latitude THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA SAILING SHEET
VOL. 35 MAY 1980
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TARTAN 10 Y.R.A. One Design
Clipper Yacht Harbor, Sausalito, CA (415) 332-4622
Now on Display: Tartan 37-33, T-10, San Juan 34, 28, 7.7, 23 Moore 24 Wilderness 21
Homewood Marina, Lake Tahoe (916) 525-6538
IN SA USALITO
Now In Stock
Now An S.Y.R.A. One Design
EXQUISITE CUSTOM SAILS DENNIS BREWER WINS THE ELECTRA WORLDS We first met Dennis Brewer when we were sailing the Buckner some years ago in little wind and lots of slop. We were either seasick or bored, and after spending much time removing the half-ounce from the headstay, we final¬ ly finished, setting the record for the longest elapsed time. We next met while playing ice hockey. Neither of us could skate, and since we were the very last two players to be chosen we were on opposing teams. The only com¬ munication we had was through opposing ends of our hockey sticks. The mere thought makes our shins feel raw and turn black and blue. We next saw Dennis when he bought Seebar, an Electra. Seebar is German vernacular for the canine equivalent of a sea lion. He came to the sail loft to buy new sails so he could win the world championship. How to teach this new dog new tricks . . .? It was easy. First of all, Dennis learns quickly and well. Secondly, he is a terrific sea lawyer, and will soon be an equally terrific land lawyer. Thirdly, Dennis organized the Electra’s world championship. And of couse he is Powered by Pineapples, and won. But seriously, Dennis is doing just fine. The Electra is one of the most active one-design classes around and Den¬ nis has won the last seven races. In the prpcess he won the last three consecutive races counting towards the season championship, the midwinters and the worlds. That doesn’t sound like an old dog to us! ★ Seebar, Powered by Pineapples
^ Powered by Pineapples
Stocking Dealers for: Headfoil 2 and Atlantis Foul Weather Gear
•v
Richards and van Heeckeren SAILhAAKERS AT 123 SECOND STREET; OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA 94607 (415)444-4321
LEASE BACKS . .. FOR CASH! We Pay Berthing, Maintenance, PLUS Cash ★ In Your Pocket for a Time-Share Lease Back. %
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YOU BUY
★ CASH BACK EACH MONTH '
CC-24 J-24 J-30 CC-30 CC-32 CC Landfall 38 CC-40 Rafiki 35 Rafrki 37
$100 100 225 225 275 375 475 275 325 . *'
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. . .CALL FOR DETAILS, NOT GIMMICKS.
■Yacht
House
CONTENTS
490 Jefferson St., San Francisco, CA 94109 362-2710 76 Jack London Square, Oakland, CA 94607 452-1100 2727 Shelter Island Dr., San Diego 223-1691
9
subscription
15
letters
35
one-design
37
loose lips
41
the big one
45
max ebb
50
sightings
60
one hand forollones
64
out of my mind
69
colin archer
72
aiiiyeeee!
74
innovative pro's
81
ploy for more
86
interview: perry
WE HAVE THE BIG NAMES IN
BOAT CLOTHES! Read on to see what boat clothing will be worn this summer afloat and ashore — for good looks, comfort, and long wear.
JACKETS For all-around wear, slip into a luxurious WOOLRICH jacket — 65% cot¬ ton, 35% poplin.
JEANS & SHORTS '
WOOLRICH makes great drawcord jeans, and shorts of 100% cotton twill. If you like cargo shorts, the best are OCEAN PACIFIC'S, made of cotton corduroy.
SHIRTS We have them by the hundreds for both men and women! WOOLRICH makes a great short sleeve bush shirt in cotton canvas — a short sleeve WALLABY shirt of interlock knit in many colors — and a great cotton Madras shirt. FOX-KNAPP has a 100% Navy wool A.C.P.O. shirt, and OCEAN PACIFIC makes great solid color short sleeve knits.
WINDBREAKERS You can have them in navy or white from OCEAN PACIFIC.
T-SHIRTS Comfortable, nautical 100% cotton from OCEAN PACIFIC.
PLASTIC VJSORS
90
big & comfortable
92
harbor hopping
94
sile the seas
New spring colors, Velcro adjustable for size.
FOUL WEATHER GEAR Anything you could need from four manufacturers — STEARNS, LINE 7, CANOR-PLAREX, and INTERNATIONAL. Choose from float coats, rac¬ ing vests, jackets, bib trousers, and on and on ...
SHOES We specialize in SPERRY — every color, style, and size.
cover photo by latitude 38 Ted Smith, ''Matchless'', Islander 41 at the Forollone Islands page 5
GIFTS We have the best in nautical gifts and novelties.
WE HAVE THEM RACERS AND CRUISERS
The Perfect Blend — Comfort, Beauty & Speed
THE CARIBE PERRY 47
Come see the 41 & 47 at our docks
The new Orion 27 by Pacific Seacraft t/ lC
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...
Corporation *
“Building pur future with quality” St
The Cost of a Dream t
If you ever thought that a blue water cruising yacht was out of your price range, it's time to think again. With Flicka, you don’t have to spend your life dreaming of cruising — you can get away now!
FLICKA
3301 So. Susan St., Santa Ana, CA 92704 (714)751-1343
Overbuilt For Safe Cruising
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA YACHT SALES 2415 Mariner Sq. Dr., Alameda, CA 94501 (415) 523-8773
1500 Maple St., Redwood City, CA 94063 (415) 368-2908
ALL NOW! SUITE SAILING ERICSON/25
+ — No other 25-footer offers more.
/ /
'
The 11.0A by S2 Yachts
ERICSON/30 +
— A new standard in 30-foot yachting.
Q Encson / IJf/L |
j' • , / / . 1 9 2A
9.2C
11,0A
11.OC
ERICSON/35
— Fine tradition in a 35-footer.
THE BEST BOAT EXPERIENCE CAN BUY. S2’s tough construction standards demand stability and response from this ultimately liveable cruiser. Everwhere you look, the superior craftsmanship and nautical expertise only S2 delivers is clearly in evidence. Saii an S2 and learn from our experience.
ERICSON/38
— She offers qualities of comfort that the rich accept as standard.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA YACHT SALES 2415_ Mariner Sq. Dr., Alameda, CA 94501 (415) 52^-8773
page 7
1500 Maple St., Redwood City, CA 94063 (415) 368-2908
KERMIT PARKER YACHT BROKERAGE (415) 456-1860 San Rafael Yacht Harbor, 557 Francisco Blvd., San Rafael, CA 94901
JUST ARRIVED OILIER 39
From New Zealand
L.O.A.l 39 0” L.W.L.29’6” BEAM., . . 114” DRAFT.60” DISPLACEMENT.18,000* BALLAST... 6,800*
BLUE WATER LUXURY IN A CLASS OF ITS OWN Introductory Price $89,ooo plus commissioning, registration & local taxes
There is More than One Way to Finance a Boat.
41* Sparkman & Stephens Yawl. Beautiful, comfortable, and elegant. “Creative financing"
We have six sellers who are ready to finance, trade, or ? Call Sid, Norm or Mike for details. Financing is available so you can enjoy the Sailing Season of 1980.
possibilities. $69,000.
BROKERAGE BOATS
32' Aries,- Gilmer's famous double ended passagemaker. Heavy F/G hull, 4 cylinder diesel, and a beautiful teak interior. $35,000.
27’ 30' 32’ 32’ 32’ 33’ 35' 36’ 37’ 40’ 40’ 48’
Islander.. . . . . . $12,500 Northstar 1000. . . . . . . . 25,500 Mariner. . . . 45,700 Islander. . . . 27,000 Daniel Pilot Sip. - 23,500 Norwegian M.S. _ 34,900 Cheoy Lee ’’Lion". . . - 36,000 Cruising Cutter. . . . _ 27,000 Garden Ketch. - 50,000 Atkin Cutter. . . . . 55,000 Challenger. _ 89,000 Hand Ketch. - 69,500
45’ Rosborough Ketch,
1970. This little pirate ship has
enough room to be a home for the family. Capable and rugged
$68,000.
SUBSCRIPTIONS
I WANT IT! □ Enclosed is $ 10.00 for one year
•
Third Class Postage (Delivery time: 2 days to 2 weeks)
□ Enclosed is $20.00 for one year First Class Postage (Delivery time: 2 to 3 days)
□ I have a distribution point in my area which will distribute 25 or more free copies of “Latitude 38". Enclosed is their name and address (these copies are sent via UPS at no cost to distributor.)
NAME .
ADDRESS
CITY
ZIP
latitude
Editor & Co-Publisher — Richard Spindler Co-Publisher — Kathleen McCarthy Advertising — Jaime Muniz Production — Terri Wilder P.O. Box 1678, Sausalito, CA 94965 (415) 332-6706
‘the northern California sailing sheet’ page 9
IHOOD PUTS YOU INI THE WINNERS OWL V
THE 1980 LIPTON CUP THE % TON WORLDS THE NORTH AMERICAN 0 NATIONALS THE J-24 WORLDS THE ADMIRALS CUP THE % TON WORLDS
1980 LIPTON CUP '
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Sails made from Hood lamin¬ ated Mylar “Laminar” sailcloth came of age at the 1980 Lipton Cup and the 1980 S.O.R.C. The new Hood Laminar genoas were outg standing in winds from 5 to 25 knots, g Not one sail tore or stretched out of shape. Unlike many commercially availbale mylars, Hood Laminars are truly manageable. What does all this development do for you? Our record says it all. In the Lipton Cup, Free Enterprise, a Serindipity43 designed by Doug Peterson, and owned by Dick Ettinger, went up against 12 of the best boats that Southern Cali¬ fornia yacht clubs could come up with and she emerged the winner after three races. In the Lipton Cup 15% of the fleet had Hood sails and the winner was Hood equipped. In the S.O.R.C. 19% of the fleet had Hood sails and 42% of the trophies were won by
Hood equipped boats. This says that if you race, your best chance is with the world’s finest sailmaker . . . Hood! Get in the winners oval. Give us a call today. TELL ME MORE I need information on—
Hood Laminar genoas □ Hood racing mainsails □ quote on sails for my boat □ My boat is a _____ I____J_P_E __
Name_ Address City — State _ Telephone
□ business Dhome
“Free Enterprise" HOOD SAILMAKERS
861 West 18th St.
Costa Mesa, CA 92627 714-548-3464
International Lofts: Argentina, Australia, England, France, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, and West Germany..
/
In the Bristol tradition ...
PERFORMANCE and the OFFSHORE CRUISING YACHT The science/art of cruising calls for that often unattainable bal&nce between performance, construction quality and realistic accomodations. The Bristol 29.9 scores right on the balance point. The best of all bluewater worlds.
Performance? This Bristol 29.9 finished first in class, ‘79 Bermuda-Newport race.
Quality? Absolutely the finest. Need proof? Ask us about Bristol construction and the Bristol shipwright. About hull to deck joints and hand-laid hull strength. Accomodations? 6+ ft. headroom. Stretch-out and stowage space like no other offshore yacht under 30 feet. Performance. Quality. Space. And now — more than ever — an exceptional investment! If you’re serious about going offshore, you, too, may con¬ clude that this is the only yacht under 30 feet to match your ex¬ pectations.
*
15 EMBARCADERO COVE PHONE: (415) 261 -SAIL page 11
OAKLAND, CA 94606 TELEX 337-614
’
^ DUFFLE BflC SPECIAL
COME SEE
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the Impressive NEPTUNE 24 & 16 CORONADO 15, BANSHEE, TOPPER, ALPHA ONE — And the Fabulous New GRYPHON.
P
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A 10”x20” 13”x28” 14”x36” Straps
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#s 199
SECOND
Also Dealers for CATALINAS & other fine boats.
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at The Sailor’s Store In WALNUT CREEK
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- $11.00 — 15.00 — 20.00 — $ 2.00
• • • •
RUGGED 13 oz CANVAS DURABLE CONSTRUCTION NYLON ZIPPERS RED, NAVY, NATURAL
FRANCISCO
•
PHONE
Brokerage — Chandlery — Custom Rigging Repairs —
We’ll Compete with Local Discounters on any substantial hardware order. We Accept Orders by Phone.
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boot warehouse
986-2090
1531 Third Avenue
STREET • FREE PARKING AT S W CORNER AT 2ND AND HOWARD
5AN JOSE
935-6844
ra M0NTEMY
HIGHWAY
SANTA CRUZ HARBOR FESTIVAL & BOAT SHOW
ISAUTA CR4Z ]1 YACHTGALES\j
UGML ■HTCUJ0
May 30, 31 & June 1,1980 Frt. 12 noon to 7:00 p.m Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m. to 7:00 p.m
O'HBIti's]
FREEAM/SS/0N
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W/lto SutfiHs
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catalina ■ yankee • santa cruzsan juari wilderness • olson • moore Chrysler • ranger • hobie • cal • bounty • santana C&B bayliner newport- 4
windrose
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Santa Cruz Area Boat & Yacht Dealers
''HAWAII AM
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bathtub race
ROBY RACE
SPONSORED BY
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Bank of America
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Six good reasons you should buy your next sail from DeWitt Sails • • • • m •
Mandella, 1979 YRA Season’s Champion (Islander 28) Front Page News, 1st, 1979 Danforth Series & 1979 Lipton Cup Amateur Hour, 1979 YRA Season’s Champion (IOR, Div. B) Journey, 1st, 1979 Silver Eagle Lohg Distance Race Panache, JransPac, 1979 Gangreen, 1979 YRA Season’s Champion (J-24)
Here’s three more good reasons • Product and customer service is top of the line • Prices are competitive • Delivery commitments are met consistently
Most of all, we care about you, and ... we perform.
dewitt sails 415-234-4334 or 234-8192 1230 Brickyard Cove Road Point Richmond, CA 94801
Open Saturdays for your convience (8-2, limited service).
Valiant ^ moves to
Mite Lompe /adth The Valiant 40
*
is a fast offshore cruising boat, pure and simple. Her clean and efficient design gives her a remarkable ability to point high while footing fast, and makes her a comfortable and exhilarating cruising boat. She has a stable, easily driven hull, powered by a close-winded versatile rig. The vessel maneuvers exceptionally well in close quarters under both power and sail, and unlike the majority of sailboats will easily back to both port and starboard in reverse. The Valiant 40 is recognized as a breakthrough de¬ sign — one of Bob Perry’s finest — the modern stan¬ dard by which all other cruising yachts are judged.
VALIANT 40 - In Stock & Ready for Delivery ★ Financing Available
LOA
39'10"
LWL
340"
Beam
I2'4" 22.500 lbs.
Disp. ■Ballast
§,400 lbs.
5.A,
772 sq.ft.
Draft
60"
Valiant 40 ★ Pilothouse 40 ★ Esprit 37 ★ Valiant 32 Northern California dealers for:
Mite Lompe VWfa
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2390 Mariner Square Dr. Alameda, Ca. 94501
(415) 523-3707
O’day
Fairways marine
VALIANT PETERSON 44 CUTTER
Quality Brokerage Featuring Video listings
SWIFT
LETTERS □ ME SAILING MY BOAT In the July 79 and the March ‘80 issues of Latitude 38 you have good action photos of me sailing my boat, yet neither photo identified the class capable of giving such an exciting ride. Both photos were taken at Clear Lake in June, after the SBRA (Small BOAT Racing Assn.) racing was cancelled be¬ cause of too much wind. It was a windy day, but not that bad. I did use an eight year old sail though to avoid thrashing my new one. I went out to see if my rig had any weak points and to see if I could handle the winds. To race in the San Fran¬ cisco Bay effectively, one has to be racing in the heavy airs, not merely surviving (see Dennis Surtees’ article “Up-sidedown is Slow”, One-Design Yachtman). My practice may have helped me win our Nationals at Palo Alto YC in July. We had close racing in the top half of the fleet in this medium heavy air series. My arch rival, Gill Woolley (1979 SBRA Champ), should have sailed with me that day to test his rudder fittings. In the Nationals, he broke the rudder pintles one day and the transom gudgeons on an¬ other day! The photos show the International Contender (16’, 250 lbs., 125 sq. ft. of sail). We have about 30 boats in the area. For more information about the boat and/or the class, please contact me at (415) 941-9060 or Jerry White, Secre¬ tary/Treasurer, Box 831, Summerland, CA 93067, telephone: (805) 969-3527. Jim Anderson President, USICA Los Altos P.S. — Thanks for the BEST yachting rag around . . . it’s the only one worth reading. Jim — Thanks for the information — we always wondered who in the heck that boat belonged to. We had hoped to publish a guide to the SYRA (Small Yacht Racing Assn.) boats, but it just didn’t fit this issue. Look for it soon, however.
□ GAG A MAGGOT Your article in the April edition on Wave Traders and Albert Schultz is enough to gag a maggot. “Poor Albert”, who gave you such a lot of advertising bucks now gets a lot of sympathy, after having stolen the life savings of many of your readers. Poor Albert cleaned out his trust or escrow account which included many thousands of'dollars deposited to purchase boats and equipment; that money is now lost; the damage done was enormous; I understand that it amounts to about $250,000.00. So, how do you treat the disaster? You state that he is real¬ ly a very nice guy who shouldn’t be punished. What about the victims? Not important to you; they didn’t page 15
... with a long record of championship sailmaking on San Francisco Bay, still
KNOWS HOW TO CRUISE ... These are some of the products and services DeWitt Sails offers single-handers and cruisers — • special long-lasting, easy to handle cruising sailcloth with ultra violet shield • roller-furling gear and conversion of existing sails -• easy-to-handle “poleless” spinnakers • twin-running headsails • extended problem solving sessions to help you decide on the best systems for you and your boat • review and evaluation of existing sails and covers • low-cost, effective, repairs and recuts • sail covers, boat covers
If you would like to know more about these products and services, please mail us the coupon below. Or give us a call. As added encouragement, DeWitt Sails is offering a free visor to the first fifty people who send us a coupon or call and mention this ad.
415-234-4334 or 234-8192 1230 Brickyard Cove Road Point Richmond, CA 94801 dewitt Sails YES! I am interested in knowing more about DeWitt Sails products and services for cruisers and single¬ handers. The type of boat I have is a_ I mostly race_cruise_sail single-handed _. Please call me at_.-_-_ between the hours_and_. Name _ Address _ Zip
A GOOD HONESTISAILBOAT WITH A PRACTICAL INTERIORpHAT’S FAST AS HELL...
State-of-the-art sailing performance in a high quality production boat Join the current Wylie 34 owners who are winning in both IOR and PHRF and experience the pleasure of sailing a fast, responsive, yet easily-handled boat. Go for the trophies or just go for the fun. Either way you’ll go in comfort and style with 6’3" standing headroom and berths for six adults. The interior is light, airy and spacious and elegantly constructed and trimmed in fine teak and mahogany hardwoods. Sturdy construction, careful craftsmanship and the winning tradi¬ tion from the builders of the Hawkfarms.
The Wylie 34 is built in Alameda, California, and sold directly from the factory. Consider the advantages: • SPECIFICATIONS L.O.A. .39’9” Draft .6’ L.W.L. .25’9” Ballast.3050 lbs. Beam. .lO’IO” Displacement. .7800 lbs. Diesel. .BMW D-12 Prop. 16” folding Martec Winches.. . . .6 Barients Headroom.6’3” .7/8th dbl. spreader Rig. Sail Area. . . 100% Fore Tri. 503 P . .. .41’ 1. .38’ J ... .11.42’ E. .14’ .12’ JC. Rating. ..PHRF: 120 IOR: 25.3
Factory Direct Call for a price on a boat outfitted to your specifications
(415) 523-8330
• • • • •
Compare prices and what is included in the base price. Most boats have a long list of “extras” that are actually basic parts of the boat (like winches, vang, spin¬ naker gear, running rigging, etc.) You’ll find the Wylie 34 with its extensive list of standard equipment to be an exceptional value and priced thousands less than its competition. You deal directly with the builder and have an opportunity to detail your boat be¬ ing built specifically for you. No dealer mark-up. Your money is buying quality materials and careful, sturdy construction. Northern California buyers save substantial shipping expenses. Factory personnel are on hand to commission and service your boat and ensure everything is right after delivery. The factory, not a boat yard, will provide and install accessories you may wish to add to optimize the boat for your tastes and needs. Because many of the ac¬ cessories can be installed while the boat is being built, there is often no charge for the installation.
north coast yachts HAWKFARM and wylie 34 2100 Clement Ave., Alameda, CA 94501
THE SERENDIPITY 43 Designed by Doug Peterson First Overall — 1980 SORC
Webster defines serendipity as “an apparent knack for making fortunate discoveries.” Winning the SORC against the toughest one-off competition in the world with a production boat from a mold was exactly what Acadia’s skipper and crew expected to do. However, finding this race-proven hull available with a hand crafted teak interior, private owners stateroom, main salon with 6’6” headroom and ' 13’ beam and full cruising amenities, including refrigeration and shower, is certainly a fortunate discovery. The Serendipity 43 is an internationally acclaimed, superbly built, and impeccably detailed racing or cruising yacht at a sensible price. Offered in three configurations — the Grand Prix, the IOR Racer, and the Racer/Cruiser (pictured), the 43 can and will fulfill the specific needs of any serious sailor. Eighteen discriminating yachtsmen will accept delivery of the 43 this year. Can you afford not to be one of them? You owe it to yourself to discover Serendipity.
Serendipity: The Winning System
★
Serendipity 43 Aphrodite 414
★ ★
Peterson 34 Aphrodite 101
★
Serendipity Ifecht/ Pier 9/The Embarcadero, San Francisco 94111 (415) 986-8108
BUCCANEER 255 with Volvo 4 cycle saildrive
Sails Traveler Pulpits Lifelines Galley Ice Box Head-enclosed Sail Cover
Genoa Track Winches Lights Bottom Paint Compass Freight Anchor Safety Gear
212.43/mo. T3.18 %«*£>.,'s 18,319 plus 1190.74 sales tax 3902.74 Downpayment Total of all payments plus down - 34,492 ★ subject to change
LONG SHAFT OUTBOARD 5 h.p. one only 395 7.5 h.p. one only 595 10 h.p. elect, start two only 745 10 h.p. Sailor two only 854 with manufacturer’s new engine warranty JIIMIT l
[^Sailboat Shop]
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2639 Blanding Ave., Alameda, CA (415) 521-5900
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LETTERS advertise, so they are not important. You missed an opportunity to be of service. You could have explored into the situation and included a dissertation of the loose regulation of yacht brokers by the State. Almost any flake can get a license and call himself a “Yacht Broker”, and open a trust account and when the time is ripe, take off for Brazil (or some such place) and laugh all the way. And get sympathy from Latitude 38 as an added laugh. The lesson of Poor Albert is that anyone selling a boat, or buying a boat, should insist on a bank escrow, and not the broker’s shirt pocket. He only got me for a couple of thou . . . but I really feel for those many who were badly hurt. Walter Colby Citrus Heights Walter — If you’re trying to misrepresent us, you’re doing a good job. You quote us as describing the former owner of Wave Traders as “Poor Albert”. That’s bullshit. You also claim we say he shouldn’t be punished. That’s more bullshit. Then you draw the illogical conclusion that because he had advertised with us, we are repaying a debt of gratitude by ex¬ pressing sympathy. To believe we owe a debt to a guy who has just burned us badly and we’ll never see again is simply idiotic. Obviously taking the money and running was a dastardly, stupid thing to do that hurt a lot of people who shouldn’t have been hurt. Like with murder, we didn’t really feel we had to explain that this was a terrible thing to do. You have our sym¬ pathy, as does everyone who lost money dealing with Wave Traders — ourselves included. But to suggest that Albert got into the boat business to rip people off when the time was ripe is as preposterous as yoUr foolish “understanding” that Albert ran off with a quarter of a million dollars. We can appreciate your anger and fury at be¬ ing burned, but getting ridiculous about it doesn’t help anything. It’s an unfortunate fact of life; bankers run off with money, stockbrokers run off with it, armor-car drivers run off with it, and in this case, a yacht broker did. We’d rather dwell on the brighter side of life, and thankfully there were a couple of constructive suggestions in your letter. Regarding the requirements of becoming a yacht broker: It is rather simple, you just have to be in a marine-related' oc¬ cupation for one year before you are eligible, and then pass a rather silly examination. After that, you must put up a $5,000 bond to cover claims against you, and that’s about all that is required by the State. Incidentally, those who sell only new boats do not need a yacht brokers license at all. There has been some feeling that with the price of boats go¬ ing up that a $5,000 bond is not sufficient. In some areas of the country, it is becoming popular to place funds with an escrow company rather than using the broker as the escrow holder, until the tide changes. As we understand it, the fee for this service currently runs about $200, which generally is split page 19
Gene Haynes "Whither Thou" with Twin 1.5 oz. Headsails up. t
We Specialize in Cruising Sails For Around the Bay or Around The World. Also Covers, Repairs and Recuts.
j& HOGIN SAILS 1801 -D Clement St. Alameda, CA 94501 (415) 523-4388 Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
IRS REFUND SPECIALS! PRICES SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURERS CHANGE GOOD THRU 5/31/80 master charge
H & L MARINE WOODWORK YOUR CHARGE CARD ACCEPTED
We are the Do-It-Yourself Headquarters for the H & L Wood Products & teak lumber. Below are a few examples of the accessory items we stock. Drawers wtdoor beneath Single & Double Available!
mqmmb Spice & Towel Rack
Corners Molding & Pintail
Louvered Door Unit Solid & Panel-types also Dish, Cup Utensil
78+ INTERNATIONAL CHANNEL 25 WATT VHF MARINE RADIO TELEPHONE FEATURES: Lighted pushbutton keyboard channel selection; Built in loud
MINI MAN BOAT LADDER Completely Col-! lapsible, Exten¬ sion Type Ladder.) Hooks Easily on Toerail/Coaming. Made of Anodized Hardened Alumi¬ num & S/S. Steps Covered w/Ribbed PVC Treads. Avail¬ able in 4 Mdls. w/Optional Carry¬ ing Bag.
hailer; R/F meter, autorevert to channel 16; splash resistant gasketed cabinet & much more!
4 Step-LIST: $149 BBSC: $139.95 5 Step-LIST: $167 BBSC: $156.95
CLEARANCE ITEMS DICKINSON CHESAPEAKE
HatBleo
We Also carry a large selection of Teak Lumber in thicknesses from V2”-2” &. various widths, both finished & unfinished.
LIST: $499.95 -
INTRO: $399.95
quantities limited
SHIPMATE 701CH S/S Kerosene Cabin Heater — Self Contained w/all fittings LIST: 290 CLEARANCE: 219
S/S Diesel Heater; C/W Stack & Cap LIST: $495.00 —
MAGMA MARINE KETTLE 100% 18-8 STAINLESS STEEL BBQ ADJUS¬ TABLE COOKING GRILL ADJUSTABLE 'DRAFT/TEMP. CONTROL Mounts to any boat. All Mdls. include H/D Dacron Tote Bag.
SEAFARER World's Largest Selling Depthsounder SPECIAL PURCHASE — 6 ONLY LIST. $199-SPECIAL $119.95
SAVE 40%
CLEARANCE: $346.50 BOTTOM PAINT UP TO 40% OFF!
SAVE 30%! COLE STOVE All S/S Fireplace LIST: $220.00
CLEARANCE: $169.00
HEATER CLOSE OUT
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LIST SPECIAL Floor Mdl. $104.50 $79.95 Stanchion Mt. $117.45 $89.95 Deluxe Mdl. $127.45 $99.95 (Includes Floor Stand & Stanchion Mount)
‘‘We sell to boat owners at boat builders’ prices.”
B0A7BU/LBERS SUPPLY CO. 1552 Maple St., Docktown Marina, Redwood City, CA 94063 (415) 365-7874
HOURS: M-F: 10-6 PM SAT: 9-5 PM
WE STOCK WOOLSEY, PETIT, ZSPAR & INTERLUX BRANDS
LETTERS between the buyer and the seller. There are some people working to get this fee down to a more, reasonable $60 or $70. If you are involved with buying or selling a boat and feel you’d be more secure using an escrow company than a yacht broker, you may want to spend the extra money. It’s up to you. (
□YUCCA’S NOSE I d like to point out a slight sin of omission in last issue’s 10R column by Roger Hall. After Sunday’s Match Race in the Australian pursuit back from the “circle”, the honorable runner-up was omitted from the results. Carl Schumacher is too modest to request a mention, but 1 am not. Instead of her customary first place finish, Summertime Dream was eased out of first place by Yucca’s substantial nose. Considering the size of her competition, not too shabby a performance. John C. Dukat Alameda John — We see that Carl’s Summertime Dream started the ocean season with a first in the MORA-IOR Division of the Lightbucket Race. Were going to have to have a talk with that Alameda designer soon.
□WASH AWAY THE BLUES Much enjoyed your March issue after a few months of “No News from Home”. Over tacos & cerveza at bar social here in Manzanillo I had to agree with your guide to Cabo. Your page on P.V. was good, but you didn’t mention the 2 best deals there: the 2 peso bus into town (sometimes with radio), and Bing’s Ice Cream. Also, the people don’t pollute the harbor — the city does! But the hot harbor showers wash away all the blues. John Paul Chile, Crew Tiburon 30’ Ketch, Katika II Manzinillo, Mexico, on route back to Tahiti, de Coyote Point
□ DREAM COME TRUE
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We are considering living aboard our dream-come-true sailboat and wonder if Latitude 38 has ever published any ar¬ ticles on liveaboard marinas in the bay area. We have children and a cat and must take into account the possibilities of discrimination where they are concerned. If you have never researched this topic, could you point us in the right direc¬ tion? (Perhaps we could furnish the article, in time!!) We need a list of marinas where living aboard is permitted and/or names, addresses of a liveaboard association if such exists.My husband works in downtown San Francisco, to give you a point of reference. page 21
EVERYTHING A SKIPPER could wish for, 3 bedrooms, Vh baths, family room, IIvino and dining room. Walk out to huge deck, down to your very own private deepwater dock and set sail on San Francisco Bay. Creative financing available. : Call STAN SHANE 769-8000; eves. 521-3260.
Price: $359,000 Other Waterfront Properties Available
WOMEN ONLY! 1
Race Clinic June 27, 28, 29 This clinic is for women by the top women sailors in the Bay Area. Its aim is to provide a solid base upon which a woman can become more competitive within the world of yacht racing. c *
Call For Brochure & Details (415) 521-7322 Olympic Circle Sailing Club 1815A Clement Ave., Alameda, CA 94501
JUST ARRIVED! The Hit of the San Francisco In-The-Water Boat Show!
IRWIN
American-Built Round-the-World Liveaboard Cruiser
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! • Perkins 4-154 Diesel Winches & Sails Included • Ketch-Rigged • Norcold AC/DC Refrigerator w/freezer • Four burner gimballed stove w/oven • Plus 6 cu. ft. ice box
• Also in Stock for Immediate Delivery: The hot new racer-cruiser, Islander Peterson 40 See the entire Cal line at Sailboats/Sausalito • Save on new Hunters — 30, 33, 36 & 37 • Join the Freeport 36 & 41 fleet of cruising yachts from Islander Yachts
NO PROBLEM FINANCING!
