S.J. CAHN -- Editor’s Notebook
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This might come as a shock, but there’s no rush in the Daily Pilot
newsroom to cover today’s Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race
live and firsthand.
Sure, it sounds like an adventurous assignment: 15 or so hours
skimming the surface of the seas aboard a high-speed yacht, taking down
tales of incredible adventures and collecting a few new ones along the
way.
The story would almost write itself.
“At midnight, everything stopped. The wind. The boat. The party.
“For 15 minutes of eerie calm, we didn’t know if we’d make it any
farther (and a few who’d had a couple too many Bloody Marys didn’t care).
Then, suddenly, there was a snap. Then quiet. And another crack, followed
by a staccato as the sails grabbed onto the wind, and we were off.”
This would be fun, in its purest and simplest form, right?
I’m happy to report that my staff seems to know better.
With those winds -- which every sailor in today’s race is praying will
stay strong and steady -- come waves. And with waves comes the rolling of
those magnificent, sleek, built-for-nothing-but-pure-speed boats.
And we all know what comes with that. Heck, last year we had a
photographer barely make it off the boat that toured the harbor during
the start.
They’re certainly getting no argument from me. Oh no. I know all to
well what a little rough water can do.
It was the summer of 1985, and my family was in England on holiday.
More precisely, we were on the shores of England getting ready for a boat
trip across the Irish Sea to visit my mom’s homeland.
It was supposed to be fun. Better than the quick up-and-down flight
from Heathrow to Dublin.
Yeah, my folks still tell me that trip was supposed to be fun.
It wasn’t. Simply put, and I mean this in all sincerity, it was the
worst few hours any human has ever spent on the face of the earth.
A freak summer storm, the worst in memory, kicked up as we prepared to
leave. The winds didn’t howl, they bellowed. The rain didn’t fall, it
shot from the sky in wet, laser streams.
I counted -- in my delirious, brain-crunching skull -- the amount of
time that ferry boat dropped down the backside of those unnatural swells
as we slowly, oh so slowly, plowed our way to Ireland.
One 1,000. Two 1,000. Three 1,000. Four 1,000. Five 1,000. Six 1,000.
Seven 1,000. Eight 1,000.
And then we bottomed out, and up we went, and down we went.
Literally ad nauseum.
I don’t know how many people were on that boat -- hundreds, certainly
-- but I only saw a handful who at some point didn’t get sick. One of
them was my aunt, who has either a cast-iron stomach or the will power of
a Zen master.
She read. Right in the hull of that ship. As I sat on the deck,
drenched, sloppy, trying to keep everything inside me.
I got sick one last time after we were on land (not dry land with that
storm still in full force).
So, believe me, I am not about to push any of my reporters onto the
high seas. And as much as I’d like to write that dramatic race story, I’m
not going either.
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