Orange Keeps Rolling, Rolling…

Bruno Peyron’s big maxi-cat is putting on quite a show. Orange II passed Cape Leeuwin (the southwestern tip of Australia) last night, and tossed a few more records into the bag. Numero Uno: Ushant to Cape Leeuwin. 21 days, 13 hours, 54 minutes (mashing Cheyenne’s old record of 25 days, 14 hours, 8 minutes. Numero Dos: Equator-Cape Leeuwin. 14 days, 11 hours (crushing Geronimo’s old record of 19 days, 17 hours, 27 minutes). Numero Tres: Good Hope to Leeuwin (the unofficial Indian Ocean record). 7 days, 5 hours, 35 minutes (pipping brother Loick’s old record of 7 days, 14, hours, 30 minutes; navigator Roger Nilson was with Loick for that run, so he hasn’t lost anything, just updated his personal best).

Check out the two new videos on the video page. Good shots of ice and hull flying, amidst discussion of routing and minor medical emergencies.

So Orange II is four days and fourteen minutes ahead of Cheyenne’s absolute record, and Peyron keeps mentioning, casually of course, how they actually could be going faster but want to take it easy on the boat. In any case, they’ve averaged 22.8 knots since the start, which is astounding, ridiculous, and very impressive. I’m starting to think that if Orange II keeps this up and makes it to the finish, she’ll throw the whole maxi-multihull world into a deep funk because all the first generation boats will be exposed as being totally overmatched and obsolete…

The Orange Revolution: “Hey, Bruno! This thing is so fast it’s turning a circumnavigation into a shortish voyage. Maybe it’s time to think about a new benchmark. Two laps. No stopping…”

Make Mine A Maximus…

Well, the latest 100 foot supermaxi speed machine has been dunked. EBS Yachting splashed it’s custom-designed, canting-keel, rotating wingmast monster today. They’ve got a month of sea trials and then the yacht–christened “Maximus” (apparently the name “Biggus Dickus” wasn’t quite subtle enough)–is off to Antigua and beyond. Here’s the fun you can have if you are a multimillionaire with a massive, er, racing yacht:

April 2005: Caribbean – Antigua Race Week http://www.sailingweek.com
May 2005: Gulf Stream – 24hr World Record Attempt http://www.sailspeedrecords.com & Rolex Transatlantic Challenge http://www.nyyc.org
June 2005: St. Tropez, France – Giraglia Rolex Cup http://www.yci.it/giraglia/
July 2005: Sweden – Round Gotland Race http://www.gantgotlandrunt.org
Aug 2005: England – Skandia Cowes Week http://www.cowesweek.co.uk & Rolex Fastnet Race http://www.rorc.org/fastnet
Sept 2005: Costa Smeralda, Italy – Rolex Maxi Yacht World Cup http://www.yccs.it
Oct 2005: Malta – Rolex Middle Sea Race http://www.rolexmiddlesearace.com
Dec 2005: Australia – Rolex Sydney to Hobart http://www.rolexsydneyhobart.com

You can watch a video of the EBS story here. And a video of the move from the build shed to the water here. Maximus (I’m sorry, I just can’t take this name seriously. It just cries out for the right sponsorship, like “Viagra Maximus” or “Trojan Maximus”) will go up against Mari Cha in the Transatlantic Challenge, which should be an epic match race, and could line up against nine other supermaxis in next year’s Sydney-Hobart (assuming everyone has their keels and masts repaired by then). Here are some shots from the launch (the full gallery is here). I think this thing is going to fly…



Monster Maxi Maximus…

Oryx Odor-Quest: Stinking And Slinking Across The Equator…

In the big round-the-world races the passage from the northern to southern hemisphere is notorious for two reasons: first, the Doldrums often serve up maddening calms and unpredictable squalls, making the sailing very tricky, sweat intensive, and miserable; and second, anyone on board who has not been across the Equator gets abused by “King Neptune” in a ceremony that mimics the best and worst of college frat house hazing. Each crew cooks up its own ritual, but usually the initiate is accused of various crimes by one of the crew dressed as Neptune, and then punishment–in the form of foul smelling slop (the fouler the better)–is poured all over the quaking sap. Here’s how it all went in the Oryx Quest on Doha 2006, as described by the ever-colorful Paul Larsen:

