS TRANSPAC 2003
Pegasus 77
and Pyewacket have competed twice against each other: Transpac
2001 and Coastal Cup 2003.
Both times Pegasus 77 clearly won.
Transpac 2003 is the culmination of this two year rivalry.
Who will cross the finish line at Diamond Head first?
Transpac 2003
Skipper's Log
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Pegasus
Racing team accepting the Barn Door award for First to Finish in the Transpac 2003. |
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Competitor: Pyewacket
Designer: Reichel-Pugh
Sail number: 50008
Rig: Sloop
LOA (ft.): 77
Draft (ft): 12.5 Beam (ft): 15
Hull color: White / Blue
Yacht Club: Waikiki and St. Francis Yacht Club
Builder: McConaghy, Sydney, Australia
Year launched: 2001, turbo-charged in May 2003
Skipper: Philippe Kahn
Navigator: Mark Rudiger
Watch Captain 1: Mark Christensen
Watch Captain 2: Morgan Larson
Crew: Zan Drejes, Samuel "Shark" Kahn, Sean "Doogie"
Couvreux, Jeff Madrigali, Mark Christensen, Morgan Larson,
Steve Erickson, Mike Mottl, Adam Beashel, Richard Clarke,
Mikey Joubert, Justin Clougher |
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Friday July 4th
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Lunch break
while getting Pegasus 77 ready for the
big race. Shark is now 13 and a growing
boy! |
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Happy 4th of July. For the team at Pegasus
Racing, its a lot of focus and work on Friday, July 4th. That's
because we decided to get it all done and give the whole team
Saturday the 5th off. Time to relax and get psyched up for
the big event. Just like a big exam, cramming won't help.
We've done all that we could do, now our dice are cast. Of
course in the navigation part of the team we're going to be
very busy crunching weather information. Most of the team
is going to go for a big workout at the gym, jogging or biking.
This will be the last big workout before a 7 day match race.
And that must be one of the longest match races of modern
sailing history: 2250 nautical miles of non-stop adrenaline,
24 hours a day without respite.
There are 4 distinct parts to the Transpac race:
Part 1: Getting out of the coastline into the offshore
winds. Big gains or big losses can be made here.
We're starting at 1 PM, probably before the seabreeze will
be established and there is quite a bit of adverse current.
Our goal at the start is to stay in touch with our competitor.
We don't need to be ahead, just close enough that we don't
make significant losses. This is the same kind of approach
that we took successfully during Coastal Cup a few weeks ago.
Part 2: Reaching in the Northwesterly gradient breeze
all the way to the ridge that is attached to the
South-Eastern part of the Pacific high. That's where we'll
meet the North-Easterly tradewinds. How far South do we go?
How much more distance should we sail in order to find more
wind? Because Pegasus 77 is a sled and planes, every knot
of increased windspeed means 1/2 knot of increased boat speed
off the wind.
Part 3: Running in the trades and surfing to Hawaii.
Sailing to Hawaii is surfing to Hawaii: You want to take down
every wave that is surfable. And that's lots of fun.
Part 4: The last 500 nautical Miles where
we have to sail with those tricky squalls all around. With
these squalls, the wind gets shifted right at the front end
but where there is almost no wind in the back. In the last
100 miles we need to find the right line to head for the Diamond
Head finish line. And there are a lot of decisions to be made
then as to how far to get across the Molokai channel to find
better wind and a better angle to the finish, again trading
more distance for more boat speed.
Of course weather models change quickly and so by Sunday
morning we'll have a pretty good game plan for the first couple
of days, but then, we'll need to continue crunching weather
information in the navigation station. This makes the Transpac
very much a navigator's race because sleds like Pegasus 77
are so responsive to increased wind speeds.
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Saturday, July 5th
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Friday, 4th
of July, watching Division 3 and 4 competitors
start 48 hours ahead of us with ideal
starting conditions. |
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Today is big crunch time for working on
our weather tactics. Here is a summary of what we know and
our competitor probably knows too.
Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
There is a possibility that a tropical disturbance may be
headed our way from Mexico, two days into the race. That's
what the forecasts say. It could be a hurricane, or just a
little more wind. Models are not very good at forecasting
tropical depressions. Maybe it will fizzle out. Its the kind
of situation that if the winds are manageable we may actually
head South a bit to catch some of them in order to go faster,
trading distance sailed for boat speed. We'll have to watch
this one closely.
Click here
to see today's weather map
This morning, the dual High pressure is still elongated around
40-41 North, 40-152 West and its central part has strengthened
to more than 1030 millibars. That should make for a quick
race if it holds up and the double system continues consolidating
into one stronger system forecasted to gain force to around
1034 milibars.
For the start, we should se a South Westerly sea-breeze flow
of 6-12 knots (probably kicking in between around noon) and
clocking all afternoon while building a bit of strength.
Our game plan is going to be to get into the strong offshore
winds as soon as we can by sailing a Great Circle route while
staying of the Islands in order to avoid their wind shadows.
Then we'll have to see how the different systems evolve.
That's a nice forecast and could make for a record breaking
year. But its too early to tell yet.
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Saturday, July 5th
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A happy crew
after our team dinner Saturday night
at the Papadakis Taverna Greek restaurant
in San Pedro |
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Food while sailing, is really important.
But perhaps most important, is a great last meal before a
long offshore passage. It's not just the food, but getting
the whole team to gel. It's discussing the last details. What
positions will we have at the start and what will we all do.
Nice company!
While we were having dinner, my assistant
Faye Kong and some of our software engineering team are busy
putting the last high-tech touches to our weather crunching
systems on-board Pegasus 77. We have four networked laptops
and we constantly receive satellite-based weather information.
We now have developed a sophisticated way to gather, organize
and analyze some of that weather. And like every high-tech
project, if it wasn't for the last minute, nothing would ever
get done!
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Sunday, July 6th
Crusty (Mark Christensen) has done a great
job during the last 6 months managing the Transpac efforts,
among other projects. We must remember that the logistics
in successfully campaigning a state-of-the-art 77 feet offshore
racer are extremely complex. But then we can't lose sight
of racing. With Pegasus Racing, we race all the time. We race
small one-design boats like Finns, Star, 29ers, 49ers or Melges
24s, because with a minimum of logistics you get to really
race competitively with the best in the world. Then, its a
matter of applying those skills to the big boat.
So the morning of the start here is what the logistics look
like:
08:30am - Meet at the reception, to hand over bags to be shipped
by container to Honolulu
10:00am - Meet at boat
10.30am - Leave dock
12:00pm - Start sailing and tuning up
We decided that the starting positions would be as follows
| Helm: |
Philippe |
| Tactics: |
Morgan |
| Runner: |
Madro |
| Mainsheet: |
Adam |
| Main Caddy: |
Shark |
| Trimmer: |
Mike |
| Trimmer: |
Stevie |
| Floater: |
Mikey |
| Pit: |
Zan |
| Mast: |
Richard |
| Mid-bow: |
Doogie |
| Bow: |
Juggy |
Rudi is free to do whatever is necessary.
First alternate helm is: Morgan
First alternate main is: Stevie
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Sunday, July 6th: The Start!
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We won
the start and 45 minutes into the
race I handed the helm to Morgan who
did a great job at extending our lead...