• Special “Dealer Finance” program assures you of an exceptionally low savings simple interest rate! Beat the Banks and Save! • Many brokerage boats can be “Owner-financed” or pick up “Wrap¬ around” low interest loans!
BROKERAGE & USED BOATS! 23’ Wreight Montara, 460 cu. in. turbo jet.$ 9,000 25'O'Day., i. 11,500 25' Apollo, 225 cu. in. outdrive. 17,950 26’Reinell. 11,750 26'Balboa.2 from 12,900 27'Catalina. 21,500 27’Coronado. 13,000 28'Islanders.3 from 28,500 28' Newport. 26,000 28'Lancer. 18,000
28' Cheoy Lee.39,000 28'Cal w/diesel. 20,500 28'Irwin. 18,500 29’ Ericson. 25,000 29' Seafarer.. .'. 16,000 30’Garden Sloop. 15,950 30' Tartan. 33,750 30’Olson. 37,000 30'Clipper. 18,000 30’ Hughes. 25,500
30'Islander MKII. 29,200 30' Coronado. 28,000 3V Cheoy Lee. 33,500 32’ Challenger. 45,000 35’ Cheoy Lee. 38,000 36’Islanders.2 from 50,000 40’ Challenger. 89,000 41' Freeport. 95,000 45’ Little Harbor Yawl.110,000 50' Contessa. 220 000
/ 2660 BRIDGEWAY, SAUSALITO, CALIFORNIA 94965/TELEPHONE (415)332-5400
FEATURES THAT MAKE AN AVON A WISE INVESTMENT (the facts of life) VALVES The criteria for a good inflatable boat valve is one that allows easy inflation, fast deflation, does not leak, lasts a long time, and is trouble free. The Avon A-7 valve meets all these standards. It is large ported so the air flows in and out without restriction. With a push and a twist the neoprene check valve is locked open so that the boat deflates itself. The valve is rugged and simple and made of non-corrosive nylon. The seat is protected from sand and salt build up with a cap that doubles as a second safety seal. It is not a tricky device, just good and reliable. PUMP Powerful and long lasting, this combination foot/hand bellows with little effort because of large ports and hose, will inflate a 10 ft boat in 5 minutes â&#x20AC;&#x201D; comfortably. No suction attachment needed, Avon A-7 valves allow your boat to deflate itself quickly. Like many Avon parts, its only after years of faithful service that you realize how good it really is. FENDER Avon's hallmark is the bright yellow rub strake/splash deflector seen in the world's remotest anchorages, on the wildest rivers. It identifies the discriminating owner, one who realizes the best is not only the safest but the most economical. (To renew high visibility scrub strake with SOS pad.)
AVON HULL FABRIC We are always talking about the heart and soul of an inflatable as the material of which it is made. We have virtually established the word ''calendered'' as an everyday vocabulary word. Because of us, Dupont Hypalon is almost as well known as Mom's apple pie. Why don't we shut up and why don't you look around? Have you ever seen a worn out Avon? Maybe in Southern California where rubber doens't last too long, you'll find a 15 year black Avon that has seen its day. But you won't find a deteriorated grey one in Southern California or anywhere else. Avon fabric is so tough that we guarantee it for 5 years against deterioration that effects the usefulness of the boat. Oh sure, some other makers have felt forced to imitate our guarantee. Their efforts have the appeal of a flat footed pirouette to the tune of the Magnuson-Moss Consumer Warranty Act. Avon fabric is guaranteed whether you wash and pamper it or don't, whether you stow it away or leave it uncovered on deck, whether you use it for fun or for commercial endeavors, whether you are the original owner or won it in a poker game. There is a problem with Avon fabric, but its not your problem ... its ours. Avons last so-o-o long.
FLOORBOARDS Weight for strength there is no commercial boat building material that is better than marine plywood. While the 1980 range was on the drawing board several alternatives were considered and finally eliminated. A plywood-foam sandwich, though attractively light, didn't prove strong. The aluminum hollow door concept to be strong was bulky and heavy and susceptable to permanent distortion when abused with heavy loads. Ultimately, one thickness marine ply, though heavier than thinner ply strengthened with perimeter battens, was selected because of satisfactory experience with this construction in large military and commercial inflatables. The pictured S4.00 floor is 3/4" thick, it is very strong though resiliant. It can be screwed ;nto or bolted through for fixing accessories or machinery. It can be owner repaired or replaced. It can be covered or coated with non-skid and certainly should, be varnished annually. Maintenance: Avon boards and transoms are deep sealed plus 2 coats of penetrating marine varnish. Annually, wood work should be sanded and varnished with 2 coats. Next year you will thank yourself if 2 coats are laid on the woodwork before the boat touches the water, paying particular attention to the edge grain. This advice applies to any new yacht. (In our service department we seldom see 5 year old boats that have more than the original varnish .. . oh, shame!)
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This picture is not to prove that Avons are Very Small Crude Carriers nor is it a sawhorse advertisement. It is a picture of air pressure. It is meant to convey the idea that you must pump up your Avon this hard to fully benefit from its merits. This Redcrest has been pumped with the standard Avon bellows, the pressure is 214 PSI. Notice that the rub strake is straight while supporting the 55 gallon barrel, the boat is rigid. You cannot easily row something that is not rigid, in fact its difficult to even board something that's not rigicf. At boat shows, Avon owners are forever feeling our display models and saying "Oh mercy, I wouldn't pump up my boat that hard ... it costs a lot of money ... it might, pop . . . etc, etc." A chief reason that everyone doesn't have an Avon is because half the Avon owners are waffleing around in half inflated boats. If you don't fully inflate your Avon you might just as well buy a cheap raft that can only withstand soft pressure. How to tell the proper pressure? When you think you pumped enough, stand on the tube. The fabric should support your weight without sagging. If the temperature cools you'll need more air, if the temperature rises and the boat is lying on the hot beach, let some air out.
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thought North Sails fi
Colin Gilboy doesn’t think so.
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Colin owns a Cal 20. He figured if North Sails worked on “Pegasus”, they would work on his Cal 20, “Samsara.” He was right! Colin has been doing so well with “Samsara”, that his competition is switching to North Sails. Well, Colin, don’t fret, it takes more than great sails to win races!!
2415 Mariner Square Drive, Alameda, CA 94501 (415) 522-5373 North Sails win more races than any other Sails in the World.
LETTERS LEADS The World in Yacht Equipment Design & Quality
Thank you so much'for your help. Burke Burgin San Francisco Burke — No, we haven’t written an article on the subject of liveaboards, and probably' never will. The relationship be¬ tween current liveaboards and the harbormaster/city/county is often fragile, and we’d hate to upset it just for the sake of a magazine article. But you may be encouraged by the fact that most new marinas are making provisions to have a small number of berths designated for liveaboards. If it’s any help, two places we can think of that do allow liveaboards in some of their slips are Ballena Bay yacht har¬ bor, and the new yacht harbor in Redwood City. While we’re quite certain those slips are filled, you may be able to get on a waiting list. We feel your best bet would be to unobtrusively in¬ vestigate this matter on your own, and have us keep quiet about the whole thing. One thing you will find is that almost all yacht harbors have liveaboards, but very few of them will publically admit to it or say it’s/legal. Sometimes this is done so people who have kids and pets can’t argue that they are being discriminated against. You see, boatowners come running after harbormaster’s scalps after cats have just run through their two-week paint job on the decks, after dogs have peed on their docklines, and after neighbors have been utilized as day care centers. Many harbormaster’s don’t feel they need that kind of heat. And you know, they may be right. Looking for a berth to liveaboard calls more for tact than it does being demanding. If we haven’t been completely en¬ couraging, rest assured that if you are willing to put in the ne¬ cessary effort, you will find a place for your boat, you, your children, and your pet.
□ OBVIOUSLY KNOWLEDGEABLE Let’s hear it for Marilyn Yolles! Ever since Latitude 38 appeared, her articles and portraits have been among the most interesting. Her series on Superb Sailors was admirably crafted. Marilyn has the talent to write grammar as we all should have learned it. Her character de¬ lineations are crisp. She’s obviously knowledgeable about boating and she certainly is not awed by the supermen in rac¬ ing circles. Marilyn deserves a big thank you (and maybe a bigger paycheck) for her work. Win & Frank Dukat Los Altos Win & Frank — Marilyn is a very busy lady, writing for a number of local and national magazines. We’ve always en¬ joyed her articles on sailing personalities, and have others planned for the future. page 25
COMPASSES Bracket Model
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Dealer Inquiries Invited
NORTHSTAR MARINE P.O. Box 95, Redondo Beach, CA 90277 • (213) 374-7422 •PLASTIMO USA, INC.-A JOHNSON WAX ASSOCIATE
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MAKEYOUR PLEASURE CRAFT A PLEASURE WITH STEREO MUSIC FROM PETER’S Hoist the newest flag afloat ... a red apple on white ... the signal for stereo happening here, and It means fun. So why wait any longer when you can have stereo in your boat as easily as in your car? We do both with the best selection of mobile stereo components including the complete Clarion line. Make stereo a part of your rigging. It’s a pleasure. Expert Installation most anywhere in the Bay Area.
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
567-4678
Peters Auto Radio 2106 LOMBARD at FILLMORE SAN FRANCISCO SALES • INSTALLATION • SERVICE
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SUPERBUYS! PRICES GOOD THRU MAY 31, 1980
PGestoent 120 12 + 2 Channel VHF Radiotelephone Here’s a unit priced for the budget-boater’s pocketbook, but with super performance. It comes with 6 channels and WX I & 2 installed, and 6 additional channels may be added. 25 watts and crystalcontrolled, this quality radio will be up-to-date regardless of the boat owned or where it’s taken. Suggested retail: $329.95.
Our price to "you:
$279.95
PGestoent 500 50-Channel VHF Radiotelephone
This high-performance unit breaks the price barrier on 50-channel radios. Tfie 500 has all authorized U.S. channels precisely tuned and easy to select on the tilted panel-mounted dial. It also has instant channel 16 and automatic shutdown if the antenna system malfunc¬ tions. Full 25 watts of power. Suggested retail: $399.95.
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Our price to you:
$339.95
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50-Channel VHF Radiotelephone
The 511 is the top-of-the-line 50-channel radio designed and built for the cost-conscious serious boater... in a corrosion-proof plastic case. It features large LED channel display, Channel 16 priority with memory, dimmer switch, power-to-antennajndication and automatic shutdown protection. Suggested retail: $479.95.
Our price to you:
$399.95
Av"'1".!'/'/ ' ' './ ^ 210
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Suggested retail: $129.95 Our price to you: $109.95 PRESIDENT 110
0-100 Feet
AL'S MARINE STORE PETE'S HARR0R, REDWOOD CITY 3*4-0208 Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. mvmrydmyl
Suggested retail: $199.95 Our price to you: $169.95 PRESIDENT 260A
0-60 Feet 0-60 Fathoms
LETTERS □ GLASSIFICATION Its been a long time since I have looked forward to receiv¬ ing a monthly magazine as much as I have yours. Its been rare that I have been disappointed with either an issue or an arti¬ cle. The hard language is OK too; it give the articles a certain vitality they might not otherwise have. I also receive Sail magazine, but after feasting my eyes on the beautiful color photos, I find that 1 am invariably let down by the blandness of the articles. The comparison of Latitude 38 and Sail is like comparing T-Bone steaks and baby food! I am enclosing a sheet that I recently received from Hughes Marine of Canada (part of a package of sales material) that rather severely criticizes hand-laid fiberglass construction. Since practically all the ads these days claim that this type of construction is the best, perhaps you could do an article on the same and clarify it for the rest of us. By the way, whatever happened to Loose Lips? Denis Neumann Foster City We would like to take this opportunity to bury the myth of the much touted and advertised “All Hand Laid-Up” process. It is the worst, most archaic, most uncontrolled, cheapest way to, make a fiber¬ glass component — we don’t use it; we never have — we never will and neither will any other major manufacturer. The so called Hand Lay-Up system interspaces woven roving with heavy, but weak layers of material. It adds thickness and weight without contributing to the strength, stiffness or im¬ pact strength of the completed laminate. We use multiple layers of woven roving and uni-directional roving interspaced with thin-controlled layers of sprayed on continuous fiberglass. The layer of mat or continuous strand between layers of woven rov¬ ing is necessary to fill in the basketweave effect of woven roving and to provide a soft level surface for the next layer of woven roving to adhere to. You cannot laminate layers of woven roving on top of one another, without a mat or continuous strand of filler, otherwise you get a poor interface bond, caused by point contact between the high points of the layers of woven fabric. The Hand LayUp method is used by those builders who don’t have the experience — technical know-how, finan- * cial resources or facilities to 'spray. The Hand Lay-Up boys mix their resin in buckets adding a guestimated amount of catalyst, about IV2 oz. per gallon of resin and hopefully mix it with a stick on the shop floor. It is then slopped onto the waiting laminate and rolled. The right way is to build a factory ventilated so that you can spray. Invest heavily in large volume compressors and sophisticated spray equipment. page 27
At Kappas Marina, Gate 6x/2 Road, Sausalito 332-8616 or 108 Caledonia Street, Sausalito 332-8151
THREE OF THE BEST! NOR’SEA 22
The response at the San Francisco Bay In-The-Water Boat Show Proved It. Prove it to Yourself. /,
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See them at our docks. Selected Brokerage: 43’ WestsaiL “Sundowner” Equipment and features too long to list. Read the Oct.-Nov. interview in Latitude with owner Ty Knudsen. $160,000. 29’ Lancer: Super clean with live-a-board-slip in Sausalito. $31,950. 28’ Westsail: Well equipped. $43,500. , 27’ Nor’Sea: Aft cabin, clean. $39,500.
\LANCER YACHTS *»
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This years yachts at last years interest rates. 12.5% interest APR 15 year terms 20% down
This offer good only thru 6/30/1980 All sales & financing subject to credit approval.
1980 LANCER 44
1980 LANCER 36
High Performance Motorsailor w/(Optional) Special Performance Rig
w/(Optional) Bruce Farr Designed Racing Rig
1980 LANCER 30 MK V
1980 LANCER 29 MK III
1980 LANCER 28-T MK V
1980 LANCER 25 MK V
SAILBOATS SOUTH, INC.
CLARA CLIPPER SAILS
1500 Maple Street, Redwood City, CA (415) 368-8214
3410 Monterey Road, San Jose, CA (415) 226-4661
LETTERS Bogart & Goring The equipment blows a controlled layer of lengths of continuous strand cut to exact lengths on the previous layer. At the same time the gun mixes a temperature and humidity adjusted mixture of resin and catalyst — wetting the blown glass before it ar¬ rives on the mold surface. The very high penetra¬ tion of sprayed resin gives us better “wetting”, enabling us to use less resin and more glass in any given laminate. There is no strength in resin — none. The higher the glass content in the laminate, the stronger the finished part. Mixing resin in buckets and using heavy weight resin-rich material layers does not do much for the strength of a boat. No, we don’t use the Hand Lay-Up process. We only Hand Lay-Up 60% of our boats with woven roving; the other 40% is resin and continuous strand fiberglass. We gave up on the bucket brigade in 1966. The first time we forgot to add hardener into the bucket of resin — or did we forget to stir it! We hope the foregoing has buried the myth forever. Denis — Back in the mid-60’s, two of the biggest sailboat manufacturers, Cal and (Columbia, got into a heated squabble over the merits of what was called an “all hand laid-up’ boat. If we remember correctly, what Cal meant by this was that each layer of woven roving, cloth, or mat was laid onto the hull by hand. A spray compressor was used to shoot in a mix¬ ture of resin and catlyst, but it was wetted into the fiberglass by hand, and the excess squeegeed out by hand. Columbia basically did the same thing, except for one step. Instead of hand laying in mat to bond, various layers of cloth or roving, they would spray in a combination of chopped fibers and resin. Since this was done by machine and didn’t require squeeging out, it wasn’t an “all hand laid-up” hull. Each manufacturer claimed their process (at that time in history) was the better, and in the long run the public perceiv¬ ed Cal’s process as being superior. (For our money the argument was a little screwy. In either case, the execution was far more crucial than the process. Depending on how well each process was used, you could end up with an excellent product or a weakened one.) Hughes Marine seems to describe a process similar to Col¬ umbia’s. We suspect they are intentionally creating a mild controversy in an attempt to attract more attention to their boats. As you can see, they’ve been successful. But to our knowledge, what they call ‘hand laid-up’ — i.e. mixing resin in buckets, has never meant anything of the sort in the United States.
Sailmakers
Finest in Design Recutting and repairing Drop your sails off to be made competitive for a fraction of new sail cost. Radial-Lineal Spinnakers Dodgers — Covers — Cleaning
Bogart & Goring OFFSHORE • INSHORE • SAILMAKERS
□ NEITHER THE FIRST OR FINAL WORD My idols have feet of clay. My 10,000 miles of bluewater cruising with my wife Gwen page 29
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LOA 44 0" DWL36T’ BEAM 13'0” DRAFT 7’1” DISPLACEMENT 14,516 lbs. BALLAST 5,696 lbs.
Now Available in Fiberglass The Farr 44 is Bruce Farr’s latest offering from C&B Marine. It’s a very fast cruiser with all the performance features that make Bruce’s designs among the most suc' cessful in the world. A yacht that is.spacious, comfortable, easily handled without a large crew and designed to be fast and powerful. In short, a yacht that can be family enjoyed and do very well under any handicapping rules. The Farr 44 is a light displacement yacht with powerful sections, wide stern, fine bow entry and stiff enough for excellent windward performance and a real thrill off the wind. The interior plan has it all, including the beautiful finish and detail work C&B has become famous for, now with either cold mold or fiberglass construction. Teak decks are standard. A Pathfinder marine diesel provides plenty of power when needed and excellent taste has been used in selecting all standard hardware, fixtures and accessories. C&B Marine also builds the Farr 34, Farr 38, Farr 55 or your custom design.
OBi marine:
Cl STOM BOATBl ILDERS
1053 SEVENTEENTH AVENUE. SANTA CRUZ, CA. 95082 (408)476-7494
LETTERS
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and two teenage children over the past two years can in no way compare with the magnificent accomplishments of Lin and Larry Pardey. But, in my opinion, their remarks on the use of safety harnesses, or rather the lack of use, borders on irresponsibility. 1 can only believe that there are many more people who have been sorry they or their loved ones have not worn safety harnesses than those who have been sorry they have. A safety harness is neither the first nor final word in safety at sea, but should be part of an unbroken chain towards a positive attitude concerning survival. . 1 only hope their remarks do not result in some terrible tragedy. In spite of this lapse, the Pardey’s, because of their example and spirit, will remain among my favorite people. Jim Johnson Chico P.S. — Enclosed is my check as a token of support for Latitude 38, it’s great.
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The NAVIK vane gets extra power from a uni¬ que double servo sys¬ tem. All stainless, light¬ weight construction and an ingenious overload safety mechanism make the NAVIK superior among straight servopendulum vanes. Ex¬ clusive U.S. Distribu¬ tor: SCANMAR MA¬ RINE PRODUCTS.
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3*8 Jim — Both your remarks and your subscription are much more than token support, we appreciate it.
ANTOHELM 2000 is the most advanced tiller con¬ nected autopilot available. Distributed by SCANMAR.
□ ONCE IN A LIFETIME Your mag is the best . . . don’t change please! What would a “lifetime subscription” cost? I realize that that is somewhat relative but why not ask? I need some info from you. Specifically, what kind (manu¬ facturer, etc.) of radar detector did Norton Smith have on¬ board for the Minitransat? I’d like to get one. I’ve found out that the detectors for police X band (10,525 MHz)and Y band (24,150 MHz) the marine X band for “pleasure” boats (9410 MHz). (At least this is true for the MicroScan G-78 and G-73 units which generate over 9445 to 24,445 MHz.) Whatever . . . since you are all up there (S.F. area) and I am a liveaboard down here in Dana Point (the sticks), maybe we can close the loop on this. Thanks, Mike Sands Corona del Mar Mike — With regards to lifetime subscriptions ... that’s more business than we care to think about right now. We find if we get too far off sailing we go a little crazy. We called Norton to get the manufacturer’s name of the ra¬ dar detector he used, but he’s off in Antigua trying to sell American Express and won’t be back for a little while. We do, however, remember that he told us it was useless along the California coasts and 250 miles out, because the coastal de¬ fense radar system would set the thing off. For that reason and the fact most ships are close to the coast, he didn’t feel it would be particularly helpful here. When he does come back, though, we’ll be sure to get the brand name. page 31
r sg t SAILOMAT is the most powerful wind-vane self-steering on the market. Proven in a record circumnaviga¬ tion. Exclusive U.S. Distributor: SCANMAR MARINE PRO¬ DUCTS.
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AUTOHELM 3000 is specifically designed for owner installation on wheel-steered sailboats. Incorporates the features of much larger and more expensive autopilots.
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Break loose with a proven winner. The Santa Cruz 27 is an ultra-light, super¬ fast one-design boat with an enviable racing record. A stock Santa Cruz 27 took honors in the 1978 Single-Handed Transpac, and other 27's have piled up victories in ocean and lake sailing around the country. Santa Cruz 27 one-design racing has turned-on sailors all over the west coast with consistently fast, fun competition. You can trailer the Santa Cruz 27 •to your favorite sailing spot—or sail there faster than.you ever thought possible.
Santa Cruz 27—$18,995 Write or call Bill Lee today; if you're looking for something bigger and faster, ask about the Santa Cruz 50.
BILL LEE YACHTS, INC 3700B Hilltop Rd. Soquel CA 95073 (408) 475-9627 See us at the Santa Cruz Boat Show May 30-June 1. Photo Credit: Tom Leutwiler
LETTERS
LETTERS
□ AYALA COVE MYSTERY MOORING
Letter (in all sincerity, tool): “Greetings and Sa/'/utations (ahem) to the best sailing rag in the country ... or even in the world! You guys even have fans and subscribers way over here on the East Coast, and we Tampa Bay/Gulf of Mexico sailors read your magazine avidly every month.
It seems to us that boats mooring in Ayala Cove at Ar.j°l Island use an adverse method of tying up by using lines fore and aft. Most anchorages anywhere are full of boats secured only by bow lines to moorings. When the boat uses its own ground tackle even in a crowed anchorage, it swings on only one hook from the bow. A boat in either case will ride with wind and current and not bang into others anchored likewise. The wind comes off the bow and makes cockpit and down below life more comfortable. Of course, a mix of boats bow anchored and fore and aft anchored makes for a sleepless night. At Ayala Cove it is also tough to pick up that stern mooring after one has tied up the bow. This anchorage could accomodate a lot more boats if everyone would swing on a bow mooring; before the permanent moorings we used to sw¬ ing on a single hook. Ayala Cove mooring has been a mystery to us, but maybe there is a factor we do not understand. R. Schuettge Dick — It makes a lot more sense that more boats could be accomodated if everyone just used a bow mooring. We haven’t been there in years, but somehow thought we recall¬ ed that the buoys were labelled in such a way as to indicate that they should be used bow and stern. Just to check, we called the Rangers who are in charge of the facility, and they said “there is no specific way in which the buoys are supposed to be used.” Now the question is, are the rewards of informing everyone of the advantages of just a bow mooring worth the effort re¬ quired to inform everyone — We wonder.
□TROTOGRAPHICAL ERROR I was pleased to see the photo of my good friends the Burgesses on pgs. 98-99 of the March issue. One minor cor¬ rection is probably in order — Earl’s wife is Wanda not Walter. If I can find it, I’ll send you a copy of their Christmas letter. Keep up the good work. George Ford San Ramon
Now I’m hoping this flattery will get me somewhere, as I’m about to hit the road for California and San Francisco, on my way to Hawaii. Would like to ask your readers out there if anyone has a place for a crewman on their boat, leaving for Hawaii around May or June. I’m 26 years old, and have sail¬ ing experience from blasting around the Gulf on my Colum¬ bia 22’; very easy-going, responsible, willing to crew for the sailing experience. If anyone knows of a boat leaving in that direction, could they leave a message with you guys at Latitude 38? And I’ll get in touch as soon as I hit the bay area in early May. Thanks much for the help. Keep up the good work. Cover the world. But don’t go slick.” -, Basil Marcus Tampa, FL
□PHRED PHIND PHUN PHREADING Being humble yet dynamic your magazine is right on my level. Not to mention provocative, alluring, forthright, tan¬ talizing, well bred, well read, well fed.well said. Sign me up. PHRED Your assistance in running the enclosed advertisement would be appreciated. I have enclosed a check for $17.50 to cover the ad and a 1 year subscription. Keep up the good work, regards, Reginald J. Guy , Corte Madera
□WHO NEEDS IT I really enjoy your magazine, it may not have glossy paper, but who needs it. Please enter my subscription for one year, enclosed is the money. Keep up the good work. My main in¬ terest is fast cruising. I have a Ranger 33. Arthur Lewis Saratoga Arthur — Thanks for the feedback.
George — Thanks so much for the correction. We were just about to leave Puerto Vallarta, had caught the trots, and were in a big hurry so our notes didn’t come out too well. If you could find their Christmas letter, we’re sure it would make interesting reading for bay1 area folks.
□WE BET YOU SAY THAT TO ALL THE MAGAZINES Yes, please coming once a month. You’re the best I ve ever had!
□ FROM FLORIDA WITH LOVE I called a few days ago and talked to Kathleen about trying to pick up a ride with a boat heading for Hawaii around May or June. To follow that up, I’m enlosing the copy and a check for a Classy Classified, and want to tender you guys this Fan page 33
Wiliam H. Wing Millbrae
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Listening to some sailors talk, you would think that it’s fine to race a “Molasses 26” because when you race one-design, “everybody’s equal . But Excalibur 26 skippers know that FUN racing begins with a FCIN-to-sail boat. Agility, responsiveness, and controllability are the Excalibur hallmarks that continue to delight active and knowledgeable sailors, on and off the race course. Some Excalibur skippers say that it’s magic the way an Excalibur feels, dancing through the waves and wind. Some of them call it poetry.
EXCALIBUR 26 More Satisfaction for your money. -
NOW AVAILABLE OPPORTUNITY — TWO NEW EXCALIBURS — AND FOR SALE! 1978 models still new, waiting for someone to enjoy. Ready to go and in the water. Tune to your specifications. MUST SEE. MAKE OFFER. Seair, Pier 39, San Francisco (415) 781-2997.
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1978 — Excellent condition, Suzuki O/B, VHF, cockpit cushions, shorepower, automatic battery charger, head, galley, 4 winches, 2 bildgepumps, bow roller, compass, mast polyurethaned, 2 an¬ chors, boat hook, life jackets, full wood panelling below, other misc. gear. $15,000. (415) 665-3458 DIFFERENT DRUMMER II, -37325. Blowaway inventory of this winning boat begins with 14 sails, 6 winches, new LPU hull, Vire inboard, plus full race elects. If it’s made, it’s aboard! Rare oppor¬ tunity at Vi replacement cost. $14,000. (415) 665-3458 Eves. ISIS, -5264. Wayfarer built in ‘68 with dinette and full cabinet galley arrangement. Very well cared for, including new throughhulls and ‘79 rebuilt Evinrude 6. 5 sails and spin. gear. ASSUME 12% loan with berth. $12,500. Elliott (415) 546-8200 / 835-4010 Peter 848-7100 / 526 0115.
Harbor Drive, Sausalito, CA 94965 (415) 332-2510
CHASED, 1969 model, blue hull; $2,000 paid 11/78 for 4 Eclipse sails, including outstanding green/blue spinnaker. Asking $10,000 with haul-out and bottom paint. Partners motivated. Dick Anderton 937-3300 or 658-5501.
ONE-DESIGNS
CAL 25’s t
i
The Cal 25 Association is trying to get in touch with all Cal 25 owners. We’d like to extend to you an invitation to join us for racing, cruising, seminars and comaraderie. For informa¬ tion, call or write Vern Marschke, 6709 Evergreen Ave., Oakland, CA 94611, or phone (415) 339-9356.
111= TOItsDsCK COMPLETE CUSTOM RIGGING & CHANDLERY 11373 FOLSOM BOULEVARD RANCHO CORDOVA, CALIFORNIA 95670 916/635-1932
J-24S The J-24 Class of San Francisco Bay is looking forward to an active season of racing and fun this summer. Two-day one design invitationals are being sponsored by the St. Francis, San Francisco, Marin, and Richmond Yacht Clubs. At last count, 34 J-24’s had signed up for the YRA series. The District J-24 Championships will be held Memorial Day weekend at the St. Francis Y.C. We will be racing as a one design class in the Aeolian Lightship Race as our class “outthe-gate” event. The first annual J-24 Angel Island Picnic/Raft-Up/Revel is being planned for July 12. The J-24 North Americans, held this year on the bay and hosted by the St. Francis Y.C., promises to be the biggest J-24 event in the U.S. this year. Participants are expected from all over the U.S., Canada and Mexico and the competi¬ tion will be hot and heavy during a week of sailing in different areas around the bay. For more information, contact Fleet Captain Conni Bock (209) 477-8607 or Class Secretary, Earl Johnson (415) 388-5941.
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CAPRI 25 in stock from $10,995
INTRODUCTORY OFFERS FOR SACRAMENTO AREA J-24 ENTHUSIASTS COMPLETE BOAT WITH SAILS - $16,200 y Plus Freight & Commission
FIREBALLS /
The Northern California Fireball Fleet is looking for some of our long lost former members. We currently have an active group sailing SBRA. We know we haven’t gotten in touch with a lot of people who own Fireballs but haven’t sailed or raced then for awhile. , We would like to hear from anyone who owns a Fireball or anyone interested in sailing and racing a Fireball. Please call either George (415) 368-4275 or Steve Smith at (415) 449-0903.
