Start on the Right Day, Finish with Intensity

We in the PNW get to give a big cheer for Team Hamachi. They sailed a great Transpac race and appears to have won the ORR division overall. Thanks to Jason Andrews who has supplied videos and reports to sailish.com leading up to and during the race. Mahalo indeed.

We did it. But the last 24 hours were really intense.

We were struggling to cover both Bretwalda 3, which was focused on sailing as fast as possible to Oahu, and Velvet Hammer, who was playing a tactical game. The Hammer was heading for the right corner to establish leverage on us, while we sailed more of a rhumb line to keep our VMG high. Squalls were rolling across the race course creating challenging wind angles and large wind holes. We struggled very early Saturday morning and watched the separation increase with Bretwalda, and our advantage decrease with Velvet Hammer. Hamachi had been atop the ORR overall standings since Wednesday morning, but all of us felt that lead slipping away.

Around 3am a series of squalls came through that increased pressure and improved wind angles which allowed us to start making gains on the competition. Then just after sunrise we gybed right on a favorable shift to cover Velvet Hammer and rode that for many hours. Sailing was slow in 12-15 kts of wind, even though they were forecast to be 20kts. Around this time we came into contact with Bad Pak (Pac 52) and Peligroso (Kernan 70), top sleds that started the day after us. Seeing these boats less than 200 miles from the finish made us start to comprehend the magnitude of our accomplishments.

The crew included Shawn Dougherty, Jason Andrews, Frederic Laffitte, Lucas Laffitte, Matt Pistay and David Rogers.

Unfortunately, as we entered the 200nm “Live Zone” our YB tracker battery died. We contacted Race Committee, but they were already aware of the situation and in the process of contacting us. Apparently our tracker went crazy and started pinging the Iridium network constantly, which burned its battery out. They instructed us to give manual updates every four hours, which made for a very stressful day for all you tracker junkies. It was equally stressful for us on board! In actuality, at no time during the last day did we surrender the lead, it just looked that way on Yellow Brick.

Around noon the wind was forecast to go right, which would allow us to get headed up to Molokai on the opposite board. Instead, the wind continued to clock left and remained light (12-15 kts). While this improved our tactical advantage over Velvet Hammer, it made our odds of catching Bretwalda worse, and all we could do was watch them sail to the finish around 2pm in the afternoon (local Hawaii time).

Based on the differences in our ratings, Bretwalda owed us approximately 13.5 hours on corrected time. So once they crossed the line a clock started and we had to finish within that time allowance. Unfortunately, we spent most of the afternoon rolling slowly downwind through swells in light breeze, 150 nm from the finish. We felt good about our ability to finish in front of Velvet Hammer, who was 45nm north and directly upwind of us, but were not so optimistic about Bretwalda 3. The team kept pushing and around 4pm the wind increased to 15 kts, and then by 6 pm it was 17 kts. The wind angle was still terrible but we gybed back on to port and headed to Molokai. The boat kicked up on a plane (Hamachi’s boat speed is about 2 kts less than the wind speed) and we started trucking south. The wind continued to increase to 20kts and clock slowly right and the whole team was focused on burning down the miles to the finish. We approached Molokai on a tear at 17-19kts and gybed right towards the infamous Molokai channel. Luckily it was fairly tame that evening and the team threw down six perfect gybes to get around Molokai, across the channel and lined up for Diamond Head. We power reached across the line at 16 kts at 2:21 am Sunday morning to complete the 50th Transpac in 8 days 16 hours and 21 minutes, which gives us a corrected time of 8 day 0 hours and 52 minutes. This time has been, so far, sufficient to put us in first place overall.

It’s been a hell of an adventure and one that will not be repeated anytime soon. We were fortunate to start on the “right day” and the high pressure materialized in a manner that allowed us to power reach the whole way to Hawaii in winds that averaged between 15-20 kts. We never saw winds above 22 kts except for a few minutes, and always between midnight at 2 am to make it more exciting. We couldn’t have asked for a better crew and having one additional crew member became a clear advantage in the heavier wind versus the other J/125s. It’s going to take several days to catch up on sleep and begin to process the magnitude of this adventure and accomplishment. We have really appreciated all the support from our friends, family and Pacific Northwest sailing community.