Maybe too much of a great job as when
the wind shifted right and we fell
into a light spot things changed a
bit. |
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We started in a Catalina eddy. That means
that a local low pressure is stationed around the Santa Catalina
Island and that the winds turn counter-clockwise in the LA
basin. So the start was in a Southerly wind that would gradually
shift right. We started in 4 knots of wind. We started to
leeward of Pyewacket. We crossed the line bow to bow. Pyewacket
tried to roll us, but we held our lane and pinched them off.
Pyewacket then footed to leeward.
We clearly won the start.
However, the wind was so up and down that we fell into a
wind-hole and parked the boat enough, that Pyewacket got their
bow out from our bad air. They continued footing and kept
on getting a huge right shift. The boat to the right with
a big right hand shift makes the gains and they did.
2 hours into the race, Pyewacket is ahead of us, 20 boat
lengths forward, leading to the Catalina Islands. We won the
start but tactically let them get to our right. Now we're
paying the price. We're about 1.5 minutes behind them. We
now need to work on caching up. It's a yacht race!
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Sunday, July 6th
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Pyewacket
did a very good job at translating a
losing start into a 20
boat length lead after we fell into
a wind-hole. Its a yacht race! |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
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Wet, windy, cold and a bit wild
Date: Monday, July 7th
Time: 00:05 PST
Boat Speed: 14.1 knots
Course: 220 degrees
Wind Speed: 29 knots
The transition to the strong offshore winds came abruptly.
Both boats are now on starboard tack and we're going into
the wind in a big seaway. We are carrying two reefs and waves
are breaking over the boat. It's cold, wet and windy and it
will stay that way most of the night from what the satellite
pictures show. For a couple of days we're going to earn our
days sailing downwind by getting tossed and banged around.
The Pyewacket team lost the start, Robbie Haines was driving
the Pyewacket, while I was helming the Pegasus. When I handed
the helm to Morgan, a good hour in the race we became over
confident and stretched too much to windward, letting them
foot to leeward and gain lots of gage to the right. Then a
massive 40 degree shift happened and we fell into a wind hole.
I am glad that we are learning our lessons early in this race.
In some ways, this is a very similar situation as Coastal
Cup. Now we have to catch them. Deja vu...All over again!
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When everything bounces, so do stomachs
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Wet and Cold
at daybreak. Happy boat catching first
20+ knot rides early in the race |
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Date: Monday, July 7th
Time: 05:05 PST
Boat Speed: 16knots
Course: 220 degrees
Wind Speed: 24 knots
It's fast and crisp sailing, although wet and cold. The wind
is down 5
knots. Our first quarter moon has set and the sun is about
to rise. When it bounces hard like this right into an offshore
race, lots of lunches and dinners come right back out over
the side of the boat.
The logistics of it all are complicated by the fact that
with fairly rough conditions, everyone is wearing harnesses
and tethered to the jack lines on deck at night. So, you got
to run, clip-in, and go do your business, all of this while
waves are washing over the deck. There are several styles.
You have the types like Doogie, who while cleaning up the
second reef, straddling the boom and suddenly bounce down
on deck, run to the back of the boat, do their business, run
back to the mast, hop back on the boom, in less than a minute.
Then there is the "I've got a bucket permanently attached
to me and I am not moving an inch from where I am" types.
And of course being down bellow while we're cooking food doesn't
really help... It kind of sets everything on a fast track:
Last in, first out!
Shark is now 13 and its his 3rd trans-Pacific crossing. He's
worked on the boat since he's out of school, did a great job
on the windy Coastal Cup, and is now safely down bellow
holding on to a bucket (Its OK Mom, its part of the rite of
passage and he won't remember that it ever happened in a couple
of days). The tropical depression that is headed for our projected
path has now officially been upgraded to "tropical Storm"
and they gave her a beautiful name: Dolores. She apparently
carries gusts over 45 kts and picking up strength. We'll stay
away from that one. Click here for the latest weather
map.
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Monday July 7th, 09:00 PST
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Rudi calling-in
our 08:00 position to race headquarters.
We like our
positioning South, time will tell. |
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Roll call is every morning at 08:00 PST. Every racing yacht
reports, and every crew member is waiting to know what happened
through the night.
That's because during the night, anything can happen. This
morning at roll call, Pyewacket is ahead of us in distance
to Hawaii. We are 25 Nautical Miles South of them and have
gained about 30 degrees of bearing on them. Pegasus actually
also sailed about 5 miles more distance. What does this all
mean?
First, on all the race reports Pyewacket will be shown leading
in distance to Honolulu. And that is what most people will
see. Read on, because there is more to this. The shortest
distance between two points in sailing geometry is almost
never the straight line. Yes, once again we all know that
both boats are going to get lifted as the winds clock around
the high. And in a lift, its nice to be the inside boat, which
is what Pyewacket is doing. However, our weather analysis
on Pegasus tells us to expect more wind along a more Southerly
route. Our calculations show us that if our wind forecasts
are correct, its well worth sailing extra distance to get
South. So, Pyewacket is betting on shift, Pegasus is counting
on more pressure. We each have our leverage and given a choice
Pegasus wouldn't trade places with Pyewacket. The next 24
hours are going to be critical: Will the Pyewacket head South
in our direction? Will we eventually cross paths? The answers
will come tomorrow, Tuesday at 09:00 PST.
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
31-08 |
121-45 |
2020 |
206:23:58 |
2 |
29 |
10.8 |
232 |
12.23 |
15/03:23 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
31-27 |
122-01 |
2009 |
196:09:31 |
1 |
7 |
11.3 |
230 |
12.1 |
14/17:09 |
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DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
31-27 |
120-54 |
2066 |
237:13:31 |
5 |
49 |
8.4 |
188 |
9.9 |
17/14:54 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
31-28 |
121-21 |
2043 |
208:27:55 |
2 |
31 |
9.6 |
203 |
10.7 |
16/05:45 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
31-18 |
120-17 |
2096 |
293:48:03 |
9 |
54 |
6.8 |
175 |
9.2 |
20/04:57 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
32-06 |
121-29 |
2043 |
202:38:23 |
1 |
21 |
9.6 |
186 |
9.8 |
16/04:43 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
32-36 |
120-27 |
2099 |
299:06:06 |
10 |
55 |
6.6 |
125 |
6.6 |
20/12:54 |
| 2F |
ICON |
31-46 |
120-47 |
2075 |
258:46:57 |
6 |
51 |
7.9 |
170 |
8.9 |
18/06:11 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
32-09 |
121-34 |
2039 |
217:38:39 |
3 |
41 |
9.8 |
188 |
9.9 |
16/00:08 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
31-17 |
120-28 |
2087 |
268:49:31 |
8 |
53 |
7.3 |
181 |
9.5 |
19/06:03 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
31-37 |
120-44 |
2076 |
263:33:19 |
7 |
52 |
7.8 |
175 |
9.2 |
18/08:28 |
| 2J |
Vicki |
31-40 |
121-16 |
2049 |
226:48:33 |
4 |
46 |
9.2 |
192 |
10.1 |
16/13:41 |
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Monday, July 7th: 15:00
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Shark clipped
in, drinking lots of water, "Mom,
I'm 13 now, I'm doing great... I even
had a couple of Cup-o-Noodles!".
Hanging tough while Doogie is trimming
the head-sail, Crusty the main and I'm
trying to keep the Pegasus going better
than windspeed. Good sailing. |
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We're sailing along nicely.