“We are currently making 21 knots on course. Every fast mile in these latitudes is golden. The equator approaches fast and thus so does the court of Neptune. We need a trident, a beard; a Neptune for that matter…. might just go with the slops. Hmmm I won’t sign off just yet. It should all be done by the end of my watch which starts in two minutes so I might as well finish later and let you join in on the fun. Let’s face it, everyone loves seeing a kiwi get hosed. Back in a mo’….. Some 4 1/2 hours later… After a sweaty and busy start to the watch where we changed headsails once again so as to keep in the groove, we got down to the more serious business. It all came about a couple of days ago where a crafty little conversation was struck up with Stan Delbarre to determine if he had crossed the equator before. Many classic tales were told prior to this of many crossings on many boats. One in particular about a typically hard ass kiwi skipper who would have none of this messing around on his serious racing boat and proceeded to have a round the world race of misery until eventually conceding. We’re not all superstitious… more likely just looking for an excuse to pour a bucket of stinking rubbish over a mate. So the conversation went on as we glided through the humid night:

DAMIAN-“Been sailing down south much before Stan?”
STAN-“Oh yeah, all the way down to Cape Horn.”
DAMIAN-“Cool, where did you leave from?”
STAN (still unaware of the trap)-“Alaska, it was a great trip”
DAMIAN-“Wow…did you sail all the way or get off and meet the boat (nice work, never give up)?”
STAN- “No, I did the whole trip”

Hmmmm, damn, but hang on, the guy sitting next to Stan was awful quiet. Yep, Andy Mikeljohn knew what was going on and what’s more…. he’d figured that he was swimming in an ever closing circle of sharks all of whom were after blood… or cheap kicks. We were onto him. Andy didn’t sleep well in his next off watch. It wasn’t so much the heat and humidity of below decks as the knowledge of what was approaching at anywhere between 4 and 24 knots in the fickle nightime conditions. Maybe he was the only one onboard not rejoicing when the boat hooked into some fresh breeze and lunged forward towards the Southern Cross. Many hands participated in the creation of the slop mixture. A likely Neptune was found, a trident and a beard. The consistency of the slop was a source of debate. Andy came on decks when we still had about 15 miles to go. The morning sun was beginning to bight the exposed skin of those still kidding themselves that it wasn’t. With grease gun in hand he proceeded to walk towards the mast to grease the ball upon which the mast rotates. The slop stewed. With 9 miles to go, Neptune’s court was ready. Andy was still greas… hang on, where is he? “I think he’s in the galley” check, nope, “I think he’s in the heads” check, nope… We all looked at the dormant grease gun… The little bugger has taken off up the inside of the mast. With the aid of a big search light we found Andy about thirty feet up the inside of the mast determined not to pay Neptune his dues (At this point I can picture his mother reading this at home, saying “My god, is he still doing that? He used to run up trees all the time when he was younger. First day of school, first day of football training, first date with a girl). We couldn’t shake him down and Neptune’s trident didn’t have the reach to jab at his clenched hands. Real kitten down the well stuff. Eventually he was encouraged down on the premise that we wouldn’t tie him down to the nets and pour 5 litres of trash and crap all over him when the latitude hit ‘0.00’.
Fool.

