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LOS ANGELES—Roy E. Disney announced his retirement from
sailboat racing at the awards dinner for the 2005 Transpacific Yacht
Race a year ago, and now he has another bit of news: his comeback
starts with the next Transpac in 2007.
With selection of the crew for his Morning Light documentary film
project complete, Disney has confirmed rumors by declaring himself as
the first unofficial entry for what will be his 16th Transpac. Now the
youngest crew ever to sail the race will have as a counterpoint a 77-
year-old skipper.
Disney will charter Pyewacket back from the Orange Coast College of
Sailing & Seamanship. He donated the three-year-old maxZ86 to OCC
after last year's race when Pyewacket finished 2 1/2 hours behind
Hasso Plattner's maxZ86, Morning Glory, whose elapsed time of 6 days
16 hours 4 minutes 11 seconds broke Disney's record of 7:11:41:27 set
in 1999 on an earlier Pyewacket.
"The biggest thing is that I really got deeply involved in Transpac again
because of the Morning Light project," Disney said, "and the more I was
around it the more nostalgic I got about me in the race, and all of
sudden I found myself saying, 'We could probably rent that big boat
back and do it again. And maybe reclaim the record?"
"If the wind blows this time there's a really good chance we'll break that
record," Disney said. He will have the same basic crew, including
Robbie Haines and navigator Stan Honey, both key figures in the
Morning Light project. The only significant modification will be to refit the
18-foot-deep canting keel that was replaced by one only 12-feet deep so
the boat could sail into Newport Bay, home of the OCC sailing school.
Disney also has planned a thorough checkout with possible upgrades of
electronic and mechanical systems, some new rigging and new sails.
Brad Avery, director of the OCC school, said, "It's good for us. There
aren't too many people out there to whom we'd want to charter a boat
like that. It requires an enormous effort. We couldn't afford to do that."
Last year in their Transpac debut the maxZ86s finished about two days
ahead of the Transpac 52s. Morning Light is a Transpac 52.
"The good thing is that we'll be far enough ahead of the kids on Morning
Light that we can be there at the dock to see the end of the movie,"
Disney said.
Pyewacket, whether it sailed or not, had already been declared the
scratch boat for 2007 with a rating limit conforming to its configuration
when it finished first in the 2004 Newport to Bermuda Race.
_/)
Hawaii State Rep. offers hope for Transpac Row
The Hawaii State Representative for the 23rd District that includes the
Ala Wai harbor in Waikiki has offered the first ray of hope that Transpac
Row may be restored for the 44th race in 2007.
Anne Stevens told Latitude 38 Magazine that she expects F Dock
where all finishers traditionally lined up side by side to be restored from
its current condemned condition in time for the race. "I can't guarantee
it," Stevens was quoted, "but there shouldn't be any reason why the
Transpac Row docks won't be in place for the end of next year's race."
For decades an aloha community atmosphere abounded when race
boats occupied slips in order of their finishes, from the inner end of the
channel to the outer end near the Hawaii Yacht Club. When those
deteriorating dock spaces were condemned by the state of Hawaii
before the 2005 race, boats were scattered around the basin to tie up at
the Hawaii and Waikiki Yacht Clubs and on a narrow temporary dock
arranged by the latter.
_/)
Grant Baldwin services Aug. 28 at Newport Harbor
YC
A memorial service preceded by a ceremony at sea is scheduled for
longtime communications officer Grant Baldwin---the radio "Voice of
Transpac"--- Monday, Aug. 28, at Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
The clubhouse ceremony will start at 2 p.m.
COMMODORE
Al Garnier
(310) 600-0158
Bill Lee
(831) 476-9639
Rich Roberts
(310) 835-2526
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Disney (r.) will be
back at the helm of
Pyewacket in 2007.
Disney with crew members,
the Barn
Door and a record in 1999.
Check out official Transpac apparel
2005 photo gallery
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