Sunday, May 10, 2009

An Update from Dad

















Zac heading out of St George's Bay

What a whirlwind of a trip! The flights went smoothly apart from a few minor delays which had me running whilst they held the gate open to make my connecting flight to Grenada.

It was great to hook up with Mike Smith, whose expertize and help was much needed on this trip, and Jen who had been on an adventure herself as crew aboard a 37 ft Leopard power catamaran from Ascension Island in the South Atlantic to Florida. It was almost like a family reunion - much was talked about and Mike and I discussed the work at hand in detail.

When we arrived at the hotel room and I was able to check back with Marianne, I was met with the news that she hadn't heard from Zac all day. He would have been approximately 2 days out from St George's Bay. Knowing his conditions and the fatigue fatigue factor that he was operating under we were both very concerned. At the time, my mind went back to the earlier communication breakdown back in September when Zac was nearing the infamous Torres Strait.

Our arrival 2 days earlier allowed us to scope out St George's Bay and figure the most efficient way to complete the extensive work list. The first night in our hotel I was viciously attacked by a Tigertooth 2" cockroach. Still semi-comatose from my travels, I lunged into action as it ran across my head and then disappeared beneath the covers. Ripping the covers from the bed, it scurried over the edge and took cover beneath the bed. I lifted up the bed and threw it on one side to find my attacker scurrying for cover. One swift and well executed move brought an end to the Tigertooth Cockroach's life. Mike, who was sharing a room with me, thought I was playing one of my practical jokes. I thought I would keep the dead cockroach and present it to the reception in the morning. I wondered as I fell back to sleep whether my attacker was alone .

The following day there was still no word from Zac. We projected his course and went to the Grenadian Coast Guard. The reason for this was to try and make contact via on of their high frequency radios and also to put them on notice of the situation. The report was taken, and as Zac would be passing within 30 miles of Trinidad they felt confident that the Trinidad Coast Guard would be able to contact Zac. A follow up call revealed that no information had been exchanged and that all the efforts that we had made were for nothing. Later that day Zac managed to get a position out on his Spot transponder. What a great relief for us all. I would like to thank you all for your thoughts and prayers.























Ben with his Grenada souvenirs

We were very fortunate to have Guy Gittins, an executive from the Port Louis development, and Clyde from Camper Nicholson furnish us with a slip and a rather luxurious 2 bedroom bungalow called the Cinnamon Hotel. They also allowed us use of the launch to meet Zac and send him off along with the sea trials and photo shoot. This was faithfully skippered by Rodger who was also great company. Intrepid had traveled nearly 6,000 nautical miles since Cape Town and the work list was long and extensive. Without Mike's help, we would still be in Grenada. Michael from Sundowner, a 85ft Oyster, came alongside and rebuilt the winches and inspected the rigging. He found several things that needed attention. We also had Joseph and Cassey who I renamed Mary which she seemed to like. They were engaged to be married. They completely emptied everything inside Zac's boat that had been swamped earlier in the week by a rogue wave. Things were sorted, washed, dried and put back.



















Zac with Joseph and 'Mary'

Zac was eager to get back on the ocean realizing that hurricane season starts around the the 1st of June. Not wanting to take chances, he would like to get back sooner rather than later. Zac is in excellent spirits and making good progress on his way to Panama.

If you would like to mail your letters to Zac's mail box, we will be certain that they get to Panama.

Zac Sunderland
1710 N. Moorpark Rd #212
Thousand Oaks, CA 91360




















Zac, Christian and I 'going local'


The Work List with thanks to Mike Smith

Upon reaching the harbor of St. George in Grenada, Intrepid had traveled more than 3800NM from St. Helena over a period of 5 weeks. Last full service was completed in South Africa, so many repairs were needed in a very short period of time. Over a marathon pit-stop of 6 days, the following tasks were identified and performed by the Formula-I (for Intrepid!) team while Zac was occupied by interviews and tele-conferences via Skype:

-The Solar regulator/charger had failed since South Africa. The original unit that had failed before Hawaii was serviced and successfully replaced into service.

