Abbenturer.5` Ctub OeW - The Adventurers` Club of Los Angeles
Transcription
Abbenturer.5` Ctub OeW - The Adventurers` Club of Los Angeles
Abbenturer.5' Ctub OeW.5 Volume 50 October 2006 Number 9 The ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Volume 50 October 2006 Number 9 Row, Row, Row Your Boat – 3,000 Miles Alone How Roz Savage – a slip of a girl at 5’ 4” and 110 lbs – rowed by herself without support of any kind across 3,000 miles of daunting Atlantic Ocean. This story is in her own words, from her journey diary/journal which she uploaded daily to her website via satellite phone, until the phone broke, and she was on her own like few before her. These paragraphs are edited for brevity. Read Roz’s entire journal online at www.rozsavage.com. Roz will attempt to row solo across the Pacific in 2007.You can follow this effort on her website. The Logistics 00,000 calories - 102 kg of food, including 300 snack bars, 100 sachets of porridge, 7 kg dried milk, 140 sachets of hot chocolate. In addition to the food, there are 940 wet wipes, 6 tubes of sun cream, 4 tubes of nappy salve, an enormous first aid kit, a 20 kg liferaft, axes, cooking fuel, toolkits, buckets, ropes, para-anchor, lifejacket, drogues, and assorted bits of technology. Put aside the expedition-specific items for the moment, and just consider what it takes to keep body and soul together for 3 months, without the option of popping out to the shops. It’s staggering. I’ll be taking close to twice my bodyweight in food with me. The Boat – Editor’s notes 5 Roz’s 23 ft. long 6 ft. wide boat started out as a carbon fiber shell, and then evolved into the Sedna Solo, designed and fitted to precisely meet Roz’s specifications. Roz gives full credit to the boat builders at the Dolphin Quay Boatyard in Emsworth, Hampshire. “I couldn’t have done it without them,” she says. The steering system was modeled on the tried and tested system Oliver Hicks used in the Petrel/Miss Olive for his North Atlantic crossing in 2005. This was based on a simple heel steering system that pivots up and down rather than the usual side to side. Specifically, pushing down with the toes steers to port and down with the heel turns the boat starboard. The rudder was built and fitted by Rowsell and Adkin in Exmouth. Roz chose carbon fiber Croker Oars with handles and spoons of a sculling blade but the shaft of a sweep oar. Roz chose a WaterRower seat that she tried and tested extensively during her training on their rowing simulator. She took a spare, and had to replace the first seat at about the one-third mark because the wheels corroded. The spare was on the verge of giving out when Roz made it to Antigua. Roz used a Simrad Chartplotter for positioning, and a PDA linked to a satellite phone so that she could post daily dispatches to her website. She also carried an Argos transporter that dynamically updated her position on the website. 30 Nov 2005 – 27 52N,17 13W celebrated my first sunset on board Sedna by being seasick. It was a bit of a low point. The wind had temporarily turned against me, the early start to my day was catching up with me, and I momentarily felt very small and very alone. I’m intending to write more but just had to nip outside to be sick again. Will upload I (Row, Row continued on page 2) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 1 October 2006 Row, Row, Row Your Boat (Row, Row continued from page 1) this now so you know I’m still alive, and will try to write more later when I will (hopefully) feel better. covered the joy of talking books (currently listening to Douglas Adams’ book recorded for me by the Kiwi Sun Latte crew - thanks, guys) but it’s not the same as a proper natter. Day 1: 01 Dec 2005 – 27 34N,17 39W y Atlantic Rowing Race has got off to an interesting start. One hour in I thought it was going to be the shortest-lived ocean rowing bid ever, when I couldn’t get my watermaker working. I’d changed the filter just before the race, and had to wait until the race had started and I was out of the harbor and into cleaner waters before I could run it. It whirred loudly for 5 seconds and then stopped. Argh. My worst nightmare DIY horror - was it coming true? I got on the VHF to ask for advice, and George from the Atlantic 4 crew came to the rescue. The pump needed priming, that was all. It wasn’t pleasant trying to sort it out, bum in the air and head down a hatch when I was feeling queasy, but 10 minutes later and we were in watermaking business again. A small but notable personal victory. M Day 5: 05 Dec 2005 – 27 13N,19 53W ake water while the sun shines...and shines directly onto my solar panels which unfortunately seems to be only for a couple of hours in the morning. Note to self to have panels on both cabins next time around. Electricity continues to be an issue on board the good ship Sedna. The watermaker is hugely power-hungry compared with anything else, and runs my two 52Ah batteries flat in no time. I can manage to make enough water, but have to be very frugal with my electricity. To save electricity