Latitude 38 AugustLatitude 38 is the West's most popular sailing and marine magazine, published 2022 by Latitude 38 Media, LLC - Issuu

Latitude 38 AugustLatitude 38 is the West's most popular sailing and marine magazine, published 2022

Page 1

VOLUME 542 August 2022

Pacific Cup What We Wish We Knew Building a Fleet Rocket Surgery Put Away Wet

W E G O W HERE T HE W IND B LOWS


Photo Credit: Bill Burkart

GRAND MARINA

COME TO GRAND MARINA FOR A WEEKEND AND LEAVE WITH MEMORIES THAT !ST A LIFETIME.

We do our best to ensure our guests have the best experience possible because the best is what they deserve. Visit Grand Marina, the pearl of the bay for an experience of a lifetime.

510.865.1200 Leasing Office Open Monday thru Saturday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. 2099 Grand Street, Alameda, CA 94501

www.grandmarina.com

Prime deep water double-fingered concrete slips from 30’ to 100’. F Guest berthing available for a weekend or any day getaway. F Complete bathroom and shower facility, heated and tiled. F Free pump-out station open 24/7. F Full-service Marine Center and haul-out facility. F Free parking. F Free on-site WiFi. And much more... F

Directory of Grand Marina Tenants Alameda Canvas and Coverings Alameda Marine Metal Fabrication Atomic Tuna Yachts BAE Boats Boat Yard at Grand Marina, The Blue Pelican Marine MarineLube Mike Elias Boatworks Mosely’s Café New Era Yachts Pacific Crest Canvas UK Sailmakers



B OAT LOANS from

CONTENTS subscriptions

6

CALENDAR

LETTERS

LOOSE LIPS

SIGHTINGS

ST PACIlC CUP RACE TO HAWAII

MEXICO WHAT WE WISH WE KNEW

"a fresh approach from people you can trust" Please contact

JOAN BURLEIGH

(800) 690-7770 (510) 749-0050

HOW TO BUILD A mEET

gIMPROBABLEg UPDATE

MAX EBB RIDE IT HARD

RACING SHEET

CHANGES IN LATITUDES

CLASSY CLASSIlEDS

ADVERTISERS INDEX

BROKERAGE

jburleigh@tridentfunding.com (Northern California)

#OVER !NJA "OG AND 0ETER 7EIGT S 0OGO Ferox WAS LOOKING GOOD AS THEY CLOSED ON THE lNISH LINE FOR THE 7ESTPOINT 2EGATTA TO TAKE SECOND IN 0(2& 3EE MORE PHOTOS AND READ OUR REPORT IN 2ACING 3HEET STARTING ON PAGE

JIm WEstON

#REDIT 4OM "ORGSTROM

949-278-9467

jweston@tridentfunding.com (Southern California)

www.tridentfunding.com 0AGE s

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#OPYRIGHT ,ATITUDE -EDIA ,,# 3INCE 3END US YOUR STORY ,ATITUDE WELCOMES EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTIONS IN THE FORM OF STORIES ANECDOTES PHOTOGRAPHS ANYTHING BUT POEMS PLEASE WE GOTTA DRAW THE LINE SOMEWHERE 7HAT HELPS YOU GET PUBLISHED 2EAD OUR WRITERgS GUIDELINES HERE www.latitude38.com/writers-guidelines (AVE WRITERgS BLOCK 'O SAILING YOUgRE SURE TO COME HOME WITH A STORY !UGUST s

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$439,000 cruising $439,000 $439,000 bluewater cruising $439,000

2019 OCEANIS 51.1 Earns it's keep inin 2002 BENETEAU 473 R CODE &2019 REQUEST FULL SPECS ON THE QR REQUEST FULL SPECS 2019 OCEANIS 51.1 Earns it's Earns itskeep keepCODE in OCEANIS 51.1 CLICK Earns it's keep in &2002 BENETEAU 473

2019 OCEANIS 51.1our charter fleet

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our charter fleet charter fleet our charter fleet OCEANIS 51.1 Earns it's keep in AO N UORW C L U B NNEEWRour B O A T LI $619,000 $619,000 $619,000 $619,000

our charter fleet $619,000

2002 2002BENETEAU BENETEAU473 473Recent Recent Upgrades Upgrades Recent $169,000 K2002 E ABENETEAU N O W N473 E RRecent C$169,000 L UUpgrades B $169,000 Recent Upgrades $169,000

CLICK ON THE QR CODE & REQUEST FULL SPECS R CODE & REQUEST FULL SPECS 1980 BREWER PH 46Well maintained 2020 OCEANSIS 30.1 Equipped 2020 OCEANIS 30.1 2020 2020OCEANIS OCEANIS30.1 30.1 Fully 1980 BREWER PH 46 Fully Equipped Well maintained Fully Equipped Well Well maintained Fully Equipped 1980 BREWER PH 46 1980 BREWER PH 46 BC O A T L I K E A N O W N E R C L UB L I K E AO N UORWNNEEWR $178,000 L U B $80,000 $178,000 $80,000 $178,000 $178,000 2020 OCEANIS 30.1 Fully Equipped Well$80,000 maintained

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$178,000 Charter Placement Boating Club Private Lessons

www.passagenautical.com 510-236-2633 New Yacht Sales Brokerage Services Yacht Charters

PT. RICHMOND BRICKYARD COVE MARINA CODE & REQUEST 1160 BRICKYARD COVEFULL RD (510) 236-2633

1980 BREWER PH 46

$80,000 www.passagenautical.com 510-236-2633

PT. RICHMOND OAKLAND OAKLAND COVE MARINA Charter & Power Boat ClubBRICKYARD Fleet Charter & Power Boat Club Fleet SPECS 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD JACK LONDON SQ. CLICK ONON THE QR CODE &&& REQUEST SPECS CLICK THE QR CODE &REQUEST REQUESTFULL FULL SPECS JACK LONDON SQ. CODE REQUEST FULL SPECS CLICK THE QR CODE FULL SPECS CLICK ON THE QR REQUEST FULL SPECS 2 WATER STREET CLICK2ON ON THE QR CODE & REQUEST FULL SPECS (510) 236-2633 WATER STREET

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New Yacht Sales Charter Placement O U R N E W B O A T time Ltime IK E www.passagenautical.com AN OWNER CLUB www.passagenautical.com One initiation fee Onetime initiation fee One initiation fee Brokerage Services Boating Club Low fee Yacht Charters Private Lessons 510-236-2633 Lowmonthly monthly feefor forfee510-236-2633 Low monthly fee for One time initiation

PT. RICHMOND BRICKYARD COVE MARINA 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD (510) 236-2633

unlimited boating

unlimited boating PT. RICHMOND unlimited boating OAKLAND Low monthly fee for BRICKYARD COVE MARINA New Beneteau yachts Charter & Power Boat Club Fleet NewBeneteau Beneteau yachts New yachts unlimited boating 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD JACK LONDON SQ. (510) 236-2633 New Beneteau yachts 2 WATER STREET

OAKLAND Charter & Power Boat Club Fleet JACK LONDON SQ. 2 WATER STREET

New Yacht Sales Charter Placement www.passagenautical.com www.passagenautical.com New Yacht Sales Charter Placement New Yacht Sales Charter Placement New Yacht Sales Charter Placement www.passagenautical.com Brokerage Services Boating Club New Yacht Sales Charter Placement New Yacht Sales Charter Placement www.passagenautical.com Brokerage Services Boating Club Brokerage Boating Club 510-236-2633 Brokerage Services Boating Club Yacht Services Charters Private Lessons 510-236-2633 Brokerage Services Boating Club Brokerage Services Boating Club Yacht Charters Private Lessons New Yacht Sales 510-236-2633 Charter Placement Yacht Charters Private Lessons Yacht Charters Private Lessons 510-236-2633 Yacht Charters Private Lessons Yacht Charters Private Lessons PT. RICHMOND OAKLAND PT. RICHMOND Brokerage Services Boating Club OAKLAND PT. RICHMOND OAKLAND BRICKYARD COVE MARINA Charter & Power Boat Club Fleet PT. RICHMOND BRICKYARD COVE MARINA PT. RICHMOND Charter & OAKLAND Power Boat Club Fleet Yacht Charters Private Lessons BRICKYARD OAKLAND PT. OAKLAND COVE MARINA PT.RICHMOND RICHMOND Charter & Power Boat Club Fleet OAKLAND

ent

1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD (510) 236-2633

www.passagenautical.com www.passagenautical.com www.passagenautical.com 510-236-2633 www.passagenautical.com 510-236-2633 510-236-2633 510-236-2633

JACK LONDON SQ. BRICKYARD COVE MARINA 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD BRICKYARD COVE MARINA BRICKYARD COVE MARINA 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD BRICKYARD COVE MARINA 2 WATER STREET PT. RICHMOND 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD (510) 236-2633 1160BRICKYARD BRICKYARD COVERD RD (510) 236-2633 1160 COVE 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD BRICKYARD COVE MARINA (510) 236-2633 (510) 236-2633 (510) 236-2633

(510) 236-2633 1160 BRICKYARD COVE RD (510) 236-2633

Charter && Power Boat Club JACK LONDON SQ. Charter Power Boat ClubFleet Fleet Charter &&LONDON Power JACK SQ. Club Charter PowerBoat Boat ClubFleet Fleet OAKLAND JACK LONDON SQ. 2 WATER STREET JACK LONDON SQ. 2 JACK WATER STREET LONDON SQ. JACK LONDON SQ. Charter &WATER PowerSTREET Boat Club Fleet 22 WATER STREET 22WATER WATERSTREET STREET JACK LONDON SQ. 2 WATER STREET


WHALE POINT HOW HOW WHALE POINT WHALE POINT WOULD HOW HOW WOULD MONTHLY WOULD WOULD SPECIALS YOU LIKE IT YOU LIKE IT YOU LIKE IT IT YOU LIKE IN DWARREE CCO. O. MM AA RR IN E E && HH AA RRDWA M A R I N E & H A R DWA R E C O.

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# NOW Beach South Beach Harbor isHarbor a great South is a # great • ALSO CARRYING LUMBER •LATITUDE 38 TO YOUR HOME? # ! " ! # TO YOUR HOME? IF LATITUDE WE DELIVERED IF WE38 DELIVERED way to experience San Francisco. way to experience San Francisco. # Beach Beach # South Harbor isHarbor a great South is a great Water Filter 38 TO YOUR LATITUDE 38 TOHOME? YOUR HOME? Boats all sizes welcome in our Boats all sizes are welcome inLATITUDE our way toof experience San Francisco. way toofare experience San Francisco. Horn by Kidde with Sheath protected harbor. Bring your boat protected harbor. Bring your boat Water Boats of all sizes in our Boats ofare all welcome sizes are welcome inFilter our Horn to South Beach and enjoy all the to South Beach and enjoy all the FILLET KNIFE protected protected harbor. Bring your boat harbor. Bring your boat attractions of the city, including 9” Blade: attractions of the city, including W to South and enjoyand all $9 the NOBeach to enjoy all the 99 99 South Beach NOW the new Chase Center. the new Chase Center. 5 1 $ #14677:W Inline RV/Marine Water Filter with flexible attractions of the city, including 6” Blade: attractions of the city, including 99 NO$32 99 Now hose. Protects against bacteria, reduces 99 NOW $8 Center. the new Chase Center. taste, odors, chlorine andflexible sediment #14666: $15 the new Chase Inlinebad RV/Marine Water Filter with

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SUBSCRIBE ONLINEONLINE AT SUBSCRIBE AT WWW.LATITUDE38.COM SUBSCRIBE ONLINEONLINE AT WWW.LATITUDE38.COM SUBSCRIBE AT WWW.LATITUDE38.COM WWW.LATITUDE38.COM $36 for a ones year

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s $36 for a ones year $36 for a one year s $63 for a one-year s $63third for aclass one-year third class third class subscription third class subscription subscription & Latitude 38 &classic subscription Latitude 38 classic Latitude 38 s $63 for a one-year s $63third for aclass one-year third class t-shirt + free shipping. t-shirt + free shipping. subscription & Latitude 38 &classic subscription Latitude 38 classic Latitude 38 (Designate Designate women or men,women and the (Designate Designate orsize.) men, and the size.) t-shirt + free shipping. t-shirt + free shipping. s $55 for one year s $55 first class for one year fi rst class (Designate Designate women or men,women and the (Designate Designate orsize.) men, and the size.) - Canada, Mexico,- Canada, FPO/APO, and correctional Mexico, FPO/APO, and correctional s $55facilities s $55 for onerequire year first forclass onerequire year first class fifacilities rst class subscription. first class subscription. Men-Red

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Lifts dirt from non-skid #52031 After Model Hours Security After Hours Security Temporary Subleases Available Temporary Subleases Available deck surfaces. Leaves 1500lbs. a non-slippery, 99 Lifts dirt from non-skid South Guest Dock for Charters Now $59 South Guest Dock for Charters 99 After Hours Security After Security 1-Step ... List Hours $129.99 .. Now $109 deck protective polymer surfaces. Leaves Men-Red 99Stove - Canada, Mexico,- Canada, FPO/APO, and correctional Mexico, FPO/APO, and correctional coating. 2-Steps . List $289.99 .. Now $239 a non-slippery, FreeGuest Pump-Out Station Free Pump-Out Station 99 South Dock for Charters Guest Dock Charters ModelSouth 99for#8013537: rst classrequire subscription. first class subscription. Men-Red Now $39 99 1-Step ...#812035 List $129.99 .. Now $109 protective polymer Now $2199 facilities require fifacilities 1 gallon: Men-Red 3-Steps . List $349.99 .. Now $299 1000lbs. 99 Butane Cartridge coating. Convenient Access to Public Transportation 2-Steps . List $289.99 .. Now $239 Convenient Access to Public Transportation Free Pump-Out Station Free Station 99 Now $4299Pump-Out #8013543: Now $3 99 3-Steps . List $349.99 .. Now $29999 1 gallon: Now $21 go where Adjacent toAdjacent Oracle Park we go where thewe wind to Oracle ParkTransportation we go blows where the the wind wind blows blows Convenient Access to Public Transportation Convenient Access to Public we goArndt where the wind blows by Racor by David Publisher/Editor ...................John .....................john@latitude38.com .............ext. Publisher/Editor ...................John Arndt .....................john@latitude38.com .............ext. 108 Publisher/Editor ...................John Arndt.....................john@latitude38.com .............ext. 108 108 Casual and Fine Dining Nearby CasualPark and Fine Dining go where the blows Adjacent toAdjacent Oracle we go where thewe wind to Oracle Park Nearby we go blows whereWeaver the wind wind blows Racing Editor .......................Christine ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. Racing Editor .......................Christine Weaver ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. 103 Racing Editor .......................Christine Weaver ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. 103 103 Publisher/Editor ...................John Arndt.....................john@latitude38.com.............ext. 108 by Racor by David Publisher/Editor ...................John Arndt 108 'Lectronic Latitude Editor Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. Publisher/Editor ...................John Arndt .....................john@latitude38.com .............ext. 108 105.............ext. Publisher/Editor ...................John Arndt.....................john@latitude38.com .....................john@latitude38.com .............ext. 108 105 'Lectronic Latitude Editor ....Monica Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. 1.2 miles to1.2 Chase 'Lectronic Latitude Editor ....Monica ....Monica Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. 105 miles toNearby Chase Center Casual andCasual Fine Dining Racing Editor .......................Christine Weaver ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. 103 andCenter Fine Dining Nearby Racing Editor .......................Christine Weaver ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. 103

FILTER 500 FGSS AIR-DRYER 1000 BATTERY500 BOXES DRY BAG 1000 FILTER FGSS AIR-DRYER

Latitude 38 Latitude 38 Latitude Latitude Latitude 38 3838

Contributing Editors: Tim Hotchkiss, Paul Racing Editor .......................Christine Weaver ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. 103 Racing Editor .......................Christine Weaver ...........chris@latitude38.com ............ext. 103 105 Contributing Editors: Tim Henry, Lisa Hotchkiss, PaulLisa Kamen, Contributing Editors: Tim Henry, Henry, Lisa Hotchkiss, Paul Kamen, Kamen, 'Lectronic Latitude Editor ....Monica Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. 'Lectronic Latitude Editor ....Monica Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. John Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, 'Lectronic Latitude Editor ....Monica Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. Ross 105 Tibbits 'Lectronic Latitude Editor ....Monica Grant.................monica@latitude38.com ........ext. 105 105 John Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, Ross Tibbits John Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, Ross Tibbits Contributing Editors: Tim Henry, Lisa Hotchkiss, Paul Kamen, Editors: Tim Henry, Lisa Hotchkiss, Editor-at-Large ....................Andy ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com Contributing Editors:Contributing TimTurpin Henry, Lisa Hotchkiss, Paul Kamen, Contributing Editors: TimTurpin Henry, Lisa Hotchkiss, Paul Paul Kamen, Kamen, Editor-at-Large ....................Andy ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com Editor-at-Large ....................Andy Turpin ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com John Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, Ross Tibbits John Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, Roving Reporter ..................Donna Andre John..................Donna Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, Ross Tibbits John Riise, John Skoriak, Richard Spindler, Ross Ross Tibbits Tibbits Roving Reporter Andre Roving Reporter ..................Donna Andre Editor-at-Large ....................Andy Turpin ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com Editor-at-Large ....................Andy Turpin ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com Production Supervisor .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 ....................Andy Turpin ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com Handles up to 1000 cu. ft. Editor-at-Large Editor-at-Large ....................Andy TurpinPerkins ...................andyturpinatlarge@gmail.com Advertising Manager ...........Mitch Perkins...........Mitch ................mitch@latitude38.com...........ext. 107 Advertising Manager ................mitch@latitude38.com...........ext. 107 Roving Reporter ..................Donna Andre Roving Reporter ..................Donna Andre Sales Manager .....................Nicki Bennett .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. 109 Safe for marine use. Roving ReporterSupervisor ..................Donna Andre Roving Reporter ..................Donna Andre Production .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 Production Supervisor .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 Production Supervisor .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 Production Supervisor .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 Bookkeeping .......................Penny Clayton ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. Handles up to 1000 cu. ft. Manager ...........Mitch Perkins ................mitch@latitude38.com...........ext. 107 109 Now $6999Advertising #255424: Advertising Manager ...........Mitch Perkins ................mitch@latitude38.com...........ext. 107 101 Marketing Administrator ......Nicki Bennett .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. Marketing Administrator ......Nicki Bennett .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. 109 Sales Manager .....................Nicki Bennett .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. 109 Sales Manager .....................Nicki Bennett .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. 109 Safe for marine use. Production Supervisor .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 101 Production Supervisor .........Soren Hemmila ..............soren@latitude38.com...........ext. 102 101 Bookkeeping .......................Penny Clayton ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. Bookkeeping .......................Penny Clayton ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. 99 99 Bookkeeping .......................Penny Clayton ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. 101 40 Liter: Now $69 Bookkeeping .......................Penny Clayton ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. 101 #255424: Marketing Administrator ......Nicki Bennett .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. 109 Spindler. Marketing Administrator ......Nicki .................nicki@latitude38.com ............ext. 109 Founded 1976.Bennett Published from 1977-2016 by Richard Founded 1976. Published from1976. 1977-2016 by Richard Spindler. by Richard Spindler. Founded Published from 1977-2016 Bookkeeping .......................Penny ClaytonÜÜÜ° >Ì ÌÕ`iÎn°V ÊÊUÊÊ­{£x®ÊÎnÎ nÓää ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. 101 Bookkeeping .......................Penny Clayton ...............penny@latitude38.com ..........ext. 101 ÜÜÜ° >Ì ÌÕ`iÎn°V ÊÊUÊÊ­{£x®ÊÎnÎ nÓää Founded 1976. Published 1977-2016 by Richard Spindler. ÜÜÜ° >Ì ÌÕ`iÎn°V ÊÊUÊÊ­{£x®ÊÎnÎ nÓää Founded 1976. Published fromfrom 1977-2016 by Richard Spindler. 15 Locust Avenue, Mill Valley, CA 94941

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W W W. R U B I C O N YAC H TS .C O M

RUBICON YACHTS

EMERY COVE • ALAMEDA • SAN RAFAEL

(3) 42' AquaLodge Houseboats 2020 - $115,000 ea. Mark Miner (415) 290-1347

2016 - 54’ JEANNEAU 54 $498,888.88

SAN RAFAEL (415) 453-4770

Thoughtfully designed and beautifully finished inside and out, the Aqua Lodge features fiberglass pontoons, a wood-beamed lofted ceiling, a fully appointed galley, and a full bath with residential-sized fixtures. The main salon is open and bright, while the master stateroom features a panoramic water view and a private deck. With the cost of building on the waterfront ever increasing, the Aqua Lodge is an affordable alternative. We currently have three (3) identical Floating Cottages available at $115,000. each. These are new houseboats that have never been used. With the acquisition of all three one could start a unique Air B&B type business in a nice location. NOTE: There is no propulsion included. An outboard engine could be installed on the bracket but, these boats are not equipped with any propulsion. They would need to be towed or trucked to their destination.

RUBICON YACHTS

EMERY COVE • 3300 POWELL ST, #105 • EMERYVILLE, CA 94608 • (510) 601-5010 ALAMEDA • 1150 BALLENA BLVD., SUITE 121 • ALAMEDA, CA 94501 • (510) 838-1800 EMERY COVE 3300 POWELL STREET, SUITE 105 EMERYVILLE, CA 94608 (510) 601-5010 SAN RAFAEL • 25 THIRD STREET • SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901 • (415) 453-4770 ALAMEDA 1150 BALLENA BLVD., SUITE 121, ALAMEDA, CA 94501 (510) 838-1800 SAN RAFAEL 25 THIRD STREET SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901 (415) 453-4770


W W W. R U B I C O N YAC H TS .C O M

RUBICON YACHTS

EMERY COVE • ALAMEDA • SAN RAFAEL

(3) 42' AquaLodge Houseboats 2020 - $115,000 ea. Mark Miner (415) 290-1347

54’ JEANNEAU 54 ’16 $498,888.88 San Rafael (415) 453-4770

52’ TAYANA CENTER COCKPIT CUTTER, 1987 $175,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

48’ ISLAND PACKET 485 CENTER COCKPIT $449,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

45’ SPARKMAN & STEPHENS SLOOP, 1982 $85,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

44’ HYLAS CENTER COCKPIT, 1987 $139,000 San Rafael (415) 453-4770

42’ SCHOCK STAYSAIL SCHOONER, 1927 $249,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

38’ SABRE, 2008 $217,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

37’ IRWIN MARK V CUTTER $21,900 Alameda (510) 838-1800

63’ MASON KETCH ’84 $259,500 Alameda (510) 838-1800

SOLD

Thoughtfully designed and beautifully finished inside and out, the Aqua Lodge features fiberglass pontoons, a wood-beamed lofted ceiling, a fully appointed galley, and a full bath with residential-sized fixtures. The main salon is open and bright, while the master stateroom features a panoramic water view and a private deck. With the cost of building on the waterfront ever increasing, the Aqua Lodge is an affordable alternative. We currently have three (3) identical Floating Cottages available at $115,000. each. These are new houseboats that have never been used. With the acquisition of all three one could start a unique Air B&B type business in a nice location. NOTE: There is no propulsion included. An outboard engine could be installed on the bracket but, these boats are not equipped with any 36, 1978 36’ CHEOY LEE OFFSHORE, 1984 propulsion. They would need36’toC&C be towed or trucked to their destination. 34’ BENETEAU 343, 2006 $32,000 San Rafael (415) 453-4770

$39,500 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

RUBICON YACHTS

$128,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

EMERY COVE • 3300 POWELL ST, #105 • EMERYVILLE, CA 94608 • (510) 601-5010 ALAMEDA • 1150 BALLENA BLVD., SUITE 121 • ALAMEDA, CA 94501 • (510) 838-1800 EMERY SAN COVE 3300• POWELL EMERYVILLE, 94608453-4770 (510) 601-5010 RAFAEL 25 THIRDSTREET, STREETSUITE • SAN105 RAFAEL, CA 94901 •CA(415) ALAMEDA 1150 BALLENA BLVD., SUITE 121, ALAMEDA, CA 94501 (510) 838-1800 SAN RAFAEL 25 THIRD STREET SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901 (415) 453-4770


W W W. R U B I C O N YAC H TS .C O M

RUBICON YACHTS

EMERY COVE • ALAMEDA • SAN RAFAEL

(3) 42' AquaLodge Houseboats 2020 - $115,000 ea. Mark Miner (415) 290-1347 D SOL

50’ SOLARIS 50, 2017 $839,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

49’ BENETEAU SLOOP, 2007 $249,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

50’ HUNTER AFT COCKPIT, 2012 $329,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

42’ BENETEAU FIRST 42, 1984 $79,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

40’ BABA 40 CUTTER, 1984 $128,900 Alameda (510) 838-1800

42’ BALTIC 42 DP, 1981 $59,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

36’ Catalina MKII $79,500 Alameda (510) 838-1800

36’ CATALINA, 1984 $39,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

36’ CATALINA MKII, 2005 $110,000 Emery Cove (510) 601-5010

Thoughtfully designed and beautifully finished inside and out, the Aqua Lodge features fiberglass pontoons, a wood-beamed lofted ceiling, a fully appointed galley, and a full bath with residential-sized fixtures. The main salon is open and bright, while the master stateroom features a panoramic water view and a private deck. With the cost of building on the waterfront ever increasing, the Aqua Lodge is an affordable alternative. We currently have three (3) identical Floating Cottages available at $115,000. each. These are new houseboats that have never been used. With the acquisition of all three one could start a unique Air B&B type business in a nice location. NOTE: There is no propulsion included. An outboard engine could be installed on the bracket but, these boats are not equipped with any 29.5’ to HUNTER 31’ BOMBAY CLIPPER SLOOP, 1978 propulsion. They would need be towedM,or1994 trucked to their destination. 26’ Macgregor, 2004 $22,000 Isleton (415) 244-0293

$31,900 Alameda (510) 838-1800

RUBICON YACHTS

$27,900 Alameda (510) 838-1800

EMERY COVE • 3300 POWELL ST, #105 • EMERYVILLE, CA 94608 • (510) 601-5010 ALAMEDA • 1150 BALLENA BLVD., SUITE 121 • ALAMEDA, CA 94501 • (510) 838-1800 EMERY SAN COVE 3300• POWELL EMERYVILLE, 94608453-4770 (510) 601-5010 RAFAEL 25 THIRDSTREET, STREETSUITE • SAN105 RAFAEL, CA 94901 •CA(415) ALAMEDA 1150 BALLENA BLVD., SUITE 121, ALAMEDA, CA 94501 (510) 838-1800 SAN RAFAEL 25 THIRD STREET SAN RAFAEL, CA 94901 (415) 453-4770


CALENDAR

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Non-Race Aug. 2-4 — Laser Clinic, Cascade Locks, OR. CGRA, www. cgra.org. Aug. 3-31 — Wednesday Yachting Luncheon, via YouTube, noon. StFYC, www.stfyc.com. Aug. 5-7 — Potter Yachters Half Moon Bay Sail. Info, www. potter-yachters.org. Aug. 6 — Maritime Day, Galilee Harbor, Sausalito, 8 a.m.6 p.m. Live music, art, food, wooden boat building, dinghy dash, historic vessels, free boat rides, marine flea market, raffle. Free. Info, galileeharbor@gmail.com or (415) 332-8444. Aug. 6 — Taste of the Delta, Village West Marina & Resort, Stockton, 1-4 p.m. Benefits California Delta Chambers. $45$50 includes souvenir glass. Info, www.tasteofthedelta.com. Aug. 6 — Sail Benicia. BenYC, www.beniciayachtclub.org. Aug. 7-28 — Keelboat Sailing, South Beach Harbor, San Francisco, noon-5 p.m. Sundays, weather permitting; RSVP in advance. Free. BAADS, www.baads.org/sailing. Aug. 11 — Full Sturgeon Moon on a Thursday. Aug. 12-13 — Concours d'Elegance Wooden Boat Show, Obexer's, Homewood. Tahoe YC, www.laketahoeconcours.com. Aug. 13 — Nautical Swap Meet, Owl Harbor Marina, Isleton, 8 a.m.-noon. Free space and free entry. Reserve a space, (916) 777-6055 or info@owlharbor.com. Aug. 13 — Hot Summer Nights, Stockton SC, 5-8 p.m. Classic car show, rock 'n' roll, burgers. Benefits Hospice of San Joaquin. Free admission. SSC, www.stocktonsc.org. Aug. 13-14 — Delta Doo Dah cruise-in, Delta Bay, Isleton. 8/13: BBQ lunch, demos, free SUP lessons, speakers, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 8/14: Sunday Market, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free slips for the weekend for the first 20 Delta Doo Dah 14 entrants who reserve one. Info, www.latitude38.com/delta-doo-dah. Aug. 20 — SF Pelican Bodega Bay Cruise. Fleet 1, www. sfpelicanfleet1.com. Aug. 28, Sept. 11 — Open House/Introductory Sail, Berkeley, 1-3 p.m. Guests must show proof of COVID vaccination. Free. Cal Sailing Club, www.cal-sailing.org. Sept. 1 — Mexico Cruising Seminar, Spaulding Marine Center, Sausalito, 4-5:30 p.m. With Fito Espinoza of Hotel Coral, and Neil Shroyer of Marina de La Paz. $10; free for 2022 Baja Ha-Ha skippers & first mates. Info, www.latitude38.com. Sept. 1 — Latitude 38 Fall Crew List Party, Spaulding Marine Center, Sausalito, 6-9 p.m. $10; free for 2022 Baja Ha-Ha skippers & first mates. Info, www.latitude38.com. Sept. 3 — California Free Fishing Day. CDFW, https:// wildlife.ca.gov/Licensing/Fishing/Free-Fishing-Days. Sept. 3 — Boarded! a Pirate Adventure, Maritime Museum of San Diego, 10:30 a.m. or 12:45 p.m. 90-minute show aboard the San Salvador. $25-$60. Info, www.sdmaritime.org. Sept. 3-4 — 80 Years of the Nordic Folkboat, Richmond YC. A gathering of past, present and future Folkboat owners. Raftup, races, swap meet, competitions for the best-looking boats (cruisers, wood, fiberglass). Info, www.sfbayfolkboats.org. Sept. 5 — Labor Day. Sept. 9 — R2AK Blazer Party, Port Townsend, WA, 6 p.m. Info, www.r2ak.com. Sept. 9-11 — Wooden Boat Festival, NW Maritime Center, Port Townsend, WA. Free-$50. Info, www.woodenboat.org. Sept. 9-11 — Northern California Westsail Rendezvous, Owl Harbor Marina, Isleton. WOA, www.westsail.org. Sept. 10 — Women's Sailing Seminar 30th Anniversary Party, Afterguard Sailing Academy, Oakland, 6-9 p.m. Live entertainment, food, all are welcome. $25; 2 free tickets for WSS students. IYC, www.womenssailingseminar.com. Sept. 10-11 — Women's Sailing Seminar, Afterguard,


LIVE THE ADVENTURE

SEA BEYOND WASHINGTON • CALIFORNIA • FLORIDA • MARYL AND • CANADA • PHILIPPINES

IN BUILD

Dashew Kelly Archer $1,5000.00 Russ Carrington 310.991.2628

2016 Moody 54DS $979,000

Kenyon Martin 858.775.5937

2023 Hanse 460

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IN STOCK

IN BUILD

2022 Hanse 458

Seattle Yachts 844.692. 2487

1995 Oyster 485 $450,000

Tom Mowbray 415.497.3366

2015 Hanse 455 $409,000

2023 Tartan 455

Tom Mowbray 415.497.3366

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CALENDAR Oakland. $330-$445. IYC, www.womenssailingseminar.com. Oct. 31-Nov. 12 — 28th Baja Ha-Ha Cruising Rally from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas. Info, www.baja-haha.com.

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Latitude 38

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Racing Aug. 5-7 — Skamania Coves Invitational, Cascade Locks, OR. CGRA, www.cgra.org. Aug. 6 — OYRA RC's Choice #2. YRA, www.yra.org. Aug. 6 — Race around Treasure Island and back to Brisbane. Sierra Point YC, https://spyc.clubexpress.com. Aug. 6 — Double Damned, Cascade Locks to the Dalles, OR. HRYC, www.regattanetwork.com/event/23823. Aug. 6 — Birthday Regatta & Beachcombers Ball. RYC celebrates their 90th anniversary. RYC, www.richmondyc.org. Aug. 6 — Kay & Dave Few Regatta. CPYC, www.cpyc.com. Aug. 6 — Singlehanded Regatta on Folsom Lake. FLYC, www.flyc.org. Aug. 6 — 50th Shaw Island Classic. San Juan Island YC, www.sjiyc.com. Aug. 6 — Cal Cup Windsurfers. BYC, www.berkeleyyc.org. Aug. 6, Sept. 10 — North Bay Series. VYC, www.jibeset.net. Aug. 6-7 — Summer Keel. SFYC, www.sfyc.org. Aug. 6-7 — Women on the Water/Woman at the Helm, Marina del Rey. Info, www.wsasmb.org/wow-wah. Aug. 6-7 — Santanarama for Santana 22s in Pebble Beach. Stillwater YC, www.sycpb.org. Aug. 6-7 — Charity Regatta to benefit the Elizabeth Hospice. Oceanside YC, www.regattanetwork.com/event/24807. Aug. 7, 21, Sept. 4 — Fun Sail Summer Series. ElkYC, www.elkhornyachtclub.org. Aug. 7, Sept. 11 — Shorthanded Sunday Series. YRA, www.yra.org. Aug. 9 — Cup Boat Regatta. FLYC, www.flyc.org. Aug. 11-14 — Mercury Nationals, Coronado YC, San Diego. Info, www.mercury-sail.com. Aug. 12 — Chase the Moon Race (a Friday evening). BenYC, www.beniciayachtclub.org. Aug. 12-14 — US Open Sailing Series on S.F. Bay. US Sailing, https://raceoffice.usopen.ussailing.org. Aug. 12-14 — Coronado 15 NAs. HMBYC, www.hmbyc.org. Aug. 13 — H.O. Lind Series. TYC, www.tyc.org. Aug. 13 — Summer Series #3/Hannig Cup. Theme: Sailing Red for the Cure Ahead. SeqYC, www.sequoiayc.org. Aug. 13 — Classic Boat Invitational Series #3. SYC, www. sausalitoyachtclub.org. Aug. 13 — Delta Dinghy Ditch Run, 30 miles from Rio Vista to West Sacramento. LWSC, www.lwsailing.org. Aug. 13 — Intraclub Series. RYC, www.richmondyc.org. Aug. 13, Sept. 10 — South Bay Interclub Series. Info, www.jibeset.net. Aug. 13, Sept. 10 — Summer Series. YRA, www.yra.org. Aug. 13-14 — Laser NorCals. SCYC, www.scyc.org. Aug. 13-14 — Overnight Race, Stockton-Antioch-Stockton. SSC, www.stocktonsc.org. Aug. 14 — Gracie & George coed doublehanded regatta. Gracie drives. EYC, www.encinal.org. Aug. 14, Sept. 11 — Sunday BBQ Pursuit Races. SBYC, www.southbeachyachtclub.org. Aug. 14, Sept. 11 — Fall Series 1-2-3 & 4-5-6. FSC, www. fremontsailingclub.org. Aug. 19 — Aldo Alessio. StFYC, www.stfyc.com. Aug. 19-21 — Moore 24 Nationals. SFYC, www.sfyc.org. Aug. 19-21 — US Match Racing Championship Qualifier in Catalina 37s. LBYC, www.lbyc.org. Aug. 20 — Women Skippers Regatta. Coed crews welcome.


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Latitude 38

s !UGUST

CALENDAR SYC, www.sausalitoyachtclub.org. Aug. 20 — LLYC Commodore's Regatta, San Rafael. Matthew, (415) 235-8187, fleetcaptain@lochlomondyachtclub.com. Aug. 20 — Round the Rock. BVBC, www.bvbc.org. Aug. 20 — Endless Summer. HMBYC, www.hmbyc.org. Aug. 20, Sept. 10 — Fall One Design. SCYC, www.scyc.org. Aug. 20, Sept. 17 — Chowder Cup Series #1 & #2. ElkYC, www.elkhornyachtclub.org. Aug. 20-21 — Drake's Bay Race. OYRA, www.yra.org and/ or SSS, www.sfbaysss.org. Aug. 20-21 — Phyllis Kleinman Swiftsure Regatta. StFYC, www.stfyc.com. Aug. 21 — 86th Annual Outlook Trophy Race for dinghies, multihulls, Vipers, VX1s and keelboats in MDR. South Coast Corinthian YC, www.sccyc.org. Aug. 21 — Commodore's Cup. SLTWYC, www.sltwyc.com. Aug. 21 — Baxter-Judson Series Race. PresYC, www. presidioyachtclub.org. Aug. 21 — Singlehanded/Doublehanded Races. BenYC, www.beniciayachtclub.org. Aug. 21 — Doublehanded Races. SLTWYC, www.sltwyc.com. Aug. 21, Sept. 4 — LMSC Summer/Fall Regatta Series, Lake Merritt, Oakland. Denis, (707) 338-6955. Aug. 25 — Ronstan Bridge to Bridge for windsurfers, kiteboarders and wing sailors. StFYC, www.stfyc.com. Aug. 26-28 — USA Junior Olympic Sailing Festival. Seattle YC, www.seattleyachtclub.org. Aug. 27 — Silver Eagle long-distance in-the-Bay race. IYC, www.iyc.org. Aug. 27 — Fox Hat Race. TYC, www.tyc.org. Aug. 27 — Double Angle. Santa Cruz & Monterey to Moss Landing. ElkYC, www.elkhornyachtclub.org. Aug. 27-28 — Labor Day Regatta, Pebble Beach. Stillwater YC, www.sycpb.org. Aug. 27-28 — Vanguard 15 Nationals, TISC. Fleet 53, www.vanguard15.org. Aug. 27-28 — USODA (Opti) PCCs. SFYC, www.sfyc.org. Aug. 27-28 — Millimeter Nationals. EYC, www.encinal.org. Aug. 27-28 — South Bay Championship Regatta and South-of-the-Border Party. Multiple races for PHRF, one design, kids, El Toros. SeqYC, www.sequoiayc.org or www. jibeset.net. Aug. 27-28 — Herb Meyer Regatta in Hansas. BAADS, www.baads.org. Aug. 28 — Mad Hatter Race. SLTWYC, www.sltwyc.com. Aug. 28, Sept. 11 — Governor's Cup Series on Folsom Lake. FLYC, www.flyc.org. Sept. 3 — Jazz Cup, Treasure Island to Benicia. SBYC/ BenYC, www.southbeachyachtclub.org. Sept. 3-4 — Folkboat races in Richmond, part of the Folkboat fleet's celebration of their 80th anniversary and 65 years of San Francisco Bay racing. Fun races for singlehanders, women helms, fleet veterans and novices. S.F. Bay Folkboat Association, www.sfbayfolkboats.org. Sept. 3-4 — Veeder Cup. MPYC, www.mpyc.org. Sept. 3-4 — Labor Day Regatta, Long Beach. ABYC, www. abyc.org. Sept. 3-4 — Redwood Regatta, Big Lagoon. Humboldt YC, www.humboldtyachtclub.org. Sept. 3-5 — Santa Cruz 27 Nationals. Morro Bay YC, www. mbyc.net. Sept. 9-11 — Ultimate 20 North Americans. RYC, www. richmondyc.org. Sept. 10 — Tornberg Regatta. TYC, www.tyc.org. Sept. 10 — Bart's Bash. CPYC, www.cpyc.com.