-The A/C inverter failed rather dramatically (see A/C distribution panel below) and was replaced with a new identical unit, which was fortunately located on the island after a search of several Marine Chandleries.

-The A/C distribution panel was killed by rogue wave overwash. The resulting short-circuit left the inverter with a flaming circuit board and power failure. The entire electrical panel was treated with cleaner and sprayed with anti-corrosion spray.

-One DC outlet was repaired and restored to service at the aft chart desk.

-A broken signal line in the radar cable had caused radar failure. The entire cable was cut and re-spliced, taped, and sealed.

-The permanent-mount Iridium satellite phone antenna cable was found to be corroded and broken. While repairs could not be completed on-site, a new cable ansd adapter will be shipped from the US to meet Intrepid in Panama. Meanwhile, the hand-held antenna will be used.

-A new, more powerful Raymarine SmartPilot X-5 tiller system autopilot, kindly provided by the American Sailing Association, was installed and calibrated.

-The Monitor Windvane pendulum mechanism was slightly damaged and had missing nylon bushings. A repair/rebuild kit with new bearings and bushings and new pendulum were installed. The rig was readjusted to prevent a misalignment problem that had been a constant difficulty. All-new control lines were installed, a couple of worn bolts were replaced, and the entire rig was tightened.

-The port-side cockpit scupper drain was relieved (unclogged).

-A fraying lower starboard shroud was replaced.

-A Broken lower starboard shroud-plate was removed for welding.

-The upper starboard spreader had a stripped bolt that was removed and replaced. The fastener was re-tapped.

-A bolt was installed in the mainsail tack to restore smoother sail trim.

-Port side Lazy Jacks were repaired by replacing a line and re-routing other lines.

-Significant mainsail repairs were needed and were performed by a sailmaker

-Genoa tears were taped with sailtape.

-A diver cleaned marine growth from Intrepid's bottom hull.

-The Head was malfunctioning, and repairs included replacement of a non-return valve and disassembly/cleaning of the hand pump.

-All gear, cushions, etc., were stripped for cleaning and resorting. The entire cabin and cockpit were emptied and washed. Cushions and covers were sent to a laundry service along with all Zac's clothing.

-The engine oil pressure sender was diagnosed as defective, plus there was some water found in the fuel. A complete engine work-up included all new internal and external fuel filters, new water pump impeller, and cooling line check. The engine was cleaned and coated with anti-corrosion spray.

-A larger, higher-output propeller was installed in anticipation of the Panama Canal crossing.

-All four main winches were completely disassembled, cleaned, and lubricated, thanks to fellow yachter Michel Picot of "Sundowner".

-Some video cameras were dead due to salt water corrosion and were substituted and brought back for repairs

-Intrepid (and Zac!) starred in a total of 8 hours of photo session work. A well-known professional photographer was engaged by a respected sports magazine to produce a variety of portrait and functional shots for a June publication. More to come...

-Intrepid was completely reprovisioned, refueled, re-watered.

-Prior to departure, Intrepid was tested for a couple of hours in a sea trial, including compass swing and calibration, plus a "learn" run to allow the new autopilot to self-calibrate steering sensitivity. Several rigging tune-ups were made, and all systems were declared "GO".

27 Comments:

Blogger Willyboy said...

Lawrence, good update, and, as usual, great pics - love the dreads; they're a natural look on Zac! I'm sure a certain would-be barber will be cringing....

Sorry to hear about the cockroach. In Arizona we had swarms of its cousins. They'd actually fly and dive bomb you. Cats loved them....

Sounds like everything went smoothly and, from the photos, looks like a least some fun was had. I'm sure Zac is happy to be on his way again.

Cheers to you and Zac and all...

willy
milford, ohio

May 10, 2009 at 4:52 PM  
Blogger Ehvee said...

Clearly these repairs are normal wear and tear, and some unfortunate chances. What I don't get is how something like the Vendee race where people do what Zac is doing accomplish the entire run without any assistance for repairs.

I'm so looking forward to the fascinating panama experience....

May 10, 2009 at 5:01 PM  
Blogger Steve said...