BROKERAGE 1974 1971 1976 1973 1970 1975 1974 1970 1978
Challenger 32.$42,500 Coronado 27, loaded.14,500 North American 23, with trailer.10,495 Aquarious 23, with trailer. 5,800 Catalina 22, with trailer. 5,000 O’Day 22, with trailer... 6,500 Venture 21, with trailer. 3,795 Yngling 21, with trailer.3,850 Chrysfer Buccaneer 18, with trailer. 2,795
WINDSURFER’S On August 2 & 3, 1980, the Western U.S. Windsurfer Championships will be held at South Side Berkeley Marina, Berkeley, CA. There will be two classes: 1.) Standard windsurfer class, as defined by IWCA. And, 2.) Open class — and “free sail” machine. For more information, write: Chris Hill, 535 Oakland Ave., Apt. No. 109, Oakland, CA 94611. T
page 35
Valley’s Largest Chandlery Dealers for Islander, J-Boats, West Wight Potter, Coronado 15, Cyclone-13, Omega 14, Laser, Topper, Avon, Capri 25 —
QUALITY BROKERAGE BOATS NEEDED
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Santa Cruz, CA 95062
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LOOSE LIPS
SEAIR SAILING CLUB Pier 39 — Box SSC San Francisco, CA 94133
(415) 781-2997 A little over a month ago, local sailors were deeply sadden¬ ed to learn that two local yachtsmen, James Wagenheim of Larkspur, and Tom Owens of Sausalito, were killed in a small plane crash on Vaca mountain. Wagenheim was the owner of the Peterson 34, Magewind, and had chartered the Serendipity 43, Wings, and sailed her to a second in class finish in the last TransPac. We don’t know how many yachtsmen have died in small plahe crashes, but we’re pretty certain there have been more than have died in their boats. There was one gentleman who just missed getting on the plane Wagenheim was on, who had also just missed gettin on the plane that had killed local yachtsman Ken DeMuese a number of years ago. DeMuese at the time owned Blackfin, archrival of Windward Passage, and previous to that, had owned the beautiful schooner, Serena. Serena has recently become a boat of distinction in that she was the first boat in the United States to be cited for being in violation of the new marine sanitation device regulations. She had run aground off San Diego and called the Coast Guard for assistance. The Coast Guard pulled her off, looked at her head, and wrote her up a citation. The Coast Guard’s attitude toward the new sanitation regu¬ lations is not to look for them, and only cite them when they come across them in the course of other duties. Rumor has it even they can’t conform with the requirements. This is old, but we’re going to run it anyway. Did you folks . catch Ted Turner and the articles on his 24-hour a day all¬ news cable TV station soon to be beamed all across the United States? At his audacious best, Turner announced that once his station started the news, they’ll never sign off. “We’ll only play the national anthem once,” Turner said, “just before the end of the world.” Ted took third place in the Long Beach YC’s Congressional Cup match racing series, the winner being southern Califor¬ nia’s Dennis Durgan for the second year in a row. Jon Andron had won the northern California sail-offs which enabled him to compete for a spot to get in the Congressional Cup, but was eliminated. Alice Yarish, the 70 years-young kid who writes about some folks who gave up the working life in England for cruis¬ ing" in this issue, met an old friend of Latitude 38 readers in Puerto Vallarta a while back. That was Bill Collins, who sailed the Singlehanded TransPac in the Robert Quinn, and whose late arrival had some folks worried for a while. Bill and his wife Linda, are on their way to the Carribbean in their boat, and Bill stopped to sign on for a trip on the motor vessel up the coast to pick up a little spending money. We weren’t sure if Bill was going to give up sailing after that TransPac, and are glad to hear that he hasn’t. page 37
YOUR COMPLETE YACHTING CENTER Pier 39 San Francisco You Can: ★ ★ ★ ★
learn to sail charter a yacht buy your yacht have us lease you new or used yachts for great tax savings ★ have us sell your yacht when you are ready.
FLOA TING TAX SHEL TER When you buy your new boat, we can lease it for you. This provides you with income to offset ex¬ penses and it gives you an excellent tax shelter. Why not profit from your pleasure? Contact us for more details.
SEAIR SAILING CLUB We can teach you to sail and if you’re not ready to buy, we have thirty 30-ft. to 42-ft. yachts located at Pier 39 available for club members to charter. You can sample several boats before you decide to buy. Call for more information.
BUY ONE OF THESE GREA T NEW ,5 LANCERS FROM SEAIR LanC^er 29
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Lancer 44
12.5% Simple Interest A.P.R. Available on Lancer Yachts thru June 30, 1980 Lancer Yachts + 12Vz% Interest + + SEAIR CHARTER PROGRAM =
Happy Boat Owner. ALSO FOR SALE Used Boats Available for Charter or Leaseback — Owner Financing Possible. 55’ Custom Ketch,.$197,500 33’ Ranger.
45,950
35’ Ericson.
55,950
38’ Morgan.
83,500
42’ California Trawler. Offer
SELECTED BROKERAGE 41’ CT..$ 60,000 41’ Coronado. 77,500 30’ Vega Trawler. 37,500 29’ Ericson."..
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The Mariner 36 is a cruising yacht with exceptional high-performance characteristics. Her long water line (over 30'), high aspect ratio rig and balanced, well thought-out hull design, combine to produce a seakindly yacht of exceptional speed. Put simply, the Mariner 36 sails like a dream. And it just so happens that she’s built as well as she sails. Her hull-deck joint is one of the most secure in the industry. A life-time Butyl rubber gasket, combined with */4 X 20 ss bolts on 4" centers, provides a bond that is virtually impervious to water. Her interior is a delight to behold. Comprised of 100% natural woods (Burma teak with teak and holly soles), it is warm, traditional and functional. By doing away with an interliner, we achieve better access to deck hardware, chainplates, wiring and plumbing accessories. This is a boat you can live on and, more important, live with for long periods of time. A yacht that has been painstakingly built from the first application of gel-coat to the last fine piece of joinery. A work of art, if you will, created a step at a time by craftsmen whose integrity is evident . throughout.
The Mariner Yacht Company, Inc. On the Salmon Falls River, East Rochester, NH 03867.
Specifications: L-O.A. 36'0" L-W.L...30' 1" Beam. 11'6" Draft.5'Q" Rated Sail Area (sloop).595.2 sq. ft. Rated Sail Area (ketch) _... 705.3 sq. ft. Hull.>. -Fiberglass Spars.Awlgrip coated Aluminum Ballast....5,650 lbs. Displacement ..17,000 lbs. Displacement (ketch).. 17,250 lbs. Displacement (Pilot).18,250 lbs. Headroom. 6'6"
Please send me more information about The Mariner 36 Sloop □ Ketch □ Pilot □ The Mariner 28 □ The Mariner 47 □
Name Address City
State
Zip
Business Phone
Home Phone
COMMODORE SAILING YACHTS P. O. BOX 1648 OAKLAND, CA. 94604 PHONE 415-376-5252 \
LOOSE LIPS
LOOSE LIPS
It’s kind of hard to imagine a Singlehapded Race without Norton Smith, but apparently he will definitely not be an entrant in this June’s Singlehanded TransPac. Norton, how¬ ever, will be going TransPac on June 15th, as one of the crew on Merlin, which has been chartered locally for the Ballena Bay crewed TransPac to Kauai. Leave it to Norton to get there first. It’s amazing how much singlehanded ocean sailing is going on these days. Before George Sigler put on the first Singlehanded Farallones Race, there was very little of it. That race drew about 75 entries, as have the three ensuing run¬ nings of that race. The first Singlehanded TransPac drew about 35 entries, this year’s will draw about 50. In just the period of April 12 to May 10th, there will have been three shorthanded races around the Farallones with pro¬ bably more than 150 boats in all sailing the course. We remember just before the first one was held that many people predicted that it was sheer insanity — and maybe it is. Four years after it happened, it appears that the lawsuits over the sinking of the ketch Spirit will finally be going to court in the near future. Spirit you may remember, rapidly and in¬ explicably sunk on the way back from Hawaii. The five crewmembers got into two liferafts and drifted around for weeks before the survivors were finally rescued. One woman who survived and the estate of another, filed suit against vir¬ tually anyone and everyone who ever had anything to do with the boat. And that’s the way it is. Herb Caen quotes Walter Cronkite as saying, “What I wouldn’t give for a house in Belvedere and a boat on the bay . . . most beautiful place in the world.” Walter is the owner of a Westsail 42. The racing ratings game. There are three major rating systems used for yacht racing in the United States today; PHRF, IOR, and MHS. The supporters of each group share the feeling that supporters of the other two are a bunch of jerks. Far and away the most popular rating system is the PHRF or Performance Handicap Rating System. Much of its attrac¬ tion is that a rating certificate costs less than a lunch at Victoria Station and that it accomodates every imaginable design. The second most popular rating is the IOR or International Offshore Rule. This rule is complex — only seven people understand it, and it’s the only rule that boats are designed to ‘fit’. Everyone admits this rule home for the hottest of shots — except for ultralights which get killed under the IOR. While there are almost 20,000 PHRF boats registered in the U.S., there are only 2,600 IOR boats, down about 600 from last year. But at the grand prix level, the IOR seems healthier than ever. The third rating system is the MHS or Measurement Handi¬ /
page 39
cap System which was developed at M.I.T. A ‘magic wand’ is used to measure the speed potential of the hull. The MHS is just getting going, but has received a lot of support back east where it has been chosen for use in important events like Block Island Week, the Bermuda Race, and the Transatlantic race. The fact that it was selected for use in the Bermuda Race — the east coast’s sacred event — so incensed the IOR fleet that they raised enough hell that it was decided to have two divisions. As of a few months ago, only 200 boats had gotten their certificates, but watch for it to grow rapidly.
Hugh don’t say? In the June issue of Playboy a guy writes in and tells the Playboy Advisor that he’s always wanted a powerboat, but he doesn’t want to contribute to the energy crisis. Hef tells him not to worry because the 11,000,000 recreational powerboats in the U.S. only consume V2 of one percent of all the fuel used in combustion engines. But, the head hedonist suggests wisely, “You could opt for a sailboat. They’re quieter, just as exciting and — they’re free as the wind.”
A LION IS ON THE BAY ... A Lion 35 Named "1DITHYRAMB"! A few months back, David Few of P.H.R.F. handicap forwarded the following letter to Fred Feied of Lion Sailing School.
Dear Mr. Few: I have a Lion 3fj’ sloop which \ race in Florida. My rating is 244 and I was amazed to find an idential Lion 35’ in your area handicapped at 192. How did that handicap come about? Please send the address of the owner. He obviously knows something I don’t know, and i want to iearn the secret. Thanks, George J. Davis H.D.A. and P.H.R.F. tie handicap performance. The more you win, the more they up the ante and the harder you have to work to keep on winning.
“DITHYRAMB’’S RECORD INCLUDES: Two YRA season championships, 77 & 78 (undefeated) 1st Place 78 Singlehanded Farallones Race, 35’-45’ Class Two Ists MYCO Midwinters 77 & '80 1st & 2nd CYC Midwinters, 74 & 76 2nd Place* 76 YRA season We’ve taken our beatings, too, but if you think we may know something you don't know, give us a call at (415) 526-4559. We offer instruction in basic, intermediate, advanced, piloting, cruising (California, Carribbean, Mediterannean). Oh, yes — We also teach racing... aboard a Lion 35 named “DITHYRAMB"!
LION SAILING SCHOOL & YACHT CHARTERS The Best Instruction on the Bay Berkeley Marina’s Marriott Inn Dock/Brochure 526-4559
PORT SONOMA MARINA Immediate Berthing New Boat Sales Yacht Brokerage Canvas Shop Complete Chandlery Fuel Dock Tennis Courts Bait and Tackle Located 15 miles north of Sausalito on Black Point Cutoff (Hwy. 37 & the Petaluma River) • m
1* 'Nr *D. • PElM-'®1* (415) 897 ^0l
The following vessels
ore offered for sole by Port Sonoma Yacht Sales and are located at Port Sonoma. Please inquire at our office by the Sales Dock for further information. — SAIL — 46' Cruising ketch, gigantic aft cabin .$129,000 32' Westsail 32, well-equipped 63,500 32' Westsail 32, cruise-ready 63,000 30' Olson, ULDD state-of-the-art 22,950 29' Islander, well cared for . . 21,500 28' English sloop, aft-cobin Day boat .10,500 27' Balboa, great family boat ..17,500 26' Ranger 26, spinnaker, rebuilt out¬ board .10,950 — POWER — 32' Grand Banks, none better . 44,500 23' Thunderbird, Formula 233C .Make Offer Many owners now willing to help with financing.
KMT
$25.00 ULBD Techniques Course. Spend a Half Day with a Qualified Instructor Aboard an OLSON 30 & Learn what the ULDB Experience Is About.
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262 Sears Point Road, Petalumo, CA 94952
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THE BIG ONE I like to think I did a pretty good job of learning the “craft” of sailing San Francisco Bay. With two buddies, I took lessons and covered all the basics. With one of my pals, I bought an old Cal 25 which everyone had agreed was a good “bay boat” — and for the last two years, sailed the hell out of her. I taught Elaine all the fundamentals of sailing so we could go out together, and in the process, reinforced it all for myself. We raced with a friend aboard his Catalina 27 because “you really learn to sail once you race.” I took a course in celestial navigation; struggled long hours to get the rigors of GMT, LHA, Hs, and sight reduction by a rather outmoded HO 211 into my non-mathematical head. I joined the Dolphin Book Club and quickly became a “loyal customer”. The minimum number of purchases never enter¬ ed my mind as I loaded shelf after shelf with the monthly nautical goodies. I subscribed to and read all the ‘right’ sailing rags. Yep, seems I did a lot right to learn what sailing our bay is all about. But, I’ve had a growing feeling that to really learn the truth . . . to be seasoned . . . there had to be a‘Big One’. Not a rich man’s pampered, indulged ‘Big One’, ala William F. Buckley. But to taste the real thing, a tough, ocean sailing adventure. The week before Thanksgiving I had the chance. My friend, Dick Doell, asked me to crew for him as he brought Muau, from L.A. up to the bay. Muav is named for a rock for¬ mation in the Grand Canyon (Dick is a Ph.D in geophysics). She’s a one-off, Gary Mull (Dick’s cousin) designed, high per¬ formance ocean cruiser. So having one week’s vacation left for ‘79 I signed on board. Looking back, it’s hard to believe all I got out of that week! There were more than enough experi¬ ences to make it the ‘Big One’ I’d hoped for. I now know what it’s like beating to windward for three days and nights from Point Conception north toward Point Sur. I now know what it’s like to hang onto the tiller with one hand and with the other try to time lights peaking occasionally over huge swells. Lights that soon become friends in the night . . . Point Conception, Point Arguello, and Point Piedro Blanco. I learned to do my first set of sun shots off a pitching boat at sea. A talented, patient skipper helped put the classroom learning into practice. For good measure, Dick showed me how to plot the accuracy of the five shots on graph paper and pick the best one for reduction. I now know what it’s like to stand ‘four-on and four-off’, day in and day out. To collapse in a bunk to sleep the fitful, tossing sleep of a sailor who never totally sleeps . . . always ready to climb back on deck at a call from above. I’ve now dodged tankers sliding up and down the Califor¬ nia coast. I know, for instance, that some tanker crews are responsive to a radioed request from a yacht pounding through 35 knot winds — “southbound tanker ... do you see our tri-colored masthead light?” Others grind on, unhear¬ ing, never answering or caring. page 41
YOU’VE BEEN GOOD TO US OVER THE LAST 10 YEARS... V 8M
£
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NOW IT’S OUR TURN TO BE GOOD TO YOU! Come by & put your name & phone number on a ticket & you’ll be eligible to win one of the 3 prizes below — no purchase necessary &you need not be present to win. Drawing will be held June 1st. »
1st
Prize —
A Custom Dodger
2nd
Prize —
A Set of Cockpit Cusions
3rd
Prize —
Sail Cover and 2 Winch Covers (Each Prize Will Be Tailor-Made for Your Boat) 210 Harbor Drive, Sausalito, CA 94965
TOPPER, a superb design achievement, is meant to be sailed hard and often by children and adults... novice and expert. She features a remarkably simple rig with the sophistications of quick roller reefing, vang, halyard, out and down hauls, sheet traveler, 4-position daggerboard and a unique 6-position tilt-up rudder. This deceptively simple design by Ian Proctor has the sophistiÂŹ cation of full positive floatation, a self-bailing cockpit large enough for two adults, and the ability to be brought up from a capsize by a child. TOPPER is as safe and as simple to operate as modern design and technology can produce.
halyard
Airtight mast section no stays
Length Beam Draft Sail Area Hull Weight
Roller furling mast
TOPPER is made in the world's most sophisticated injection molding machine. She is constructed of Propathene", a lowmaintenance, high-strength material that has an impact resisÂŹ tance far greater than that of wood or fiberglass. This totally unique production technique produces a lightweight, attractive boat that can be easily carried on top of a car... hence her name, TOPPER.
J. V. DUNHILL MARINE SPORTS INC. 720 Sterling Dr., Martinez, CA 94553/(415) 228-4348
outhaul
downhaul
sheet
Fully adjustable. 6-position rudder
Mast step and lock
LOCAL DEALER^
REDDING Sequoia Stereo
WALNUT CREEK Boat Warehouse
VALLEJO Baywirids Sailboat Co.
RANCHO CORDOVA Inland Sailing
HEALDSBURG Empire Sailing
ALAMEDA Cruising World, Inc.
FREMONT Tri City Sporting Gds.
RICHMOND Cruising World, Inc.
UKIAH Olson Sports
SAN JOSE Clara Clipper Sailes
STOCKTON J.A. Yacht Sales
FOSTER CITY Port of Call Boat Gardens
4-position daggerboard
Forced-air, kerosene heaters By Wallas
The Wallas Heating System is a line of Swedishmade, forced-air, kerosene heaters designed for safety and comfort. Totally enclosed combustion and very quiet operation. Safe, clean keroseqe fuel and automatic safety features. Your boat will be warm, dry and ventilated for maximum comfort. This is a heating system you can leave on and sleep safely with. Write or call for information. Viking Leisure Products 6970 Convoy Ct. San Diego, CA 92111 (714) 268-4065 In San Francisco call (415) 474-3623
The new miniMan Boarding Ladder is a lightweight, completely collapsible ladder you will find very useful on the boat. A strong and sturdy aluminum construction with flat comfortable steps. The adjustable support will keep the ladder in the best climbing angle. Available with 3, 4, and 5 steps.
L
Viking Leisure Products 6970 Convoy Ct., San Diego, CA 92111 (714) 268-4065
THE BIG ONE
P. O. Box 45-A Moss Landing, CA 95039 (408) 633-2620 (408) 633-3883 John Lusher Richard Woodward
I now know some of what it must have felt like to be a square rigger sailor trying to make ‘a slant’ ar6und Cape Horn. This lesson came hard as we were forced to turn around and run one afternoon. Winds had built to 40 knots over 24 hours of hard sailing. Muau had crashed through thousands of mounting wind waves atop huge swells. Skipper Dick finally said, “Muau, you shouldn’t have to take a beating like this! So we ran toward the south, the Force 8 winds now at our backs. There were mixed emotions during that long night. Feel¬ ings of regret knowing those hard won miles were so quickly slipping away under Muau’s keel. But, also exhilaration dur¬ ing a 5 hour middle of the night watch. Hanging onto the tiller with both hands. Surfing down the face of the biggest swells I’d ever laid eyes on. Running off back down the coast of California, ever farther off-shore. What a night it was! As Dick turned-in, he said, “Try not to watch the compass too much. Just glance down from time to time. Steer by the feeling of the water coming up behind. Steer by the stars.” And so, I really got the experience in my gut of those words printed unthinkingly by landlubbers on so many Hallmark cards: “And, all 1 ask is a tall ship . . . and a star to steer her by.” Muau, Mr. Orion, and I learned together that night what it’s all about! I’ve awoke to bright, California, morning-after-gale sun¬ shine — 50 miles offshore. I’ve helped hoist twin headsails for a ten-hour close reach in past Point Conception, down the Santa Barbara Channel, to a mooring in Santa Barbara Har¬ bor. The day of memorable sailing was not lessened by know¬ ing we were going the wrong way! We had been beaten for a time by the oceans and winds that sailors for centuries have had this weird love/hate/respect relationship with. Yes, in that one week I had all those experiences and more. We eventually made it to the bay, after some sleep and reprovisioning. Experiences on the Pacific — that put some reality behind the “book learnin’.” I really had my ‘Big One’. And, as if that wasn’t enough . . . the kicker came during one middle of the night watch. Beating to windward, wind and seas building, rigging shrieking with each thrust into the swell ahead ... I saw — through the flying spray, right there on Muau’s foredeck — one of those salty, ancient mariners ol’ Joshua Slocum talked about. He had a sly grin through his beard as he shouted to me back in the cockpit ... “Okay, m’lad. We wanted t’ give ya a bit of a taste of what it’s like out ‘ere. But . . . not so much . . . ya won’t cum back.”
— jerry johnson
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page 43
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MAX EBB
CLICLSILVEL SAULS ALAMEDA
One of the problems with crewing on several different boats throughout the year is that you never know when you’re go¬ ing to be “invited” to one of those boatyard work parties that owners hold for the purpose of keeping their beast in racing trim. A few weeks ago I wasn’t quick enough with a good ex¬ cuse, and ended up helping out with some rigging work and bottom fairing on a new 35-footer. We had spent most of the morning reorganizing (untangling) the internal halyards, and were just getting into fairing around the keel root when the subject of class rules came up. The owner, who is involved in formulating these rules, mentioned that the class might opt to sail under the “720 Rule,” despite his own objections. “We have far too many collisions on the Bay as it is,” he said .‘“This will just encourage people to take more chances in tight situations.” An older crewmember echoed this sentiment — “1 agree; anything less than a DSQ is unfair to all the other boats that observe the rules. By the way — you have Bondo on your nose.” But another deck ape had different ideas: “That’s how everybody reacts to the 720 Rule at first,” he said. “I was one of the intercollegiate sailors who first experimented with the rule back in ... I think ‘70 or ‘71. I’ll never forget my own reaction one morning before a regatta at Kings Point, New York, when they passed out a sheet of paper that said “720° turns alternative penalty system” on top. I was horrified! So was everybody else. It meant the end of racing as we knew it. How could anything replace the protest and DSQ? But they assured us it was just experimental, and we agreed to see how it worked. “Well, needless to say, every time one of us fouled and did
I was horrified ... it meant the end of racing as we knew it . . . a 720 and kept on racing, the new rule had another convert. By the end of the regatta, I think most of the skippers liked the rule, and after a few months it was an inseperable part of in¬ tercollegiate racing.” “Was it that successful in reducing the number of protests?” “Oh, no — the number of protest hearings stayed about the same — and there wasn’t any noticeable change in the number of collisions, either. But there was a big improvement in rule observance. * v. “The situation previously was that if you hailed ‘protest’ it was equivalent to saying ‘I ,expect you to withdraw from the race.’ Naturally there was a great reluctance to protest a minor infringement, especially if the offending boat was from a team way back in the standings. On the other hand, if you protested a boat that was ahead in the standings, you might page 45
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MAX EDD be accused of ‘winning at the protest table instead of on the water’ or be labelled a ‘sea lawyer’ and risk generating a lot of bad feelings. The point is that a DNF of DSQ is a very severe penalty for making someone change course by a few inches. But with the 720 Rule, a hail of ‘protest’ meant ‘I expect you to do a 720 for that’ and the tolerance that we had for minor infractions disappeared. Everything got protested, and you just couldn t get away with sloppy rule observance any more. So the number of protests hailed on the water probably doubled, but since half of them were resolved by 720’s, the t number of hearings and DSQ’s was unchanged.” At this point, I asked if he thought that the same thing would happen in YRA racing on San Francisco Bay. “Yes, he answered, “but with an important difference. In¬ tercollegiate racing, even before the 720, was somewhat rule oriented anyway, and most sailors knew them well enough so that serious collisions were rare. YRA is a different story. Not only are the skippers notorious for not protesting when they are fouled, but I’ve often seen clear disregard (or ignorance) of the rules result in some very bad crashes. Those collisions may have been fun to watch, but racing would be much better without them. I m sure the 720 Rule would reduce collisions significantly.” “But the 720° penalty is inconsistent” objected the owner. “In medium air, it takes 30 seconds, while in light air, it could take three minutes! And what if you have a spinnaker up?” 'You’re right, the penalty does vary,” answered the crewmember as he smeared in some more fairing compound. “But so does’the tactical advantage to be gained from break¬ ing a rule. If you avoid two extra tacks in very light air by squeezing past a starboard tacker, or if you can keep your spinnaker flying but not fully responding to a luff, you gain a
Doing a 720 constitutes acknowledged fault and you lose option to protest lot more than if you fouled someone when you had better maneuverability. Breaking a rule can usually give you a tac-. tical advantage that is roughly in proportion to the tactical penalty of having to do a 720.” “You could even make the same argument for ocean rac¬ ing,” added the older crewmember. “If the race is long, violating a right-of-way rule, it doesn’t give you any real ad¬ vantage, and doing a 720 doesn’t hurt much either. Dis¬ qualification would be inappropriate for a long race. I bet that’s one reason why there are so few protests during ocean races.” Work stopped abruptly when the food arrived — crab salad, spinach quiche, blueberry muffins and champagne (yes, there are still a few skippers that know how to take c&re of a good crew.) T
page 47
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MAX EBB During the meal, the owner remarked that maybe the 720 Rule wasn t so bad afterall. “Besides,” he said, “if I’m involv¬ ed in a complicanted situation, I can always protest and then do a 720 to cover myself.” “No you can’t!” proclaimed the boat’s tactician (who had arrived just in time for lunch.) “Take a look at U.S.Y.R.U. Appeal No. 207! Doing a 720 constitutes acknowledged fault, and you lose the option to protest.” He reached into his duffel bag and pulled out a small black loose-leaf notebook. “Here it is — this is the part I underlined — ‘The right to protest applies not when neither yacht believes she was at fault but when neither yacht acknowledges fault by doing a 720 . . . a yacht may not do a 720 and then protest . . .’” We all agree that that settled the matter, and poured another round of bubbles before putting on our respirators and attacking those little bumps in the bottom paint. So it looks like at least one new one-design class will be rac¬ ing under the 720 Rule this summer, and if anyone has some good arguments against it, I’d sure like to hear what they are. And try not to be involved in any spectacular collisions! — max ebb
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SIGHTINGS
fernandez ‘killer coast* report Well, 1 figure it’s about time you got the north coast report (killer coast). After five years of sailing the Mendocino coast I’ve yet to sail with another sail on the horizon. There’s hardly a shortage of wind up here so I’m out 3 to 5 days out of the week just beating up then surfing down. Swells generally run 6-10 ft. My Cal 2-24 ex-Santa Cruz Flyer just loves that high wind and surfing conditions. Last year I kept her anchored in one of our little dogholes and for four months there was no auxiliary (sailboat). If I ever get caught in a bad nor¬ thwest blow and couldn’t get back up, of course we’d have a ride that would be fast, thrilling, and full of knockdowns all the way to Bodega Bay 102 miles south, that’s the next harbor. 500 fishing boats and 3 sailboats (I’ve never seen the others hoist sail). Well, maybe one day a beautiful lady would bring her boat up and I’ll be able to sail next to another. Well, I guess I just couldn’t put it all into one card so here’s more info. The usual rule up here is that b^ats don’t die of old age — they end up on the rocks one time or another (same with people). Just about all of them hundreds of lumber schooners built to haul the red gold down to rebuild S.F. hit the rocks eventually. I’ve hit rock quite a few times. The boats have survived so far. Of course, if I had a depthsounder, Loran C, and other gadgetry I would miss out on the thrills (Oh! the advantage of a small boat). The few ex-owners of sailboats, the present two owners and the many future owners really appreciate your sending us the sheet to the Little River Market. But maybe could you cut the number down to fifteen. You know we don’t like to waste. We’ve got 200 miles of coast and three boats. Ride down the hill to S.F. then trailer up again. Dan Fernandez Little River P.S. — That sounds like a great race down the northern California coast — trailer up — surf down.
news scene That’s Bob Marshall in the photo above, adjusting the genoa lead on his Newport 30, Roquefort Chances are if you’re out sailing a lot, you see Bob fre¬ quently, because they aren’t many peo¬ ple who enjoy sailing more than he. Bob’s no slouch «t the tiller either. In 1973 he won the Excalibur champion¬ ship in Perezoso, and he has won the Newport 30 championship with Ro-
SIGHTINGS tiburon yacht club The Paradise Yacht Club is no more. During their April 1980 meeting, that club voted to change its name to the Tiburon YC, “more befitting with the long-range plans for club, the club’s location on the Tiburon peninsula together with making the club more recognizable, and recognized throughout the yachting world.” So be it. If we recall correctly, the yacht club has long term plans for a new clubhouse facility next to what is hoped will be several hundred new berths on the north side of Paradise Cay yacht harbor. Good luck.
master mariner’s regatta
quefort in 1976 and 1977. Bob also happens to be a member of the ‘blood and guts’ Channel 7 news team. Fortunately, Bob does the weather and has never yet been guilty of giving our blood pressure an un¬ necessary jolt. In a pleasant turn of events, KGO Channel 7 has seen fit to have Bob cover the bay and delta areas this summer for features on the “Friday Boating Report”, a report that will be part of the Friday 5:30 NEWS SCENE. So if you’ve got interesting news or events in your club association or marina, you might alert Bob by writing him at KGO-TV NEWS, 277 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94102. And you can rest assured they won’t be sending out some idiot who is not sure if the pointy end is the bow. Were very pleased to see that a television station is willing to devote some of its time and money to local sail¬ ing. That, along with Kimball Liv¬ ingston’s greatly increased coverage of sailing in the Chronicle indicates to us that the media is finally accepting sailing as the popular middle class recreational activity and way of life that it is. page 51
If you have not done so, time is running short — maybe has even run out — on entering your “traditionally designed and built sailboat” in the Master Mariner’s Regatta. The actual sign-up deadline was April 30th, and while organizers are attempting to be much firmer this year, your rapid dialing of 456-1860 and some sweet talk may still get you into the race. After reviewing the grumbles spawned by last year’s race, a number of changes have been made for this, the 17th running of the Regatta since it was ‘reborn’. The race, for example, is organized and presented solely by the Master Mariner’s Benevolent Association. Inc., a non-profit organization interested in maintaining the heritage of classic sailing yachts. In a big break from the past, the San Fran¬ cisco Junior Chamber of Commerce will no longer be involved. Other changes include a ‘no-nonsense’ race committee for pro¬ tests, and a new course to be revealed a week before the race. Each entrant is to be sponsored by a marine-related interest, and will carry a sponsor’s representative and their ‘house’ flag during the race. In the past there have been some complaints as to why the event seems to cost so much money. Mike Douglas, treasurer, explained where some of the big expenditures go. Between $750 and $1000 goes to the trophies, the luncheon costs another $1700, $1800 has been spent on T-shirts (hopefully which will be recaptured), and another $400 on burgees. A more detailed accounting of the funds is available to those who want a further explanation. Here are the important dates for you to remember: May 16, which is the day boat owners and sponsors are matched up at the Flag Presentation luncheon at His Lordships restaurant in Berkeley. (If you have not signed your boat up well in advance of this day, it is unlikely you will be allowed to race.) The big day is of course May 25, Race Day. After the race there will be a BIG PARTY, although the location is still to be decided on. It looks, however, as though it will either be Dunphy Park in Sausalito or the cove at Treasure Island. For further information on being either an entry or a sponsor, call Mike Douglas at 456-1860. For a Master Mariner T-Shirt ($6.00), call Dave Pressley at 332-6481, or Ed Gibson 332-6274 during the evening. These last two parties also have the M.M.R. burgees available at $12.00 each.