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Sept. 10 — Fall Race #1. SSC, www.stocktonsc.org. Sept. 10-11 — ILCA District 24/Tahoe Championships, Stampede Reservoir. Tahoe YC, www.tahoeyc.com. Sept. 10-11 — Melges 24 California Cup/West Coast Championship. SCYC, www.scyc.org. Sept. 10-11 — Finn PCCs. SDYC, www.sdyc.org. Sept. 10-11 — Lake Chelan Sailing Regatta, with boat-in camping, Chelan, WA. Part of the Moore 24 Roadmaster Series. Lake Chelan Sailing Association, www.sailchelan.com. Sept. 11 — Commodore's Cup. EYC, www.encinal.org. Sept. 11 — Wosser Cup. SFYC, www.sfyc.org. Sept. 15-18 — Rolex Big Boat Series for ORC, classics 48-ft-plus and J/105, J/88, J/70, Express 37 and Cal 40 one-design classes. Deadline to register is 8/31. StFYC, www. stfyc.com. Beer Can Series BALLENA BAY YC — Friday Night Grillers: 8/12, 8/26, 9/9, 9/23. Gary, (510) 865-2511, www.bbyc.org. BAY VIEW BOAT CLUB — Monday Night Madness. Fall: 8/8, 8/22, 9/5 (daytime race on Labor Day), 9/19. BVBC, www.bvbc.org. BENICIA YC — Every Thursday night through 9/29 except 8/11 & 9/1. Dan, (707) 319-5706, www.beniciayachtclub.org. BERKELEY YC — Every Friday night through 9/23. Mark, (214) 801-7387, www.berkeleyyc.org. CAL SAILING CLUB — Year-round Sunday morning dinghy races, intraclub only. Info, www.cal-sailing.org. CLUB AT WESTPOINT — Friday Night Fun Series: 8/5, 8/19, 9/10. Larry, lrmayne@gmail.com or www.theclubatwestpoint.com/friday-fun-series-2022. CORINTHIAN YC — Every Friday night through 9/2. CYC, (415) 435-4771, www.cyc.org. COYOTE POINT YC — Sunset Sails, every Wednesday through 10/12. CPYC, (650) 773-6414, www.cpyc.com. ENCINAL YC — Summer Twilight Series, Fridays: 8/12, 8/26, 9/9. Chris, (650) 224-3677, www.encinal.org. GOLDEN GATE YC —Fridays: 8/12, 8/26. GGYC, www. ggyc.org. ISLAND YC — Summer Island Nights: 8/5, 8/19, 9/2. Info, (510) 529-8227, www.iyc.org. KONOCTI BAY SC — OSIRs (Old Salts in Retirement) every Wednesday, year round. Info, www.kbsail.org. LAKE WASHINGTON SC — Every Thursday night through 10/27. Info, www.lwsailing.org. LAKE YOSEMITE SA — Every Thursday night through 9/8. Info, www.lakeyosemitesailing.org. LOCH LOMOND YC — Every Thursday through Sept. except Friday races on 8/12. Matthew, (415) 235-8187 or fleetcaptain@lochlomondyachtclub.com. OAKLAND YACHT CLUB — Sweet 16, every Wednesday through 8/24. Info, www.oaklandyachtclub.net. RICHMOND YC — Every Wednesday night through 9/28. Info, www.richmondyc.org. ST. FRANCIS YC — Knarr, Folkboat & IOD classes, Wednesday nights 8/3-8/24. Thursday Night Kites: 8/4, 8/18, 9/1. Windsurf Course, Friday nights: 8/12. Wing & Windsurf Slalom, Friday nights: 9/2. Info, www.stfyc.com. SANTA CRUZ YC — Every Tuesday through 10/25 & Wednesday through 11/2. SCYC, www.scyc.org. SAUSALITO YACHT CLUB — Summer Sunset Series, Tuesday nights: 8/2, 8/16, 8/30. Dan, (415) 577-5602 or www.sausalitoyachtclub.org. SEQUOIA YC — Sunset Series every Wednesday night through 10/5. Info, www.sequoiayc.org.


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CALENDAR SIERRA POINT YC — Every Tuesday night through 8/30. Info, https://spyc.clubexpress.com. SOUTH BEACH YC — Friday nights: 8/5, 8/19, 8/26. Info, www.southbeachyachtclub.org. SOUTH LAKE TAHOE WINDJAMMERS YC — Every Wednesday night through 10/12. Steve, sdkatzman@yahoo.com or www.sltwyc.com. SPINNNAKER SAILING OF REDWOOD CITY — Every Wednesday night through 9/7. Info, www.jibeset.net. STOCKTON SC — Every Wednesday night through 8/31. SSC, (209) 951-5600, www.stocktonsc.org. TAHOE YC — Laser Spring Series, every Monday through 8/29. Keelboats, every Wednesday through 8/31. Dan, (530) 583-9111, www.tahoeyc.com. TIBURON YC — Paradise Pursuit Racing, every Thursday night through 9/1. Mariellen, (415) 606-2675 or www.tyc.org. TREASURE ISLAND SC — Vanguard 15 fleet racing, every Thursday night through 9/8. V15 team racing, every Tuesday night through 11/1. V15 Fleet 53, www.vanguard15.org. VALLEJO YC — Every Wednesday night through 9/28. Mark, (916) 835-2613 or www.vyc.org. Please send your calendar items by the 10th of the month to calendar@latitude38.com. Please, no phone-ins! Calendar listings are for marine-related events that are free or don't cost much to attend. The Calendar is not meant to support commercial enterprises.

August Weekend Tides Predictions for Station 9414290, San Francisco (Golden Gate) date/day 8/06Sat 8/07Sun 8/13Sat 8/14Sun 8/20Sat 8/21Sun 8/27Sat 8/28Sun

time/ht. LOW 0055/0.8 0201/0.2 HIGH 0025/6.8 0118/6.4 LOW 0129/0.9 0229/0.6 LOW 0615/-0.1 HIGH 0017/5.9

time/ht. HIGH 0751/3.8 0923/4.1 LOW 0702/-0.9 0744/-0.5 HIGH 0851/4.1 0958/4.4 HIGH 1312/5.0 LOW 0644/0.1

time/ht. LOW 1203/2.8 1315/3.2 HIGH 1401/5.5 1438/5.6 LOW 1257/3.3 1406/3.4 LOW 1815/2.3 HIGH 1337/5.2

time/ht. HIGH 1848/6.2 1945/6.5 LOW 1908/2.0 2004/1.7 HIGH 1859/5.6 1955/5.7

LOW 1851/2.0

August Weekend Currents

(510) 981-6740 0AGE s

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NOAA Predictions for .88 NM NE of the Golden Gate Bridge date/day slack max slack max 8/06Sat 0212 0548/1.4F 0930 1118/0.6E 1324 1712/2.1F 2018 2312/1.6E 8/07Sun 0336 0718/1.8F 1054 1236/0.6E 1442 1818/2.1F 2118 8/13Sat 0154 0500/2.5E 0848 1200/3.3F 1530 1754/1.6E 2048 2342/2.7F 8/14Sun 0248 0548/2.3E 0924 1236/3.2F 1606 1836/1.7E 2136 8/20Sat 0254 0642/1.7F 1000 1154/0.6E 1400 1718/1.5F 2042 2318/1.0E 8/21Sun 0406 0748/2.0F 1106 1306/0.6E 1512 1818/1.5F 2142 8/27Sat 0118 0412/1.9E 0754 1106/2.6F 1442 1700/1.4E 1948 2248/2.3F 8/28Sun 0154 0448/1.9E 0812 1130/2.7F 1506 1730/1.5E 2024 2324/2.2F Source: https://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov


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LETTERS

LATITUDE / CHRIS

⇑⇓ THE DELTA DITCH RUN, AS SEEN THROUGH A VETERAN'S EYES I have raced the Delta Ditch Run for about 25 years on my boats — a Coronado 25 and Catalina 27 — or as crew on other boats. In fact, unbeknownst to me, my name is on the Johnny Walker Trophy as the first SSC boat for one year. Then, I broke my hip in 2017, which ended my sailing career. Not willing to give up everything nautical I knew, I went over to the 'Dark Side' and bought a trawler, which I have taken from Stockton to the Bay and to Bodega/Tomales Bays or Monterey almost every year since then. We have also acted as USCG-required escort vessel for the DDR three times, including 2022. The Coast Guard requires that the DDR have an escort vessel, in case a commercial vessel coming to/from the Port of Stockton encounters becalmed racers who can't get out of their way. (I don't know how the escort is supposed to be available to 100-plus boats spread over miles of water, but what the hell, it's a good excuse to make the trip.) With so many vessels coming to the Delta from the Bay Area without local knowledge, most of what we end up doing is towing boats that have gone aground.

This year's Delta Ditch Run saw typically gnarly, knock-downy conditions in the narrow-ish channels between the North Bay and Stockton. A big thank you to Peter Hine, the author of this letter, for his work as a race escort.

Anyway, we had no incidents this year until we saw a trimaran (name withheld) stuck on Middle Ground off Port Chicago. We never heard a call for assistance, but figured we would probably get one, so we headed toward him. However, when my depth alarm went off at an indicated 5-ft (1-2 feet on the chart), we turned back to the channel. Being a trimaran drawing under 2 feet, he got off OK, and not having had outside assistance, he continued racing. Then, about light 17A just east of the Antioch Bridge, we heard a VHF call from a boat that had run aground. My blood pressure increased, and we got all my lines ready. I had done a towing job on my trawler twice before, once towing Stan Derrick's Hunter 34, which had suffered engine failure, from the ocean off Bolinas back to Stockton. Stan and Vincent Wortham — both of whom were crew on one vessel or the other on the Bolinas tow — were crew on this trip. While anxious, I was confident we could do this job. We had a little confusion while we decided whether to pull him out from the bow or the stern. Not knowing he still had an anchor down, after getting him off, we wondered why he hadn't continued on. Thank you to my crew: Stan, Vincent, Jeanette and 0AGE s

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.BJO 4USFFU "MBNFEB $" 1IPOF

2PG 6VQR %CVVGT[ 'GUVKPCVKQP

4UPSF )PVST .POEBZT 'SJEBZT BN QN 4VOEBZT BN QN

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LETTERS Cathy! All's well that ends well. I am sorry I can't be racing anymore, but still happy to be a part of the DDR, and I thank the race committee and volunteers of both Richmond Yacht Club and Stockton Sailing Club for putting on a perfect race for — what? — 31 years! Peter Hine The Dark Side Peter was commenting on the June 24 'Lectronic Latitude: Dishing on the Delta Ditch Run.

RACING, CRUSING, ONE-DESIGN

⇑⇓ FINAL VICTORY FOR THE HONEYS AND ILLUSION IN THE BERMUDA RACE Stan, Sally and seasoned winning crew on a venerable record-setting vessel will go down in racing history as the way to win and enjoy the process. We who have had the pleasure of sharing time with them consider ourselves very fortunate. Chuck Cunningham San Francisco Chuck was commenting on the June 22 'Lectronic with the same name as this letter. For more on this year's Newport to Bermuda Race, check out Sightings. ⇑⇓ A STORYBOOK ENDING The only way this story could be better is if the Honeys won their final race in their old boat, and captured the St. David's Lighthouse Trophy against the world's best sailors and equipment. Mike Z. Mike — They did! Stan and Sally Honey, along with their crew, won the St. David's Lighthouse Division of the Newport to Bermuda Race, against 108 other boats.

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Ullman Sails Sausalito Robin Sodaro 465 Coloma St., Sausalito, CA 415.332.4117 UllmanSailsSausalito@gmail.com 0AGE s

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CHRIS BURVILLE

Ullman Sails San Francisco & Monterey Bay That's Stan and Sally Honey (red shirt) in the middle aboard the Cal 40 'Illusion' at the conclusion of this year's Newport to Bermuda Race. The rest of the crew, from left, are Carl Buchan, Don Jesberg and Jonathan 'Bird' Livingston.

⇑⇓ A STORYBOOK DUO It could not have happened to a nicer couple. Stan and Sally have made a giant difference in sailing through their volunteerism, promotion of the sport, and all-around support. What a way to finish a fabled sailing career! Chuck Hawley Winner of the 2020 Herreshoff Trophy Santa Cruz


Dredging the Bay Area’s Shallow Draft Waterways Petaluma River was dredged in 2020 and recently a new contract has been awarded to dredge the San Rafael Canal this year. Bids have been received and opened to dredge the Napa River this year. What is happening? Congress is starting to fully appropriate necessary funding for maintenance dredging using the Harbor Maintenance Taxes collected by the federal government. This allows the backlog of maintenance dredging to be eliminated. Since the tax was created in 1986, the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund has grown to over $9 billion. Where else should dredging take place in San Francisco Bay for recreational boaters? Based on some comments Ayala Cove, Clipper Cove, Richmond Craneway channel and or Richardson Bay might be considered, provided that there is interest and Congress is made aware of the need. Congress has created a methodology for self-nomination of projects, known as Section 7001. Annually, the Secretary of the Army is to submit to Congress a report that identifies for potential congressional authorization. The report is to be based, in part, on requests from non-federal interests. Scan the QR code below to notify your congressperson of a waterway needing dredging. Congress also authorized a program of maintenance dredging of a marina or berthing area that is located adjacent to a Federal navigation project. There is a 25% cost share and a limit of $5 million per year. Congress has a two-part process: Authorizations and Appropriations. During the Authorization phase, generally through legislation known as the Water Resources and Development Act (WRDA) Congress authorizes the study of a project and then the construction of a project. During the Appropriation phase, generally in legislation known as the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act, Congress appropriates funds which go to the U. S. Army, Corps of Engineers (Corps) for studies, construction, and maintenance. It’s time consuming so important that project proponents start communicating early and work continuously with their Congressional representatives and the Corps until the project is fully funded.

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LETTERS

LATITUDE ARCHIVES

WARM SUMMERS AT

Stan and Sally Honey, sailing royalty.

⇑⇓ SPILL THE BEANS ON THE TRICKS OF THE TRADE Well done! It would be great to know what Stan's personal navigation setup is on Illusion. I know he uses some powerful tools on the big boats he navigates, but what is his personal setup? I assume Expedition and a laptop? Maybe some sextant readings? Let's hear about it. Come on Stan, spill the beans. Paul Galvez International 14 sailor SoCal

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⇑⇓ A TWO-TRANSPAC ALUMNUS Sally, Stan and Illusion: a match made in heaven. I'm honored to have shared two Transpacs with them, and ever grateful for their advice and assistance prepping Seafire, known in the Cal 40 community as "The Peterbilt of Cal 40s." I would have expected no less than a bullet on their final campaign, and a decisive one at that. Congratulations to the whole team on a job well done! John Harrison Seafire, Cal 40 Honolulu, HI ⇑⇓ VALIDATION OF RULES AND VALOR The victory of Illusion confirms that the handicap rules work well. When a well-sailed Cal 40, designed nearly 60 years ago by Bill Lapworth, can still win against the newest designs, it shows that the characteristics of the competing designs are fairly evaluated. Bert Bowers

⇑⇓ GOOD SAILING STARTS IN DINGHIES Stan Honey is a terrific sailor, but you can make a case that Sally is better. Never forget they are 5O5 people! Another example how the best racers start on small boats. Dan Knox Luna Sea, Islander 36 San Francisco

⇑⇓ POST-ILLUSION Wonderful that they had a great ride along with a monumental finish. I'm sure there will be more adventures for Stan and Sally post-Illusion. Love those Cal 40s. Linda Newland Winner of the 2022 Leadership $ in Women's Sailing Award Port Townsend, WA

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LETTERS

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⇑⇓ ROVING REPORTER LARRY HAYNIE AT THE ROYAL YACHT SQUADRON'S CORNERSTONE CUP My understanding is that Captain Larry Haynie is able to make others (sailors, ladies, non-sailors) happy "on both sides of the Pond," as he seems to be perfectly familiar with the sailing community in Northern California and in Europe. He seems to be able to perfectly deal with easygoing Californians as well as with British traditions — and Larry Haynie captured some of the all that with a smile. Being unique color at the Royal Yacht multilingual and multiculturSquadron on the Isle of Wight. al certainly helps. Larry is a real wanderer between worlds. Here in Europe, we would love to see Larry do what he plans to do: Sail singlehanded, perhaps sometimes with friends, across the Med, the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. Wishing good luck with his search for a yacht in Europe. Suggestion: Why not in Northern Europe? One thing is certain: Singlehanded sailors from the S.F. Bay Area may, and certainly can, count on 100% of the utmost support anywhere in Europe. Many interesting and charming encounters guaranteed! Best wishes for Larry's upcoming adventure! Michael

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⇑⇓ THIS YEAR'S WINNERS OF THE RACE TO ALASKA I was actually sorry to see them add the outside choice this year. Seems to me to further the inequities in an already diverse number of watercraft and micro-route choices.

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Team Pure and Wild sailed to victory from Victoria, BC, to Ketchikan, Alaska, in just 4 days, 4 hours and 32 minutes aboard their Riptide 44 'Dark Star', with Jonathan McKee, Matt Pistay and Alyosha Strum-Palerm, in no particular order in this photo.

Having just one route — the inland passage — was a great equalizer, at least for us tracker junkies. Art Ewart Dream Catcher, Pearson 36 San Francisco


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Art — Agreed. There should be two classes, as the outside route will be monopolized by big, fast, expensive sailboats. Thomas Woodruff Palawan III, Colin Archer cutter Portland, ME

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS

LETTERS

Golden State Warrior Klay Thompson has made the news by making the rounds of San Francisco Bay aboard his Axopar 37 motorboat. During the NBA Finals in June, Thompson was asked about his love for the water at ⇑⇓ GOLDEN STATE several press conferences. "The ocean has healing properties," he said. "To be immersed WATER WARRIOR in nature like that, it really makes me happy."

I've seen it with dozens of friends that I've taken sailing over the years: Some get it, and some don't. Klay clearly feels the spiritual boost of being out there in the elements. Day or night, sun or fog, wind or becalmed, it's awe-inspiring. Now — someone please take him out on a sailboat so he can feel the quiet, majestic thrill of harnessing the wind. Marcy Zimmerman Marcy was commenting on the June 17 'Lectronic Latitude: 'Namaste Klay' on the Bay: The Secret to the Warriors' Winning Ways. ⇑⇓ TIME TRAVEL WITH THE MASTER MARINERS' WOODEN BOAT SHOW My late father, Ben Blum, commissioned the building of Nautigal. He raced her successfully in Bay and coastal races until he enlisted in the US Navy in WWII. Mark Blum Nautigal III, Beneteau First 22 Tahoe City

LATITUDE / JOHN

Mark was commenting on the June 29 'Lectronic with the same name as this letter.

The 38-ft Myron Spaulding-designed 'Nautigal', built in 1938 by Anderson & Cristofani shipbuilders in San Francisco. That's current owner Robby Robinson posing on his labor of love back in June.

⇑⇓ A TIMELY QUESTION AND PERFECT SEGUE How do those beautiful vessels get insurance? We are struggling mightily to get our old woody insured. (We are a nonprofit.) Can someone advise us on this? Arnold Oliver Latitude Nation 0AGE s

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Sails & Service Mōli, Randall Reeves with Full Batten Mainsail, 125% Genoa and Solent Jib PHOTO COURTESY TIM HENRY/LATITUDE 38

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PLEASE JOIN US

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The San Francisco Bay Folkboat Association is paying tribute to the 80th year of the Nordic Folkboat with a gathering at the Richmond Yacht Club, September 3-4. Past, present and future Folkboat owners are encouraged to attend. More details: sfbayfolkboats.org 0AGE s

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LETTERS ⇑⇓ TWO CAL 40S COULD NOT FIND INSURANCE FOR THIS YEAR'S PAC CUP Sequoia and Freja lost their insurance due to being over 40 years old, and pulled out of the race. Azure lost theirs too, but is self-insuring. Some boats have been grandfathered in and have held onto their insurance. This could eliminate older boats from offshore racing if the trend continues. Nathan de Vries Pacific Cup Watch Captain Duende, Cal 40 Alameda ⇑⇓ RUMORS AND CONSPIRACIES ABOUND I heard that some insurance companies screwed over any boat smaller than 40 feet wanting insurance for the Pacific Cup, or were told no at the last moment, causing several to drop out or sail uninsured. Conspiracy theories anyone? Jeffrey Finn ⇑⇓ MORE EXPENSIVE, MORE RESTRICTIONS, HARDER TO GET I read with interest your article on the state of marine insurance for bluewater cruising. [The author is referring to the July issue's Sighting: The Evolving Market of Marine Insurance.] A little background: We've owned our 40-plus-footer early2000s sloop for over a decade. She has all of the required equipment for safe passagemaking, plus additional items such as AIS, SSB, etc. We're US Sailing-certified, have chartered a dozen times around the world, and make sailing a priority. We've never filed a single claim, and have renewed our insurance with a major provider for over a decade. Our broker is well known on the West Coast and Mexico. While looking to cruise Mexico with the Baja Ha-Ha, we have been offered bluewater cruising policies with strict requirements: defined itinerary naming ports and dates (no changes), must be back in US waters (San Diego) by June 1, and a sizable premium increase. Cannot leave the boat in Mexico for the summer. The broker offered many of the same reasons you cited in your article. The broker said many underwriters were exiting the business due to the recent spate of losses, leading to provider consolidation and a reduced insured base upon which losses could be spread. He also said the wide geographic range of natural-event losses contributed to the underwriter exit — apparently, the dramatic losses in both the Pacific and the Caribbean in adjacent years undercut the overall market profitability, adding to the consolidation. (When the broker was pressed as to why sisterships already in Mexican waters were held to different standards, an insufficient answer was offered.) The broker said I could go with a different underwriter who may allow me to keep the boat in Mexican waters, but cautioned that my decade of loyalty to my current underwriter counts for nothing with a new underwriter, and a new underwriter may decide to decline coverage. Then I'd be stuck without coverage. The marine insurance situation has us rethinking the famed cruising lifestyle, as going with the flow seems to no longer be part of the experience. Without stronger bluewater recreation marine advocacy, our access to insurance may go extinct. This then leads to further collapse of our sport. Hopefully, a new and reasonable marine insurance market will be formed. Name Withheld by Request Planet Earth


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LETTERS

John was commenting on the July 8 'LL: Something to Ponder Over the Weekend … What's a Blooper?

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⇑⇓ WE NOW DIVE INTO A SERIOUS CONTEMPLATION OF THE 'BLOOPER' In the bad old days, the International Offshore Rule (IOR) rewarded race boats with disgustingly pinched ends, tumblehome, tons of ballast, huge foretriangles, tiny ribbon mainsails, droopy booms and huge spinnakers. This horrendous imbalance twixt main and kite was corrected with a blooper, an additional sail flown opposite the spinnaker using a spare spinnaker halyard. This 3/4-ozcloth jib sort of thingie had a long neck and a really big, fat belly. This gave the foredeck yet another onerous task. The wonder and glory of bloopers ended probably with the next IOR rule change. John D.

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We hope you're ready for the blooper reel. The boat above flies a spinnaker and a blooper. Color coordination was the order for this unique and now charmingly dated sail combination.

⇑⇓ WHAT A BLOOPER ISN'T A blooper is not a spinnaker, since it is hoisted at the same time, and there can be only one spinnaker. It is thus a blooper, a light-weather foresail used by racing yachts, unattached to the forestay, and often hoisted with — and on the opposite side to — a spinnaker. George Shea ⇑⇓ WHAT BLOOPERS WERE Bloopers were usually relatively lightweight and fullbellied, deployed when sailing deep downwind with the spinnaker to lend stability to the boat, compensating for a downwind death roll. Peter Mirrasoul Citla, Cal 39 Mk III San Diego Bloopers were banana-shaped and balanced the sail plan a bit, reducing (but not eliminating) some of the death rolls. Bill Andrew Bloopers were trimmed via the halyard and sheet, and could typically add between one and two knots of boat speed, if trimmed well. Meserve


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LETTERS

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Gusto, a Nautor Swan 441, is a prime example of what excellent care and attention to detail will do for a finely built yacht. Her joinery shines and an inviting layout is ideal for long days at sea or comfort at anchor. Whether you want race offshore with a crew or cruise shorthanded, Gusto has the elements you need. Improvements include two electric primary winches, new teak decks, new engine, standing rigging (2020), Dyneema running rigging, a full suit of sails in excellent condition, AIS, and watermaker, to name a few. Gusto is a well-oiled machine in sailaway condition for wherever your sailing dreams may take you.

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⇑⇓ WHAT A BLOOPER WAS (A PAIN!) Blooper definition: Infernal, nearly uncontrollable flying sail designed to keep an IOR boat on its feet downwind. Check out the September 2020 issue of Latitude 38 [page 62] for a classic Diane Beeston photo of Kialoa III with her spinnaker, blooper and mizzen spinnaker flying along That's 'MorningStar', a 50-ft, Germán with main and mizzen. Frers-designed vessel, racing (and ul- Think about how many timately winning) the Southern Ocean hands it took to keep all Racing Conference series in 1984. that nylon aloft. A blooper flew opposite the spinnaker in front of the winged-out mainsail. My Newport 30 came up from Southern California with one, and I flew it in the Vallejo races. It didn't help things much — we usually ended up shrimping in San Pablo Bay. I imagine there are several generations of S.F. Bay sailors who never saw one, let alone flew one. Patrick Broderick Nancy, Wyliecat 30 Sausalito ⇑⇓ THE BLOOPER HEYDAY The blooper was a way to get more sail up at one time and still not be penalized under the then-controlling IOR rules in the 1980s. I was lucky enough to crew on the 63-ft maxi Triumph in the Big Boat Series in 1980-82, when "big" boats actually raced in the series. All the boats in our fleet carried and used a blooper. Most were hoisted on an extra spinnaker halyard, the tack was secured at the bow (as mentioned in the good description above) and the clew trimmed back in the cockpit on the spinnaker sheet winch not in use. On the bigger boats where cost was not an issue, they were designed and color-coded to match the spinnaker. That's 'Gekko V', a 41-ft Frers design, But on S.F. Bay when blooping her way somewhere downwind, the boat started to rock sometime in the 1980s, we presume. and roll in Cityfront, downwind chop, it was no fun trying to manage two spinnakers that were out of control at the same time — getting one sail under control seemed to aggravate the other one. No one knew for sure if they really made you go faster, but they were popular then, and a fleet with them all up did make a spectacular sight with the Golden Gate Bridge in the background. Bill O'Connor Vandal, Mercury Sonoma

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⇑⇓ JIBING WITH A BLOOPER Bloopers made things real interesting when jibing, as they had to be doused and then rehoisted. I believe they were outlawed sometime in the '80s — not sure why. Bill Nork Zenith, Islander 36 Alameda

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⇑⇓ A COMPLICATED AFFAIR I last flew a blooper in the 1980s on an Esprit 37. It's a sail that mostly made sense on rocky, rolly IOR boats that tended to round down. Flying just outside the leeward edge of the spinnaker, the blooper caught air spilling off the chute. Fun fact: One had a person trimming the blooper halyard, because if it collapsed, the blooper's foot was in the water. It was quite effective stopping the rock and roll, but boy did it make jibes complicated. Jim Quanci Green Buffalo, Cal 40 Richmond ⇑⇓ A BLOOPER BY ANY OTHER NAME? A fun fact about bloopers in the IOR days is they were measured as a genoa. They had to conform to girth and LP restrictions that were part of the rule. The rule forbade flying two spinnakers at once; it did not restrict flying a genoa and spinnaker simultaneously. Sail designers adapted to the rule by creating a significantly curved luff, thus giving the sail its unique shape. David J. Gruver Sketch, Olson 25 Belvedere ⇑⇓ ALL BALLOON, NO HOT AIR I would suggest it's what we used to call a "ballooner," a very full, lighter-weight fores'l hoisted from the bow or bowsprit to the masthead. Yes, it dates back to gaff/Gunter rig days, when it was used for close reaching, too shy for a spinnaker. Moraga John

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⇑⇓ THE BLOOPER FAD A blooper was a novel revenue stream for sail lofts in the 1970s — the wide-lapel polyester leisure suit for sailboats,


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⇑⇓ LIGHTEN UP, PEOPLE There are lots of haters out there. I'm not particularly interested in watching millionaires sail with a professional crew, and I'm totally not interested in sending any YouTuber my hard-earned cash. But I do enjoy killing spare time watching sailing content. If they get a cut from a single view, then so be it. To call sail bloggers beggars and accuse them of not working? Not fair at all. Lighten up, people. Just about all of them bust their butts working their rigs and making money in other ways. What is the harm in pitching a product or sponsor? Shit, that's been the core of broadcasting culture since the invention of radio. If B&G electronics offered [name redacted] $5,000 to pitch some nav equipment on YouTube, he'd frickin' take it and make a commercial. I have never sailed a day in my James Evenson surveys the damage to his Spindrift 37 catamaran 'Zingaro' in late 2019. life, and watching a number of these videos from Atticus, Zatura and a few from Zingaro, I'm curious now. I would love to take a sail charter to some island, and I may just do it — so there you go. They are promoting an industry. Nothing wrong with that. Retired Air Force Master Sergeant The reader was commenting on the February 20, 2020, 'Lectronic Latitude: Zingaro's Bad Break Is Bad Break. In late 2019, James Evenson — who runs the popular YouTube channel Sailing Zingaro — was approaching Honolulu on his Spindrift 37, with drogues deployed, when the hull deck joints started to break. The boat was a loss. "[Zingaro] are being helped already by donations from subscribers to their YouTube web series who are interested in helping with the next part of their adventure," we wrote in the 2020 'Lectronic. There was a deluge of people calling Zingaro "beg sailors." "Send us money and we will make videos of our fabulous lives," wrote one commenter. "Hard to believe people subscribe to these sea tramps." Good news: If you don't want to donate your money to someone's YouTube channel, you don't have to! ⇑⇓ STILL SPLITTING HAIRS OVER A WORD TO DESCRIBE WORK ON TUGBOATS Nothing incorrect about using the word "precarious" when describing the work on oceangoing tugs. The crew may be pros, but they're still human.

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LETTERS My Uncle Bob was a chief engineer on oceangoing tugs out of Coos Bay, Oregon. His company worked up and down the West Coast, and during the Vietnam War hauled barges to Vietnam. He had many stories that sure sounded precarious to me! My uncle suddenly retired while still relatively young. When I asked him why, he told me he started getting scared whenever they had to cross any of our treacherous West Coast bars. I couldn't imagine him being scared of anything, but there you go. Bruce Wicklund Take Five, Californian Navigator 34 San Francisco

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Bruce is referring to the April 15 'LL: Video Footage of Wan Hai 176 Under Tow from Point Reyes. One commenter disagreed with our use of the word "precarious" when describing a tugboat wrangling a 564-ft container ship in 15- to 20ft seas. "This type of work takes place more often than you might think," the commenter said. ⇑⇓ PROPOSED OAKLAND A'S STADIUM ON THE ESTUARY PASSES KEY VOTE ON ROAD TO APPROVAL The A's should stay right where they are. The Oakland Coliseum is directly served by BART, eliminating a lot of driving. If this new stadium is built, the closest BART station (12th Street) will be a full mile away, and most people will drive instead of making that walk. The additional oil consumption and air pollution alone are reason enough to oppose this project. Better that the A's leave town than build a stadium that will cause a lot more people to drive. Jeff Hoffman Berkeley

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An artist's rendering of what would be a dramatic transformation of the Bay Area's waterfront. (Notice there are no docks in the rendering.) The Oakland A's want to build a 35,000-seat baseball stadium, 3,000 housing units, 1.7-ish million square feet of office and retail space near Jack London Square, and a 400-room hotel on the Howard Terminal section of the Port of Oakland.

⇑⇓ I DON'T TOTALLY HATE IT As long as they are mitigated to keep all the trash that stadium will produce out of the Bay and ocean, and if they put in a high-speed chairlift from the nearest BART station to alleviate congestion and parking issues, I'm not against it. I've seen the same ship, John Glenn, parked at Howard Terminal and taking up space for a couple of months. It's not the busy part of the port, to say the least. Dan Zempel

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⇑⇓ THE DEVIL'S IN THE DEVELOPMENT DETAILS It's a real estate development masquerading as a stadium plan, not that the port is critical infrastructure or anything. Paul Dines Schooner Freda B Sausalito

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⇑⇓ EARTHQUAKES AND DEMOGRAPHICS We don't need to finance another sports corporation. We'll be losing a lot of jobs that pay well. Let them fix up the old stadium. I remember when it was new. Just a tip: Those of us in Berkeley know of a beautiful field just up the street from us that will probably be available for use since the Pac 12 became the Pac 10. Memorial Stadium on the Cal campus could use some revenue. Seems to be empty most of the time. Also, take into consideration all the problems with intense development on our shorelines. Not so good for the fish and others who live in the Bay; add to that seismic problems of the projected building, as well as rising seas due to global warming. And one last note about demographics: Seems that baseball these days has very little appeal to those under the age of about 36 or so. Mary Westlake ⇑⇓ LETTING LOOSE THE DOCKLINES, POINTING THE BOW AT THE HORIZON, AND GETTING AWAY FROM ALL THE BULLSHIT If you're going cruising to get away from all the bullshit, you won't want Starlink. It's really sad that more and more people go cruising, yet attempt to stay connected to the bullshit. There was a time when the cruising life was about leaving the consumer society behind, of striving for a different way to live; you espoused and encouraged that for years in the pages of Latitude 38. Now, many cruisers are simply exchanging an apartment for a boat; different location, same situation. What happened to expanding our view of the world by living outside of what we've been taught? How about viewing the world with one's eyes and heart instead of through a YouTube video, or the screen of a phone as you make one? Starlink will make the monetization of cruising even easier as we see this unique and precious lifestyle slowly absorbed into the "bullshit" of social media and consumerism. Bruce Balan Migration, Cross 46 trimaran Bay Area Bruce was commenting on the June 20 'LL: 'To Starlink or Not,' That Is the Baja Ha-Ha Question.

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Bruce — My feelings exactly. Sadly, I think we're still getting Starlink, but we want to use it for good, and limit the BS. Bill Gere SV Shifting Geres ⇑⇓ THIS IS HOW I WILL GO CRUISING Bruce — It sounds like you're saying that there is a "right" way to go cruising, and clearly a "wrong" way. I'll be the first to advocate for less screen time, moderating news, social media and incoming information, and generally trying to find a balance between technology, information and life, but these are deeply personal choices, and these choices are not necessarily mutually exclusive from expanding one's world view, nor from living a more experiential life.


I watch a lot of YouTube videos, and have learned countless things about diesels, electrical systems, rigging, fiberglassing, and the list goes on. And when I'm done, I go sailing, and I feel pretty tuned into the moment. (But I use my phone for charts, tides, weather forecasting, AIS, music and photos.) If you made enough money to go cruising indefinitely, then congratulations — truly. If we're really talking about getting away But please don't judge from all the bullshit, then no sailor has acpeople who might complished that feat quite like Australian Kris Larsen, who built the homemade, have to keep working junk-rigged 'Kehaar', which has no engine, while they're trying to electricity, radio, GPS or compass. (Larsen realize their dreams. uses candles for light.) In 2018, Larsen If I'm ever able to go completed a singlehanded circumnavigacruising, then I'll have tion on the 'Kehaar'. Has Kris set some kind to work remotely (and of standard for cruising purity, righteously @Compasscanvas of a landlocked life? will need the latest shunning the trappings technology) so that That was a trick question. 'Latitude's ethos will always be this most perfectly nautical of I can afford it, and idioms: Whatever floats your boat. that's just fine with me. I really like working and want to grow in my career late into my life. I don't think it's necessary to abandon everything to go cruising. Or rather, I choose not to. I've met a few cruisers who come across as a tad sanctimonious about how they shed their landlubber lives, scoffed at consumerism and the rat race, and took to the sea to live a slower, simpler life, though that concept is extremely relative. Many sailors proselytizing about the virtues of a life at sea also download new movies and books, keep current on the news, buy the latest systems for their boats, and stay in touch daily with all of their old friends via Facetime. That sounds exactly like my landlubber life! Danny Hendricks San Diego ⇑⇓ CELEBRATING FREEDOM ON JUNETEENTH Maybe the sailing you know has a "historically white heritage," but methinks you don't look very far back into history. Many civilizations with people "of color" navigated by sail with considerable success thousands of years ago. Sailing has always been the most inclusive simply because it was necessary for trade and travel until just a hundred years ago. The Arabs, Chinese, and the wandering Polynesian peoples had sailing quite well under their control. The whiteness of sailing is simply a narrow view of history. I completely support getting kids onto the water in sailboats, but can we not make a silly racial argument that holds no water outside the modern West? Barry Spanier Rosie G, Antrim custom sloop Emeryville These comments are from the June 20 'Lectronic with the same name as this letter.

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LETTERS

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Important work; good for Latitude to feature this. Tim Dick Malolo, Lagoon 42 Mexico Barry — You're absolutely right in pointing out that on nearly every shore throughout the world, there is some kind of maritime culture spanning back as long as people have stood next to the ocean. But how is ancient history of service to the problems of today? This supposes that you would agree that a lack of diversity in sailing is a problem in need of a solution. As the June 'Lectronic noted, there's a long way to go before sailing truly evolves from its historically white heritage. In the 246-year history of the United States, we think it's pretty safe to say that sailing was a small, exclusive club. Even somewhere as diverse and progressive as the Bay Area, sailing has not been Captain Donald Lawson hopes to become the reflective of the demo- first African American to sail singlehanded, graphics of the Bay nonstop around the world. Lawson has created Area itself. But prog- the Dark Seas Project foundation, and also serves as chair of US Sailing's Diversity, Equity ress has been made. It's not strictly racial and Inclusion Committee. — we often hear people of whiteness talk about the difficulty of breaking into the sailing scene. Several women have told us that access to sailing for them hasn't necessarily been an easy road, though access has been increasingly facilitated by other women sailors. Those of us who've been sailing our whole lives surely take for granted the ease with which we occupy this world. Some of our staff turn down more chances to sail beer cans than they accept. (Few non-sailors know that beer cans are a not-a-lot-of-experience-needed avenue into the sailing universe.) But we get it. The status quo, which we've always thought was perfect and harmonious, has suddenly been called into question. These are not easy conversations to have. At best, this new dialogue is awkward. At its worst, "inclusion" might be a road paved with good intentions that can lead to an unexpected, undesirable outcome. Do we run the risk of straying into tokenism, or turning people into perfunctory symbols? Do we risk dehumanizing the very people we're trying so hard to include? A fair critique of liberalism is that some people, perhaps unknowingly, just want to see diversity so that they feel better about themselves — or even feel a little self-righteous. Despite the pitfalls, we think it's worthwhile to keep trying. There are good stories out there about unique sailors who didn't inherit sailing through family or friends, but came to the sport and lifestyle via a different path, and driven by a burning desire.

DARK SEAS PROJECT

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LETTERS ALL YOU CAN

WIKIPEDIA

Sail Saaiiill Sa All right, dammit, here's another image of the Gall-Peters projection map. (We cropped out a sliver Antarctica for space. No offense, Antarcticans.) It's a little weird, right? It's not an especially attractive map, is it? And no, it's not without its flaws and distortions. But it is interesting, right? Doesn't everyone want to see every map, globe, satellite photo, and computer model in existence to form a better understanding of the planet? (This understanding can have as much or as little politics as you desire.) If you are on the quest for cartographic knowledge, check out the website www.thetruesize.com.