So once Andy had his crimes read out to him and was given the thorough right of passage, the DOHA 2006 Bear given to us by a class of schoolchildren from Doha was also initiated. Then of course it was back to business as usual with yet another headsail change as the winds became more consistent. We didn’t get any of the rain squalls that many of us were hoping for and so it was that I gave up on my theories of bodily bacterial stabilisation and breaking the back of the hygiene hump. I admitted that I did in fact stink and that it was time to act. The ‘sugar scoop’ at the back of these boats is a superb bathing area. Like your own little private beach if the conditions are right. A great place to go and shed the second skin that accumulates in these warm climates…”

South of the Equator, Doha 2006 and Geronimo are continuing their neck and neck drag race, with Doha 2006 edging out front by less than a mile. Leaderboard here. Make sure you check out the daily video clips here. It won’t be much comfort to Andy M., but the ceremony used to be much more painful. Super-navigator Roger Nilson, sailing on Orange II right now, once told me that when he was in the Swedish navy they doused him with hot tar…

Miserable Mikeljohn: “I’m sweaty, I’m tired. And now I have flying fish guts all over me. I knew I should have taken that accounting job…”

It’s A Bird, It’s A Plane, It’s…L’Hydroptere!

L’Hydroptere–a trimaran than turns into a hydrofoil–has always been one of the most interesting contestants in speed sailing game. Here’s how “skipper and pilot”, Alain Thebault, describes this wacky machine:

“At low speed, l’Hydroptère sails like a normal trimaran. From 10 knots, she starts to lift, and like for an aircraft you have to cant up the boat by angling up the elevator on the submerged bottom of the rudder. This is controlled from the helm with a joystick. Once l’’Hydroptère has reached her cruising altitude, between 2 and 3 metres, the helmsman, who has now become a pilot, brings her onto a horizontal trim by briefly canting the nose downwards. Connected to the water solely by her two marine wings and her aft “fin”, l’Hydroptère immediately reaches high speeds. The more the speed increases, the higher l’Hydroptère lifts out of the water thanks to the V arrangement of her foils.”

The issue with this baby has always been durability and the difficulties it has in rough water, but after a two year layoff for tweaking L’Hydroptere is back. Last week the boat broke the record from Dover to Calais, covering the 19 nautical miles in 34 minutes and 24 seconds. That’s an average speed of just over 33 knots, which is a higher average speed than any record ever ratified by the World Sailing Speed Record Council. Top speed was an impressive 43.4 knots. The plan now is to chase after other records. Which ones, I’m not sure. But until this thing can prove itself in rough seas, the maxi-multihulls can rest easy. Check out this great photo gallery from Gilles Martin-Raget. It’s a very cool machine, isn’t it…

Dover-Calais Speedster: “Well, if we can’t keep it together in the Atlantic at least we can run a fast cross-Channel ferry service…”

Have A Wetass Weekend…


We started the week with Ellen, so we’ll finish it with Ellen finishing…

RIP Jon Mozo…

TWC wouldn’t be TWC without all the great photos out there. And one of the guys who was taking some of the best surfing and underwater shots was Hawaiian Jon Mozo. Sadly, Mozo died yesterday doing what he loved doing: shooting in the water at Pipeline. Here’s are the key details from a report in the Honolulu Advertiser:

Mozo, 33, was swimming and taking photos of surfers yesterday. About 2 p.m. bodyboarders alerted lifeguards that a swimmer was in trouble, said Jim Howe, operations chief for the city Ocean Safety Division.

An off-duty lifeguard who was in the water dived and found Mozo. He and others brought Mozo to shore at Ehukai Beach Park and tried to revive him with a defibrillator, Fire Capt. Kenison Tejada said. Mozo had head injuries and had no pulse, Tejada said. Mozo was pronounced dead at Kahuku Hospital.

“People are just speechless,” said fellow surf photographer Bernie Baker, who was shooting pictures from the beach at Ehukai yesterday.

Baker said yesterday was one of those “pristine, perfect kind of photo and surfing days.” The surf at Pipeline was not especially big, he said, but the swell was out of the west “and as any North Shore lifeguard can tell you, when you have an extreme west swell you have an extremely strong current and it’s very easy to get dragged into a shallow area off the reef.

“He probably found himself caught in the face of a wave, and with the power of these west swells it may have dragged him up and over the face of the wave and flipped him into the shallow water. He would have hit the reef, which at best has 5 feet of water.”