Mahalo!

Team Hamachi


Hamachi In for the Win

Hamachi for the win.

Just in from Hawaii - Hamachi did it! There were some tracker questions in the final miles that confounded watchers, but on the water apparently it was all clear. We’ll wait for Jason’s report to hear the details. Janet Lafitte, who has been the point person on putting out the Hamachi reports, says the following:

Aloha!

Team Hamachi slayed the field of J125’s, Division 3, and finished the First Boat Corrected Overall. WIN. WIN. WIN. The boys came into the dock around 03:00AM and the Mai Tais flowed. Hence, you will have to wait for Jason’s onboard report.

ORR Overall??

ORR Overall??

Hamachi continues to charge toward the finish line in the Transpac, and continues to lead the ORR fleet (and the three other J/125s) on corrected time.

They’ve sailed a tremendous race, and there’s only 188 miles to go. Here’s the latest from Hamachi. Tune into the tracker (4 hour delay)

Been a wild 36 hours. Things got tactical starting Wednesday and we
went south to cover Velvet Hammer and Snoopy, who were heading south for
more wind. We split the difference between them and Bretwalda and spent
most of the day sailing in 20-22 kts. That evening the full moon was
blocked by low clouds and we rocketed through the night at ludicrous
speed in pitch black. The boat was barely in control launching off the
tops of big waves and accelerating down troughs and up the other side.
The speedo was often out of the water so boat speed was indeterminate
but we saw at least 23 kts of SOG the next day. This subsided after a
few hours and it was a relatively “calm” night with winds 17-20 kts.

Winds were down Thursday morning and Fred towed his Mahi Mahi lure
behind the boat for an hour. Didn’t catch anything - too fast. Thursday
was lighter in the morning (12-15 kts) with big seas. Then the squalls
started and the wind picked back up, along with even bigger seas. The
boat was back to rocketing along at 18-20 kts in 20-24 kts of wind.

We set our A2.5 spinnaker back on Sunday morning around 5am and it has
been up ever since. It carried us 1500 miles across the Pacific through
some wild conditions but at 10pm PDT last night it suffered one too many
indignities at the hands of its crew and blew apart. We quickly pulled
it out of the water and launched the A4, which we’d packed knowing we
were pushing its limits.

It’s been inshore match racing for the past 500 miles, and will continue
to the finish. We gybe on the shifts and have seen some crazy wind
angles. Right now the GFS says the wind should be at 58mag but we are
sailing 95mag directly at the finish. Aloha! We had the A4, then
switched to the backup (older) A2.5. Navigating more squals and just
trying to keep the boat and gear together while we sail fast! Winds have
been lightening some so expected finish is around midnight Sat (PDT).

Hamachi Closing In

With about 750 miles to go, Hamachi is in the running (actually leading) the race for overall ORR honors in the 2019 Transpac. PNW racing fans will want to be checking the tracker often for the remainder of the race.

I won’t be surprised if Jason Andrews and the gang are going to be too busy to send out updates. They’re well aware of their position and what’s at stake. But here’s their latest report. Let’s all keep our fingers crossed for a strong PNW finish!

Latest (last?) post:

Transpac is a race within a race within a race.  There are four J/125s, an above average collection, who are competing with each other to be the fastest J/125 on the west coast.  Each boat has donated to a prize for the first across the line.  This was our main focus going into Transpac, as it’s been a friendly rivalry and a great chance to meet other J/125 owners.  All four J/125’s are racing within Division 3, which is highly competitive and comprised of 13 boats. It’s a great honor to win your class at Transpac, especially in a class this competitive.  Finally, there is an overall winner based on corrected time for all 92 boats.