Good news: That tropical storm has weakened and has now been
downgraded to tropical depression. We'll still watch Dolores.
It's nice to know that we
can safely stay South. The team is a bit ambivalent about
this Skipper's log because I kind of spill the beans. I guess
that if we see that Pyewacket has put up a kite and dived
South to meet us, we won't be surprised. Will they chose to
stay the course or try to use their height and cross ahead
of us. Could they? From the wind
scat pictures, the South route looks the best. Things
change quickly and forecasting the weather is more of an art
than a science. So the artist in chief is Rudi. And he's a
great artist in chief. The thing is, nothing is for sure and
it will take a couple of days for all of this to play out.
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Monday, July 7th: 15:00
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It takes
a head-sail trimmer (Doogie), a Main-sail
trimmer (Crusty), a driver (Philippe)
and two grinders to get the performance
out of the beautiful Pegasus 77. |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
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Monday, July 7th: 17:00 PST
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Mike grinding
the head-sail for Doogie, and Adam grinding
the main-sail for Crusty. Boat-speed
is about putting all the pieces together:
Driving, sail-trim, sail plan and setup. |
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The routine on-board is getting
organized, the watches are changing smoothly and we're sailing
along in 16 knots of wind, shifted almost all the way to the
North. We're about to officially enter the ridge zone. That's
much closer to shore than two years ago at Transpac
2001 . You can tell on the latest surface analysis, that
things are pretty unsettled in the North East Pacific Basin.
First there is Tropical Depression Dolores coming from Baja.
Then there is that low with the embedded fronts, going over
the Pacific High system and potentially splitting it in two
weaker highs.
So we must be wizards to figure all this out... Well not
quite. There is a lot of guessing involved.
In the early days of the Dot-Com boom, I remember meeting
with a startup that was going to do the next killer IPO. The
guys we're supposed to be building the most accurate weather
site anywhere, get the numbers up, go public and buy a home
by Diamond Head. They had gotten commitments from major brand
venture capital firms and just needed the blessing of a technologist.
I got the call. They figured that I built a few successful
technology companies like Borland
and that I knew something about weather from sailing and
flying airplanes. Fair enough, I visited these twenty something
net-entrepreneurs, meeting with them in plush hip designer
offices, South of Market. In the room everyone wore Armani, Prada, Brioni and probably Tortelini Bolognesi. Real Bulgari
jewelry and watches, Cartier pens and Chanel Numero Cinq.
The PowerPoint kicked in. Presenting "The Weather Net
Channel, the most accurate forecast anywhere and everywhere".
So I had to ask: "How do you guys do it?" They said:
"Well, we are applying for patents on the following forecasting
methodology: We spent half a million dollars in research that
confirmed that if you know today's weather and you forecast
for tomorrow the exact same weather actually reported today,
you'll be more accurate than 90% of the media forecasts. Our
method is to call up the weather talkers at every airport
and to automatically forecast for tomorrow, today's actual
weather and repeat this process daily. We're applying for
patent protection."They were dead serious. I couldn't
stop laughing. They are now probably retail clerks at Nieman-Marcus.
Weather is hard and there is a good reason why the Ancient
Greeks had Aeol, Poseidon, Zeus and other Gods make the weather
a bi-product of their capricious tempers. That's almost as
good of an explanation as any.
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Sailing in a pitch dark night
Date: Tuesday July 8th
Time: 03:45 PST
The weather and sea-state have completely changed. It's now
warm, overcast, winds are shifty and lighter and we've got
the big kite and a stay sail up. We're entering the running
phase of Transpac. It's unusually early: This is my sixth
trans-Pacific crossing and it usually takes one to two days
more to cross the ridge. With fully overcast skies, its pitch
dark. My favorite part of offshore sailing is steering at
night specially when there are no visual references. Can't
get enough of it.
Shark is back to being 100%. He's grinding, trimming, steering,
laughing at jokes and eating all the solid food that he can
get his hands on. (He even ate some broccoli!). Now he is
sleeping in his bunk.
We are surely crossing the ridge. The wind may be a little
further right than we forecasted, so our competition may have
made some gains on the shift. There is nothing that we can
do about that. We'll wait for the morning report. Now its
about sailing fast through the pitch black night.
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Hanging South, a fair and balanced report,
in other words, real journalism!
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Wind-Spotting:
After daybreak, sailing under cloud
cover, Morgan looking over the horizon.
The roll-call confirmed our strategy:
Go South and sail more miles, it will
pay off later, like a sound investment. |
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Date: Tuesday July 8th
Time: 03:45 PST
This morning's roll call report reflected what we forecasted:
We are now 100 miles South of our competition, we've gone
forward 12 degrees of bearing and sailed 342 nautical miles.
They sailed 328. We were significantly faster sailing lower.
And that could mean more wind for us as we predicted. However,
because the competition is sailing directly to the mark, they've
gained on distance to Honolulu. They are now 27 miles closer
as birds migrate along great circle courses. But the geometry
of sailing is rarely Euclidian. The straight line is almost
never the fastest way to get from point A to point B on a
sailboat. However the position reports will show them ahead
by 27 miles.
Clearly both boats are digging in their heels. They now have
lots of leverage for a big right hand shift. Pegasus is counting
on significantly better winds down South. They will be looking
at wind direction, we'll be focusing on wind speed. The tropical
depression Dolores could now play a bit in our favor. Thanks
for being there and being nice to us Dolores. Check out today's
wind scat picture.
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
28-11 |
127.16 |
1711 |
186:13:03 |
2 |
6 |
11.9 |
338 |
14.1 |
14/07:13 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
29-46 |
128-05 |
1684 |
176:43:17 |
1 |
1 |
12.6 |
329 |
13.7 |
13/21:43 |
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DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
28-06 |
125.16 |
1816 |
205:07:39 |
6 |
33 |
9.5 |
303 |
12.6 |
16/06:48 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
28-38 |
126-26 |
1758 |
180:42:23 |
1 |
2 |
10.9 |
314 |
13.1 |
15/01:59 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
29-15 |
124-31 |
1863 |
229:59:20 |
8 |
51 |
8.4 |
251 |
10.5 |
17/13:08 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
29-19 |
126-17 |
1772 |
182:00:28 |
2 |
3 |
10.5 |
299 |
12.4 |
15/08:05 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
30-35 |
124-26 |
1879 |
239:21:06 |
9 |
53 |
8.1 |
237 |
9.9 |
18/01:09 |
| 2F |
ICON |
28-49 |
125-19 |
1818 |
212:38:26 |
7 |
43 |
9.5 |
294 |
12.3 |
16/08:02 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
29-26 |
126-23 |
1768 |
199:41:38 |
4 |
17 |
10.6 |
297 |
12.4 |
15/06:11 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
29-10 |
125.10 |
1828 |
204:L30:07 |
5 |
32 |
9.2 |
275 |
11.4 |
16/14:14 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
31-31 |
120-41 |
2078 |
637:31:44 |
10 |
55 |
3.4 |
7 |
.3 |
2/13:52 |
| 2J |
Vicki |
29-46 |
126-20 |
1773 |
197:57:13 |
3 |
14 |
10.5 |
285 |
11.9 |
15/08:50 |
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Tuesday, July 8th: 14:00
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Garbage-in,
Barnacle-out: Sea-life is eager for
whatever support, including plastic,
glass, nets, you name it. Here barnacles
are growing on a piece of yellow plastic,
washed-up on deck during the night.