⇑⇓ WE AGAIN DISCUSS THE MERCATOR AND PETERS PROJECTION MAPS There are some bad ideas that seem to be immortal; the "Peters projection" (PP) is one of them. It made a brief stir when it first aired, about 50 years ago; was widely discussed, shown to be useless, and then apparently forgotten. But now it pops up again in these pages — you can't keep a bad idea down! Let me summarize what's wrong with it: The PP complains that the picture of the world presented by the Mercator projection is wrong; e.g., Greenland is shown as far too big. Yes, all maps distort the true shape of the Earth; you can't project a sphere onto a flat sheet without some distortion. (Note that the sample of the Peters map you printed is just as bad in this respect — look at what it does to South America.) The only question to ask of any projection is, does it preserve the property that's important to me? For a sailor, the Mercator preserves what's most important to him — straight rhumblines — and no other projection does this. But the PP was never really about cartography. It argued that the distortions of the Mercator projection were somehow harmful to the poor, the oppressed and the Third World in general. Exactly how an exaggerated idea of Greenland's size did this was never made clear, but for a sizable group of our citizens, clarity seems to be unnecessary. Mark Halpern Landlubber, but regular reader and fan Mark — We're not sure that the Peters projection was "shown to be useless," but it was certainly never popular, and never took root in American classrooms, where the Mercator is still the standard. We're also not sure what your issue is with the Peters depiction of South America, which is shown to be much larger on the PP compared with the Mercator, because it is much larger. Why are the properties of the Mercator map important to you, Mark? And why are the arguments in favor of the Peters projection, which are that it's more accurate, unimportant? If you've been following the cartographic controversy in these Letters, then we'll refer you to the original comment by Nik Omarzu in the November 10, 2021, 'Lectronic Latitude: Sailors' Word of the Day: Latitudinarian. "Numerous studies have shown that growing up with the Mercator world map breeds Yankee arrogance and further distorts North-South

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political misunderstanding. It's the 21st century. There is no excuse for this level of misrepresentation." (This comment appeared in the January issue's Letters, and was revisited in March.) Now, we don't necessarily agree with these sentiments, but we recognize that there are properties in this viewpoint that are important to other people. If there were a widely used map that distorted the Bay Area, making it look small and unnuanced, while Marina del Rey (no offense, MDR) occupied a large, prominent position, well, then we'd have some skin in the game, and we'd have something to say about it. If you had kids in school, Mark, wouldn't you want them to know what the planet actually looked like — which is to say, the actual size of things? This has been our driving point throughout this debate: simply, that accurate, objectiveas-possible facts are presented to students. Why is a sailing map — which we all know is distorted because of the inherent nature of two-dimensional projections, and because it was designed to service navigation — used as the goldstandard reference? And what of the subjective viewpoint of "Yankee arrogance" and "North-South political misunderstandings"? Can't we consider multiple opinions, encourage critical thinking, and allow students to make up their own minds? They should not be indoctrinated with a point of view (or whatever anyone's idea of so-called "wokeness" is), but neither should they be taught propaganda, or a version of history that glosses over the warts and robs history of its complexity and context. As sailors, and lovers of charts, we ask, "Is there not room enough in classrooms — and in our collective consciousness — for more than one map?" ⇑⇓ EIGHT BELLS FOR DONALD GORING Donald Goring, veteran Bay Area sailmaker and ocean racer, passed away on July 3. He was 93 years old. Donald was making sails with Peter Sutter in Sausalito in the 1950s, and had his own loft in San Francisco by the '60s. After a '70s hiatus in British Columbia, he returned to Oakland's Johnson & Joseph Sailmakers in the early '80s, before opening Bogart & Goring in Alameda in 1984. Donald continued sailmaking in Alameda for the next 26 years, finally retiring in 2010. Since he started making sails and mucking about with boats 70 years ago, he never thought of it as "work." Find something you love to do and keep doing it — he followed his own advice. The S.F. Bay sailing community responded to Donald's January 10 boat fire with overwhelming generosity; your contributions to his GoFundMe allowed him a measure of financial security over these past six months, and he was truly grateful for your support. He finally succumbed to advanced metastatic cancer on Sunday evening. Fair winds and following seas for the final voyage. Submitted with a grateful heart to everyone who donated in January and February when Dad's situation was dire. Find further details of his remarkable life in the September 2020 edition of Latitude 38's Sightings. Morgan J. Goring Florida Have a story, thought, adventure or comment? Please email us at editorial@latitude38.com, and include your name, your boat's name, and its model and hailing port, or just tell us where you're from.

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his month's Caption Contest(!) reached new heights! There were a lot of unique captions to accompany the photo below, and it was difficult to choose from among the creative one-liners shared by our readers. But we did our best, and following are our favorite captions, starting with the winner.

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The winner: "See, I told you I'd find a use for that old boat!" — Scott Henry.

"My foredeck refuses to leave the bow to go up the mast." — Ben Bland III. "Mikey was sure he'd nab that Darwin Award this year." — Bill Willcox. "If we mount this thing just above the spreaders, then the next time you capsize, you'll still have an auxiliary engine." — Roger Briggs. "Jim thought stowing the new dinghy was easy enough, but now, where to hide the forklift so his wife wouldn't see it…" — Bill Andrew. "I'll definitely be the Poster Boy on next month's OSHA Calendar." — Joseph Hansen. "He's never gonna find his boat up here." — John Callahan. "He took my suggestion to 'power up his rig' a bit literally." — @outthegatesailing. "Rare photo of a DinghyTender Crow's Nest installation." — Rob Sesar. "Given the high price of gas, Sam is learning to sail." — John Arndt. "Jill finally had Bill just where she wanted him… the ink wasn't even dry on the life insurance policy…" — Kelvin D. Meeks.

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TRIXIE WADSON / PPL

Cal Currier, a 16-year-old boy from Palo Alto, left the US from Marion, MA, on June 27 to sail solo across the Atlantic to Spain. His father, James Currior, wrote, "It seems if he completes the journey, he will be the youngest person ever to sail solo across the Atlantic from west to east. The idea of him being the youngest was never part of the goal or idea. That was brought up by other people about a week after he left and was already 800 miles offshore. He just wanted to do it. If he arrives on August 6, he will have completed the 3,500-mile journey in 37 days when he was 16 years and 249 days old." He was born on December 1, 2005. "He's been going very fast for a Tartan 30: 19 days and 3 hours to get to Horta, Faial, Azores. He only stayed 24 hours to the minute, arriving at 8:20 p.m. local time on Fri-

SEAN MCNEILL

In a storybook ending that everyone could envision though few would dare verbalize in advance, Stan and Sally Honey won the St. David's Lighthouse Trophy in the recent Newport Bermuda Race aboard their beloved Cal 40 Illusion, their swan song as the boat's owners. We middle-of-the-pack racers know there are too many variables in sailing to make winning a regular thing. Right? Turns out that winners, like Stan and Sally Honey, know that winning consistently takes good sailors, a well-prepared boat and a good strategy. The only Rolex Yachtsman and Yachtswoman (twice for Sally) of the Year married couple have relentlessly proved this truism over and over again. Can we say it now? Of course they were going to win. They've owned Illusion for 34 years and sailed her in both race and cruise mode. (As noted in a few articles in our Changes in Latitudes section, they departed San Francisco Bay aboard Illusion in 2014 and have been commuter-cruising ever since, ending up in Maine.) With winning experience on their own boats and numerous others, they know how to prepare a boat to win. Recruiting Olympian Carl Buchan, and Bay Area all-stars Jonathan 'Bird' Livingston and Don Jesberg — friends and friendly competitors from past years — they assembled a stellar crew. And, as Sally said after the finish, "The conditions were perfect for our boat, and we had a pretty good navigator on board," referring to Stan. "Stan chose a really good course, and the conditions were just what the boat loves, heavy-air reaching. A lot. We got into a Gulf Stream eddy and stayed in it for about seven hours. That gave us a good boost. We managed to stay in the wind most of the way down. We had a couple of light spots, but nothing like the later boats." With Carl Buchan at the helm, they hit a top speed of 22 knots. This is just shy of another top speed achieved when Stan and Sally hit 24 knots in a squall while doublehanding Illusion to Hawaii. The result of their combined experience, preparation and strategy was winning the coveted St. David's Lighthouse Trophy, a silver and gold replica of the lighthouse awarded since 1954 to the winner of the largest division, this year with 108 boats in the class. Illusion posted the division's fastest corrected time for the past 20 years, and the margin of 1 hour, 58 minutes, 4 seconds ahead of Andrew Clark's second-place J/122 Zig Zag is the third-largest in the same time frame. The Illusion crew made repeated trips to the stage during the rest of the prize ceremony, earning half a dozen other prizes for the largest margin of victory in class, the top-performing vintage yacht, the fastest yacht from the Pacific Coast, and more. The "top performing vintage boat," Illusion, is 56 years old and was first raced to Bermuda in 1966 by legendary Long Island Sound sailors Bus Mosbacher (an America's Cup skipper) and Vincent Monte-Sano. The seven Cal 40s in the Bermuda Race that year swept the results. The Honeys found Illusion 34 years ago at Moore's Reef in Santa Cruz and revitalized her for an illustrious racing and cruising future. It was their step up to big boats after 20 years of dinghy racing in 5O5s, and, in theory, it was going to be a cruising boat. As Sally relayed to Sean McNeill, after all those years of competitive sailing they just couldn't stop. After buying the boat in 1988, they went out and did the Pacific Cup as their first offshore doublehanded race together, placing second in class. When they did the race together again in 1996 they won overall. Stan also crushed the fleet in the 1994 Singlehanded Transpacific Race to Kauai, where he set a course record of 11 days and 10 hours. This remains an elapsed time faster than all Cal 40 efforts in the crewed Transpac Race (a longer course). They also enjoyed pulling a similar horizon job in the 2003 crewed Transpac. This was a fast, rough year for the Bermuda Race, with conditions that suited the West Coast crew and boat. It was Sally's third time racing to Bermuda and Stan's seventh. Following this year's race, ownership of Illusion will go to Stan's nephew, John Vrolyk, who will keep the boat in the Chesapeake. The Honeys are now looking at going to the "dark side" with

palo alto teen's


SIGHTINGS day the 15th, and leaving at 8:20 p.m. on Saturday. He grabbed new water, 10 more gallons of diesel, and some more food. Most importantly, he downloaded 20 more books to his Kindle. He originally brought only 10 books and ran out a week after leaving the US. Plato's Republic has been a favorite so far. "Our family is from Palo Alto, and Cal spends his summers in Duxbury, Massachusetts, and in Marion. He just finished his sophomore year of high school at Palo Alto High School. He plays on the volleyball team. "Cal got the idea to do this in January 2022, but didn't really know how to sail. So he took sailing lessons at Spinnaker Sailing School in Redwood City, fixed up an old continued in middle column of next sightings page

the honeys' illusion — continued plans to purchase a powerboat, which, happily, will not end their involvement with sailing. They will stay active in sailing, as they are both longtime contributors to US Sailing. Stan serves on the US Sailing board of directors, and Sally is a past chair of US Sailing's Safety-at-Sea Committee. She's currently working with World Sailing. Stan will certainly be tapped for many more racewinning navigator opportunities. Racing trophies are just a small piece of their achievements and contributions to sailing. We will miss the many stories we've shared of the Honeys and Illusion over the past 34 years, but it's a fitting final victory lap for the boat and couple aboard their legendary Cal 40. The storybook ending to the Illusion chapter of the Honeys' fabled sailing life is both remarkable and unremarkable at the same time. There are always a few wild cards in any race that can throw off even the most consistent performers, but somehow the Honeys reliably rise to the top. Retiring from Illusion with a St. David's Lighthouse Trophy in the Bermuda Race is simply one more tale in a much larger story of an adventurous and successful sailing life. — john SSEAMAN PHOTOGRAPHY

solo atlantic crossing

Top left, left to right: Jonathan Livingston, Sally Honey with the St. David's Lighthouse takehome trophy, Bermuda Governor Rena Lalgie, Stan Honey. Bottom left: Seconds before the gun. This page: Sailing out of foggy Newport.

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SIGHTINGS captain barb ross, wsasmb education chair

palo alto teen

Captain Barb Ross (aka Cappy) wasn't particularly drawn to sailing as a young woman, but she always had an adventurous spirit and a bit of a wild streak. So when her second husband shared his dream of sailing across the ocean, she said, "Let's go!" The young couple set sail across the Pacific, and that was the beginning of a journey to a lifelong passion and career on the water. Captain Barb's experience evolved and grew through the years, taking her over many ocean miles, highs, lows, challenges and victories. She became a highly skilled, seasoned, savvy sailor and racer, and a fully licensed captain and instructor with an impressive résumé spanning more than 30 years. I've sailed with Captain Barb, including a weekend cruise to Catalina from Los Angeles, on her beautiful Intuition, a 1978 Cal 39 MkII. Intuition is also her home. On these adventures, she shared some great stories about her life on the water. "I was born in Los Angeles in 1953," she recounts, "and stayed in the area until I met my first husband when I was 17. I picked him up hitchhiking on the Pacific Coast Highway, and we got married six months later. We moved to Portland, Oregon, and then to his hometown of Philadelphia. Four years later, I moved back to Los Angeles alone and started working for the largest glass company on the West Coast. I met my future husband, Tom, who was a glazier at the company. He lived on his 35-ft Ericson in Wilmington, and would take me sailing every weekend to Catalina Island. He had a dream to sail to Hawaii and back. I said, 'Let's go!' A year later, I had learned provisioning, celestial navigation and, of course, sailing. This is the start of a life of sailing. "When I divorced my second husband, he got the boat and I got the Corvette. But I was in pursuit of another boat, and because he wasn't using the boat, I started chartering it after I acquired my Coast Guard 100-ton master license in 1993. I independently started teaching sailing for women to Catalina as custom charters. The clients were mostly teachers who just needed an affordable getaway. "My next adventure was a six-year cruise through Mexico, Central America and through the Panama Canal. During this time, I worked on a dive boat in Costa Rica and had the fantastic experience of diving the Secos Islands in Panama and Malpelo Island in Colombia. My boating and diving knowledge increased and extended my experience to large powerboats. "We left Costa Rica on a delivery through the Panama Canal to Fort Lauderdale. After two more trips through the Canal, we headed for the Galapagos Islands. We were allowed to stay there due to some engine issues, then set out for the Marquesas, which took us 34 days with no sight of any sea life. I learned to work on the engine and toilet, sail trim in strange wind conditions, how to cook with foods I am not familiar with, anchoring, heavy weather prep, and sailing. From the French Societies, we sailed to the Hawaiian Islands (on an Ohlson 38), where we lived at the Hawaii Yacht Club for a year. "We sailed out of Hanalei Bay to Sitka, Alaska, in 19 days. What a shock to the system! Tropics to cool temperatures. Glacier Bay through the Alaskan inland passage to Seattle, where we settled for a time. I then moved to Portland and started teaching for an ASA school. I bought another boat and lived aboard on the Columbia River. "I fell in love with ocean passages, especially the 4 a.m. shift right before sunrise. That was a very peaceful and self-healing experience. Although I've had my butt handed to me mid-ocean, it still is not scary, because your primal instincts must kick in and you are busy as hell. "I believe that women in current times are very fortunate to have experienced women around them and women's sailing programs to attend. I married into it to get my experience. Now I share with both women and men to get them out on the water safely. I want people to have similar wonderful experiences to what I have had. My future is focused on getting youths involved in sailing. No better confidence builder. I think the AdventureSail program that the National Women's Sailing Association offers

boat in the spring, and left on June 27." Cal is not rich. His Tartan 30, Argo, was made in 1976. Cal bought the boat for $12,000. He put another $5,000 into it, mostly in electronics, solar and communications. He made the money by starting a summer camp in Palo Alto with his three brothers to teach kids physics, and by getting sponsorships. He's still looking for sponsors, hoping to raise enough funds to cover the costs. Cal will have an interesting story when he gives classmates his "What I did on my summer vacation" report. We'll have more on Cal in 'Lectronic Latitude and an upcoming issue of the magazine. By the time you read this, he should be close to his destination in Spain. You can follow his track here: https://share.garmin.com/FFAKP. — john

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SIGHTINGS — continued

captain barb ross — continued

Cal Currier aboard his Tartan 30 'Argo'.

Author Caroline Bielskis has enjoyed sailing since she was a teen, and started sailing and racing avidly in 2017. She enjoys daysailing, cruising, and coastal racing in Southern California, and looks forward to exploring the world via sailboat. She loves to travel. Caroline has written and published a children's book, and is a voice artist and actor. She previously worked in urban and transportation planning for local governments in California. — ed. Left: apt. Barb oss finds time to rela aboard her Cal 39 MkII 'Intuition'. This page: 'Intuition' anchored at Catalina Island.

CAPTAIN BARB ROSS

ARGO

should be embraced by all women's sailing organizations." In recent years, Captain Barb has served as auxiliary captain of the 80ft tall ship Irving Johnson in Long Beach, and is an active member of a few sailing clubs. She currently serves as the education chair for the Women's Sailing Association of Santa Monica Bay. She is very involved in ocean and marine life conservation efforts, and supports the marine environment through organizations like AltaSea and Cabrillo Marine Aquarium. Today, Captain Barb also owns and operates Captain Barby's Boat Management Service and Instruction, providing full-spectrum boat management services from deliveries to instruction. Captain Barb has lived an extraordinary life. She's proof of what wonderful things can happen in life if you just say, "Let's go!" — caroline bielskis

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SIGHTINGS delta doo dah 14's

the story of pell mell

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COURTESY DAVID SUTTER

Due to a wave of COVID infections, Owl Harbor had to postpone July 30's Roaring Day on the Delta, new date TBA. The next Delta Doo Dah event on the official itinerary will be on August 12-14. Delta Bay Marina in Isleton has organized a Saturday packed with activities for our sailors. Here's how the weekend's shaping up: Friday, August 12: Optional arrival. Saturday, August 13: s 10:30 a.m.: Presentation on Clean Boating and the Pumpout Nav App by the San Francisco Estuary Partnership, the California State Parks Division of Boating and Waterways and the California Coastal Commission.

COURTESY ALEX SIMANIS

On June 1, 1987, Dave Sutter launched Pell Mell on San Francisco Bay. "I was interested in sailing and boats, and it had been kind of a lifelong pursuit until into my 20s," said Dave, who's the son of Sausalito sailmaker Peter Sutter. "After stopping, then a transition in my life, I started sailing and cruising again and thought I wanted a little racing boat." So Pell Mell was born. She's part cold-molded and part plywood, with a little Moore 24 mixed in, combined with a bit of the Dogpatch 26 Moonshine. That combination makes for a unique blend of a fast ocean-capable and yet comfortable boat. "I had already been drawing another boat when I saw Moonshine and thought, 'Now I have to do something else.'" Moonshine was also built in the '80s in San Francisco by Dave Leech and quickly became a standout in the local racing scene. "I wanted it to be faster than Moonshine, and a bit lighter. I also used different boats as a reference for the cruising interior. So I made a galley that's really easy to use, and of course room for comfortable sleeping and sitting." Pell Mell is now owned by Alex Simanis and Joe Grieser, partners in Ballard Sails in Seattle. When Pell Mell showed up one day, Alex fell in love. "The first time I saw the boat was probably about 15 years ago," says Alex. "Steve Roberts owned the boat over in Poulsbo, Washington, and was working on her while I was employed at a local boatyard called CSR Marine." Then he hitched a ride. "I thought that thing — super-cool, you know — kind of looks like a Moore 24 on steroids. So I helped him get the boat in the water and we sailed back to Poulsbo and the thing just slipped along. It was just a neatly constructed little ultralight boat." But it took a while before Pell Mell and Alex would finally hook up. "I told Steve if he ever wanted to sell it to let me know. And couple of years ago, right in the middle of the pandemic, he calls, 'Hey, now it's time to sell Pell Mell if you know of anybody.'" That anybody was Alex and Joe. "I was kind of looking for a boat to do a doublehanded Hawaii race or something like that. So we went and looked at it and made him a deal." Pell Mell then got a facelift, as the team dug into fixes and upgrades. "There wasn't really anything dramatically wrong with the boat. There was rotten plywood in places and stuff. But it was in really good shape and had been nicely taken care of." Then the big work started. "The cockpit arrangement was really terrible for us, because it was so far back and so small you couldn't have the trimmer and a driver working effectively. We were going to only open the transom and make some room there. After discussion we said, 'Screw it, why don't we just put a whole new cockpit in the boat and make it the way we want it?' So we moved the cockpit forward, like 40-some-odd inches up to a place that made sense for the construction of the boat, and then cut it all out and built a new cockpit." After a year and what turned out to be a massive project, Pell Mell was ready for her debut. "The first race we did was a local for the Sloop Tavern Yacht Club. It's a Three Bridge Fiasco-style race


SIGHTINGS pell mell — continued

august weekend s 11 a.m.-2 p.m.: BBQ lunch prepared by Peninsula Yacht Club. s 1 p.m.: Delta history talk by Commodore Bill Wells of the California Delta Chambers. s 2 p.m.: Harbormaster talk by Delta Bay's own harbormaster, Eric Chiu. s 3 p.m.: Things to Know Before You Go talk by veteran cruisers and authors Pat and Carole McIntosh. Their talk may be of special interest to Delta Doo Dah sailors contemplating the Baja HaHa — and vice versa! s All day: Demos on solar boats and propane outboards; free SUP lessons. continued in middle column of next sightings page

that we do in October." After many local races from beer cans to the Center Sound and Round the County, Pell Mell was planning on heading to Hawaii in this year's Pacific Cup. "We were actually registered but ended up pulling the plug on it for multitude reasons. We have the 2024 race in the sights." With their California Offshore Race Week overall win behind them, they may be hard to beat. Doublehanding Moonshine (also now based in Seattle), Marc Andrea Klimaschewski and David Rogers won their division in this year's Pac Cup and may have plans for 2024. "Those guys are diehard," says Alex. "I'm sure that they will do the 2024 race as well. Oh, that'd be good! That'd be fun." After their spring California tour, capped off by the Delta Ditch Run, it's local sailing, some races and cruising for Pell Mell, including taking friends out. "I'm going sailing on her tomorrow," said Dave. "I'm really looking forward to it. It'll be a great time. Just great." — ncs

WWW.NORCALSAILING.COM

Top left: The Point Bonita 27 'Pell Mell' sails San Francisco Bay in the 'old' days. This page: 'Pell Mell' starts the Coastal Cup in Monterey on Memorial Day. Bottom left and inset: Remodeling the cockpit.

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SIGHTINGS nothin' much for dinner

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Who hasn't heard the old saying, "A well-fed crew is a happy crew?" I've found this to be accurate and a necessity. The first boat I raced on was an Express 27 out of East Greenwich, RI. The owner was a nice guy but unfortunately followed the adage of quantity instead of quality. Like clockwork, his form of provisioning was limited to a two-pound tub of chicken salad, a bag of hot dog buns, and a 12-pack of light beer, all for a crew of five! Two years later, I found myself racing on a boat around the Solent in England, and for some reason, the food choices there were not much better. I particularly remember a sandwich of relish-mixed cheese curds. Three years later, in the Caribbean, I found good food on a boat while working on an 80-ft schooner with a full-time professional chef as a crewmember. Her name was Elizabeth Lee, and boy, could she cook. I watched her work as an artist in the tiny galley, turning out five-course meals for eight guests in a single sitting. She was like a rock musician on stage,

August 14: s 10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Sunday Market. Delta Bay Marina, just off the San Joaquin River, offers free berthing for official Delta Doo Dah entries on August 12-15. You'll make your reservation online using a gift code; we'll email the info to our fleet. Delta Bay can accommodate up to 20 guest boats from the Doo Dah. Visitors are also welcome to arrive by car via Isleton's Delta Loop. Register for Delta Doo Dah (it's still free) at www.latitude38.com/delta-doo-dah, and we'll be in touch via email. — chris

NOTHIN' MUCH

ALL PHOTOS WILL SOFRIN EXCEPT AS NOTED

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Clockwise from top left: Trader Joe's covers provisions for a couple of sailing days; sandwich, salad wrap, crackers on reusable plates and sparkling rosé; Andrew fires up the grill to throw off the competition during the downwind leg of a beer-can race; nautical multitasking as Andrew steers, trims, drinks and gets served dinner by Will.

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SIGHTINGS fall crew list party

dinner — continued

Latitude 38's Fall Crew List Party will return to the Spaulding Marine Center in Sausalito on Thursday, September 1, from 6 to 9 p.m. Find a boat, find a ride, find crew for the Baja Ha-Ha, cruising, racing or sailing on the Bay. Everyone is welcome; come as you are. We'll have free munchies, door prizes, color-coded informational name tags, and a sailing slideshow. Spaulding will sell drinks to raise funds for their programs, and the Casablanca food truck that partiers enjoyed last September will be back. As has been the tradition for many years,

doing all sorts of crazy things like using a small propane torch from the engine room to burnish the tops of custard or melt a slice of cheese into the shape of a serving bowl. Our guests never missed the decadence of her presentations, and leftovers were rare. Understanding how much food matters on a boat has transformed me into a control freak when it comes to provisioning, preparing, and serving food on my boat. I would much rather hand the helm over to anyone so I can dive into the galley and prepare a meal or snack that I know will be worth eating. I have learned some tricks along the way that have helped me cut down time and effort in preparing meals on the boat. The first thing I do is plan a menu. I think about how many people will be on the boat and what food items will spoil first. At home, in my kitchen, I prepare nearly all of the meals, vacuum-seal them, and then freeze them. Pre-freezing the meal helps keep the icebox cool, lowers the battery drain, and lengthens the lifespan of the food. If I don't have time to prepare much, I provision at Trader Joe's because of their fantastic selection of prepared and mostly cooked food. Through trial and error, I have learned to prepare food that is easy for my guests to eat. I avoid oily food because oil stains Gelcoat, teak and upholstery. If I plan on serving sandwiches, I wrap them in butcher paper to hold them together and keep the condiments on the side so the sandwiches don't get soggy. I don't use disposable plates and cups but instead have a nice set of highquality plastic plates and cups that can be easily cleaned and reused; this cuts down on garbage. I also supplement much of my provisioning with store-prepared food. Trader Joe's is my preferred resource because their cold-food section has a wide range of easyto-serve cold salads and appetizers. Last year when racing around Catalina, we popped the alreadybaked but cold lasagna in our boat's oven a few hours before sunset. The forethought provided a piping-hot, high-carb dinner for us after crossing the finish line at dusk. I understand having an oven on a small sailboat may sound lavish or intimidating. I've also cooked many meals over a Coleman stove. My world of cooking on a boat changed last year when I bought a Magma Marine kettle gas grill that we mount on our stern pulpit. Moving the cooking up to the deck relieves a terrible amount of heat generated by the range and oven in our galley. The grill also cuts down on the cleanup of cooking, since I don't need to use any pots or pans. The propane fuel makes it easy to fire up and turn off without the mess of charcoal briquettes, which can be messy and dusty depending on where the wind is coming from. The grilling became such a feature on my boat that we grill every Wednesday night on the downwind leg of the Marina del Rey Sunset race series. We certainly don't have the fastest boat in our class. So, instead of wasting hours trying to argue my PHRF rating, we win by making the other boats jealous of the pleasant aromas coming off our grill as we race down the channel inside the breakwater. I call the most-requested sandwich on my boat the Gloucester Honey. Ingredients: s Cotswold Cheddar s Fresh Basil Leaves s Honey Mustard s Ciabatta Bread s Fresh Sliced Tomato s Balsamic Glaze Directions: Slice the bread in half and warm the slices in a toaster oven or on the grill. Smear a thick spread of honey mustard on the bottom piece, and the balsamic glaze on the top part. Layer sliced cheese with 6-12 basil leaves, and top with thin tomato slices. Serve with a salad roll-up and a crisp sparkling rosé. — will sofrin

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SIGHTINGS marie duvernoy — scientist, writer, sailor Scientist, writer and sailor Marie Duvernoy just finished a passage through the Panama Canal with her partner Yalcin Ozhabs. It all started back before the pandemic. "I didn't live near the sea until I moved to the Bay Area in September 2016," says Marie, "though I sailed a lot as a kid. I'm from France originally, so I was doing week-long summer sailing on Optimists and catamarans." A keelboat cruise with friends on the Mediterranean gave Marie the taste for cruising on bigger boats. When she moved to Berkeley for her postdoc, she knew it was time to take advantage of the access to sailing. "That's how I found the Cal Sailing Club and met Yalcin!" Growing up in Istanbul, Yalcin wanted to learn to sail. He fell in love with keelboats out on the beautiful, warm water around the southern coast of Turkey on the Mediterranean Sea. The University of Istanbul sailing team introduced him to cruising and skippering bigger boats. "I moved to the US for grad school, and it was a long pause in my sailing," says Yalcin. "But then I moved to the Bay Area and started sailing again at Cal Sailing Club in 2017." Marie and Yalcin started sailing together and loved the community at

MARIYA RYAZANTSEVA

YALCIN OZHABS

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fall crew list party the Fall Crew Party will be preceded by a Mexico Cruising Seminar to help Baja HaHa sailors and other southbound cruisers prepare for their voyage. Fito Espinoza from Hotel Coral in Ensenada and Neil Shroyer from Marina de La Paz will present an hourlong seminar from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m., allowing for half an hour of Q&A from 5 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. The gate charge will be $20 for both events or $10 for the seminar or party only. Both are free to officially registered 2022 Baja Ha-Ha skippers and first mates. No advance reservations are required, but you can buy your ticket(s) in advance through Eventbrite. There's free street parking around the neighborhood, and office building parking


SIGHTINGS — continued

marie duvernoy — continued Cal Sailing Club (CSC), but Marie's visa as a postdoc was running out soon, and when her contract was up she would return to France. So they thought, why not sail back to their beloved Mediterranean Sea? "At that time the deadline was within the next year, so we had at least two years before we had to leave," explains Marie. "The hardest part is just leaving! So it helped us to have a deadline we could meet," laughs Yalcin. Finding time to work, sail, and take on a project boat was tricky — while working, time was short for boat projects. But when the contract work was finished, it would be time to depart. During the boat search, they discovered the Ericson 38 and decided to focus on finding their own. "We found the one we ended up buying — it was in San Diego, and that was part of the adventure of going and bringing it back." They named the boat Tire Bouchon, which means corkscrew in both Turkish and French. The test sail was really the trip up from San Diego. "You cannot allow yourself to get a project boat that far from home; you need to know you have it in good enough shape to sail up the coast," explains Marie. The first part of the operation was to make this boat sailable. They replaced a reef line, jib halyard and topping lift, and serviced the winches, as they were not working. Once back in Berkeley, they took long weekend trips for offshore experience. CSC friends made a great crew for sails to Half Moon Bay, Drake's Bay and Bodega Bay. In January 2021, Marie and Yalcin headed south. They were immediately forced to keep a tight schedule and carefully plan around hurricane season as they approached Mexico. "You need to watch for hurricane season to get out of hurricane-affected zones. That's why people usually start in November or October going to Mexico. We were sort of late in the season," explains Yalcin. Wanting to get out of the hurricane zone by the end of May, the team sailed down the Baja coast to spend the little time they had in the Sea of Cortez. Cruisers normally spend the whole season there, but Yalcin and Marie had only three or four weeks. At the end of May they left Mexico. It was their longest passage. Destination: Costa Rica. They arrived in Panama City in January 2022. This was the grand master plan: Pass through the Panama Canal. Arriving in January, with travel plans through February, they had made meticulous plans for the passage. Everything was on a tight schedule: certificates and paperwork, bank transfers and payments, scheduling and hosting extra crew, prepping the hull, and then motoring through the Canal itself. "But I came down with COVID!" explains Marie — cancel everything! "We managed to travel with the boat safely, and we were still registered. We didn't have our crew anymore; we had to find new people and scrape the bottom. We had to redo everything." They recruited new line handlers, reprovisioned the boat, and cleaned the hull, which delayed their departure until March. But finally, Tire Bouchon was ready and motored through the locks, rafting up to a tug boat for the "up and down," when the water filled in from the bottom of the chamber — just three lock chambers between them and exploring a new ocean to cross on the other side. Yalcin explains their next few goals. "In the November/December time frame, when the hurricane season ends, we want to be more than a thousand miles upwind from where we are right now. We're going to take our time to avoid going into the hurricane-affected zone." You can follow along on their blog at www.teambouchonsailing.com and their Instagram @TeamBouchonSailing to see their progress. — heather breaux GRAEME LOWE

lots are available after 5 p.m., but please don't park in the Clipper Yacht Harbor lots. Spaulding wants to be a good neighbor. You don't have to sign up on the Crew List to go to the party, but if you do, the Crew Party is a great neutral ground to meet your new contacts. The Crew List is free for skippers and crew! If you haven't been to Spaulding before, it's worth a trip across the Bay just to experience the old-school wooden boatbuilding vibe and immerse yourself in the salty atmosphere of Sausalito's historical working waterfront, which endures and abides. Find the Eventbrite links, maps of the area and Crew List forms, and learn more at www.latitude38.com/crew-list-home. — chris

COURTESY TIRE BOUCHON

Clockwise from top left: The Panama Canal transit crew, left to right, Fraiser, Ivan the Canal advisor, Marie, Benjamin, Graeme, Yalcin; Marie and Yalcin on Lake Gatun, where they spent the night during the Canal transit; 'Tire Bouchon' on San Francisco Bay; last raft-up before departing, with 'Merope', 'Kakelekele' and 'Wild Rover'.

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SIGHTINGS pro surfer, amateur crew — As you may have already read in these very Sightings, the 52nd running of the Newport Bermuda Race saw more than 200 boats sailing the 635mile Atlantic Ocean course in June. The fastest monohull, by far, was 11th Hour Racing's foiling IMOCA 60 Malama, which completed the race in just over 41 hours. Malama had its 'normal squad' of skipper Charlie Enright, co-skipper Justine Mettraux and media crew Amory Ross, as well as two relatively new sailors: Lake Tahoe native and big-mountain snowboarder Elena Hight, and Maui native and big-wave surfer Ian Walsh. Walsh had sailed with Ross before, and knows many of the 11th Hour Racing team. But most importantly, there was an underlying alignment of values. "The pivotal thing for me is what 11th Hour Racing represents in their messaging to inspire proactive change surrounding the oceans. That's something I hold very dear as a surfer," Walsh told us. The 11th Hour Racing Team is intent on winning The Ocean Race in 2023 with Malama while raising awareness around ocean health globally and demonstrating best practices when it comes to sailing. "Sustainability is at the core of all team operations," a spokesperson told us.

HARRY KH / 11TH HOUR RACING

AMORY ROSS / 11TH HOUR RACING

continued on outside column of next sightings page

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nordic folkboats In 1939, a year after the Volkswagen Beetle hit the roads of Europe as the car for the people, the Swedish Sailing Association launched a design competition for the people's boat — literally the Folkboat. As Europe descended into war, the idea to produce a boat that was affordable and elegant, and could accommodate a family, caught the imagination and no less than 59 entries were submitted to the competition. The top four designs were then handed to the Swedish naval architect Tord Sunden to produce a final design. On April 23, 1942, the first Folkboat was launched as the ice melted on Gothenburg Harbor. Scandinavian immigrants introduced the Folkboat to San Francisco Bay, where it proved the perfect design for the strong


SIGHTINGS celebrate 80 years

ian walsh and 11th hour racing

AMORY ROSS / 11TH HOUR RACING

winds, currents and swell. Having arrived from Denmark in 1953, Bay Area sailor Knud Wibroe encouraged others to import boats. The fleet held its first season championship in 1958. Today we see wooden and fiberglass Folkboats racing side by side. On September 3, Richmond YC will host an 80th birthday celebration for the people's boat. Folkboaters will celebrate the history of the fleet, meet up with old friends, and make some new ones. Folks who have not yet had the opportunity to sail these boats will have a chance to give them a try. The fleet will swap gear and stories — and no doubt swap places while competing in some short fun races. Learn more at www.sfbayfolkboats.org. — chris

Spread: 11th Hour Racing came out swinging in the 52nd Newport Bermuda Race. You can just see skipper Charlie Enright's head sticking out of the foiling IMOCA 60 'Malama's cabin. Left photo: 'Malama's Newport to Bermuda crew, from left: lena ight, an Walsh, Justine ettrau , and Charlie Enright. Right photo: Sailing 'Malama' from inside her cabin.

Walsh won the prestigious big-wave surf contest at 'Jaws' in Pe'ahi, Maui, in 2017, where he caught a wave that was later awarded "Ride and Barrel of the Year." Walsh told us that getting into sailing "is almost like learning to surf again." Being on board Malama, Walsh brought a curiosity about the behind-the-scenes, day-in-the-life details, offering a glimpse of life aboard such a spectacular, convention-defying sailboat. There is no cockpit on Malama — the boat is almost entirely sailed from inside a closed structure, with screens mounted throughout the interior. All lines lead inside the cabin, where winches and a grinder are situated. Walsh calls the boat a "carbon missile," or a "spaceship." Walsh said, "I was, like, 'We're going to check the sail trim on iPads?'" Walsh called himself a "bottom-of-the-barrel amateur sailor." He has a Hobie 16 on Maui, has taken up wing foiling, and said he was looking forward to poking around on sailboats, and maybe getting to do some dinghy sailing on a trip to Europe this summer. In 2018, Walsh sailed aboard the gunboat Falcor from Tahiti to Hawaii, via the Line Island chain, while taking water samples to test for microplastics in the Central Pacific. 11th Hour's Amory Ross was on the trip to document the journey. There's a YouTube video of the trip called Lines to Hawaii. Would Walsh's 2,500-mile trip across the Pacific help prepare him for the foiling fury of a bluewater race? Watching his videos on Instagram, even the heartiest sailors might feel a little queasy inside the tight, sloshing-wet confines of Malama's cabin. "I was like, there's zero chance I'm not going to throw up all over this cockpit," Walsh said. But speed was a savior. "It's so fast, rather than that slow, lethargic waddle from side to side; the speed was really unique and helped me on a personal level." Malama was bashing into the waves for much of the race, Walsh said. "But that was our primary angle on our route to Bermuda. When we did have windshifts that put us at, like, 85 degrees, you could feel how it smooths out the ride, and how fast that thing goes." As someone new to offshore racing, Walsh said he was curious about the lives of professional sailors. "To them, it's just a normal day: the way they go about their life, the way they eat, the way they sleep — the crazy savagery of how little they sleep. I'm naturally inquisitive, probably to a fault, about those kinds of details. But it's something that I enjoy sharing, whether it's surfing or snowboarding or mountaineering." Walsh did some reportage from his Instagram: "You might ask, 'How the hell do you sleep?' I ask the same thing. You kind of snuggle up in this carbon missile and hang on, and you basically fall asleep out of sheer exhaustion and get a little cat nap." Walsh shot a video from his bunk, as Malama hummed and jolted and creaked and whooshed toward Bermuda. "You can peel down your foul weather overalls. Boots stay on though," Walsh said. "Some of the waves we hit while in the bunk can have you levitating and landing so hard it feels like your teeth might crack. A mouth guard might not be a bad idea in bed." How about food? "I only attempted to boil water once to make ramen. It almost cost me my left forearm because it was so rough, the gimbal had that kettle flying side to side." Personal business? "Trying to take a piss is a full contact sport and requires three points of contact, minimum. (You do the math.)" So how does sailing translate back into surfing? "Sailing really helped me open up my peripheral vision in the ocean. Sailing is just a much bigger perspective, and a deeper connection to the ocean and the conditions that surround it. And the bottom line: It's fucking fun harnessing wind and going that fast. Even though flying in a sailboat that's going 35 knots in a carbon missile is a little bit different than surfing, we connected on something that's very important, which is how much we appreciate the ocean." For almost 20 years, Walsh has shared his appreciation for the ocean through "Menehune Mayhem," his annual kids' event promoting surfing, sportsmanship, creativity and scholarship for the youth of Maui. "But the backbone of the event is environmental awareness," Walsh told us, "and trying to show kids how important it is to take care of the oceans and the beaches where they live." — tim henry !UGUST s

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PACIFIC CUP 2022 HINGES

RONNIE SIMPSON

The brightly colored Riptide 41 'Blue' glowed in the tropical sunshine off Oahu.

a half before the next boat and managed to pull off the sweep: first to finish, fastest elapsed time, first in Division A and first overall. An incredible result for this world-class program. Behind Pyewacket, Stuart Dahlgren's Santa Cruz 70 Westerly sailed an incredible race to claim second place. After sustaining keel damage due to a collision during the delivery down from Canada, the team barely managed to get repaired in time and make the start. With a boat and a program that has made great strides in the four years since the last Pacific Cup, Westerly kept Pyewacket 70 honest and finished about six hours behind on corrected time to claim second not only in Division A but also in the overall rankings. In the BMW of San Rafael B Division, a trio of J/125s and a

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' amachi' approaches the finish at dusk on Saturday, July 16.

RONNIE SIMPSON

fter an extended break since the last edition of the Pacific Cup in 2018, the race from San Francisco to Oahu's Kaneohe Bay is back and as good as ever. Sixty boats took on this marathon 2,070-mile ocean crossing beginning on July 4. While the first two days of starts were punctuated by light air just offshore of California, the Thursday and Friday starters found much more favorable conditions, which allowed them to more quickly reach away from the coast. With the breeze pretty moderate across the middle sections of the course, the 2022 Pacific Cup set up a classic Hawaii race with huge tactical splits early in the race and a long VMG-running drag race through the trades. The typical bigger winds and seas closer to the islands set up the kind of epic finish for which this race has become so famous. Owing to the slow conditions that racers faced in the first two days of starts, it was almost a given that Roy P. Disney's turbo Volvo 70 Pyewacket 70 would be the first boat to reach Kaneohe, barring any damage. Accelerating away from the coast as if she had been shot out of a cannon, the beautiful blue 70-ft cantingkeel monohull made quick work of the earlier starting fleets and managed to romp on to Hawaii in just six days — in a ‘slow' year. Routing themselves beautifully to stay in pressure, Disney's former round-the-world racer finished a day and


'Pyewacket 70' at the start in San Francisco on July 8.