WOW! What a fantastic load of work you all accomplished. If this doesn't show how important it is to have a huge hard-working team...nothing does. God bless all who have been doing so much to help make this adventure happen. Steve

May 10, 2009 at 5:30 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Awesome update! Thanks Laurence, worth the wait :-) pictures are outstanding!


Good question about the Vendee. I'm thinking just looking at the boat site, for example one for sale at nearly 2 million US dollars, better not break down :-))) versus at 20,000 dollars a 36 foot Islander. Though don't the rules for Vendee allow for stoppage but unassisted repairs?


http://www.imoca.org/forsale.asp

May 10, 2009 at 5:44 PM  
Blogger Marilyn said...

It's definitely time to hit the "donate" button and help with the parts and repairs that were completed in Grenada! It looks like a similar list of repairs that took months before Zac embarked, and this only took a few days! Well done everyone!

Marilyn in Woodland Hills

May 10, 2009 at 5:55 PM  
Anonymous Elizabeth / USA said...

Goodness gracious, etc. How on earth did you ever manage to do all THAT in six days? My prayers will be that the engine behaves itself for the panama crossing...

May 10, 2009 at 5:57 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow! You you certainly did a lot of work in a short period of time. Zac is pretty lucky to have your help; you not only preformed the necessary repairs, but you cleaned the boat and did Zac's laundry!! Yep, he's pretty darn lucky.

May 10, 2009 at 6:47 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lawrence, I wish I could have had you for a Dad. All of you are living the lifestyle that I would like. I really respect you on your confidence in Zac. Marc

May 10, 2009 at 6:58 PM  
Blogger John Gezelius said...

Lawrence, what you've done with and for Zac is nothing short of phenomenal. I couldn't get my father to go out on a Boy Scout trip! I was curious about the radar and thought it might have been a power problem - but the cable is MUCH EASIER to fix. A week to ten days to Panama, three days thru the canal; and then to the Pacific?

May 10, 2009 at 7:09 PM  
Blogger Ruth said...

Wow! I'm exhausted, just READING about all the work, repairs, interviewing and test sailing that was accomplished by Team ZAC! Congratulations to all of you for getting it done in record time. I still love to hear about the amazing, selfless generosity of people along the way of this amazing adventure. THANK YOU for sharing it us, Ruth.

May 10, 2009 at 7:18 PM  
Anonymous Grant Fjermedal said...

Impressive list of great tasks diagnosted and performed.

My only question was about using sail tape on the genoa -- rather than cloth and stitching. Maybe sail tape has gotten better over the years, but I always found it not worth much.

Wishing All the Best,

Onward to Panama!

-- Grant Fjermedal, Seattle

May 10, 2009 at 7:18 PM  
Blogger MindWalker said...

Laurence - you and the Formula-I team are amazing. Your long list of repairs and adjustments seems impossible in such a short layover.

Hoorah! for the real photos you provided with this update - dreds and all!

Zac: What a great Dad and Mum you have. But then, you know that.

May 10, 2009 at 7:51 PM  
Blogger KenGreig said...

Great report and great pictures! I think that these are the first larger than "full screen" pictures that we've seen. Hope there are more like those.

Looking forward to the Panama crossing.

May 10, 2009 at 8:19 PM  
Anonymous Bill Jamison said...

That is one impressive repair list to get done in only 6 days! It sounds like Zac and Intrepid are both in fine shape for the last two legs of his journey.

May 10, 2009 at 8:39 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Grat job and a wall don to all that helped out. sail on thanks for the update

Bilgerat101

PS is there a costom stop in San Deago prior to home port?

May 10, 2009 at 9:14 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Fantastic....love it!
Well done ALL.
Wonderful to hear that Zac is ok and pushing on to Panama.
I have been wondering/worrying!
Hooray for SPOT once again.

@Marc 6:58pm
Perhaps one day you can be that dad who allows his child to follow his dreams...that would be awesome.

UK friend

May 11, 2009 at 2:03 AM  
Blogger Rory Gogan Singapore said...