SIGHTINGS
singlehanded transpac A At the offical deadline for entries in the Singlehanded Sailing Society’s Singlehanded TransPac, there were a total of 58 entries. The final number will go a little higher since some later applications are being accepted. Next month we’ll be featuring a complete list of those who are entered, and several personality profiles. Those listed below are the 33 northern California entries, by far the region with the most boats entered.
»
Amy Boyer David Briggs Bob Counts Sam Crabtree Frank Dinsmore Barbara Dolan Donald F. Eldridge Leland Flint Charles G. Fiawley R.E. Haynes James Herbert Michael J. Herz John E. Hill Ted Holland Dick Mitchell Grover Nibouar Rod Park Randy Parker John Robertson John M. Robertson Kent Rupp Buz Sanders William J. Siegel Harold E. Upham Sam Vahey Hans Vielhauer Linda Weber-R,ettie Stephen G. Williams Jerry Cotter Michael Olson John Waite Kevin McDonald 3regg Booth
Little Rascal Gandalf Sanderling Catch the Wind Carina Mollybolt Skol Luana iki Slim y Whither Thou Golden Egg Kunu Ariel Solaris Blithe Spirit Outrage Panache Chasch Mer Legs Courageous Manitou Red Boat Isis Odysseus Mach Schnell Rough and Rettie Beginnings Errant Prince Stormalony II Veloce Wave Length
Wilderness 21 Irwin 34 Golden Gate Sip. Cal 39 Islander 28 Islander 24 Valiant 40 Farrallon 30 Moore 24 NorWest 33 Freya 39 Ericson 35 Columbia 29 Columbia 36 Pearson 36 Moore 24 Bill Lee 40 Santa Cruz 50 Moore 24 Hawkfarm C&C 35 Cal 29 Mull 32 Golden Gate 30 Ranger 37 Scampi 30 Yamaha 33 Searunner Tri Custom Buchanner 296 Ericson 35 San Juan 26 Cal 39
Field B.C. Alameda Sausaiito Antioch Sausaiito San Francisco San Francisco Sausaiito Santa Cruz Alameda San Francisco San Francisco Emeryville Redwood City Ballena Bay Tahoe City Richmond Santa Cruz Lake Tahoe, NV San Francisco Sausaiito Alameda Santa Cruz Oakland Sausaiito Sausaiito Alameda Alameda San Francisco Alameda Pt. Richmond Santa Cruz Lake Tahoe
\
little boats Part of the popularity of the 8-ft. El Toro is that whether you are young or old, you can still be competitive. Jim Warfield (pictured above), won the 1979 El Toro Championship at the age of 42, but it wasn’t the first time. He’d also won it 26 and 27 years ago when he was a mere lad. Jim’s started off this year well in El Toros, recently taking the Sausaiito to San Francisco Bull Ship Race for his se¬ cond time. The fleet of about 100 boats breezed across the bay in lighter airs,
SIGHTINGS
plunger buttons A while back we complained that the ’plunger buttons’ on some Merriman 715 leadblocks were falling off, and half-seriously sug¬ gested that Merriman ought to recall them. Merriman wrote us and said our blocks were the only ones in the history of the product line they had ever gotten back. The also said the problem was probably due to the fact that ours were some of the earliest made and were ‘hand staked’ rather than ‘machine staked’ the way they are now. Anyway they fixed our blocks free, and we like ’em pretty good.
can d.o.e. do it again? Like a lot of folks, Sea Magazine got really fried at the Department of Energy’s proposal to limit the use of motordriven boats on weekends in the case of a severe fuel crunch. They got so mad they hired Glassman-Oliver Economic consultants to check out the DOE’s work, and they found it was generally an idiotic, counterproductive waste of money. James Byrne,, publisher of Sea, summed up the DOE’s work by saying “The independent analysis shows that the DOE proposal is riddled with errors, distortions, and faulty analysis, and should be recalled immediately.” An example of the kind of slipshod work he’s referring to: When calculating the benefits of the program, the DOE used a figure of 10.7 million boats, but only used 7.7 million when they were calculating the costs. No wonder they can’t balance the budget. The industry protests were so strong and the work so inferior that the proposal finally was recalled by the DOE. But don’t get too ex¬ cited, they are planning a new one, one that will this time include airplanes and recreational vehicles, too.
big finish and weaker tides than expected (see photo above left). Warfield figured himself for about an 8th place finish un¬ til the last 100 yards when the wind died and the ebb was a little stronger. He rode the zephyrs across the finish line first (photo above right) nippirfg Dennis Silva, Lynn Huntly, four-time winner Hank Jotz, and Sally Robertson by a mere boat length. Now is that a great way to finish a race, or what?
page 53
■>,
transpac air fare discounts Are you Hawaii-bound this summer to meet up with someone sail¬ ing the Singlehanded TransPac or the Ballena Bay Kauai race? Maureen Weaver of the Travel Shoppe in Alameda is trying to round up enough passengers to qualify for United Airlines group discount fares. Outbound flights are scheduled between June 23 and 28 with a 7 day stay required, and group rates would save $100 on the round trip. For information call Maureen at (415) 865-5542. /
SIGHTINGS
;v
i ■
doublehanded .7
There can’t be many sailing groups initial race has been as en¬ thusiastically recieved as that of the Bay 'Area Multihull Association. April 26th BAMA sponsored the first Doublehand¬ ed Farallones Race, for both mono and whose
t
multihulls. Did they ever draw a crowd! The 74 boat fleet included such thoroughbreds TransPac record holder Merlin, Santa Cruz 50 Chasch Mer, TransPac trophy winners Brown Sugar, Sweet Okole, Wings, and more. These boats were backed by a strong fleet of racers includ¬ ing 4 Wylie 34’s, 3 Olson 30’s, 3 Santa
photo quiz Do you know the man in this month’s photo quiz? If you do, you can win one hour’s worth of free sail repair courtesy of DeWitt Sails who sent the photo in. There are two hints: 1.) The photograph was taken 20 years ago. 2.) The subject of the photograph is no longer making sails. If you are the first to send the correct answer to us at P. O. Box .1678, Sausalito, CA 94965, you win the free hour’s sail repair. Everyone except the person pictured is eligible. You may begin now. v
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Cruz 27’s, and several Moore 24’s, and who knows what else. Winds 10 knots and frequently much less resulted in a disappointing race, with only 23 boats actually completing the course. Some boats that did finish took almost 24 hours, and a few boats averaged under 2 knots for the 25-mile trip bcick from the islands. Overall winners were Paul Kaplan and Scott Lamson who had chartered Bill Lee’s Merlin. Justly feeling they had boatspeed on the fleet, Paul and Scott decided to play it conservative. They decided to stay clear of everyone and start a little late, and they decided to set a sail they thought they would be able to carry all the way to the islands without making a change. Their strategy seem¬ ed to pay off as their closest boat-forboat rival, Randy Parker’s Chasch Mer, resorted to changing sails before they even got to the Gate. Merlin carried the heavy No. 2 genoa all the way to the islands and set a chute coming back. While it turned out to be a fairly easy race, there was still a lot of running around to do to keep Merlin ahead. “The decks were wet,” Kaplan reported, “but from our sweat, not the seas.” Merlin, with a comical PHRF rating of -12, finished the 56-mile course in 12 hours and 39 minutes. That was about an hour and a half ahead of Chasch Mer, which rates 0 under PHRF.
\
SIGHTINGS )
farallones Merlin’s margin was sufficient to take both the Division II (ultralights) title and the overall title. Division I (trimarans) went to Joe Therriault’s 33-ft Sundowner, with a sailing time of 20 hours and 2 minutes. Kim Desenberg teamed with Skip Allan on the Wylie 34, Killer Duck, to take Division III (PHRF under 183) in 16 hours and 17 minutes. Scott Owens and Bob Zolli sailed Sweaty Lorna, a Santana 22, to victory in Division IV (PHRF over 184) in 22 hours and 54 minutes. Despite the light conditions everyone loved the concept of the race, and it is destined to become one of the most popular in years to come. '
santa cruz harbor festival
loses america’s cup
Friday, May 30 thru Sunday, June 1, are the dates of the immensely en¬ joyable Santa Cruz Harbor Festival and Boat Show. Sponsored by the local boat and yacht dealers, the Santa Cruz port district, and the Bank of America, the event knocked everyone’s socks off last year when it drew over 10,000 peo¬ ple. i But the draw is understandable. San¬ ta Cruz harbor is a warm, friendly place, the event is free, and there are over 7 million things to see and do. You can board sailboats of all types and sizes — cruising, racing, famous, infamous, they’ll all be there. There’s paper boat¬ building for kids, rescue crafts demonstrations, the Air National Guard Big Band, the Great Norweigian Steam Bathtub race (with both sail and paddle divisions), Hawaiian war canoes, inner tube races, exhibits, food, beer, pretty girls in tiny bikinis, and the gregarious party atmosphere peculiar to Santa Cruz. Mark your calendars, it’ll be a lot
That’s George Olson in the picture, he being the guy who design¬ ed the Olson 30 and with a couple of partners, manufacturers them at Pacific Boat Works in Santa Cruz. Most boatbuilders seemed har¬ ried an<iperenially behind schedule. Not George, who everytime we see him is tinkering around with some different hobby. First it was restoring a Model T truck, and most recently it’s been another dirt sailer. A dirt sailer is much like an ice boat, except you sail it on the heat of the desert floor rather than the ice of a lake. George has done three dirt boats, all named Pterodactyle, which is a flying dinasour that went extinct a while back. With the first two Pterodactyls he won a whole series of ‘America’s Cups’. His partner at Pacific Boat Works, Ln Neale, can’t remember how many exactly, but he’d won every single one since she arrived 5 years ago. At the end of March they held this year’s America’s Cup on the California-Nevada border near the L.A. to Vegas freeway. For the occasion — which was also supposed to include the World Speed Trials — George had whipped up yet another incredible Pterodactyl. George may not dress in Yves St. Laurent, but he’s a stylist, nonetheless. We saw this new Pterodactyl and it was so loooooow, loooooong, and sleeeeeeek. George goes into things full bore, so it wasn’t exactly cheap. The mag wheels cost about $600 a piece, but even they weren’t really his pride and joy. No, his real pride was the Harden blocks and Barient winch he ‘dianodized’ and painted powder blue to match the rest of the color scheme. Unfortunately, it con’t. on next sightings page
of fun. ✓
paqe 55
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SIGHTINGS
con’t from previous page was this dedication to style that may well have cost him yet another America’s Cup. Things started badly. They arrived late and didn’t really get a chance to tune the boat'. Then early in the going, the entire front end got smashed up and they had to go to Las Vegas for a complete rebuild, which you know had to be a weird trip. Still, they hung tough with their big competition, Millenium, owned by the Harken brothers. But that wasn’t the end of their troubles. During the end of one race, the Barient winch gave out and they had to race at reduced efficiency. The problem was that the pawls ripped through, but before Chris Boome gets too excited, it was determined that it was becausb George had fooled around with the anodizing to change the color. Ln Neale got on the ham radio and was recruiting parts from Santa Cruz and boats on Lake Mead, and finally Pterodactyl III was back together again. With all this trouble, how did they do in the fleet of 70 entries, some from as far away as England and Germany? Well, the Harken brothers, all tuned up from a winter of ice boating took first. George’s untuned and hobbled Pterodactyl III took second place by just a half a point. Third place went to George’s older and smaller Pterodactyle II, which took 7 for 7 firsts in her class. George is not one to take los¬ ing sitting down, and has plans for yet another Pterodactyle so his boats may tune together. Winds blew 25 to 30 knots, with the boats hitting about 85 mhp.
\
won’t get foiled again Three months ago we ran a feature on Bruce and Sandy Graham preparing their Star of Corintfi for a cruise to the Virgin Islands. In that article we mentioned that they were taking about 150 servings of Continental Kitchens ‘canned food in a pouch’. Things like veal scalapini, pepper steak, and we can’t remember what all. The benefits of the product was that it wasn’t dehydrated, it fit in small foil packages you put in boiling water, and they contained no preser¬ vatives. After publishing that information, a number of readers wrote in to find out where they could get the stuff. We reminded them that they were only being test-marketed in Dayton or some ridiculous*place, and that all our attempts to get an address for the company were fruitless. But Emily Kopec of the Westsail 32, Meander, is much wiser than we. She had the bright idea of writing Gourmet and Bon Apetit magazines who promptly came up with the information. Emily called Continental Kitchens and they were told that it wouldn’t be necessary to make any special order, because Safeway stores in San Francisco should be carrying it now, and they will probably be available in the rest of the bay area soon. So, check your market, then pork out!
60’s to As we sat under the Golden Gate Bridge waiting for the Colin Archer fleet to head out for the Bonita Buoy, we snapped this photograph of 15 years of southern California boatbuilding. The front boat is a rare Columbia 38, Paramour, from the early 60’s; behind her are three Santana 35’s, a design that’s little more than a year oid.
SIGHTINGS over the side If you get seasick, the following remedy may be of interest to you. It was passed along to us by Walter Crump — who swears it works — from William Cox of Darien, Conneticut. This seasickness preventative was developed under the direction of Dr. Ashton Graybiel of the Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory at Pensacola, Florida. Its effectiveness supposedly was proven on Naval personnel both afloat and under simulated condi¬ tions ashore. The magic ingredients are: 25 mg. Promethazine hydrolchoride together with 25 mg. Ephedrine sulfate. You want your doctor to write a prescription calling for one cap¬ sule every four hours, beginning at least one hour before you cast off. The limit is 4 capsules per day. You should end up with a pink capsule of normal size, renewable without further prescription from your doctor. Naturally you should test this remedy ashore for side-effects before trying it at sea, although none are anticipated. Like all drugs, you should discuss this with your physician for it's suitability to you. Apparently in some people it can cause a dry moyth, slightly higher blood pressure, and if you have prostrate pro¬ blems, it may prevent you from taking a whiz. If you prefer to go a route with no side effects at all, you might try covering one eye with a patch. This has reportedly been very suc¬ cessful with the only drawback being you can’t see so well.
thanks for the plug On behalf of the Berkeley Yacht Club my sincere and warm thanks to you for mentioning in your own inimitable style and flair our First Friday Flics in “Sightings.” I am certain you are aware of, the great popularity Latitude enjoys around the Bay and beyond. And are we ever happy for it because we are sure it had a good deal to do with the overwhelming crowds that showed up to watch our April sailing movie. We had well over 260 people and showed the film three times. What a great beginn¬ ing. After this great success, we will show a super racing (and maybe even a bit racy) flic every first Friday of the month and also serve a delicious but mellow priced meal beforehand. Our June film will be the Warren Miller Production “Hot Yachts, Cold Waters”, featuring some terrific racing.scenes. Among others, Ragtime, the two-time TransPac winner, six-meters rounding buoys, Laser slaloms and the St. Francis Perpetual. You, your wife and staff, of course, are always welcome and dinner is on the house. Hope to see you. Chris Kafitz Berkeley YC
Chris — We’re happy to help you, the Berkeley YC, and everybody else we can with announcements. But please, please, pleeeeeeaaaaassssee folks, send them in as early as possible.
SINGLEHANDED FARALLONES
As far as we’re concerned, this year’s Farallones Singlehanded Race belongs to 44 year-old economist Frank Dinsmore. While his Islander 28, Carina, was the last boat to round the
Farallones by hours and hours, there is good reason to consider him the real winner of the race. It was he who trium¬ phed over the greatest obstacles. As must happen before each Single-
George Gombasy on the Nor'West 33, Whither Thou, and an Olson 30 struggle to get squared away in the light winds. Singlehanded Sailing Society Commodore Michael Herz about to round the rocks in his Ericson 35.
handed Farallones race, everyone men¬ tally prepared for a real knockdown slugfest with the wind and the waves. As it turned out, the biggest potential problems were being burned by the brilliant sun, or being lulled to sleep by the gentlest of swells. Rather than the normal brisk northwesterlies, the prevailing wind was out of the south for most of the day. It thus effectively reversed the normal currents, and rendered the crib sheet Kame Richards had prepared for Latitude 38 in the last issue, completely useless. Rather than a beat out and a run back in, it was a spin¬ naker reach out and back in for a lot of folks.
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Ted Smith sets twin headsails after rounding the Farallones in his Guerney designed Islander 41,
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For the second straight year Dee Smith was the first to finish, and he also took first overall, first in class, and just about everything else they were hand¬ ing out. Dee cited his victory as “a tribute to the Olson people,” who had provided him with Collage, their wellprepared factory Olson 30. “It was easy,” Dee said, “I got flushed out with the ebb and sucked in with the flood.” While it’s true he couldn’t have had a much easier sail, he can’t shake off the credit he deserves. First he had to over¬ come the fact he was unfamiliar with the boat. “It’s the first time I’ve sailed on an Olson 30,’ he said, “and my first tack in
one was the one I made to round the Farallones.” Dee also had the good sense, as he was sailing past Bonita, to ignore a weather report that indicated the wind was blowing 18 knots out of the northwest at the pilot boat. Seem¬ ingly this would have called for fading north with the southerly wind, so as to be in a good position to tack over and lay the islands when the northwesterly hit. The northwesterly never did arrive, and Dee explained his tactics with a sim¬ ple adage, “When things get weird, sail the rhumb line.” Collage was the second boat to the islands, but led from there to the finish. Leader to the island was Rod Park in his
SINGLEHANDED
Lee 40 TransPac veteran, Panache. Rod trailed Dee in the Gate by about half an hour, but stalled out fighting the ebb within spitting distance of the St. Francis YC finish line. After a lengthy standoff, he retired in frustration. A number of other boats had by then join¬ ed him inside the bay, but it would be 5V2 hours after Collage, before another boat would finish. Frustration, frustra¬ tion, frustration. The most difficult part of the race was the first couple of hundred yards, that distance from the starting line off Presidio Shoals to the south tower of the Golden Gate Bridge. Light wind from the east and a strong ebb combin¬ ed to pull boats over the starting line early, and sucked a number of them out the Gate between the south tower and the shore — the illegal side. It was here that Frank Dinsmore displayed the character and the perseverence of a champion. For the most part the skippers who
were over the line early and/or were sucked out the wrong side of south tower, reacted in two ways. They either began bellyaching long and loud at the race committee over Channel 68; or,
they quickly decided they’d never make it back in the Gate and around the tower properly, and therefore sailed off for the Farallones disqualified. Frank Dinsmore got sucked out the wrdng side of the south tower, but he distinguished himself by relentlessly fighting back, slowly inching his way back under the Gate, playing the zephyrs against the formidable ebb. He made it back in, but was promptly suck¬ ed right back out again. We asked Frank if he didn’t feel like saying ‘screw it’, and just taking off for the Farallones. “No way,” he insisted vehemently, “I’ve done too much sail¬ ing to violate a course that way. I’d have quit first.” Needless to say he didn’t quit. A for¬ tuitous westerly briefly picked up and he was able to set his chute and head for the shore close to Fort Point. As he passed under the bridge, his keel struck bottom once, and then got caught in a countercurrent that pushed him further toward the rocky shore. He hit bottom again, and then again a third time before he was able to jibe the spinnaker. Fortunately it carried him away from the perilous shore and in fact, out around the south tower the correct way. Those first several hundred yards of the race took Frank almost 2 hours, and the leaders were already passing the
FARALLONES
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Grover Nibouar in his Moore 24,
Outrage,
leads Michael Herz’ Ericson 35 around the backside.
Both boats are entered in the Singlehanded TransPac.
Lightbucket some 11 miles out. But Frank really didn’t care, he was sailing this race for his own personal satisfac¬ tion, and having not quit when the first obstacles appeared, he was accomplish¬
Nevertheless, the remaining 20 hours of so of his race was “really enjoyable”. Preparing himself and his Islander 28 for the Singlehanded TransPac in June, he ate at regularly scheduled times, read quite a bit, and got some good sleep in while his autopilot or Navik vane took care of steering. So while he didn’t round the islands until 1:30 that night (“It was real spooky”) or finish un¬ til almost 11:00 the next day, he ap¬ peared at the race BBQ that afternoon looking well. So while there were 65 boats and skippers who crossed the starting line and were fully capable of sailing the course on this easiest of days, only 17 actually completed it. The fact that Frank Dinsmore was one of them demonstrates that perseverence and pa¬ tience are among the vitues of a good seaman.
1
Steve Williams
DIVISION I — MULTIHULLS Beginning Searunner 31
1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 13
Dee Smith Larry Ohs Kim Livingston David Hodges Jay Grum Grover Nibouar
DIVISION II - MULTIHULLS Olson 30 Collage Gangreen J-24 SC 27 Little Green Blackbird Foreplay Wilderness 30 SC 27 Hanalei Express Moore 24 Outrage
—
page 63
ing what he had set out to do. By 3:00 his situation had not improved much. The wind had died, his favorable ebb had now gone slack, and as the leaders were now rounding the
Farallones, he was still in the Bonita Channel.
1 6 2 7 3 8 4 9 5 10 6 15 7 16
Bob Vergeer Alexis Monson “Igor” Stagg James Slauson Warren Stryker Paul Boemke Ted Smith
DIVISION III — PHRF 192 and below Catalina 38 Elan Hawkfarm Jenerator Wylie 34 Leading Edge Morgan 30 Patriot Bounty II Dulcinea Morgan 38 Respite Islander 41 Matchless
1 11 ? ? 4 12
Paul May Frank Dinsmore David Hatch
DIVISION IV — PHRF 192 and above Herreshoff 28 Accomplice Islander 28 Carina Mariah 31 Ariel
— latitude 38
20.35 19.29
10:42 16:33 16:30 16:16 16:22 20:11
9:09 13:57 14:11 14:32 14:33 17:40
16:30 17:41 17:39 18:59 19:04 20:44 20:12
14.34 15.34 15:49 16:17 16:22 18:13 18:22
20:51 16:30 —
20:48 17:19
OUT OF MY MIND
I was sitting with my wife Krystyna at the dinner table enjoying the peaceful atmosphere which is always present at our friend’s home. It was July 4th and like every other year, John and June in¬ vited us newcomers to celebrate In¬ dependence Day. Over hills of tacos, oceans of spicy sauces, and rough reefs of tortillas, I could see the friendly faces of our hostess and her family. A gentle breeze blew the napkins as if they were sails and the girls’ skirts which became color¬ ful spinnakers. I had a good year behind me. Only a few days ago I finished my two year long Transpacific Expedition from San Francisco to Tokyo and back, sailing solo in the 27’ long sloop Nord. I sailed via Hawaii where Krystyna joined me and we sailed together in the Hawaiian Islands for two months. And later, singlehanded again, I sailed via Wake, Iwo Jima and the mysterious “Devil Sea” (the northern part of Phillipino Sea, which is as infamous as Bermuda Triangle) to Japan. In Japan I stayed for 6 winter months and worked, lectured, learned Zen, and practiced judo. I sailed a Japanese 50’ “racing machine”, was facinated with Buddhist temples and the delicate faces of Japanese women. Later, on my record-breaking return passage there were storms, calms, fog, rain, snow . . . But all this was the past and behind me. Would you be interested in this?” A massive, iron-like hand reached over the table with a small newspaper clip¬ ping. John was smiling. I know you will like it.” I took a look at Krystyna. She was sit¬ ting comfortably on a redwood bench with glass of wine in one hand and en¬
chilada in the other. Her short hair reminded me of the day I saw her for the first time. She was then a basketball star behind the “iron curtain” . . . Certainly it would be completely un¬ fair after leaving Krystyna for a year, to do it again, if only for a month only. I knew her answer without asking and it made it even harder. “If you really want to sail again, if this passage can make you as happy as the Transpacific Crossing — go! And I will help you as much as possible.” I read the clipping again. A youple of minutes later I was on the phone and we soon had all the basic in¬ formation: 30 ton schooner Morning Light with destination Pago-Pago, American Samoa. Objective: Mission¬ ary activities at the South Pacific Ocean. Existing crew: 6 people without ocean going experience. One set of sails, ex-
OUT ON THE OCEAN -
eluding storm sails. No radar, ham . . . The rest of the holiday we spent talking about south seas, typhoons, reefs, pilot charts, Saomoan songs and equatorial calms. Driving home in our old Ford Cortina along Highway 1 to Montara, we did not talk. Krystyna was sleeping on my shoulder. I was alert and my head full of thoughts. Passing Pidgeon Point lighthouse, the light flashed right in my eyes and sent me a message: StupidStupid-Stupid-Stupid . . . My resume and two interviews made a good impression on the owners of Morning Light, especially the 50,000 miles of singlehanding. I checked the schooner which lay in Vallejo, Califor¬ nia. Morning Light was brand-new, heavy and sturdy, but her rigging was old fashioned. She was well designed and well built by qualified volunteers,
Morning Light
enroute to Polynesia
but with some lack in equipment, typical for a new ship. The young crew was busy loading food supplies (mostly cans from donations). They were excited and full of dreams about South Pacific. But for me, everything was against the voyage. Numerous magazines in the USA, Japan, Germany, even in Russia, asked for articles about Nord’s third odyssey. There were also publishers in¬ terested in a translation of my book “Lonely Voyages — A Century of Singlehanding” and “Brave Passages — Famous Raft Expeditions”. And my new employer (I am a process engineer in semiconductor production) fixed the day I was to start working. “I can’t go.” I walked desperately through our livingroom with an ocean view clear up to Farallone Islands. “Do what ever you really want. It is your choice. I will help you in anyway, and anytime,” promised Krystyna. Stupid-Stupid-Stupid flashed a re¬ mote San Francisco entrance buoy. Leaving excitment aside, with cool blood, we decided together: I would ask for an extremely high (but reasonable) price for my services. This was, we believed, the very best way. I talked to the owners of Morning Light a few hours later and gave them the price. If my of-
\ candidature were rejected, the roblem would be solved. .a day in the early morning the ,jnone woke us up: “You are accepted as the Captain of Morning Light with all your requirements. We expect that as you promised, you shall sail her to Pago-Pago safely in 35 days.” “Yes,” I answered. “Please remember about the storm sails. We have only days till departure!” I kissed Mouse (our cat and my mate during the solo sailing to Japan and back) and his spouse Barbakanka. I loaded 25 books, bags of letters from all over the world, which still waited for an answer, typewriter, cameras, tooth¬ brush, towel and sunglasses and with Krystyna drove to Vallejo. On morning of July 22, after a tearjerking religious ceremony at the yacht harbor, Morning Light left Vallejo. With lots of good wishes on board, we motored toward the San Francisco Bay through one of the nicest waterways I’ve ever seen in my life. Krystyna spent many hours at the steering wheel. “A perfect ship,” she said. I agreed totally. We stopped in Sausalito for the last provisions, new storm sails and final preparations. Before darkness we said goodbye to all
OUT OF MY MIND
visitors and the ocean going order began. July 23rd at 2:00 a.m. with strong ebb and same fog, Morning Light pass¬ ed under the Golden Gate to begin her maiden voyage. The new crew started their first lessons: Never put two ropes on one cleat! Never be late at your watch! Never be late with meal you are preparing: And their first conclusion: “Our Cap¬ tain is too tough!” Maybe boys, (a Captain can not only see everything but also hear everything), but it was too late now. The Farallone Islands disappeared behind stern. The first harbor where you can jump ship is Honolulu, and that’s at least two weeks sailing. Luckily, Neptune is full of understanding for the new crew: he sent us light winds and the ocean looked like a well-polished floor. All was going smooth and perfect, and day after day Morning Light’s positions (fixed by my
trainees) were leading straight to Hawaii. Our VHF radio kept contact with coastal stations. 100 miles, 200 miles, 500 miles! It is unbelievable that such a small VHF radio has a range like this. We even talked to Monterey Coast Guard from a distance of 90Q miles — almost halfway to Hawaii! When the crew got their sea legs they -started to be interested about the world outside our small island sailing through the blue Ocean under sunny sky; dol¬ phins, sharks, dorados, turtles, por¬ poises, whales! And birds, the masters of gliding, the tireless voyagers . . . “Genoa up! Fisherman down! Do not put two ropes on any one cleat! Fore¬ stay sail! Main staysail! Reef the main!” Wind is going up and up. The crew is working hard under tropical rain. Darkness, ocean and roar of wind. Good boys! Dedicated to their boat and missionary vocation. The bow of Morning Light punched the ocean spray like a bullet. “Keep 240°! Watch the current! Do not trust
Catch of the day: a float, a buoy, a whiskey bottle, a soccer ball, a glass ball, and a baseball
Have sextent will .travel.
Wire
Urbancyzk,
Montara.
too much the Pilot Charts, the winds and currents never read them.” Accord¬ ing to our agreement, I am not only a Captain, but also a teacher. After arriv¬ ing in Pago-Pago, the ship will spend years sailing from island to island, fishing for native’s souls. I am spending nights on the deck, and they are exactly like the year before when Nord III sailed to Hawaii (there was only one day difference in the start of the two voyages). Again the unlimit¬ ed treasures of space, again the nicest •ewelery one can imagine. Beautiful universe . . . We were sewing a new sail using nands, bosun’s palm, needles and an ice pick. Day after day the bloody stitches were going forward. Hurry! Hurry! We must finish before Samoa! Our RDF is picking up Hawaii sta¬ tions! The sound of hula-hula comes to us over the swells covered with whitecaps. But the crew doesn’t care. They have their own world. The world of religion, their devotions, their own (which I can’t understand) songs . . . Mystery, mystery world. But we found a common interest. Noahs Ark. Fascinated after seeing the movie “In Search of Noah’s Ark”, guid-
OUT ON THE OCEAN
ed by the Bible, I am building a.model of Noah’s vessel. Suddenly I remembered that while in Russia, only several miles from Mount Ararat on a honeymoon trip, a discussion occured with Krystyna about the reality of Captain Noah’s voyage from the scientific point of view. The blond haired Jura, a Russian sailor, criticized Noah: “Regardless whether he existed in reality or not, he was a bad Captain. He did not know where he ar¬ rived and his vessel was grounded — the biggest shame for a mariner. Also he drank himself to unconsciousness . . .” After two weeks of sailing, Morning
Noah was a bad Captain, he did not know where he was when he was grounded, the biggest shame for a mariner
Light approached Hawaii. August 7th we saw the flashes of Molokai light¬ house. Loosening sheets, in enormous rain, the schooner changed course and
O’Neill’s Yacht Sales & BROKERAGE BANK OF AMERICA FINANCING AVAILABLE
soon the lights of the Sheraton Hotel, on the southwest of the island, passed by. Now, guided by the glare from Oahu with me feeling as if I were com¬ ing-home after long absence, we sailed through Oahu Channel up to Ala Wai in the purple light of the rising sun. The palms, beaches, green mountains hit my heart So strong that I was compelled to wear sun glasses “to cover” my eyes ...