PACIFIC CUP YACHT CLUB

super-fast Bieker-designed Riptide 41 would duke it out all the way to Hawaii. With the J/125s swapping the lead for the majority of the race, Jason Andrews and Shawn Dougherty's Seattle-based Hamachi came out on top to claim divisional honors and also third place overall. The same program that won the Transpac overall in 2019, Hamachi continues to achieve incredible results in a Hawaii race. Navigator Jason Andrews claimed that the weather was so complicated — a hallmark of this year's race — that he was still pulling down GRIB files as they were leaving the Bay. The decision to go north or south wasn't even made until many miles into the race. James Nichols' J/125 Velvet Hammer finished in second place after Rufus Sjoberg's Rufless opted to withdraw due to a protest that Hamachi lodged against their rating. This unfortunate retirement doesn't change the fact that they sailed an incredible race. The Goslings Rum G Division saw Bob Hinden's Richmond-based custom Schumacher 46 Surprise sail their way to a convincing divisional win. With daughter Rebecca handling the navigational duties and a very talented crew of local legends on board, Surprise stayed in better breeze than many of her rivals and moved steady as she goes down the track to come home with some first-place hardware. Greg Mitchell's Andrews 43 Kahoots, sailing with several Richmond

YC Juniors on board, came home in second place in a division that saw a race-long battle among about five boats for the runner-up position. David Ryan's Beneteau First 45 Athena nearly had to turn around due to severe seasickness but hung in there and managed to finish on the podium.

T

he earlier starters had to deal with very challenging and light conditions during the initial stages of the race, which created an epic navigators' duel. In Weems and Plath W Division, Eric Hopper and

'Pyewacket 70's crew at the dock in Honolulu. Their ft keel didn't fit in aneohe.

Douglas Schenk's J/105 Free Bowl of Soup sailed to a divisional win ahead of Nick Schmidt's Olson 30 Concussion, which won Best Dressed at the awards ceremony with the crew's festive aloha shirts and shorts. Jason Lauer's Express 34 Double Espresso rounded out the podium. The North Sails S Division saw one of the best battles on the entire race course. Andy Schwenk's Richmond-based Express 37 Spindrift V slayed some dragons to come home first in division. In a massive north-south split that opened up between Spindrift V and their rivals on sistership Limitless, the north eventually paid off, helping Spindrift V eke out the advantage. To win, however, they had to hold off a hard-charging J/35 from the Pacific Northwest. Chad Stenwick's J/35 The Boss showed awesome boat speed all along the course and !UGUST s

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ON THE NORTH-SOUTH SPLIT


PACIFIC CUP 2022 HINGES

matched Spindrift V's routing to Hawaii to claim second place in division. Shawn Ivie's Express 37 Limitless finished in third place, due mainly to being on the wrong side of the aforementioned northsouth gamble. The Mahina Doublehanded 2 Division also provided some incredibly exciting racing to follow. Christina and Justin Wolfe's Orcas Island, WAbased J/111 Raku led the fleet early. With impressive boat speed and a southerly route that saw them farther south than virtually any of the frontrunners, Raku consolidated back up to the rhumbline and looked to have the race pretty much locked up. Finishing in early morning with a 0AGE s

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commanding lead in division, they were assumed to be the winners. But with competitors finding stronger winds and bigger waves to surf on approach to Hawaii courtesy of Hurricane Darby, Andy Hamilton and Steve Kleha on the Donovan 30 Wolfpack got fully lit for the

final 300 miles and made gains in wholesale fashion. Going from four and a half hours back to almost an hour and a half in front, Wolfpack gained somewhere north of six hours in a day and a half to claim an impressive comefrom-behind win in Mahina DH2. Raku finished in second place, and Erwan Menard and Fred Bouju's impressive Pogo 30 Eskoriñ came home in third. The Kolea Doublehanded 1 Division that started on Monday also provided one of the most exciting battles in the race. The legendary husbandand-wife duo of Bill and Melinda Erkelens were back in the race, this time with a Moore 24 named Foamy. Heading south aggressively off the start, Bill and Melinda looked to be putting themselves into a strong position for Shown here with PCYC Commodore Jim Quanci (left), the Encinal YC trio of 'Surprise', 'Duende' and 'Azure' won the team award.

PACIFIC CUP YACHT CLUB

TIM AYE

The Express 37 'Limitless' approaches aneohe.


ON THE NORTH-SOUTH SPLIT 2022 PACIFIC CUP RESULTS Div Flt Boat Type Skipper Yacht Club OCEAN NAVIGATOR (Started 7/4 at 10:05 PDT) 1 19 Azure Cal 40 Rodney Pimentel EYC 2 27 Duende Cal 40 Giuseppe Lavelle EYC 3 36 Galatea Islander 36 David Herring Wayzata YC 4 43 Alternate Reality Express 27 Darrel Jensen Sloop Tavern YC 5 49 Rägeboge Hallberg Rassy 38 Heinz Baumann Cruising Club Switzerland/RYC 6 53 Sacagawea Jeanneau 349 Ryan Floyd SBYC 7 54 Cali Islander 36 Kerry Scott VYC KOLEA doublehanded (Started 7/4 at 10:15 PDT) 1 30 Moonshine Dogpatch 26 Marc-Andrea Klimaschewski/David Rogers Sloop Tavern YC 2 35 Foamy Moore 24 Bill & Melinda Erkelens RYC 3 42 Yeti Express 27 Adam Mazurkiewicz/Ron Snetsinger PCYC 4 44 CruzSea Baby Beneteau 10R Brian & Amanda Turner SCYC 5 46 Puffin Moore 24 Kelly Gregory/Patrick Haesloop SSS 6 47 Surprise! Alerion Express 38-1 Bob Johnston/David Morris RYC 7 48 Accelerando Moore 24 Erica Mattson Siegel/Robin Jeffers StFYC 8 51 Hang 20 Express 27 Lori Tewksbury/Catherine Meyer RYC 9 52 Twelve-Winded Sky Hanse 342 Mark Jordan/Randy Leasure IYC HOLO HOLO Cruising (Started 7/4 at 10:25 PDT) TLE* Solis Hans Christian 43 Darshaun Nadeau No YC MAHINA doublehanded (Started 7/5 at 10:50 PDT) 1 21 Wolfpack Donovan 30 Andrew Hamilton/Steve Kleha RYC 2 24 Raku J/111 Christina & Justin Wolfe Orcas Island YC 3 3 Eskoriñ Pogo 30 Erwan Menard/Fred Bouju PCYC 4 37 'io Antrim 27c Buzz Blackett/Jim Antrim RYC 5 50 Dash J/99 Stephanie Arnold/Ken Machtley Orcas Island YC 6 55 Loki X-49 John Sancho/Rudi Boekamp SeqYC NORTH SAILS (Started 7/5 at 11:00 PDT) 1 20 Spindrift V Express 37 Andy Schwenk RYC 2 22 The Boss J/35 Chad Stenwick WSCYC 3 26 Limitless Express 37 Shawn Ivie Seal Beach YC 4 34 Chance Centurion 42 Mark Lowry RYC 5 38 Total Eclipse Kalik 40 Roger Wise PCYC 6 40 Perplexity Express 37 John Wilkerson Sloop Tavern YC WEEMS & PLATH (Started 7/5 at 11:10 PDT) 1 25 Free Bowl of Soup J/105 Eric Hopper/Douglas Schenk Portland YC 2 29 Concussion Olson 30 Nick Schmidt SSS 3 31 Double Espresso Express 34 Jason Lauer SCYC 4 32 Vera Cruz First 40 Michael Johnson RYC 5 39 Hokulani J/120 Tracy Rogers PCYC 6 41 Escape Artist J/105 Dana Sibilla CYC Portland 7 45 Dogma Olson 40 Mike Little SSC GOSLINGS RUM (Started 7/7 at 12:50 PDT) 1 8 Surprise Schumacher 46 Bob Hinden EYC 2 12 Kahoots Andrews 43 Greg Mitchell RYC 3 13 Athena First 45 David Ryan The Bar YC 4 15 Freja Aerodyne 43 Jonathan Cruse Sloop Tavern YC 5 16 Lodos J/111 Tolga Cezik CYC Seattle 6 17 Mako Sydney 38 Jason Vannice/Kyle Reese South Sound SS 7 18 Wildcard SC37 Nick Grebe RYC 8 23 Pearl Synergy 1000 Eric Thomas Duluth YC 9 28 Such Fast 1D35 David Garman SSS BMW OF SAN RAFAEL (Started 7/7 at 13:00 PDT) 1 3 Hamachi J/125 Jason Andrews/Shawn Dougherty CYC Seattle 2 6 Velvet Hammer J/125 James Nichols RYC 3 9 Blue Riptide 41 Michael Schoendorf South Shore YC 4 10 J/World's Hula Girl SC50 Wayne Zittel Conestoga SC 5 11 J/World's Cazan DK 46 David Gates SDYC/SFYC 6 14 City Lights SC52 Aaron Wangenheim StFYC RAF* Rufless J/125 Rufus Sjoberg RYC ALASKA AIRLINES (Started 7/8 at 13:35 PDT) 1 1 Pyewacket 70 Volvo 70 Roy Disney SDYC 2 2 Westerly SC70 Stuart Dahlgren Royal Victoria YC 3 4 Rage Wylie 70 David Raney CYC Portland 4 5 Zvi R/P 55 Alan Lubner Seattle YC 5 7 Shadow II TP52 Peter McCarthy West Vancouver YC *TLE = Time Limit Expired; RAF = Retired After Finishing. See https://pacificcup.org for full details.

HANG 20

60 starters, 3 retired and 57 finishers

Cathy Meyer and Lori Tewksbury doublehanded the press ' ang ' to aneohe. We lost our power batteries charging , reports Lori. The last days we had no instruments and sailed by compass and stars and wind. We taped a headlamp onto the compass so we could see it at night.

later in the race. Marc-Andrea Kilmaschewski and David Rogers' hard-chined plywood Dogpatch 26 Moonshine chose a more northerly route and managed to consolidate in front of Foamy in the later stages of the race. Like other boats, Moonshine was pulling down GRIBs in the starting sequence and did not make their routing decisions until about 40 miles into the race. Sailing through the light spots, Moonshine's epic gamble paid off, and what was originally a 500-mile north-south split turned into a healthy advantage for Moonshine. Bill and Melinda Erkelens would end up in second place while Adam Mazurkiewicz and Ron Snetsinger on the Express 27 Yeti rounded out the podium.

Accelerating away from the coast as if she had been shot out of a cannon, the 70-ft monohull romped to Hawaii in just six days. The Ocean Navigator A Division saw Rodney Pimentel's beautiful blue Cal 40 Azure own the north and sail a fantastic race to claim a solid victory with Cal 40 sistership Duende following in their wake to finish in second place. David Herring's Islander 36 Galatea rounded out the division's podium on this navigationally difficult year. !UGUST s

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PACIFIC CUP 2022 T

he Pacific Cup relies on two rating systems. "For the larger, faster boats, we use the fairly complex Offshore Rating Rule (ORR) system administered through US Sailing," explained PRO Michael Moradzadeh. "This rule requires a number of measurements and the like to come up with a computer model predicting a boat's performance under various conditions. "For the slower boats, we rely on the more economical and simpler Performance Handicap Racing Fleet (PHRF) downwind performance number, based on manufacturer- and owner-supplied information, weighing, and the performance of the boat and sisterships.

"Each division uses only one of these rating systems. Longtime Pac Cup participant and yacht designer Jim Antrim helped us devise a conversion factor that we use for purposes of awarding the Pacific Cup trophy overall." The biggest factor in determining an overall winner is the weather. "The 2022 race was plagued by very light winds for the first few days of the race, effectively eliminating the Monday and Tuesday starters from any serious contention for the Pac Cup overall trophy. Nonetheless, they put in some very good performances for the circumstances they faced." See https://pacificcup.org for more. — ronnie simpson

Pacific Cup Overall; Bjorn Johnson ORR; Fastest Passage: Pyewacket 70 Best PHRF Boat; Navigator's Award to Ted Floyd: Azure Team Trophy: Azure, Duende, Surprise — Encinal Yacht Club Fastest Family Afloat: Surprise Bill Lee Trophy: Westerly • Schumacher Trophy: Surprise J/125 Prize: Hamachi • Express 37 Prize: Spindrift V Islander 36 Prize: Galatea • Moore 24 Perpetual: Foamy

STUART ENGLE

2022 PACIFIC CUP PERPETUAL TROPHIES & AWARDS

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WHAT WE WISH O

ne of the best things about the Baja Ha-Ha is all the like-minded people you meet during the rally — and many times buddy-boat up with, or run into later in the season. But for 2021 Ha-Ha participants Salacia, Fundango, Rochambeau and Triaena, the meeting-up-with part came after the rally, while they were all exploring the Sea of Cortez. After many shared meals and hilarious adventures, they spent time reflecting on what they had learned, and what they wish they had known a year earlier as they prepared to depart. Patty Johansen-Mitchell of Triaena collated it all into "enough to fill an entire book." Here are a few highlights. . . Open Ocean and Overnight Crossings Rochambeau — Our best advice is to be conservative at night. Stay clipped in, sleep when you have the chance, and always use a preventer when running downwind. Fundango — We had two additional crew on board for the Ha-Ha, enabling three-hour watches each, overlapping the first and last hour. With five hours off watch, everyone was able to get ample rest and de-stress from sail changes and nighttime shipping encounters. Many little squid found their way onto our deck and cockpit. We learned to tread lightly, otherwise you might end up with squid

ALL PHOTOS COURTESY TRIAENA

anything loose on the galley counter. Salacia — On our passage from San Diego to Turtle Bay, we had a problem with our autopilot turning off while sailing downwind in 8- to 12-ft seas. After a few times running to take the helm manually, we learned to immediately reset the autopilot. We have since learned more about setting and fine-tuning autopilots! Essential Equipment and Upgrades All four boats agree: Lots of solar and a watermaker are essential equipment! Salacia — We switched to lithium batteries. We upgraded the inverter/charger, house alternator and external regulator, and installed 870W of solar panels. We also rebedded the keel, resealed the lower rudder bearing, and installed new standing rigging, along with the normal host of smaller maintenance items. Keep the engine clean so you are aware of issues before they become a serious problem. Triaena — Our favorite addition is our watermaker. Our tanks are small, so being able to replenish the water allows us to have enough for our needs and to rinse the heavy salt deposits from the decks and hardware. We were new to solar (coming from the PNW with very little sun!) and

THE BOATS AND FOLKS Triaena — Tom Mitchell and Patty Johansen-Mitchell have sailed their Newport 41 around the PNW for the past 25 years, and yearned to shed their foul weather gear and swim in warm waters. In 2019, they began refitting the 1979 boat to make the long passage down the coast. COVID delayed their Anacortes departure until September 2021, when they finally cast off their lines and headed south. Salacia — Donna and Peter Molettiere decided to change up their lives — from living and working in San Francisco to living and traveling on their Santa Cruz 53C. "Fond memories of a BVI bareboat charter in 1994 and, years later, a goal to charter again in Sardinia to celebrate our 20th anniversary, prompted us to take sailing lessons and join the South Beach Yacht Club," says Peter. "In 2018, we bought Salacia; in 2020, we sold our condo — and the rest is history." Rochambeau — John and Marcy Baker weren't ready to close the chapter of 27 years living and sailing in Alaska. So they bought a second boat, Rochambeau, a Beneteau 49, in San Francisco just months before joining the 2021 Baja Ha-Ha. After only seven weeks of learning, fixing, and upgrading, they crossed under the Golden Gate, and the transit to San Diego became their shakedown trip. Fundango — Scott Sibbald and Joanne Pilkington set the goal of a cruising lifestyle five years ago. Less than a year before the Ha-Ha, the Bay Area couple finally found their ideal boat in Fundango, a Bavaria Vision 46. Fully committed to the cruising dream, they liquidated nearly everything they owned and moved aboard. between your toes and ink everywhere! Triaena — We try to plan our overnight passages during a full moon. The extra light eases anxieties, makes it easier to stay alert — and is beautiful. Prepare food that you can reheat in advance. The ocean swells make it very difficult to keep 0AGE s

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it was a big learning curve for us to understand how systems worked and how to monitor our daily consumption. We also like flopper stoppers, and stern anchors help to steady the boat at anchor when there are swells. Rochambeau — Our VictronConnect

battery-monitoring device allowed daily tracking of our power usage and battery health. Weather Forecasting and Monitoring It is unanimous: PredictWind and Iridium GO! were the "must-have" tools. Fundango — For forecasting, we primarily used the PredictWind Offshore app (www.predictwind.com) with Iridium GO!. We found it useful to compare different models and make plans based on the "gust" map. If you look only at the "wind" map, you could be in for a surprise in the SOC. Salacia — We didn't realize there would be so many northers blowing in the winter months, or that the seas would be so short and steep in what would be considered moderate (15- to 20-kt) winds. Those conditions make travel slow and very unpleasant. We also wish we'd known the seasons in the SOC better — May and June are the best months for cruising, while August and September are the hottest. Rochambeau — We found the ECMWF (European Centre for Medium-Range


WE KNEW

Above: Scott and Joanne. Below: 'Fundango'. Left: 'Salacia'. Above: Peter and Donna.

Below: 'Triaena'. Below left: Patty and Tom.

Weather Forecasts — www.ecmwf.int) Gust map to most closely reflect our actual experiences and to be accurate in predicting the strong northerly wind events. Triaena — After the Ha-Ha, we headed to mainland Mexico after learning that the northerlies in the SOC blew for days, making northbound travel nearly impossible, not to mention colder. We returned to Baja in late February — which, in hindsight, was a month too early as the water and air had not yet begun to warm up. Next year, we will hold off returning to Baja until mid-March. Biggest Challenges Triaena — Early on, we didn't have enough battery power, which required reducing our consumption wherever possible. We resolved it by adding more solar, for a total of 750 watts, and moving our cooling unit higher in the refrigerator box. Salacia — Just after arriving in Cabo, Donna received a call for a follow-up medical procedure. She opted for an ultrasound in La Paz, followed by more testing in San Diego. This meant leaving the boat for an unknown period and finding

Above: Buddy-boater group shot.

Above: John and Marcy. Left: 'Rochambeau'.

moorage. We opted for a mooring ball in Puerto Escondido, which became our home base. All medical concerns are now resolved, and we are back cruising full time. We learned that it is good to be prepared to adjust to unexpected circumstances. Rochambeau — We experienced a failed starter and a leaking shaft seal. These two experiences taught us to have manuals for everything and be able to access them when needed. Often, we didn't have a cell signal or access to the internet, so it's essential to download them before you leave (or obtain hard copies). Buddy-boating is a lifesaver for help in making repairs, finding local services, and connecting to arriving guests who are willing to bring in parts. Fundango — We won't go anywhere without having some Barnacle Buster on board. It helped us out of jams a couple of times when our raw water cooling system clogged up. The zinc for our Saildrive unit is uncommon and hard to find, so we wished we had brought more zincs, a carburetor for the dinghy outboard, a wind vane for the anemometer (it disappeared

from the top of the mast at an anchorage with lots of bird activity), and a watermaker maintenance kit with more filters. Marinas and Reservations Rochambeau — During the peak season, Mexican marinas can be more expensive than Southern California's. We found that the break-even point between the daily and weekly rates was usually three days. We often secured a week, giving us time to provision and do laundry. Triaena — We didn't realize that reservations needed to be made weeks in advance to leave our boat over the Christmas holiday. Passage to mainland Mexico allowed us to find moorage in La Cruz, and it was less expensive than the Baja marinas. We anchored out 95% of our eight months of cruising and only required moorage the two times we left the boat for inland travel. Fundango — To remain flexible and avoid being on a schedule, we tend to not make plans far in advance. When we wanted to get a slip for a day or two, we would email the marina a few days before. The marinas were usually able to find a !UGUST s

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WHAT WE WISH spot for us on an end-tie or outer dock. Once we got into a marina, we established a relationship with the management to increase the likelihood of securing a spot the next time we came through. Salacia — Marinas are often full. Planning helps to secure a slip, but being there in person, ready to pull in and pay, may count for more than a reservation. Managing Life Aboard Triaena — It really helps when you like (and love) your spouse. For the first five months of cruising, we didn't experience buddy-boating, and primarily depended on each other for company. Forty-one feet is a tight space, and small annoyances can become big. Our kayaks and sailing dinghy provided space and time to separate when we needed some alone time. We worked together on weather forecasting, trip planning, maintenance, and skippering the boat. This teamwork helped us to stay friends. Rochambeau — Our days were filled with sailing; walking on the beach; hiking the hills, mountains and canyons; snorkeling; paddling our SUPs; reading; boat chores; cooking; hanging out with friends; and enjoying perfect sunsets almost every evening. With constant warm, sunny weather, you can get off the boat anytime you feel the need for space. Fundango — Projects on a boat take longer and cost more than similar projects on land. We learned to expect that, adjust plans accordingly, and always leave some fun time in each day. Salacia — Our biggest adjustment was dealing with the refrigerator and the amount of time and work it took to get food from a store and bring it back to the boat. The fridge was deep, so we tried organizing it with several bins. But we often needed something down at the bottom, and to get it required pulling out all the bins! Eventually, I adjusted to the routine and learned to be patient, relax, and take my time. Provisioning Rochambeau — We like to keep a seven- to 10-day supply of food on board, along with five shelf-stable meals. Be sure to have a few meals that will feed six to eight people, as we often had friends stay longer than Happy Hour. Those were some of the most memorable evenings of the season! Salacia — Be ruthless with what you bring, and don't get something "just because you think you might need it" — especially if you're just going to Mexico. You can get all the food you need there. Triaena — We found the farmer's 0AGE s

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met because of the Baja Ha-Ha. Salacia — Snorkeling is probably the best form of entertainment in the water! We did take 4/3mm wetsuits (4mm of thickness in the Few new cruisers think much about buddy-boating when they start out, but torso; 3mm in the learn quickly that it enhances the experience immeasurably. arms and legs), markets a great source of fresh food. which we thought would be too warm, but Shopping where the locals shop ensured it turns out the water can be pretty cold the best prices. A Costco run in Cabo and in the SOC. We did take a whole boxful Puerto Vallarta allowed us to top off our of games, but we're not big gamers, and wine supply and source some hard-to- we've only used them occasionally. Fundango — Toys included a paddlefind cheeses. Freezer space allows you to stock up on specialty items when you find board and snorkel gear along with wetsuits. For entertainment, we enjoyed them. Fundango — We learned to grow music and movies that were downloaded sprouts and make fresh bread, and per- whenever we had service, and/or copied fected our pizza dough. Impromptu pot- from buddy-boat hard drives. Triaena — Our prior life left us little lucks with buddy boats were always a lot of fun, plus if we were missing an in- time to sit and read. Cruising changed gredient, usually one of our buddy boats that and we read a lot of books. Daytime was filled with kayaking, snorkeling, and would have it. swimming. It would get dark by 6:30 p.m., when we enjoyed binge-watching Staying Connected Fundango — While out of cell-service series that we had on DVD. range (which is most of the time in the Insects and Pests SOC), we relied on our Iridium GO! for Triaena — We were careful what we texting, emails, weather forecasts, and occasional phone calls. When in cell range, brought on board, and left all paper and we used our cellphones with an AT&T un- cardboard packaging at the dock. Belimited data plan for the USA, Mexico and fore bringing on vegetables and fruit, we dipped everything in fresh water with a Canada. Triaena — While cruising the main- small amount of bleach. Shake out items land, we had a very reliable cell signal. left outside to dry before bringing below Once crossing to Baja, we were often out — or you just might find that you have a of touch for two to three weeks. We were new, unwelcomed crewmember. That is a sure to let our family know of these limita- story for the future! Fundango — Having screens on all tions and our probable itinerary, so they didn't expect to hear from us. Iridium GO! hatches and in the companionway kept was our backup communications tool if any annoying insects out. In areas where there were thirsty honeybees, we avoidwe did not have a cell signal. Salacia — Iridium GO! is good for ed having any fresh water in the cockpit weather, but slow for other communica- during daylight hours so as not to attions. We've been trying to get our SSB tract them. Insect repellent was effective and Ham radio working correctly to make against bobos and mosquitoes. Rochambeau — Carry mild and notcontacts with the US, and we've been surprised at the regulatory hurdles for inter- so-mild insect repellent, burn coils, and national Hams. Cellphone networks are bring cockroach and rat traps. fairly ubiquitous though, and work great Dinghies — The Cruisers' Car — except where there aren't any. Being Fundango — We chose a lightweight offline for four to six weeks isn't such a inflatable Takacat dinghy that's easy bad thing, though! to beach and packs away for long passages, thus avoiding the need for davits. Boat Toys and Other Entertainment Rochambeau — Hands down: fellow We planned to get an electric motor, but cruisers! We spent the majority of the could not get it delivered before we left. season with really great friends whom we So we settled for a small, lightweight


WE KNEW

outboard. We plan to replace it with an electric motor at some point in the future. Rochambeau — We have a 10-ft Highfield double-floored aluminum RIB, with a 15-hp engine. It is durable and fast, but too heavy for the two of us to carry onto the beach. The SOC does not have high surf, and we successfully used a "buddy anchor" system to hold it off the beach. Knowing what we know now, we might switch to a Takacat with an 8-hp outboard. Triaena — We rebuilt a 10-ft Chameleon nesting dinghy and didn't have time to test it before leaving Anacortes. It rows, sails, and holds our 4-hp outboard. We experimented with options to store it on the bow and davits, and how best to assemble and launch it. The mainland Mexico anchorages often had surf, making dinghy landings difficult. We learned (the hard and very wet way) to be cautious and patient waiting for a break in the waves before landing and launching.

Cruisers' Nets All boats checked in on local VHF nets from time to time. Peter on Salacia has a Ham license and also participated in the Amigo Net. Rochambeau — We often listened to the net in Puerto Escondido. In Guaymas, we asked for a ride on the morning net and met Patrick, who turned out to be a great guide of the area. Fundango — We listened in on cruisers' nets occasionally and found them useful for finding out where to get propane tanks filled and where to buy parts or get service. Triaena — We enjoyed the check-ins to hear who was in port and, in La Cruz, the local weather and wind forecast. Making Friends and Buddy-Boating Rochambeau — "John talks to everyone and hands out our boat card, so meeting new people and being able to stay in contact has never been an issue," says Mary. (All three other boats met

Rochambeau through their friendly greetings!)Buddy-boating is wonderful! When there is a problem, it's always handy to have multiple brains and sets of tools to draw upon. It's also safer for hiking, snorkeling, and adventuring as a group. Triaena — It's easy to paddle over and say hello, pass a boat card, or extend an invitation to meet ashore. COVID changed socializing, with many cruisers not entertaining on board. Buddy-boating reduced the risk by limiting the size of a group with whom you were in close contact. Fundango — Before leaving, we made friends at our marina with folks on other boats that were also going south on the Ha-Ha. We met a lot of people during the Ha-Ha and ran into them again in anchorages. We had great fun buddy-boating, socializing, sharing ideas, and discussing plans. We did not know about boat cards before departing, but can see their value and will have some made soon. Exploring and Local Communities All four boats concur: Make an effort to learn some Spanish! It will enhance your interactions with the locals and facilitate

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WHAT WE WISH WE KNEW more meaningful connections with our host country. Fundango — We enjoyed supporting the small villages by eating at their restaurants, shopping at their markets, and taking local tours. Taxi drivers are a great source of local information. Triaena — Staying in one anchorage for a while gives you a chance to connect with local activities and volunteer opportunities. The cruiser nets are a good source to learn what's happening and how to participate. We also enjoyed exploring ashore and mastering the local bus system. Rochambeau — We always walked through the new towns, visiting museums and missions, restaurants and tiendas. While many places had Englishspeaking locals, many did not. Our goal for next season is to have a better grasp of Spanish. Cruising Guides All four boats carried Sea of Cortez: A Cruiser's Guidebook, by Shawn Breeding and Heather Bansmer, and found it invaluable.

Triaena — Buy your cruising, marine life, bird, and plant guidebooks before leaving the US. They are difficult to find in Mexico. Fundango — We use the latest Garmin charts on our chartplotter; Navionics on iPad. Rochambeau — We found Shawn and Heather's guidebook, along with the subscription for the accompanying Blue Latitude charts from iNavX, to be indispensable tools. We used our iPad and our phones to run both iNavX and Navionics subscription plans as our primary "chartplotter". Summer Plans and the Next Season Salacia — The hot summers in the SOC made us decide to haul out in Guaymas until we return at the end of September. Salacia is our full-time home, so our summer will be spent traveling and visiting friends and family, including trips to Seattle and Alaska to spend time with Tom and Patty (Triaena) and John and Marcy (Rochambeau).

Triaena — We returned home to Seattle in late April after hauling out in San Carlos. We rented a storage unit to hold all deck and dinghy gear, aerosols, the outboard and empty jerry cans. After emptying the boat of all food, covering all exposed plastic, and setting up a shade cover, the boat is on the hard until we drive back in October. Once back in the water, our plan is to explore farther north before slowly cruising south as far as Manzanillo. Rochambeau — We'll store the boat in the yard in San Carlos. We were surprised that it took longer to "summerize" the boat than it takes to winterize our Alaska boat! Another cruiser shared their to-do list, and we refined it with our own experiences. It took us seven full days to get the boat ready for our six-month absence until we return next season. Next year we'll allow eight days! Fundango — We plan to stay on the boat as much as possible for the summer in the northern SOC — with the option of putting the boat in a slip and going home for a couple of months if it gets too hot. — patty johansen-mitchell

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HOW TO I

t might have started with a conversation. I was sailing a Holder 20 back then, my first boat that wasn't technically a dinghy. "Cool boat," my friend Carlton said, looking at Fear Knot sitting in the Morro Bay Yacht Club yard, "Nice lines. Looks fast." "Yeah. I like it," I remember saying. "But what Mark and I really want is a Santa Cruz 27. It's like the father of ultralights. Started the whole thing and some can be found for about the same price as this Holder 20. But, unfortunately, the club hoist can't handle them." It's true. Ever since Mark Hilden and I realized that the Santa Cruz 27 packed the most bang for the buck, we wanted one. And now we have one, and there are three other SC27s that have joined us. As the founding member, along with Cousin Mark, of the newly formed Morro Bay Santa Cruz 27 fleet, some people have asked how Mark and I actually introduced a new boat to our town and started a one-design sailing community. Of course, the simple answer is that you need a cool boat. No one would argue that the SC27 isn't cool. The classic Bill Lee design, with its low profile and sporty lines, is nothing if it isn't cool. But truth be told, the founding of our new fleet has really been part of a larger journey, a journey that started with another boat. Morro Bay Yacht Club has the biggest fleet of O'Day Day Sailers in the world. For those unfamiliar with the Day Sailer, it is a 17-foot, two-person fiberglass sloop-rigged dinghy with a spinnaker, first built in 1958. It's perfect for sailing in Morro Bay, which is often referred to as the miniature golf of sailing venues. Races are held inside the small bay, DAN HACK

which has dozens of moored boats to dodge, sandbars to navigate, eel grass to remove, ripping currents to play, commercial fishing boats to not anger, and tourists in kayaks to miss. The Day Sailer sails well in all wind conditions, the centerboard and rudder kick up easily to navigate the shallow sandbars and clear eel grass. Over 12,000 have been made, so used boats are pretty inexpensive, which is key for our obstacle-filled, strong-current sailing venue. I became a much better sailor competing with my wife, Gwenn, for years in the Day Sailer fleet. Nothing teaches sailing better than racing in a dinghy. We im-

'Janina', 'Mistress Quickly', 'Gotcha' and 'Lady Santa Barbara' at the start of the MBYC race.

DAN HACK

John Krossa and Mark Hilden heading home on 'Janina'.

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proved, and I love sailing with my wife, but I also wanted to compete for trophies. I am 6'6" and 240 pounds. Gwenn and I do not have the time to become good enough sailors in the Day Sailer to overcome my skill and weight disadvantage. I felt there was a real opportunity in the MBYC PHRF Ocean Fleet to win some races. Height and weight can be beneficial in bigger boats. In college, I had played on a Holder 20 and I always thought it was a fun boat and could be perfect for racing against the Ocean Fleet in Morro Bay. It met my four requirements: 1) Inexpensive; 2) Fun to race; 3) Trailerable; 4) Under 1,400 pounds (the limit of the MBYC hoist). In 2013, I purchased a Holder 20 named Fear Knot and started racing her in PHRF races at MBYC with Cousin Mark. It's a good little boat with a great PHRF rating, and Mark Hilden is a seasoned sailor who honed his skills racing in Santa Barbara for 30 years. Mark makes any boat he steps on faster with his knowledge and trimming skills. We consistently competed for trophies and often finished ahead of boats that owed us time. For every race, we would invite a

different person from the Day Sailer fleet to be our third crewmember in the hopes they might have enough fun to go out and buy a Holder 20. Our goal was to grow a one-design ocean fleet in Morro Bay. Winning races is fun, but I missed the fun of one-design I had experienced in the Day Sailer fleet. Most crew we took out had fun, but they often got a little worried in our prerace talk about the importance of putting in the hatch boards if the wind starts to blow. Holder 20s are notorious for swamping in big wind. There are all sorts of stories on the web about Holder 20 mishaps. For some strange reason, after our pre-race talk, we could not convince any of our friends to buy a Holder 20. My experience in the Day Sailer and Cousin Mark's expertise kept us out of most trouble in ocean racing. But we realized we were pushing our and the boat's luck when we lost our rudder just after rounding a mark off of Cayucos. It was consistently blowing 20 knots and gusting up to 30. We rounded Constantine Buoy and started flying downwind on a plane with just the small jib and a reef in the main when we hit some kelp and ripped the rudder off. It was then that we realized this is a really small boat with very little freeboard to be out in 30-knot gusts, five miles from Morro Bay with no rudder. We took down our sails and used our Torqeedo outboard as a rudder. It did not have enough battery to motor us home, but we could use it in small bursts to keep us going straight downwind. I realized I needed to adjust my criteria for an ocean racing boat in Morro Bay. Being able to use the hoist is nice, but being ocean-worthy is much more important. We can get big swell and wind on the central coast of California. So Mark and I narrowed our list to small, affordable, trailerable boats that can race to Hawaii and race in Nationals: Express 27s, Moore 24s, and Santa Cruz 27s. Around this time, Greg Miller was racing a lot in Morro Bay and Santa Barbara in his Day Sailer. In fact, we actually T -boned his Day Sailer at the Goblin Regatta in Santa Barbara when we were racing Fear Knot. In late 2017, Greg invited Mark and me to do a race in Santa Barbara on his national champion SC27 Jersey Girl. Needless to say, we had a blast that weekend. So much so that Greg let us leave immediately after the race, without cleaning up, so we could go look at a SC27 for sale in King Harbor.


DAN HACK

BUILD A FLEET

The

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fleet and the

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ock at the mouth of the harbor.

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uring the COVID years, we still took people out when we felt it was safe, and continued to send out emails of boats for sale. We just didn't have any takers until we decided to do the Delta Ditch Regatta in 2021. Not only did we get a story in Latitude 38 about how we almost died by tanker, but John Hovdal, one of our Day Sailer friends who had sailed on Janina multiple times, asked us to look at the SC27 Gotcha that was for sale in Richmond. She was gorgeous and we immediately told John to buy it. He did and Cousin Mark towed the boat home to Morro Bay for John while I towed Janina.

That got the momentum going. Carlton Smith and Dave Hensinger are two Day Sailer owners who we had taken out multiple times on Janina. When they heard John had bought a boat, they decided they were interested in buying a SC27 as partners. I put out a message on the SC27 Google Group to see if anybody knew of any boats that were for sale and instantly received a text from three-time national champion Evan Diola, who was thinking about selling Mistress Quickly. To be honest, part of me didn't want to tell Carlton and Dave because I wondered if Janina would ever win a race again in Morro Bay. Carlton and Dave worked out a deal

Left: John Krossa, Lex Budge and Mark Hilden with lots of PHRF trophies for 'Janina' collected at the 2019 Commodores Ball. Right: John and Gwenn Krossa built their skills on Morro Bay aboard Day Sailer #1831, center.

BOTH PICTURES COURTESY OF MBYC

Mark and I were not really ready to buy a new boat, but the owner was motivated to sell, and we purchased Janina for $5,000. Over the next few years, we won many of the races we entered in the Morro Bay Ocean Fleet. We even won the Zongo Cup — the race from Morro Bay to Port San Luis — two out of three years. The year we lost, we lost to Kevin Williams, who was sailing my old Holder 20 Fear Knot! Kevin still takes every opportunity he can to remind us of how he beat us in our old boat. Over the years, we took out every O'Day Day Sailer owner who showed any interest in racing on Janina. We intentionally gave them opportunities to drive and get a feel for the boat. I would then send them emails of SC27s for sale in California. We really wanted to grow a fleet. Mark and I took Janina to Lake Tahoe to race in SC27 Nationals in 2019 — our first time racing against other Santa Cruz 27s. We had a blast and were semicompetitive, finishing in the middle of the pack. And most importantly, we fell in love with the camaraderie of the fleet.

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with Evan over the phone and bought Mistress Quickly, sight unseen. It's hard to go wrong buying the boat that has won the National Championship three out of the past four years.

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umors spread that Morro Bay had the newest fleet of SC27s in the state. Greg Miller, the former owner of SC27 Jersey Girl, had been saying for years that Morro Bay Yacht Club should host Nationals. Then, Ryan Schuyler, the SC27 National Class president, contacted our newly formed fleet and asked if we would be interested in putting on Nationals. MBYC had never hosted any Nationals outside the bay. In January 2022, the MBYC board approved the possibility of hosting Nationals, and a few months later Ryan, on behalf of the SC27 Association, informed us that it was official. Morro Bay Yacht Club would host the 2022 Nationals on Labor Day weekend. The amazing part is we were not done growing the MBYC fleet. Greg Miller, not

wanting to be left out of all the fun this summer, purchased the SC27 Lady Santa Barbara a few months ago with fellow Day Sailer owner Patrick Gorey. Currently, the MBYC SC27 fleet consists of: — Gotcha, a two-time national championship boat — Mistress Quickly, a three-time national championship boat — Lady Santa Barbara, with two-time national champion driver Greg Miller — Janina We had hoped for a one-design fleet — and we got it! But more importantly, boat owners John, Carlton, Dave, Greg and Patrick are our friends who have sailed against us in Day Sailers and have sailed with us on Janina — and now they will sail against us in their own Santa Cruz 27s. Sometimes in life you get what you wished for and a whole lot more! And Cousin Mark and I are just fine if we have wished ourselves out of some Morro Bay Yacht Club trophies. It's going to be fun to compete! — john krossa

DAN HACK

HOW TO BUILD A FLEET

Carlton Smith and Dave Hensinger pass the Rock on 'Mistress Quickly'.

A 26 mile race from SF to Benicia. Enjoy warm weather and great wind.

Pre-Party

Friday, September 2

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Race Day

Saturday, September 3

Racing from SBYC to BYC After-party in the lovely, warm Benicia Yacht Club & Harbor.

Raft up for Live Jazz & Trophy Awards!

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PAC CUP PODIUMS This year’s 2070-mile Pacific Cup offered a range of conditions from drifting to 40 knots. UK Sailmakers customers had the sails to excel in the whole range of winds. Rodney Pimentel: Cal 40 AZURE, first in class and first in PHRF Overall. The Cal 40 DUENDE finished second in class. Stuart and Joy Dahlgren, Santa Cruz 70 WESTERLY, second in class and second in ORR overall. J/111 RAKU second in class & second overall in doublehanded

SAIL WITH CONFIDENCE

Latitude 38’s Delta Doo Dah Delta Doo Dah 14 looks forward to a weekend of fun at Delta Bay Marina in Isleton on August 12-15, with free berthing for up to 20 official 2022 fleet members.

We go where the wind blows, but this August you can find us in the Delta!