You can check out his work here. And buy some of it here. You never know when it will all come to an end, so live it up while you can…

The Dude liked waves…

A Day In The Life Of The Oryx…

The Oryx Quest is not getting the attention of Ellen, the Vendee Globe, or even Orange II. But don’t be fooled. It is a fascinating race not only because it pits three of the best G-Class multihulls against one another, but also because there are some excellent reports coming off the boats. Right now, Brian Thompson’s Doha2006 has crept ahead of Olivier DeK’s Geronimo, by just over 50 miles (take that, tri-lovers!). Cheyenne is lagging by more than 200 thanks to a failed flyer (full leaderboard here) but there could be a restart coming with the approach of the Doldrums. Anyhow, in the equally important Pulitzer Competition, Doha2006’s Paul Larsen is in the lead, thanks to his detailed and insightful daily reports. Here’s his latest, which gives a real sense of the life and rhythm aboard these maxi-multihulls:

“Well that was a typical start to my daily update. I got woken up for standby watch. A very deep sleep this time as I had been up for around twenty hours so I could get some filming done in my off watch period (no guilt from non-participation that way). After staggering through the hot and humid hull into the refreshing and instantly cooling breeze on deck it’s good to sit down in the little ‘cuddy’ (coachroof) and wake up properly. It’s dark, an hour or so from first light and the boat is driving on at 20-22 knots with its Draught Horse mentality. The new on watch team of Thomas Coville and Sharon Ferris seem pretty calm and under control. Johnny Malbon is up on the foredeck with Andy M. fixing something or other. Looking at everyone’s clothing it seems like no-one is worried about any water coming on decks. I’ll stick with shorts. It’s good to just sit and feel the motion of the boat, check out the sail combination, ask about the weather trends and consider the next possible gear change. On standby watch you are not required for the general driving and trimming activities. Your purpose is more as a man/woman power resource when a sail change or other such labour-intensive manouever is needed so armed with the aforementioned information you can plan your next four hours. Some breakfast perhaps, some cleaning or maintenance, a little extra sleep or in my case, an update and some photo editing. I sat in the cuddy for an hour or so, sorted out my head torch from the previous night and watched the sunrise. Everything looked cool and the gang. OK then, down to the aft part of the port hull to my little media station, open the laptop, power it up and open Outlook Express all the time thinking what to write about. All comfy, I strike one key and Sharon yells down the hatch (in the most distinctive Kiwi accent there is) “Paul mate, we’re reefing”. Riiiiight!!! If this situation happened only once then it would not be an issue but it seems to happen all the time. Nature doesn’t believe in working to our feeble time schedules. As I made my way back on decks I wondered what had changed in the 35 seconds it took me to get down the to the media station. Sigh.

So the reef has gone in and it seems to be for the better as the numbers are the same and the motion is easier. It’s already getting hotter. (right here is where I have to leave this little piece as my time is up and it’s now my turn on watch. with 11 minutes to go I’ll endeavour to cram in breakfast, find my hat and sunglasses, wake up the next standby and get a quick brief off the last watch). Sometimes it seems like there is not much to do but it is funny how you keep running out of time in which to do it!

Ok, five hours and one watch later and I’m back down in the sweat factory…actually no, the galley is truly the mother of all sweat factories (A good excuse for a naked chef if ever there was one…and therefore a good reason not to let Fraser B. cook) but it’s hot down here nonetheless. All hatches are firmly sealed and the boat is off power- reaching under full mainsail and ‘Yankee’ reacher. Current speed 25 knots, current position, about 250 miles west of the straits between India and Sri Lanka. During our watch we hit some pretty fast speeds and narrowly missed some big long piles of flotsam. We now have someone on the bow spotting full time as some of the logs in the water would take the daggerboards clean off. We are guessing that this is the remnants from the recent tsunami but that’s just a guess. Better to be safe than to get the million dollar crunch. So there has been some big hull flying action which makes things go momentarily quiet from where I am sitting. That is until the traveller winch directly overhead makes a noise as pleasant as a catfight at four in the morning (thanks Johnny M for that one) as the load is eased and the hull touches the water again.