(Background hand, courtesy of Zan-Da-Man) |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
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Tuesday, July 8th: 20:00
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Yes, that's
what we came for: Lively seas, steady
trades and puffy clouds. Its starting
to feel like beautiful Hawaii... |
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Sailing the
trades
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Tuesday, July 8th: 20:00
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Pegasus 77's
mast stretching up almost 100 feet with
kite and staysail flying |
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Sailing the
trades
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Tuesday, July 8th: 20:00
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14 knots
of boat speed, 100 degrees apparent,
137 true wind angle, heading 254 (pointing
straight to Hawaii), 13.6 knots of wind
speed, 34 degrees wind direction....
Just what we ordered, a late shift to
the North East. Lets hope that our luck
continues. |
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Sailing the
trades
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Tuesday, July 8th: 20:00
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Just sailing
moderate trades, pushing the boat hard
to make every wave count |
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Sailing the
trades
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Our early morning report, fair and balanced,
real journalism.
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Breakfast
Burrito at sunrise. Zan loves his Tabasco! |
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Date: Wednesday
July 9th
Time: 07:00 HST
Notice how we are now
using HST (Hawaiian Standard Time). We're pointed almost directly
to Honolulu, we're sailing in light trades, sounds like a
good time to skip 3 time-zones.
If you remember for the last three days, we had been sailing
more distance than the competition investing in what we thought
was a better strategic Southerly position. The difference
showed up again this morning at roll call. Here are the raw
statistics:
Taking a range and bearing from the Pegasus the numbers compute
as following:
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Bearing |
Distance |
Today: |
346 deg |
64nm |
Yesterday: |
323 deg |
100nm |
Difference: |
23 deg of bearing gain to Pegasus |
They have come 26 miles closer to
us |
In terms of performance on the race course, here are the
numbers for you statistic lovers:
Made Good to the Mark
| Pegasus 77 |
265 nm @ 246 deg with an average speed of
11.4 knots (not bad for light air!) |
| Pyewacket |
234 nm @ 235 deg with an average speed of 9.75 knots |
This shows a 35 Nautical Mile gain to the mark
for Pegasus.
What do all these numbers mean? First, a big
cheer on-board the mighty Pegasus. Our investment paid off,
we are now ahead on all leader boards, including for the first
time on the official race schedule. In fact, our calculations
show that we are 8 Nautical Miles closer than the competition
as birds migrate over Oceans (Great Circle Route).
Our race so far, has mostly gone the way that we planned:
We won the match-race start (a nice psychological boost for
Pegasus as Robbie Haines, US Olympic Gold Medalist was steering
the Pyewacket), we invested in the South and our investment
is starting to pay off.
But, this is a long race and our competition is tough. We're
not even halfway to Honolulu. We need to stay focus and think
about the fact that this may be a race where the lead changes
a few times more. And that is great racing. It's a yacht race!
Click here for a winds-cat
chart, Pegasus is at about 26 North, 132 West and they
are about 1/5th of a square directly North of us.
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
27-15 |
132-09 |
1447 |
191:30:41 |
1 |
3 |
11.6 |
265 |
11.1 |
14/12:30 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
28-17 |
132-12 |
1455 |
193:31:33 |
2 |
4 |
11.5 |
234 |
9.7 |
14/14:31 |
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DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
26-52 |
129-50 |
1566 |
197:37:27 |
3 |
7 |
9.8 |
254 |
10.6 |
15/23:18 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
27-44 |
130-47 |
1523 |
188:02:41 |
1 |
2 |
10.5 |
236 |
9.8 |
15/09:19 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
27-52 |
128-21 |
1652 |
225:57:39 |
8 |
48 |
8.6 |
218 |
9.1 |
17/09:19 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
27-56 |
130-06 |
1561 |
195:16:59 |
2 |
5 |
9.9 |
217 |
9.1 |
15/21:21 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
27-55 |
126-56 |
1727 |
262:26:24 |
9 |
54 |
7.4 |
207 |
8.6 |
19/00:15 |
| 2F |
ICON |
27-54 |
129-41 |
1582 |
209:29:07 |
6 |
25 |
9.6 |
237 |
9.9 |
16/04:53 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
27-53 |
130-*30 |
1539 |
207:51:43 |
5 |
23 |
10.2 |
236 |
9.8 |
15/14:21 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
28-30 |
129-32 |
1596 |
200:04:59 |
4 |
10 |
9.4 |
233 |
9.7 |
16:09:49 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
Retired |
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| 2J |
Vicki |
28-38 |
130-17 |
1558 |
209:35:19 |
7 |
26 |
10.0 |
218 |
9.1 |
15/20:28 |
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Wednesday, July 9th
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13 year old
dreams after a night watch |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
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It's just good old navigation and I like it
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Mark Rudiger,
expert navigator, old and new school |
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Navigation is mainly about
two things: Knowing where you are and knowing how to get to
where you want to go, fast and safely. It took a long time
to develop systems that would allow ships to precisely know
where they are let alone where they want to go.
The ancient Polynesians are the master navigators of all time:
They were crossing the great Pacific Ocean going back and forth
to and from New Zealand, Tahiti, Samoa, and Hawaii before the
Europeans even knew how to safely navigate their coastal waters.
Those great ancient navigators used the stars, the sun, wave
patterns, bird migration to find their destinations. They developed
a fantastic oral tradition that has been mostly lost, but is
seeing some revival. The Western world needed to invent the
chronograph to solve the longitude riddle and the sextant to
have a good fix on latitude. That was all aimed at figuring
out where one is, and then the compass helped with where one
wanted to go.
These days, we have $50 hand held GPS devices. However, for
the same reason that we still learn to add, subtract, multiply
and divide although we have digital calculators, I believe
that it's important that we, as sailors or pilots, be familiar
with the more traditional arts of navigation. It's always
a treat to play with the sextant on these offshore passages.
Mark Rudiger carries the old school tradition with him. A
very good thing.
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Wednesday, July 9th
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View from
the top of the Mast of the Mighty Pegasus.
The spinnaker is so far forward that
it doesn't fit in the picture. What
you see forward of the mast is the staysail
that we are flying. |
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Thursday, July 10th: 02:30 HST
Lat: 25 North
Lon: 135 West
Wind: 14 kts @ 74 Deg
Heading: 220 deg
Boat Speed: 13 knots
We're sailing in moderate
trade winds. The Moon set and it's pitch dark with the skies
mostly overcast. The first part of the night was pure magic:
Glittering waters with the reflection of the moon, big skies,
bright stars, little trade-wind puffy clouds, lively seas.
We gybed a few times taking advantage of the shifts and we
are now carrying on port.
The scat chart shows how
much the South is favored for pressure. These charts are action
direct real-time interpretations of sea surface winds from
satellite information. They are very accurate. Every time
we plot ourselves at the time of validity of that scat chart
and compare what our boat instruments show to what we read
on the chart, there is no calibration mis-match.
In the absence of Pyewacket, we could have chosen to just
go South, but we decided to do the right thing from a match
racing perspective and focus on putting more bearing on them.
We'll know in a few hours how that tactic worked out.