Northern Cal: 510-523-3966 Southern Cal: 310-822-1203 Pacific NW: 250-656-8843 www.uksailmakers.com

Friday, August 12: Optional arrival. Saturday, August 13: 10:30 a.m.: Presentation on Clean Boating and the Pumpout Nav App by the San Francisco Estuary Partnership, the California State Parks Division of Boating and Waterways and the California Coastal Commission. 11 a.m.-2 p.m.: BBQ lunch prepared by Peninsula Yacht Club. 1 p.m.: Delta history talk by Commodore Bill Wells of the California Delta Chambers. 2 p.m.: Harbormaster talk by Delta Bay’s own harbormaster, Eric Chiu. 3 p.m.: Things to Know Before You Go talk by veteran cruisers and authors Pat and Carole McIntosh. For Delta cruisers and those planning a Baja Ha-Ha. All day: Demos on solar boats and propane outboards; free SUP lessons.

For details and registration, visit www.latitude38.com/delta-doo-dah Thanks to our sponsor Vallejo Marina!

August 14: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Sunday Market. Farm produce and products, arts & crafts, book sale, live music, lunch. !UGUST s

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s improbable as it may sound, The Red Rocket may return someday to a race course near you. At least if Bruce Schwab has anything to say about it. Those who know the Mull 42 Improbable's story may have their doubts. Racing again after 50-plus years? Come on. But they will also allow that, when it comes to Improbable, anything is possible. Conceived in 1969 by Warwick 'Commodore' Tompkins, with input from his A-Team crew of mostly Bay Area hotshots (among them Dave Wahle, Skip Allan, Kim Desenberg, DanMission Improbable — ny Daniels and a Bruce Schwab is all in. 22-year -old Kiwi kid named Ron Holland), the idea was to build a manageable-size boat maximized for downwind racing, with no regard for the then-in-use CCA rule or that newfangled IOR thing. Hurdles popped up immediately. They took the idea to East Bay naval architect Gary Mull (for whom Holland was apprenticing), who at first said it couldn't be done. But eventually he drew a boat with such sexy lines it can still make a racer's heart skip a beat. They had trouble selling the idea to an investor. After going through several prospects, at one point, Commodore noted, "It's improbable we'll get a boat." "Improbable is a great name for a boat!" said Dave Wahle. "Let's call it Improbable!" Real estate developer Dave Allen eventually came on board to back the project, with two stipulations: He wanted to lengthen the design from 38 to 42 feet. And he wanted the boat ready to race in the 1971 SORC (Southern Ocean Racing Conference), which started in Florida in late January. Improbable was cold molded out of three layers of kauri wood at the boatyard in New Zealand where Holland had learned the boatbuilding trade. Launched later than planned (in December 1970), and heavier than planned (almost 2,000 pounds over the 17,000-lb design displacement), there was no time for a shakedown. All the crew could manage was a short jaunt around Auckland's inner harbor one evening using two-by-fours as a tiller. Then the boat had to be loaded onto a freighter immediately

PHOTOS COURTESY WWW.PROJECTIMPROBABLE.COM EXCEPT AS NOTED

if it was going to make it to SORC. When the freighter was delayed for a week, once again, things were looking improbable. When the ship finally docked in Baltimore, the boat was transferred to a waiting semi trailer for the final sprint to Tampa. When it arrived, says Skip Allan, Improbable "was tipped over 30 degrees and dragging the remnants of a phone booth and power lines from the twisted bow pulpit" — the result of a shortcut that the well-meaning trucker had taken to avoid permits and other delays. Improbable missed the first day's racing while the crew worked round the clock to sort the boat out and put it together. The boat touched US waters for the first time just two hours before the start of racing on the second day. The start was literally Improbable's 'shakedown.' The crew had never even put the spinnaker up. Despite being only a so-so upwind performer (only about 15% of that year's racing was off the wind), Improbable ended up third in class and 12th overall in a field of 60 boats. Proof of concept came at the next event two weeks later, the 800-mile, alldownwind '71 Jamaica Race. Improbable's long surfs, often pegging the speedo at its 20-knot limit, catapulted the boat past much larger craft. Commodore and his team finished fifth, just a few hours behind much bigger boats, including the maxis Ondine and Windward Passage. Eyebrows raised. Heads turned. And from then on, the red-hulled boat's 'official' nickname was The Red Rocket. The tales, triumphs and accolades continued for several years in America, Europe and down under — the boat's convoluted participation in the '71 Admiral's Cup deserves a fulllength article of its own. Eventually, though, IOR caught up with Improbable. Despite several attempts to make the boat rate better — including installation of the infamous B-bumps — the writing was on the wall. And by 1976, just five short years into her 'Star is Born' career, Improbable's serious racing days were over. The boat was sold to new owner Leonard Schwab — Bruce's father — who did a little singlehanding in the Bay, then took the boat north to Puget Sound, where she served as a fishing and pleasure sailing platform for the next 40 years.

"Improbable was dragging the remnants of a phone booth from the bow pulpit. . ."

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Dave Allen's next boat, launched in 1977, was the impeccable and virtually unbeatable 40-ft Imp — one of Ron Holland's earliest designs, which drew heavily on what he had learned with Improbable. The same could be said for a generation of racing boats that came after The Red Rocket. It's fair to say that even today, nearly every high-end racing boat carries at least a little Improbable DNA.

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ow 62, Bruce Schwab is getting to be a bit of an old warhorse himself. He grew up cruising with two brothers and his father (partially on Improbable). He began a career in the marine industry as a rigger at Svendsens in Alameda in 1980. By the time


COURTESY COMMODORE TOMPKINS

— 'IMPROBABLE' UPDATE

Below: 'Improbable' at the 1971 Admiral's Cup. Left: An IOR rating penalty for the stern-hung rudder led to this under-transom steel rudder and skeg. They're going away for the new foil. Above (l and r): The 'winch island' around the mast was removed, clearing the foredeck. Right: Commodore Tompkins with a model of 'Improbable' back in the day. Below right: The boat's cold-molded kauri hull and supporting structures "are in nearly perfect condition," says Bruce.

he left almost 20 years later, Svendsens was one of, if not the, biggest recreational marine rigging shops on the West Coast. These days, Bruce is founder, president and chief programmer at OceanPlanet Energy Systems, Inc., based in Maine. The company sells and installs high-end marine electronics. During and in between those vocations, Schwab has been a force to be reckoned with on the race course, and in particular singlehanded racing. Long an outside-thebox thinker, his own boats have varied from the quirky Rumbleseat, a highly modified 1930 30-Square-Meter aboard which he won the Singlehanded Transpac in 1996; to Ocean Planet, a Tom Wylie-designed Open 60 he raced twice around the world.

He credits Improbable for the inspiration to really get into singlehanding, due to his dad's interest in solo-sailing the boat — and his own interest in beating the old man in singlehanded races. When Len passed away in 2018, the next improbable chapter of Improbable's crazy story began. "This whole thing was taken on against everyone's better judgment," said Bruce, "including mine." Though there was talk of selling the boat — after all, he certainly didn't have the time to devote to it, especially living on the opposite coast — resistance was futile. For the past several years, Improbable has been on the hard at Jim Betts's yard in Anacortes, and Bruce — when time

allows — has been all-in, scraping, sanding, scheming and dreaming of bringing The Red Rocket back to racing: leaner, meaner and faster than ever.

A

master of multitasking, with the endurance of a bicycle racer (which is also on his resume, by the way), Bruce has worked out a system that allows him to work on the boat for a month or more at a time, then fly back east to his 'real job' for a couple of months. Then back to Washington. Here's how he described it recently: "I still work remotely while I'm out west, pretty much full time. I typically get up around 4-5 a.m., work on OPE stuff, then try to get in a workout before heading to !UGUST s

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ROCKET SURGERY the boat. I'll be watching emails, Slack, Ring Central, etc., to cover any urgent questions, perhaps a hundred times a day while sanding/etc. Then catch up (on whatever I've put off during the day) after dinner. Fortunately, I have wonderful hosts in Anacortes, Bill and Kathleen Elmer, former racers who have a house only a few miles from Improbable." His next work session is planned for August 5 through October 4. Along with the 'usual' restoration tasks, bigger jobs include the installation of a new forehatch; fairing the hull; work to modify a recently acquired Farr 40 mast to replace the original (and thereby save 200 pounds aloft); and major surgery to fix the rudder — once and for all. Improbable went through several iterations of rudders during her racing days, most noticeably switching from the transom-hung original to an under-transom version. But Bruce feels like none of them was exactly what the boat needed. So he had Neil Racicot and Paul Bogataj collaborate on a new foil, and Larry Tuttle at Water Rat in Santa Cruz built it. (Paul and

Rocket's red glare — 'Improbable' in her glory days.

Larry also did the foils for Ocean Planet.) Bruce is currently fabricating a supporting structure into the hull to maximize the new blade's efficiency.

Much of the early work Bruce did on the boat included the sometimes emotional minefield of divesting Improbable of all the stuff his dad had installed aboard (including three freezers for fresh salmon), along with about half of the original 14 winches and the complicated underdeck system of gearboxes and shafts that allowed the leeward winch to be driven by a winch handle on the windward side. If the bucks come in (Note: Bruce is looking for financial partners in the project) and the fates keep smiling, Bruce hopes the 'new' Improbable will come in about 1,000 pounds lighter than her designed weight. As improbable as it might sound, more than a half-century after turning the racing world on its ear, a new generation of sailors might well get to see The Red Rocket once again strut her stuff in competition. Exactly where and when that will be, Bruce can't say exactly. But one thing is certain: With Schwab on the job, the prospects of it happening are anything but improbable. — latitude/jr For more information, log onto www. projectimprobable.com.

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MAX EBB — RIDE IT HARD "W

here is the crew?" We were all asking ourselves the same question. The sun was setting, the bar was warm, the drinks were flowing, and we were all waiting for the crew of our competition to make their appearance to receive our congratulations for a race well sailed. Also our taunts for some questionable moves that we probably should have protested if our red flag had been within reach. Making them buy my crew a round or two would be a better form of justice, under the circumstances. Were they afraid to show their faces? The post-race schmooze, where everyone gathers in the same place to talk about the same things, is one of the

main reasons that club-oriented "beer can" races are still going strong while some other race formats are having hard times. But that crew was depriving us of that weekly pleasure. So I decided to walk down to the dock to see what the holdup was, and Lee Helm, who absolutely had to explain to their tactician why some of their moves were all wrong, decided to come with me. The surprise was that, even though they had finished ahead of us boat-for-boat, and they had a much shorter route to their berth on the main fairway, they were not anywhere near finished putting their boat away. "The luff tapes should line up exactly,"

instructed their skipper as the foredeck crew and trimmer carefully flaked the jib. "Don't you want to be able to see the entire luff before hoisting?" asked the flaker at the luff end. "To make sure there are no twists?" "Oh no, that would change the angle into the pre-feeder as the sail goes up," the owner responded. "It increases the wear on the tape." "Aye-aye," the forward flaker responded with a note of sarcasm, and they undid the first three folds to start over. Meanwhile, another crew was collecting and coiling the sheets and guys,

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ALL PHOTOS MAX EBB

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Figures 1 and 2: Two methods of stacking the luff tape when flaking the jib. Which one is correct? Figure 3: Hanging a fender from the lifeline wire is always wrong, but around a stanchion tip is worse. Without the plastic coating, the wire can be forced into a sharp bend around the edges of the hole in the tubing. But plastic-coated lifelines hide corrosion and broken strands in the wire, and are no longer allowed for ocean racing. Figure 4: The standard, quick way to tie off a fender. First take an extra round turn around the stanchion to prevent slipping, then two quick half-hitches. The low attachment point makes it much less likely for the fender to ride up above the dock. Figure 5: An elegant way to secure a fender line to a toe rail: Use two adjacent holes in the rail to form a cleat hitch. Figure 6: Never do this! Threaded turnbuckle rods should never be subjected to bending loads, even small ones. The thread roots are stress concentrations where cracks can originate. Figure 7: The Flemish coil symbolizes a welcome mat. It means the boat is all put away and is ready for visitors.


LATITUDE / JOHN

AND PUT IT AWAY WET

Walk the docks of any marina and you'll find many interpretations of 'shipshape.'

and piling them into a large bucket while her shipmate fetched the dock hose. "We always rinse the running rigging in fresh water," he explained. "Keeps them soft and clean. It's especially important if there's been salt spray on deck … and let's get that dock line, too." This is a skipper who insists that dock lines should never touch salt water. And if they do, they get rinsed right along with the sheets and guys. The only problem was that with dock lines added to the load, the bucket was clearly too small. "Bigger bucket?" the crew asked. "Or are we doing two loads?" "Better idea," suggested Lee, pointing to a dock cart. "It's not, like, totally waterproof, but it's got the volume." She had barely finished her sentence when the nearby cart was rolled over and filled with running rigging and dock lines, and the hose brought to bear. "I bet this is how those dock cart axles get bent," I whispered to Lee as I estimated the weight of water that was filling up the cart.

The big boat, now missing two dock lines, was being temporarily re-secured by a novice sailor who was looping a spare dock line around a primary sheet winch, while carefully keeping the line from getting wet. "No!" scolded the owner. "Never use a winch for a dock cleat! It puts repetitive load on the same spot on the drum bearings every time the boat surges in its berth." Now, this seemed a little excessive for a tie-up that would only last 10 minutes or less, but I nodded agreement on general principles when the novice sailor looked over in my direction for support. Years ago I had been admonished by a well-known, world-class sailor for making exactly the same mistake, and while I still didn't really think it made any difference to the longevity of the winch bearings, it seemed to be good practice, perhaps more for etiquette than for better care of the equipment. They moved the temporary line to a slightly less convenient deck cleat. By this time the jib was flaked the way the skipper preferred, and the foredeck

crew's next task was to run all the jib and spinnaker halyards up to the top of the mast on a thin tagline. "Keeping the halyards out of the sun?" I asked. "They stay softer and last longer," the owner confirmed. "And we often leave unused halyards up there during a race. It saves weight aloft and reduces wind resistance." Of course, that meant that the opposite end of the halyard made a very long tail on deck, but that was coiled — in a torque-balanced figure-eight, of course — and passed down to the cabin to keep it out of the elements. For the mainsheet tail, there was a big pocket built into the mainsail cover so it, too, had a place to hide from the sun. But this skipper was not done with his novice crew. They had tied the fenders to the lifeline wires, something I don't even allow on my boat. "Fender lines are better on the stanchion bases," he instructed. "That way they're much less likely to slide aft or ride up when the boat shears along the dock." !UGUST s

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MAX EBB "But I tied it to the wire on both sides of the stanchion so it's fixed in place fore and aft," the crew tried to explain. "Even worse, I'm afraid. That tends to bend the wire around the edges of the hole in the top of the stanchion. Could result in a broken strand, and you don't want that in a lifeline wire, especially at the stanchion tip where it might be hard to see." "Have you thought about switching to Dyneema for lifelines?" I suggested. "Tried 'em, went back to wire," the owner informed me. "Hard to see at night. Bare wire is shiny, reflects points of light. Dyneema or Spectra seems to disappear in the dark." When the running rigging and dock lines finished their rinse cycle, they were pulled out of the dock cart, coiled again, and hung to drip-dry. "You're not going to put them away wet, are you?" I asked, trolling for an over-the-top response. "Damp fresh water means mildew and mold." "Unfortunately the sun's down

already, otherwise I'd hang them to dry. My big dehumidifier will have to do all the drying out tonight." While the foredeck crew lifted the heavy dehumidifier out of the dock box, the owner demonstrated to one of the novice crew, who was working on tying

"Never use a winch for a dock cleat! It puts repetitive load on the same spot on the drum bearings every time the boat surges in its berth." a fender to a stanchion base, how to do a more classy "toe rail hitch" on the perforated aluminum toe rail extrusion. "With two holes, you can basically form a cleat hitch. That way you're not locked into always putting fenders SouthBayPoster-2022-R3.pdf

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where the stanchions are. And it looks really classy." "Speaking of looking classy," I said, "do you also make up the excess dock lines in Flemish coils?" "The Flemish coil actually has a function," he answered. "It resembles a doormat or welcome mat, so it's an invitation for guests to come aboard. It means we're all put away and ready to receive visitors." "I'll keep that in mind next time I walk past," I said. "But I'm afraid the kitchen will run out of burgers if we don't get back up to the club for the post-race BBQ." A few minutes later we were all walking back up the gangway, guided by the smell of meat on the grill. But I overheard Lee talking in a low voice to one of the novice crew: "You might try racing with Max next week," she whispered. "We get back to the bar much sooner. I think his motto is, like, 'Ride it hard and put it away wet …'" — max ebb


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THE RACING Here we check out the YRA Westpoint Regatta, the BAMA Doublehanded Farallones, the OYRA RC's Choice #1, the El Toro North Americans, the singlehanded LongPac, and the Snipe Nationals. We then correct an error in July's Master Mariners feature. Big and beefy Box Scores and a collection of Race Notes fill up this robust edition.

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of racing, there were some close, almost photo finishes. A stray cat shadowed the race. We observed humorously that its fancy chase boat probably cost about 100 times what the little Hobie 18 beach cat cost. The Westpoint Regatta finished northeast of the Redwood Creek channel that enters the Port of Redwood City. Make a hard left at the first opportunity and you get to the party at Westpoint Harbor. But somebody forgot to tell a bunch of crews that this was a race to a party. Unclear on the concept, they turned and burned, sailing back through the rough stuff, in the lumpy brown water and blustery northerly to return to their homeports up north without stopping. — latitude / chris

BAMA Doublehanded Farallones Originally scheduled for April 9 but postponed to June 18 due to hazardous sea conditions, the 43rd BAMA Doublehanded Farallones Race proved that perseverance does pay off, even on the morning of a rescheduled race. Using a committee boat start line off Baker Beach instead of the traditional Golden Gate Yacht Club race deck, the race committee took a full hour to start all six divisions. Spotty wind for the 8 a.m. start time brought several postponements and some boats starting far behind the others in their divisions. The strong

LATITUDE / CHRIS

YRA Westpoint Regatta The dependable San Francisco Bay summer breeze piped up in time for the 11:25 first warning of the Westpoint Regatta on July 16. Sequoia Yacht Club ran the start between Treasure Island and the Berkeley Pier ruins, and the finish east of Redwood City. Most boats started on starboard and sailed toward TI, getting some current relief from the flood that would build to massive proportions. The morning's minus tide followed by a king tide would result in plenty of water rushing into the South Bay, helping the fleet on its way to Redwood City. A few chose a port-tack start, threading the needle between the right-of-way competitors. Five multihulls started last, with Bottle Rocket and Wingit approaching from the TI side and hooking the pin. Bottle Rocket actually touched the inflatable mark and had to circle back to clear herself. The Newport 30 Sundurst, registered in the first-to-start non-spinnaker division, actually hung back and started after everyone else, finished last, and was scored DNF (did not finish). After tacking away from TI, most boats crossed the Slot and hightailed it to Angel Island, in anticipation of current relief there. A few, including the two Wyliecat 30s, went for the cone of Alcatraz instead. Then the racers rounded Harding Rock, their windward mark, and cracked off for the face of Alcatraz. The full force of the flood tried to push the boats into the Rock. Most of the spinnaker boats didn't set until they were safely past the island. After a brisk first two sections of the race, the wind died at the Bay Bridge. Spinnakers drooped and were dropped. Most boats tried to sail the shortest distance, close to the Cityfront, but the breeze held longer closer to the recently bulldozed Yerba Buena Island. South of the Bay Bridge, the breeze dropped all the way across from San Francisco to Oakland. But that powerful flood carried the racers to the wind, which would soon build into the sporty range. Between Coyote Point on the San Mateo coast and the San Mateo Bridge, the race got jibey-jibey. Ferox and Wingman 5 had a good jibing duel. After 28.7 miles

lighter, Islander 36, William Hackel. (6 boats) MULTIHULLS — 1) Bottle Rocket, Seacart 30 GP+, David Schumann; 2) Whoopee, Dash 76, Glenn Howell/Heather Annesley; 3) Greyhound, F-22, Evan McDonald. (5 boats) Full results at www.jibeset.net

The Westpoint Regatta's post-race party in Redwood City moved this year from Sequoia Yacht Club to Westpoint Harbor. YRA WESTPOINT REGATTA, 7/16 PHRF 1 — 1) Arsenal, J/125, Andrew Picel; 2) Saoirse, Tripp 41, Russell Huebschle. (2 boats) PHRF 2 — 1) Lucky Duck, J/90, Dave MacEwen; 2) Nuckelavee, Melges 32, Mark Kennedy; 3) Alchera, J/120, Jeff Phillips. (5 boats) PHRF 3 — 1) White Shadow, J/88, Jim Hopp; 2) Ferox, Pogo 36, Anja Bog/Peter Weigt; 3) Pelagia, J/88, Sergey Lubarsky. (5 boats) PHRF 4 — 1) Imagination, Bavaria 40, Erik Jessen; 2) L2O, J/29, Alexander Huang; 3) Revelry, Catalina 42, Rick & Petra Gilmore. (7 boats) PHRF 5 — 1) Goose, Catalina 30, Mike Kastrop; 2) Neja, Dasher 32, Jim Borger; 3) High-

countercurrent in the starting area created a general drift toward the South Tower during the lulls. Several boats called in to drop out for various reasons before their start time. The multihull division started on time, with three of the four trimarans finding wind to get them out into the middle to the escalator toward the ocean. The fourth tri was caught too far from the line without enough wind to get to the line until minutes later. Aboard first-place multihull Papillon, skipper Drew Scott and crew Gordie Nash crossed the start


SHEET

line about 15 seconds ahead of Entourage, half of their eventual winning time. The combined monohull divisions 1 and 2 also started on time, except for several boats caught too far from the line that labored to get across. There was some catching up once all boats started, however. Memo Gidley's Basic Instinct, Monohull 2 winner, had a "painful start because even though we were at the line, the wind completely shut down, and going against the current meant it took 20 minutes to get across that line." Basic Instinct was the second Mono 2 boat to start, 20 minutes late. In Monohull Division 1, Sean Mulvihill's Jamani reported a similar start, "taking 25 minutes to beat 250 yards to the line — definitely the worst start ever!" The boats that got away early found the ebb, swiftly heading toward open

For more racing news, subscribe to 'Lectronic Latitude online at www.latitude38.com July's racing stories included: Pacific Cup ic aui Race O RA Hal oon Bay Race est arine Open ailing eries Bayview ac inac Race Chicago ac inac Race ore RA estpoint Regatta Photos Preview o August Races and more

The flood was ripping on July , and Westpoint racers had to head up to stay clear of Alcatra 's west face. or more Westpoint photos, turn the page. photo latitude chris

water once they escaped the countercurrent. For most it was a port-tack ride to Point Bonita. Then the wind shut down, resulting in several false attempts to start before the ULDB division got away at 8:45, followed by the Moore 24s at 8:50. The wind then disappeared until 9:20, when the slower Monohull Division 3 finally had enough wind to start. The ebb had pretty much disappeared by this time, and the lone tanker exiting during the starting sequence slowly passed under the bridge and proceeded down the middle, blocking several boats from reaching the desired Marin side of the course, including Gary Troxel's Tiki Blue, Division 3's winner. Troxel reported that "The tanker encouraged us to tack back to the south side." All the other Division 3 boats followed. Once beyond land's end, boats found short, choppy 5- to 7-ft wind waves. According to Adam Mazurkiewiez, sailing Yeti, south of Point Bonita they "did a headsail change down to the #3 and made our way out through the bouncy chop, with few significant slams coming off the waves." The second-place finisher in Division 3, Jib Marten's Freedom, found the seas difficult. "In my 10 times around the Farallones, I have never taken so much solid water over the deck."

Mike Mitchell's Tartan 4100 Roxanne broke a whisker pole chock and decided to turn back. "This wasn't our day, and beers in the Bay was the call." Pat Broderick's Wyliecat 30 Nancy made the same decision due to crew unease. Multihull leader Andrew Scott aboard Papillon discovered that he had not fully closed the port ama hatch, accumulating about 50 gallons of water, so he and Gordie Nash tacked and pumped out before resuming a course for the Stinky Rocks. Between the Lightship and the island, Troxel reported, "The wind lightened up a bit and the sea state improved." Others reported similar conditions. Once near the island, some found themselves too far south for their intended port rounding. Sean Mulvihill thought a starboard rounding was "faster than our usual route leaving the island to port." Memo Gidley also rounded clockwise, finding "not much of a swell and relatively smooth conditions. The way back in was when things began to get exciting." There was general agreement with Memo's observation. Several boats experienced "windaided modifications" after rounding and heading back in. Drew Scott reported that, "We heated up, but were on the edge of control, stuffing the bows repeatedly, then the wind gods smiled on us !UGUST s

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and the spinnaker sheet released and we had to drop the spinnaker." Gidley's Basic Instinct also experienced spinnaker woes, "rounding up once and then for some reason shortly after both spinnaker sheets released from the spinnaker clews." After hoisting the jib, Gidley and crew Ethan Baum had fun dousing the clewless chute in 24 knots of wind, which was not an easy job for two. Troxel's Tiki Blue broke the topping lift after a round-up, so they "snugged the pole against the forestay and tightened the downhaul, converting our symmetrical to an asymmetrical spinnaker." The two Mulvilhills enjoyed surfing at 15-16 knots but, "The good times did not last, and after three rounds-ups trying to point up to the South Tower we gave up and doused." Wind speeds increased near land's end, resulting in several spinnaker wraps. Near Point Bonita, Troxel found wind exceeding 30 knots. He and crew Rune Storesund decided it was time to douse the spinnaker when "a fortunate light wrap around the forestay gave us a quick opportunity to pull it down through the forward hatch" and go to white sails for the finish. Jib Martens' Freedom rounded up several times, resulting in "a large wrap at top and bottom with the sail filled in the middle — so we had no control over the spinnaker. We were still several miles out from Bonita!" 0AGE s

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Westpoint egatta, clockwise from top left: 'Bottle ocket' snagged the pin at the start but e onerated herself to finish first and correct out first overall ave ac wen's J 'Lucky uck' had the best monohull corrected time Jim iepenbrock's Swan 'Wingman' and An a Bog's ogo ' ero ' trade ibes south of the San ateo Bridge Ale uang's J 'L ' at the finish.

The Martenses managed to keep "control enough to finish the race, though it was not easy, so it was a hairy ride." Aboard CruzSea Baby, Brian and Amanda Turner discussed doing a letterbox takedown. "Then the leeward douse got away from us and we both spent time on the pointy end trying to figure out how to unwrap things." With the lee shore and Mile Rock, along with inbound traffic, they decided to secure the sail and finish. On Plus Sixteen, Paul Disario and crew Lian McNamara's spinnaker wrapped 6 miles from the Gate. They experienced 30+ gusts then, as they "crossed the finish line and the spinnaker miraculously unwrapped." "The Doublehanded Farallones Race this year was the fastest race we've had in more than 25 years," reports the commodore of BAMA, Truls Myklebust. "We had three multihulls that finished with a corrected time of under 7 hours. That is so rare that we refer to it as the '7-hour barrier.' It had not been done by any boat in any class since 1999, when the trimaran Erin did it, and in this race we had three multihulls under. Just incredible! We believe these are the

fastest corrected times since the recordbreaking 1992 race, which had winds from the south and a beam reach both ways (all records for both corrected and elapsed time for monohulls and multihulls are from the 1992 race). We have full electronic records back to 1998, and these are certainly the fastest corrected times since then. The first two multihulls, Papillon and Entourage, both F-27 trimarans with the same rating, fought a boat-to-boat battle the whole way, and finished within just 29 seconds of each other, with Entourage flying a full spinnaker and gaining at the finish — but they ran out of time to catch Papillon before the line. Papillon scored a grand slam in this one: first-to-finish line honors, best elapsed and corrected times overall, and a 25-plus-year record for corrected time! "It wasn't just the multihulls — it was a very fast race for everybody. We had some challenges getting boats away in the morning. The wind switched off a few times, and we had two postponements. The start for the Mono 1 and Mono 2 fleets was really affected, because the wind shut down right after just two boats had crossed the start line. And the Mono 3 class didn't get started until 9:20 a.m.


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— almost an hour late. Despite that, we had all boats back by 7:35 p.m., in daylight, and we didn't need to do after-dark roll calls for any boats. I can't remember that happening before! "The San Francisco Ham Radio Club was helping us with the race again this year to provide radio coverage all the way out to the island, and they actually had two stations, one in San Francisco and one in Pacifica/Montara. Their support really helps us ensure the safety of the racers. "Basic Instinct was the first monohull to finish, and Mooretician was the best monohull on corrected time. The Moore 24 has been the most-winning boat design through time in the Doublehanded Farallones Race, and that streak continues. Peter Schoen and Roe Patterson finished in style, planing across the finish line with full spinnaker in the windiest conditions of the day — Anita Rock was reporting winds in the high 20s, sometimes gusting to 30 knots, between 4 and 5 p.m. "In the windy conditions, we had a number of boats that finished with rather elaborate spinnaker wraps." Peter Schoen reports on Mooretician's race: "We started on a port tack close to the committee boat with our #1 up and had just enough way on to clear the committee boat. Snafu elected to start at the other end of the line, which was set pin

lockwise from top left: irst to finish the oublehanded arallones ace was ' apillon' 'Basic nstinct' was the first monohull in the unusual starting area west of the olden ate Bridge 'Mooretician' won their division and first overall on corrected time.

high. Even though the pin was favored from a distance perspective, our strategy was to get to the remaining ebb in the middle as soon as possible and favor the north. Our strategy worked, because we quickly built a lead on Snafu. "By the time we got to Point Bonita, wind speed increased quickly to the point that we needed to change down to the #3 jib. Once the sail change was complete, we tacked onto starboard and headed toward SE Farallon. "The wind speed and direction were fairly consistent all the way to the Rock Pile. Winds were in the mid-teens with gusts to 20. However, the sea state was bumpy and made it challenging to keep consistent boat speed. With the ebb push, we made it to the SF Entrance Buoy in two hours. "Unfortunately, the wind never clocked enough to fetch the north side of the islands. After almost four hours on starboard tack, we came in just to the south. This year's rules allowed us to round in either direction, and since we needed to tack to get up and around SE Farallon, we decided to leave it to starboard. It didn't make sense to us to sail up to the north end of the island and then back down to the south, thereby

leaving the island to port. "We were amazed that we were around the island by 1:45 p.m. This is also where we encountered Snafu coming at us: They were just beginning to leave the Rock Pile to port. After our brief encounter, we set the kite and aimed for the north side of the SF entrance channel. It was a comfortable beam reach back to the Gate, every once in a while surfing on a swell. At about 4 p.m., the wind switch kicked on. Winds built into the low 20s with higher gusts. We were just north of the SF Entrance Buoy at this point. This marked the beginning of the E-ticket ride we came for. We started surfing more and more, easily hitting 12, 13 and 14 knots. Just the conditions that the Moore excels in! "Gusts continued to get stronger as we approached Point Bonita. We could now feel the boat lurch as the puffs hit us. We were laser-focused on staying under the kite and not wiping out. We ripped coming into the Gate, hitting a few 17s with a top speed of 17.8! We also punched through one swell that sent a two-inch sheet of green water across the deck. "As we closed in on the bridge, we could see that the water was flatter inside the Bay, so we delayed our jibe !UGUST s

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and waited for a 'light' spot. The jibe was completed without much excitement, and we were off again on a flat-water plane to the finish, a slow 13 knots in flat water. We finished at 4:45 p.m., which is the earliest ever for me in this race on a Moore. "For those familiar with my sailing attire (or lack thereof), yes, I completed the entire trip in shorts. That's how warm it was. Of course, they were soaking wet when we finished. This year's sail in from the approach buoy is on my top-10 list of all-time best sailing experiences. For those of you who missed it, this was one for the books!" — pat broderick & latitude / chris BAMA DOUBLEHANDED FARALLONES, 6/18 ONO Jamani, J/120, Sean & Jeff Mulvihill; 2) Hypatia, Solaris 47, Ray Lotto/Morgan Paxhia. (3 boats) ONO Basic Instinct, Elliott 1050, Memo Gidley/Ethan Baum; 2) Spindrift V, Express 37, Andy Schwenk/Mike Schiltz; 3) Timber Wolf, Farr 38, David Hodges/Tim Cordrey. (6 boats) ONO Tiki Blue, Beneteau 423, Gary Troxel/Rune Storesund; 2) Freedom, Worth 40, Jib & Will Martens; 3) Plus Sixteen Olson Paul isario iam cNamara oats ULDB — 1) Yeti, Express 27, Adam Mazurkiewicz/Ron Snetsinger; 2) Accelerando, Moore 24, Erica Mattson Siegel/John Robinson Jeffers; 3) Vitesse Too, Hobie 33, Grant Hayes/Brian Cog0AGE s

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Scenes from the Snipe ationals in San iego on July . rnesto odrigue and athleen Tocke placed in the top three in si out of the eight races of the regatta. The iami sailors ranked as the Snipe sailing team in the world, and won the orth Americans in . odrigue defected from uba in . p ne t are the Worlds, on August in ascais, ortugal. ley. (3 boats) OOR Mooretician, Peter Schoen/ Roe Patterson; 2) Snafu, Karl Robrock/Joel Turmel; 3) Puffin, Patrick Haesloop/Kelly Gregory. (3 boats) MULTIHULL — 1) Papillon, F-27, Andrew cott ordie Nash; Entourage, F-27, Benjamin Carver/Peter Church; 3) Greyhound, F-22, Evan McDonald/George Kiskaddon. (4 boats) Full results at www.jibeset.net

OYRA Race Committee's Choice The lightly attended OYRA Race Committee Choice #1 race on June 25 was sailed in light winds. PRO Don Wieneke chose a course out to the Lightship and back. All 13 boats that started were able to finish. Wind at the start hovered around 11 knots but dropped into the single digits beyond Point Bonita. Greg Nelson's Azzura 310 Outsider topped the six-boat PHRO 1 division. John Ahern's J/109 Reverie placed first in the two-boat PHRO 2 division. Andy Newell's Santana 35 Ahi took first in the two-boat PHRO 3 division. Pat Broderick's Wyliecat 30 Nancy won the one-boat SHS (shorthanded) division, and David Schumann's Seacart 30 Bottle Rocket

placed first in the three-boat multihull division. — pat broderick El Toro North Americans With Tom Tillotson leading the club activities and committee, Lake Washington Sailing Club hosted the 2022 El Toro North Americans on June 23-26. This year's Nationals was the first time a new class of traditional El Toros was included. These boats, both wood-hull and Caballero fiberglass-hull boats, all had wood masts and eager sailors from Lake Washington racing, learning, and doing very well against the new fiberglass Moore hulls with carbon-fiber masts. LWSC is located in West Sacramento on the shore of Lake Washington, where the Sacramento Deep Water Channel enters the Port of Sacramento. One Junior, Peter Wells, and 10 Seniors raced. (Seniors are ages 16+, not 65+!) — latitude / chris EL TORO NORTH AMERICANS, LWSC (9r, 02t) Art ange points; ordie Nash ; aughn ei ers oats Full results at www.lwsailing.org


JACKIE PHILPOTT / BAY & DELTA YACHTSMAN

SHEET the Cal 40 Riff Rider, Mike Smith on Eos, a Cal 2-34, and Daniel Willey on Galaxsea, a Nauticat 44 — fought it out in a variety of conditions with wind hitting the high 20s on the course and lulling out in frustrating 5s near the finish. Riff Rider finished at 8:27:24 on Saturday evening, Galaxsea at 8:19:14 Sunday morning, and Eos at 9:25:09 a.m. on Monday. (They corrected out in the same order.) — ncs SSS Great Pacific Longitude Race On Wednesday, July 6, at 9 a.m., four boats started the Singlehanded Sailing Society's LongPac, the hardest shorthanded West Coast race (just our opinion). The SSS created the LongPac as a race that would count as a qualifying sail to compete in the Singlehanded Transpacific Yacht Race to Hanalei Bay, Kauai. After the start at the Golden Gate Yacht Club on the Cityfront, the boats go around a virtual mark at longitude 126.40° W, with the latitude up to the skippers. It's 200 miles out and 200 RACE TO ALASKA, 6/13-7/7 STAGE 2 — 1) Pure & Wild, Riptide 44, J. McKee/M. Pistay/A. Strum-Palerm; 2) Elsewhere, Soverel 33, R. Balmer/J. Ball/M. Gibson; 3) Fashionably Late, Dash 34, K. Fletcher/J. Bossert J incent P arena A erle C Fletcher; 4) Vegemite Vigilantes, Corsair 760 Sport, A de Bruin alling ord T Bevan N Comer; 5) Lost But Don't Care, Corsair Sprint 750, J. & N cragg P Nin urg; Kootenay Pedalwheelers, Flying Tiger, J. Blackmore/M. Bowick/D. Kennedy/R. Hassol/T. Kettner/M. Sagal; 7) High Seas Drifters Olson em e J Franklin/M. Bostrom/S. Wood; 8) Hardship, Pogo 2, B. Fahy/C. Cotter/P. Kelly; 9) Mustang Survival's Rite of Passage C N halil F & E. Dougherty; 10) Wraith 2AK, Brooks Dees Grand Prix, I. Lloyd/R. Speck/D. Etchaubard/P. Burns; 11) Rho Your Boat, C&C 25, L. Burke/R. McMullen/G. Cornwell/K. & R. Breseman; 12) Loustic SuperSonic, Santana 20, Boris Rohou/ Nathalie Fouet; G l finch, Ranger 20, Paul & Evan Pennoyer; 14) Seas the Day, F-242, B. & C. Satterwhite/L. Moon/M. McKernan; 15) Don't Tell Mom, Savo 650 E, Leigh & Clare Dorsey; 16) Let's Row Maybe?, Merry Sea rowboat, Michele Choy/Carling Zeeman; 17) Oaracle, Seaward Passat G3 kayak, Janice Mason/Ian Graeme; 18) Fix Oder Nix, Stretched Angus RowCruiser, J. Roesler/Zoë Sheehan Saldaña; 19) Sockeye Voyages, Bolger schooner tri, J. Calogero/T. at ins O ord oats Full results at www.r2ak.com ROUND TREASURE ISLAND RACE, 6/21 AN AR an Altreuter Claire

SSS race committee volunteers, stationed in front of for the start of the Long ac.

miles back. Most years see a mix of singlehanded and doublehanded boats, but this year was a singlehanded-only affair as no duos entered the race. This year was light on competitors but had the usual heavy air and big seas. Five boats were heading to the start line, but a fishing boat speeding past Alcatraz hit Falk Meissner's Olson 25 Shark on Bluegrass. Stephen Saul's Ericson 34-2 Kalia had to drop out a few miles west of the Farallones with gear problems. The final three — Charles Casey on

BOX SCORES Pratt; Ty ngram Ti any i; indsey Baa lena andenBerg; Cole Hatton uri Nami awa. (20 boats) Full results at http://vanguard15.org ULLMAN SAILS LONG BEACH RACE WEEK, 6/24-26 (7r, 0t) PHRF-A — 1) Adjudicator, Carkeek 40, Paul Dorsey, 10 points; 2) Flaquita, R/P 44, Paul Casanova, 14; 3) Pendragon IV, TP52, Steve Torres, 21. (4 boats) PHRF-B — 1) Destroyer, 1D35, Jim Bailey, 10 points; 2) Jim, J/120, John Snook, 13; 3) Lugano, Beneteau First 40.7, Mark Stratton, 21. (3 boats) PHRF-C — 1) Rival, J/35, David Boatner, 7 points; 2) Topa, Beneteau First 38, Steven Mee, 19; 3) un Puffin, J/105, George Scheel, 20. (4 boats) PHRF RL-A — 1) Argo 4, J/125, Kenny Kieding John incent points; Saga, TP52, John Brynjolfsson, 5; 3) Nereid, J/125, Standish Fleming, 11. (6 boats) PHRF RL-B — 1) Relentless, 1D35M, Marty ogel points; Tiburon, SC37, Doug Steele, 8; 3) Spin Doctor, Andrews 40, Paul Farrell, 11. (6 boats) PHRF RL-C — 1) Shadowfax, DS 43, Steven George, 3 points; 2) Dos Amigos Dos, C&C 110, Bob Hubbard, 8; 3) Intense Olson Allan Rosenberg, 9. (5 boats) FARR 40 — 1) Blade II, Mick Shlens, 10

