Please select your home edition
Edition
Barton Marine 2019 728x90

Second wave heads west in Transpac 50

by Transpacific Yacht Club 13 Jul 2019 17:25 UTC 10-25 July 2019
Second wave of 27 monohulls in 3 divisions starting off today in light air - Transpac 50 © Ronnie Simpson / Ultimate Sailing

In gray but clearing skies and a light building sea breeze, the second wave of monohull entries has left the start line set by race managers from the Transpacific YC here at Point Fermin to head towards a finish line awaiting them at Diamond Head in Honolulu 2225 miles away in this year's 50th edition of the Transpacific Yacht Race.

Today 13 yachts in Division 3, 11 in Division 4 and 3 in Division 5 set off for their first mark of the course, the West End of Catalina Island, before heading southwest on tracks determined by their navigators to be the right balance between greater wind speed to the south versus shorter distance to the north. Weather forecasts for the coming days suggest tracks that should sag south, but not quite as far south as the first wave was advised when they left on Wednesday afternoon. Wind angles and pressures look good for the next few days for this group.

Among the Wednesday starters there have been three teams who have encountered problems serious enough to turn back for the coast. The first was Mark Ashmore's Cal 40 Nalu V, who reported yesterday "Difficulties keeping bilge dry, pumps keeping ahead but reason for water ingress unknown, returning to port." Next was Kyle Vanderspek's Hobie 33 Aloha, reporting rudder problems, and this morning another Hobie 33, Steve Eder's Mayhem, also with damage to their rudder. Both are returning to port at 4-5 knots of speed, and all aboard these retiring yachts are safe and unhurt.

So far the division leaders are David Gorney's J/105 No Compromise in Division 8, no doubt because she is furthest north and thus sailing a track closest to the rhumb line and thus the shortest distance relative to the others. At 1700 PDT she was 136 miles north of Cecil and Alyson Rossi's Farr 57 Ho'okolohe who is leading not only Division 6 but the entire fleet now in shortest distance to Hawaii at 1807 miles. Other division leaders at this time are Tim Jones's Olsen 40 Live Wire for Division 6, Michael Yokell's Oyster 56 Quester in Division 7, Ian Ferguson's Wasa 55 Nadelos for Division 9 and Lior Elazary's Lagoon 400S2 Celestra in Multihull 0A.

Over the next 8-14 days the second wave fleet that left today and the first wave that left on Wednesday will face all the pros and cons inherent to ocean racing: these range from being miserably cold, wet, uncomfortable, tired and bored for hours on end to seeing the glory of brilliant sunrises & sunsets leading to and from star-filled nights, seeing sea life in, on and over the water, having the weather get warmer and the wind go aft a little more every day, and looking forward every morning to the daily position reports to see their progress towards Hawaii but also how they're positioned relative to their competitors on the course.

And for the next few days as faster boats start overtaking the slower boats there will be the occasional thrill of a visual contact made with a running light at night, a silhouette at dawn, or a sail plan seen just on the horizon. This is breaking news on a boat at sea, and for a while the crew is focused on this target, armed with binoculars, hand bearing compasses and a lot of speculation on who this could be.

This is the sort of entertainment that has replaced the digital life left behind on the coast, and what drives us to the sea to reconnect with nature and our shipmates. Yet the digital life has not been completely removed on many boats, since tales are coming in to TPYC race headquarters via email that range from facts-only reports that read like log entries to some quite amusing accounts of life on board. For example, take this from Celestra's morning report:

Flying a Code 0 and main. Things have been a bit difficult on Celestra. First my steak was over done after I specifically asked for medium rare, and then our projector bulb went out. So much for movie night (and people said it would be easy on a cruising catamaran). Over all the sailing is good, with a consistent 15-18kts true wind with 3-4 ft waves. However, we all wish we knew what to do with these large white clothes flapping in the wind. The thing that makes this somewhat bearable is ice cream sandwiches and the fact that we are crossing an ocean as part of the Transpac:) Thank you for putting on such a great event.