For Team Hamachi, we have been tracking the other J/125’s from the start.  After day 2 we started tracking other boats in our Division and were both surprised and excited to see Hamachi climb our Division ladder. Then on Tuesday Hamachi started trending towards the top of the overall standings and now we’ve held the #1 in ORR (fastest boat overall) title for 24 hours.  The crew is ecstatic but a little uneasy.We like being a pursuit boat, quietly seeking to pass the leader.  We are not used to being the boat everyone is watching and trying to take down.

So needless to say the dance parties have stopped, along with the drone flying.  We spend every moment pushing the boat to go as fast as possible. Living below is like driving your VW camper van down a black diamond mogul run. We constantly pull weather and position reports, we are gybing to find the best wind and wind angles.  We are 920 miles from the finish and SENDING IT. Our current 24 hours record is 336nm. Top boat speed is 21.8kts (David Rogers).

Summary: This may be the last at sea update as time is now very short:

eat, sleep, sail fast, repeat…

If you haven’t done so already, follow us on the tracker. Also, there is usually a Transpac Race Summary on YouTube by Seahorse Magazine - Google or look on the Transpac website.  Thank you for your thoughts and encouragement!

Transpac Update - Hamachi, Longboard and a Dramatic Rescue

Pyewacket and OEX crews safe ashore.

The full story has yet to be told, but the bottom line early in this year’s Transpac Race is that the crew of the SC 70 OEX was rescued by Roy Disney and company aboard Pyewacket. All are safely back on shore, and OEX is apparently still afloat. Rudder post damage was the culprit.

From the Hamachi drone……

It seems a breezy race so far, judging from the updates from the PNW’s own Hamachi crew. Here’s the latest “Half Way” report:

Well, we don’t know if its EXACTLY half way but we have 1250nm to go and it seemed like a good excuse for a party (not that Team Hamachi ever
needs an excuse to party). We gathered on the back patio to contemplate
the race so far and pass our flask, which quickly devolved into a YMCA
dance party with the drone circling the boat, all while doing 15-16 kts.
Our objectives going into the race were: 1) be safe, 2) have fun, and
3) win. So far we are doing well in all three categories. Taking stock
half way, here are some thoughts:

- Best Moment(s): Sailing away from our closest competition

- Crew Lowlight(s): Too many body fluids and damp socks in a small
cramped cabin

Things We Have Plenty Of:
- Food: The weight Nazis will cringe knowing we went to sea with four
days of frozen food and enough snacks for 12 days. There was a calculus
of carrying more weight on the reach to keep the crew happy and sailing
fast versus taking every last ounce our of the boat. Despite this extra
weight we’ve had amazing boat speed.
- Dude Wipes: Great marketing on someone’s part. We can sail fast
confident that our “dude parts” will stay clean to the finish.
- Boat Speed: Of the four J/125’s, we are the only one with six crew.
Despite this extra weight, and all of our frozen food, we seem to have
great boat speed. In the last 24 hours Hamachi has covered 294nm.

Things We Need More Of:
- Purell: clearly we should have thought this one through. We left
with a small half empty container. Definitely need more of that.
- Hot Cocoa: The key to a fast boat is a well-fueled crew. We have
plenty of Starbucks Via but need more cocoa for our mochas.
- Ventilation: use your imagination
- Boat Speed: While we’ve got a lot, you can always have more…

Speed Records:
Starboard Watch: 18.8kts (Matt Pistay)
Port Watch: 18.6kts (Jason Andrews)

- Kudos:
1) David Rogers has been crushing it as our Lieutenant Ohura. It was
rough going (literally and figuratively) in the first 24 hours as he was
making up for a sick crew member and doing all of the boat data
collection and navigating. Over the past few days he’s stepped up the
game and built tools to track the fleet, our performance and answer
everyone’s questions.
2) The Cooks: We are four days in and still eating frozen gourmet food.
Thank you Janet, Marian (and Jason) for doing all the cooking!

Are We There Yet?
The days are blowing by and we are a little shocked its already half
way. Normally its a 10-11 day race for a J/125 but this year we are on
track to finish in around 8 days.

Up Next:
Sleep. Eat. Sail Fast. Repeat.