Master Mariners Erratum We've received a correction to the race results shown in our Master Mariners Regatta feature in the July issue. "The error was ours, as an early version of the results which Latitude 38 picked up had duplicated the awarding of the Kermit Parker Perpetual Trophy, and the wrong boat was printed as winner," explains the MMBA's commodore, Bill Conneely. "The final race results on the MMBA website correctly show Makani Kai winning the trophy," added Ken Inouye, Makani Kai's skipper. "Per our MMBA perpetual trophy definition, the Kermit Parker Memorial points; 2) Insanity, Rick Goebel, 13; 3) DarkStar, Steve Brown, 25. (6 boats) CATA NA D-Ives Plus, Keith Ives, 17 points; 2) Temptress, Raymond Godwin, 19; 3) Team DRYC, Chris Weis, 20. (8 boats) B N T A FR T PI, Larry Smith, 13 points; 2) Rode Rage, Peter Cochran, 19; 3) Bella Vita, Martin Burke, 20. (4 boats) CHOC Buttercup, Roderick Messinger, 12 points; 2) Whiplash, Ted Thompson, 17; 3) Code Blue, Robert Marcus, 20. (7 boats) J/111 — 1) Skeleton Key, Peter Wagner, 7 points; 2) Picosa, Jack Jorgensen, 15; 3) Obsidian, John Staff, 20. (5 boats) J/109 — 1) Blue Crush, Bob Little, 12 points; 2) Fuzzy Logic, Jeffrey Shew, 14; 3) Raptor, Heinz Butner, 19. (4 boats) J/70 — 1) Midlife Crisis, Bruce Golison, 16 points; 2) Nimbus, Eduardo Saenz, 24; 3) Huckleberry, Jim Murrell, 28. (16 boats) P R Loco X, Ed Feo, 13 points; 2) Boomslang, Geoff Fargo, 15; 3) Boiling Point, Daniel Milefchik, 25. (7 boats) BOAT OF TH ON N: D-Ives Plus; PHRF: Argo 4. ACHT C B CHA N : Team B C A D-Ives Plus, Whiplash, Relentless. O ON NT FA TROPH : Destroyer. F RTH T TRA : Swish, J/70, Steven Proud, Australia. Full results at www.lbrw.org SCYC 5O5 SPRING REGATTA, 6/25-26 (10r, 1t) 1) No Name, Mike Holt/Rob Woelfel, 18 points; 2) N=1, Eric Anderson, 20; 3) The Black !UGUST s

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Race Notes The US Youth Match Racing Championship for the Rose Cup is an invitational event open to sailors ages 16-20. This year, eight teams competed at Long Beach YC on June 17-19 in Solings, a former Olympic-class keelboat. Morgan Pinckney, Will Glasson, Ashley Highland and Peter Sangmeister, sailing for Newport Harbor YC, placed first overall. Scott Easom launched two new Boat, Mike Martin/Adam Lowry, 22. (12 boats) Full results at www.scyc.org SFYC FIREWORKS FOLLY PURSUIT RACE, 7/4 1) Kuai, Melges 32, Daniel Thielman; 2) Freedom, Worth 40, Jib Martens; 3) Peregrine, J/120, Randy Smith. (14 boats) Full results at www.sfyc.org US SAILING CHUBB JR. SAILING AREA G CHAMPIONSHIP/SMYTHE TROPHY, SFYC, 7/7 (5r, 1t) CA RA A ichael Biral F C points; Connor Bennett F C ; Tor vendsen F C oats Full results at www.sfyc.org CGRA RS AERO WORLDS, 6/24-7/1 (12r, 2t) A RO an Fal C C eattle points; eith Hammer No C ; ichael Johnson C C eattle P C oats R A RO alton Bergan C C eattle eattle C points; Jay Renehan eattle C ; Peter Barton ymington Town C ; Noah Rees ymington Town C ; Carl Buchan C C eattle oats R A RO ieter Creit eattle C C C eattle points; Ryan ehnder eattle C ; annic loster B C oats Full results at www.cgra.org SBYC J/STOP REGATTA, 6/18-19 (7r, 0t) J/105 — 1) Ne*Ne, Tim Russell, 17 points; 2) Blackhawk, Ryan Simmons, 24; 3) Strangelove, Justin O er auer ; Peaches, John & Michael Rivlin, 39. (16 boats) J/88 — 1) Pelagia, Christos Karamanolis, 10 0AGE s

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A group photo taken after the anguard ound the sland ace, honoring the late Jeff nowles. Twenty boats participated in a clockwise race around the island everyone finished. The winners: laire ratt is holding the trophy and an Altreuter is in the blue acket over her left shoulder.

buoys on the San Francisco Cityfront in early July. "We painted ARo on the new Anita Rock offset buoy so you should use that designation on race instructions," advises Bruce Stone of StFYC. "It is the old Blackaller Buoy, nicely refurbished by Scott with fresh paint and ground tackle. While it will move a bit with the currents, Easom placed it in 42 feet of

water at mean tide, 42 yards from Anita Rock on a bearing of 350 degrees. "The A Buoy is now in place off the St. Francis race deck." Another note from Bruce: "Racing in Bodrum, Turkey, 12-year-old Travis Greenberg — a junior member at St. Francis YC — and the US Opti Team won the Optimist World Team Racing

BOX SCORES

Eagle, Express 27, Ross Groelz, 13 points; 2) Hot Sheet, Express 27, David Wick, 15; 3) Under the Radar, Express 27, Greg Felton, 18; 4) Water Dragon, SC27, Derek Weitz, 18. (13 boats) Full results at www.regattanetwork.com

points; 2) Butcher, Dave Corbin, 20; 3) Ravenette, Brice Dunwoodie, 29. (6 boats) Full results at www.regattanetwork.com ABYC C420 NATIONALS, 7/8-10 (12r 1t) O riggs mery iemar CR C HPC, 44 points; 2) Reade Decker/Sophia Mulvania BC C B C NB T ; organ Pinc ney Ashley Highland NH C Bahia Corinthian C NB T ; ylan Nathan ih BC C NH C B C AB C NB T ; Thomas hidden it Harned Riverside C oats R Owen Fretwell e erman B C points; Cale verett Julia etter BC C NB T ; Carly ieding ate Joslin C ; Bla e Behrens Hope Camp ell B F B T B C ; Bo Angus Ava Arepally Fishing Bay C oats N R Anton chmid yatt elly C NB T points; Owen Fretwell e Derman; 3) Caleb Everett/Julia Getter. (10 boats) Full results at www.abyc.org TAHOE YC TRANS-TAHOE, 7/8-9 (5r, 0t) MH — 1) DDB, F-18, Ian Bouchier, 8 points. (1 boat) August Ice, J/125, Greg Felich, 7 points; 2) Wicked Sister, Farr 36, Richard Courcier, 11; 3) Racer X, Farr 36, Gary Redelberger, 12. (3 boats) Personal Puff, Melges 24, Dan Hauserman, 7 points; 2) Powdered Toast Man, Melges 24, William Pullen, 11; 3) Rock Steady, Melges 24, Blake Hoffmann, 13. (5 boats)

OYRA HALF MOON BAY RACE PHRO Swift Ness J Nesrin Basoz; 2) Psycho Tiller II, JPK 1080, James Goldberg; 3) Leading Lady, 1D35, Andrew Lindstrom. (3 boats) PHRO Story Maker, Tartan 101, Mike & Sean Mahoney; 2) Inconceivable, J/88, Steven Gordon. (3 boats) PHRO Green Buffalo, Cal 40, Jim Quanci; 2) Ahi antana Andy Newell; Aegea, Sabre 38-2, Lewis Gridley. (4 boats) MULTIHULL — 1) Round Midnight, Explorer 44, Richard Waltonsmith; 2) Bottle Rocket, Seacart 30 Gp+, David Schumann; 3) Lookin Good 3 F R Rafi ahalom oats Full results at www.jibeset.net SFYC HART NUNES, 7/9 (5r, 0t) RC R Fortran, John Ravizza/Chris Boome; 11 points; 2) Fast Break, Randy Smith/ Kurt Hemmingsen, 12. 3) Space Invader, David West/Chris Kreuger, 14. (6 boats) Full results at www.sfyc.org SFYC MIDNIGHT MOONLIGHT MARITIME MARATHON, 7/9 1) Niuhi, J/105, George Hecht; 2) Kuda Wuda, SR 33, Craig Page; 3) Lonestar, Beneteau 10R, Madeline Morey. (9 boats) Full results at www.sfyc.org

COURTESY SAM WHEELER

Trophy is to be awarded to the Gaff 2 yacht for the best elapsed time. (Gaff 2: Gaff-rigged boats less than 40-ft and more than or equal to 30-ft LOD). Latitude 38 showed Sea Lover winning it. No fault to Latitude reporting what they were given. "Makani Kai had an elapsed time of 2:16:36, which was the best elapsed time for all the Gaff 2 boats. Sea Lover is listed at 30-ft LOD on the start time instructions and was the only boat in Gaff 3, which made her ineligible for the Kermit Parker Trophy. She had an elapsed time of 3:51:57." — latitude / chris

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St unior Travis reenberg at the pti World Team acing hampionship in Turkey.

Championship and placed second in the Nation's Cup." The regatta was held on June 27-July 7. Travis's father Brian wrote: "Travis had a great time. He was able to walk away with a gold medal in team racing and a silver medal in the Nation's Cup. He was also the youngest American sailor to ever make the gold fleet (the top 25% of 278 competitors). In addition he FYC HIGH SIERRA REGATTA WEEKEND 1, 7/910 AN J AN The Great Dane, Jorgen Clausen, 11 points; 2) No Name, S. Sherry/B. Kant/J. Best, 12; 3) Illuminator, Bob Cornstock, 15. (11 boats) NT RNAT ONA Pros & Cons, John Clark, 7 points; 2) Lokita, P. Galvez, 8; 3) Low and Angry, James Clarkson, 17. (4 boats) A A RA Measure's Up, Haydon Stapleton/Roy McClish, 6 points; 2) Hot Flash, Craig Lee, 10; No Name, Greg Miller, 19. (14 boats) MELGES 14 — 1) Daniel Thielman, 12 points; 2) Andrew Picel, 19; 3) Auric Horneman, 20. (6 boats) O A Orin B, Mark Ryan, 12 points; 2) Go Brandon, Bob Little, 12; 3) Lady Bad, Jack Jorgensen, 17; 4) Lil Red, Tyler Webb, 26. (19 boats) O B Orion Ryder Nes itt points; 2) Pinkty, Melissa Kirby, 10; 3) No Name, Mark Dawson, 15. (4 boats) OTH Broo s Reed points; Chad Freitas, 11; 3) Katie Love, 19. (10 boats) LASER — 1) Juju Soto, 13 points; 2) Chris Simenstad, 16; 3) Emilio Castelli, 17. (7 boats) LASER RADIAL — 1) Cooper Smith, 6 points; 2) Linnea Jackson, 12; 3) Courtney Clamp, 14. (4 boats) BAN H Wild Mouse, John Andrew, 6 points; 2) SV, Steve Anderes, 9; 3) itfire, Kerry Johnson, 20. (5 boats) R A RO Nice Try lya ol ov points; 2) Lucky Punk, Craig Perez, 9; 3) No Name, Chris Davison, 15. (6 boats) Full results at www.regattanetwork.com

was one of only 40 sailors invited to the Regatta of Champions this fall in Cyprus, an incredible honor. "One of the coolest moments for us was when a young Turkish girl wanted to meet Travis after the regatta and he gave her the spars (mast, boom) he used during the event." Travis lives in Scituate, Massachusetts, but he'll return to the Bay Area for the Rolex Big Boat Series, helping call wind as a member of Bruce Stone and

BOX SCORES FYC HIGH SIERRA REGATTA WEEKEND 2, 7/16-17 (5r, 0t) OOR Mooregasm, Stephen Bourdow, 8 points; 2) Lowly Worm 2.0 cott Nelson 19; 3) Watts Moore, Chris Watts, 24. (15 boats) ULTIMATE 20 — 1) Peabody, Donna Womble, 6 points; 2) Ultimate Antics, Bob Comstock, 10; 3) Big Wave en Nelson oats CTOR 383, Joe Rollinson, 11 points; 2) Red Eye Special, Scott Holmes, 13; 3) Mr. Goodwrench, Donald Bonander, 13. (11 boats) CORONA O No Name, David Rumbaugh, 5 points; 2) Boondoggle II Chris Nes it Travis Wilson, 12; 3) Shamwari, Lucy Gillies, 16. (7 boats) THISTLE — 1) Mike Gillum, 5 points; 2) Mike Arrow, 11; 3) Steven Hale, 14. (3 boats) PHRF — 1) 24K, Greg Byrne, 11 points; 2) Mojito Ole ichhorn ; Covfefe, Michael Lazzaro, 16. (7 boats) Full results at www.regattanetwork.com US OPEN SAILING SERIES, LONG BEACH, 7/15-17 29er — 1) William Stratton/Ronan Curnyn, 9 points; Noah tapleton Jac Bradley ; evin Cason Holland ierling oats F NN ri idecis points; R Phillip Ramming, 17; 3) Chris Raab, 19. (14 boats) ILCA 7 — 1) Leo Boucher, 18 points; 2) Marshall McCann, 26; 3) Chapman Petersen, 29;

The new Anita ock offset buoy along the beach west of StFYC.

Nicole Breault's J/105 Arbitrage crew. He'll stick around for the J/105 North Americans on September 29-October 2. Another accomplishment by a young sailor: Merritt Sellers, 14, of Marin County, doublehanded a J/111 to victory in the 204-mile, 33-hour Bayview Mackinac Race with her dad, Scott, on July 16-17. More on that soon. — latitude / chris 4) Ford McCann, 30; 5) Guthrie Braun, 30. (19 boats) ILCA 6 — 1) Tate Christopher, 21 points; 2) Cooper Smith, 36; 3) Liam Andresen, 39; 4) Connor Bennett ; Oa ley Cunningham boats) ILCA 4 — 1) Paloma Arrigo, 13 points; 2) Landon Stahl, 13; 3) Chloe Pearl, 25. (5 boats) FO Noah yons points; Pedro Pascual, 18; 3) Alexander Temko, 23; 4) Maverick Putnam, 30; 5) Samuel Perez Hults, 33. (18 boards) FO N T ar us degran points; van He ernan ; Noah Runciman 24; 4) Kai Calder, 31; 5) Will Cyr, 40. (25 boards) Full results at www.ussailing.org SDYC SNIPE NATIONALS, 7/11-15 (8r, 1t) 1) No Name, Ernesto Rodriguez/Kathleen Tocke, 19 points; 2) Danilu, Augie Diaz/Christine De Silva, 22; 3) La Flama Blanca, Arthur Blodgett/Grace Howie, 40; 4) MAQ, Enrique Quintero/Charlie Bess, 45; 5) Pickle Rick, Evan Hoffmann/Shira Golub, 61. (49 boats) J N OR Justin Callahan Aiden Hoog land, 13 points; 2) Trevor Davis/Ale Torres, 20; 3) Peter Busch/Cam Spriggs, 23. (8 boats) Full results at www.sdyc.org SYC J/105 & J/88 INVITATIONAL, 7/16-17 (6r, 0t) J/105 — 1) Ne*Ne, Tim Russell, 11 points; 2) Arbitrage Bruce tone Nicole Breault ; Akula, Doug Bailey, 22. (14 boats) J/88 — 1) Ravenette, Brice Dunwoodie, 11 points; 2) Butcher, Dave Corbin, 14; 3) Hijinks, Logan Ashcraft, 22. (3 boats) Full results at www.regattanetwork.com !UGUST s

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CHANGES Several West Coast boats completed circumnavigations this spring. In the next

few months, we hope to bring you glimpses into each of those remarkable voyages, written by the folks who lived them! The first two installments are from Warren Holybee of Eliana, and Larry and Margie Linder of Althea. Also this month, we revisit the ongoing cruises of Tulum V and Green Flash; take a quick look back — and forward — at Zihuatanejo SailFest; and top it all off with a creamy icing of Cruise Notes.

Warren with a big one that didn't get away.

sailors from all over the world — many of whom I kept running into as we took our own routes around. Some were sailors from my own backyard who I met on the other side of the world! I got to see animals and places that most of us only read about or see on the 'Eliana' at a snug anchorage in New Zealand.

National Geographic channel. I briefly lived in worlds with different cultures, different religions, and little wealth — but lots of happiness. I had hardships, including running dangerously low on cash; having to make repairs to the boat; and conflicts with crew. I kicked one crewmember off in Fiji. Another abruptly left — calling me from the airport to let me know he wouldn't be back. I had a rigging issue in South Africa that I caught early, before it prematurely ended my trip. What I experienced and learned can't be taught, and I am fortunate to have been able to experience it. I started sailing in 2014, in midlife — well before retirement but much later than so many of my friends who started as kids. It began during my commute to work across the Golden Gate Bridge. While stressed out in traffic, I'd look out into the Bay. One day I decided sailing was a better way to spend my time than in traffic. I began taking classes at Modern Sailing in Sausalito. A little over a year later, I bought Eliana with the lofty, distant goal of sailing around the globe. I found the boat in Marina del Rey and had an opportunity to cruise around Catalina Island with some friends before bringing her north to the Bay Area. "Cruising" was new to me then, having at this point only taken classes and daysails around the Bay. But I knew I wanted it to be my new way of life. It took three years before I was able to leave. I created a long checklist of projects for Eliana, entered some beer can races, and started planning and wrapping up my financial affairs for the trip. In early 2018, I decided to enter the Pacific Cup. The boat wasn't ready, but close. The main reason for entering was that it set a firm date for departure. There was no way to put off leaving for "a few more upgrades." If the boat met the strict safety equipment rules, that would be enough. As a result, I left without refrigeration, watermaker, a windlass, solar panels — the list goes on. None of those is really necessary, although I would later add solar and refrigeration. The race was a spectacular experience. Eliana did great and we took third in our division. I feel good that we had a strong finish for a first time in the race. And I'd love to do it again — but on somebody ELIANA

ELIANA

Eliana — Morgan 382 Warren Holybee The Experience of a Lifetime Petaluma I just finished my circumnavigation a few weeks ago. It was an experience of a lifetime, meeting many new friends and

else's boat! I didn't realize how hard an ocean race would be on the boat. Flying the spinnaker at night through squalls with winds that reach 30+ knots is not for the fainthearted. Fortunately, the only things that broke were the hinges on the toilet seat. After enjoying the party at Kaneohe Yacht Club, most of the fleet turned around and went back to where they'd come from. Except me. I continued south to New Zealand, and eventually across the Indian Ocean, then to Brazil and the Caribbean; waited out COVID in Virginia, and finally transited the Panama Canal and returned to San Francisco. I am often asked what my favorite place was. I answer quickly, "Fiji," but


ALL PHOTOS ELIANA EXCEPT AS NOTED LYONSEYEPHOTOGRAPHY.COM

Above: Home is the sailor, home from sea — 'Eliana' sails back under the Golden Gate in June. Top left: rone shot under spinnaker. Top center: The acific up was the start of the adventure. Top right: Making friends with a lemur.

that really isn't fair to everywhere else I went. Fiji was wonderful, and I plan to retire there eventually. But I also had amazing experiences in nearly every place I went (although, for the most part, I would not want to live in those places). To the west of Fiji at Vanuatu, I got to stand on the rim of an active volcano and watch the lava bubbles explode. I also witnessed "land diving," which led to the invention of bungee jumping. A 100foot tower is built from branches, men climb the tower, tie vines to their ankles, and jump headfirst. The goal is to hit the ground but not die. In days past, it was

thought to ensure a good yam harvest. Now it's only done for tourists. The people in Indonesia were so welcoming and friendly, and invited me into their homes, schools, and churches to share their lives with me. The highlight there was speaking to young children in school who were learning English and had never met a native English speaker. Indonesia, however, was very dirty and polluted. Beaches looked like landfills, raw sewage flowed in gutters along the streets, and only bottled water was safe to drink. So, while it was an amazing experience and important to see, I felt fortunate

IN LATITUDES not to have to live there. In Madagascar, of course I got to see, feed, and hold lemurs. I took a trip inland to a national park, and had a guide take me out at night to see mouse lemurs, which are just so darn cute. I also got to see how some of the poorest people in the world live. I visited villages that knew nothing of plastic, metal, or using electricity. People lived in houses made of sticks, and fished and gardened for food. No stores or even money. I traded about $200 of rope for a few tomatoes, as tomatoes are all they could offer in trade. Other cities in Madagascar had some wealth — not much by our standards — but also lots of crime. I was at the yacht club only an hour before a man offered me some girls to take to my boat. Locally, this seemed to be acceptable and was done right out in the open. That mostly ruined Madagascar for me, but was also really eye-opening to world problems we don't experience in the US. South Africa featured some of the worst and most difficult sailing of the trip. The Mozambique Channel is brutal. About 10 boats clustered together as we waited for sailing windows and compared weather reports and the suggestions of weather routers. The ports on the east coast of South Africa all had local sailors with local racing, etc. They are very dedicated indeed. I rented a car in South Africa and went on a self-guided safari. I didn't get to see any lions, but saw most everything else you might expect. A rhino blocked the road at one point for 20 minutes. I was certainly not going to force the issue by trying to shoo him away. I also saw zebras, giraffes, hippopotami, monkeys, baboons, and more, all in their natural habitat. Crossing the South Atlantic to Brazil was the best sailing of the whole trip. Once I'd trimmed the sails and set the windvane, I didn't touch anything for the whole first week. After that the wind got light, and it took more work to keep the boat moving. But the weather was great: no rain, no squalls, flat, comfortable water. It was sailing that we all dream about. I was in Salvador, Brazil, for Carnival. The people, the music, the huge party — there is nothing like it anywhere. The size of the event dwarfs anything else I have seen. Beer is cheap, and everyone is dancing and having a great time. I left Brazil the day after Carnival for Trinidad and Tobago. Unknown to me at the time, a few days before I got there, the world would go into COVID lockdown. I learned of this en route, and the only !UGUST s

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CHANGES place I was allowed to stop was St. Thomas. I was on St. Thomas for about two months. Most of the "essential" island businesses remained open. (Restaurants were open only for takeout.) Most of the rest of the Caribbean was closed to travel, so any boats that were caught between ports diverted to St. Thomas. So there were quite a few cruising boats filling the anchorages. I relaxed, met some old friends who'd found their way there, and made some new friends. Eventually, I found a job in Virginia, right near a marina, and sailed up the coast to hunker down for a year and refresh the cruising kitty. In November 2021, I headed south toward Puerto Rico on my way to Panama. I had done a lot of maintenance in Virginia, including inspecting and replacing much of my steering system — except for the cable. It was new right before I left California, and still appeared new, so I let it be. Of course, it broke halfway to Puerto Rico. I spent a day adrift while I rigged some Dyneema to replace it. It took a few days for the Dyneema to "set" while I kept taking up the slack, but now that it's done, I don't think I'll return to wire rope. The Dyneema is so easy to splice and replace, and I think it will last longer. It's also cheaper than the wire Edson sells. I went through the Panama Canal rafted to a boat homeported in Morro Bay, whose owners I'd first met in South Africa. (Ed. note — That boat was the Westsail 32 Althea, featured in the next Changes story.) Another difficult-to-describe experience was being in a lock with a container ship as water rushed in and you rose to the lake level, then later repeated to come back down to the Pacific level. I greatly preferred the more southern ports of Mexico. Banderas Bay and everything north, where most of the cruising seems to be, wasn't nearly as good in my opinion. All of it was "touristy," whereas the southern ports had more culture, and to my eye were cleaner, cheaper, and more inviting. I tried to sail up the West Coast. I really did. But after so many miles, my sails were worn and stretched. Between my reduced pointing ability, the current, and the uncomfortable swell, the boat and I were taking such a beating that I gave up. I waited for calm weather, and motored to the next port, to wait for calm weather again. Eventually, I fell in with some other boats doing the same, then we harborhopped all the way to California. My most expensive mistake happened in Santa Cruz, only a few days from finishing my trip. And it was all my fault, 0AGE s

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and I knew better. I tied my dinghy to the wharf, and the tide changed, and it got pulled under the wharf as the tide came in. If I took a sledgehammer and beat my outboard as hard as I could, it would do less damage. My outboard was a total loss. Fortunately, it happened at a point where I didn't need it anymore, but it's one of those mistakes you feel stupid for having made. I arrived back in Sausalito on June 4, 2022. My mom chartered a boat, and she and several other boats sailed outside the Gate to escort me in. It was a very emotional moment, bringing such a journey to an end. For now, I'm back working for the foreseeable future, but hope to retire in a position to do it again, and settle somewhere in the South Pacific, maybe Fiji. — Warren 7/1/22 Althea — Westsail 32 Larry and Margie Linder The Longest 90 Seconds of My Life Morro Bay After bonding with fellow cruising friends during a monthlong COVID quarantine in Brazil, we set sail from Marina Jacare on April 28, bound northwest for St. John in the USVI. The first part of the voyage was pleasant. The weather was favorable enough to cook, play Scrabble, and take turns napping. We experienced a mixed bag of conditions, but had no idea that we were about to encounter — for one very long and hair-raising moment — the worst weather of our entire circumnavigation. It happened a week into the passage, on May 5, just as we got to the ITCZ. The Intertropical Convergence Zone is a band of low pressure that swirls around the Earth near the equator. It generally manifests between 5ºN and 5ºS. Warm air rises, cool air descends, beckoning the


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About 500 miles west of South Africa, 'Althea's prop shaft broke. With bilge pumps going nonstop, Margie and Larry nursed the boat another 1,000 miles and ended up on the hard in St. Helena at the same time the residents — island natives are known as "Saints" — celebrated their annual Whale Shark Festival. The tribute painted on the rudder honors their help and hospitality. Left: 'Althea' at anchor. Inset above: On approach to Bora Bora.

trade winds from the north and south to coalesce and throw a big bash. A swirly soirée, if you will. Sounds fun, right? Well, not always. For the record, our lat/long was 04°21' N, 40°10' W when the squall hit. We don't have instruments to accurately measure wind speed that high, but we later agreed that 70 kts would probably be a good estimate. I would later feel fortunate that we

were flying only a staysail at the time. But when the squall first hit, and our sturdy little double-ender lay over almost on her beam ends, my first thought was, "This is it. This could be the end. I'm glad we are together." I assumed a standing position between the galley and the wet locker, bracing myself with each hand firmly gripped around a post. My gaze was fixed on Larry. He sat on the starboard side of the

cockpit, feet against the footwell, pulling the tiller toward him with all the strength he could muster. Our port lights were underwater. Like a scene in a wrestling match, Althea was pinned. Items in the galley and the pilot berth that are normally secure in rough weather were flying and rolling around everywhere. Seawater from boarding waves seeped in through the forward hatch. After the initial hit, as terrified as I still was, my fear was coupled with a strange sense of calm. I specifically remember telling myself, "We are gonna get through this." I don't recall thinking that I needed to summon the strength to survive. It just came. And then, as suddenly as it had come, it was gone (though 30- to 35-kt winds persisted for several hours). The boat popped back up and Larry regained control. For me, it seemed as though the squall lasted for 20 minutes, but Larry assures me that, from start to finish, it was only about 90 seconds. I'll defer to his estimate, but just want to say it was the longest 90 seconds of my life. Regardless, we were alive! Immediately, we took inventory. We discovered: — Leaks we'd never noticed before. — Every towel was sopping wet. — Our awning ripped 12" at the seam. — We lost two fenders, a harness tether and, worst of all, a Tiller Pilot. Luckily we had a spare. Unluckily, the bracket under the tiller that attaches to the autopilot snapped in half. So no more autopilot for the rest of the trip. Adding insult to injury, our vane steering was also out of commission. Right before we got to the ITCZ, the steering oar popped off after driving into a thick patch of sargasso weed. We had to "pull over" and heave to while Larry secured the errant oar in high seas. Shout out to Captain Jim Sublett of Jaga 2, who advised us via SSB that the fisherman's bend knot would be the best choice. Fortunately, it wasn't all terror and broken stuff. Earlier in the passage, Larry had landed an 8-kilo (17-pound) mahi mahi on our hand line. He saw the fish 30 yards out before it swallowed the lure. "It looked like a remote-controlled missile speeding toward the lure at 40 mph!" he shouted. We were so pumped! Beautiful fish — the first we had caught since we left South Africa, so we were stoked. Less than an hour later, the fish was in our skillet and then our bellies. We made landfall on May 19 in the USVI. We grabbed a mooring at Honeymoon Beach and cleared into the country on the island of St. John. Time to enjoy !UGUST s

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CHANGES Having abruptly left Green Flash on the Pacific side of Panama for almost 18 months during that country's near-complete COVID lockdown, we returned in October 2021 to find she had been wellcared-for by our mechanic-turned-boatsitter, Ollie. This was the longest that my wife, Joan, and I had been away from Green Flash since we kicked off this great adventure via the 2017 Baja Ha-Ha, and we were glad to be back! After a couple of weeks of boat projects and provisioning in Vista Mar Marina, we were ecstatic to be back on the water. Our forced hiatus behind us, we headed for the Perlas Islands in the Bay of Panama,

Above: oing down at the atun Locks aribbean, here we come! Below: 'Green Flash' anchored at oco Bandero ay, San Blas. Left: Bob and Joan started their cruising with the 2017 HaHa Rally.

PTSD moment, I liken our harrowing experience to my experiences of childbirth. It was an odyssey, terrifying and exhilarating, but in the end we were handed a blessing … a gentle landfall in a calm, peaceful anchorage in clear, turquoise waters. — Margie 6/23/22 Larry and Margie crossed the outbound track of their seven-year circumnavigation off Banderas Bay in June.

to be followed by the Panama Canal and ultimately the Caribbean Sea. We left for the Perlas in mid-October, which was still the (very) wet season, with daily electrical storms, squalls and brief periods of torrential rain. The tradeoff was that we were able to be in the clear water of the northern Perlas Islands before it turned to pea soup during the coldwater upwelling of the dry season, as it sometimes does. We were not disappointed in the wilds of these lush, beautiful islands and spent two weeks there, but after four seasons on the Pacific side of Mexico and Central America, we were anxious for the adventure of exploring a new ocean. We finalized our measurement date with our Canal agent and set sail for Panama City. The Canal was not yet back to its level of pre-COVID traffic, so from the time of our measurement to our transit, it was only three days (as opposed to the more normal two weeks or so). Before we knew it, we were on the downside of the Gatun Locks, with views to the Atlantic Bridge and the blue Caribbean beyond! Our stop in Shelter Bay Marina near Colon for provisioning was supposed to be quick, but it turned into a two-week schedule of cruiser social events, walks in the jungle, relaxation by the pool and waiting for an appropriate weather

window to head to our destination of destinations: the San Blas Islands (also known as Guna Yala). The marina is a wonderful confluence of sailing vessels from all over the world that, like us, had just transited the Canal, or were preparing to transit going the other way. We met many interesting sailors, shared adventure stories and local knowledge, and made many friends. But when the right weather window finally opened, it was time to set sail. The southwestern Caribbean is the end of the line for Caribbean wave trains from different directions to come together with the effect of a washing machine: steep, short-period, confused seas. If comfort is any priority at all, then timing is everything, particularly during the heightened trade-wind season of December through April. After a two-night stopover in Linton Bay, we found ourselves in the Chichime Cays, one of the westernmost island groups in this amazing archipelago, and often the first and last stop for vessels coming and going. Though a part of Panama, these 300+ coral-fringed islands are a semi-autonomous, indigenous province governed by the Kuna General Congress. Because of their anti-development policies, strict bans on scuba diving, and limiting of charter boats, many of the

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all the perks of landfall: fresh produce, a laundromat, great restaurants (takeout only) high-speed internet and ice cream! "Boozy milkshakes" were a standard offering in every ice cream store we saw. Why not? We spent two days there, soothed by the ever-sogentle rocking of Caneel Bay. We both went into eight-hour comas each night. Back to my

Green Flash — Beneteau Oceanis 35 Robert Ritner and Joan Chen Glad to Be Back! San Clemente snorkel-

GREEN FLASH

The fish's eye view of ' reen lash' ing in the San Blas Islands.

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islands remain relatively untouched by the modern world. Cruising boats, though, are welcomed and the permits to visit — collected by officials in pangas once a month — are inexpensive. Though there are more developed island villages closer to the mainland, many families on the outer windward islands live in thatched huts without running water or power. Many Kuna still make the passage between islands by dugout canoe, often with the aid of small, colorful sails. Food and fuel are in limited supply, save for the few larger villages close to the mainland, and for the occasional fruit and vegetable pangas and dugouts that make their way around the more popular island anchorages. Life is simple there, and we were once again blissfully ignorant of the goings-on of the outside world much of the time. Our days were filled with snorkeling, island walks, occasional boat projects and pleasant tropical midday naps! The windward islands have fringing reefs that protect the anchorages from the open-sea conditions of the Caribbean and have clear, calm water and abundant, healthy soft and hard corals. So the snorkeling conditions were ideal. The leeward islands tend to be more populated, but still offer good anchorages with close proximity to mangrove and river wildlife habitats that beg exploration by dinghy. We were so taken by these islands that our plans to see more of the Caribbean will have to wait at least one more season. Having seen the beauty of this place, we were surprised to learn that they are frequently bypassed by cruisers in the rush to get through the Canal to the Pacific, or

to get north in the Caribbean after transiting the other way. For our pace and style of cruising, this is really a wonderful place. We recently flew back to our land home in San Clemente after extensive preparations to leave Green Flash on the hard in Shelter Bay for the summer, but feel drawn to again explore these islands next season. After that, who knows? We only take it

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Regular readers may best remember the French family for their largest crewmember, Quincy the Great Dane. Rounding out the crew complement are (left): Mom Michelle, daughters Kellyn (in blue and Teagan, and apa had shown here at their visit to the Temple of the Inscriptions in Palenque, Mexico. Above: Mermaids have frequently been spotted in the water around 'Tulum'. Lower left: sla Tortugas, osta ica.

one season at a time! — Bob 7/4/22 Tulum V — Aleutian 51 ketch French Family ¡Hasta Luego, Mexico! 29 Palms The crew of Tulum V finally departed Mexico after adding one scurvy new crewmember weighing in at a whole kilogram! After spending more than our fair share of time in the Sea of Cortez, last November it was time to head south and, this time, keep going. We enjoyed a festive Christmas in Zihuatanejo and rang in the New Year with a spectacular fireworks display in Acapulco. We slowed down long enough to take inland trips in Oaxaca and Chiapas, visiting the cultural epicenter Oaxaca City, historically renowned Palenque, and charming San Cristóbal de las Casas. We adopted Oreo, our new kitty, in Huatulco and she was quickly indoctrinated into the cruising lifestyle by crossing

the dreaded Gulf of Tehuantepec only two weeks after adoption. In April, after a glorious two and a half years, it was finally time to say "¡Hasta luego, Mexico!". We hoisted new courtesy flags and spent what we thought would be a brief stopover in the Gulf of Fonseca, but Mother Ocean had other plans in mind. Though liberating to be at anchor in all new countries, the daily 20-plus-knot winds with choppy swell and strong currents had us dancing between anchorages in all three countries that surround the bay. Almost three weeks later, we were finally underway Feeding time is now a team and made it evolution: Quincy dines and to the seren- Oreo cleans up. ity of Bahía Santa Elena in Costa Rica. Only here can you experience the sound of silence … peppered with some d i s t a n t howler monkey calls, of course!


We checked into the country and quickly learned what pura vida was all about: monkeys and sloths, recycling bins on the beaches, happy, lovely people, and thrillseekers' zipline rides over the rainforest. Some anchorages have been rolly, and yes, traveling through a rainforest during rainy season does feature lots of rain, but overall, we've thoroughly enjoyed exploring this magnificent country on our floating home. We have our sights set on transiting the Panama Canal after enjoying some of the beautiful cruising grounds of northern Panama and the Perlas Islands. With new territory, some things have changed, but some have not. The water is still blue (except when red tide is flowing); homeschooling commences on most weekdays; and exciting yet unexpected boat projects continue to emerge — we are a cruising family after all! The "battle for the crown" on board Tulum V is a constant source of entertainment as we watch our four-legged crewmembers compete for attention, food, and the best napping spots. With some plans for preventive maintenance and perhaps inland travel,

we hope to break up the rainy season in Panama and look forward to exploring a whole new ocean! — Chad 6/8/22 (www.LiveFree2SailFast.com) Zihuatanejo SailFest — Sailors Giving Back Every February, sailors from around the world gather in Zihuatanejo, Mexico, for two weeks of fun and philanthropy. The event, known as SailFest, raises money for school construction projects implemented by the Mexican nonprofit organization Por Los Niños ("For the Kids"). SailFest 2022 raised 3,450,000 pesos or about $175,000 — a record despite the lingering shadow of COVID-19 and the struggles of the Mexican tourism sector to recover economically. Since 2002, the proceeds from SailFest have been used to construct 142 classrooms, science laboratories, computer centers, kitchens, bathrooms and covered playgrounds. This includes construction of 14 completely new schools and repairs to 31 existing schools. Funds are raised through generous

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Even for cruisers who never make plans, making plans to attend SailFest is a worthy exception to the rule.

contributions from the cruisers, as well as Zihuatanejo's multinational tourists — many of whom schedule their vacations around the growing list of events put on by the SailFest Committee of over 125 volunteers. On-the-water activities, hosted aboard visiting yachts, include sunset music cruises and a Rally-Round-the-Rock "race" where paying guests can crew aboard a boat, or help officiate at the start/finish line. There's also a Sail Parade from Zihuatanejo to Ixtapa, where guests take a leisurely cruise between the bays of these two world-class resort towns while enjoying food and beverages and, occasionally, a pod of dolphins or a breaching whale.

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HAULOUT s -ARINE 4RAVELIFT TONS s -ARINE RAILWAY TONS s Storage in adjustable steel cradles s &ENCED 9ARD s 4RAVELIFT 4 !MPHIBIOUS MOBILE TRAILER 4 s 3ERVICES OF OUR TUG FOR TOWING SAFETY ASSISTANCE AND INTERVENTIONS PAINTING s 4OPSIDES HULL BOTTOM VARNISH s "RUSH ROLLER SPRAY MECHANICAL WORK s )NBOARD OUTBOARD DIESEL GAS s !LL BRANDS REPAIRS s %LECTRICAL REPAIRS s 2EFRIGERATION INSTALLATION REPAIR s &IBERGLASS WOODWORK s 7ELDING STEEL STAINLESS ALUMINUM SAIL LOFT s 3AIL REPAIRS BIMINIS DODGERS COVERS STORE s )NTERNATIONAL 0ETTIT %PIGLASS $EVOE s 3PARES s &ILL 5 3 GAS CYLINDERS DO-IT-YOURSELFERS WELCOME! BoatUS Cooperating Marina

B.P. 1111 Uturoa Raiatea 98 735 Polynésie Française Tel: (689) 40 600-545 ~ Fax: (689) 40 600-546 ~ VHF 68 Web site: http://www.raiateacarenage.com ~ email: raiateacarenage@mail.pf Facebook : Chantier Naval Raiatea Carenage 0AGE s

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Cruise Notes s 7E ARE lNALLY BACK IN THE 0ACIlC again, almost a decade after sailing out," writes Kia Koropp of the Ganley 49 cutter Atea. Originally from Sacramento, Kia

Kia and John with Braca (left) and Ayla. Between them, the kids have already done nine equator crossings in their young lives.

has been cruising with British husband John Daubney since 2011 (and kids Braca and Ayla, who joined the crew along the way). The family will end this year in New Zealand and possibly take a break from cruising for a while so Mom and Dad can regenerate the cruising kitty. Until then, "We will enjoy this year on our slow crawl across the Pacific, making the most of the beautiful atolls and islands we sail to," says Kia.

s ,AST MONTH THE 5+ BASED Telegraph ran a piece called "Your 70s Is The Best Decade of Your Life — Meet the Women Who Prove It." Among the climbers, marathon runners and other septuagenarian female athletes was our favorite "marathon" sailor, Jeanne Socrates, who, at age 77, became the oldest woman to circumnavigate the world solo and unassisted. She accomplished the feat in just 11 months aboard her Swedish-built Najad 38 Nereida, crossing her Happy Birthday, Jeanne! outbound track in Victoria, BC, in October 2019. Also "for the record," this was the fourth circumnavigation in a bit over 10 years (and the second nonstop) for Jeanne, who only took up sailing in her late 40s. Oh, and a big "Happy Birthday!" to Ms. Socrates, who turns 80 on August 17. LADONNA BUBAK

Onshore activities include rock 'n' roll bands on the beach, elegant house parties (also with musical entertainment), a chili cook-off, numerous raffles, a spectacular live auction, and the traditional gala dinner with music provided by schoolchildren from the community. Por Los Niños is a Mexico-registered charity founded in 2005 to administer the funds raised by SailFest. (US tax deductible receipts can be issued through the sister organization, Los Niños.) Visit the website www.porlosninos.com to learn more! — Peter Benziger Readers — SailFest was created by Latitude 38 founder Richard Spindler and some goodhearted cruisers in 2002. We still enthusiastically support this fun and worthy event and hope everyone headed south will put 2023 SailFest — February 12-26 — on their calendars. See you there!