Good to know that in between the photo shoots and the "Handy Mandy" stuff the boys had time to suck back a good few rum drinks! It's always good to have a few "sharpeners" to "take the edge off"
Nice touch.

May 11, 2009 at 3:02 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yep, making repairs WAS a major feat, of which we're all proud! It resulted from waking each day at 4AM and in bed at 10:30PM (daylight is roughly 5:30AM to 6:30PM). I'll be hobbling around for the next two weeks from the sore bones and bruises I suffered, and I have to pry my fingers open in the morning! But it was great fun, and I so much enjoy Laurence's company. We make a good team, and Laurence was constantly running to find parts and services and support to make it all happen. Cassey and Joseph, while not experienced with boats, were very clever and eager, and if we had not met Michel, we'd have been working very much behind.

So even very expensive boats break, just as much as less expensive ones: between work on Intrepid, I managed to diagnose and repair a shore power failure on Sundowner, a $7.5M yacht, as a favor to Michel for his invaluable efforts!

Now I'm into retirement from "ZWA"!

Mike Smith

May 11, 2009 at 4:35 AM  
Blogger Douglas Pistone said...

Like always Laurence had tons of work to do and like always he got that large list taken care of. Great post Laurence.

It's amazing how so many people have helped out and Zac is sailing again. Keep us posted and we'll be looking for another update. Loved the picture of Ben!!!

Sail On,
Douglas Pistone
MDR, California

May 11, 2009 at 6:51 AM  
Anonymous Melanie said...

Boy is that Ben growing up fast! He's looking more like a little boy now!

Talk about an "In and Out" run down to Grenada. The Intrepid crew did an amazing job diagnosing and repairing problems. Great work.

Love the pics, especially the one's with your "dreads."

Panama, here he comes!

May 11, 2009 at 9:43 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Laurence-
Great update. The list of chores comleted was mind-bongling. Here's to a well equipped "Intrepid" and a safe voyage home for young Zac.
Kodiak Mike

May 11, 2009 at 10:43 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Not that I know what much of it means, but **WOW**, what a lot of work!!! But the real reason I wanted to comment is that the photo of Ben is so cute. :^)

May 11, 2009 at 12:06 PM  
Anonymous Ginger said...

WOW! I got exhausted just reading about all the repairs. Glad it all worked out and Zac was able to get some R&R, before sailing out to sea.

BTW, Zac, you look great in the photos. Keep safe and Godspeed.

Dick & Gin
Upland

May 11, 2009 at 12:48 PM  
Anonymous craig schreiber said...

Thanks for that detailed update on the vital and not so vital repairs to Intrepid. Where you guys get the energy from is beyond me. It sounds like Intrepid is Top Notch ready to make the run back to MDR. Speaking of MDR do you have any idea of a possible ETA for MDR and the first Panama lock. At his present rate what do you think. I will not be able to attend the return gala at MDR but I have a daughter stationed at Seal Beach. She is a traveling nurse and will be there only until June 13th at the latest. If she can arrange to be there for his return she will be bearing gifts from the students of St. Gregory School.
Tell Zac to get a move on and get back home.

Craig Schreiber
St. Gregory Elementary SChool
Houma, LA

May 11, 2009 at 2:30 PM  
Blogger Daveh said...

That is an AMAZING list in a very short period of time, wow...

Amazing that the airlines held the gate for you, can I borrow your passport for my next trip???? lol

Daveh & Skipper
dave@davehickson.com

May 11, 2009 at 2:48 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Wow, great job guys. Lawrence, youv'e got a great talent for getting everything done in a short time. Wondering when Zac palns on getting to Panama?

May 11, 2009 at 5:27 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Laurence
It's hard to believe that you got such a long list completed in a such a short time. What focus and determination

Were the photos celebratory after the tasks were all completed? You guys look really relaxed in those photos, does it have to do with the tropical cocktails, looks like R-P to me.
Ben is way too cute for words.

Congrats to the team. on a job well done!!!
Zac, fair winds on the next leg.

Regards
Sherna

May 12, 2009 at 5:42 PM  

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