Throughout the night, we've made several spinnaker changes
in order to always be sailing with the best possible sail
combination. That's where our preparation before the race
is paying off: We just look at our detailed cross-over charts
and pick the right combination of spinnaker and staysail.
There is no guess-work. Mike Motll has been running our sails
program under Crusty's tutelage and they both have done a
fantastic job.
We're about to have a watch change, all the way into morning
roll-call. Life is good on-board the mighty Pegasus.
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Thursday July 10th, 07:00 HST
You've found the best place
for today's hot Transpac stories: Pegasus 77 stretched from
8 to 43 Miles in 24 hours and increased bearing by more than
45 degrees!
Our early investments in sailing South are paying off. Couple
that with sailing the Pegasus at its full potential for 24
hours and the numbers tell the rest of the story:
With Honolulu bearing 250 degrees and about halfway into
Transpac 2003, from our deck, Pyewacket is bearing 033 degrees
@ 55 Nautical Miles. Furthermore Pegasus has made a gain for
35 Miles straight to the mark.
Our strategy has worked better than expected. The teamwork
has been amazing: Everyone is pushing even harder than they
usually do. It's nice to see. This is a team that really knows
how to perform in all conditions.
We are only half-way into this race and anything can happen.
You can lose a four hour lead by getting caught in the back
of two squalls. So, now we're going to work even harder. Our
management mantra: "Performance, Teamwork and Positive
Attitude" is what makes Pegasus Racing win. It applies
equally to business. Winning sport teams and successful business
in my opinion are managed in a similar way.
Our friends at Alta Vita who chose a route more to the South
did well on Beau Geste. Beau Geste didn't play the shifts
as we did in order to dive South and cover Alta Vita. In fact,
Alta Vita was only second to us in daily run in the last 24
hours and had a better daily run than Pyewacket. Stan Honey
is heading North in his Cal 40. It seems that he is trying
to call an early layline to set himself up for port approach
to Honolulu. That's an interesting move given the present
weather forecasts. We'll have to see how that move plays out.
We watch those battles with interest, but remain focused 100%
on our match race with Pyewacket.
Now off the keyboard and onto the deck!
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
24-54 |
135-58 |
1224 |
202:21:12 |
1 |
4 |
11.0 |
249 |
10.4 |
14/23:21 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
25-33 |
135-15 |
1267 |
211:26:54 |
2 |
17 |
10.5 |
231 |
9.6 |
15/08:26 |
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DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
25-30 |
133-44 |
1349 |
202:22:23 |
2 |
5 |
9.6 |
225 |
9.4 |
16/04:03 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
25-40 |
134-06 |
1330 |
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1 |
2 |
9.8 |
217 |
9.0 |
15/23:14 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
27-02 |
131-51 |
1461 |
230:41:37 |
8 |
46 |
8.4 |
193 |
8.0 |
17/13:51 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
27-24 |
133-31 |
1376 |
209:28:03 |
3 |
14 |
9.3 |
184 |
7.7 |
16/11:32 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
26-42 |
130-31 |
1529 |
254:00:26 |
9 |
52 |
7.7 |
204 |
8.5 |
18/15:49 |
| 2F |
ICON |
26-52 |
133-07 |
1392 |
220:40:42 |
5 |
35 |
9.2 |
193 |
8.0 |
16/16:04 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
26-03 |
133-53 |
1344 |
220:26:31 |
4 |
33 |
9.7 |
212 |
8.8 |
16/02:56 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
26-31 |
132-04 |
1445 |
222:49:11 |
6 |
36 |
8.6 |
180 |
7.5 |
17/08:33 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
Retired |
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| 2J |
Vicki |
27-45 |
133-30 |
1381 |
226:00:02 |
7 |
41 |
9.3 |
178 |
7.4 |
16/12:53 |
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Thursday, July 10th
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Our 13 year
old, 29er sailor, apprentice 49er helmsman
Shark, steering the mighty Pegasus 77.
Morgan Larson, star US' 49er Olympic
sailor on the rail, Doogie washing up
and Mike Mottl trimming main |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
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Thursday, July 10th, 15:00 HST
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The trades
have picked up again, beautiful sailing
with the 4A spinnaker flying and the
staysail |
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Lat: 23 North
Lon: 137 West
It's beautiful sailing here:
The trades are back up to 16-18 knots. We've got our 4A spinnaker
up with a staysail. This is just what the brochure advertised
and why California to Honolulu passages are probably some
of the best offshore sailing in the world. This is my sixth
trans-Pacific crossing and I'm hooked. Young Shark is just
13 and this is his third, he just loves it. The first couple
of days tend to be cold, wet and wild and then the magic begins.
We're experiencing that magic now.
As we look at the weather
charts, we see squalls ahead. Quite a few of them. Squalls
in the North-east Pacific tend to become active as the air
temperature cools in the evening, but the Ocean water temperature
stays warm. Then before daybreak they usually dissolve and
leave hours of light air behind them. When racing we look
for Squalls and gybe to stay in front of them where the wind
is considerably accelerated and usually shifted right. There
can be more than a 50% increase in pressure at the front end
of a squall. For example: if we're sailing in 20 knots trades,
we could expect 35 knots wind speeds in the front of a squall
and we could also expect to find ourselves becalmed if we
got caught behind a squall. So its pretty simple: Stay in
front of a squall as long as you can and escape quickly as
soon as the squall starts overtaking you. Easy to say, tough
execution.
The Pyewacket team has a lot
of experience with squalls and we are bracing for a fierce
battle here on Pegasus 77. If the competition does squall
management better than we do, tomorrow morning we could find
ourselves trailing. We just passed the half-way point to Honolulu.
Its a long race and a 43 mile lead with over 1000 nautical
miles to go can evaporate almost instantly.
We learned our lesson at the
start when Pyewacket locked hammer us in a match-racing start.
It backfired on them: We convincingly won the start. However,
we then made the mistake of being over-confident and gave
them the opportunity to pass us and build a one mile lead
at the West end of Catalina. We learned our lesson. The whole
team knows that and we are bracing for a fierce battle all
the way to the finish line.
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Thursday, July 10th
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Friday, July 11th
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Beautiful 20 knot trades blowing,
8 to 10 ft waves, sailing in paradise
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Sunrise Friday.
The little dome is a gyroscop-stabalized
satellite communications system. On
board Pegasus 77 we have three satellite
communications systems that we use in
parallel to extract weather information
from Internet public sites and build
this log (As well as cheer for Lance
Armstrong, Hassk returning to the Wings
and Klitchsco getting his chance at
a fairer rematch with out of shape Lewis) |
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Date: Friday,
July 11th
Time: 08:00 HST
Lat: 21 North
Lon: 140 West
And three cheers on board the mighty Pegasus, because there
are three good reasons to do so: 1.
Pegasus stretched again on Pyewacket: They are now bearing
050 degrees @ 63 nm with Honolulu bearing 261. That's a gain
of 17 degrees of bearing and 8 miles of gauge. More than we
ever expected.
2. For the 5th consecutive day we sailed
more miles than Pyewacket. In the last 24 hours we sailed
302 nm to the mark to their 295 nm (Pegasus actually sailed
334 nm through the water)
3. We are now almost positioned where leverage
on one side or the other for Pyewacket is non-effective. We're
almost there.
That's great tribute to the hard work of this team, gybing
the shifts through the night and pushing hard 24 by 7. We'll
rest on-shore.
Yet we are worried.
