If anyone would like to follow boats in the race click HERE to sign up for tracking. I will be aboard “Snow Lion” for my fourth race on a boat with that name. More than any other single boat I have raced to Bermuda on.
Category: bermuda race
IMPORTANT CHANGES FOR THE BERMUDA RACE 2010
If you are sailing the Bermuda Race, you need to click HERE. The procedure for entry into Bermuda has changed.
On another note, sad news, John Bonds, died today. A fixture at the Safety at Sea Seminars. I watched and listened to him in March. He was full of life.
500 mb and the Gulf Stream
Today was the last day of class with Lee Chesneau, we discussed the 500 mb charts in weather. We had a guest speaker, Frank Bohlen who has spent most of his life studying the Gulf Stream. It is such a large feature and contains so much energy, it has a very real impact on weather.
WHAT IS BIG?
I had trouble fitting “Mirabella V” in the frame. That is” Leopard of London” which is 100 feet long on the outside of “Mirabella” The dark mast through the rigging of “Mirabella” is “Speedboat” also 100 feet long. Both of the 100 foot boat have power assisted winches and canting keels, which means that the engine must be running pretty much all the time in order to sail the boat. They sail with 18-25 people as they are all needed to make sail changes or any other big changes, like a jibe.
Both “Speedboat” and “Leopard” are in Newport waiting for a weather window to make an attempt on the monohull transatlantic record. Because they have power assisted winches they can never own the outright record held by “Maria Cha” set in 2003
“Speedboat” is also entered in the Bermuda Race starting June 18th, where I am certain they would like to set a course record as well.
“Mirabella V” is, I believe ,still the largest sloop in the world. Despite to fact that everything is done by a computer and power, I have trouble conceiving of managing anything aboard her. Just the sheer size of the gear and the loads generated are mind boggling. The photo of people standing next to the headstay turnbuckle should be proof enough. This photo is courtesy of Bill Coleman.
I am thrilled to see these boats and glad of their existence I am anxious to get back to the thread of the 12 meters and the America’s Cup.
LOOKING FOR A BERMUDA RACE NAVIGATOR?
196 Entries for the 2010 Bermuda Race
196 entries is a healthy number any time, for a race like the Bermuda Race. 635 nm in distance at a magnetic course of 162 degrees. The start is June 18th, therefore the weather will be what the weather will be. Add to that the Gulf Stream as a race course feature. It is not always possible to take full advantage of both. The Gulf Stream is like a barrier or fence in the Ocean that you have to climb over to get where you are going.
Kitchen Shoals is your landfall/turning mark, before finishing off St. David’s light
Safety at Sea
St. Partick’s day weekend in Newport. The Safety At Sea Seminar also took place. The weather outside was some of the worst we have experienced in some time;sixty knots of wind and over 5 inches of rain.
more Carina memories, the big mouth frog.
In 1971, I was preparing “Carina” for another trans-atlantic crossing to Cowes for the Admiral’s Cup. “Carina” was again part of the 3 boat team representing the United States.
BERMUDA RACE 1970
As I continue to “mine” my papers and photographs, new material comes to light. I have previously written about my “Carina” years and the Nye family. Not enough can be said about their involvement in yachting. Here are copies of the Bermuda newspaper after our win. and a photo of Bodie Rhodes and one of his daughters Robin.
BURT DARRELL
I first met Burt Darrell in 1970 after the Bermuda Race. We had work done at his yard. In the succeeding years I would always visit and help out at the yard, as the finish of a Bermuda Race would push the limits of the usual island time. I looked forward to it, as I was rewarded with many stories of the sailing past. He was a man of enormous understated charm. Often I was invited to lunch at his house, again understated, well hidden from the public. A house he built himself with lumber salvaged from wrecks on the reefs surrounding Bermuda. The House was built of teak.