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Transpacific YC
Presents the Tahiti Race "Point Fermin to Pointe Venus" 33° 41'N, 118° 17'W to 17° 30'S, 149° 30'W |
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Transpacific Yacht Club
presents
the
13th
Tahiti Race
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LOS ANGELES---The
Transpacific Yacht Club is convinced that many of those
2,000-plus competitors who sailed more than 200 boats in the
last three Transpacs are ready now for the next great ocean
adventure: across the equator to the South Pacific.
With its 44th biennial race to Hawaii successfully completed
last month, the TPYC announced that for 2008 it will revive the
race to Tahiti that it ran intermittently a dozen times from
1925 to 1994---this time, it envisions, not only with boats at
the leading edge of evolution in the sport but a new generation
of sailors sailing smaller boats with their families and
friends. For many, that's more than enough reason to race to
After the 1964 race Dale Budlong wrote in Sea Magazine: "There
is a saying at the Tahiti Yacht Club that there is no one winner
in a race to
All qualified ocean racers that meet ISAF
Category 1 and the minimum size requirement are eligible. Those
interested may contact entries chairman Mike Nash:
mikenash@roadrunner.com.
Dale Nordin, race co-chairman and Transpac vice commodore, said,
"This will be the first chance for many younger sailors to race
to the South Pacific on their own boats. At the same time, many
of the high-tech boats launched since 1994 haven't had the
opportunity to do this race."
At 3,571 nautical miles,
Already declaring to compete are Doug Baker's Magnitude 80, an
Andrews 80, and race co-chairman
But even in the Tahiti race's early days,
smaller boats upstaged much larger frontrunning rivals by
correcting
out on handicap time, as Walter Johnson's 38-foot Mistress did
against Spencer Murfey Jr.'s 55-foot Silhouette in 1953. George
Kiskaddon's 33-foot Spirit, the smallest boat ever to sail the
In other years ocean racing icons such as Novia del Mar, Morning
Star and
One notable exception was Jake Wood, a longtime West Coast
racing icon who died last spring. Racing to
The fastest elapsed time to Tahiti of 14 days 21 hours 15
minutes 26 seconds---an average speed of about 10 knots, modest
by current standards---was achieved by Fred Kirschner's
Tahiti
is the largest
island
of
French
Polynesia,
located in the
archipelago
of the Society Islands in the southern
Pacific Ocean
at
.
The island has a population of 169,677 inhabitants, according to
the
2002
census. The capital is
Papeete
on the northwest coast.
Captain James Cook visited the island in 1774, followed by other
European ships with increasing frequency. The best known of
those was HMS Bounty, whose crew mutinied shortly after leaving
Peggy Slater, a noted Southern California
sailor who was skipper for several Transpacs, said after sailing
to Tahiti in 1961: "Since the days when Captain Bligh's men fell
for the wiles of the laughing maidens who swam to the ship and
perched on the rails, every sailor has had his ultimate course
plotted: Tahiti."
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| Tahiti Race History | ||
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1925
(4 boats)
3,687
nautical miles
First
to finish: Mariner (107'
LOA), L.A. Morris (elapsed time: 20 days 11 hours 45
minutes 00 seconds) |
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1953
(3 boats)
2,381nm
First
to finish: Silhouette
(55' LOA), Spencer Murfey Jr. (ET 21:01:16:00, corrected time
20:23:51:29)
Overall: Mistress (38'
LOA), Walter Johnson (ET 23:01:32:00, CT 20:22:22:54) |
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1956
(5 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish: Novia
(ET
21:01:01:08, CT 21:01:01:08)
Overall: Jada (56' LOA),
William Sturgis (ET 21:03:47:04, CT 19:01:34:56) |
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1961
(7 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish: Morning Star (98'
LOA), Fuller Calloway (ET 18:18:23:32, CT 18:17:43:14 )
Overall: Athene (62'
LOA), James Wilhite (ET 19:13:30:02, CT 17:03:09:34)
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1964
(7 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish:
Overall: Rascal (50'
LOA), William Wilson (ET 20:13:50:05, CT 16:16:54:35)
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1968
(6 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish and overall:
Aranji (48' LOA) , Henry H. Wheeler (ET 20:12:27:24, CT
13:13:00:24) |
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1970
(14 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish: Blackfin (75'
LOA), Ken DeMeuse (ET 18:12:16:43, CT 17:21:54:19)
Overall: Widgeon (54' LOA), Norm Bacon (ET 19:11:04:20, CT 15:18:52:42) |
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1972
(7 boats)
3,571
nm
First
to finish: Graybeard
(73' LOA), L.H. Killam (ET 20:00:11:28, CT 20:00:11:28)
Overall: Pen Duick III (57' LOA), Eric Tabarly (ET 21:11:25:35, CT 18:17:19:03) |
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1974 (
boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish and overall:
Sorcery (62' LOA), Jacob (Jake) Wood (ET 18:11:14:32, CT
18:11:14:32) |
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1976
(4 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish: Natoma (58'
LOA), Don Dalziel (ET 21:03:37:37, CT 21:03:37:37)
Overall: Bravura (48'
LOA), Irving Loube (ET 21:08:36:10, CT 20:15:56:27)
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1978
(4 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish and overall:
Sorcery (62' LOA), Jacob (Jake) Wood (ET 18:22:53:00, CT
18:22:53:00) |
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1994
(2 boats)
3,571nm
First
to finish:
*--Elapsed time
record.
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Interim Website for the Tahiti Race provided by Transpacific YC ~~ September 26, 2007 |
| www.Transpacificyc.org |