Next issue: As the schooner nears Pago-Pago, Captain Andrew is still ‘not saved’. Beginning to fear for his life, he arms himself with a 1” long Swiss Army Knife, and prepares “to die with dignity”.
AGENTS FOR: CAL BOATS
HOBIE CATS
RANGER BOATS
LASERS
MOORE 24
WINDSURFERS
WILDERNESS YACHTS
JESTER DINGHIES
OLSON 30
BOSTON WHALERS
See you at the Santa Cruz In-The-Water Boat Show, May 30th thru June 1st!
CALL US FOR MORE INFORMATION ON PERFORMANCE AND QUALITY OR TO M^KE APPOINTMENT FOR FACTORY TOUR.
2222 EAST CLIFF DRIVE, AT THE YACHT HARBOR IN SANTA CRUZ
(408) 476-5202
the Wilderness 30SX ,
The Wilderness 30SX is one of the hottest racing/cruising Photo by Patrick O'Daniels yachts of the 80’s. ft was second to finish, boat for boat, in the single handed Farallon Race. Designed by renowned Naval Architect Chuck Burns, to sail as fast as possible on all points of sail, which is exactly what she does. For up-wind perform¬ ance, she has a 7/8 rig, straight water lines, as opposed to IOR diamond shaped water lines.The firm bilges carry all the way to the transom for dynamic stability. Surfing on ocean swells is an experience no sailor should miss. Race equipped with the t>est equipment that is extra on most comparable yachts, featuring names such as: Hulse-Chrisman Spars, Barient, BMW Diesel, Schaefer and Navtec. The deck and cockpit are clean and uncluttered, with wide side decks for easy crew movement. The 30SX interior was designed simple, clean yet very functional. She sleeps six, with 5’10” headroom, complete galley and a head with privacy curtain. The Wilderness 30SX is ready to sail as delivered, test sail one today. > Specifications: LOA 29’9” LWL 27’9”
Beam 8’9” Draft 5’6”
Ballast 1,900 Displ. 4,200
CRUISING WORLD YACHTS, INC. has been chosen as the Northern California Distributor for the Fast Passage 39. A hand crafted, blue water cruising yacht, designed for the cruising sailor dissatisfied with less than high performance and quality construction. Specifications: LOA 39’111/2” LWL 33’6”
Beam Max. 11’10” Draft 5’6”
Ballast 7,500 lbs. Displ. 21,000 lbs.
■ Partial List of Brokerage Yachts Sam Brooks—Yacht Broker SAIL 17’ Leisure Sloop & Trailer 24’ Yankee Dolphin 24’ J-24 27’ Coronado 2 from 27’ Choate (Foreplay) 27’ O’Day 30’ Cape Dory
• Hans Christian
$ 5,300 $14,900 $16,500 $12,900 325k9eC $19,950 $21,950 $38,850
• Fast Passage
30’ 36’ 38’ 38’ 41' 41’ 45’
Farrallone Columbia Hans Christian Downeaster Caribe Freeport Coronado
2 from
$38,995 $39,500 $99,950 $69,995 $65,000 $94,995 $86,500
POWER 18’ Kona w/tlr. 35’ Eagle Trawler 40’ Bluewater Trawler 44’ Pacemaker 45’ Bluewater Sedan.
$ 5,300 $61,995 $74,995 $99,495 $99,950
• Wilderness • Fox • B/J • Gryphon • Banshee • Topper • Dover Dory
Mans Christian jSchts Roger & Barbara Wales
Distributed by:
of Northern California
Cruising World Yachts, Inc.
2415 Mariner Square Drive, Alameda (415) 521-1929 • 1120 Brickyard Cove Road, Point Richmond
(415) 235-9880
COLIN ARCHER
It’s not often that heavy, full-keel cruising boats get together for a big race, but when they do, the same thing usual¬ ly happens. Rick Oliviera of the Encinal YC wins, in his Traveller 32, Horizons. The big race for cruising boats this last four years has been the Colin Archer Memorial Race, which each year seem¬ ingly attracts a bigger and better fleet than the year before. While it is called a race, instructions to the skippers remind them that fun is the real reason for the get-together. So rather then emptying
the water tanks and stripping the boats out, family and friends are piled aboard with big lunches wine and beer. Only then are they prepared to be com¬ petitive. The Colin Archer is an interesting and challenging 26 miles. The start is off Alameda where the winds are light, then actoss the bay and out the Gate, around the Bonita channel buoy which is a mile west of the point, back through the Gate, Raccoon Straits, and the star¬ ting line. That’s the course they’re sup¬ posed to sail, but a strong flood and
Rick and Marilyn Oliviera. Below, Horizons, their Traveller 32, during a sail change.
-
COLIN ARCHER
The Westsail 32,..“Meander”, and the Halvorsen ketch, “Peter Gynt” had a tacking duel all the way out the Gate. Well ahead of everyone but “Horizons", only “Meander" was able to finish the race.
Mare-C sailed a great race in the beginning, but got stymied in the flood off Bonita.
s.
Rick Oliveira Traveller 32
FIRST TO FINISH 5 hours 46 min. Horizons
DIVISION I — Outboard Rudder to 30’ Mirage, Nicholas Meyer, Nor’Sea 27; Mare-C, Rudolof Schroder, Storefidra; Meinliebschen, Gordon Schruber, Nor’Sea 27. DIVISION II - Out. Rudder 30’ - 35’ Horizons, Rick Oliveira, Traveller 32; Meander, David Kopec. Westsail 32; Alhena, K. M. Weller, Kosterbat; Southern Cross, Ron Cool, —. DIVISION III — Outboard Rudder over 35’ Edward Bernard, John Abbott, Rafiki 37; Out¬ ward Bound, Alejandro Torjofuku, Rafiki 37; La Gaviota II, C. J. Altermueller, Rafiki 37; Tran¬ quility, Richard Hull, Rafiki 37. DIVISION IV - Inboard Rudder to 35’ Tao. Fred Freerks, Willard 8 ton.
MEMORIAL
The "Ingrid”, “China Rose”, and what looks like an Alajuela beating for Bonita.
One of several Traveller 32's entered in the race. *
After the race the boats gather at the Encinal YC for drinks and dinner. A nice club, with a great staff, wonderful food and — a pool!
-
A big Hans Christian cutter, full of family, rumbles through the slop.
fickle winds piled most of the fleet up just west of Point Bonita and wouldn’t let them go. Eventually 13 of the 51 starters did finish, and naturally Rick Oliveira was the first of those to finish. We asked Rick what his secret w$s, what made him a consistent winner over the years. He mentioned that it was a big help to have a two-bladed prop rather than a three-bladed one as many of his competitors, and that he had a good crew. Other than that, nothing much was revealed about how he makes the double-ender go so well. Nevertheless, this is likely to be Rick’s last victory in the Colin Archer Race — he’s sold Horizon for a bigger boat of a different' design, one that won’t be allowed to enter the race.
— latitude 38
What happened next remains a mystery to us. Eventually we determin¬ ed that we were heeled over at some horrible angle because the cockpit was in the bay, but figured that if we could just hang on we probably wouldn’t die. Someone mountainclimbed to the weatherrail to release the vang. It smok¬ ed as it flew off the winch, unjibing the main with a terrific crash, and snapping the spinnaker pole like a toothpick. We’d like to tell you that we've since gone out and with practice overcome our fear of the chute. But that would be a lie. Everytime that spinnaker comes on deck, our heart jumps into our mouth and we wish we were anywhere else in the world. The pictures on this page show exactly why. Yeeeech! John Hutton took these shots of Race Passage and Papou of the San Fran¬ cisco Bay YC and the St. Francis YC respectively. The boats were battling it out in the 2-day, 5-race San Francisco Challenge Cup for the second year in a row. Papou won it for the St. Francis last year, Race Passage• got revenge for the San Francisco this year. Next year they will probably have a ‘thrilla in Manila’ rematch.
— latitude 38
INNOVATIVE
It’s no secret that it’s tougher than normal for an individual to purchase a boat these days. Reports from the re¬ cent boatshow and from brokers in general indicate while the depnand for sailboats is as strong or stronger than ever, many potential customers are get¬ ting tripped up by the banks. We’re all aware that interest rates have skyrocketed during the last 6 months, and that lending institution loan re¬ quirements have become more str¬ ingent. Indications are the current situa¬ tion may last a number of months. Generally speaking, dealers and brokers have been responding to this new business climate in two different ways. Some have seemingly become paralyzed by events, virtually shutting down their operations, hoving to, so to speak, hoping the ‘storm’ will blow over and they will be spared. There’s a significantly large group of dealers and brokers who are taking the opposite approach, folks who aren’t willing to sit passively and be buffeted about without making the best of the situation. As financing has become harder to obtain, the more energetic and creative they have become in fin¬ ding new, ways of putting people into the boats they want. Instead of hoving to, they’ve hanked on the storm sails and are still driving to weather, waiting for the first sign of abating interest rates and the resulting boom in boat sales. In a time when America may be suf¬ fering from having become a little fat and soft, these folks are getting lean and tough. We admire their perseverence and innovation in the face of adversity, and are going to stick our editorial necks out to support them. We’d like to in¬ troduce you to some of these people, the boats they sell, but most importantly the variety of ways — some old and some new — in which they are helping people get into the boats they want. We at Latitude 38 honestly believe that sailing is the way to make the sum¬ mer of 1980 the best of your life, and we believe these innovative folks are the kind of people who can make it happen for you.
Dick Denay
move their boat rapidly. A typical recent deal involved a $100,000 boat; the buyer put up $50,000 cash and the seller took a note on the balance for 12 percent simple interest. That note is due . in a year, or as soon as the buyer sells his current boat.
Dick Levine
The Yacht House/C&C,
J-Boats, Rafiki, Nonsuch, Silverton In one specific case, a couple came to us knowing full well they wanted a 34-ft. boat that cost $65,000, but prac¬ tically speaking, could only afford a $45,000 boat. Through our time-share program, we make it possible for them to buy their $65,000 dream boat. How? In return for giving us a percentage of the boat time, we gave them a berthing subsidy, a boat maintenance subsidyy and actual receipts of cash, thereby, reducing their financial commitment to a comfortable amount. They got their 1983 dream boat at 1980’s price.
Bob Tefft
Sailbo at s/Sausal it o / Islander, Freeport, Irwin, Cal, Hunter Our approach is that we can conclude boat transactions — even though the government is really sticking it to us — by thinking, scheming, conniving, plot¬ ting, planning, and working new ex¬ citing ‘new’ ways to sell and finance sailboats. One of our dynamic programs is a 14 percent simple interest “Reduced Interest” plan that takes the heat of high interest payments off the back of the new boat buyer. Wherq there’s a will, there’s a way — and this is just one way. Don Durant
Bob Tefft Cruising/Offshore Cruising Brokerage We’re simply concluding many deals without using the bank at all. Sellers are realizing that they may have to carry some of the financing if they wish to
Sailboats, Inc./Pearson, Bristol, Dufour, Endeavor, Spirit, Merit, Balboa, Albin People in -the-know understand that anytime you can borrow long term money at an interest rate close to or below the inflation rate, it’s a hell of a deal! In addition to an inflation hedge, our Tax Sheltered Lease-Back program is getting stronger than ever as more and more yachts are put into multipleuse situations. Currently, for example, we have berths available in Santa Cruz, Tahoe, and Tiburon for those who want Uncle Sam’s help in paying for their boat. )
in return for occasionally being able to use them for demonstration purposes.
We have several attractive buying programs currently available. One is a charter arrangement with an option to buy. A second is a fantastic program in
It’s an ironic situation where the customer actually benefits because of the higher interest rate.
cooperation with the Lancer factory, where Lancer’s are offered at an effec¬ tive interest rate of 12.5% for 15 years at 20 percent down.
Bert Trezise Bill Kimley
Bob Moe
Skipper’s Yacht Sales/Formosa, Farr, Brokerage Since the credit market tightened up, we’ve gone through our brokerage listings to find out which owners might be willing to offer assistance in financ¬ ing. We’ve found a large number of them are, and in a few cases there are even assumable loans starting as low as KM percent.
Jack O’Rourke The Sailboat Shop/Buccaneer, Cor¬ inthian, Chrysler/T. M. I., Allied Yachts We’re offering special incentives on the boats we haveI in stock now. In order to reduce our flooring expenses we’ll be selling these new boats and of¬ fering to provide berthing and insurance page 75
Santa Fc Yacht Sales /Fantasia, Brokerage Power & Sail About half the boatowners on our brokerage listings have indicated a will¬ ingness to carry some of the financing when selling their boats. One such kind of a situation would be where the buyer makes 2 to 5 years of normal monthly, payments, with a balloon payment in the end. In situations like this, it is im¬ portant for the broker to work with the seller to assure that the seller’s interests are protected.
John Lauritz Seair / Lancer, Brokerage, Charter --3-
Serendipity/Serendipity 43, Peterson 34, Aphrodite Since we manufacture the Serendipi¬ ty 43 we sell, we often don’t get involv¬ ed with financing, although when necessary we do help arrange it. In some cases we’ve encouraged people to start with the more basic racing gear now, and go full bore on equipment next season. We do get a lot of national feedback on how interest rates are affecting yacht sales around the country. The entire east coast, with New York in particular, seems to be booming right along in yacht sales, feeling little if any affect. Detroit, where the auto business is so
INNOVATIVE heavy, is badly depressed. On the west coast Seattle and southern California seem the worst areas, and the bay area Is down, but the best area on the west coast. Money is available. We had a cus¬ tomer go into a local bank last week, and he had no problem getting financ¬ ed.
ownership amounts to almost $950 a month.
Mike Douglas
nel Cutter There is money available, last week we had two, buyers get financing for boats in the $70,000 range. We sell cruising boats and we’ve found a large N number of our buyers are people who can’t afford houses, but no longer want to pay rent. Their boat gives them an economical form of housing which builds equity, it gives them a central source of recreation, and it allows them to prepare for cruising a year or two from now.
Kim Desenberg
Kermit Parker Yachts/Cavalier 39, Brokerage Sail & Power We haven’t used a bank in the last 5 transactions, deals which totalled over $200,000. The sellers are very flexible as long as their financial obligation to the bank and the broker is being covered. Some of the' bigger transac¬ tions are being secured with thirigs like a second deed of trust on property. This is interesting, because in all of 1979 we didn’t have one deal that involved any real estate, and now it’s very common. There is big renewed interest in smaller boats, with cash buyers in the $30,000
The solution to his problem was achieved by a broker who had a buyer with $10,000 cash and an $85,000 house with an 11 percent, $50,000 assumable mortgage. The seller took the house, the $10,000 cash, and a note from the buyer for $10,000. The buyer was out of the house, had his dream boat which he moved aboard, and a monthly payment which was lower than his house payment had been. The seller then rented the house for more than the mortgage payment on it and was left with a positive cash flow investment. Desires are endless, some people want to buy and some want to sell. Traditionally banks have been helpful in these transactions, but in the current situation they are often not a party to them.
Roy Cannon & Jim Apple
range.
North Coast Yachts/Haw kfarm, Wylie 34 This is pot a new comcept, but perhaps is one that is becoming more common in the industry. Our last two sales — both to Chicago — have involv¬ ed syndicates. In neither case were they related to tightened credit, but these people had been in them before, and they were successful. The obvious benefit is that it’s a less expensive wdy for people to campaign a racing boat, one they perhaps could not afford in¬ dividually.
Bill Hunter Port Sonoma Y.S./ Olson 30, Brokerage Sail & Power A cruising boat owner back from the South Pacific rejoining the 8 to 5 routine has a little problem. His $55,000 boat which he owns outright still costs him $325 a month in taxes, insurance, and berthing; and if you add to that the lost return on used $55,000, his pride of
Fred Sohegian
Nor’Sea Yachts/Nor’Sea, Flying Dut¬ chman, Baba, Falmouth, Bristol Chan¬
Northern California Yacht Sales /Ericson, Pacific Seacraft, S2, Caribe 41’ & 47’ One of several programs we’ve developed involves subsidizing some of the buyer’s interest for a two-year period — and this program applies to all
our new boats. A special escrow ac¬ count is set up at the bank, which disperses a fixed sum of money each
Mike Lampe
turning down. We are offering these people smaller or used boats as a hedge against inflation and so they can enjoy sailing this season, and are guarantee¬ ing them the purchase price in trade when the interest rates do go down.
Bill Lee
>
month directly to the boat loan account. That amount of money represents the difference in the current interest rate with a more normal interest rate which has been arranged with the buyer.
/ v H fjj
Mike Lampe Yachts/O’Day, Valiant, Swift, Peterson 44, Uniflite, Fairways In brokerage boats we’ve got several boats over $30,000 that the existing 10 and 11 percent financing can be picked up. On new boats, particularly larger models in inventory, we are setting up lease-backs where the buyer gets certain tax advantages and perhaps income from the boat.
Bill Murray Gil Guillame
Bill Lee Yachts/Santa Cruz 21 & 50 We remain flexible at customizing, transactions on a personalized basis, considering all pertinent factors, not strictly limited to optimizing interest rates. We must consider interest today, interest tommorrow, list price today, list price tommorrow, and what we and the customer have to offer each other.
Roger Wales
O’Neills Yacht Center/Cal, Ranger, Moore, Wilderness, Olson, Hobie, Laser, Jester, Boston Whaler We want people to know that financ¬ ing is available despite the false publicity to the contrary. We have people come in who are astounded to hea/ that money is available. We’re looking into a situation where we can expand our current rental and charter program of smaller boats to in¬ clude boats in the 30’ to 40’ range, and therefore are developing lease-back programs to provide for this. page 77
Mariner Square Yachts/Santana, Newport We cater to people who know what , they want and have been figuring the boat into their budget for a long time. We’re not having trouble finding money for these people, in fact one big bank — and we don’t even do our flooring with this bank — complained that we weren’t giving them enough customers. There are a few buyers who the banks would have loved 6 months ago, but in this marginal money market are barely
Hans Christian Yachts/Wilderness, Fox, B-J17, Dover Dory, Topper, Ban¬ shee We’ve got a number of programs to meet a tigher money market situation.
INNOVATIVE Quality investments like boats are in de¬ mand with money is tighter; financing is available, and in fact we’ve just moved ahead and opened an additional bay area location.
Bob Toler
Cyclone, Omega, Laser, Avon, Capri Were working with a nationwide leasing company who offer programs usually directed toward professional people, and these programs are tailored to the individual. We’re finding partner¬ ships working — for example an ac¬ countant and a software computer salesman got a 28-ft boat together. The accountant entertains on the boat, the salesman races extensively. One lives in Sacramento, one in San Jose, and the boat is kept halfway between in Rich¬ mond. The obvious result is that the cost of the boat is cut in half for each in¬ dividual. We’ve also seen a 5-party Catalina 22 partnership work out suc¬ cessfully for several years.
realize the money they think they will be
saving will be eaten up by the price in¬ crease in boats — almost all of which are a derivative of oil.
Paul Kaplan
Jim Clauss Glen Cove Y.S. /Brokerage Sail & Power Buyers should be aware that prices are now soft, frequently to the extent that makes up for the temporary in¬ crease in interest rates, rates which can be refinanced down when the rates drop. The used market is active, and often times without the help of the banks. We’ve sold a 22-ft one-design, a 45-ft motorsailer for $80,000, and a 32-ft sailboat for $43,000 — aH of which were transacted without a bank.
Lowell Richardson & Ross King
The Foredeck/Islander, J-Boats, West Wight Potter, Coronado,
Clauss Enterprises/Tartan, San Juan, Wilderness, Moore 24 Buyers ought to be aware that inven¬ tory boats are a good value to be in¬ vestigated. Not only are dealers sometimes eager to get them off their flooring, but the banks are sometimes willing to go an extra mile with the customer to see if the deal can’t be put together. At this time both the dealers and the banks have an interest in reduc¬ ing dealer’s flooring. Marilyn Hunt Commodore Yachts/Mariner We are setting up lease-back situa¬ tions, to help out with interest for the first year. Buyers who are planning to wait for lower interest rates ought to
City Yachts/Brokerage Sail & Power We had a seller who owned a 35-ft. boat outright, and put him together with a buyer who the bank wouldn’t take at the time. The seller decided to carry the buyer, and got a 438 BFU special en¬ dorsement on the insurance policy to provide him with security. Deals are be¬ ing put together this way, but we’re rather conservative about them and are generally arranging financing in the traditional manner with banks. We look to current interest rates as being tem¬ porary . Don Hatler Clara Clipper Yacht Sales /Lancer, Neptune, O’Day, Hobie, West Wight Potter, Vagabond Lancer Yachts, in cooperation with its dealers, has arranged a financing pro¬ gram in which'Lancer guarantees the loan to the financial institution, and pays a loan fee up front which results in the customer recieving a 12.5 APR,
PROFESSIONALS 15-year financing. There’s nothing bet¬
high interest costs until they drop and the boat can be refinanced. Our boats are custom, or semi-custom, and would take about six months to complete. At that time we anticipate financing is likely to be more attractive.
Sam Brooks
less established builder. ter available. The offer lasts until July 1, 1980, or the first $5 million worth of boats.
Ryo Arai
Nancy Carr
Nancy Carr Yacht Sales/LaFitte Our boats are expensive, and we’re finding many qualified buyers who come to us and say, ‘this is what I have, and this is what 1 want — can you put it together?’ This may involve helping them liquidate other assets, it may in¬ volve our locating alternative private financing at rates more attractive than the bank offers, or other things. We’re finding our network of business contacts is spreading into different fields in order to facilitate yacht sales.
Boat Warehouse/Neptune, Cor¬ onado, Banshee, Topper, Alpha One, Gryphon, Catalina The credit crunch hurts us like everyone else, however the bulk of our business is in small sailboats, and usual¬ ly people buy them on a cash basis. For those needing financing on bigger boats, we are able to help reduce the first year’s interest with a cash rebate.
Jim Bock
Bob Thomsen C&B Marin e/Farr, C&B 38, Custom Boatbuilders We’ve never really been involved with the financing of any of the boats we’ve done. We give our customers the bill and they give us the money. Our track record however, makes it easier for people to get money than with some
James A. Bock & Co., Inc./Cape George Cutter We have a private source of financing and are willing to underwrite part of the /
page 79
Sam Brooks Yacht Sales /Brokerage Sail & Power There is money available for people who can qualify for loans. Also we do have some excellent listings where the owners are willing to either take real estate or develop lease-back ar¬ rangements. Sellers are realizing that boats, like houses, are tougher to finance, so they are generally being a lit¬ tle more flexible.
On April 14, the Northern California Marine Association took a survey and found these banks are making boat loans: Bank of America, Bank of the West (French Bank of California), Barclay Bank of California, California Canadian Bank, California First Bank, Central Bank (Hong Kong Bank of California), Crocker National Bank, First Enterprise Bank, Hibernia Bank, Imperial Bank, Lloyds Bank, Security Pacific National Bank, Toronto Dominion Bank of Canada, Union Bank (Chartered Bank of London), United California Bank, Western Women’s Bank, Beneficial Finance Company, Fireside Thrift Co., Household Finance Co., Public Finance Co., Embarcadero Federal Credit Union, Greyhound Credit Union, Western Union Employees Credit Union — latitude 38
Join Bob Marshall fcj a complete calend of weekend bOatin activities on the B and Delta.
Friday 5:30 P
i
K
PLAY FOR MORE
As one daughter so bluntly put It: What will you do for money? Won’t the boat tip over? How do we reach you, for God’s sake?
20 toes into the breeze, the univer¬ sal symbol of freedom.
Churchill said it best: “Play for more than you can afford to lose and you WILL learn the game.” We did . . . Gene ‘n me and Whither Thou. We won our gamble and we are learning the game. You no doubt saw the Skipper ads last fall proclaiming ‘Our Hull Number One is presently cruising the San Juan Islands’? That was us. Hull Number One is Whither Thou, our proud golden Nor’West 33’ sloop. Chuck Burns de¬ page 81
signed her in 1976, Nor’West Yachts built her in 1977. We came, saw and , christened her in 1978, damn near sank her in 1979, but it takes more than a pooping by a rogue wave to stop this stalwart boat. She bobbed right back up, shook herself off and seemed to growl “Okay you turkeys, now what?” Her hatchcover was lost in the black night, her batteries deluged and her boom was bent. Gene sported an extra bump or two and I came close to buying the
farm, but our first offshore passage has still been gleefully stamped ‘we did it!’ and we’re getting ready for the 1980 Singlehanded TransPac to Hawaii, for Gene and one helluva boat. Yes, the three of us are learning the game. Even before we found Whither Thou we itched tq turn the sailing we both lov¬ ed into our fulltime lifestyle. No matter that Gene’s active experience was bare¬ ly three years old at the ‘78 Singlehand¬ ed when his first boat broke and he had
PLAY
to turn back. No matter this first mate was forty-seven years old before setting foot on any sailboat, 2-packs-a-day and a workaholic who was scared of water, water, never did learn to swim, had a sometimes thing with claustrophobia and the love of heights wasn’t anything to write home about, either. No matter we were starting the second half of life, each with grown children and grand¬ children as well. No matter that Gene had contributed his engineering and design skills to the same electronics firm for twenty-five years or that I’d been his travel agent for twelve of those years, sending Gene and his counterparts to wherever their business called. All that had been just dandy . . . once. But priorities change and now, after finding each other and our beautiful Whither Thou, each workday doing jobs we’d once loved had become a nine-to-five frustration. The important times were when we were together, the three of us.
^Jene is a mountain man who dis¬ covered the sea late in life, a new arena for his natural instincts of discovery, wonder and sense of adventure. He was born in the year Lindbergh soloed the Atlantic and has always felt a mysterious link to that extraordinary human being. Born then, when fron¬ tiers could still be discovered and living now, some fifty-plus years later, he has the rare ability to find thrill in the challenge of a far horizon, be it at sea or the next mountain summit. He has the eyes to see, the heart to feel and an overpowering spirit to seek, knowing you don’t have to go back and reinvent the wheel in order to find challenge. Even if its been done countless times before, can one deny their child the sense of wonder and accomplishment when he discovers for his first time that
two plus two equal four? It’s the same thing. Gene also lives by, and has taught his first mate, a creed of true faith: “Until one is committed there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness . . . whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it . . . the magic will follow as day follows night.” This creed to dare to take a chance led us both from everyone else’s vague 'someday soon’ to our personal here and ‘NOW!’ It also stood Gene in good stead when he needed it badly. lv Like Lindbergh, Gene has soloed but in his own way, walking his beloved Sierras alone. In ‘78 he began prepara¬ tions for another solo and another com¬ mittment, the Singlehanded TransPac race to Hawaii. For six months he work¬ ed, psyching himself and Pretz, his 26-ft. Columbia MKI, into an all time fever high, putting every nickel and every drop of energy into the prepara¬ tions. Gene was the only entrant with sheet-to-tiller steering; not only did he firmly believe in a minimum of gadgetry, he plain couldn’t afford a windvane or electronic steering device, even with financial help from so many that believ¬ ed in him and his committment. But not having money doesn’t stop a man like Gene, nothing can really stop a singlehanded sailor. What did stop him was a detached water tank, discovered after the start of the race when it threatened to tear the boat apart. No one except another sailor, or somebody who loves one, can know the agony of making that decision to turn back. Get¬ ting old? Turning chicken? Out of place in a young man’s world? Chicken? Gene Haynes? No way. His guardian angel perched on his shoulder that day, for subsequent inspection pro¬ ved one more day and Pretz would have broken up under the combined pounding of the water tank, loose in its cage within, and the hammering surf without. As it was, her entire port bow was in shreds. Pretz was fixed, the race became a dream laid to rest till the next one, and now Gene had time for the next major
step. We became liveaboards two months after Whither Thou was christened. Now living in two worlds, the weekends flew past and Monday through Friday became impossible with the frustration of mounting gas prices, choking commute traffic and longing to be on the boat fulltime. After a twoweek vacation in May, practicing and testing our limited bluewater experience and skills, we knew we had to make a decision. For two weeks we’d been do¬ ing the thing we loved best; we just couldn’t go back to the old programmed
FOR MORE
Gene and Dotty Hayes, a new today.
existance. Both of us had given — so gladly! — half our lives to family, jobs, and myriad responsibilities to others, but those yesterdays were over. We were a new today and damn it, we wanted our tomorrows while we were still young enough and agile enough to absorb and enjoy! But . . . could we af¬ ford it? And could we break those ties? Or, as one daughter so bluntly put it, “What will you do for money, will the boat tip over arid how do we reach you, for God’s sake?” Now that’s blunt. And basic.
Where to start? We already had by buying Whither Thou. Chuck Burns set out to design a full keel cruising boat who loves to run, can outpoint anything in the water, can and has held her own against the best of 'em in a race, but still had been our comfortable home for over six months. He designed her as such, Nor’West built her as such and she yearned to sail any waters, any¬ where. So by God, if Whither was going sailing, we were going with her! We gave our notices in June (“You’re doing WHAT???”), told all the kids (“Mothe-r-r-r, you can’t swim!!”), an¬ nounced to one and all we’d be back in two years, if and when the money ran out, for a new set of saddlesores (ah, the optimism of the young at heart!), decided it was too late in the year to head west so it would be north to Alaska. We provisioned the boat and paid absolutely no attention to such nonsense as (1) a lost wedding ring the day after we quit our jobs . . . omen? or (2) a broken tooth three days later or (3) guess whose van slipped its brake and deep-sixed into Oakland’s Estuary . . . uh huh. But did all this deter us? Not on your life it didn’t! No. Mere omens, mishaps and my mal de mer didn’t deter us. It took gale force winds for five days as we beat our way north through the tailend of a Bajabased hurricane. It took taking on more water than we felt right and finally, after deciding to turn back, it took a gybe with a reacting boom and Gene’s wristbone snapping clean through. That’s what it took! Incidentally, never throw away your old Latitude 38's, gang. They make great splints. The weakness causing the extra water intake was easily fixed by the builder that knew the boat rather than a strange boatyard in Juneau. Gene’s wrist was put in a cast (“Soak it off in hot water in six weeks, come see me when you get back.” Doctors can be sailing nuts, too). We replenished the fuel and water tanks, opted for another bottle of wine, took another deep breath and two weeks later started north. Again. Only now, it’s August, right? And too late for ,7 ■■
page 83
M. ..-
Alaska because any sailor in his right mind knows Alaska’s Gulf is the pits in September, right? Right. But we’re not too late for lovely British Columbia, right? Right on! Great weather this time of year, so nonstop, right? Wrong.
