Hawaii to San Francisco Cruise – Sunday Report
/in Uncategorized/by jworldWe got the another squall, with rain and winds this morning, perfect way to start Rick’s “boat birthday” and for what we hoped to be a lazy sunday… hum, i had to wake up everybody at 7:30 am to help me reef, and lash down everything… Rain, and big wind gusts. Joe braved the rain and got soaked mumbling something about these working conditions that he had to talk to you about! We toughed it out with smiles, even two rail meat hiking again, soaked and happy at all times on the rail to stay on track! We are dedicated and motivated cruiser-racers. t
I made french toast, and took a nap. We just finished tea with cookies and took a british accent that Polly has been trying to teach us. All good. We are now sailing with 7-9 kts out of the east again, so NE is our heading and close hauled has been our point of sail since day 1 and wind wind wind wind…
We are at 31.36 by 147.53… So there, we’re sailing up NE for a while more and we’ll get what we get.
Cheers! Your very faithfull Capt, and great crew…
Eugenie
Short and to the point
/in Uncategorized/by jworldrelaying from an email receive today. sent at 10:17 PDT:
all on board are in fine spirits and super well. we are eating well, trying to get used to this waking up all the time, all day and nite, but seem well enough rested. we heave to for lunch and diner for an hour because we have been pounding into the waves since we left , making it hard to cook. nobody has been seasick. we stopped to swim in the big blue ocean, and we havent used the motor yet- yippeee. as of friday am we are at 28.28.4 by 153.17.1 –roughly 540 miles north of hawaii. winds have been clocking to the east, now we are making a course of 030. there is a high above, we’ll motor east then continue north after for a bit.
Eugneie, from onboard “J/World”
From our friends on Holua….
/in Uncategorized/by jworldHi to all with loved ones and friends aboard J/World.
As of this morning, they were at:
28 28’N 153 17’W with 9-12 kts of wind from 090* and all is well, as of 0900 PDT Friday.
This was relayed from my friends Mike, Ted and Tom aboard Hulua, returning to Southern California. They are at: 34 10’ N 138 50’W.
They reported that they spoke with Eugenie this morning via the SSB radio (Single Sideband high frequency radio)
“we had weak connection, but the gal on J World was asking if we were “posting” positions anywhere, I said I’d fwd to you that JWorld was at 28*28’N 153*17’W with 9-12 kts of wind from 090* and all is well, as of 0900 PDT Friday. ”
Also from Mike on Holua” “There is no formal network or schedule for the returning boats and we all have different data capabilities, so we try to share info and keep a loose log of daily reports for each other. As “lead dog” out of Waikiki, HOLUA has been the contact/list keeper. Now that we are charging east it is harder and harder to hear the boats just getting started. If someone were to find themselves in trouble we could figure out who, if anyone, was close enough to render assistance.?”
Euge sent a direct email from the boat… I’ll post that soon.
Barry and the J/World Crew
Getting there as fast as possible, without a spinnaker…
/in Uncategorized/by jworldBummed to pass this one along… But, people have friends and family meeting them on the island, flight schedules, jobs to return to, etc… Apparently, the decision to retire was a democratic vote and unanimous, with the objective to get to the island as directly and quickly as possible. -Barry
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J World
23 35
147 30
Transpac Race Committee:
Please be advised that the vessel ‘J World’ is formally withdrawing from the 2009 Transpac. Vessel and crew are fine, and there are no issues beyond significant damage to our downind sail inventory!
Due to a variety of commitments, the crew has elected to engage the motor and to motor-sail a portion of the remaining distance in order to arrive in Hawaii in a timely fashion.
Please advise when convenient as to instructions for our arrival in Hawaii (whether we should still radio upon our arrival, and who to check in with for berthage assignments).
On behalf of the entire J World team, I thank you tremendously for a fantastic event! We look forward to participating again in 2011.
All the best,
Wayne Zittel
Bad Ending…
/in Uncategorized/by jworldForwarding on excerpts from a “personal” email…
“fyi we blew up all our spins in the last 24 hours. Really squally and tough. Surprised the 1.5 oz went… not that windy, but they go thru a lot of abuse…
We tried to nurse the last one (a big .75) and I [Wayne] was driving when it went. Wind went from 15 to 25 real fast at 1am. Had some great rides for about 20 minutes, I thought we had it made, then no luff, no shock load, just pop. No chance of repairing any… so nothing to do but jib reach… 700 miles? ouch…”
Barry
This is why we do this…
/in Uncategorized/by jworldOk, it’s 2:30am. The light winds of this race have drawn out the first half to a painful 9 days. We’ve drifted for hours, prayed for wind, sacrificed anything we could think of to Mother Nature/King Neptune, and taken stock of the onboard food supplies.