Hamachi is currently leading Division 3 and they covered 313 miles in the last 24 hours. Oh my.

Comanche, the gun in a knife-fight. She only sailed 448 miles in the last 24 hours. Photo by Sharon Green.

We’re also keeping track of Peter Salusbury’s Longboard. They are not, repeat NOT humming along. Oh, they’re going fast enough, covering 281 miles in the last 24 hours, just not “humming.” Here’s the story. Designer Paul Bieker helped deliver the boat to California and was extremely bothered by a hum/howl noise that emanated from the keel when Longboard was going fast. Bieker reports “I couldn’t stand the idea of them doing Transpac with that so I rented two tanks when we hit the dock and spent ~2 ½ hours rasping/sanding the keel trailing edge. It was a pretty funny scene that no one could see – a lot of it was spent straddling the bulb as I worked – like Slim Pickens in Dr Strangelove. My shoulders were sore for a week after the effort. I didn’t give it a big chance of working 100% but I thought it was likely to help some.

And here’s skipper Peter Salusbury’s note to Paul from the Pacific as Longboard hit her stride:

Hey Paul - it’s amazing! NO KEEL HUM AT ALL!!!!!!!

We are proposing to the Prime Minister to make you an Honorary Canadian and be awarded the Order of Canada.

We are going real fast today - the boat is lit up and we are confident we will reel in some boats by the end of the week. Slow start as our small waterline length was a real issue against all the huge waterlines in our division. But it’s Longboard time now so we are making the best of it!

Thanks for all your hard work fixing the keel - can’t believe we didn’t do that sooner.

We’ll keep watching. If you want to, check out the tracker yourself.

Hamachi to Hawaii

Hamachi to Hawaii

The Hamachi team is on the way to Hawaii. And they’re allowing us an occasional peek when possible. We already showed some drone video of their passage down the coast and shared some start footage on Facebook. Below, they’re off the west end of Catalina with lots of company (for now).

Hamachi off Catalina in TransPac 2019. Thanks to Jason Andrews!

Our friends on Longboard had an interesting delivery and we here at Sailish are big fans of the Peter Salsbury owned & skippered, and Bieker designed 35-footer. They’ve made several changes to the already scary-fast boat, so we’re anticipating great things.

I was hoping to also be writing about Atalanta and her 120,000 lbs. charging toward Hawaii, but alas they decided to pull the plug and not race. We’ll be keeping an eye on the TP The Shadow II from Vancouver, which is in a very competitive class.

Stay tuned, because we’ll be hearing more from Hamachi, and Bruce Hedrick won’t be able to stay away from the tracker for the next few days. The big boys, including odds-on lines favorite Comanche and the other 100-footer Rio, have yet to start.