A
L m. pile of weather greeted us just outside the Gate; wet, stormy slapin-the-face weather. This was, natural¬ ly, immediately after Gene has wrestled up the genoa for the bay’s soft deceiving winds, now he had. to one-arm the changeback to the working jib. Uh yeah, it really would help, first mate, if you’d watch the wind indicator — LIKE YOU’RE SUPPOSED TO! - instead of the gymnastics going on up on the foredeck. Boy, was Gene mad! Rain, thirty-five knot winds and high seas shot us as far as Drakes Bay and an over¬ night was definitely called for ... to cool down, dry off, and for me, to throw up. Mal de mer again. The weather came to a thudding halt almost immediately after leaving Point Reyes the next day, and we literally bobbed our way through five days of no wind, alternating the bobbing with motor sailing. Then came the fog, dense enough to shroud the mast, and I really came unglued. Gene came up for his midnight watch and took one look. “You’re crying. Don’t you EVER let yourself get this upset again, over anything! Why didn’t you call me?” “I didn’t want to wake you.” “Dammit!” He was right, pretty darn dumb to just sit there in the dark and fog, getting scareder. Communicate! Another over¬ night, this time Crescent City for R&R as well as fuel, what with all that motor sailing. The tank took only a few gallons; we accepted with thanks a
PLAY FOP MOPE gorgeous red snapper from Hank the fisherman, took another deep breath and were off again. This time, the winds and sea and Saint Peter got together and blessed us with a low and a high, both in the right places, to give us a downwind sail, uphill, the rest of the way and man, did we sail! We reached Neah Bay, Washington, in just thirteen days total, even with the two stopovers. Not too bad for first-timers! Our elation, our vest-bustin’ s— eatin’ grins gave us away. We’d done it, we had finally honest to God DONE IT! A dreamlike month followed as we cruised both sides of the border through the U.S. San Juans and Canada’s Gulf Islands, drinking in their beauty and learning more lessons: f’instance, do you know the tidal surge through these islands can often be as high as fourteen feet? At high tide, these delicious coves and inlets appear as deceptive small lakes of tranquil and undisturbed water. Low tide revels their true nature of rocks, outcroppings, boulders and sandbars just waiting to scrape, grind, and gouge. Even with a depthfinder and lead line, we learned early on to time our arrivals to low tide. After two weeks of ocean sailing, it was now delightful to island hop, an¬ choring each day well before martini time and getting reaquainted with each
Playing windlass in'the Northwest.
other. Offshore sailing takes all concen¬ tration and strength during the four-on, four-offs, dividing the four-off’s between navigation duties, cleaning and cooking as well as sleeping. We had set up the bunk with a wet sheet and blanket, keeping the regular bedding for normal times. This way the watchee, recently the watcher, could pile straight in. Man, don’t get in the way of me ‘n the bunk or I’ll run right over you — interrupt me once there and kill . . . bubba . . . kill! More than two or three weeks of roundthe-clock cruising could conceivably create problems for a crew of two. Meals, much less anything else, are rarely shared and life is touch and go with growing tenseness and frayed nerve endings. Or, as Gene said about the tenth day, “You’re just not your sweet loveable self these days!” Well, neither was he! But now, with one direction of offshore behind us, we had all the time in the world for touch and stay instead, a vast improvement! Weather, fishing, most of all the peo¬ ple . . . our month was forever indeli¬ ble. There are so many friends in this world, as the man said, just waiting to be met and nobody knows this better than sailors. “Hi! Like her? Come aboard and look around, Gene Haynes’ the name!”
Whither Thou attracts everyone with her bright golden hull, then they spot Piney the Pine Tree and our solar panel, both conversation pieces. Gene’s love of people and his infectious enthusiam, as well as his overwhelming pride in Whither really nails ‘em! (Yep, we have a pine tree so Gene, my sea farin’ mountain man, would always have the best of two worlds about him. Some people sail with pets or kids, so we sail with a tree! If it could only talk . . . “Why can’t I live in a yard, like a' nor¬ mal tree? What am I doin’ on a boat, for crying out loud??”) Then there was the lesson of the cus¬ toms. Some lesson. “Fine? What fine? $400? You’ve GOT to be kidding!” Customs doesn’t kid. When Cana¬ dian customs says check in immediate¬ ly, they mean immediately, not the next day. And only the captain goes ashore to do the checking-in, sport, not the crew, married or not married! Phew. They let us off with a warning but not before they warned us, too, that this same booboo returning to the U.S. could cost a cool thousand. Yes, SIR! Even dream cruises must end sometime,‘and when we saw the geese forming overhead for their trek south we knew it was time to follow. Provi¬ sions replaced, diesel tank brimming, one more hot shower and we were off, the rains and wind pelting us as we scooted through the Straits of Juan de Fuca and hung a left at Cape Flattery. The weather pattern had changed in an eyeblink. Running with the swells ten to fifteen feet, literally surfing in the twenty-knot winds, we neared the California border three days out of the Straits, a record run. If this kept up, we’d be home in less than a week total, wow! Then, it happened. — dotty haynes
Next Month: You learn ‘what’ happened.
page 85
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About a year and a half ago we ran an in¬ terview with Bob Perry that was con¬ ducted by Singlehand¬ ed TransPacer, Alan Rutherford. We liked it, but still wanted to get a feel for yachting’s current most popular cruising boat designer. So when Karen Thomp¬ son at the In-TheWater Boat show of¬ fered to introduce us, we were glad for the opportunity. We spent a pleasant afternoon with Bob, talking on a LaFitte 44, and later roving around through a number of his other designs. Bob’s in his early 30’s, and judging from the way he dresses, must read ‘‘Gentleman’s Quarterly” in addition to all the yachting magazines. He’s done well. He has an Esprit 37, drives a turbo
lives in a modest house in a nice waterfront neighborhood of Seat¬ tle. Bob has two assistants who work with him in his design office. After the office closes and the phone stops ring¬ ing, he likes to blast out the Eagles on his big stereo and get down to some serious work. There are a few com¬ ments Bob makes that appear to be critical ‘ of other designers work. From the tone of voice he used, he didn’t mean to belittle them, but rather felt an obligation that the public hear his honest opinion. PHOTO BY LATITUDE 38
THE LATITUDE 38 INTERVIEW
BOD PERRY 38: It looks like you’re doing more pilothouse boats than motorsailers, it that true? Perry: Yes, we’re doing more than we used to. In fact, almost every job we start now, the client will ask us to also have in mind a pilothouse version. 38: Why do you think that is? Perry: I think it has to do with the swing in population age, all the war babies are getting older and want more com¬ fort; I think it has to do with people wanting to use their boats 12 months a year; and I think it has to do with our being con¬ ditioned to be comfortable more of the time. 38: Do you think it has anything to do with powerboaters turning to sailboats because of fuel supplies? Perry: That’s probably the last thing it has anything to do with. I see more sailboat people turning to powerboats than the opposite, at least in my own area around Washingtdn, which is the only place I really have a good feel for. The whole switch from power to sail is a fig newton of the imagina¬ tion, although it may still happen, and I’d sure like to help if it does. 38: What trends are you picking up in boats? Perry: People wanting bigger boats is well-documented, and our design work now settles at about 30-feet and above ... * 38: That’s your average size boat? Perry: No, our average now is about 43-feet, for a com¬ bination of production and custom boats. The top of the range for a production boat now is the LaFitte 63, and we’re also doing up a 46-footer for Valiant to replace the 50 that was built for reasons I’ve never been able to understand, ho, ha, ho, ho. 38: What boat do you own? Perry: I’ve got an Esprit 37 that I use for cruising around Puget Sound. In the summer we got up to the San Juans, but I work pretty hard and can’t take too. much time off, so I do most of my cruising in Puget Sound. In Seattle, we’ve got a dozen little anchorages you can get to within five hours, so Friday afternoons you can sneak off and have a nice week¬ end. When racing doesn’t interfere, my family and I go, about every other weekend. 38: Do you race your boat? Perry: I don’t race mine anymore, because I’ve got it all ‘cruised up’ with books and everything. But next weekend I’ll be racing on a 56-ft. Sparkman and Stephens boat, and last weekend I raced on a Cal 40 which was the first time I’d sailed one of them. I’ve got three boats that are going to be launch¬ ed during the next five weeks, and they’re all going to be rac¬ ed some. One is a 42-ft.' plumb stem cutter for Doug Fryer that you’ve probably seen written up. Then there’s a twotonner with a 7/8’s rig, and also the first Nordic 44 will be launched. I like to cruise a bit and I like to race, a bit, but racing page 87
my own boat bores me. I want to go out and race some of the other boats. 38: A hotter boat? Perry: Not a hotter boat, but a different boat. I didn’t feel that climbing on a Cal 40 was as much getting on a hotter boat as it was checking out a landmark in yachting design. 38: What kind of ‘cruising’ gear do you have on your boat? We’re talking about things like windlasses and so forth. Perry: Specific gear? I’ve got a spinnaker pole that’s a foot longer, a half ounce spinnaker, a 3A ounce spinnaker, a hydraulic adjustable backstay, a luff foil system, and big self¬ tailing primaries. That’s the kind of stuff 1 consider cruising gear. I don’t have an anchor windlass, I pull it up by hand. I don’t have an anchor on the bow either, I don’t like the way it looks. We work hard to get a bow to look just right, and then you hang an anchor up there and it looks, well . . . 38: What size primaries do you have for your 37-foot boat? Perry: Well, they’re 44’s, no they must be 48’s self-tailers I guess, I don’t know what size they actually are because I just use ‘em, I don’t read them. Ho, ho, ho. 38: Are there any boats you’ve done that are your favorites? Perry: I sure like the Esprit, I like the Valiant 40, 1 like the Baba 30 a lot, ho, ho, ho, (Bob would later encourage us to inspect one and say “Isn’t that pretty good? Turned out great, didn’t it?”] I like this LaFitte 44 we’re sitting on a lot, and 1 like the Islander 28. The Islander 28 and the Valiant, and one-off Heather and Union Jack were all great boats. Heather was phenomenal, now the Boy Scouts own her so she’s going downhill. 38: How many designs have you done? Perry: Somewhere in the mid-70’s. I do have help, I’ve got two guys who work for me. 38: Are there any specific problems with motorsailers, for example, you just, did the Seamaster 46, and was it the first one you’ve done? Perry: We’ve done them all along, and there was no real problem. You can’t grow up in the northwest — I moved there when I was* 12 — and do a lot of sailing without being tuned into the benefits of a motorsailer; such as being able to get out of the frequent rain and cold, which allows you to sail 12 months a year. Dodgers are big in Seattle; in fact, many people never put them down once they’ve put them up. That’s why I’ve never bought one. 38: Bob, what’s prevented you from moving out of a car wash like Seattle to a more tropical location like San Diego? Perry: I like the rain and the dingy weather because its condusive to my work. It keeps me inside and I find it easier to work in the rain. It also suits my temperment more, and I
INTERVIEW
just feel at home in that kind of weather. 38: Where did you live before Seattle? Perry: 1 lived in Australia for 10 years, although I was born in Ohio — Toledo. 38: Did you sail a lot in Australia? Perry: Never. 38: You must have been the only Australian kid who didn’t. Perry: We were in Sydney, but weren’t of the boat own¬ ing class. The standard of living is a little lower there, and we didn’t have a car, we didn’t have a television set; 1 can remember when we got our phone, I can even remember, ho, ho, ho, when we got our refrigerator in 1957. You had to be pretty affluent to have a boat, because if you can’t afford a car, you can’t afford a boat. 1 didn’t come from a long line of wealthy yachtsmen — which incidentally is a help to becoming a yacht designer — because I wasn’t that fortunate. Or maybe unfortunate, since growing up with less breeds a little fiestiness in you, and perhaps a little more determination to ‘make it’. 38: Do you think a lack of money helped you out in your quest to be a successful designer? Perry: No — ho, ho, ha. 38: A minute ago you mentioned some good qualities you said you thought it developed in you. Perry: I think, maybe, it worked to some advantage because you have to justify it as the fight way of having done it. Wait, I’ll tell you how it did help me out, and I’ve never thought of this before. It made me take jobs that, had I been wealthy, I probably would have turned down, and in taking these seemingly not so desirable design jobs,.you really ex¬ pand what you can do. 38: Can you reveal the nature of “an undesirable design job”? Perry: Ho, ho, ho. I’m not going ho, ho, ho, to tell you that. Well, ok., the Seamaster is one. Initially it had so many requirements we didn’t think we could do a boat that we and the client would both like. You see, even if we do boats we’d never dream of owning, we still like to say ‘fulfilling all the re¬ quirements, that’s the best boat you can have.’ We do understand and recognize and appreciate, every compromise and solution, but it does involve making compromises. Also, when you need money, you’re more willing to deal with picky customers that you might ordinarily shoe away. And, you can pick up a lot of things from them that you’ll get credited with in the end. I’ve gotten credited with things that weren’t my ideas, they were the ideas of a fussy client. 38: Let’s hear a couple of examples. Perry: The Valiant 40 interior started with a one-off boat I designed in Seattle before I went to work back east* but that boat had an interior that a client had specified. Then the Freeport 36 interior was the product of a brainstorming ses¬ sion at Islander with Buster Hammond and Hank McCor¬ mack, and Steve uh, uh, Steve ah, Steve ... 38: You mentioned sometimes you have to put
characteristics in boats that you don’t personally like. Could you identify some of them? Perry: Well, headroom. I’d prefer that all boats have 5’4” headroom. 38: Ho, ho, ho. So they’re lower and sleeker? Perry: Yes, ho' ho, ho, I’d rather look groovy and stoop down below. Ha, ho, ha. That really would be one, people always ask you for headroom all the time where I don’t necessarily . . . well, it’s that whole trend of making a boat more like an apartment. You go in a Bristol 45 over there and it’s really an American modern motel with the decor . . . some of these boats have dinettes that look like a corner booth *at Denny’s . . : you know that whole business of mak¬ ing it look like a condo. You know what I like in a boat when I go down below? I mean this LaFitte we’re on doesn’t have it, and I can ap¬ preciate it’s different requirements, but I really like to go down below . . . well, let see, like a Valiant 40 where everything is pretty symmetrical and everything is a little austere and unrestrained and there’s not too much gingerbread . . . that suits my mood when I go in a boat, it suits my regiment I guess, that kind of opposed settees and pilot berths. A boat with pilot berths always looks good, you know. I think, that’s how a boat ought to look, you can go anywhere in a boat that’s got two pilot berths, you know, a good sea boat. 38: Are there any old boats, old designs, that you par¬ ticularly admire? Perry: Well, Cheasapeke 32 by Phil Rhodes, Something 26 by Ray Richards, a lot of Wiliam Garden’s designs . . . I’ve admired him because he’s so versatile. He’s done a lot of dogs, but he’s done a lot of great boats. And to get off the subject a little> the problem of doing cruising boats is that nobody ever really finds out they’ve got a great boat because they never race them. So there can be great boats out there, but nobody knows they’re dynamite because nobody has the quantitative data to establish the pedigree of performance. 38: So to you, performance is crucial in a cruising boat? Perry: Well, it’s not that hard to incorpo'rate some consciencness of performance in a boat. It just doesn’t take that much effort. We’re using a ‘predicted performance’ program now, and we’re the only cruising designer using it . . . and that program can very accurately predict what the perfor¬ mance of a boat will be under almost all conditions. 38: Would you explain a little more what this program gives you? Perry: It will tell you for a given true wind speed and a given true wind direction what the apparent wind speed and apparent wind direction will be, what the velocity made good to weather will be, what the velocity through the water will be, the leeway angle will be, the heel angle will be . . . 38: What number are you plugging in to get these results out? Perry: We digitize the whole hull., the whole rig. It’s a complex program and its derived from the MHS [Measure-
DOB PERRY ment Handicap System rating formula]. 38: Does it work accurately in your experience? Perry: The first boat we’ve done using it was just launched last Saturday, so we don’t know yet.'All the backup material — it’s been used in lOR boats — seems to say it will work fine. It’s a nice tool to use for a cruising boat. For example, this boat we launched last week, we ran the program and it said it was very strong off the wind, reaching and running, but the guy running the program said relative to an IOR boat with a similar ‘L’ — you know, ‘L’ is just a really good way of measuring the ‘sailing length’ of a boat, whether you believe in the IOR or not — he said it made a little too much leeway. But, I had a 7’3” keel on the boat 42 feet long. The thing is the boat has almost a plumb bow and is almost all waterline, so relative to a waterline length of 40-feet, it really didn’t have a big keel. So we had a big question, do you put additional draft on it? If you add a foot to the keel, what hap¬ pens? You go faster upwind; how much? I’m not exactly sure. You’ll go slightly slower downwind, how much? I’m not ex¬ actly sure. What would be the difference in the two keels over a 20 mile gold cup course? or a triangle? Well, I’m not exactly sure. But these programs we have will tell you. Upwind in 10 knots of breeze the boat will be 22 seconds a mile slower — and you can do this with the program for all kinds of wind conditions. So the answer on whether to change the keel or not doesn’t come as a result of throwing bones or anything, it’s pretty well cut and dried. The interesting thing with this program since we ve started, is that the guy with the program says ‘this just keeps getting better and better, and I’ve got the boat up to having a 8’9” draft’. Ho, ho, ha! I said, ‘this is supposed to be a cruising boat that the guy is going to race PHRF so that’s sort of unaccep¬ table.’ And he said, ‘well, I don’t have any IOR rating to balance against it in seconds per mile.’ He was used to chang¬ ing sail area and draft and those things and finding out what difference you’d have to pay in seconds per mile under IOR rating. So we had to make decisions without that. When they tell you seconds-per-mile, you say ‘what is that?’ But if you say, ‘you’re going to go as fast or as slow as a Ranger 33 from now on,’ they can relate to that, it’s a standard they can judge by. 38: How’s business? Perry: Our business is the best it’s ever been. T can’t foretell the future, but right now it looks like the next year is busy, busy, busy. 38: Are you doing more production boats or one-offs or what? Perry: More one-offs right now. One’s a 38-foot maxitrailerable, 8600 pounds. 38: A maxi-trailerable? < Perry: Yeah. 38: Do you select the builder of boats or what? Perry: I’ve only been really able to do that once, and even
then it wasn’t quite right, so the answer is really no, I don’t page 89
select the builder. Usually I have a builder in mind when a person comes to me, though. With this maxi-trailerable we’ve done, I want to build it at C&B Marine, ho, ho, ha. Yeah, I like Bob Thomsen a lot and I really like the boats he does. I really want to get the boat down there, and the client is amenable to it, and he’s sending the drawings down for a bid. 38: What boats or what is it that C&B does that you like? Perry: I’ve seen Topaz which is a Chuck Burns design and Wild Spirit which is a Wylie design, and both those boats I thought were pretty . . . bland-looking designs . . . that’s just my honest, personal feeling. But, I felt C&B’s execution was very effective, and really carried those boats off in just a really tasteful manner. 38: How do you get acquainted with the builders? Perry: Well, they usually write me letters'saying ‘we build boats and would like to do one of your designs, please send a client to us’. Ho, ho, ho. That’s more or less how I got together with Bob Thomsen, we met in Seattle. So that kind of thing, boat shows, and while we’re travelling around we hear about boats being made and see them, and reading about them in the magazines — which I all read pretty closely as you might imagine. You guys are so pro-Wylie, though . . . 38: We’re so what? Ho, ha, ha, ho. We’re pro-Wylie? Perry: Yeah — a little bit too much, maybe. 38: That’s surprising news to us and probably to Tom, too. But we’re interested; what else do you ‘read’ in Latitude 381 Perry: It’s a . . . well, your magazine always seems to me to be . . . it’s sort of a 30-year old freak’s magazine. You know what I expect out of somebody from Seattle’s vision of somebody from San Francisco, right? Ho, ho, ho. It’s exactly what I’d expect, but I read it because it’s one of my favorite magazines. I even read that crazy guy, I can’t even pronounce his name ... 38: Urbancyzk? Perry: Yeah. I mean I enjoy him. You grew up in the same era I did, and I like the magazine, I enjoy it. I don’t like to see things get too “baggy-wrinkle / woodie / wooden ships’ stuff. I like the feel of a good plastic boat under me, myself. I don’t like things getting too esoteric, and you have a nice balance and have run some good articles. That interview Alan Rutherford did with me, that’s a lot to put into a magazine and / thought it was really nice, something that went into that much detail. Castoff, which is a similar magazine in Seattle, just did an interview with Ted Brewer. They had a halfpage sketch of him — which didn’t look like him at all — half a page of interview and a couple of columns on another page and that was it! I mean, it was really too bad.
Bob’s got more interesting things to say then we have room to print. At least this month. Stay tuned next issue for more of Bob Perry, when he sounds off for cruising sailors.
COMFORT DIG We came away from the San Fran¬ cisco In-The-Water Boat Show talking to ourself. We said, “Geez, have you ever seen so many big, comfortable, boats in your life?” We hadn’t. Gover¬ nor Brown may believe in the ascetic life, but hedonism is alive and kicking along the docks'. If you missed the show we’re going to show you a few highlights of the ‘big and comfortable’ trend. Afterall, we
when you step on your neighbors new boat. 1. The ‘park bench’ settes you and we have are a primitive part of the
past. Form-fitting, soft swivel chairs, such as these on an Irwin 43, are the standard on bigger boats today. -
2. Aft cabin ‘playpens’, this one is on a Cheoy Lee 48, are a second nautical necessity of the 80’s. Most playpens are for kids, but these are seemingly meant for the boatowner with lots of very close and very adult friends.
3. Pilothouses are sprouting on several tried-and-true trunk cabin hulls, this one being the Pearson Pilothouse 36. The ‘adaptions’ are usually a little less big and less comfortable than most pleasure palaces, but afford greater protection from inclement weather and more gracious interiors than their trunk
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4. For those more severe tastes, this Canadian-built CS 36 is ideal for folks looking for more comfort in a Danish modern motif. Competitors complimented it’s superb tooling and detail work.
5. The interior that startled us
the most \uas the Niagara 35. Although the photo doesn’t show it well, the port and starboard halves of the boat can be separated for virtually the entire length. An unusual and roomy layout, with great appeal for liveaboard spouses who each need ‘space’ for themselves.
6. The newest in the frequently controversial “lusty Lancer” family is the twin-engine (no kidding) 44-ft. motor-
sailer. If you looking for a boat that’s really different, this is one of the ones you’d see. For starters all sail control sheets lead' inside the cabin to a footactivated, electric, self-tailing winch. Sopping sheets may make a dripping mess on the console, but your fingers will be dry.
7. Jeannie Franzier from the Olympic Circle Sailing Club is no big boat, but she does warm up this feature a bit. Besides, she says that sailing clubs are growing bigger all the time, and are
a comfortable way for beginners to get into sailing. We’re really not sure what to make of all these new features and styles of boats. Why don’t you write us and tell us what you think, we’d really be in¬ terested in hearing your opinion. — latitude 38
HARBOR HOPPING The following brief harbor hopping, 'guide to southern California marinas was originally intended to assist MORA Long Distance Race folks on their return up the coast. As it turns out, it should be helpful for those of you planning a summer cruise down south, or those who will be heading south for Mexico cruising next winter.
SAN DIEGO; If you choose to stay in San Diego longer than the San Diego YC can put you up, you have two op¬ tions. You can either get a transient berth at the harbor patrol office at the end of Shelter Island at the excellent — for southern^ California — rate of $5 a day for the first five days. The next 5 days are at $10 a day, after which time you get the boot. The other option is to anchor out, and while you can legally anchor anywhere in San Diego bay that isn’t either specifically prohibited or a marked channel, some places are better than others. Personnel in the harbormaster’s office have confidentially told us that the Coronado anchorage is perhaps the best and the safest. It’s probably true, because you are limited to a closely monitored 72-hour stay* Obviously in San Diego you’ll be able to find everything you need. The San Diego YC dock is probably the best place to reprovision, given its proximity to fuel, major food stores, chandleries, and Crazy Eddie’s bare boobs bar. After you’ve had it with San Diego, move 35 miles up the coast to OCEANSIDE: This can be a tricky harbor to enter for newcomers, as the casually marked submerged jetty eats up a few boats each year. It is recommended that you call the har¬ bormaster for assistance, and if you arrive at night they’ll be glad to send out a boat to guide you in. Oceanside is a military town with, limited appeal to most sailors. The Oceanside YC however is small, accomodating, and by our experience, very friendly. Plus, their showers have great heat lamps to warm your chilly bones. Guest ber¬ ths are limited, so you may have to go to the harbormaster for an inexpensive transient berth. If they’re filled or if you’re cheap, you can tie up at the Jolly Tiger restuarant dock and nurse a few drinks at the bar until closing time. Then spend the night hoping nobody kicks you out — it usually works. The eats in the area — save the standard ‘surf & turf’ fare at the Jolly Tiger and Charthouse — are mediocre, so it won’t be long before you head 22 miles up the coast to DANA POINT. This clean, modern marina complex is in an attractive setting. There are big white cliffs in the back, with big lawns and nice landscaping, and some of the best weather in southern California. The Dana Point complex features plenty of shops, marine supplies, and restaurants. One restaurant, the Wind & Sea is full of San Francisco bay sailing photographs taken by Diane Beeston, and is a good place to stop if you’re feeling homesick for wind. Overnight berthing runs and incredible $12 a shot, with a maximum stay of 5 days. Included in this are showers which
HARBOR HOPPING
feature the notorious ‘southern California marina shower fix¬ ture’. This is a strange appliance found in several other southern California marinas and is guaranteed to either trickle you with ice water or firehose you in scalding water. If the thought of $12 a night for a berth makes you sick, there is hope. Wheh we were there the staff was lackadaisical and paying was a matter of our taking the initiative. There is also a pleasant and convenient anchorage within the breakwater, and you can stay there for 5 days. But somebody must be on the boat at all times — a peculiar an¬ chorage regulation if we’ve ever heard one — or you will be cited. They check for compliance with the regulation fre¬ quently, and the first violation is $65, so be warned. There are no great attractions in Dana Point, so it’s 11 miles north to NEWPORT BEACH. This place is so crowded with boats and the guest facilities so few, we’d recommend you pass it up. If you do want to visit here, leave your boat at Dana Point, and walk up to the Pacific Coast Highway where you can catch a bus to Newport. It’s cheap, and takes you to the spots you’ll want to visit. If you have stayed in Dana Point, it’s a 31-mile sail toAlamitos Bay in LONG BEACH. We’ve observed that the closer you get to Hollywood, the more trouble you encounter with uniforms and badges. It probably has something to do with all the cop shows on TV and the cinema pychosis epedimic loose down there. So be prepared for a lot of tough talk. Alamitos Bay is one of the most desired marinas in southern California, so getting a transient berth can be tough. If you’re desparate to spend a night and the harbormaster is no help, we’d recommend docking at the Jolly Tiger, and as in Oceanside, nursing a drink until closing time. Or, if you ar¬ rive very late at night, you might tie up at the long dock adja¬ cent to the Long Beach YC. This is illegal and the harbor police swear they will issue you a citation, but we’ve always gotten away with it. Naturally you run this ploy at your own risk. The waters just north of Alamitos Bay is protected by the Long Beach / Los Angeles Harbor breakwater, and offers the first decent conditions to anchor in since Dana Point. While the waters generally are calm, there is often lots of shipping activity, industrial noise, and glaring lights which encourage you to head 15 miles north to MARINA DEL REY. A number of things have changed here recently. Heavy rains brought mud pouring down Ballona Creek, which shares a common jetty with Marina Del Rey. Consequently the south entrance is closed, for the sum¬ mer. Some of you will remember that the north side of the in¬ side channel had been shoaling badly, but has since been dredged to an adequate depth. This is the closest marina to Hollywood, so be prepared for overzealous police work. We came in one chilly evening for a guest berth and the man behind the counter demanded the boat title. It wasn’t our boat and we didn’t have it, and neither did the owner whose bank had lost it. The clerk refused to ac¬ cept our explanation and demanded, “How do I know you
HARBOR HOPPING
HARBOR HOPPING
haven’t stolen the boat or are carrying drugs?” Of course if we did present him with the registration, he still wouldn’t know if we stole the boat or were carrying drugs. After a useless telephone call to the boat’s owner and extended pointless hassling, he reluctantly gave us a berth. Obviously you can get anything you want here, and lots of things you don’t want. Transient berthing runs 40 cents a foot per night, and your stay is limited to 7 days — far more than you’ll want here. Probably the best reason to put in here is the marina’s proximity to the L.A. airport where you can pick up or drop off crew. It’s about a five minute drive and a $5 cab fare. If you need to tie up for just a few hours, there are 4-hour guest slips available for free, and you don’t — thank your lucky stars — even have to check in with the harbor¬ master. Like Alamitos Bay, this is a good jumping off place for Catalina or CHANNEL ISLANDS MARINA, Oxnard. If you hug the coast from San Diego to Point Conception, it’s between Marina del Rey and Oxnard that you’re likely to encounter the strongest winds, especially off Point Dume. Unlike the Ventura Marina a few miles up the coast, Chan¬ nel Islands harbor has not had a problem with the harbor en¬ trance shoaling. At this new, clean marina, the guest slips go for $6.50 a night, with a 7 day limit. Our only complaint is the aggravating ‘burn or freeze’ shower faucets. There are plenty of shops, restaurants, and marine supplies within a short distance if you need to dispose of excess cash. Castagnola’s Restaurant, right next to guest berths, has a nice breakfast. We’ve always liked this marina, except that there is a fanatical element on the harbor patrol force. We pulled in here late one night after a rigorous trip up from Marina del Rey, and tied up at the Whale’s Tail restaurant, hungry and ready for a few brandies. A Gomer Pyle lookalike wearing a gun and an aviator’s cap sideways, thundered over in a Boston Whaler and threatened us that it was a 2-hour zone. We acknowledged we could read the sign and went inside. A lot less than two hours later we returned to the boat and went below to put on dry clothes. Coming back on deck we noticed Gomer Pyle, complete with gun and sideways hat, was writing us a citation, which he was finally talked out of com¬ pleting. We then paid for our slip and waited and waited and waited as this zealot could not find change for our $20, a key to the head, a pen that worked, or a map to direct us to the berth, or a receipt for our money. This guy would not have in¬ furiated us so much, except that some 27 miles up the coast is SANTA BARBARA, where the courteous and efficient harbor personnel run what may well be the nicest marina operation in southern California. An additional plus for this harbor is that the harbor environs are certainly the most beautiful in southern California. The entrance to the harbor can be very tricky. The sandy bottoms moves so much and so frequently that the entrance buoys are not marked on charts. Entering at night can be par¬ ticularly difficult, but the harbor patrol will gladly come out and guide you in. The facilities here are among the oldest in
southern California, but they are functional and clean. A 30-ft transient berth costs $4.80 a night for the first 14 days, which should be sufficient for your needs. This is a nice spot to catch up on your sleep, do some last minute warm water ocean swimming, or maybe take a hike in the nearby mountains. You’ll need the good rest, because Point Conception, fog, wind, and rotten weather lie 40 miles ahead. If you’ve run low on money, the El Paseo Restaurant has happy hour hors d’oeuvres to satisfy all but the biggest gluttons.