Another from one of the smallest boats in the fleet being double-handed by Charles Devanneaux and Fred Courouble is Devanneaux's new Figaro 3 A Fond Le Girafon, who say

"Cold and still wet outside...a bit of drizzle...seems like home in Brittany...waiting for the sun to dry the boat [and] the jackets. The baby giraffe (girafon) is a wet animal on the deck, spinnaker is up... going to Hawaii now. Let's get Mai-Tai's ready."

Reports like these, YB tracker tools and more are available on the race website, and progress for boats on the course can be followed on the 4-hour delay YB tracking found on the race website, and daily position analysis videos from offshore racing commentator Dobbs Davis will be posted on most mornings during the race.

For more information on Transpac 50 and its history, events and sponsors, visit 2019.transpacyc.com

Related Articles

Virtual start of the Transpac Tahiti Race
Over 34,000 players taking part! In lieu of having the actual start of the fleet in the 2020 Transpac Tahiti Race scheduled for today off Point Fermin in Los Angeles, a virtual race was started instead at 1100 PDT among over 34,000 online players on Virtual Regatta. Posted on 28 May 2020
Transpac Tahiti Race on Virtual Regatta
The dream of sailing to the South Seas will have to wait After having attracted a near-record turnout for the 2020 edition of the Transpacific YC's Transpac Tahiti Race, organizers had to finally succomb to pandemic restrictions and postpone this year's race to the future. Posted on 23 May 2020
'Gamble' Mini Documentary from Transpac
Justin Edelman is a filmmaker who grew up sailing My name is Justin Edelman and I am a filmmaker who grew up sailing. I never imagined I would get the opportunity to combine these two passions when I went to school for film. Posted on 18 Dec 2019
Transpac Tahiti Race Commodore's Challenge
Calling all Commodores: Get a free trip to Tahiti! The Transpacific Yacht Club (TPYC) created the Tahiti race almost 100 years ago in 1925, and it has been run only 15 times in this time. The most recent editions were in 2008, with 5 boats, and in 2012, with 2 boats. Posted on 7 Oct 2019
Leaders past halfway point in Transpac 50
82 teams press on as rescuers and the rescued arrive safe At about 2 AM PDT, a small crowd gathered at the docks of Windward Yacht Center to await the arrival of a 68-foot sailboat with 19 people aboard. This was 10 more than the 9 they left with from Long Beach back on Saturday at the third start Posted on 17 Jul 2019
Rescue at sea in Transpac 50
Pyewacket rescues OEX crew in Transpac 50 On the 50th edition of the Transpacific YC's 2225-mile race from LA to Honolulu, at 0200 Pacific Daylight Time this morning the YB tracking system had activated an emergency signal from John Sangmeister's Santa Cruz 70 OEX Posted on 16 Jul 2019
Big boats sustain damage in Transpac - Day 2
Santa Cruz 70 activates emergency signal on Day 2 of Transpac, MOD 70 hits UFO At 0200 Pacific Daylight Time this morning the YB tracking system had activated an emergency signal from John Sangmeister's Santa Cruz 70 OEX after she experienced rudder issues and water ingress. Updated to include dockside video after the crews returned Posted on 16 Jul 2019
All boats away in Transpac 50
90 yachts are now headed off the coast in Transpac 50 With the breeze shifted far left in overcast skies due to a strong Catalina Eddy, the final wave of 24 monohulls and 4 multihulls in a record fleet of 90 yachts are now headed off the coast in the 50th edition of Transpacific Yacht Race Posted on 14 Jul 2019
First starters on their way in Transpac 50
On a classic So Cal summer day On a classic So Cal summer day with the sun burning through the morning haze to help along a building seabreeze, the first wave of 33 monohulls and 2 multihulls set off for Hawaii today in the 50th edition of the 2225-mile LA-Honolulu Transpac. Posted on 11 Jul 2019
First of 3 waves starts Transpac 50 on Wednesday
50th edition of the biennial 2225-mile race The first of three waves of 90 entries starts on Wednesday, July 10th in the 50th edition of the Transpacific YC's biennial 2225-mile race from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Posted on 8 Jul 2019
Switch One DesignDoyle_SailWorld_728X90px_SY BOTTOMArmstrong 728x90 - MA Foil Range - BOTTOM