Longboard Delivery

Longboard doing her thing here in the Northwest.
By Peter Salsbury
When we entered Longboard in this summer’s Transpac, there was no doubt in my mind how we were going to get the boat to the start line - it had to be an offshore passage with old friends, giving the boat one last test, and experiencing the thrill of sailing Longboard downwind in the ocean.  
So I set out to find the best delivery crew I could and completely lucked out. Stewart Jones volunteered immediately - a key part of our crew for 7 years now, he couldn’t make the race itself but really wanted to be part of the delivery.  Paul Bieker, the designer of Longboard also jumped at the chance - he’d only been on the boat once since it launched in 2012 so a great opportunity to sail his creation.  And an old friend, Darren Burns, also signed up - Darren runs a top Farr 30 program in Vancouver but had never been offshore before so this was a special experience for him.
Stewart, Darren, and I left West Vancouver Yacht Club on Monday, June 24th and powered all the way to Anacortes to clear customs, pick-up fresh groceries, and pick-up Paul.  After a nice dinner at Paul and Charlene’s house, we headed out the following morning. 
We were greeted with a sunny, flat calm day and ended up powering all the way to just before Sheringham Point before a nice high teens NW filled in for a traditional beat out of the strait.  As always, by Duntze Rock the wind disappeared and we then powered for the next 19 hours - strait offshore!  Bruce was helping us with our weather routing and due to a low pressure ridge located off the WA and Oregon coasts, he recommended we target a waypoint 125 miles offshore - basically a course which seemed like we were going to Maui, not California.
Just before a nice NW filled in, we felt like we had some weed on the drive unit so Paul dove over with a knife to clear it - the water temperature reported to be quite warm which was a good thing given he had no wetsuit on. For the next 4 days, we had the easiest offshore sail one can image - relatively flat seas and a NW wind of 7 to 11 knots allowing us to jib reach or fly a delivery kite with only a few short powering stints.  The weirdest thing was the large amount of milled logs 1 foot in diameter by 6’ to 20’ long which scattered the ocean all the way down the coast - it was like a Panabode cabin shipment fell off a ship 5 years ago judging by the growth.  We were constantly dodging them and the first night hit one pretty hard while powering.
Whales and porpoises were abundant which was great to see but surprisingly few birds seem to be around - maybe it was because our route kept us about 135 miles off the coast until we got south of San Francisco.  The last few days, the seas really start to build, disproportionately to the strength of the wind which was hovering around 20 knots.  Finally, we were experiencing a true offshore sea state and Longboard was really enjoying it.  On our approach to Pt Concepcion, the seas continued to build and the wind started to get into the high 30 knots and, unfortunately, we ran over some kelp and seaweed which clogged up the rudder really slowing the boat down.  So, when we got those nice puffs which allow the boat to take off down the waves, it didn’t!  The result being breaking waves pooping the stern and landing in the aft cockpit area - not a very comforting feeling. 
The biggest seas and highest winds were rounding the point itself where the wind accelerates along the coast and the ocean floor shallows up considerably - we had a pretty hairy few hours with Paul driving, Stewart trimming the J4 (no main up at this point), and Darren looking astern calling the waves and gusts to prepare Paul for how he needed to set the boat up on the waves.  I stuck to the laptop below calling course changes to allow us to dodge commercial traffic and oil rigs.  Once again, AIS is the most brilliant invention ever in these conditions.  
After getting behind the lee of the point, we backed down under sail, cleared the rudder, got the main back up and had a nice sail north of the Catalina Islands overnight arriving on Tuesday morning, 7 days, 2 hours after leaving Anacortes.  
The offshore passage helped us find a few key issues we are now addressing before the start of the Transpac race - it’s great to find these things out before the race, not during the race.  So, the longest delivery to a start line was a huge success - Stewart, Paul, Darren and I completely enjoyed one another’s company and it was really rewarding for Paul to see how great his little 35’ offshore passage-maker is first hand.  
Thanks to everyone who sent us nice notes along the way - we all appreciate it.  And a big shout out to Bruce Hedrick who sent us weather advice twice daily - you made it easy, Bruce - thanks so much!  Our start is next Friday, July 12th - we are all looking forward to sending Longboard flying downwind to Honolulu!

As of this writing, Longboard was getting free from the coast at 8.1 knots. We’ll be watching for when the wind goes aft…..

100th entry to Transpac 50 is Ragtime

By Transpacific Yacht Club

This trio of half-hulls shows the evolution of Ragtime’s foils.

This year’s Transpac is promising to be epic. I’d like to gather a list of PNW entries to keep an eye on here at sailish.com. If you’re going, please let me know.

In a record year of interest, it’s perhaps fitting that the 100th entry to the 50th edition of the Transpacific Yacht Club’s biennial 2225-mile Transpac race from LA to Honolulu is at 55 years old one of the oldest in the race yet also one of the most innovative in the last half-century of yacht design.

Chris Welsh’s Spencer 65 Ragtime will be making her 17th race to Hawaii in July, more than any other yacht in the history of this race. Welsh has been an owner of RAGTIME since 2004, and since then has raced three Transpacs (2005, ’07, ’09), one race to Tahiti (2008) and the Sydney-Hobart Race (2008). “It’s been ten years since we last sailed to Hawaii,” said Welsh, “so we’re looking forward to having some fun again.”