I’ve been steering by the stars at night, and I keep thinking of Charlie’s phrase and smiling. Before you get all impressed by notions of me standing on deck with sextant in hand, let me admit it’s been nothing that sophisticated. I check my bearings, see which stars line up with the comm masts on Sedna’s ‘roll bar’ and then make sure I keep them in line, adjusting every hour to account for the movement of the stars. Gives me a great sense of elemental satisfaction. M Day 4: 04 Dec 2005 – 27 25N,19 22W t had been two and a half days since I last had a conversation. The last proper- I Day 12: 12 Dec 2005 – 26 06N, 22 23W ne oar down, three to go. I thought I had emerged unscathed from the big blow of Saturday night, but I was wrong. This morning I realized that one of my oars is broken. Not broken in two that I would have noticed - but splintered along O ish conversation was a 3 minute chat with Lin on the Woodvale yacht Aurora when they swung by on Friday morning. I’ve dis- (Row, Row continued on page 5) October 2006 2 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Flumin’ da Ditch FLUMIN’ DA DITCH Marv Garrett # 1083 n the extreme northwest corner of the Big Island of Hawaii along Route 270 lies the small soaking-wet town of Hawi, soaking-wet because it receives over 350 inches of rain per year. O yons, and through tropical rain forests. They were paid $1 per day plus room and board. On their time off they could make an extra 5 cents per building block they cut out of stone. Japan, at that time, was in a war with About one hundred years ago the sugar company, down the coast, where water is much less available, decided it needed more water. Three hundred imported Japanese laborers worked for eighteen months to build an irrigation supply flume from the waterlogged northwest corner near Hawi, through mountains, over fields, across deep can- Russia. When the construction was over, all the money they had earned was sent back to the Emperor to help in the war effort. The sugar industry on the Big Island has long been shut down, but the flume still exists. A few years ago someone decided the kids on the island shouldn’t have all the fun running the flume on floats, so it (Flumin’ continued on page 4) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 3 October 2006 Flumin’ da Ditch (Flumin’ continued from page 3) point we were 160 feet below the surface. It is very wet all the time, but the air is warm, so being wet is no problem. The current swept us along, so all we needed to do was fend the kayaks off the rocks and walls. A worry most of us have in the tropics is biting insects, but on this water borne trip this was not a problem. I guess the nearly constant rain kept them away. For me the trip’s highlight was enjoying the unspoiled virgin rain forests. Whether going high above them or floating through the dense jungle, I had the feeling of how lucky I was, as very few explorers even know about this adventure. On your next time in Hawaii, swing by Hawi and take this trip. You will find was opened to a tiny local company, Kohala Kayak, as a tourist attraction. I’ve been going to the Hawaiian Islands almost every year since my first visit in 1944. On my trip in April of 2006, I was excited to find something I had not tried when I found out I could “flume da ditch.” We started our trip in a station wagon over a very, very poor, At the “trailhead” chuckhole filled road up the mountain. Eventually (it seemed like forever) we reached the launch point, and transferred to specially built kayaks with extra heavy side walls to take the bouncing off rock sides of the ditch and tunnels. Each of us received a flashlight. Much of the trip is underground. At one The end-run it different and exciting, and you will get spectacular photos (waterproof camera recommended). Tunnel entrance October 2006 4 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Row, Row, Row Your Boat (Row, Row continued from page 2) its length in four distinct cracks, like a plastic drinking straw that has been trodden on. Not a big problem - I’ve got 2 spares, although obviously by the time I’m down to my last oar I’ll be having problems going in anything other than circles. to replace the pump if I could post it to them, but clearly this wasn’t much help in the circumstances. Day 32: 01 Jan 2006 – (unavailable) A re oars supposed to do this? I think not! Happy New Year! Day 13: 13 Dec 2005 – 25 56N, 22 40W N ote from First Mate Monty: Day 49: 18 Jan 2006 – (unavailable) pdated Casualty List. 4th and final oar now damaged - so I have: Magic bendy oar - irreparable Oar with no spoon - irreparable Oar with spoon almost broken off - Sikaflexed and splinted Oar with shaft broken close to gate (rowlock) - splinted. Hmmmph! U Day 16: 16 Dec 2005 – 25 44N, 24 23W wo oars down, two to go. Oops, broke another oar. It was about 3 am last night, and I was doing battle with some unpleasantly large waves. One particularly malevolent wave broadsided me and my down-wave oar got caught under the boat. There was an ominous cracking