[editor’s note: I hope they didn’t offer Josh’s shoes!]
But that was then, and now it is a whole different race.
Two days ago we had a 198 mile day… oh, so close to that 200 mark. Undaunted, and newly challenged our team rose to the challenge to knock of 215 miles yesterday. I just crunched the numbers, and we are looking pretty good for today too. We are in the trades. They blow all day, all night. A bit off pace from normal, we are seeing steady 15, occasionally gusting to 20. The seas have gotten more organized, and the surf is indeed up. Top recorded speed so far, 15.3 knots. Nicely done, Jon.
Life on board has fallen into good routines. As a group, we have gotten to know the boat and to know each other. Our onboard communication and teamwork continues to progress, and I think it will show in the end. Most of the magazines have been burned thru, and all the bad jokes have come and gone… now we are all stuck with each other! But we have a fun bunch aboard; the interaction is great, except that I have a hard time falling asleep when I hear the hoots and laughter in the cockpit.
Good times indeed.
Way up north of us, the 100 foot maxi Alfa Romeo is blasting along, gunning for a new course record. They got to start after all the weather anomalies that we had to deal with had dispersed, so they get to sail a much more direct route, along with the fleet of 70+ foot boats. Down here to the south, we are slowly being overrun by the 50 footers. Saw one off on the distance in the late afternoon, and are thinking it was the Japanese Team in Tachyon III.
And tonight the moon came out. The night started off coal black, with the only the nights from the instruments and the eerie glow of phosphorescence. But early on, the moon came up, peeked out of the clouds, and wow, what an evening. Trucking along, 9, 10, 11 knots with regular bursts over 12, with a lunar-esque sea scape surrounding us. Yes, this is why we do what we do…
Wish us a good watch, and we’ll catch you sometime tomorrow…
Wayne Zittel & the J World Team
Oh what a difference a day makes….
/in Uncategorized/by jworldOh what a difference a day makes….
Tonight, as I sit here writing this, we have the spinnaker up for the first evening, and the sound of water sizzling past the boat again fills the cabin. The breeze finally stabilized and filled in, and we have been enjoying a nice NNW 9-11 knots all day, and now well into the night. The J/120 loves this stuff, and we have been scooting along at about 7 knots in very smooth seas. Good times are here again.
I give my commendation to a great team, who persevered in truly difficult conditions. And their efforts paid off. We came out of the ‘uglies’ in pretty good shape relative to our fleet. We are still sitting in second in our class. Unfortunately (for us, at least) the bigger boats who started three days behind us are missing the tough stuff we ran into earlier and enjoying markedly better conditions, and hence will be tough to beat overall.. but those are the breaks, are there is nothing we can do about the luck of the draw on starting times. We are focusing on our fleet, specifically seeing what we can do to reel in the ultralight Relentless, who sprung to an early lead in the light winds. Our team is jazzed to be back in the breeze, and ready to chase them down. We have been scraping off a couple of miles at each position report, so I am optimistic that we’ll get to them!
We had the great fortune to come across a small pod of Orcas earlier today. They passed by relatively close on our starboard side, but then as quickly as the come in the scene, they were gone… leaving us alone again. Very impressive animals, and it’s a humbling experience to see them out here in this vast space which is really theirs…
Anyhow, it’s coming up on 4am right now, and I’m going to head back on deck and get ready for the watch change… Charles has been driving, Bill is stepping up to the helm, and Eric is here in the cabin earing up to trim for an hour before he starts driving. It’s going to be a nice morning.
All the best and pleasant dreams of far off shores to all those back home,
Wayne Zittel and the J World Team
The Pacific lives up to its name.
/4 Comments/in Uncategorized/by jworldFrom the J World Radio News: The Pacific lives up to its name.