From its very beginning, this long, narrow, low-freeboard and lightweight black beauty with the reverse shearline and hard chines has been a recognizable Pacific ocean racing classic. Designed and built by John Spencer in New Zealand in 1963 as Infidel for first owner and race car driver Tom Clark, she was meant to be simply the fastest boat boat of the era, something proven years later by her second owners who were from Long Beach and beat the legendary Windward Passage across the finish by only 4 minutes and 31 seconds to set a new course record in the 1973 Transpac. And to prove this was no fluke, she won the Barn Door Trophy again in 1975. Ragtime’s long narrow light weight design helped inspire the next generation of ULDB (Ultra Light Displacement Boat) designs that were to dominate this and so many other Pacific ocean races for the next 25 years.

Ragtime finishing many years ago wing-and-wing. The Transpacific YC site has an amazing collection of historical photos. If you’re into racing history, it’s definitely worth a look.

Since then there has been several owners, with each making tweaks to this double-ply plywood yacht: upgrades of new rigs, sails, keels, rudders, bulbs, deck hardware, etc. have all been in her history. And with the new innovations came new structures to accommodate the higher and higher loads that came with pushing her faster and faster. Welsh reckons there are few if any other monohulls in the world who are performing 25% higher than when they were first built.

Right now Ragtime is getting a new engine that will not only be more reliable but a few hundred pounds lighter, and some new winches that will decrease the total number on board but also increase crew work efficiency in the small cockpit space available in the design. Welsh plans to race not only offshore but occasionally around the cans too, and after Transpac has his sights set on an East Coast tour in 2020.

Keel frame reinforcement details, where wood frames meet carbon reinforcement - photo © Transpacific Yacht Club

For this tour there will be another upgrade: a new carbon mast that will be higher and lighter than the current one, which he would have used in Transpac this year except there is no time to oversee the additional structural work needed to secure this rig properly to the hull and deck. Nonetheless, Welsh expects to be fast and have a shot at the King Kalakaua Trophy awarded to the race’s overall winner in corrected time.

“Its fantastic that Transpac 50 has inspired so many boats of so many ages, sizes and types to come out to race,” said TPYC Commodore Tom Hogan. “And with the classics like Kialoa II, Ragtime, the Cal 40’s and others still competing into their fifth decade, this shows the great passion everyone has for ocean racing here in the Pacific. Transpac 50 is shaping up to be an epic race.”

For more information on the 50th Transpac, visit the event website at 2019.transpacyc.com.

“Got That Out of the Way.” Carl Buchan and the Transpac

Merlin closing in on the finish with Bill Lee at the helm. Sharon Green photo.

There were plenty of big stories in this years Transpac Race. Comanche‘s 5-day, 1 hour record, Mighty Merloe‘s stunning victory and the return of Merlin are probably the top three.

The Merlin story includes a part that’s very near and dear to us in the Pacific Northwest. It was Carl Buchan’s first big offshore race of the kind. Pacific Northwesterners are eager to claim Carl as one of our own, and with good reason. He’s won an Olympic Gold Medal (with Jonathan McKee in the Flying Dutchman) an America’s Cup - sort of - (with Dennis Conner in 1988) 505 North Americans (with Carol Buchan) Tasar Worlds (with Carol) and last but not least the Star Worlds (with Hugo Schreiner).

On Madrona, a 40-footer to his own design, Buchan is a perpetual force on the PNW race courses including events as diverse as Round the County and the Race to Alaska.

Most importantly, through all of it, he has retained both his humility and energy for the sport. Both came in handy on Merlin this year. As one might expect, Merlin‘s crew was rife with experience led by The Wizard himself, Bill Lee. Buchan may ooze boatspeed and racing smarts, but he was the offshore newbie aboard Merlin. Staying in character, he did his job and learned a lot.

Lessons Learned

Transpac sunset - not necessarily time to sleep. Buchan photo.

Sleep The first learning curve is one of the most important and challenging. “I was starting to get into a rhythm the day before we finished. I was a basket case before that sleep-wise,” Buchan explained. I’m not sure how he did it, but accepting that you have a problem is always the first step.

