5 minute read

Ask Nigel — Aboard Zvi

Next Article
Broker’s Best

Broker’s Best

BY NIGEL BARRON

California, Here We Come

NIGEL BARRON recounts the “practice run” that was the delivery of Zvi to Los Angeles in anticipation of the July 17th start of Transpac 2021.

Step one of the Transpac triangle: The trip from Seattle to Los Angeles. On paper, it’s pretty simple—leave Seattle, make three left turns and you’re in Los Angeles. Of course, we all know things are never that simple. As we got closer to our planned June 18th departure, it became clear that we would take a beating in the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Port Angeles to Seiku. The decision was made to push the departure to 4 a.m. on Saturday, June 19th. We left the slip around 4:15 a.m. and started motoring north. By sundown on Saturday, we exited the strait into a fog bank. We did not see the sun for the next five days. As with any trip offshore, the first few days are the hardest as people adjust to life at sea. We’d planned for this with each day’s food in a numbered bag. Early in the trip, the food bags consist of lighter meals, snacks, fruit chews—things that are easy on an unsettled stomach. The weather didn’t help. As we got into the first night, we were seeing pretty steady winds of 15-25 knots from the northwest. The angles were nice for a downwind trip, but the total darkness was tough on the new guys who hadn’t been offshore. Driving by instruments only, without moon or stars and total cloud cover, taxes the mind. You need confidence in the instruments, as well as what your body feels. Our weather routing was provided by Roger “Clouds” Badham, who has participated in every America’s Cup since 1983. The plan didn’t change too much as we got closer to the departure and even during the trip. Go offshore for better wind, come inshore for less wind and a motor. We opted for the offshore route. By the time we were in northern California, we were around 100 miles off the coast and ended up a maximum of 160 miles off the coast. By the third day, everyone was starting to feel a lot better with enough watches under their belts to get caught up on sleep. Eight people sailed this leg. We ran two watches of four people on a 4-4-4-6-6 watch schedule, in terms of hours on and off. Basically, we ran three watches at night and then two longer watches in the daylight. The normalizing of conditions also allowed me to ramp up communications with our shore team. This was the last big shakedown of the boat and systems. We had a new custom alternator from Mark Grasser at DC Power Solutions that we needed to test under real life conditions. This alternator puts out 185 amps attached to our little 75hp Yanmar. We started making water with our Spectra watermaker to check amp draws and production. It worked well, but we discovered at over 16 knots of boat speed the watermaker struggles a little bit with aeration. Without question, the highlight of the trip has to be the last day where we came through the Santa Barbara Channel with 26 knots of boat speed in steady 32- to 37-knot winds. We flew, but under control. By the time we were near Malibu, we had taken the main down so we could get that done while there was still some light and settled in to motor the rest of the way to Los Angeles. The trip validated the many hours so many people have contributed to make racing to Hawaii possible. I head back down July 9th to load our shipping container, and our start for Transpac is July 17th.

>> Nigel will give us his account of the race to Hawaii in next month’s column, but for those who just can’t wait, real-time Transpac race results can be found transpacyc.com.

Nigel Barron was born in England and developed his sea legs at an early age. He is currently the project manager at CSR Marine in Seattle, where he has worked for 15 years, first as a rigger, then an installer, and now in his current role. Last month, he took part in the Transpac 2021 race captaining Zvi, a Reichel/Pugh design and McConaghy-built custom race boat from Seattle.

MOORING BUOY TIE UP

Fast – Easy – Reliable The Grabber-Mooring Retriever

Pull Any Size Line through Mooring Ring or Shackle Two versions fit any pole Stainless Steel, Aluminum, UHMW

www.GoldenDoveMarine.com phone: (206) 842-7250

Successfully serving clients for 28 years (206) 284-9004 www.signature-yachts.com

At Our Docks At Our Docks

Arriving Summer

Beneteau First 18

Beneteau Oceanis 46.1

Arriving Fall

Arriving Fall

Beneteau First 27

Beneteau Oceanis 30.1 Arriving Summer

Beneteau Oceanis 38.1

On Order

Beneteau Oceanis 40.1 Arriving Summer

Arriving Fountaine Pajot Astrea 42 Beneteau Oceanis 51.1

Pre-Owned Boats

At Our Docks 2 New Listings At Our Docks

49' Hunter 49 ‘09 ............................$249,900

At Our Docks

38' C&C MKIII 38 ‘86 .........................$52,000

At Our Docks

37' Beneteau Oceanis 37 Ltd ‘13 .....$149,900

At Our Docks

34' C&C 34 ‘78...................................$29,900 25' Harbor 25 ‘09 ..............................$44,500 19' Chris Craft Racing Runabout ‘50 .$49,900

51' Beneteau 51.1 ‘21 ...............Arriving Sold 46' Beneteau Oceanis 46.1 ‘21 .Arriving Sold 44' Jeanneau 44 DS ‘16 .......................SOLD 42' Beneteau 423 ‘04 ...........................SOLD 42' Fountaine Pajot Astrea ‘20 ..Sale Pending 40' Hunter 40.5 ‘93..............................SOLD 38' Hunter 386 ‘03................................SOLD 38' Beneteau 38.1 ‘21 ...............Arriving Sold 38' Beneteau 38.1 ‘20 ...............Sale Pending 35' Island Packet 350 ‘01 ...............$129,900 35' Beneteau Oceanis 351 ‘95 ..............SOLD 35' Beneteau ‘35.1 ‘21 ..............Arriving Sold 35' Catalina 350 ‘03 ..............................SOLD 31' Beneteau Oceanis 31 ‘21 ....Sale Pending 28' North Pacific PH ‘11 .......................SOLD 25' Beneteau First 25 ‘15 ..........Sale Pending

What’s Happening

Save the Date! Beneteau Rendezvous August 27-29, 2021 • Call for more information 2476 Westlake Ave N, #101, Seattle, WA 98109 (206) 284-9004 Open Monday thru Saturday 10 am - 5 pm Sunday by appointment

This article is from: