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Vol. 12, Issue 208 - Friday, July 27, 2007
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Transpac yacht
Morning Light arrives safely
The yacht's voyage during the Transpac
was being filmed
By Gary C.W. Chun /gchun@starbulletin.com
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The yacht Morning Light lived up to its name yesterday, arriving with the
dawn as it finished the 44th Transpacific Yacht Race off Diamond Head.
Finishing at the official time of 6:09:13 a.m., the boat with a crew of 11,
ages 18 to 23, celebrated the end of a long journey of more than 2,500
miles from Los Angeles to Honolulu. The young crew -- including
Punahou student Mark Towill -- is the subject of a documentary
produced by Roy Disney and Leslie DeMeuse of Pacific High
Productions, in association with Disney Studios.
Adding to the drama was a neck-and-neck race earlier this week
between Morning Light and Samba Pa Ti, the same type of boat -- a
Transpac 52 -- in the same competition class. After the first few days of
the race, it is unusual for boats to come within sight of one another.
Near the end of the course, Samba Pa Ti veered south and picked up
some favorable winds to beat Morning Light by more than four hours.
Pacific High publicist Michiko Wada said "Morning Light," the
documentary, is scheduled for national release in the summer, instead
of spring 2008 as had originally been planned.
With cameras on board throughout the race, the yacht was also greeted
by filmmakers on "three chase boats and two helicopters," Wada said.
"It was pretty crowded out on the water. Besides spectators, other
family members of the crew went out on the press boat."
It was an exhausting but rewarding race.
"They had kind of run out of food near the end," Wada said. "They were
rationing themselves to two freeze-dried meals a day, plus a protein
bar."
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