We’ve deliberately left out a couple of spots on the southern California coast, like Kings Harbor in Redondo Beach which is a bit out of the way, and Ventura Harbor which is more out of the way and sometimes has a very dangerous harbor entrance. For you cruisers and MORA folks who want to go to the Channel Islands, next month Singlehanded TransPacer and Santa Barbaran Mike Pyzel will have a guide in our next issue. — latitude 38
Looking for a lady to share your cruising dreams? Perhaps you’re a woman seeking passage to an adventure.
Either way, you might find-just the person or situation through a latitude, 38 classy classified. It costs $ 10 and you get 40 classy words to have your say. Naturally we can't make any guarantees, but many readers tell us they've had good results. If we received your 40 wonderfully worded classy classified and check for $10 ($20 for businesses) before the 22nd of each month, your message will appear in the following issue, during the first week of the month. The address is latitude 38, p. o. box 1678, sausalito, ca 94965. We appreciate your support, we really do!
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SILE THE SEVEN SEAS Fancy this British bloke coming home one evening from his nine-to-fiver in London and saying to his missus, Guess w’ot?” and she, saying to him, suspicious like “W’ot now?”, and him saying “We’re going to sell our ‘ome;
aboard in twenty-eight days. Not fast time, but then she is a cruiser, not a racer. I iust spent two weeks aboard as a charter guest sailing in the Caribbean from Antigua, visiting eight other islands
with her in spite of the fact that Sir C had been built by a landlubber, almost single-handedly, with no prior experi¬ ence in carpentry. Besides, Crowley had to overcome a ,long term and deepseated bias against ferro-cement hulls as Sir C’s bottom is concrete. “I’ve always preferred' wooden or steel hulls,” said Crowley, “but Sir Cloudesley Shovell is so well-built and has such a marvelous crew 1 couldn’t turn her away. I liked Sir C because she
Burnham-on-Crouch, England 1975. “Sir Cloudesly Shovell" gets ‘plastered’. Eight profes¬ sionals and 80 amateurs assisted.
sell our spohts cah; I’m going to quit my job, and build us a boat to sile the seven seas!” Many ,a missus would have gone slack-iawed and teary at such an an¬ nouncement, but not Anne Gascoine. “Jolly good idea,” said Anne beam¬ ing. ‘W’en do we staht?” She was as happy as could be at the prospect of escaping from the London secretary’s millieu and sailing off into a new adven¬ ture. And so they did, but it wasn’t all that easy. It was five years from the time that Bob Gascoine made the big decision to quit his well-paying iob as a supervisor in a large lithographic firm until he sailed the finished product of his dream, nam¬ ed Sir Cloudesley Shovell, - from England to Gibralter. For two years Bob and Anne lived aboard and conducted a charter service there. Last December, looking for new seas and new adventure, they sailed the beautiful 65-foot schooner across the Atlantic to the West Indies with ten page 95
of the Lesser Antilles about 1,000 miles southeast of Florida. I iust couldn’t believe she was a home-made boat. Named after an Eng¬ lish admiral of the 17th century who rose through the ranks from cabin boy, she is sleek, comfortable, well-fitted, seaworthy and responsive. Sir Cloudesley Shovell is one of the latest additions to the worldwide fleet of some 35 yachts chartered for vacations and expeditions through Ocean Voy¬ ages, Inc., of Saugalito, headed by the veteran seafarer, Mary Crowley. Crowley is very choosey about her yachts. She doesn’t sign up iust any old tub. In fact, she spends a goodly amount of her time flying around the world to inspect the boats, acquaint herself with the skippers and crew, and sail along with them to make sure everything is absolutely bonzo before she will accept them for Ocean Voyages, Inc. She spent five days aboard Sir Cloudesley in January before signing he/ up, and she was thoroughly satisfied
doesn’t creak in the night when I’m try¬ ing to sleep on a rough sea.” I asked Bob Gascoine how he, a neo¬ phyte, had produced such a fine vessel. “How did it go?” “It was a long, tough struggle,” he said. “We couldn’t iust start building the boat until we sold our house, and it took two years to get the price we needed. For that two years we continued sailing as much as possible, crewing friends boats. We went to night school and worked days. I earned my master’s ticket and passed the Board of Trade exams which are similar to the British MerchantTIavy exams.” Meanwhile, Anne studied for the Royal Yachting Society exams and passed them. The Gascoines finally sold their home and their Aston-Martin in 1973 and started building the boat at Fambridge near the yachting center of BurnhamonrCrouch. At first, he had run into hard-nosed opposition from his family and friends. “My father thought I was crazy, but
SELL OUR SPOHTS CAH
Crewmember Alison Jones is an expert skindiver, slalom skier, and marksperson.
once I started and he realized I was serious, he did everything he could to help me. He and my friends would come down weekends and whenever they could to help out,” said Bob. “Before I started we studied lots of plans and talked to a lot of boatbuilders. We decided to build a comfortable cruiser so we could liveaboard her and make a living with her as a charter vessel. She would be our home and our livelihood so we knew we must build a good one. “We bought a set of plans and specs from Samson Marine in Vancouver. I think they cost about $500, but they had a good reputation as marine ar¬ chitects. “We had decided to build a concrete hull. Concrete has become very popular in recent years in the U.K., (as he in¬ variably calls Great Britian) Canada, and Europe. It’s very durable, com¬ paratively inexpensive, and requires very little maintenance. “To build the hull, you first make sort of a bird cage frame of reinforcing steel rods and many layers of steel mesh, tied into the armature. “When the metal form is completed,
you are ready for the big event — Plastering Day. That’s the day you need all your friends and relatives and fellow boatbuilders to rally around at first light to help mix and apply the wet concrete. About 80 volunteers showed up and we hired eight professional plasterers. Other boatbuilders showed up to help in anticipation of our helping them when the time came.” The volunteers literally worked the wet concrete into the steel mesh by hand, and the professionals followed along to smooth the surface. At the end of a hard day’s work, the hull, threequarters of an inch thick, was done. But there was another 18 months of work ahead. The innards had to be finished, four little two-berth cabins were install¬ ed, each with its own wash basin, hot and cold running water, and a closet. There were two heads, one with a hot and cold shower, a map room with cabinets, navigational equipment, a galley, and a comfortable saloon cen¬ tered by a table large enough to feed twelve in a pinch. The interior paneling, headings, framing and bunk boards are made of beautifully grained Parana pine from the Amazon region. The bulkheads are water-boil proof plywood. “We found these beautiful brass and bronze fittings second-hand; many of them are very old and they can’t be ob¬ tained from modern equipment manu¬ facturers. The capstan was built in 1896.” The saloon and cabins were carpeted and the thick foam rubber bunk and seat cushions were covered in tan mockleather. “I kept adding improvements, and, along with the inflation, we went way over our budget. She cost twice as much as 1 had figured and took twice as long to build. I went through many periods of depression and being in the dumps but we’d gone so far it was im¬ possible to turn back. We’d burned all our bridges.” But workmanship as meticulous as Bob’s takes a lot of time as he is a perfectionist and he had a tremendous
determination to have it right. Shouell (it rhymes with shovel) has a 15-foot beam, a 45-foot waterline, and eight-foot draw, a 63-foot mainmast, and a 4 cylinder Ford engine. Finally, after two-and-a-half years she was ready to go. Launching Day was at hand.
TO SILE THE SEVEN SEAS That was so exciting,” Bob recalled. “My heart was in my mouth. Not that I was afraid she wouldn’t float — I knew she would — but because of the need to move that 30 ton monster from the building site to the water, some 400 yards away. We had built her on a pret¬ ty high frame so that we could lower her
onto a dray for hauling. ‘All our friends and relatives and everybody who had helped us build, fellow boatbuilders, everybody was there. “We had champagne and food and it was certainly one of the most exciting days of my life. Down the ways she slid,
Skipper — Owner — Builder, Bob Gascoine.
smooth and beautiful, and everybody was shouting and cheering and Anne was crying. It was a mad scene. It was a great thrill to see her afloat.” She sailed beautifully as they took her on a trial-run on the Crouch, and everyone was overjoyed. Had he made any major mistakes? “Not really. We had thought it out pretty carefully. If I had it to do over again I would probably allow a little more head room below.” At Gibralter, which is a rest and recreation area for British armed forces, they started their chartering business with emphasis on scuba diving and in¬ struction. After two years they decided it was time to move to new waters: they selected the Caribbean. They took on as crew two old friends: David Sumner, 30, an experienced scuba diver and underwater photogra¬ pher with whom Bob had dived in the U.K.; and Alison Jones, 26, also a skill¬ ed diver who had just resigned her com¬ mission as a captain in the Royal Air Force in Gibralter. She was a member of the RAF’s championship teams in sky-diving, skiing, and marksmanship. Both jumped at the chance to cross page 97
SHE THE SEVEN SEAS the Atlantic with the Gascoines. Sumner, a male nurse specializing in operating room nursing in cardiovascu¬ lar and neurological surgery, was glad to escape from his job in a Saudi Ara¬ bian hospital as he found thg medical standards there far below those of - England, the United States, and the Bahamas where he had worked previ¬ ously. The four of them comprise a fine, well-balanced crew, and are able to pro¬ vide instruction to the charter guests in sailing, navigation, snorkeling and scuba diving. Alison is planning to leave Sir Shouell in a few months, but the others will continue sailing on the Atlan¬ tic Coast from the West Indies to Nova Scotia under Mary Crowley’s aegis for the rest of the year. Crowley is arrang¬ ing another kind of adventure for them in 1981 when they will go to the Azores hoping to locate and salvage the British brigantine Revenge which went down
almost a century ago. Gascoine’s advice to other prospec¬ tive boatbuilders? “If you want to do anything badly enough you can do it. Plan carefully and double your estimates as to time
Was it worth the effort? i
Absolutely. and money. Don’t give up.” Was it worth the effort? “Absolutely,” he replied. He saved about $60,000 by building the boat himself. She cost about $90,000 and is worth about $150,000 on the market.
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From the standpoint of cost and life¬ style it was a good venture. “I don’t think I could ever go back to a nine-to-fiver,” he said, his tall, lanky figure stretched out in the cockpit. He looked smug and happy. n “I know we’ll never get rich charter¬ ing, but we’ll always have a pleasant life,” Anne agreed. I asked Dave privately what he really thought of the boat. He replied “I’d have her anytime.” All of the above they told me in wonderful limey accents, midway be¬ tween the Queen’s English and pearlbutton cockney, which made it all the more jolly. Only Alison stayed with the Queen, language-wise. And when I bid farewell to the Shouell crew and flew off into the wild blue yonder, I was talking limey too — “She’s a grite ship and I ‘ad a fine sile.” — alice yarish
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415 871-2290 -
1Q1
page 99
8ADaR
5 kw solid state 40 mile-8 range radar of safety design for small fishing boats engaged in coastal & inshore fishing.
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OUR PRICE: $2,885
SAN DIEGO
“Everybody’s a little Amy Boyer daf¬ fy,” my editor wrote to me in a memo. “Why don’t you talk to the San Diego woman who’s going on the Singlehand¬ ed TransPac,” and he gave me a little background on her: name, Kathy Senelly, age 22, lives on her Cal 25 in Coronado, is hoping to get some spon¬ sors for the race to Kauai. After several long distance attempts to reach her through a go-between, Kathy returned my call and we set up a meeting at the Coronado Yacht Club. I told her we could talk over lunch, so as 1 drove down the main street in Corona¬ do, I glanced at likely restaurants, my stomach already growling. 1 arrived at the sun-dazzled Coronado Yacht Club ten mintues'early, planted myself on the veranda, and set up my telephoto so I could get a photograph or two of Kathy as she either sailed or dinghyied up to the dock. At 12 on the dot I spotted a wooden rowboat headed my way so I zoomed in on it with my long lens, planning my Shots of the gutsy young woman in a nautical setting. As .the rower drew closer however, 1 could see that he was bare-chested and bearded and wasn’t Kathy. At 12:15 1 saw in the distance a boat jauntily sailing up the channel, tacking among those at anchor. “Ah, an appro¬ priate entrance,” I thought. “She’s go¬ ing to singlehand it right up to the dock.” I considered how I could click off several shots as she approached, then set the camera down to help her with her lines. But as the boat drew nearer and nearer I could see that it was a Newport 27 instead of a Cal 25, and it soon jibed around and ran back down the channel. It was an incredibly beautiful day for a sail, and I wished I were doing just that instead of sitting on the dock while my nose blistered. I heard the telephone ring inside the locked yacht club and I wondered if it would be Kathy, trying to notify me that she couldn’t make it. At 12:55 I found a phone booth and called her answering service but they said she had already picked up her
messages and probably wouldn’t be call¬ ing back again for about three days, “That’s about how often she checks in.”
At 1 p.m. I saw a boat head into the wind and I watched as the sails were furled and it proceeded toward me. “About a 25 footer,” I told myself and awaited its arrival at the yacht club My stomach began to rumble almost as loudly as the jet planes on approach \ dock. I followed it until it glided into a to nearby North Island Naval Air Sta¬ berth, the fellow at the tiller eyeing me as I eyed him. tion, gliding in over the magnificent 1 waited 15 more minutes, scrutinizHotel del Coronado.
SINGLEHANDER
ing everybody who walked by and checking the photo of her 1 had clipped from the San Diego Log. Shoulder length hair, parted in the middle, nobody I saw fit the description. So at 1:15 I packed it in, mumbled “DAMN”, and headed back across the $1.20 toll bridge to my hotel and babysitter. A couple of hours later I found a
message that Kathy had called and said she’d be on her boat at the Coronado Yacht Club tomorrow at 12. I already had a 12;00 sailing date for the next day — should I get a babysitter, pay the toll again, and get the story I came for, or just sulk about it? Before I had made up my mind, Kathy called again and I agreed to meet her on her boat.
Kathy studies up for the June 15th Singlehanded TransPac. She'll be one of four women entries, in¬ cluding Amy Boyer and Alameda’s Linda Rettie.
This time she was right where she said she’d be, and we speculated upon why we’d missed each other the day before. The conclusion was, neither of us looked as the other expected. (Next time maybe I’ll try to look more like the female reporter on The Lou Grant Show.)
Kathy Senelly’s sailing background began with college sailing lessons and some concentrated cruising experience over the last three years. “I’ve done quite a lot of coastal California cruising, and I’ve spent a lot of time in the Carribbean.” She crewed aboard the research vessel Regina Maris, where she picked UP celestial navigation while doing Humpback Whale research. Then she crewed on a variety of charter boats in the Carribbean. “I came back to San Diego to finish school and become nor¬ mal again, but I got real claustophobic in my apartment. So, I just decided to finish school and get a job and work real hard to get enough money to buy a boat.” Just before graduation, she taught the same sailing course she had previously taken. She attended UCSD, majoring in En¬ vironmental Engineering, which is basically city planning. “1 did that for six months, I worked for the city of Oceanside as a planning intern and I just hated it. It was real disappointing, real boring.” So she quit, and bought a boat. “I didn’t know a lot about buying boats but I sailed a lot of them and got advice from a lot of people. And of course I was limited in my price range, so when I saw this Cal 25 I immediately realized it was perfect for me. It’s a pret¬ ty fast, boat but its got plenty of room fland I can handle it myself without any trouble at all. “I’ve done quite a few modifications. It’s a little heavier than the stock Cal because I’ve reinfqrced the hull in some places with extra layers of glass and stringers. I’ve upgraded the rigging one size, put on better turnbuckles, and rein¬ forced the chainplates. I put in a whole bunch more storage, replaced the din-
SINGLEHANDED
ing table, and put in a pressurized kerosene stove with an oven. Most peo¬ ple would say it’s silly to put an oven in a racing boat . . . but what is a race ex¬ cept a fast cruise?” Kathy has been a warm weather sail¬ or so far, having never sailed above Point Conception. But on her 350 mile qualifying sail for the Singlehanded TransPac, she got a taste of rough weather. “When I left it was sunny and beautiful and they said it was going to be that way for the next four days.” But a storm moved in and she encountered 35 knot winds and rain for almost the entire trip. “The windvane didn’t work well so I didn’t get much sleep. That was the roughest weather I’ve ever sailed. It wasn’t much fun, but it was O.K. be¬ cause I needed the experience. I covered 350 miles in four days.” I asked her how she got interested in singlehanded sailing. “When I bought the boat, I found out it’s real hard to ar¬ range sailing with people . . . when they can come, where to meet, etc., so I mostly wound up sailing alone. I started to really like it and found out I could do it. Also, 1 read about the all-female crew on the last TransPac and I thought that
When I saw this Cal 25 I immediately realized it was perfect for me.
sounded kinda neat, but I never got in touch with them to see if they needed any crew and I figured I didn’t have enough racing experience anyway. Then I heard about this race and the that the requirements weren’t too str-N ingent. It’s real tough, though, money wise. I had to get a liferaft and a lot of race equipment I’d never have bought otherwise so it’s been kinda tight in that aspect. But some people have been really helpful. I have a sailmaker who has given me a huge discount and actually given me a few sails' that’s Star¬ board Sails in San Diego. Proline Paint offered to paint the boat and Shelter Island Yacht Ways will haul ..the boat for free. Huntington Thomas Advertising is looking for sponsors for me, but they haven’t gotten any so far.” She has a pretty good sail inventory: a 170 drifter, a 1.5 oz. radial head booster, twin 150% genoas, twin 110’s, (“actually one of them is a 95”), a 50% storm jib and a 50 sq. ft. storm jib that can double as a trysail. Also a spare, old 110. She has no auxiliary engine. She’s also taking a 30 day supply of freeze dried food, “don’t mention the brand because they won’t give me a dis¬ count,” a huge library of books, and Emily the cat, “the terror of the dock.” Kathy has the distinction of being pro¬ bably the only person to have taken a sight in Glorietta Bay. “There was this guy from the Los Angeles Times, and he said, ‘You have a sextant, don’t you? Why don’t you take a sight and we’ll take a couple of pictures.’ I said I couldn’t really take a sight in Glorietta Bay because there’s no horizon, but he insisted, and wanted me to do it stand¬ ing in the cockpit. Well, I said O.K., I’ll pretend to take a sight but I just cannot pretend to do it from down here, so I went up on deck.” And the Los Angeles Times printed a picture of the singlehanded sailor taking a sight on Glorietta Bay! Kathy works out regularly in the exer¬ cise room of the Hotel del Coronado, mostly to strengthen back muscles which she said became fatigued during her qualifing sail. She also runs two or
Kathy
three times a week, “but I don’t like run¬ ning mu'ch so I have to force myself. One of the papers printed that I jog four miles twice a day! What a joke! I hate running. I like working out with weights and all the neat machines though, and I like swimming!” Her weekends and holidays are spent working as a pharmacy technician at Coronado Hospital, which gives her weekdays to work on the boat and sail without the weekend madness that oc¬ curs on San Diego Bay. I told her I couldn’t think of any more questions, and asked her if she wanted to comment on anything else. “The one question everybody usually asks is: ‘Why are you doing this?’ and I haven’t been able to come up with a very good answer,” she said. “I’m going because it just sounds like a whole bunch of fun!” — sue rowley
HEATING SYSTEMS
Frank E. Bilek INSURANCE AND BUYERS SURVEYS Certified by the National Association of Marine Surveyors BAY DELTA
POWER SAIL
(415) 232-7638 before 9:30 a.m.
HAVE SEABAG WILL SAIL I’m an experienced bay racer with the desire to sail to or from Hawaii before reaching the BIG 30 (soon). Will help defray ex¬ penses. Call Bob (415) 939-2400x225(d); (415) 685-8192(e) References. Flexible schedule.
NASH’S YACHT-RITE Experts in Painting, Rigging, Deliveries, And Maintenance New Boat or Old — We Can Do It!
Call (415) 782-4579 For the Best Racing On the Bay And the World The Ultimate One Design
Contact our Secretary: Vito Bialla - 30 Princess - Sausalito - 94965
MARINE SURVEYOR
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33 Experts in the installation and repair of electrical, heating, refrigeration and corrosion systems. Also Dealers for Major Brands.
CALL US AT (415) 332-3780 EDINGER MARINE SERVICE 399 Harbor Drive, Sausalito, CA 94965
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ELECTRICAL FOR SALE - “NAUTIGAL” $25,000 financing available. 1938, 38-ft. wood ocean going slpop, teak deck & trim, sleeps 6, head, galley & dinghy. Corin¬ thian Yacht Club berth B-3. Contact Joe Koopman 434-3838 d 456-6909 e CHARTER HAWAII & SAN JUAN ISLANDS. WESTSAIL 43, Immaculate ocean sailing vessel, avail, for bareboat & skippered charters in Hawaii/San Juan Islands, WA. Additional 22-50’ sailboat fleet & full svc. sail’g school. Wind Works Sailing School & Charters, 7001 Seaview Ave., N.W., Seattle, WA 98117 (206) 784-9386
APPRAISER
JACK MACKINNON Call anytime
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(415)276-4351
SANTANA 20 Trailer, Seagull outboard, sails — main, storm jib, 110,150, rig¬ ged for spinnaker. Lifting sling, three winches, lifelines, cushions, anchor, adjustable backstay. Very good condition. In dry storage — Ballena Bay, Alameda. Call 523-7969
LOWER RATES FOR 1980
FOR SALE International 110, number 659, 24’, wood, 2 jibs, 1 main, trailer included. $800. (702) 588-2727
_
MARINE INSURANCE
RE DICKERSON & ASSOCS. Insurance Brokers
341-2674 FOR SALE - CHARTS Complete set of charts of Hawaii and all islands,. $1.50 per chart. Other charts available also. Charts have never been us¬ ed. Phone:(415)752-2554
Clear, penetrating epoxy sealer for wood or ferro-cement $28/2 gal. kit. Linear polyurethane paints — all the colors of the rain¬ bow $32/2 gal. kit. Antifouling paints — both in tin & copper types, from $25 to $80/gal. Polysulfide rubber, 2-component sealants for caulking, bedding $24/gal.; epoxy adhesives $42/2 gal kit. Flotation foam $34/2 gal. kit. Technical manual, “How to finish Your Ferrocement Boat”, avail. $5, refundable w/first $50 order. We also have a laminating resin superior to the West System.
SMITH & CO.
1220 South 49th St., Richmond, CA 94804 (415) 237-5986
PATHFINDER SELF-STEERING VANES
je 103
"Successfully Used For Years"
Call Bill Paulson: 453-8722 454-9285 Western Sales Mfg. Co., San Rafael, Ca.
Specializing — Marine Insurance, Yacht Clubs, Marinas, Shipbuilder’s Liability, Cruisers, Sails, Yachts, Houseboats. 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE
1941 O’Farrell Street, San Mateo
EXCLUSIVE AGENT — Group Insurance, Ballena Bay Yacht Club Race — San Francisco to Kauai, June IS, ‘80 YAMAHA 2511 1978 Race or cruise this jewel. Dsl. auxiliary w/Martec, Hood & Mit¬ chell inventory, Barients & more. Good race record. Asking $23,900. Alameda slip available. Call Nick at (415) 347-8234 wkdays or (415) 785-2468 eves.
IS YOUR HULL DIRTY? Save yourself from swimming in the cold San Francisco Bay or from paying a fortune for dry dock fees. We will hand scrub your hull for a minimal cost. For appointment call
Rudy 526-3065 Scott 254-9753
CAL-20 Race ready, clean, sound, new jib and new genoa (Pineapples), spinnaker, reliable outboard, hauled October, 1979. $4300. (415) 254-3389 848-5536 655-8053
RIGGING • RIG TUNING • COMPASS ADJUSTING • OUTFITTING ELECTRONIC INSTALLATION • ELECTRICAL • YACHT DELIVERIES
SURVIVE THE SAVAGE SEA! Find out what blue water sailing is all about. Spend 3 days & 2 nights enjoying professional instruction, gourmet food & the thrill of sailing a true deep water yacht. Spring & summer book¬ ings available. Call for dates & applications. OLYMPIC CIRCLE SAILING CLUB, (415) 521-7322, 1815A Clement Ave., Alameda
ROMAINE YACHT SERVICES
FOR SALE — 55 HOLLOW SPRUCE MAST W/.BOOM Tangs spreaders, gooseneck, 3/8’ 1x19 SS standing rigging, 1 main, 1 jib. Excellent condition, came off heavy 39’ cutter. 2 No. 22 S.S. Barients, 2 pcs. 1V4”x10’ genoa track. 1 set fram fuel filters. Call (415)332-1838
RONALD R. ROMAINE
KARL ROMAINE
61 MIRAFLORES AVE. SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. 94901
YACHT DELIVERIES PORT HUENEME, CALIF.
(415) 453-3969
(805) 483-7227
N.
1957 MAYA 24’ cedar over oak, % rig, fast and seaworthy. 2 sets of sails, custom canvas covers. Class is being reactivated. (415) 454-4660 — (415) 456-8373
NEED A CREW MEMBER? Australian guy wishes to crew on yacht going almost anywhere, and departing early June, 1980. Call (415) 769-9421 for information
MARINE SURVEYOR SEEKING PASSAGE Responsible, easy-going Florida sailor, meandering westward. I’m a 26-year-old male with coastal sailing experience in Florida. Would like to crew on a boat leaving for Hawaii in May or June. Call collect: (813) 932-2725
Custom
SSetterin*
FRANK OLIVEIRA Before BAM or After 6PM
Call
Dan Padgett Yacht Deliveries — Sailmaker sundry yachting services 10,000 miles ocean racing experience 1568-D 7th St., Santa Cruz, CA 95062 (408) 476-2468
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Order your durable 'Dry Paint" — boat lettering, individually designed according to your specifications, selecting from over 400 color combinations on our convenient order blank! Registration numbers and speciality art too! A to Z Signs & Graphics, 104 G St., San Rafael, CA 457-1849
38’ MATTHEWS MOTORYACHT, 1980 CLASSIC Fully restored. Oak frame, bronze fastened, Mahogany cabin, dsl. eng., new fuel tanks, fatho., dinghy, press, hot/cold wtr., separate galley, Novcold 110/12v refrig., propane oven/broiler, 4 burners, exc. home/cruiser. Sausalito berth. $26,000. (415) 461-4171
SAN FRANCISCO YACHT SERVICE
Equip. Sales & Svc. □ Dockside Maintenance & Repair Engines □ Electrical □ Sanitation Systems □ Woodwork
762 Valencia Street San Francisco, CA 94110
BERTH TRADE — Coyote Point Berth 36’ — June, July, August? For same Sausalito. Leave message for Bob (415) 952-1325 weekdays. ALSO NEED Anchor windlass) liferaft, & someone to build stainless mast pulpit & boom gallows aboard my boat.
QUALIFIED COMPASS ADJUSTER NAVIGATION INSTRUCTOR YACHT DELIVERIES RIGGING - TUNING - SPLICING T (415)939-5073 Z MIKE MAKAROUNIS
A.B. STEVENSON
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(415) 552*7342
WANTED: WOMAN COMPANION for summer cruise, either yacht delivery from Hawaii in August ./"■or trip to Channel Islands in September. Ocean sailing ex. perience mandatory, scuba diving desirable. Send resume to: Greg Stach, P.O. Box 1858, Sausalito, CA 94965.
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Seven D«V* ■ Week
Available
(415) 388-2239
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INSURANCE 3450 lakeshore ave.
°AKLANDuc,A6r;639^
‘78 CATALINA 27 DIESEL ; Weil maintained bay boat in super condition for sale or trade for small trawler. 2 spd. Barients, DF, VHF, galley, head -ht, compass, carpeting, recently hauled - painted. Evenings, weekends (707) 255-0469
CATALINA 27 New North Jib, 78 Genoa and Main, Barient 21 Winches, Fathometer, VHF, knotmeter. Excellent condition with many extras for $17,000. (415) 364-8253 (415) 364-1906
WANTED: ADVENTUROUS FEMALE who might be interested in cruising bay/ocean/world for a day/weekend/year. Interested? Curious? Me, too! Let’s chat ana discuss the possibilities. I’m 44, single, own a very sturdy little 31’ ocean-going ship. Fred (408) 226-1763 h; 735-2295 w
9’4” PRAM DINGHY Vee bottom, marine plywood planking, spruce framing, flota¬ tion under three seats, design from John Gardener — “Building Classic Small Craft”. (415) 388-0900
BE A MORA CHAMP — NEWPORT 3011 North heavy & light 150,135, 90, drifter & blooper. Mitchell y2) %, iy2 chutes, DeWitt main & 110, 11 Barients & Barlows, Gemini head foil, 2 compasses, depth, AWI & close haul, windspeed, knotlog, RDF, VHF, internal halyards & more. $46K value for $40K or stripped at$33K. (415)939-2393
FOR SALE - THREE TRIMARANS 21’ Daysailer — $1800; 23’ Tremolino — $5800; 25’ Mini-Cruiser — $6650. Call Bill (415) 843-4512
1979 VENTURE OF NEWPORT 23’ fiberglass cutter, exc. condition, most of the extras — 4.5 hp Mercury long shaft, sleeps 5, Pier 39 berth, ready for sum¬ mer fun, with the look of the old ships circa 1900. Call J. Miles 673-7265 or work 989-1130 $5700 LEARN COASTAL SAILING 45’ sailing ketch “Adventure”, wants 6 sincere beginning or ad¬ vanced sailors to spend 2 intensive learning days & nights practicing offshore skills, ship handling, piloting, etc. May /June reservations offers for an unforgettable cruising weekend. (415)421-8389 (415)332-4879
FOR SALE - CATALINA 22 71, fiberglass sloop with teak trim. Hull &. sails in good condi¬ tion. 5V2 hp Johnson outboard. Sturdy bay boat at affordable price of $4950. Alameda berth possible. Call Dick at (415) 522-0684 after 6 p.m.; days (415) 577-5197
CASSANDRA CANVAS CUSTOM BOAT CANVAS CALL FOR ESTIMATE Kip Astor
(415) 332-7263
CAL 39 PARTNERSHIP Sharp 2 cabin sloop, teak interior, CNG stove, Barients, jib furl¬ ing, ideal for cruising, bay or weekends away from it all. 5K down, 300/month (including slip fee & ins.) Sausalito berth (415) 968-3831
28’ BUCCANEER SLOOP S.F. bay one-design, full keel, inboard eng., genoa, jib, club jib, mahoganey trim, cockpit, and interior. Asking $10,500. d(408) 257-7000 x2304 e (408) 245-1533
BKJ0TWORX- oearocaL
SAILING TO HAWAII? NEED A CREW? Young, mature couple seek position to Hawaii. Sailing ex¬ perience, energy and enthusiasm, ready to go after June 25th. Please call Werner or Lindsey -r- (415) 456-9334 or write Box 254, San Anselmo, CA 94960
endives-vivivq
cff/ortfipomt Yacht Maintenance Yacht Delivery
San <?ranczsro. Ca (4/5) 673-6023x65
J-24 CHEAP! (408) 262-3200 weekdays (408) 265-7970 eves & weekends
Extraordinary Opportunity for Minimal investment Now offering Va% ownership of beautiful, prestigious, fully equipped 78 Islander 28. $2000/down, $140/month — incls. everything — low 10% loan, slip fees, yearly taxes/insurance. Lance (d)(415) 838-0465 (e)(415) 820-6324
Downwind Designs custom canvas bags, boat covers, cushions awnings Fast, Professional Service.
cMarma c&eCCfeei/, Ca (2/3) 82/-7880
FOR WORK ON YOUR BOAT Cleaning, varnishing, cabinetry, plumbing, painting, etc. By the Hour, By the Job — Lpw Rates —• Free Estimates. Call Bob at (415) 383-5664, leave message
HAVE SEXTANT WILL TRAVEL Experienced sailor, navigator wishes to sail to Hawaii this sum¬ mer. Available from early June on. Call Pat (415) 848-4157
Jane Silva — 200 Gate 5 Rd.. no. Ill, Sausalito, (415) 332-9593
BALBOA 26 — CLASS 1972 SAILBOAT White w/Tan fiberglass sloop, swing keel, Vallejo berth — easy to sail, excellent condition, 4 sails, genoa pole, s.s. sink, alcohol stove, porta potti, 1974 Johnson ob electric start, 2 bat¬ tery banks, 6 gal. fuel tank plus much more. $11,950. (916) 775-1043 (916j 332-6435 RANGER (MULL) 22 1978, 5 bags of sails including spinnaker, 6 hp Johnson, EZ oader trailer, speedo, fathometer, porta potti, painted spar and nore. Very complete boat — $10,00 or best offer. Call Ray (415) 456-0254 and leave message. ge 105
GREEN’S YACHT SERVICE
Painting ■ Fiberglass & Gelcoat Repair STEVE GREEN 1945-F Francisco Blvd. San Rafael, CA 94901
(415)459-2267 Res: (415) 456-4800
TRAILERABLE GULFCOAST 21 Compact sloop with retractable keel. Sleeps four. Includes galvanized Little Dude tilt trailer, 4.0 hp Mecury outboard, sails, whiskerpole, Jiffy reefing and other-extras. Perfect for bay or lake sailing. $3500. (415) 794-1742 eves (415) 433-1676 x18 days
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BEAUFORT LIFE RAFT FOR SALE 10 man, newly inspected. 3 years old in valise. $750. Phone: (408) 336-5223
READY OUTBOARD SHOP 1
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245 Gate Five Rd., Sausalito
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NEW & USED MOTORS
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Top Dollar for Trade-ins — Any Motor, Any Condition (415)332-5233. 9-5 Tuesday-Saturday
“ORANGE SUNSHINE” Ericson 27 — inboard, tiller, spinnaker gear, compass, speedolog, depthsounder, Pineapple sails, fully rigged for racing — excellent race record. $24,500/offer. Call Glen (415) 522-5417 (415) 351-5469
CLASSIC 34’ SUNSET SLOOP “Aeolus”, 1961, excellent condition. Past YRA champion, fir over laminated and bent oak frames, teak deck, bronze fasten¬ ed, Berkeley berth G-4. $31,000. Ask for Fred at (415) 234-4334 wkdys. \
$50.00 REWARD Will be paid to yacht operators with vessels 20 ft. (or more) long, having 20 hp or more motors who assist at the 8th Annual Windsurfer Golden Gate Crossing, June 28, 12 noon to 4 p.m.