Knowing the Boat “One of the things that became clear was the importance of knowing the boat, in particular the polars and (sail combination) crossovers. You usually don’t have other boats around to get that performance feedback. It was great to have Pyewacket out there. They were always pushing us. We were expecting to fall behind early, but our goal was was to be within about 20 miles when the high speed running conditions started to favor us.” In the end, Merlin beat Pyewacket into Hawaii by a couple of hours and only trailed the much higher rated Runaway on elapsed time. On corrected time, the Alan Andrews-designed Pyewacket won, followed by the Santa Cruz 70 Catapult and the Merlin.

Merlin While it may have been tempting to think of Merlin’s 2017 Transpac as a trip down memory lane for a 40 year old boat, it was obviously a lot more that that. Over the years she’s been modified and upgraded many times, and since buying the boat a year or so ago Bill Lee has put in a number of other changes. Here’s a Scuttlebutt post with more on the program. “Once in a while Bill would say something like ‘at this point in the race back then’ but he’s really forward thinking,” explains Buchan. “It’s not clear what the next phase will be for the boat, perhaps chartering or selling.”

Offshore Tactics Buchan is used to finding the fastest way upwind, downwind or to a point somewhere along the course that will take advantage of current or expected windshift. In the Transpac, the usual course of things is to be lifted on starboard gybe as you make your way to Hawaii. The big decision is when to gybe to port. “Things happen more slowly out there on an ocean race. You set a waypoint into your plans and maximize your speed to that point. But conditions are always changing, so you’re constantly updating that information and updating the game plan. You have to be set up to take in that information.”

Madrona lighting it up in Round the County. Sean Trew photo.

A Transpac for Madrona? Watching Madrona take shape locally in carbon, with many helping hands, was fascinating for many of us. At the time we heard Transpac mentioned. “Even when I built the boat it was on my mind,” Buchan says. Madrona‘s moderate beam and relatively full ends not only look like it would go fast downwind, it does. A couple of memorable Round the County runs revealed Madrona as not just a really fast 40-footer, a blisteringly fast 40-footer in the right conditions. “In many ways, the Transpac would be right up Madrona‘s alley,” Buchan said. Hmmm.

 

In the end, Buchan’s understated summary was “I got that out of the way.” Tellingly, he also said “I certainly enjoyed the longer distance race. I came away seeing it’s a very interesting challenge, especially for the navigator.” My guess is he did a lot more than check something off a list – I’m pretty sure he absorbed a tremendous amount of Transpac know-how, and we’ll see it again, processed and upgraded.

 

 

Triumph finishes Transpac

The Santa Cruz 52 Triumph, with Bruce and Gregg Hedrick aboard, finished their Transpac last night and are presumed safely docked and mai taied. Congratulations all. Raisin’ Cane and Kinetic V finished last night as well, and BlueFlash is closing in on the finish line fast. Merlin, with Carl Buchan aboard, finished in the wee hours Friday morning to finish second over the line in class and third in class on corrected time. I’ll try to get more details on each of the stories. Results here.

In the meantime, here’s the last report from Bruce Hedrick, filed just before the finish. It’s a fun insight to life onboard and a well-run program.

TransPac Update 15 July 2025

What a long strange race it’s been. Sorry I wasn’t able to get more info out to you however we’ve been working really hard to keep the boat moving in difficult conditions. Even though records were set by the big boats, we’ve spent a lot of time sailing in 9-13 knots even on this final approach to the Islands when we should be sailing with our full sized, heavy kite in 20 to 25 knots of trade winds. Instead we are just comfortably cruising along making about 8-9 knots in 14 knots of breeze.

We had a great first half of the race and it seems like after we had hit something large and soft, we lost our boat speed edge. Even though we could see nothing on our keel or rudder, we also couldn’t see the full length of either one of them. After three days of the slows we finally bit the bullet, dropped the spinnaker and did a complete back down. We never saw anything come off the bottom but we definitely got our speed back and went from 30 miles behind the other SC-52s to within 3 miles of them last night. At sunset we started aggressively gybing on the shifts to try and get past them and actually ended up losing time, go figure. So now we are just keeping the pedal down and are once again sailing up to them. We have about 100 miles to go so it will be interesting.