That's because several things can happen:
1. We have a major breakdown/accident
2. We get trapped in the backside of a squall
3. They bang the left corner as we expect
them to and a huge shift materializes that is outside of the
parameters
We are working on addressing those three threats as best
we can.
First, are doing preventive maintenance all around the boat.
Then, we are rehearsing our squall techniques for the night
and finally we are working at positioning ourselves so that
we shut down any potential passing lanes.
Still, our Lady Hawaiian Luck will need to kindly smile on
us.
We will dance with the wind: Makani
Hula!
There are three distinct phases in this Transpac 2003:
Phase one: Invest in the future even if
it is painful. That's what we did for the first two days when
Pyewacket looked in the lead while we were soundly investing
in the Southern route.
Phase two: Reap the benefits of out early
investments and turn them into valuable assets: That is what
we did for the last three days.
Phase three: Protect our valuable assets
using conservative practices. This phase started this morning
and will continue to the finish.
Because we are now in phase three, we need to manage, execute
and hope for a little bit of luck.
Lets Dance with wind. Makani Hula!
Click here to see today's weather
map
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
21-42 |
140-14 |
983 |
206:05:20 |
1 |
7 |
10.8 |
302 |
12.6 |
15/03:05 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
22-14 |
139-13 |
1038 |
215:29:37 |
2 |
23 |
10.3 |
295 |
12.3 |
15/12:29 |
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DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
25-20 |
138-30 |
1091 |
197:00:32 |
1 |
2 |
9.9 |
258 |
10.8 |
15/22:41 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
23-29 |
137-53 |
1113 |
205:51:17 |
2 |
6 |
9.7 |
244 |
10.2 |
16/03:08 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
26-44 |
135-39 |
1257 |
230:09:06 |
7 |
43 |
8.4 |
204 |
8.5 |
17/13:18 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
25-53 |
137-07 |
1170 |
213:33:04 |
3 |
17 |
9.2 |
213 |
8.9 |
16/15:37 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
26-08 |
134-28 |
1314 |
244:02:36 |
9 |
50 |
7.9 |
215 |
9.0 |
18/05:51 |
| 2F |
ICON |
26-12 |
137-11 |
1170 |
220:10:03 |
6 |
34 |
9.2 |
222 |
9.2 |
16/15:34 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
25-51 |
138-38 |
1089 |
215:50:03 |
6 |
34 |
9.2 |
222 |
9.2 |
16/15:34 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
25-58 |
136-26 |
1208 |
214:46:12 |
4 |
18 |
8.8 |
237 |
9.9 |
17/00:30 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
Retired |
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| 2J |
Vicki |
27-45 |
137-10 |
1191 |
233:35:31 |
8 |
45 |
9.0 |
195 |
8.1 |
16/20:28 |
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Friday, July 11th
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20 knot
trades, beautiful waves to surf, puffy
clouds: Sailing paradise. There is no
better place to sail in the world. Crusty
(Mark Christensen) steering, Mike Mottl
grinding |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
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Sailing the winds of
Paradise!
Date: Friday,
July 11th
Lat: 21 North
Lon: 142 West
Just beautiful sailing here. The team is working hard, grinding
on every wave. We're surfing the Hawaii and that is how it
should be. Pegasus 77 loves it: She can smell the barn.
Goals are key to any team. So, our goal is to win this match
race with Pyewacket.
We're now setting secondary goals for the team. Goals need
to be achievable or they are meaningless. For example: the
course record can only be achieved at this point if the trades
kicked-up to a steady 25 knots. That's very unlikely.
Yesterday, it didn't appear that we had a shot at beating
Stan, Sally, Skip and Jon on their Cal 40 Illusion to the
finish. They started 5 days ahead of us and in general had
more favorable weather all along. However, yesterday Illusion
made a little incursion North that they seem to have later
regretted. They now have gone back South for more breeze and
sailed a few extra miles in the process. Hence, there may
be a little window of opportunity for a secondary goal.
"Will Pegasus be able to beat Illusion to the finish?"
That's a fun bet for the team on Pegasus, because its a pursuit
race. Perhaps what the Barn Door should be in the future to
attract back the Santa Cruz 50s, 70s, the other sleds etc...:
Whoever gets there first wins the prize. I love it because
Skip Allan taught me how to navigate the North Pacific Ocean
when he and I won the Pacific Cup in 1988, setting a record
that held for 10 years with a chartered Santa Cruz 70 designed
by Bill Lee. So for the fun of it, we're going to try and
catch Illusion.
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Friday, July 11th
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14 hard
working sailors/athletes need to be
fed 7 by 24 for over 7 days, no refrigeration
(too heavy, Pegasus is all built in
carbon fiber to be the lightest it can
be), so it's zone-meals, all balanced
40/30/30, frozen in boil bags. Jeff
is in charge of nutrition logistics.
We have three camping burners to heat
up the pressure cookers. Simple, Spartan,
efficient and actually delicious. |
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Friday, July 11th: 21:30 HST
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Doogie doing
his rig-check at sunset before the night.
Yes we are heading West... Right in
the direction of the sunset. |
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Lat: 21 North
Lon: 144 West
Superlative sailing with an extraordinary sunset. We had
the visit of a pod of small size friendly Dolphins. We even
saw a few sea-bars. Yet we're still more than 750 miles from
the Hawaiian Islands.
'We're bracing for the night. We wouldn't be surprised to
see Pyewacket make some gains at the morning report. That"s
because we are going to be sailing conservatively while they
are going to need to be taking risks.
The satellite pictures seem to show us that the squall activity
is minimal tonight. We still have to be on the lookout. If
we just get on the wrong side of a squall we could get passed.
Beautiful night sailing. Click
here to see a relevant weather map
Fly Pegasus fly!
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Friday, July 11th: 21:30 HST
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Sunset sailing
the winds of Paradise |
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Saturday, July 12th, 06:00 HST
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Here is
a screen capture for Deckman running
on my laptop. The main part of the screen
is divided into two tiled windows. One
is a wind tape that displays the wind
velocity and direction. The second window
has a chart of the Hawaiian Islands
with our approach waypoint. to Honolulu.
You can see the two blue laylines. We
are the green boat on the right and
you can also see all laylines. We are
now 590 nautical miles away from Honolulu,
bearing 255 degrees magnetic. |
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Lat: 22 North
Lon: 146 West
A perfect night of sailing. With the moon almost full, perfect
temperature, the ideal wave setup this may have been some
of the best sailing ever. We felt that we sailed fast all
night and that we kept Pegasus 77 on track, pumping and grinding
for every wave.
The morning roll call confirmed our intuition: We gained
another 5 miles to the finish on our competition. We had a
good day, sailing 349 nautical miles point to point for an
average of 14.5 knots. Faster and farther than Pyewacket for
the sixth consecutive day. In average, we sailed 3 degrees
lower (265 deg vs. 268 deg) and 5 miles further. Lower and
faster.
A happy Pegasus 77 team is having breakfast. Jeff is cooking.