So life is continuing at a somewhat different pace than the previous few days. At least at this speed you know that no-one is gaining on you at any rapid rate. Clothes are being customised in an effort to stay out of the sun and all is well. I just hope that we don’t hit anything. (having just said that, we just did. I can reach aft with my left hand from where I am now and touch the port rudder stock. It just rang like a bell. Quick check and all seems well. On y va.)

Currently at 4′ 47″ N with an ETA at the equator around midnight GMT. There’s one little bunny on board who is going to get the full wrath of Neptune. The ITCZ (Doldrums) looks interesting and possibly complicated. It’s definitely not the Atlantic. Cheers, Paul.”

And cheers to you, too, Paul. Thanks for taking the time to write. In the coming days we’ll check in on the ever-colorful Tony Bullimore

Thirty-six knots never looked so easy…

It’s A Weirdass World…

Okay, where to start. We’ve all had treehouses, and we’ve all dreamed of living off the grid…at least for five minutes. So let me introduce you to Canadian Tom Chudleigh, who is in the business of making these fantasies come true…at the same time. See, Tom manufactures a product called “Free Spirit Spheres,” which are large egg-shaped, err, spheres that are built to be suspended from the trees…and lived in (tag line: “Habitat For The Untamed Spirit”). Really. He calls the design a marriage of treehouse and sailboat technology, and his aim is to give humans a different, very different, perspective on life. According to Chudleigh:

The forest canopy is a magical environment. Break the contact with the ground and the energy seems to shift. Its hard not to think of elves and fairies or to not feel the presence of the forest. That presence seems to dwell in the canopy where it can watch the meanderings below.

I wouldn’t mind feeling the presence of the forest, but as for the elves and fairies…

You can order your own from the Free Spirit Sphere web page (no price listed). And if you need to know more before you move in (but why would you?), you can check out the info page (which explains that the thing will swing like a motherf*cker every time someone moves in it), and the FAQ page (which explains that no, there is no bathroom, and suggests that the thing can be hung as high as 120 feet off the ground; wait a minute, isn’t that a bad combination?). Anyhow, you can see lots of pics here (umm, why does that Dude have a laptop in the Sphere; I mean, what’s the point?). The Free Spirit Sphere. Very tempting for anyone with small children…



“Damn! I really hate delivering the mail to these wackos…”

You Like Big Air…?

Well, check these windsurfing clips (Quicktime only) out:

Monster Air

More Monster Air

They come from a great windsurfing site, called Continent Seven. It’s windsurfing clip heaven. Just click on “Moves” if you want to work on your Back Loop or Air Flaka (say what?). Or hit the links on the front page and surprise yourself. Be careful, though. It’s easy to start imagining that you can pull this sh*t off…



“Is this a f*cking Flaka…?”

The Wetass Life: Oskar Kihlborg…

He’s been up Everest, K2 and Lohtse. He’s sailed across the Atlantic twice. He’s ridden a bike from Rome to Stockholm. And now Kihlborg, a Swede, is gearing up to bring you the Volvo Ocean Race through the lens of a camera, as the race’s official photographer. Bastard. “My job is to show the world what the Volvo Ocean Race is all about. It’s not just the competition between the boats; it’s also about happiness and sorrow, sweat and tears, high tech and mother nature. I want to cover all of that,” Kihlborg says. “I have never been in the Southern Ocean myself, but I know what it is like to sail in tough conditions. When breaking the Atlantic record on Nicorette there was 85 knots in the gusts. I know the feeling when one minute you scream for joy, and the next cry for fear. I think that’s important for me to know, and I hope I’ll be able to put those feelings into my pictures.”

Yeah, me too. You can check out Kihlborg’s work at his website. But here’s what it looks like:



(Photos: Oskar Kihlborg)