Our crew has been great and we have had a great time. Our skipper, Steve Sellinger, did an outstanding job of putting a diverse group together and getting them to function as a team. There is no question that any of us would happily sail on Triumph with Steve again, any time, any place. Our boat captain is Gregg Hedrick who did a superb job putting the boat together and getting us ready for this long trip. We have not had one single failure of any piece of equipment or any of the many complex systems aboard. A true testament to his skills and abilities.

We have two watch captains, Scott Mason and Scott Poe, who bring a wealth of knowledge to the table along with an incredible amount sailing skills and abilities. They know instinctively the right thing to do at the absolutely the right time. We also have the considerable fortune to have Bruce Cooper aboard, our sailmaker and living, breathing human crossover chart who knows, without looking, exactly what sail we should have up and where we should be sailing it.

The person you would race anywhere with is Grant Wooden because he is constantly trying to figure out how to make the boat go faster by always trimming and re-trimming to get the very most out of you and the boat. The most dangerous job on the boat is running the foredeck which entails never ending trips to frontier land (the bow) to get the sails up and down as well as get the spinnakers through that complex series of maneuvers we call gybing which involves coordinating the entire crew. We are so fortunate to have Zack Hannah in charge of all of that; he is just amazing as well as totally fearless. Regardless of the task, time of day or night, even if he just came off watch, he always answers the call with a smile on his face. A truly outstanding group!

So what worked for us on this 10 day trip? Besides everything, there are notable standouts. Top of the list was the food, and it was incredible. There was none of that freeze-dried junk. Instead we had real food that had been completely prepared, vacuum packed and then deep frozen. All you had to do then was take the breakfast for the next morning out the night before or take dinner out in the morning. Once it was thawed you simply placed the plastic bag in the boiling water of the pressure cooker, let the pressure come up to about 4psi, and your meal was ready! The meals were planned to meet the expected conditions so for the first night, which is traditionally rough, we had easy to eat chicken and rice or bean and cheese burritos. Other dinners included carne asada, pork roast and veggies, pappardelle, sabatinos sausage spaghetti, turkey meatloaf, and for our last supper we’re having barbeque chicken with Trader Joe’s cabbage salad. Not a marginal meal in the bunch. We do have five days of backup freeze-dried meals however things would have to get pretty desperate before we went to those.

Lunch and breakfast were less organized because of the watch system however as the days go on and the days get warmer you generally transition from three meals to two meals and more snacks. Even todays snacks included carrots, celery, apples, oranges, beef jerky, and Kind bars. We’ve all lost some weight but not for lack of food.

A very cool addition to the boat was a coffee grinder mounted in the cockpit which allowed one person to sit on a Home Depot bucket with a boat cushion and easily trim the kite with the option to going to three speeds if needed. So much easier than trying to sit on a winch island and grind a top action winch.

Bruce Cooper, our sailmaker from Ullman Sails, also introduced us to the latest and greatest when it came to aids in the nighttime trimming of spinnakers. For years we’ve used contrasting strips of cloth in a chevron shape along the luff. We got these new luminescent strips which glowed in the dark and were easily seen from the cockpit. They got a little fainter towards dawn but then recharged themselves when the sun came up. He also small strips of the same tape you could place on the sheet so you could easily return to the same fast setting.

Lastly, my Don Leighton autographed sailing gloves were worth every cent. Every time you touched the wheel with them the boat went almost a knot faster. If you reached over the side and touched the water, seas were instantly calmed. Amazing.

Overall, the thing to remember is that when you can sail across the pond with such a great group on such a well prepared vessel, it is an experience like no other and you should never miss an opportunity to do so. Again, I apologize for not getting more of these out to you. Needless to say, if you’re going to be around TransPac Row in the Ala Wai Yacht Harbor tonight around 2300 hours, come on by and say hello.