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
22-12 |
146-27 |
636 |
194:37:37 |
1 |
4 |
11.4 |
349 |
14.5 |
14/15:37 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
23-01 |
145-26 |
696 |
202:17:18 |
2 |
9 |
11.0 |
347 |
14.5 |
14/23:17 |
|
DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
25-28 |
143-55 |
806 |
189:14:50 |
1 |
2 |
10.2 |
294 |
12.2 |
15/14:55 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
23-44 |
143-25 |
812 |
194:32-:26 |
2 |
3 |
10.2 |
305 |
12.7 |
15/15:49 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
26-21 |
140-34 |
994 |
217:07:00 |
7 |
35 |
8.9 |
265 |
11.0 |
17/00:16 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
25-13 |
142-04 |
900 |
204:17:07 |
4 |
10 |
9.5 |
271 |
11.3 |
16/06:22 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
25-26 |
139-04 |
1062 |
229:06:02 |
9 |
46 |
8.4 |
252 |
10.5 |
17/14:54 |
| 2F |
ICON |
25-34 |
142-14 |
896 |
210:14:26 |
6 |
20 |
9.6 |
275 |
11.5 |
16/05:38 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
25-30 |
143-53 |
808 |
208:46:58 |
5 |
17 |
10.2 |
285 |
11.9 |
15/15:16 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
26-30 |
142-04 |
919 |
200:03:37 |
3 |
6 |
9.4 |
305 |
12.7 |
16/09:47 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
Retired |
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| 2J |
Vicki |
27-08 |
141-40 |
951 |
228:49:38 |
8 |
45 |
9.2 |
242 |
10.1 |
16/15:43 |
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Saturday, July 12th
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Racing to
Paradise at sunrise. Yes the Sun rises
East and we are headed West at 14.5
knots. Richard is steering, Morgan trimming
the main and Juggy the kite. |
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Click
here to see the press coverage from today.
Click
here to see a today's weather map
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Saturday July 12th, 14:45 HST
Lat: 22 North
Lon: 148 West
Around the 14:00 HST race
organization roll, call Pyewacket's private jet called the
Pyewacket on the SSB. The planes call sign was "Shamrock"
and they were overseeing our portion of the race-course having
most competitors around lat 22 North and lon 150 West in sight.
Pyewacket responded with a lat/lon position to look to and
a dialog was initiated. It's neat to see the Pyewacket yacht
talking to the Pyewacket jet. This all reminded me of how
airplanes and sailboats are similar in many ways, share the
same physics as well as the same communication technologies.
Sailboats and airplanes are all about foils, lift, drag, apparent
airflow. Wireless communications from a sailboat and from
a modern jet depend on satellites. So a jet, the fastest mode
of transportation, and a sailboat, the slowest mode of transportation
share a lot. Humans always dream of sailing and flying.
All day we saw whales breaching, Dolphins, lots of flying
fish and even had a squid wash-up on deck. Its quite hot,
85 deg F down bellow and much hotter in the sun. Grinding
every wave forces fluid and electrolyte replacement almost
constantly. We've got powdered Gatorade that we mix into the
water made with our Spectra water-maker. It seems like there
is constantly someone mixing Gatorade. Its like a busy bar
on Saturday nights in the Marina in San Francisco, except
we only mix Gatorade with water and the bar-tender doesn't
get tips.
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Saturday, July 12th: Honolulu, Hawaii
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Dad
sail fast and safe, I'll be watching
you from Diamond Head. Mom took this
Picture-Mail with her brand new Sprint
8100 Camera-Phone |
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During this voyage I sent a lot of Picture-Mails, they are
all collected in this log. I had a terrific surprise when
I received one from my daughter, Sophie, who is 6 years old.
The Sprint PCS picture-phones are amazing and you can now
get them for less than $100 and a $15/month subscription that
allows you to send as many pictures as you want. As you can
see its fun and a great way to share emotions and memories.
I highly recommend it.
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Saturday, July 12th
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Grinding
hard every wave all the way to Diamond
Head, every inch adds up to boat-lengths.
Doogie and Mike sweating it out. |
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Saturday, July 12th
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No bathroom,
just an outside salt water shower and
lots of sweat to wash off. Two or three
times a day is pretty common for these
outdoor showers. Zan doing his business. |
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Saturday July 12th, 23:00 HST
Another fabulous night of sailing. The waves are just right.
We are being conservative and will let Pyewacket take a more
risky road. We expect that we could lose 10 to 20 miles in
the last 24 hours as we are protecting our lead. Our lead
is such that we can well afford this insurance policy.
We saw more Dolphins, dozens of them. Short and gracious.
They were leaping 3 to 4 feet out of the water and surfing
the waves with us. It's as if they were here to welcome us
to Hawaii and whisper in our ears playfully: "Fly Pegasus
fly!". We are flying!
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Sunday, July 13th: 06:00 HST
 |
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Pegasus 77's
bow slicing through Hawaiian waves |
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Lat: 22 North
Lon: 153 West
Another good report card this morning. In
the last 24 hours we gained another 14 Miles. Now Pyewacket
is 75 miles behind Pegasus dead astern. We sailed point to
point 356 miles compared to 336 to Pyewacket.
There is a fierce battle between TP52s about a day behind
us: The Kiwi big guns on Beau Geste versus the Santa Cruz
smoking guns on Alta Vita. They are within a mile of each
other, in-sight.
Now where is Stan this morning? Stan is doing just fine with
236 miles to go and is third on handicap. Alta Vita is surprising
everyone and winning the handicap battle. But surely Stan
isn't going to give up.
Our projections show that we will be crossing the finish
like around 05:00 or maybe a little earlier. Before daybreak.
It's a bit lighter this morning and the skies are overcast.
There will be squalls for the last 24 hours of Transpac 2003
and the whole team will be on the lookout.
| ID |
Yacht |
LAT |
LON |
DST 2GO |
CORR TIME |
STD CL |
GS FL |
AVE SOC |
24H DOC |
24H SOC |
FIN
TIME/ ETA |
| DIVISION
1: |
| 1A |
Pegasus 77 |
22-36 |
152-51 |
288 |
187:14:26 |
1 |
2 |
11.9 |
356 |
14.8 |
14/08:14 |
| 1B |
Pyewacket |
22-43 |
151-30 |
362 |
194:41:57 |
2 |
7 |
11.4 |
336 |
14.0 |
14/15:41 |
|
DIVISION 2: |
| 2A |
Alta Vita |
24-25 |
148-53 |
529 |
185:10:37 |
1 |
1 |
10.4 |
277 |
11.6 |
15/10:51 |
| 2B |
Beau Geste |
24-26 |
148-55 |
528 |
189:23:58 |
2 |
4 |
10.4 |
304 |
12.7 |
15/10:41 |
| 2C |
Bengal II |
26-17 |
145-38 |
734 |
209:00:36 |
7 |
27 |
9.1 |
273 |
11.4 |
16/16:10 |
| 2D |
Grand Illusion |
24-56 |
147-19 |
620 |
196:53:00 |
4 |
10 |
9.8 |
286 |
11.9 |
15/22:57 |
| 2E |
Hesal II |
25-19 |
143-44 |
813 |
220:03:34 |
8 |
41 |
8.7 |
253 |
10.5 |
17/05:52 |
| 2F |
ICON |
24-54 |
147-20 |
618 |
203:21:13 |
5 |
15 |
9.9 |
280 |
11.7 |
15/22:45 |
| 2G |
Medicine Man |
24-23 |
148-55 |
527 |
204:03:48 |
6 |
16 |
10.4 |
282 |
11.7 |
15/10:33 |
| 2H |
Pendragon 4 |
24-45 |
146-50 |
642 |
192:19:31 |
3 |
5 |
9.7 |
278 |
11.6 |
16/02:03 |
| 2I |
Renegade |
Retired |
|
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| 2J |
Vicki |
25-51 |
146-30 |
681 |
220:56:03 |
9 |
43 |
9.5 |
271 |
11.3 |
16:07:49 |
|
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Sunday, July 13th: 08:00 HST
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Pegasus,
smells the barn. We're making tracks! |
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253 nm to Honolulu at a bearing
of 241 degrees magnetic
It's lighter but we are pushing really hard. We just realized
that we had a chance at top three in corrected time. We really
never thought that we'd play in the handicap game. So, now
we have a new goal: Let's try to be top 3 for the overall
handicap trophy.