11’ BOSTON WHALER Sport Model, 1979. Brand new, 2 months in fresh water, Lake Tahoe. No trailer or motor. $1,500. Call (415)854-3435
Call 572-8666 to register. SAIL CARIBBEAN! Your own yacht with crew for parties of 2-12 for as little as $70 per person, per day. Includes gourmet meals, unlimited bar.
LYNHOLLEN YACHT CHARTERS
(916) 920-0820
601 University Ave., Suite 150-L, Sacramento, CA 95825
RETURN DELIVERY Enjoy the downhill run to Hawaii and let an experienced crew return your boat to the mainland for costs only. References. Prefer July/August. Guy (415) 362-6160 or (415) 924-9319
PARTNERSHIPS (4) AVAILABLE 50' Challenger ketch, cruise ready. $8000 - 6370 mo. Call Linda 235-9880
“TREASURE ISLAND” Unique 21’ sloop, full keel, fiberglass hull, wood cabin with 4 hp long shaft Evinrude. Needs little work. Must sell. Act Quick! Call 684-2150 or (415) 332-4226 or 692-6000
FULL RACE RHODES 19 Includes trailer, full set custom Pineapple sails w/tri radial & all spinnaker gear, Eriksson spars, many custom extras & much more. Ready to race or cruise. $3,800/offer. Call Justis (408) 476-3831 (408) 462-4108
SALE/TRADE AMERICAN25- exc.concftkxi^furfng.genoa, VHF.depthsounder ,10hp. Mercury .Vansontraler. Cruise equp.$ 10,000.^^(415)391-0910 CABO SAN LUCAS CRUISERS Will caretake boat at anchor in exchange for use of Marin waterfront home. Consider any two-week period(s) after September 1980. Especially Christmas. Contact: E.M. Henderson (415) 461-3718 39 Greenbrae Boardwalk, Greenbrae, CA 94904
TRADE Buildable lot in the beautiful Santa Cruz mountains. 10 miles from Monterey Bay; lot has water already on property/huge Redwood trees. Will trade for 32’ or larger sailboat of high quality. Will compensate if boat is of greater value. Rob (h)(408) 353-3413 (w)(408) 288-5000
MOORE 24
-
1976
6 headsails, 3 spinnakers, 1 blooper; Evinrude outboard, little
used; all safety gear; 6 winches; trailer; recently surveyed. Ready to Fly. $15,500 i Phone:(408)757-6812
BROWN 31 SEARUNNER TRI Cutter with 7 sails, 8 winches, spinnaker gear, stove with oven, 2 anchors and chain, 9.9 hp Johnson, knotmeter, compasses, Honda generator and much more! Santa Cruz sublet. $16,500 or offer. , (408) 335-4359
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% MAIL FORWARDING SERVICE AND POST OFFICE BOX RENTAL
the travellers mailbag 3020 bridgeway avenue, sausalito, ca 94965
(415) 332-2032
When Only the Best is Good Enough ...
LIGHTHALL MARINE 105 Bronson St., Santa Cruz, CA 95062 Custom Boats, Rudders, Repairs, Supplies Storage. Monterey Bay Dealers for DeWitt Sails, WEST Systems (408) 425-8155
MORGAN 27 From ‘72-‘75, 245 of these classic speedsters were built. Hull No. 238 is for sale. 8 bags of sail, ready to race and win. There is not a better Racer/Cruiser under 30 feet. $25,000. Call (415) 521-9664 after 6 p.m.
ISLANDER 24 "Excellent bay boat with' full keel. Handsome interior sleeps four — head, sink, table, excellent cushions throughout. Well for reliable 6 hp Evinrude Fisherman. Hull recently paint, four sails, bow pulpit. Only $5900. (415)233-4954
AWAITING BETTER FINANCING TERMS? Put your down payment into a smaller boat as a sailing infla¬ tion hedge and sell it later when it’s possible to finance your dreamboat. Buy my 25’ Fleur Bleue sloop in Berkeley Marina. (415) 587-3629 evenings
POLYMER SEALANT — In Place of Wax! Professional Finish w/No Rubbing — Lasts Up to One Year — Does Not Yellow — Does Not Build Up — Easily Applied — Easily Removed — Removes Oxidation Polishes & Protects Stainless & Anodized Aluminum STARSHINE PRODUCTS - (415) 453-8326 eves
Ansaphone
(415) 472-7934
RICK’S DIVING
5 Years Certified PADI & NAUI Attempted Search & Recovery Thorough Bottom Cleaning — Zinc Inspection Scheduling for Monthly Maintenance
CHEOY LEE FRISCO FLYER $11,500 Larry (415) 435-9495 Debbie (415) 924-8155
J-24 SHARES FOR SALE Prospective racer or leisure. Active class racing. One year old, excellent shape, all equipped. Brickyard Cove Marina berth, Pt. Richmond. (415) 383-3399 mornings before 8:30 or eves/wkends
TARTAN 30 Immaculate, 4 sails, VHF, AM/FM radio w/tape deck, alcohol stove, Atomic 4, depthsounder, shore power, bonded w/electroguard meter, spinnaker rjgged, many extras. $34,000 — financing available to qualified buyer. (415) 666-4427 d (415) 435-3006 e
SAILING DOCTOR AVAILABLE — 1 am an emergency physi¬ cian from Marin & on a Sebatical leave for 6 months beginning May 5th. I’m interested in a crew position on a sailing vessel, racing/cruising, that’s heading soon to warm blue waters. I’m exp’d. & willing. Please call now! Dutch Knapp, MD (415) 924-8488
CREWING POSITION WANTED Physician, m, 30, & nurse, f, 27, desire crewing position for So. Pacific journey (or Japan). Available 7/80. Share expenses. Contact: Rob Mastroianni, MD (209) 754-4257 856 Mountain Ranch, San Andreas, CA 95249
37’ SCHOONER ' Just back from seventh cruise to South Pacific/Hawaii. This , beautiful, custom, classic, Peterson coastal schooner has everything. Needed to leave tomorrow on another extended voyage. Must see to appreciate. $89,000. Call (415) 332-9100 & leave message for Bob Stanford.
VENTURE 2-24 #1090 A blue hull in marvelous cond. Considered to be the finest rigg¬ ed Venture afloat; ‘78 Honda, 5 DeWitt sails, trailer,, new fabric interior, galley, 4 Barlow 16’s, twin battery electrical system, radio, depth & knot meters, ctr. sheeting & more. (209) 823-4329 Manteca
FOR SALE Ericson 27, 1977, dsl., wheel, Lectra-San head, VHF, fathometer, knotlog,'Jiffy reefing, whiskerpole, 110 & 150 jib, alcohol stove, new bottom paint, sleeps 5. Excellent condition. $28,950. Consider offer. (408) 269-3769
CATALINA 27 — Exc. cond., sleeps 6, main’s, jib sails, anchor, Evinrude ob motor, d.s., compass, lifejackets & cushions, head, galley/stove, bow/stern pulpits w/lifelines, cabin fully carpeted, curtained & covered, interior nicely fitted. Must be seen. $14,900 for quick sale: Sausalito slip possible. (415) 495-3050 or 461-5826 eves
WANTED - EL TOROS - USED For Vallejo Yacht Club Junior Program. Must be fiberglass hull and in good condition. Contact: Dave Tiefenbach (707) 648-1706, Jr. Program Coordinator.
TARTAN 30 Immaculate, 4 sails, VHF, AM/FM radio w/tape deck, alcohol stove, Atomic 4, depthsounder, shore power, bonded w/electroguard meter, spinnaker rigged, many extras. $34,000 — financing available to qualified buyer. (415) 666-4427 d (415) 435-3006 e
CF 37 “BODACIOUS” Designer: Shad Turner. Builder: Dennis Choate , LWL: 30’. Beam: 12’. Draft: 6.5’. Ballast: 6,500 lbs. Displacement: 14,000 approx. “Bodacious” is a beautiful race/cruise yacht of excep¬ tional fiberglass construction. She is equipped with 10 sails, 13 winches, full spinnaker gear, custom spars, headfoil, electronics, and full instrumentation. Her interior is spacious and attractive, featuring teak, naugahide and textured white sur¬ faces. With her IOR rating of 28.9, she is an outstanding com¬ petitor on the race course. She could be sailed or raced anywhere in the world. Call Bill Semanek (408) 739-3178 days or (415) 982-7598 weekends.
1976 ERICSON 35 S.F. rig. Signet windspeed, wind point, digital knotmeter & dep¬ thsounder, Motorola 55 channel VHF, Yacht Specialties wheel, loaded, winner Monterey Bay EYC Winter Series. Asking on $47,500. Call Frank: (408)688-8141 evenings
“PAJARITA” 25’ Golden Gate sloop. Built by Stephens in Stockton, good condition. 1 must sell this boat. Asking $5000 & will carry the note. A berth can be arranged. Please call Larry at (415) 456-7381 h (415) 871-4300 w
TRADE SAUSALITO BERTH Would like to trade 29’x10’ Sausalito berth for a similar one in Richmond, Berkeley, or Emeryville. Full time, part-time, tem¬ porary or permanent. (415)937-8510
CLASSIC 26’ RACING & CRUISING SLOOP Oak frame, fir plank, mahogany cabin, lead keel. Excellent con¬ dition — built in the U.S.A. in 1955; berth in Sausalito. Price: $9500. Assume 10% loan. Phone: (415) 924-0949
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8’ TRADITIONAL ROWING & SAILING DINGHY
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Mahogany Trim — Spruce
30’ TRIMARAN - EXCEPTIONAL BUY Fast & dry. Rigged for singlehanding, exc. condition. Well equipped: tillermaster, cutter rig, VHF, RDF, VDO, fathometer, alcohol stove, 12.9 hp eng., Polyaxial compass, anchor & rode, sleeps four, Piver Nimble. $9,000. (707)646-4565 d (707) 643-0625 e 1974 CT-41 — Professionally varnished/painted, 1/80. Perkins 4-108 dsl., depth, R/T, speedo, log, radio/direction, self¬ steering, refrid., Yarman lOOv generator, 10 bags of sails, American rigging, full bimini. $43,000 assum. loan @ 10%. Ask¬ ing $89,500. W/take real estate equity or other in trade. (415) 332-8460 d; (415) 435-2085 e&wknd
$700 complete, including sail.
OLYMPIC CIRCLE SAILING CLUB AAsl. • Rentals
La Se,va- ca
95076
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wfJSfiiF * Zlsz-lss * Lessons • Club
(415) 521-7322 1815A CLEMENT AVE
alameda
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
CROSS 24 TRIMARAN, 1975
ATLANTIS OVERALL BOAT MAINTENANCE
Tandem trailer, 7 Vi Mercury w/alternator, k.rn., w/log, d.s., lights, CB radio, main, self-tending jib, professionally made spars, over-size rigging, beautiful, fast, comfortable cruiser. Many extras. $5500. (916) 933-1022 — Possible trade to Hobie cat, Santana 21 or ?
Brigfitwork, woodwork, underwater cleaning & repairs, gas, dsl., electronics & rigging. We have a crew with over 20 yrs. ex¬ perience in the boat industry. We offer a maintenance program to suit your needs. Lawrence Berry (415) 564-6430
EXTREMELY RARE SAIL — 30x9x4.9 Albert Metisse. The comb. — F.G. hull (79 Imron), teak deck/cabin, spruce spars. One of the most destinctive sloops anywhere; exc. Saus. berth. ($70/mo.) $32,950; CQR, Danforth, Zodiac, Seagull, Vane, 3 brnr. prop., Barients, cvr., Kenyon, triclr., Pier IV2, 61x, Sausalito Y.H. Ed Estrada (415) 922-5877 (415) 468-1867
classy classified You can get your classy classified started by sending your check for $10 ($20 for businesses) along with your 40 wonderful words to: latitude 38, p.o. box 1678, sausalito, ca. 94965. The deadline is the 22nd of the month and we cannot bill you — it just wouldn’t be classy if we did. And remember to include your phone’s area code to ensure full classy coverage.
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Belffortie y
Marine Surveyor
Survey and Appraisals, Sail and Power Yachts Contact: Denis Belfortie 415-922-0227
FOR SALE Snipe class sailboat — 15V2 ft. sloop, Schock fiberglass hull #14494. North sails, Proctor mast, aluminum board, Mastercraft trailer, lights, spare wheel, complete outfit — ready to go! George Gessling, Walnut Creek (415) 934-7440
COMPASS ADJUSTORS
Douglas Wilde L. D. McCroskey Phone 332 7989
31’ SEARUNNER TRIMARAN “MARU” Built for cruising, vent-wing, double berth forward, standing headroom throughout, full sterncastle dinette, ped. steering, marine ply, 5 sails, 7 winches, Benmar, depthsounder, trailer, much more. Permanent Oyster Point berth. (415) 851-3241. Must sell quickly — accepting offers.
UNDERWATER HULL CLEANING & REPAIRS Powerqd rotary scrubber gives smooth, clean finish; actually revitalizes most bottom paints. Sand or strip prior to drydock. Replace props & zincs. Periodic Maintenance available. Call: Dockside Boat Services — Napa — (707) 226-7028
23’ S-2 Super clean & ready to go. Owners must sell. Any reasonable offer considered. Berth with boat. Joan at (415) 339-1535
30’ SLOOP — $3,000 Homemade, sturdy, fiberglass over plywood. 4 tjerths, galley, head, heater, stove, anchor, chain, new Jotz mains’l, gd. headsail, new aluminum stick, S.F. berth, Grey inboard 20 hp. Neglected 3 years, but potential. 929-0457
Trailerable, Volvo penta gas inboard, entirely dismantled & rebuilt w/mahogany caprail & decks, storage areas, cutty’s & benches. Running lights, canvas cover, ideal for fishing, family or club launch. $3500. (415) 326-2430 Early Morning.
BOB TEFFT CRUISMIG
Brokers Of New Or Used
SAILS RACERS: Stop hoard¬ ing your old sails — we’ll sell them for you. CRUISERS: We have a large inventory of beautiful cruising sails — Stop by (or phone) and take a look, you’ll save lots of $.
Industrial Center Building No. 105
*
l8l9BRIDQEUmr.SWTE20l,S»USAllT0.CII-9+96> 28’ 30’ 32’ 32’ 32’ 35’ 36’ 38’ 39’ 40’ 41’ 43’ 45’ 46’ 46’ 47’ 47’ 48’ 49’ 55’
Herreshoff Rozinante ketch, 1963, custom extras.$18,000 Atkin “LITTLE MAID OF KENT” schooner, ‘70, dsl.25,000 Contessa cruising sloop, 1976, great inventory.45,000 Holman “RUSTLER” cruising sloop, 78, cruise vet.41,250 Islander full keel sloop, ‘65, must be sold.27,500 Alden yawl, 1948,4-107 (1968), recently returned.43,000 Cheoy Lee cruising sloop, vane, 1966, cruise ready.58,000 Alajuela cutter, 1975, vane, SSB, Ham, loaded.90,000 Peterson gaff ketch, “LITTLE DANSKER”, beautiful.62,000 Alden cutter, 1935, MD-3N, Aries vane, loaded.53,500 Ohlson custom sloop, 1968, SSB, A/P, 9 B & G insts.120,000 Atkin “LITTLE RANGER” ketch, 1968, good sailer.53,000 Hood steel yawl, 1962, built in Holland, very nice.110,000 Rhodes C/B sloop, 1957, in near perfect condition.82,500 Colin Archer type ketch, 1949, spacious & strong.65,000 Cheoy Lee (2) ketch & yawl, beauties from.135,000 Colin Archer steel ketch, 1972, GM 6-71, heavy. .95,000 Parker/Moody custom sloop, excellent.80,000 Robert Clark cutter, 1964, quality English boat.100,000 Schock ketch, 1940, outstanding gear & condition.197,500
SPECIALIZING IN OFFSHORE CRUISING BOATS - Over 100 listings
Gate 5 Rood Sausalito, CA 94965
As
(415) 332-9515
SAM BROOKS YACHT SALES UmM at Brickyard Com H20 Brickyard Com M.
Particulars are believed to be correct but are not guaranteed; subject to price change, prior sale or withdrawl without notice.
WANT A
Point Richmond, CA (415) 235 9*80 OFFERS THESE FINE BROKERAGE USTINGS SAIL 17' Leisure Sloop w/trailer.$ 5,300 J-24 . 16,500 24’ Yankee Dolphin. 14,900 25' Bahama . .. 9,795 27’ Sun.:... 24,495 27' Coronado. 12,900 27' Coronado, extra sharp. .. • • • 12,900 27’ Nor’Sea, aft cabin. 39,500 27’ O'Day. -21,950 27' Ericson. 31,995 30’ Farallone, race/cruise. 37,995 30’ Cape Dory Ketch.... 38,850 32’ Westsail, cruise ready, windvane..... 57,900 34’ True North cutter. 75,000 36’ Columbia...39,500 38’ Down Easter... ■ ■ 69,950 38' Hans Christian cutter.104,995 41’ Freeport. 94,995 41’.Carib, showcase cond... 64,995 44’ Offshore Ketch. 139,995 45' Coronado. 86,500 50’ George Sutton Ketch. 135,995 POWER .$ 5,100 18' Kona. . 9,499 19’ Starfire. . 9,499 21’ Starcraft. . 27,900 30’ Tolly Tricabin. . 61,995 36’ Eagle Trawler. . 35,950 37’ Delta Clipper, will finance. . 74,995 40' Bluewater Taiwan Trawler, flush deck . 46,500 42' Hunter.. base price 89,995 43’ Gran Mariner, new. . 99,495 44’ Pacemaker Motor Yacht. . 99,950 45’ Bluewater Sedan. .139,500 47’ Chris Commander. .189,500 49’ Alaskan. .165,000 57’ Chris Motor Yacht. Particulars are believed to be correct but are not guaranteed. S,ubject to price change, withdrawl or prior sale without notice.
Better look at this one before you buy. This cutter was the original Lyle Hess design; custom, built for simple, extended cruising. Many extras. I-V2 yrs. old with 10,000 cruising miles. Call for details.
(408) 475 7966 or write: "WHOOSH” 105 Serrell Ave., Santa Cruz, CA 95065
Dealers for: Farr 24’ & 30’ FORMOSA
SKIPPERS
Yacht Sales
WE HAVE ONE OF THE LARGEST INVENTORIES IN THE BAY AREA Select Brokerage Listings 61' COLIN ARCHER KETCH.95,000 60' BURGER CENTERBOARD YAWI_250,000 53’ SKOOKUM KETCH.....100,000 52’ CHINESE JUNK.89,500 48' STAYSAIL SCHOONER.47,500 48' MAPLE LEAF AUX. CRUISING CUTTER. 175,000 46' FRANZ MAAS LITTLE HARBOR YAWL110,000 45’ ROSBOROUGH.65,000 44' HARDIN BOUNTY KETCH.110,000 43' WESTSAIL.2 from 120,000 41' CORONADO.87,500 41' PIVER TRIMARAN.41,000 4V BENNETT KETCH.47,500 41’ CT. 75,000 40' CHALLENGER.89,000 40' STONE KETCH.19,000 40' NEWPORT KETCH.55,000 40’ HANG NEYH KETCH,.27,500 39' COLUMBIA-CUTTER RIGGED SLOOP.59,995 38' ALAJUELA. 90,000 38' FARELLON CLIPPER.36,000 37’ RAFIKI. 78,500 37’ O’DAY!.60,500 37' IRWIN MARK II KETCH.55,000 37' FAR EAST GARDEN.52,000 36' CHEOY LEE CLIPPER.67,500 35' CHEOY LEE LION.35,000 35' ERICSON I....4.4,000 33’ MORGAN O/l... .45,000 32’ PEARSON..63,500 32' CHEOY LEE.39,500 32' ISLANDER. 27,500 32’ CLIPPER MARINE.21,500 32' STEEL SLOOP, aft cabin.35,900 32' HERITAGE MARINE.33,000 30’ CLIPPER MARINE.15,000 30' HURRICANE. . . ..12,000 30' RAWSON.,.3 from 25,000 30' FAREAST H-30 KETCH.25,000 30' ERICSON. 22,500 30' ALBERG.25,950 30’ COLUMBIA. 5,000 29' COLUMBIA'MARK 1.21,750 29' ISLANDER.2 from 19,750 28'6" PEARSON TRITON.,.16,900 28' PEARSON. 29,500 28' STONE MOTORSAILER.15,000 28' KINGS CRUISER.8,500 28' COLUMBIA.13,500 287" COLUMBIA, 8.7..44,000 27' HANNA GULFWEED. .6,000 27’ CORONADO.15,000 26' REINELL.8,300 26' COLUMBIA MKII.12,900 26' INT’L. FOLKBOAT.15,500 26' NORDIC FOLKBOAT.2 from 7,000 26' COLUMBIA MARK 1.10,500
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25’5" ERICSON. 22,950 25’ PACIFIC SEA CRAFT. ..15,990 25' B. SEA HORSE YAWL.14,500 25’ PETERSON 2-25.20,000 25’ TRIMARAN.6,400 25' STEPHENS GOLDEN GATE.5,500 25' DEBUTANTE ..3,900 25’ CAPE DORY.14,700 24’ BRISTOL.2 from 13,500 24’ SAN JUAN.17,000 24’7" SANTANA V* TON.13,900 24’ ISLANDER BAHAMA.2 from 6,000 24’COLUMBIA CONT.i..4,000 24' FARR. 727./16.500 23’ RANGER.10,800 23’ BEAR.2 from 4,400 23’ COLUMBIA.6,950 23' S2 7.3.14,900 23' COASTER. '.7,700 23' MAYA.8,500 23’ ISLANDER.5,500 23' KELLS COASTER.7,700 23' NEWPORT VENTURE.2 from 5,900 23' BEAR.2 from 4,400 22’6" PEARSON ELECTRA.6,500 22’ BRISTOL.7,400 22’ COLUMBIA.4 from 5,000 20’ BAY LADY.„.2 from 3,450 20’ GAFF RIGGED CUTTER.2,500 20’ SANTANA. .4,500 20’ PETERSON MERMAID.4,000
NEW 35’ FORMOSA KETCH — Volvo Dsl., Shower, Lots of Teak & Brass AT OUR SALES DOCK. .,... $52,000
NEW 34’ AFT CABIN FORMOSA SLOOP — Volvo dsl., Walk-through to aft cabin!‘Lots of teak. AT OUR SALES DOCK.
52’ CHINESE JUNK — Elegant Liveaboard, Cat. 225 Dsl., New Sails, Berth.$89,500 61’ COLIN ARCHER STEEL KETCH — GM 6-71 Dsl., Caribbean & Central American Cruising Vet, Recent Survey.$95,000
BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE/BERTHS AVAILABLE FOR ALL BOATS
1535 Buena Vista Ave., Alameda No. 12 Marina Blvd., Pittsburg
(415) 522-6500 (415) 432-8722
ERICSON 29 — Excellent condition, heavily equipped for racing or cruising. $26,500.
33’ VANGUARD — Alberg design. Super racer/cruiser. Class champion. $36,000
35’ ERICSON — Swift, luxurious perfor- j mance cruiser/racer in beautiful condi¬ tion. Inquire.
SANTA CRUZ 27 — Race ready, Bill Lee design, exc. condition. 2 available from $18,900.
Paul Kaplan, Christine Kaplan, Mary Jo Foote jage 111
17’ 20’ 22’ 23’ 23’ 24’ 24’ 24’ 24’ 25’ 25’ 25’ 25’ 25’ 25’ 26’ 26’ 27’ 27’ 27’ 27’ 27’ 28’ 28’ 29’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 30’ 31’ 32’ 32’ 32’ 32’ 32’ 33’ 33’ 35’ 35’ 36’ 36’ 36’ 37’ 38’ 38’ 38’ 40’ 40’ 41’ 43’ 44’ 44’ 45’ 47’ 50’ 55’ 57’ 60’
SAIL — SELECTED LISTINGS Leisure.$ 5,300 Cal.7,000 Kels Coaster.7,700 Bear.6,495 Bear.7,150/offer North Star.25,000/from San Juan.16,500/from Cal T/4.11,900 “J”.16,000 Killer Whale.14,000 Peterson.16,000 Peterson.24,900 Meridian.14,500 Nordic Folkboat.11,000 Jr. Clipper.offer Columbia.12,900 Ranger.13,000 Bristol.13,000 Santa Cruz.18,900 Santa Cruz.20,950 Cheoy Lee.23,900 Cal.18,000 Tai-Pan (Cheoy Lee).29,500 Wylie.25,000 Ericson.26,500 Peterson.39,000 Alberg. 25,950 Bums Vi Ton.39,500 Islander II.31,500 Cal 3/30.41,800 Knarr.11,500 Knarr. 13,200/offer Knarr.11,000 Dragon.6,000 Pacific.13,500 Pacific.12,500 Wylie ‘Legacy’.29,500 Columbia Saber.8,500 Coronado.. 29,500 Vanguard. 36,000 Norway Motorsailer.29,500 5.5 Meter Boat.7,250 Vanguard. 36,000 Motorsailer.59,000 Alberg.37,500 Ericson.55,000 Lapworlh. 30,300 Lapworlh. 30,000 Farr One Ton.67,000 Rafiki Cutter.78,500 Alajuela.94,000 Faralone Clipper.42,000 Faralone Clipper.45,000 Cheoy Lee.67,500 Staysail Schooner.40,000 Tartan. . 109,500 Meter Sloop.29,500 Peterson.115,000 Bounty.110,000 Steel Yawl.110,000 Steel Ketch.95,000 Offshore Sloop.220,000 Stuart Ketch.170,000 Sea Lion #1.150,000 Stone Built Sloop.40,000
FOOT OF LAGUNA ST. SAN FRANCISCO (415) 567-3695
TARTAN 41 — “Regardless”, seller motivated. Price reduced to $89,950.
J-24. Like new — less than one year old; trailor. Join the fun in the active onedesign class. $16,000.
FARR 727 — Super well equipped, ex¬ cellent race record, S.F. berth included. $15,900.
30’ PETERSON CUSTOM DESIGN/ equipped for racing/cruising. Beautiful teak interior, i.b. dsl. inquire.
Hank Easom, Eric Leiske & Rollo D. Dog
mei55ner winches MEISSNER INTERNATIONAL B.V. set out six years ago to design and build the finest winches in the world. They have accomplished just that, and MEISSNER WINCHES have earned the respect of top international racing and cruising sailors.
WHY MEISSNER WINCHES ARE BETTER â&#x20AC;˘ Geometric Design - Balanced to achieve a maximum reduction in friction while the winches are under load, without sacrificing their ability to spin freely Material Selection - Best available for every component, including exotic alloys created exclusively for MEISSNER Structural Strength - Appropriate metals selected for all structural components Alloy Base - Cast by special process; strongest-lightest and most durable metal base offered anywhere Anodizing - Hardest and thickest available, unique in the marine industry
WHY MEISSNER WINCHES ARE BETTER FOR YOU # Easier Sail Handling Outstanding Reliability Lower Maintenance Strongest-Lightest Design Greater Durability Wtitten Warranty Comprehensive Service
Special Roller Bearings - Manufactured only by MEISSNER Forged Aluminum Handle - For the best combination of strength and light weight Low Maintenance - Self-lubricating journal bearings in gears and main shaft
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meissner winches Contact your U S. Distributor: International Marine Hardware Star Route 21 Woodside, Calitornia 94062 (415) 851-3060
Represented by Seaport Marine (213) 431-4804 Available at Anchorage Marine, Sausalito, CA (415) 332-2320
You can join the hundreds of sailors who prefer MEISSNER WINCHES over all others, because they are the strongest-lightest, most precisely designed and manufactured winches in the world. * * These exceptional winches are now available in the U.S.A. Contact us for more information and the location of your nearest dealer.