ATEA

IN LATITUDES

Freedom to Explore Explore the most energy-efficient and quiet watermakers at www.spectrawatermakers.com Speak to a technical representative to find the right system for your needs at 415-526-2780

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CHANGES IN LATITUDES

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he notes, "We can't go until we find a slip in San Diego, so if anybody has any ideas …"). From there, the plan is on to La Paz via the '23 Ha-Ha. After that, they have loose plans to sail to the South Pacific, or turn left and go to the Med. "Our life's journey is to adventure off-grid," says Tom, "and we have the platform to accomplish our dreams." s $ENNIS 2OQUET AND +ELLY #ARR LEFT their new-to-them Beneteau 52 Roxxy at Shelter Bay Marina in Colon, Panama, and flew home to Friday Harbor for the summer. The current plan is to return in September, transit the Canal, and head up to Costa Rica for some canvas and sail Kelly and Dennis — making God laugh. work. Then up to Barra Navidad, where they hope to keep the boat for a couple of years. "But remember," notes Dennis: "God laughs at people who make plans." — latitude/jr ROXXY

DETORÉ

s !FTER SELLING HIS Beneteau 473 Vitesse, a veteran of the '08 and '15 Baja HaHa's, San Francisco's Tom Price found his of the trip, and the dream boat, Detoré, times where he a Grand Soleil 50, in launched and reSan Diego. After havcovered the drone ing some work done on land went fine. in Ensenada ("Bahia "But one day, I got Naval does top-notch bold and launched work!"), the boat while sailing. I headed up to the couldn't manage Bay, where Tom and to get the drone his lovely lady, Holly back on board from Wolfe, have been sailastern, so flew it ing and upgrading in around to the bow preparation for the and brought it in — 2023 Ha-Ha (and shirtless. I ended maybe a Transpac). up crashing it into Among extracur'Detoré', the dream boat. Inset: Tom and Holly. my chest. The crew ricular activities, Tom has enjoyed several trips to the Ca- mercilessly made fun of the new blade tatribbean, and couldn't expound enthusi- toos on my chest for the rest of the trip." Eventually, Tom and Holly plan to astically enough about a charter in Belize. Well, except for "the drone incident." head south to San Diego by way of the He bought a drone to record highlights Channel Islands and Catalina. (Although,


Harbor Island West Marina 32° 43.5’ N 117° 12.7’ W

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28th Annual Baja Ha-Ha! More than 3,000 boats and 10,000 sailors have done the 750-mile cruisers rally from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas. Here are some of the main reasons. 1) It’s really, really fun. 2) Superb safety record. 3) You get a Ha-Ha backpack filled with swag at the Halloween costume kick-off party. 4) To a great extent there is safety and shared knowledge in numbers. 5) Daily roll call, professional weather forecast, and net.

6) Six social events in which to make lifelong cruising friends. 7) You’ll be featured in the Ha-Ha bio book. 8) Experienced leadership. Collectively, the three event leaders have transited the Baja coast more than 80 times. 9) Ha-Ha discounts can easily exceed the entry fee. 10) And the number one reason given by past entrants — it gives you an exact deadline to head south.

The Ha-Ha runs from October 31 to November 12 Register now at www.baja-haha.com

Join the 28th Annual Baja Ha-Ha and become part of cruising history! !UGUST s

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CLASSY

CLASSIFIEDS PERSONAL ADS MAX

WORDS WORDS $65 WORDS MAX $90 0HOTO $30

BUSINESS ADS

$70 FOR 40 WORDS ALL PROMOTIONAL ADVERTISING /NE BOAT PER BROKER PER ISSUE

PERSONAL ADVERTISING ONLY .O BUSINESS OR PROMO ADS EXCEPT

,OGO OR 'RAPHIC !DDITIONAL

.ON 0ROlT *OB /P "USINESS /P

"IZ ADS DO NOT APPEAR ON WEBSITE

Latitude 38’s Classy Classifieds is the place to buy or sell boats, marine gear, trailers, liferafts, boat partnerships, trades and more! Submit your ad online at www.latitude38.com/adverts 9OUR AD IS LIVE ONLINE IMMEDIATELY UPON COMPLETION OF PAYMENT !DS AUTOMATICALLY RENEW EVERY DAYS YOU CAN CANCEL ANYTIME

THE PRINT DEADLINE IS ALWAYS THE 15TH AT 5 P.M.

QUESTIONS? (415) 383-8200 OR CLASS@LATITUDE38.COM DINGHIES, LIFERAFTS & ROWBOATS ÇÊ /Ê //9Ê -Ê £ nÓ°Ê Restored but could use a bit of cosmetic work. Complete with oars, full sailing rig and a 2hp, 2-stroke Yamaha outboard. Has been used as a tender reliably for the past 40 years and will easily serve for 40 more. $900. South Beach Marina. adc@ stanford.edu (650) 619-7214

£äÊ /Ê 7 ,Ê 9Ê Î£äÊ Óää °Ê 10-ft fiberglass dinghy with sail kit and Hypalon flotation collar. Collar is new, installed less than a year ago. Complete with full sail kit, cover, oars LEHR 5hp propane outboard. $2,350. Emeryville. dktalton@gmail.com (415) 205-0687

Deadline for the September issue classified: August 15 Your ad goes live online immediately at www.latitude38.com

°xÊ /Ê Ê , ",Ê */ ½-Ê ]Ê Óä£Î°Ê Well-constructed fiberglass rowand sailboat. New paint job, in and out, complete sailing rig, two 7-ft oars, 3 hp electric motor, boat dolly, ss strip on keel, complete cover, life jackets, 4 ss lifting bridles for shore boat use, and more. All equipment is in first-class condition. $3,800 OBO. Paradise Cay, Tiburon, CA. hjroeben@comcast.net (415) 435-3006

££°xÊ /Ê 7 / Ê 7 -/ " -/Ê Óääx°ÊThis is the ultimate, purest sailing and rowing dinghy. Meticulous craftsmanship with every accessory available at the time. Sailing rig, bronze centerboard, sculling insert with rolling seat, three sets of beautiful sculling oars. Used only three times since new, always covered. Custom cradle. Teak and fiberglass. $10,000 OBO. Ventura, CA. Scotthomerepair2@gmail. com (805) 689-0984

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Local closing facility for brokers or private transactions

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£ÓÊ /Ê Ê* *" ÊÓäÓä°ÊBrand-new. Epoxy/wood construction. Arch Davis design. Includes trailer, sail, cover & oars. $10,000 OBO. Carpinteria. carpdory@ gmail.com (720) 250-8060

ÓÓÊ /Ê ÉÓÓÊ£ n{°ÊClass-legal J/22. Sailed

£ÎÊ /Ê ,-Ê ,"Ê ÓäÓä°Ê Almost-new RS Aero for sale! Sailed perhaps half a dozen times. Size 7 sail. Bags for rudder and daggerboard, dolly, boat cover. Great boat, easier and more comfortable than a Laser! $10,500. Redwood City, CA. jimhopp@gmail.com

easily behind smaller truck. $7,750. Alam-

regularly. Always dry stored. North Sails jib new 2021, only used half dozen times. Numerous wins in Friday night handicap races. Road-ready trailer. Can be towed eda, CA. rduste@aol.com (281) 650-1869

24 FEET & UNDER SAILBOATS £ÈÊ /Ê " Ê7 / Ê 6 Ê£ÓÊ£ÉÓÊ£ {°Ê Gaff-rigged sloop, strip plank Atlantic white cedar and steam bent oak frames. Bronze fastened. Built by internationally recognized violin builder, Scott Hershey. $15,000. San Diego. scarpy47@gmail. com (619) 694-7696

ÓΰxÊ /Ê 1 / ,ÊÓΰxÊ£ ΰÊWater ballast. 2003 Honda 5hp outboard “new” tires and wheels. Cockpit seats 6. AM/ FM CD, marine radio, kick-up centerboard and rudder. $7,300 OBO. Loomis, CA. dmhoey@sbcglobal.net (916) 765-1389

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25 – 28 FEET SAILBOATS

Ê {Ê /Ê " Ê - Ê - ,* Ê Óää£Ê°Ê Ó Home built by my brother-in-law. Finished in 2001. All marine plywood on the exterior covered with fiberglass. We had it redone last year. Shoal draft boat with a cat ketch rig designed by Bruce Kirby. Sails are basically brand-new. Tohatsu motor has barely been used. Rebuilt carburetor two years ago and haven’t used it since. Trailer comes with it. Link for description. $12,500 OBO. Camas, WA. flylady21@icloud.com (503) 720-0096 https://tinyurl.com/3z8c58as

Ê äÊ /Ê Ê "1 /, Ó - Ê -""/9Ê / , Ê 1 Ê 9 7 Ê Óä£{Ê°Ê ‘Wee Bonnie’ is a sailing and rowing craft, well-suited for one or two people. Built from excellent materials and maintained in top shape. This Sooty Tern is outfitted with light ground tackle, a sounding lead, compass, fenders, 3-part hoisting tackle, 4 removable ballast pigs (totaling 125 lbs) and a bilge pump. Her rig is a lug yawl and includes all spars, sails, necessary lines, sheets, reef points, etc. The mizzen sheets forward to the cockpit through a hollow boomkin. Both the centerboard and rudder blade can be raised for beaching. She comes with a full-length travel/storage cover and is carried on a Karavan trailer equipped with LED lights and wooden deck. $15,000. Central Coast CA. schoonermagic@earthlink.net (760) 835-4204

Ê ÓÊ /Ê ÉÓÓÊ £ nxÊ°Ê This is a really fun Ó boat for racing and sailing with friends. Fast and trailerable. The boat has many upgrades: new windows, new blue cushions, standing/running rigging, Velocitek SpeedPuck, a Honda motor used no more than 10 hrs. Several Quantum sails. She comes with a nice trailer as well. $12,000. Near South Lake Tahoe. carlafenes@ gmail.com (510) 289-2929

Ê {Ê /Ê "", Ê Ó{Ê £ n£Ê°Ê Hull #98. OneÓ design/offshore setups — Open transom, under-deck companionway. 2 mainsails, #1, #2, #3 (2), heavy weather jibs, reacher, drifter, 5 spinnakers. Autopilot, Instruments, EPIRB (registered), emergency rudder, outboard. Galvanized dual-axle trailer. $20,000 OBO. Point Richmond, CA. c.michael.maio@gmail.com (707) 628-1181

Ê ÓÊ /Ê - / Ê ÓääÈÊ°Ê Very clean, boat Ó and sails are in nice condition. Rollerfurling genoa/jib, lazy jacks, mainsail cover. Trailer included, see additional photos. Call or email. $12,000. South Lake Tahoe. ronmaloney55@yahoo.com (408) 828-4824

ÊÓÈÊ /Ê 9 Ê £ n{Ê°Ê PHRF racer and comfortable cruiser. Interior and exteÊ nÊ /Ê , -/" Ê Ó Ê 1// ,Ê £ ÇnÊ° Ê Lyle Hess-designed cruiser for crew of one or two. 40-ft LOA, draft 4-ft 10-in, disp 14,000 lbs. 6-ft 4-in headroom. Cruising dodger. Cream-colored mainsail, staysail, 85% jib custom built 2011 Port Townsend Sails. Additional sails; all headsails hank-on. Yanmar diesel 3GM30F 27hp 1994. Interior refit 1994. Fixed 3-bladed prop. Monitor windvane. Raymarine Tiller Pilot S2000+. PUR Powersurvivor 35 watermaker. Three anchors. $38,500. Vallejo, CA. quinthopter@ comcast.net

rior maintained in excellent condition by meticulous owner. Yanmar 1gm10 diesel with very low hrs. Garmin chartplotter, Raymarine VHF radio, emergency beacon and many other items. $10,000. Alameda. Jnovie@aol.com (415) 271-3441

29 – 31 FEET SAILBOATS

ÊÓ Ê /Ê ÉÓ Ê £ n{Ê° Ê Due to relocation, Ê ÇÊ /Ê - Ê 1 Ê Ç°ÇÊ ­ , ®Ê £ Ç Ê°Ê Ó Freshwater Tahoe boat. New Pineapple mainsail ($2k) still in box. #1, #2, #3 and spinnaker with Sunbrella mainsail boom cover. Stereo, Porta-Potti. Reliable 7.5hp Honda outboard on tilt-up mount. Heavyduty tandem trailer with extension pole hitch for launching on boat ramp. A fun, lively fractional rig that sleeps 4 comfortably. $6,200. Truckee, CA. a.esler1@ gmail.com (530) 414-1469

‘Blazer’ is for sale, ready to sail/race. Super-light, fast and smartly built. Try to find a faster 29-ft in the Bay. Inboard Yanmar 1GM10 runs perfectly. New diesel tank. Bottom paint up-to-date. $10,500 OBO. Brisbane, CA. alban.leliepvre@ gmail.com (650) 733-3172

ÊÓxÊ /Ê ÊÓxÊ£ ÈnÊ°Ê It is a great Bay or Delta sailing boat with three sails, 15 hp Nissan outboard motor, and VHF radio. Call or email. $3,500. Rio Vista, CA. g_munoz2005@yahoo.com (912) 409-0760

ÊÎ£Ê /Ê79 Ê Ê/7 Ê£ ÇÈÊ°Ê ‘EnÊÓ£Ê /Ê- Ê 1 ÊÓ£Ê Ê Ê£ Ç Ê°Ê Good condition. Race winner, 1980s – mid2000s (LYC Spring Regatta, 1st, several times, Konocti Cup, 2nd, several times). Fairly good sails, (main, working jib, 150 genoa, spinnaker), 2 Barient 10 winches, 4hp Johnson outboard w/Panther pull-up mount, Porta Potti, 1978 Calkin trailer (old tires, should be replaced). Can deliver to Marin Co. $2,975 OBO. Kelseyville, CA. rickatac@msn.com (415) 269-5483

core’ is a beauty. Recent out-of-water survey. Check out Wooden Boat issue 12 for more build info. I would prefer that both boats go to the same buyer, but they have been apart before. By far the fastest Ê ÓÊ /Ê-/ ,Ê " /Ê£ ÈÎÊ°ÊGlass hull, good Ó condition. Multiple sails, good condition. 2 whisker poles. Elvstrom bailers. Current 2022 registration. Trailer with spare tire. Fast is fun! $1,800. Richmond, CA. stefroche916@gmail.com (916) 303-0459

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Ê xÊ /Ê - " Ê , ",Ê ÓxÊ ÓäänÊ°Ê Ó Pretty, Easy, fast and fun. For a good time, call. $45,000. Sausalito. synetgy@ gmail.com (415) 729-3584 https://tinyurl. com/8jf7fyj2

boat I have ever sailed. Mylar main and jib, spare Mylar jib and a #3 Dacron jib. 2 spinnakers. $20,000. Treasure Island, CA. sawinery2004@yahoo.com (925) 219-2279

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Ê £Ê /Ê 79 Ê Ê /7 Ê £ ÇÈÊ°Ê Î ‘Legacy’ is a beauiful racing boat, and so is ‘Encore’. Want to own a pair of dueling pistols? Check out Wooden Boat issue 12 for all the details. Recent survey out of water. Send an email and I will forward it to you. $20,000. Treasure Island, CA. sha32015@outlook.com (925) 219-2279

Ê Ê /Ê - Ê - ""*Ê £ ÇÈÊ°Ê One Ó owner, good condition, many upgrades plus overhauled engine and electrical system, Monitor windvane and mast tabernacle. Commercial grade 16,000 lb trailer can be towed without permits. See web site for photos. $15,000. Portland, OR. bobbiebl@q.com (503) 621-3520 https://tinyurl.com/f2e3fszm

32 – 35 FEET SAILBOATS

Ê {Ê /Ê - , Ê £ n{Ê°Ê Excellent boat for Î Bay conditions. Lovingly restored by a craftsman. Roomy interior and cockpit with stern pulpit seats. Westerbeke 27 diesel, new Force 10 stove, new batteries, 2008 main still crisp. $39,000. Alameda, CA. 34ftSabre@gmail.com Ê {Ê /Ê 8*, --ÊÎ{Ê£ nÈÊ°ÊVeteran SF Bay Î racer with a winning pedigree. Extensive sail inventory. Proceeds go to youth sailing program. More info and photos at website. $26,500. Alameda, CA. (201) 486-1700 https://javier1596.wixsite. com/1986express34

Ê ÓÊ /Ê Î 6"1,Ê £ n£Ê°Ê Fresh bottom job (Micron 66)! LOA 32 4 Shoal keel (draft 4 -8 ). 100, 150, storm jibs. Yanmar 3GMD 20HP, 2 blade 15×13 prop. Self-tailing 2-speed jib winches, Autohelm 3000 autopilot (plus spare). Aries vane self-steering system. New Al fuel tank. New starter. New SS exhaust elbow. New Jabsco head. Icebox w/refrigeration system. Numerous extra lines, parts and spares. Photos available on request. For info on this model see www. endeavourowners.com/boats/e32/ e32specs.html $15,500 OBO. Grand Marina, Alameda. ahorn1063@gmail.com 925-323-4080

Ê ÎÊ /Ê *"ÊÎäÊ­ " ®Ê£ n{Ê°ÊCarl Î Schumacher-designed Capo 30, built at Westerly Marine. She has a 3-ft sugar scoop designed for her by Schumacher. She has the upgraded rudder (elliptical not trapezoidal) with new rudder bearings. She has a new Yanmar 3ym20 motor that drives a 3-blade feathering prop (20 hrs on the motor). She has a new dripless seal. I had her ready for the 2020 Pac Cup when COVID struck. Since then I injured my back and am unable to sail her. She comes with AIS, marine radio with MMSI, handheld marine radio with MMSI, Furuno radar. She got bottom paint in 2000 when I faired the bottom and the keel. $25,000. Moss Landing. mtmadonna@mac.com (831) 359-3643

Ê ÓÊ /Ê "7 -/ ,ÊÎÓÊ£ ÇÈÊ°Ê ‘Victorious’ Î just returned from 6 months cruising the Sea of Cortez. 26 hp Beta, new B&G electronics, new Victron inverter/charger, new AIS, new staysail Harken furler, Rainman watermaker, Iridium GO!, Torqeedo Travel 603, Avon inflatable dinghy, Hydrovane. $42,000. Vallejo. nscottconstruction@gmail.com (530) 908-6110

Ê {Ê /Ê ,Ê - ""*Ê £ n{Ê°Ê Fast and Î versatile sloop-rigged racer/cruiser. 33-ft 10-in LOA, 11-ft 2-in beam. Well maintained, new diesel tank, stern tube, shaft seal, steering system, rudder, bottom paint, raw water manifold. Fully equipped for cruising with Yanmar 3 GMD 20 hp diesel, dinghy, tools, spare parts, PFDs, safety equipment, Autohelm, new handheld VHF, basic instruments, stereo, galley, bronze BBQ, new cabin heater, jib furler, extra sails, EZ Jacks, Boomkicker, spinnaker pole, ground tackle, folding 2 blade prop, sleeps 6. Set up for single handling. Excellent SF Bay and offshore boat. $25,000 OBO. Richmond Boardwalk (Brickyard Cove), Point Richmond, CA. randall2u@astound. net (925) 519-0471

Ê {Ê /Ê * Ê - , /Ê £ nÇÊ°Ê The Î Pacific Seacraft 34 (“Crealock 34”) was Bill Crealock’s design for a slightly smaller and updated version of his classic cruising sailboat, the PSC 37. ‘Victoria’ is a stunning example of a well-kept Crealock. She has made several trips up and down the Pacific Coast from Washington to Mexico and is well equipped to start the next voyage. Amenities include: Force 10 two-burner propane stove with oven; Adler Barbour Cold Machine refrig w/ freezer box; solar panels (2) on movable rail mounts; dodger and full canvas bimini; Achilles 4-person dinghy, Viking liferaft. AIS, Furuno radar, chartplotter, VHF. New bottom paint. Yanmar diesel 1900 hrs. Email for complete list. $69,000. Point Richmond, CA. jenders@jeffnet.org (541) 821-0929

Ê xÊ /Ê E ÊÎxÊ Ê Ê£ nÎÊ°ÊFully loaded Î and ready for sailing in the Bay/offshore. Brand-new bottom job, with new sails (main, jib), symmetric/asymmetric kite, and autopilot See URL for specs, pics and more info! $29,500 PRICE REDUCED!! Richmond Yacht Club. rune@storesundconsulting.com (510) 225-5389 https://tinyurl.com/mpd7dbbj

Ê ÓÊ /Ê ,, - " Ê £ nÊ°Ê Beautiful, Î strong cruising cutter Herreshoff designed, bowsprit and boomkin, cedar cold-molded hull, full lead keel, spruce spars, sails in great condition (mainsail with 3 reefs; stays’l, jib; 120% Dacron; 120% 1.5 oz. nylon; storm sail; trys’l); Aries wind vane self-steering; 10-ft fiberglass dinghy; sails beautifully; no engine; sail into and out of upwind Berkeley berth or use 16 ft oar; 4 anchors (45# 35# 25# CQR, fisherman); windlass. $39,500. Berkeley. kennoble40@gmail.com (925) 786-7878

Ê xÊ /Ê "7 -/ ,Ê £ ÇÇÊ°Ê Tired of Î the pandemic, or global war? Sail away! The Downeaster 32 is a classic beauty that can take you anywhere in the world. 35-ft overall, 16,000 lbs, 4.5-ft draft, 11-ft beam. Well equipped with Anderson winches, autopilot, davits, Yanmar, GPS, AIS, and Lewmar windlass and bow thruster. $28,500. Brickyard Cove. baysailor1@hotmail.com (510) 309-2164

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• FUEL POLISHING • FUEL FILTERING • BILGE CLEANING • TANK WORK


ÊÎnÊ /Ê / Ê ÎnÊ £ nÎÊ°Ê Universal M35b 4cyl diesel, new s/s prop shaft, new cutlass bearing. North 3DL sails, main, 155%, 130%. North spinnaker. New bottom paint 12/21. Two coats Micron 66. Good racer, cruiser, liveaboard. $29,500. South Beach Harbor. fltrsk38@comcast. net (510) 872-3260 Ê xÊ /Ê- " Ê- / ÊÎxÊ£ Ç Ê°ÊThis Î Bristol-condition boat is being offered with a liveaboard slip in Berkeley, CA, and 5-year financing through financial institutions and vehicle trade might be considered. She is a comfortable fast cruiser, liveaboard, and competitive racer with great sail inventory and many upgrades performed in the last 9 years. Twelve feet of beam and clever use of space give her an amazing and practical interior. $34,500. San Francisco. driente@aol.com (650) 714-7777 ww.schocksantana35.com/

Ê {°xÊ /Ê É£äxÊ£ ÇÊ°Ê Racing- and cruisÎ ing-ready, ‘Big Buoys’ (FKA Ultimatum) is hull #153 and the winner of several regattas. Been regularly maintained and has many sails including recent jib, main and kite. $55,000. South Beach Harbor, San Francisco. colingmiller@sbcglobal. net (415) 370-5675

Ê ÓÊ /Ê 7 Ê / -Ê / -/ Ê Î £ näÊ°Ê A Westsail-like boat, 11-ft beam, 5.3-ft draft, 31.3-ft LOA, 20,000+lb dis, Volvo MD3B frozen — needs replacing, sails old, dodger newer, very stout boat, polyester resin/fiberglass hull, wood deck 1.5-in thick. $7,000 OBO ghenry1102@yahoo.com (510) 501-4927

36 – 39 FEET SAILBOATS ÊÎ ÈÊ /Ê Ê 7, /Ê *, --Ê £ ÇÇÊ° Ê A solid/comfortable bluewater ketch with simplicity throughout. New barrier coat (2013) and Interlux hull paint (2008). Westerbeke 40hp, roller furling jib, Dutchman system, dodger and all lines to the cockpit. USCG documented. $36,276. Coyote Point. christopherjette@gmail.com https://tinyurl.com/5ye5ctyr

Ê ÈÊ /Ê / ÊÎÈÊ Ê ÊÓäääÊ°ÊCondiÎ tion: 4.7 of 5 Totally equipped for cruising off-grid – water and solar. Marina slip included! Fly cheap from Tijuana to condo on the Sea. Gorgeous lifestyle. Super electronics–needs nothing more. $79,500. Marina Palmira, La Paz, MX. davidjvidmar@gmail.com (541) 727-1409

Ê ÈÊ /Ê - Î ,Ê£ Ç Ê°ÊSits in a 40-ft narrow slip in the West Basin, San Francisco Marina. Boat and slip rights sold together. ‘Nimbus’ is an excellent racing and cruising family sailboat for San Francisco Bay. Fiberglass hull and deck, varnished mahogany interior with teak and holly sole. Accommodations: Large “V” berth forward with head to port. Hanging lockers to starboard. Main salon: two settee berths, center table stows out of the way. Double quarter berth to port aft of the navigation station. Galley: Stainless steel sink, icebox, stove/oven. Mast and boom aluminum with stainless steel rigging. Manual jib furling system. Mainsail with two reefs. Jib and spinnaker. Engine: Westerbeke 38. $85,000. West Basin, San Francisco Marina. daphnej@pacbell.net (415) 385-4157

Ê ÈÊ /Ê / Ê­ Óx8*®Ê£ nnÊ°ÊSloop. Î Single Universal Diesel engine, 3-cyl, 4-cycle. Refrigerator. Double SS sink. Microwave. Toilet. Shower. Engine-mounted alternator. Titan VHF transceiver. Autohelm 4000 autopilot. Depthfinder. Threecabin layout. U-shaped dinette. V-berth. Dinghy. Stereo. $39,900. Redwood City, CA. iamerv@gmail.com (916) 792-6389 https://tinyurl.com/2tfm96d8 ÊÎ ÇÊ /Ê 7 / Ê ÎÇÊ £ ÈÇÊ° Ê The Blackwatch 37 is a predecessor of the Tartan 37 and is ready to be out on the water. She used to be a racing boat and was recently outfitted to go cruising. New in last 2 years: Autopilot, watermaker, electric toilet, windlass, anchor & rode, solar. $25,000. Tiburon. ilchianti@gmail. com (916) 995-7853

40 – 50 FEET SAILBOATS Ê ÈÊ /Ê ÉÎÈÊ£ näÊ°Ê Bigger brother of the Î J/24 and J/30, this fractional-rigged boat sails well under the modern 7/8 rig. Cruise with two or race with five crew. The small jib and large mainsail are the key. Has 10 bags of sails, Yanmar diesel, boat cover, new oven, Raymarine instruments, Martec folding prop. Engine mounted over the keel gives brilliant balance. $36,500. Stockton Sailing Club. bonnielopezunr@ gmail.com (209) 772-9695 Ê ÈÊ /Ê - ÊÎÈÊ£ ÇÇÊ°Ê Cascade 36 Î ketch-rigged sailboat, Hull #14. This was originally a kit boat built in Oregon and finished in San Leandro. She sails very well but needs extensive work, as she has been sadly neglected for the last several years. She has three roller-furling jibs, a main, and a mizzen sail. There is a large inventory of accessories and spare parts. For details contact Glen. $10,000 OBO. San Leandro Marina. glenr99@gmail.com (541) 274-9268 Ê /Ê , 9 Ê Î Ê ¼ Î ½]Ê £ ÇnÊ°Ê ‘Candide’ is a Hawaii, Australia and Mexico vet. Yanmar diesel, ProFurl, Monitor windvane, IC-710 SSB, new Spectra watermaker, etc. Selling as is. $30,000 OBO. Brisbane. hogancanoes@aol.com (650) 728-9528 or (650) 773-3834

50 Ton Travelift • DIY Friendly Bottom Paint Packages • Machine Shop on Site Insured Boat Work Professionals Welcome! Info@VallejoMarineCraft.com • 707-554-2813 • www.vallejomarinecraft.com

QUALITY MARINE SERVICES ~ ABYC accredited electrician Installations/Upgrades - Maintenance /Repairs, Selfsteering, Solar, Watermakers, aloft rigging, Vessel Management - Offshore Prep & consultation

qmsboat@gmail.com • (858) 218-4718 ALAMEDA

Ê nÊ /Ê , -" ÊÎn ÓääÊ£ nnÊ°Ê‘Gypsea’ Î has sailed the Mexican waters for seven years and is ready to do so again. She has had much work done in the last six months, including new standing rigging, new refurbished interior, new cushions, keel re-bedded and torqued, new bottom six months ago. She has all that’s needed to explore the Sea of Cortez and mainland Mexico. $69,500. La Paz, MX. gphillips511@yahoo.com (415) 269-8279

Ê ÈÊ /Ê "9Ê Ê £ ÈxÊ°Ê Great world Î cruiser, and great liveaboard. Six-ft headroom, sleeps six, has a 4-cylinder Perkins diesel, brand-new head, and holding tanks. Four brand-new batteries, ship to shore radio and depthsounder, three good headsails, all-teak deck and teak interior. Also included is an 8-ft West Marine dinghy with 2hp Honda 4-stroke motor. I’m only selling this boat due to cancer and chemotherapy. $10,000. Pittsburg Marina. gohdn12@ gmail.com (925) 766-0055

Ê ÓÊ /Ê * --*",/Ê {ÓÊ £ n{Ê°Ê Highly re{ spected worldwide cruiser, structurally sound. With some elbow grease and TLC can be brought back to excellent cruising and cosmetic condition. High-quality cutter rigged project boat with a complete inventory of sails in excellent condition, main almost unused. Teak deck does not leak. 50hp Beta Marine (Kubota) engine (28 hrs)! Superb liveaboard now with beautiful teak interior. Dickinson range/oven, two 7.1-gal alum propane, microwave, built-in fridge/freezer. TV, new mattress (great condition). See complete specs, work needed, and photos at the URL. I am moving to Africa and will sell quickly. accepting the first reasonable offer! A great deal if you apply effort and TLC to a first-class cruiser/ liveaboard. $34,500 OBO. San Rafael. andylists@gmail.com http://tinyurl.com/ PassPort42

COMPLETE MARINE WOODWORK

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NAVAL ARCHITECT – MARINE ENGINEER & MARINE ELECTRICIAN >«Ì> Ê Õ}i ÌÊEÊ Ãà V >ÌiÃÊ­{£x®ÊxΣ È£ÇÓ !UGUST s

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{ÎÊ /Ê " 1 Ê£ ÇÓ°ÊColumbia 43 Mk III, ‘Schuss.’ Mint condition, single owner, SoCal/Catalina sloop. New Harken roller furler system and Quantum genoa, new backstay, new sail pack with lazy jacks, new Quantum mainsail and mast track. Perkins diesel fully serviced. Classic Barient winches. Fine varnished finishes. Keel and mast recently reset. With two Dyer dinghies. $75,000. Long Beach, CA. chrislizza@schat.net (760) 914-1454

Î °xÊ /Ê Ê{äÊ£ ÈÈ°ÊCal 40 #66, ‘Shaman’ modernized sistership to Bermuda Race winner ‘Illusion,’ with all major upgrades. New Ballenger rig 2007, B&G instruments, autopilot, Zeus 10 (2012), Gori Race prop (2021), Waterrat carbon rudder, full set of racing sails. Won her class in 2008 Pac Cup and 2012 Santa Barbara Race, second in class 2016 Singlehanded TransPac. Beautiful interior with premium woodwork, AGM batteries (450Ah 2016), Xantrex sine inverter, Newport watermaker. Much more! Contact me, Tom, for specs. $75,000. Point Richmond. tomburden1@gmail.com (831) 331-8737 https://tinyurl.com/5f9pfj7x

{ÎÊ /Ê*" , -Ê{ÎÊ£ Ç °ÊExtensive refit in 2000 — Lefiell mast, standing rigging, Yanmar 50hp, custom hard dodger, new fuel tanks, LP water heater, BBQ, windlass, roller furling main and jib, MPS, etc. Winner best maintained at SGYC 4 years. New house and start batteries, dinghy. See pictures info at website. Strong cruising boat and great liveaboard. Call Ron. $119,000. San Diego. ron@griffinformation.com (619) 226-6071 https://tinyurl.com/yc7r4p8m {£Ê /Ê /Ê{£Ê£ Ç{°ÊGarmin radar, Harken roller furler, VacuFlush head, Wallas diesel boat heater, Frigi Cold refrigeration, Force 10 propane stove, new electrical panel and wiring, gel cell batteries. $25,000 OBO. San Francisco East Bay. jvodonick@gmail.com (530) 478-1078

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{ÈÊ /Ê Ê , 1Ê£ nÇ°ÊKetch rig. Electric roller-furling main. Manual furling mizzen and genoa. Fully equipped cruiser. Very good condition. Many recent upgrades. Has Icom VHF and SSB. Raymarine and Northstar GPS. Victron charger/inverter, 6 lifeline AGM batteries. 2012 re-fit and re-power. Cummins diesel. Northern Lights genset. 125g fuel. 270g water. Highfield aluminum dinghy. Specs and photos upon request. Serious inquiries only please. Beautiful private marina. Dockage available from seller. $145,000. Blaine, WA. sail2live@hotmail.com (509) 687-6236

{ÎÊ /Ê ,7 Ê {ÎÊ Ê Ê £ nÇ°Ê Center cockpit. Perfect Ha-Ha sailboat, did the 2016 Ha-Ha and have had it in Mexico/La Paz cruising every year. It is in great shape and ready to go without any work — just provision and go. View on Yacht World. It has everything you would need to cruise, full set of sails, dinghy, outboard, Yanmar 66hp turbo with $11k maintenance overall 2016, new Northern Lights generator, new bottom paint, topside vanish in perfect condition, topside waxed in May ’22. Call for more details; motivated to sell and will deliver to San Diego. $89,000. La Paz, MX. scott_johnston63@yahoo. com (775) 722-2051

{ÓÊ /Ê É{ÓÊ£ n°Ê‘Thylacine’, hull number 29, with a carbon mast. She is in excellent condition having received all-new rod, chainplates, and a complete mast rebuild in 2019. She has a Pelagic autopilot from 2019 with a LeComble and Schmitt 50 hydraulic ram, a Monitor windvane, a carbon fiber hard dodger, and many sails ranging from good to excellent condition. ‘Thylacine’ is a fast bluewater cruiser that is ready to go offshore. Contact for a full list of recent upgrades and maintenance and more photos. $135,000. La Paz, BCS, MX. noahhpeffer@gmail.com (562) 822-5027

{£Ê /Ê 7*",/Ê {£Ê £ nÓ°Ê Selling my loved Newport, 30 hrs on rebuilt engine, recent bottom job. New shaft, refrig, diesel heater, and more. I’m getting too old for a boat this size so I bought a smaller boat. $25,000 OBO. Emeryville. Thepaintgod@yahoo.com (415) 233-2845

{äÊ /Ê * --*",/Ê {äÊ £ nÎ°Ê Worldcapable cruiser. Ready to take you cruising. Cutter-rigged. Oversized rigging and 2 large extra cockpit winches. Large sail inventory, VHF, Icom HF, GPS, Aries windvane, Dickinson heater, Autohelm autopilot, Furuno radar, 40 hp Yanmar engine. 3-burner stove/oven, refrig/freezer, Spectra watermaker. 2018, power train refurbished at $20K cost. $135,000 (broker), $125,000 (private). Call or email. $125,000. Orcas Island, WA. svlandsend@yahoo.com (360) 632-8896

{äÊ /Ê É* Ê £ n£°Ê Pacific Puddle Jump veteran, ‘Mandolin’, our seaworthy home for 14+ yrs. Equipped for cruising, stable at sea, custom Hasse sails, meticulously maintained. Galley renovated, rebuilt shower, refinished floors, many upgrades. See link for specs and photos. $135,000. San Diego, CA. loriserocki@yahoo.com https://tinyurl. com/2p898x8h

{nÊ /Ê "9Ê Ê- ""*Ê£ nä°ÊBluewater sailing vessel. Go anywhere with this seaworthy boat. Returned in 2020 from sailing in Mexico for several years, she is outfitted for liveaboard or cruising. Some of the equipment: 1100 watts of solar, C240 Isuzu 60hp main engine, 3kW Yanmar genset, Garmin Navionics. Email for a list of equipment and amenities and photos. $130,000 OBO. Bodega Bay, Spud Point Marina. jholman@sonic.net (707) 529-8982

{äÊ /Ê Ê {äÊ £ ÈÈ°Ê Hull #73. Classic racer/cruiser. If a Cal 40 is on your bucket list this is very clean and mostly original example! Perkins 4108, electric head w/ macerator and tank. Smart charger, 2 batteries. Original “vintage” Tillermaster autopilot and Signet instruments. Harken furling w/cruising yankee 138% and lightly used racing Dacron 150%. Kevlar #3, tallboy. Removable carbon sprit w/2 asymm kites, all original spin gear, poles, 4 kites included. Successful PHRF racer in SoCal. Harken primary self-tailers, halyards led aft w/clutches to cockpit. Stainless cabin top handrails, eyebrows shaved, teak toerail cap. Nice clean updated look. Nice interior foam and cushions. newly recovered cockpit cushions. $34,700. Dana Point, CA. defsailor@gmail.com (949) 510-7353

{äÊ /Ê ,,Ê {äÊ £ Ó°Ê ‘HIgh Five’: Cookson-built Farr 40 / Kevlar hull. Volvo Penta 40 hp; 250 hrs on engine and saildrive. Includes multiple sails. Extremely well maintained. Call to get more details. $50,000. Morro Bay, CA. goldconcept@ sbcglobal.net (805) 550-1118 {äÊ /Ê Ê £ n£°Ê Gary Mull design cruiser/racer sloop. Recent improvements and maintenance completed. Hull good with no blisters. Good sail inventory. Boat lies Newport Harbor. Valued at $38,000. Roche Harbor, WA. jhietbrink@aol.com (949) 640-1754

{ÈÊ /Ê 7Ê< Ê{ÈÊ£ Ç£°ÊCutter rig, New Zealand Yachts, center cockpit, aft cabin, cold molded kauri pine, Dynel cloth, Epiglass design: Jim Young N.A. Re-rigged 2018, New standing and running rigging, North main and jib, lazy jacks, Harken mechanical backstay tensioner, B&G wind and depth instrumentation, Simrad radar, Yanmar 4HJ, 50hp, ZF Trans, Fireboy auto fire extinguisher system, slipstream Aust. Feathering prop, toerails, handrails, caprail, companionway hatches, forward cabin top hatch varnished. Steering: mechanical, hydraulic. Natural gas stove/oven. New 300-ft 5/16 high-test chain, stainless plow anchor, Engel refrigeration, Lavac manual heads. $100,000 Reduced. Long Beach, CA. jimwaide@gmail.com (949) 838-5880


{ÇÊ /Ê -/ Ê 1// ,°Ê Beauty and safety come with this Herreshoff-inspired design. Interior is open, well lit, and nicely ventilated. Light woods with Bristol finish warm the interior. 65hp Yanmar is strong and dependable. Jib, mizzen, main, and genoa are easily handled. Chartplotter, autopilot, and radios keep things simple. $82,000. Suisun City. Mike.seely001@ gmail.com (530) 624-3201

