Newport Sea Base receives new sailboat
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In late 2004 the Newport Sea Base, a youth-oriented maritime
educational program, took possession of a renowned world-class racing
sailboat, formerly known as Bright Star (2001-2004) and Zephyrus IV
(1997-2001). Renamed Scout Spirit, this 78-foot Maxi Turbo Sled is
the only racing boat of this kind owned and operated by a
youth-oriented sailing facility in Southern California..
In her first race as Scout Spirit in January 2005, she upheld the
tradition of success, taking line honors in Del Rey Yacht Club’s
Berger Series Race 1 Malibu and Return. On a churned-up Santa Monica
Bay with 4- to 6-foot swells and a steady 20-plus-knot Southwesterly
breeze, the 22-person crew consisting of advisors, juniors and crew
from Sea Scout Ship 711 sailed a strong race to finish first in the
23 nautical-mile race. The rainy day could not tarnish the smiles on
board as the boat climbed through and left the fleet behind.
Richard Breeden, former Chairman of the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission and member of the New York Yacht Club and Storm
Trysail Club, donated the Maxi Turbo Sled to the Newport Sea Base.
“One of our goals is to build a program that keeps youth on the
water in keelboats and helps to teach the teamwork and skills
necessary to bridge the gap from sailing or racing dinghies in high
school and college, to the sailing and racing in big boats the rest
of their lives,” said Ian Vickers, Sailing Chair at the Newport Sea
Base. “Scout Spirit provides an excellent platform for our more
experienced, older sailors to learn about and compete in offshore
racing.”
Under Breeden’s ownership, Bright Star competed in numerous
prestigious races including the Fastnet Race, the Newport-Bermuda
Race and the Marblehead-to-Halifax Ocean Race. Bright Star’s
successes included line honors in both the 2002 Around Long Island
Race and 2001 Marblehead-to-Halifax Ocean Race, and was first in
class at 2001’s Block Island Race Week and Around Block Island Race.
Bright Star was second in class at the America’s Cup 150th
Anniversary Regatta in Cowes, Isle of Wight.
Designed by the Reichel-Pugh Yacht team and built in 1997 by James
Betts Enterprises for Robert McNeil, a long-time competitive sailor
and businessman who makes his home in San Francisco, Zephyrus IV
(1997-2001) was a proven race-winner. Her race performance shattered
records in the 2000 MTM Cape Town to Rio de Janeiro international
ocean race and the Middle Sea Race in the Mediterranean, two of the
most competitive and challenging true offshore sailing competitions.
In the first major ocean race of the millennium, the 3,435 nautical
mile-long race from Cape Town to Rio de Janeiro, the Zephyrus IV did
not only take line honors but also completed a clean sweep by
correcting to first place in fleet on handicap--winning the coveted
South Atlantic Trophy. Upon completing the race, Zephyrus IV set a
new race record of 12 days, 16 hours, 49 minutes and 41 seconds:
nearly two days off the previous course record. Later that year,
Zephyrus IV smashed the Middle Sea Race course record by eight hours,
with a course time of 64 hours, 49 minutes and 57 seconds. The Middle
Sea Race starts and finishes in Malta, leaving the Island of Sicily
and the volcano Stromboli to Port. Her other significant races
include the 2000 Chicago-to-Mackinac Race, the 1999 Transpacific
Yacht Race and 1999’s Puerto Vallarta Race.
This one-of-a-kind vessel is truly unique not just for
youth-oriented sailing programs, but also for sailing in general. The
Scout Spirit gives young men and women from throughout Southern
California the opportunity to learn about nautical racing aboard a
world-class vessel.
“Competitive sailing requires training at the level where you will
compete,” said Newport Sea Base Director Catherine Malm.
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