(San Francisco, CA)- As has happened over the course of this
famously tough race, the fleet was greeted by the same forecast as the
J/Fest crews were-- light in the morning and increasing velocity to a
"good breeze" by late afternoon. What no forecaster seemed to take into
account were two very critical elements, particularly as they applied
to the hapless double-handers headed outside the fabled "Golden Gate" to
arm-wrestle their wheels and tillers over the great monster known as
the "potato patch" and head around some islands renowned as much for
feeding fat little seals off its shores to those scourges of the deep,
the Great White Shark. One element was how HOT it was going to get
inland, the great bread-basket of California known as the Great Valley
and the second element was how strong the currents would be on the ebb
due to excessive rains and snow melt coming from the very same Sierra
Nevada mountain ranges. The combination proved yet again to be pretty
toxic.
At start of the Farallones Race, it was blowing 15-20 knots. But, by the
time the fleet was outside of the Golden Gate Bridge, it was blowing
more like 20-40 knots with huge, breaking waves. Sailing in the fleet
was a J/105, a J/109, a J/120 and the J/125 DOUBLE TROUBLE (DT), Andy
Costello's speedster on the Bay. DT started the race, broke their
rudder quadrant and returned home-- here's Andy's report to Sailing
Anarchy:
"Well DT had a great start and we were first out of the Bay with "Trunk
Monkey", the only other mono that managed to exit the bay without being
caught at the start by the tide. Once we cleared Point Bonita we were
the northern most boat in the fleet and were taking pretty steep waves
off the shoals but managed to get thru pretty well besides getting
banged around a bit. The wind steadily built to the low 20's just off
Bonita, then as we progressed a mile or so out out the waves and wind
continued to increase up to solid 26s with gusts close to 30 knots. By
this point we were trying to slow DT down and she was just jumping off
the backs of the steep waves and hard into the next. I thought our rig
was going to come down every time we leaped off the next wave. Pat went
down to get his handheld GPS to get a heading for the Rock and I was up
alone for a while. We leaped off a huge wave and when we came down the
boat came down with such force I heard a crack from the steering
quadrant area. At the same time our back-stay handle was flung
overboard into the ocean!! Wow!! ( Take note- would have been smart to a
have a tether on that!). Now the rig was un-adjustable, great!? We
sailed along for a good 4 or 5 more miles waiting to see if the wind
would increase or subside, during that time the creaks from the steering
area were coming and going depending on load. I asked Pat what the
heading was for the island and he gave me the news that our only mapping
GPS had bit the dust!! 12 miles out from Farallones Islands, we decided
to give up on our attempt of first monohull to finish (there was NO ONE
else in sight)!
We continued upwind until an inbound freighter took our stern and
followed him until we knew we were in the channel back to Golden Gate
Bridge. On our way back in we sailed for 10 minutes before we saw the
Open 50 coming upwind. I think we would have had our shot at overall
honors as our J/125 has the legs downwind and the Open 50 had some
catching up to do (like 15 miles worth!). He probably would have caught
us but our start had paid off huge. We hugged the green Markers all the
way in dodging 3 in-bound and out-bound freighter's. Under main alone
we wee trying to keep the boat as unloaded as we could, but we still hit
over 18 knots on multiple occasions (a few times the speedo would be
reading 16, 17 and then it would drop down even though the boat was
still accelerating-- only then did I realize the speedos were both
completely out of the water!! Ha!!). The J/125 is a joy to drive
downwind when your not worrying about your rudder!" Thanks goodness
these two (Andy and Pat) made it home safely.
Hanging tough in the same conditions were the J/105, J/109 and J/120. A
bunch of guys from Chicago had brought their J/105 GONZO to the Bay for
the winter sailing series. Apparently, they've had a great time
sailing on the Bay in everything from light air to the classic nukin'
conditions the Bay can offer-- cart-wheeling AC72's anyone?? In any
event, Ken Garch sailed GONZO to a very respectable 2nd in Class 4 ULDB,
sailing the course in just 8 hours. It was their first time sailing
this grueling race, not bad for a bunch of newbies from a lake in the
Midwest.
The top finishing J was Howard Turner's J/109 SYMMETRY from Santa Cruz,
sailing an elapsed time of 7:46:26 to beat the famously fast offshore
J/105 speedsters on elapsed time. Howard's SYMMETRY won Class 3
Monohull by nearly an hour over three other famously fast Express 37s.
In the same class at DOUBLE TROUBLE was the J/120 JAMANI sailed by Sean
Mulvihill and friend. JAMANI had an elapsed time of 7:54:27 to get a
fourth in class and finish behind the J/105 and J/109 on corrected
overall. For more Doublehanded Farallones sailing results