Yes indeed. Well, at least the part of the Pacific that is currently the venue for the 2009 Transpac race. There is a lot of activity many thousands of miles away, but that seems to have disrupted our little party way down here, much closer to the Equator. Team J World (and the rest of the fleet) have been working hard in some really trying conditions. Very, very light breezes have made going painfully slow. Every mile (in fact, every boatlength) seems to take a tremendous amount of focus and patience. There is encouraging news, though, as today we started moving along with a bit more breeze. And knowing that the weather patterns should be changing in the next 24 hours and that boats which made gains now should reap increasing rewards kept us working. It seems to be paying off. We have been holding a strong second place in our class, even taking over the lead for a day…
On board, there is a rumor sweeping the crew about a Sea Mall with an impressive food court. The EPIRB has been re-wired to become the “Emergency Pizza Indicating Radio Beacon,” designed to expedite pizza pie delivery to the remote aquatic regions. And thru it all, Bill just sits on the transom, staring back towards the mainland, continually muttering (occasionally hollering) something about Blueberries…
We have been seeing tons of these small jelly fish, no bigger than a pack of cards, with their little sails up (luckily, none have actually succeeded in going faster than we are!). If you look closely, odds are you’ll see some of the small white (albino??) crabs that scoot across the surface of the water. Not sure what they are doing out here, over 500 miles from the nearest patch of land, and in water some 60,000 feet deep! Occasionally, flying fish surprised by our presence (and probably our keel), take flight, arcing away from our bow, but other than that, it’s pretty lonely out here…
Other happenings: The raspberry crumble served up at 3am last night seems to have been a hit. Nothing like some tasty treats to take make the graveyard shifts a little more pleasant. We made a sacrifice of Rum to the wind gods today; it wasn’t much, but we are hoping to get credit for the fact that it was 100% of the rum aboard. Josh has been threatening to light all sorts of things on fire in honor of the holiday. Luckily his hurricane proof lighter seems to have run out of butane… can’t image how that would have happened…
Anyway, late at night now and I am taking the chance to catch up the latest weather faxes, and we are all cheered at the fact that the big spinnaker went up this afternoon, and we are able to fly it from puff to puff… and although the holes out here are still big, it’s looking like the worst is behind us. We are all looking forward to surfing in the tradewinds in the upcoming days…
More later, and happy Fourth of July from all of us out here at our quiet outpost at 20 25’N by 126 35’W…
Wayne Zittel and the J World Team
It was as if they were motoring!
/in Uncategorized/by jworldWell, I have certainly had easier sailboat races.
So not only is our destination halfway across the Pacific Ocean, and our route taking as far from dry land as you can get on mother earth, we are also being thrown some quite interesting weather. Usually by this time in the Transpac Race from LA to Hawaii, the spinnakers are coming out as the breezes freshen and get behind the boats, giving crews the thrilling surfing conditions in warm weather that contribute to making this event one of the all time classic yacht races.
Not so right now… After our last post, the breeze lightened up, and has been shifty and challenging for the past day. Last night, we were slatting away at about 1 knot for far too long. It was phenomenally frustrating to see the lights of a boat which had been about 5 miles astern all day, just take off like we were standing still (which we were), and they were motoring at full steam (which they can’t of course, since it’s a sailboat race). Demoralizing, to say the least. But much to our happiness at the morning position report, we learned that the mystery boat was in fact the Alaska Eagle, the escort boat and communications center for the fleet who reported that in the middle of the night they had, in fact, started motoring to keep on their schedule. Much relief aboard, followed by satisfaction when morning roll-call indicated that we had gained nicely on most of our fleet. One notable exception is the One-Design 35 in our class, Relentless, an ultralight which does not seem to be struggling as much as us heavier boats in the light winds… They are currently winning our class, with us in holding onto second.
So what to report of life onboard? The day was warm and mostly sunny. They layers of clothing are getting peeled back, but the nights are still a touch chilly, so the foulies haven’t gone too deep in the sea bags yet. We pulled out the sextant for a bit today and practiced taking sights. It was a bit bouncy (trust me, it’s surprisingly hard to get an accurate reading), and there’s a bit of room for improvement… let’s just say for now that if all our GPSs took a dive, we could probably see the islands before we sailed past them. Probably. Like I said, a bit of room for improvement, but that’s what we are here for. We cracked into the freeze dried rations this evening, with a dinner of Lasagne and vegetable medley. Not too shabby… We were accompanied by dolphins earlier this evening (I seem to have slept thru it). The moon rises an bit before dark, and the early evenings are glorious. It’s now late night (around 2:30am) and dark dark outside. Really puffy too, with breeze at 2 knots, then 12 knots… but at least we are still moving.
Yes, I have certainly had easier sailboat races. But not many more enjoyable.
All the best from Wayne and the J World team from out here in the wide blue Pacific. More later…
J/World Sailing
San Francisco Bay
San Diego
Puerto Vallarta
(800) 910-1101
(510) 271-4780
info@sailing-jworld.com