The weather is now overcast and squall-prone. Click
here for the latest squall chart. We're on the watch.
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Sunday, July 13th
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Monday, July 14th: 02:30
HST
Pegasus 77 crosses the finish line
and wins the Transpac 2003 race.
SAILING NEWS _/) _/) _/) _/) _/) _/)
_/) _/) _/) _/) _/) _/) _/) _/)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
42nd TRANSPACIFIC YACHT RACE Transpacific Yacht Club
www.transpacificyc.org
July 14, 2003 For Immediate Release
PEGASUS 77 RIDES A MOON RIVER TO VICTORY
HONOLULU---A full moon lighted the way past the Diamond
Head finish line for
Philippe Kahn's Pegasus 77 and a second consecutive
Barn Door victory in the
42nd Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles early
Monday.
Kahn's archrival later described the path laid by the
lunar reflection on
the water as "like sailing down the moon river,"
but Roy E. Disney and his
crew aboard Pyewacket were nearly five hours behind
in a match of equally
powerful sailing machines.
The Barn Door is a 3 ½-by-4-foot slab of carved
Hawaiian koa wood that goes
to the boat with the fastest elapsed time for the 2,225
nautical miles. Four
Aloha boats that started five days earlier finished
ahead of Pegasus 77 by
as much as 15 hours, but their ETs were days slower.
Finishing at 2:31 a.m. local time, Pegasus 77's time
was 7 days 16 hours 31
minutes 17 seconds, the fourth fastest ever for the
race but nearly five
hours over Pyewacket's record of 7:11:41:27 in a windier
1999 race.
Pyewacket's time was 7:21:18:01, the eighth fastest
ever.
"Records aren't something you can control,"
Kahn said. "Either the weather
was going to cooperate or not. We did break a record
for the daily run, and
what was interesting about that is we did it without
a lot of wind."
A day earlier, with no more than 18 knots of breeze,
Pegasus 77 completed a
24-hour run of 356 miles, breaking the record of 353
set by Magnitude in
1999.
Disney, whose boat has been highly modified since '99,
said, "Both of these
boats are much faster than what we set the record with."
When the wind increased late in the race, Pegasus 77,
then in a commanding
position against Pyewacket, seemed to have a shot at
the record.
"We thought about that a lot," Disney said,
laughing. "Quite a lot."
At the time, Pegasus 77 still had an outside chance
of achieving a rare
Transpac sweep: fastest elapsed time and first in class
and fleet on overall
corrected handicap time.
But, ironically, a 40-year-old Cal 40 whose crew included
Pyewacket's usual
navigator, Stan Honey, finished in time late the same
morning to correct out
on Pegasus 77 by about half an hour. However, Bill Turpin's
Transpac 52,
Alta Vita of San Francisco, has the inside track on
the honor with about a
two-hour edge and needs to finish before 7:12 a.m. local
time Tuesday to
clinch it. If the trade winds hold, that is well within
its reach.
Illusion, with Honey's wife Sally and Transpac veterans
Skip Allan and Jon
Andron joining Stan, was first overall on handicap time
through most of the
race but slipped back as the larger, faster boats accelerated
in stronger
breeze.
The problem was, as Stan Honey said, "If [the
wind] picks up from 10 to 20
knots, we go from 7 to 8."
But, flying a full-blown spinnaker in 30 knots of following
wind, they flew
down through the finish line, surfing at 16 knots to
beat nine other Cal 40s
in a revival of the class that dominated the race in
the late 60s.
Later, several of the disappointed Pyewacket team,
including Disney, greeted
their teammate at Ala Wai Yacht Harbor, where Doug Rastello
told Honey, "We
needed that."
The outcome of the Pegasus 77-Pyewacket contest was
determined early on, not
by boat speed but by strategic differences of opinion.
"We led them past [Santa] Catalina [Island] by
a mile, but then we went
right and they went left, and they were right and we
were wrong," Disney
said.
The Pyewacket crew was stunned by the second day's
morning roll call and
position report that showed Pegasus 77 100 miles south
of them.
"We were surprised how low [south] they went the
second day," said Peter
Isler, who replaced Stan Honey as Pyewacket's navigator
for this race.
Then, when the shift they were expecting failed to
produce a lively breeze,
they had to eat their mistake and give up a lot of miles
to find better wind
south. That's when Pegasus 77 came slightly north to
drop into a controlling
position directly in front.
Mark Rudiger, Pegasus 77's navigator, said, "It
was [wind strength] pressure
versus angle, and I've learned the hard way over the
years that the first
half of this race you have to go for the pressure and
the second half you
can start working on angle. So I just tell the guys,
'Send the boat the
fastest way it can go.' Speed rules.
"Originally our plan was to stay with them, but
we decided to sail our own
race. Our goal was always to hold at least 30 miles
of southing on them to
make sure we had a little more pressure but try to put
them back on bearing
so they had no angle they could get at us with. Crusty
did a really good job
of masterminding that [plan]."
Crusty is Mark Christensen, who was on the winning
team in the last two
Volvo Ocean Races but had never sailed a Transpac.
"The first couple of days I was having trouble
getting a grasp on how far
off course we were going," he said. "Rudi's
[saying], 'Get south, get
south.' After that we just had to try to think what
they were thinking and
do the jibes so we'd always set ourselves up between
them and the mark.
"We were pretty confident with all our forecasts.
It was kind of scary. We
just got every shift. Even today, Rudi would say, 'Well,
the wind's supposed
to go to [a compass direction of] 060 . . . be patient,
be patient.' So we
waited and waited and finally jibed on 050 and an hour
later it was 060 and
we came screaming in. The whole race was like that."
On the last night, sailing in 26 knots of wind in the
Molokai Channel, the
wind shifted after Pegasus 77 jibed---a quirk that turned
into a half-hour
shortcut toward the finish.
"Again," Christensen said, "Rudi could
do no wrong."
The young veteran Morgan Larson said, in a way, the
race was routine.
"I like it when things go wrong," he said.
"It was too easy."
Tracking charts for selected boats or the entire fleet
may be viewed by
clicking on the link at the right side of the www.transpacificyc.org
home
page. Daily position reports and photos also will be
posted until the
completion of the race.
Boats' handicap ratings may be checked at
www.transpacificyc.org/03/tp03-ratings.html
COMMODORE
Brad Avery
(949) 645-9412
brad@occsailing.com
ENTRIES CHAIRMAN
Bill Lee
(831) 464-4782
wizard@fastisfun.com
PRESS OFFICER
Rich Roberts
Honolulu Press Office: (808) 949-9425
cell phone (310) 766-6547
richsail@earthlink.net
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