{äÊ /Ê * Ê - , /Ê £ °Ê An impressive bluewater cruiser designed to cross any ocean in safety & comfort. ‘Juniper’ is fully loaded and outfitted for world cruising. Well maintained, extensive spare parts, tools, and gear. $249,000. La Paz, MX. juniper@latitude23.net tinyurl.com/49d5uycf xäÊ /Ê 1 -" Ê ", Ê xäÊ £ Çn°Ê Center cockpit, 80hp Ford Lehman w/3600 hrs. Aft queen berth w/windows. Yanmar 90 Amp genset. Lower teak decks replaced, Sitka spruce main, aluminum mizzen. $75,000. Berkeley. Tcparfitt@yahoo.com (707) 8612954 48 FT Suncoast 1980. Type of vessel: ketch. Estimated speed: 10 kt power, 6-8 kt sail. Built Netherlands 1980. Time of lay-up: fall 2012. Hull: length 48-ft, beam 15-ft, draft 7-ft. Frames: varied dimensional steel. Topsides single skin steel plate, 1/4 thick estimated; bottom single skin steel plate, 1/4 thick estimated; deck and bulkheads steel plate. Hull layout: V-berth, forward head, forward triple berth, settee/berth, chart station, galley, captain’s berth, engine/machinery/ maintenance room, after master bath, after head, straight inboard diesel engine auxiliary powered. New bow thruster (2010), electronics, autopilot, forward underwater sonar. Six-cyl Leyland diesel, midline, 350 gal water, 250 gal fuel. Pictures at website. $54,900. Cleveland, OH. maudeij@yahoo.com.au (954) 235-2527 http://guapasailboat.com

CLASSIC BOATS

{ÈÊ /Ê-7 Ê£ nΰÊDesigned by German Frers and built in 1983 in the Nautor Swan yard in Finland, Mark I Hull #009. Swan is synonymous with fast cruising vessels of the highest quality. Bottom painted 12/31/2020, two coats of Trinidad HD blue. Large aft master stateroom with centerline berth. Guest stateroom forward with pilot berths in the main salon. Can sleep 8. Standing rigging over 12 years old. Local estimate for new rod rigging $15k. Fin keel draft 8-ft. Crafted teak interior exceptionally well maintained and boasts a large main salon. Perkins 4-154, 741 hrs. Fuel 100 gal, water 127. Holding tank 30; electric head. Good sail inventory. Please email for more details $110,000 SELL. San Francisco. whackel@yahoo.com

Îx /Ê 7 ,

,Ê 9 7 ]Ê £ Î °Ê Low hrs

Yanmar diesel. NEW: worm drive steering, SS fuel tanks, solar panels, air head, Simrad plotter and more. Completed extensive boatyard overhaul. Master Mariner race winner, Transpac vet. $11,000. Owl Harbor. sagieber@gmail.com (206) 384-1175

MULTIHULLS

ÓÇÊ /Ê Óx ÊÓäää°ÊSuperb F25C trimaran. Price reduced. $34,500 OBO. Los Angeles, CA. davidcollins@mindspring.com

ÈäÊ /Ê ,, - " Ê , "Ê *" "Ê - "" ,Ê£ Ç£°Ê‘Valkyrie’ is a threemasted double-ended schooner, hull speed of 11 1/2 knots, has been up to 18 knots. Equipment: Three masts are Sitka spruce, short-rigged; has double rollerfurling jibs and full sail complement, with specially designed sail covers. Hercules diesel engine 6 cylinder. 6 solar panels, Stainless steel water tanks will hold over 150 gal. Wood carving interior, tool room with tools included. Chart station with charts of the world, and all the electronics go with boat. Full galley, gimbaled 4-burner stove, double sink, microwave, and all the kitchen wares to stay. Fridge and separate freezer. Washing machine, 2 oil heaters, scuba gear, dinghy and outboard. $295,000. Half Moon Bay. Jdjellis@hotmail.com (805) 696-8513

Î Ê /Ê ," ,Ê / 9 ",Ê £ nÓ°Ê 39-ft trimaran for sale. Custom designed and built. Wood epoxy construction, Rotating wingmast, Gougeon Brothers design. Full batten main. Andersen winches. Aux capable – sleeps 4-6. Call Tom. $14,900. San Diego. irunpctsd@gmail.com (619)

POWER & HOUSEBOATS

293-5044

{ÇÊ /Ê / Ê{Ç£ÊÓäää°ÊMy wife and {ÓÊ /Ê - "7Ê - ""*Ê £ Σ°Ê One-of-akind vessel. ‘Alma’s little sister. Built to last of old-growth Douglas fir and powered by a working 2-cylinder Hicks engine. Beloved boat with rich history, ‘Squarehead’ is ready for her next steward. $50,000. California Delta. SQHDforsale@gmail.com

{äÊ /Ê /, , Ê ÓääÓ°Ê Jim Antrimdesigned, built to break records, this trimaran is still the fastest 40- x 33-ft, 6700lb, trailerable offshore trimaran in North America. Carbon hulls, Marstrom carbon mast. Cost over $600k in 2002, built by Sn composites in Montreal. Sister ship still owns California-to-Japan solo record, PHRF approximately -68. Priced low for upgrades. Specs on Jim Antrim’s design, ‘Zephyr’. Consider trade-in. $185,000. Reno, NV. Multihuler@ aol.com (775) 722-5677 20 FT TomCat 2000. Catamaran, excellent condition. Accommodates eight. Includes mainsail, jib, and genoa; Yamaha 9.9hp outboard; dual rudders with wheel and tiller steering; bimini top; ST60 Tridata instruments; compass; trailer; anchor with chain and much more. $19,500. Lake Almanor, CA. mjpboat.6.2@gmail.com (650) 924-0849. https://tinyurl.com/24a6pvaf

power – twin 9.8-hp outboards. Cruising

I are considering selling ‘Footloose.’ ÎÈÊ /Ê , -Ê , /Ê " -/ / " Ê £ È£°Ê ‘Some Day,’ with swept foredeck, a “midcentury modern” classic. Newly re-powered (350s) with full replacement of the bottom planking (2005), perfectly tuned, looking for new lover. $18,000. Fortman Marina, Alameda. info@erwanillian.com (510) 847-2898

{ÈÊ /Ê / , Ê ÓäÓä°Ê Catamaran project, fiberglass hulls, gear to finish, needs interior. Mast, boom, sails, engine, 20+ new Lewmar ports and hatches, 24-ft container, pulpits, stanchions, lifelines. Yard to finish, easy move $50,000 or offer. $50,000 OBO. Santa Rosa, CA. john@ windtoys.net (707) 696-3334

Recently completed updates on paint and teak, maintained/repaired with the highest quality products. This is a great boat we have owned since late 2013. $499,000. Cartagena, Colombia. michael@sailfootloose.com (510) 9102099 https://tinyurl.com/2p8k3ntr

ÓnÊ /Ê* Ê,1 "1/ÊqÊ " " 1 Ê £ Ó°Ê–Owned for 14 years with custom trailer built in 2015. Great Delta and Bay boat with 540 bbc – 4.5 factory bored. All roller rocker drivetrain – Merlin heads. All hardware for hd use. B&M – PMT 2 speed trans. Latham power steering. Gil exhaust. SSM#3 outdrive. Rolla-4 Blade Cleaver prop. Drop out seats. No head, no galley. 85-gal fuel tank. Runs like a champ! $26,500. Santa Cruz, CA. sst90@ earthlink.net (831) 479-1595 !UGUST s

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PARTNERSHIPS - 1- /"Ê - Ê * ,/ ,- *°Ê Seeking one well-qualified sailor to acquire one-fifth equity share of our long-running Morgan 382 partnership. Boat specs at website. Boat is in excellent condition, recently upfitted with new rig and sails. For less than monthly berth rent, enjoy turnkey sailing on a solid, well-found Bay sailboat with plenty of availability. $1 million insurance policy plus LLC status for liability protection. All boat maintenance and LLC business handled by local manager. $12K buy-in + $500/mo. Sausalito. macdonaldtom4@ gmail.com (916) 529-6582 https://tinyurl. com/bde3vj4t - Ê " +1 /9Ê * ,/ ,°Ê Seeking a non-equity partner for a 2004 C&C 99 (32.5-ft). It’s clean, well-equipped and maintained. Berthed in South Beach Harbor. I’m looking for someone to share the monthly slip fee, insurance, and routine maintenance (including an annual haulout and bottom painting). I have 35+ years of sailing experience and would prefer a partner with at least a few years of experience. Photos and more details available upon request. Serious inquiries only. South Beach Harbor. matt.snipp@ hotmail.com (408) 204-7142 "" Ê ",Ê " /Ê * ,/ ,- *°Ê Looking for partnership on 30-50-ft sailboat, preferably East Bay. Equity and non-equity considered. Have 20+ years of experience sailing on the Bay and chartering internationally. I have partnered successfully on a 31-ft Beneteau for five years. Now I have a small sailing dog that I want to sail with me and the others are allergic. Looking for a clean boat in good condition that is sailed regularly, and responsible, nice sail partners. Berkeley. ddodgesf@gmail.com / , Ê 19 ]Ê , /Ê ",Ê *1, - °Ê Wanted: Equity or rental partnership in 35’-42’ (+/-) cruising catamaran. Either buy-in (or rent) into existing boat or purchase with partner(s) new/used boat. Experienced bay and costal sailor for 25 years.Contact Jim. jim-hawley@ix.netcom.com (510) 928 1327

PROPERTY FOR SALE OR RENT

, / Ê 7 / , ," /Ê Ê /"7 " °Ê Dramatic waterfront Alameda 3BR/2.5 BA townhome with a private 44-ft deep-water slip attached to the property. An impressive 2,054 sq ft with multiple living spaces all designed to overlook the glistening Ballena Bay. $1,249,000. leah@leahtounger.com (510) 701-6497 https://tinyurl.com/3wdmepyu 0AGE s

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SOUTH OF THE BORDER

, 7"" Ê /9Ê , Ê - *-Ê 6 °Ê Slips 30 -75 at great rates! Amenities: parking, bathrooms, laundry, pump-out, free wi-fi, keyless entry. Guest berths also available. Call for availability. 451 Seaport Court, Redwood City, CA 94063. crevay@ redwoodcityport.com (650) 306-4150 www.redwoodcityport.com/marina

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES * Ê 9"1,Ê 8 Ê / 7 9Ê "7°ÊAt the gorgeous Cielo Y Mar condos. Located in Punta Mita, 35 minutes from Puerto Vallarta, available to rent from private owner. On the beach, 10 feet from the water, they offer spectacular views of ocean and mountains, the biggest infinity pool in the area, an endless beach, great surf breaks, great fishing, tremendous views of whales, bird life and the islands. While uncrowded and tranquil, just a fiveminute walk to several waterfront restaurants. Choose from a spacious, beautifully furnished one- or three-bedroom unit, or an amazing two-story penthouse with lovely shade trellis on the top floor. To reserve, call or email Dona de Mallorca. puntamitabeachfrontcondos@gmail.com (415) 269-5165 http://

181,9Ê - Ê ,/ ,Ê 1- --Ê ",Ê - °Ê Highly successful crewed-charter business with established history of full seasons and satisfied clients. Includes immaculate fivestateroom sailing yacht with coastwise trade endorsement, beautiful website, color brochure and fabulous reviews. This has been a perfect full-time career for the current owners and will be a great turnkey business. Serious inquiries call or email for details. San Juan Islands, WA. stephen@ibainc.com (425) 454-3052 https://ibainc.com/

CREW

BERTHS & SLIPS ,9Ê "6 Ê9 Ê- *Ê ",Ê, /°Ê$450 per month. 40 x 13.5. 40ft in beautiful, totally upgraded Emery Cove Yacht Harbor. One month free rent with one-year lease. Call Heinz for more information. $450. Emeryville, CA. hj.dallmann@yahoo.com (310) 804-1196 ÎxÊ /Ê- *Ê-1 - °ÊMonth-to-month sublease at South Beach Harbor on Dock D from June till the end of October $500. San Francisco. spodshivalov@gmail.com (408) 314-1511

Ê "6 ÊpÊ " 1 1 °ÊOwn this slip in Glen Cove. Like a condominium, there is a small HOA monthly. This slip is 55-ft long and can accommodate a 57-ft boat. Located just in front of the Glen Cove lighthouse building with easy access and a short walk from the parking area. This marina is protected from the wind on three sides. No noticeable tide surge. Easy to maneuver with lots of turning room. $100,000. Glen Cove Marina. rlee@remax.net (707) 333-83087 ÎÈÊ /Ê- *Ê /Ê* ,ÊÎ °ÊMany attractions on the Pier, clean private restrooms with showers and laundry facilities. Discounted secure parking available. $4,400. San Francisco. sailingfearless@gmail.com (415) 745-2292

1-/" Ê 1 /*,"" Ê ,1 - Ê /, , Ê - -Ê 8* , Ê , 7°ÊLong- and short-term positions. Individual(s) or one-berth team. Please see website for detailed information on boat and crew opportunities. Humboldt Bay. svSurrender1@Yahoo.com http:// www.svSurrender.com , 7°ÊSeeking EXPERIENCED race crew, Wednesday evenings for one-design racing on Merit 25s, in the South Bay, sponsored by Spinnaker Sailing, Redwood City. Usually 6-10+ Merits racing. Fun. Competitive. Burgers and beer after. Call Steve. sklein42@gmail.com (650) 269-1030 6 /1, Ê - °Ê Join us for an ocean passage in 2022. andy@sailingbiz.com (707) 953-0434 http://www. sailingbiz.com

JOB OPPORTUNITIES / /1 ÊÎnÊ -/, / 6 Ê-1* *",/Ê " Ê"**",/1 /9°ÊLatitude 38 has a position for a passionate sailor to support our key mission of serving the West Coast sailing community as the source of news, entertainment, inspiration and connection. The position will support Latitude 38’s growth along with the health of the local sailing community. To achieve this we are looking for a creative, inspired individual who will support our editorial, sales and production teams. Learn more here. www.latitude38.com/ job-opportunities/

- ,6 Ê , /",Ê" Ê/ ʺ »Ê "1/Ê " Ê * ,Ê Î °Ê Potential candidate: Check all incoming paperwork, contact all families via phone throughout the week to confirm voyage plans. Full-time position that requires the use of a personal vehicle. Work-related mileage will be reimbursed. The Service Director position is also a face-to-face customer service-oriented position. Duties include: Meet and greet guests as they arrive. Review details of the voyage plan, safety features and boarding procedures with guests. Help with passenger boarding. Maintain a clean vessel, which includes cabin prep and cleaning, and vessel washing. Check documentation for correctness and completeness, and file. Guide guests during the voyage and ceremony. Public speaking before, during, and after services. $25. San Francisco Pier 39. brian.adams@ sci-us.com (707) 710-6771 https://tinyurl. com/25dtjbzr Ê , ",Ê - Ê * ,/ / Ê , ",Ê ,°Ê GHCA is hiring a harbor manager to provide administrative and logistical support to Sausalito’s working waterfront community of marine-related workers and artists. This is a 20-hrs-a-week job (including health benefits and vacation) for someone who likes to work independently on a range of different projects in an office that is equal parts outside and on the water. Some onsite evening meetings required; there is flexibility in arranging your work schedule. You should have proven communication, administrative, and project management skills. Please see our website or send an email for more details. www.galileeharbor.org/jobs. Sausalito, CA. galileeharbor@gmail.com Ê/ °ÊThe Canvas Works, on the water in Sausalito, specializing in custom canvas fabrication for marine and other applications, is seeking to fill a field and in-house technician position. This job is full time, weekdays 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Responsibilities: Install canvas covers and structures on boats, homes, and commercial buildings. Oversee and organize shop mechanical areas, supplies and equipment. Demonstrate proficient operation of hand and power tools. Safely operate company vehicles. Qualified candidates must have solid mechanical skills, be proficient using hand and power tools. Training available for job specifics. Contact Lisa for more details. lisa@ thecanvasworks.com (415) 331-6527 https://tinyurl.com/2p8dd8ae */°Ê , Ê ¼-Ê - Ê -Ê , Ê */ -! We are seeking licensed captains for private charters on our three boats in Sausalito and Alameda. Our motto is “Best Day Ever” because we emphasize providing our guests with great customer service. Check out our reviews on Yelp/Google. We train our team and maintain our boats to high standards for safety and comfort. Part- or full-time possible. Please send résumé to email below. Thanks! joe@sfbaysail.com http://sfbaysail.com


Ê , Ê " -/,1 / " Ê - - * ,-" Ê°Ê Bellingham Marine is seeking a salesperson for the Northern California office. Join the industry leader in marina design and construction to help maintain and grow the division’s sales program. Learn more about the Project Development Coordinator position at BellinghamMarine.com/Apply or call (707) 678-2385 and ask for Bryce or Eric. Dixon, CA. bfisher@bellingham-marine.com (707) 678-2385 https://tinyurl.com/yeyrs8jz

Ê " /9 , Ê ,Ê 7 / Ê°Ê Spaulding Marine Center (501c3 nonprofit organization) is currently seeking an experienced Boatyard Manager to oversee our educational working boatyard. Candidates should have ABYC qualifications with relevant time and experience in similar roles. Healthcare and other fulltime benefits included. Applications are open online on our website. Sausalito, CA. education@spauldingcenter.org (415) 332-3179 https://tinyurl.com/59r37fmv

Ê , Ê - Ê -/,1 /",-Ê°Ê Inspire Sailing Berkeley is looking for sailing instructors to join our growing team! USCG OUPV License is required, though if you are interested in getting your captain’s license we can help out there too. We have opportunities to teach aboard both tiller- and wheel-steered sportboats as well as larger cruising boats. We focus on the education of adults in a fun, welcoming and safety-oriented environment. Located in the heart of SF Bay, we are just minutes from the best sailing grounds, not miles! Do you enjoy racing? Our performance program is going strong and we need racing- and spinnakerexperienced captains as well. US Sailing and ASA Instructors welcome! Competitive pay! Free boat use! Fun! Berkeley, CA. careers@inspiresailing.com (510) 8311800 https://tinyurl.com/bdhdzn6c

, Ê / Ê Ê, * ,Ê * ,-" Ê°ÊSpinnaker Sailing in Redwood City is looking for someone to assist in the maintenance and repair of our fleet of 30 sailboats. Should be familiar with sailboat rigging, ship’s systems, outboard motors, light electrical, plumbing and diesel engine service. Consider either part time or full time. Pay rate commensurate to experience. Call or email Rich. Redwood City, CA. rich@spinnakersailing.com (650) 363-1390 http://Spinnakersailing.com

Ê , Ê ,Ê°Ê Oakland Marinas. The Marina Manager handles all aspects of marina operations within budgetary guidelines in an efficient, cost-effective and creative manner, and is responsible for improving the marina’s guest services level, performance, efficiency, and profitability. Marina Manager will be an excellent leader and provide the highest level of customer service in a friendly, helpful manner while accurately responding to the customers’ needs. Projects a professional company image through all types of interaction. Please email résumé. Oakland. jhayes@almar.com http://almar.com Ê " Ê "1,Ê / Ê " Ê -/,1 /",-tÊ Spinnaker Sailing in Redwood City is looking for ASA-certified sailing instructors to teach out of our Redwood City Marina location. Part-time, flexible schedules, midweek and/or weekends. Please contact Rich or Bob by phone or email. Redwood City Marina. office@spinnakersailing.com (650) 3631390 http://www.spinnakersailing.com

Ê 7"Ê , ",-Ê , ",Ê / * ,/ /Ê *"- / " -Ê 6 Ê°Ê Positions available! Two Harbors Harbor Department, on the west end of Catalina Island. Looking for experienced boat operators for seasonal harbor patrol positions (March – October). Harbor patrol assigns and facilitates the use of 700+ moorings on the west end of Catalina Island and assists with transporting passengers to and from shore. USCG license required for passenger transport, seasonal mooring included for patrol personnel with liveaboard vessels. Inquire at website. Jrconner@scico.com (310) 510-4254 https://tinyurl.com/wheb7kvn

Ê- /1 /Ê ," /Ê EÊ 6 /Ê "", /",Ê° Ê Front Desk person: Meet and Greet drop-ins. Comfortable handling Sales/Enrollment and scheduling for courses. Mini retail too. Book and coordinate charters. Help with Member Events & daily operations. Requirements: Good communication skills both phone and written, computer and internet savvy, working sailing vocabulary. Sail training added benefit! Start part-time. Flexible schedule. $=Experience. Other team members needed: Captains & Instructors – Keel, Small Boat & Cat. Fleet care person to prepare boats, then turn-around to be ready to go again. Oakland. info@afterguard.net (510) 535-1954 http:// www.afterguard.net

Ê /Ê- ,6 Ê-/ Ê°ÊClub Nautique has an opening for a full-time Fleet Service Staff in Sausalito. No experience necessary. We will train the right candidate. Job responsibilities include: Cleaning both the interior and exterior of sailboats and powerboats. Fueling and pumping out boats, which requires driving them to and from the fuel docks. Working with the standing and running rigging. Inspecting the vessel and its systems to ensure all are in good working order before and after charters. Assisting members with questions and troubleshooting issues before charters. Sausalito. jnassoiy@ clubnautique.net (415) 332-8001 http:// clubnautique.net

Ê Ê- Ê / ,ÊqÊ6" 1 / ,-Ê°ÊVolunteer docents wanted to staff educational science exhibitions. Volunteer or contract graphic designer wanted. Photographers and photography wanted. Ask about other volunteer positions. info@ sailingscience.org (510) 390-5727 https:// www.sailingscience.org/

Ê "Ê- Ê Ê 6 -Ê -Ê , ÊpÊ 1 / * Ê *"- / " -Ê°Ê SLO Sail and Canvas is hiring for multiple positions in our busy sail loft in beautiful San Luis Obispo, California. We specialize in building boat covers, trampolines, and sails for sailing dinghies, one-designs, and beach catamarans. The following job opportunities are open for immediate fulfillment: Sailmaking Department Manager, Manufacturing Assistant — Industrial Department, Production Sewing & Prep — Trampoline or Boat Cover Department, and Office Assistant. To learn more about each job opening, visit website. erik@slosailandcanvas.com (805) 4796122 ext.9 https://tinyurl.com/fpdkrmt Ê -/,1 /",-Ê 7 / Ê° Ê Join the captains at Club Nautique and start teaching US Sailing’s most comprehensive curriculum of sail and power courses, both offshore and inshore, in the nation. We have openings now for USCG-licensed captains who exhibit exceptional communication and boating skills, and the willingness to train and work in a professional environment. Fulltime and part-time positions available. schooldirector@clubnautique.net (510) 865-4700 X313 www.clubnautique.net Ê- " /Ê , ,Ê 7 / Ê°Ê South Beach Riggers is located in Sausalito, California, and has been in the rigging business for over 30 years. Currently we are looking for a motivated individual to join our skilled team. Our sailboat riggers are responsible for effectively and efficiently installing, maintaining, repairing, and replacing sailboat rigging and sail systems. An ideal candidate would be familiar with boats and nomenclature, mechanically inclined, and experienced in the use of basic hand tools, air tools and electric power tools, but we are willing to train the right person. If you are interested in working with and learning from an experienced leader in the marine industry, please contact us today! Compensation based on experience. Free parking, waterfront location. Sausalito. southbeachriggers@gmail.com (415) 331-3400

Ê 8* , Ê 9 /Ê ," ,Ê ÉÊ - -* ,-" Ê Ê° Ê Rubicon Yachts is seeking a professional yacht broker/salesperson for its new Alameda, CA office. Yacht sales experience required, must be a self-starter, membership in CYBA is a plus. Contact owner/ broker Mark Miner. Alameda, CA. mark@ rubiconyachts.com http://rubiconyachts. com

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Ê - Ê */ Ê7 / Ê°ÊWanted: Licensed Captain with towing endorsement for TowBoatUS./Vessel Assist on the San Francisco Bay and Delta. Preferred if you live by SF waterfront, Alameda or Bethel Island areas. Philipdelano@gmail. com (925) 382-4422 http://vesselassistsanfrancisco.com Ê - Ê */ Ê7 / Ê* ,ÊÎ ]Ê S.F. Wanted to operate 28-ft passenger RHIB Boat ‘Bay Voyager’ out of Pier 39. We are committed to providing the highest level of customer service and expect the same of our captains. Job includes vessel safety, live narration and interaction with passengers. Previous RHIB boat exp., tour guide exp., second language, former USCG, area all preferred. Please reply to this posting and attach your résumé in PDF format. Pier 39, S.F. charles@bayvoyager.com (510) 612-1251 https://bayvoyager.com/

GEAR

Ê ," 1, Ê Ê 1, Ê-9-/ Ê°ÊVery * good condition used R42 model. All parts are included and in serviceable condition. Previously fitted on a 40-ft performance cruising monohull. Approx headstay length = 54-55-ft. Max luff length = 53-ft (absolute). The maximum hoist on the jib furler was 52.30 ft. This dimension is from the shackle on top of the furling drum to the shackle on the bottom of the halyard swivel two-blocked/full hoist. Call or text with any questions. $850. Richmond, CA. drapem21@yahoo.com (559) 360-4011

TRYING TO LOCATE

Ê // -Ê ",Ê Ê1 " Ê , " /Ê° Ê ISO owner of a Lake Union Dreamboat bought at auction from Oyster Point Marina after she sank. I have fittings that I want to return. Peninsula. Sheilaholmes@mac.com

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Ê " / Ê 9"1,Ê " /Ê°Ê The Bay Area Association of Disabled Sailors strives to make sailing accessible to people with disabilities. BAADS is always on the lookout for donated boats to support its mission. Help an all-volunteer organization while receiving a charitable tax deduction. boatdonations@baads.org (415) 532-9831

MISCELLANEOUS

WE’RE EXPERTS IN HAULOUTS

Ê Ê - Ê°Ê 40-ft double-spreader, tapered mast section #4430 with running and standing rigging. Four North Sails, four Barient winches. Lots of hardware and much more! $2,500. cblair1015@ yahoo.com (209) 704-4982

BayAreaMarineServices.com

Ê Ê , ",Ê , / Ê 9Ê ÓäÓÓÊ°ÊJoin Galilee Harbor for a day of live music, fish and chips and homemade pie at our annual Maritime Day festival on Saturday, August 6 from 8 am – 6 pm. Bring the whole family to this free event located on the Sausalito waterfront. Wooden boat building, dinghy dash race, historic vessels, free boat rides. Shop the marine flea market and artist booths. Purchase a ticket for the Olde Tyme Jar Raffle to win a prize donated by local merchants. Relax by the Bay, listen to music, hang out with friends. It’s a fun day for everyone! 300 Napa Street, Sausalito, CA. galileeharbor@gmail.com (415) 332-8554 https://tinyurl.com/4nmw77se

/ /1 Ê În½-Ê Ê , 7Ê -/Ê * ,/9Ê -Ê tÊ 6-9 p.m. Thursday, September 1, at the Spaulding Marine Center in Sausalito. A social event that connects people who want to sail with boat owners looking for crew. Find a boat, find a ride, find crew for cruising, racing or sailing on the Bay. Everyone is welcome, no reservations required, come as you are. Included in the $10 price of admission are free munchies, Latitude 38 logowear door prizes, color-coded, informational name tags, and a sailing slide show. Free to officially registered 2022 Baja Ha-Ha skippers and first mates. Bonus: Baja Ha-Ha Mexico Cruising Seminar from 4 to 5:30. Admission $10. Free to officially registered 2022 Baja Ha-Ha skippers and first mates. No-host bar benefits Spaulding Marine Center; Casablanca food truck.

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>Ê*>âÊ ÀÕ ÃiÀÃÊ -Õ«« ÞÊ À iÀ>}i 55’ Waterline 55, 2003 ..............$825,000 55’ 1998 Bruce Roberts Ketch ..$234,000 48’ Salazar 48, 1991 ...................$49,000 46’ 1999 Robert Perry ............. $249,000 45’ Bruce Roberts, 1982 .............$40,000 43’ 2005 Beneteau 423 ............$150,000 42’ Catalina 42 MK I .................$109,000 42’ J42, 1998 ...........................$166,000 42’ 1977 Grand Banks 42 ........$125,000 42’ Hunter 42, 1991 ..................$120,000

42’ Robert Perry Tatoosh, 1982 .........$105,000 42’ Catalina 42 Mk II, 2006 .......$169,000 40’ Pacific Seacraft,1999 .........$249,000 39’ Freedom 39, 1983.................$49,900 38’ Ericson 38-200, 1988 ...........$69,500 37’ Bruce Roberts, 2005 .............$55,000 36’ Catalina 36, 2000 ..................$79,500 33’ Ranger 33 1978 ....................$25,000 32’ Tiara 3200, 2009 .................$195,000

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The Cruiser's Home in Mexico MARINE BATTERIES Available at the following local marine chandleries and service distributors: ALAMEDA The Boatyard at Grand Marina Blue Pelican Star Marine Svendsen's Chandlery BERKELEY Berkeley Marine Center BETHEL ISLAND Marine Emporium DISCOVERY BAY Energy Technology Systems

MARTINEZ Martinez Bait & Tackle OAKLAND Outboard Motor Shop RICHMOND Swedish Marine Bay Marine KKMI VACAVILLE Tim Wiest Yacht Services

AMERICAN BATTERYÊÊUÊÊ >ÞÜ>À`]Ê ÊÊUÊÊ(510) 259-1150

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7 `i Ê >ÌÊ Õ ` }ÊUÊ,i«> ÀÊ> `Ê,iÃÌ À>Ì £ ÓnäÊ- ÕÌ Ê >ÀL ÀÊ À ÛiÊUÊ ÀÌÊ À>}}]Ê Ê x{ÎÇ

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Please visit www.jimdewitt.com regularly as we are working hard to fill the site with images to enjoy!

DeWitt Art Gallery & Framing (510) 236-1401 pam@jimdewitt.com Online Stores: www.jimdewitt.com www.DeWittAmericasCupArt.com

ADVERTISERS' INDEX American Battery ................... 111 www.americanbatterycompanyofhayward.com ATN ....................................... 78 www.atninc.com Bainbridge International............ 42 www.bainbridgeintusa.com Baja Ha-Ha Beach Party ........... 69 www.vivalapaz.net Ballad of Calypso .................... 45 www.balladofcalypso.com Bay Area Marine Services....... 110 www.bayareamarineservices.com

Club Nautique ......................... 12 www.clubnautique.net

FlopStopper........................... 111 www.flopstopper.com

Island Yacht Club .....................28 www.iyc.org

CMANC ................................. 23 www.cmanc.org

Folkboat Association ................30 www.sfbayfolkboats.org

Keenan Filters ..........................36 www.ktisystems.com

Compass Canvas ..................... 41 www.compass-canvas.com

Gianola Canvas Products ........ 111 www.gianolacanvas.com

KISS-SSB/Radioteck ...............110 www.kiss-ssb.com

Cruising Specialists .................. 14 www.boats.network/cruisingspecialists

Grand Marina ........................... 2 www.grandmarina.com

KKMI - Full Service Boatyard .......3, 116 www.kkmi.com

Cruising Yachts ........................37 www.cruisingyachts.net

H&M Marine / Beta Marine Engines / Hirschfeld Yachts ...................35 www.betamarinewest.com

La Paz Cruisers Supply ...........110 www.lapazcruiserssupply.com

Defender Industries ...................15 www.defenderus.com

Harbor Island West Marina ..... 101 www.harborislandwest.com

Lind Marine .............................31 www.lindmarine.com

Bay Maritime Group................. 13 www.bay-ship.com

Denison Yachting ................... 115 www.denisonyachtsales.com

Helmut's Marine Service ...........44 www.helmutsmarine.com

List Marine Enterprises ..............43 www.listmarine.com

Bay View Boat Club ................. 63 www.bayviewboatclub.org

DeWitt Studio ........................ 112 www.jimdewitt.com

Heritage Marine Insurance ........ 44 www.heritagemarineinsurance.com

Makela Boatworks .................111 www.makelaboatworks.com

Berkeley Marina ...................... 18 www.berkeley-marina.com/

Division of Boating & Waterways.. 27 www.dbw.ca.gov

Hood Sails .............................. 29 www.hoodsails.de/en

Marina Bay Yacht Harbor .........42 www.marinabayyachtharbor.com

Berkeley Marine Center ............ 63 www.berkeleymarine.com

Downwind Marine ...................33 www.downwindmarine.com

Hotel Coral & Marina ............. 100 www.surfnet.com/coral

Marina de La Paz ....................71 www.marinadelapaz.com

Boat Yard at Grand Marina, The 10 www.boatyardgm.com

Emery Cove Yacht Harbor .........33 www.emerycove.com

Hydrovane .............................. 71 www.hydrovane.com

Marina El Cid ........................111 www.elcid.com

Brisbane Marina ...................... 79 www.brisbaneca.org/marina

Fisheries Supply Co. .................35 www.fisheriessupply.com

Inspire Sailing..........................43 www.inspiresailing.com

Marina Village.........................24 www.marinavillageharbor.com

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38’ ENDEAVOUR 38 Y TERE MON ’84 $62,500 Limit Up. A comfortable sailer that provides performance beyond expectations. Beautiful lines and she is a lot of boat for the price! 70’ SANTA CRUZ 70 ’85

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37’ BANJER 37 ’70 $99,000 KNOCKABOUT. Very capable boat that has been cruised extensively, With her blue water gear she’s $59,500 ready to carry on in 38’ PEARSON INVICTA II ’66 Jigger. Rejuvenated classic turns heads wherever she comfort and safety. goes. Custom companionway, newer standing rigging and Yanmar diesel. A real treat!

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31’ PEARSON 31-2 ’89 $38,000 Satva. A fast boat with ample sail area proportioned into a powerful rig. Contemporary hull $9,900 A very clean vessel. In 33’ RANGER 33 ’74 Le Bel Age. Great opportunity to own a classic racer/ Monterey. cruiser. Fun on the racecourse and enough room on board to enjoy a cruise to Catalina.

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43’ HANS CHRISTIAN 43 ’80 $150,000 Josephine. One of the most sought-after boats for safety and stability. Comfortable and easy to sail around the world or around the bay.

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38’ CUSTOM BLOCK ISLAND BOAT ’60 $39,500 Scrimshaw. This wide beamed double-ender with great handling qualities is a natural for short-handed sailing. Impeccably maintained.

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ADVERTISERS' INDEX – cont'd Mariners Insurance ................... 26 www.marinersinsurance.com

Richard Boland Yacht Sales .....114 www.richardbolandyachts.com

South Beach Harbor ................. 32 www.sfport.com/southbeachharbor

The Moorings .......................... 19 www.moorings.com

Richardson Bay Marina ............ 35 www.richardsonbaymarina.com

South Beach Yacht Club ............ 74 www.southbeachyachtclub.org

Modern Sailing School & Club .. 37 www.modernsailing.com

Richmond Boardwalk ................41 richmondboardwalk.com

Spaulding Marine Center .......... 83 www.spauldingcenter.org

Napa Valley Marina ................ 16 www.napavalleymarina.com NAVTEC ................................. 62 www.navtechydraulics.com Neil Pryde Sails ....................... 45 www.neilprydesails.com Outboard Motor Shop .............. 37 www.outboardmotorshop.com Owl Harbor Marina ................. 71 owlharbor.com Passage Nautical ....................... 5 www.passagenautical.com Quantum Pacific ...................... 63 www.quantum.com Raiatea Carenage Services ....... 98 www.raiateacarenage.com Rainman ................................. 25 www.rainmandesal.com

Rubicon Yachts................... 7, 8, 9 www.rubiconyachts.com Sailrite Kits .............................. 17 www.sailrite.com San Francisco on the Bay .......... 40 www.sfonthebay.com/list-38 Schaefer Marine ......................38 www.schaefermarine.com Seacoast Marine Finance .......... 79 www.seacoastmarine.net Seattle Yachts ..........................11 www.seattleyachts.com Sequoia Yacht Club ..................82 www.sequoiayc.org Society of Accredited Marine Surveyors/SAMS .....................38 www.marinesurvey.org

Ullman Sails San Francisco & Monterey Bay .......................22 www.ullmansails.com Vallejo Marina .........................83 www.vallejomarina.com

Spectra Watermakers ............... 99 www.spectrawatermakers.com

Ventura Harbor Boatyard ........110 www.vhby.com

Sterling Associates ................... 83 www.dimenmarine.com

West Coast Multihulls ...............79 www.westcoastmultihulls.com

Svendsen's Bay Maritime Group .. 21 www.bay-ship.com Swiftsure Yachts ....................... 34 www.swiftsureyachts.com The Canvas Works ................... 20 www.thecanvasworks.com TMM Yacht Charters ................. 78 www.sailtmm.com

Westwind Precision Details ........82 www.boatdetailing.com Whale Point Marine Supply ........6 www.aceretailer.com/whalepoint Whiting and Associates ..........111 www.norcalmarinesurveyors.com

Trident Funding .......................... 4 www.tridentfunding.com

Wichard Sparcraft, Inc. ............39 www.wichard-usa.com

Twin Rivers Marine Insurance... 111 www.boatinsuranceonly.com

Yachtfinders/Windseakers ......113 www.yachtworld.com/yachtfinders

UK Sailmakers ......................... 75 www.uksailmakers.com

!UGUST s

Latitude 38

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RIVIERA • BELIZE • NEW & BROKERAGE • POWER & SAIL 1070 marina Village pkwy., #107 alameda, ca 94501 • cell: 510-610-6213 - office: 510-521-6213 R AT OU

VI CIA, B ST. LU

S DOCK

61’ CUSTOM SCHOONER, 2000 $99,000 —CALL ROY COVE YARD K C I R B

53’ SKOOKUM CUTTER 1979 $225,000 —CALL BILL

47’ VAGABOND, 1986 $149,000 —CALL BILL

BENETEAU 45’ OCEAN, 2017 $275,000 —CALL MIK

44’ NORDIC, 1981 $160,000 —CALL BILL

CKS R DO AT OU

CKS R DO AT OU ! CTION REDU E C I R P

New & Brokerage Yachts • Power & Sail

44’ HARDIN 1977 44’ CATLALINA 43’ JEANNEAU 2003 41’ SOVEREL, 1976 40’ PASSPORT, 1987 $79,000 MORGAN, 2005 $165,000 $129,900 $24,000 $115,000 —CALL MIK OR BILLof the month —CALL B ALLouR BILL docks to View —CALL MIK eVeRY 2nd —C@ —CALL BILL Open boat weekend • ILL oVeR 30 Yachts

www.richardboland.com

NG! LISTI NEW

ERIOR T INT GREA

40’ FREEDOM 1996 $123,000 —CALL BILL

! CTION REDU E C I PR

EDA ALAM

PRIC E RED UCTIO N

JEANNEAU 379, 2013 $165,500 —CALL MIK

37' PACIFIC SEACRAFT 1980 $42,500 —CALL BILL

! CTION REDU E C I PR

ERIOR T INT GREA

36’ WESTERLY CORSAIR, 1985 $49,000 —CALL MIK

Richard: 510-610-6213 Mik: 510-552-7272 Roy: 916-595-7500

36’ CATALINA 1995 $69,000 —CALL BILL

35’ CATALINA 350 2011$219,000 — CALL MIK

34’ HANS CHRISTIAN, 1977 $35,000 —CALL BILL

32’ FUJI 1976 $21,500 —CALL BILL

Richard Boland Yacht Sales

Alameda, CA 94501 Office: (510) 521-6213 Direct: (510) 610-6213 Redwood City, CA 94063 RBYS Email: rbys@aol.com 54 YEARS www.richardbolandyachts.com

36’ CATALINA, 1998 ONE OWNER —CALL MIK CKS R DO AT OU

30’ HUNTER1996 37,500

Barney: 510-541-1963 Bill: 510-410-5401 Michael: 831-236-5905

!UGUST s

Latitude 38

s 0AGE


47' SAILBOAT

2022 DUFOUR 470

DUFOUR 530

54' DUFOUR 2022 | CALIFORNIA $CALL FOR PRICING

EXCESS 15

48' EXCESS CATAMARAN 2022 | CALIFORNIA $CALL FOR PRICING

ON ORDER | CALIFORNIA

DUFOUR 390

$39' DUFOUR 2022 | CALIFORNIA $CALL FOR PRICING

EXCESS 12

38' EXCESS CATAMARAN 2022 | CALIFORNIA $CALL FOR PRICING

+1 510.981.2021 DenisonYachting.com

DUFOUR 360

36' DUFOUR 2022 | CALIFORNIA $CALL FOR PRICING

EXCESS 11

37' EXCESS CATAMARAN 2022 | CALIFORNIA $CALL FOR PRICING

San Diego, CA Newport Beach, CA Long Beach, CA Marina del Rey, CA San Francisco, CA Seattle, WA

619.822.2715 949.791.4220 562.594.9716 310.821.5883 510.981.2021 206.686.5400



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