sound. In daylight the damage doesn’t look too bad. The oar is still usable. But I’d better be more careful in future because I can’t afford for this attrition rate to continue. T Day 52: 21 Jan 2006 – (unavailable) was rowing along this afternoon, admiring the cloud formations and trying not to think about my aching shoulders, when my right oar suddenly started to feel...different. I looked out, and my heart sank when I saw the spoon flapping uselessly at the end of the loom. The Sikaflex had given way. So with a sigh of oh-no-here-we-go-again resignation I pulled the oar in for another round of running repairs. I Day 20: 20 Dec 2005 – 25 52N, 24 14W hristmas dinner, which was never going to be very exciting anyway, is now going to be not very exciting and...cold. For today my camping stove died. Bugger. When things started to go awry I called on my guru for all matters concerning outdoor gear - my sister. She was able to put me onto a colleague who gave me the UK supplier’s number. They very kindly offered C Day 60: 29 Jan 2006 – (unavailable) spent 4 hours busily bottom-scrubbing (getting rid of barnacles), replacing washers on rowing pins, padding my rowing seat, sponging out bilges, and most importantly, I (Row, Row continued on page 6) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 5 October 2006 Row, Row, Row Your Boat (Row, Row continued from page 5) strengthening my oars. The last round of oar repairs had been done in 20 foot waves and 25 knot winds so it was high time to improve on them. Magic Bendy Oar was today relieved of guardrail duties - it was so broken it was useless even as a guardrail - and hacksawed into pieces to make splints for Splintered Loom Oar. The timely discovery of a whole unused reel of duct tape, combined with these splints, plus the boathook, have given me much more confidence in my starboard side oar. Given that it’s mostly blind faith and duct tape holding it together, this matters. Day 76: 14 Feb 2006 – (unavailable) I t has to be the ultimate Valentine’s greeting - HMS Southampton dropped by today en route from Grenada to say hello and wish me a happy Valentine’s Day. They would have happily brought chocolates (and a bacon butty) as well, but unfortunately race rules forbid. Day 80: 18 Feb 2006 – (unavailable) Day 71: 09 Feb 2006 – (unavailable) R oz’s satphone dispatches have stopped. Roz’s mother, Rita writes: All day I have waited for the telephone to ring but Roz has not phoned. I have checked her progress on the Atlantic Rowing Race website times without number. Sedna Solo is moving, though the mileage on Friday and today have not been as good as the previous few days. One good thing is that although the wind is ENE and would be moving the boat south west, Sedna has moved a bit more to the north, towards latitude 17 where she needs to be to reach Antigua. This can only mean that Roz is working hard at clawing back the degrees south where the wind and waves had taken her. A good sign in more ways than one. I do hope and pray that whatever the problem is with the communications that it can be overcome. T hree out of four pair of rowing gloves are now in tatters. Caroline suggested cutting off the fingers to relieve pressure on nails - not strictly necessary. It’s time to up the ante. I want to be in English Harbor by the end of February. It’s a lot to ask, and will require a significant increase in my daily mileage. I’ve learned a lot about myself already on this row. Now it’s time to find out something new - am I tough enough to do what it takes to make landfall by the end of the month? Day 89: 27 Feb 2006 – (366 miles from Antigua) R ita Savage: Roz, when I last spoke to her ten days ago, was very eager to reach the end of the voyage in less than 100 days. The question now is whether she will or not. Looking at her mileage for days 79 to 89, she was averaging 38.4 per day. She has another 366 miles to cover in the remaining days from 90 to 99. That gives an average of 36.6 miles needed per day. She can do it! I was left with the dilemma when her satphone no longer worked: was she needing me to alert the race Day 72: 10 Feb 2006 – (999 miles from Antigua) L ess than 1,000 miles to Antigua. This is a major milestone for me - getting down into triple figures. The end may not be exactly in sight, but it soon will be. October 2006 6 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Row, Row, Row Your Boat organizers and rescue services, or was she hoping and praying that I would not act too hastily and call them out unnecessarily. I just had to know whether she was actually on the boat and that it was not moving with the wind and the waves. Day 101: 10 Mar 2006 – 16.56N, 60.42W R R ita Savage: Realistically we think that Roz will arrive Sunday morning. If she pushes on too fast and gets here Saturday night there will be some disappointed people! The children from the Island Academy have been practising a song specially for her, with very appropriate words. They are prepared to wear their school uniforms on Sunday if necessary, to be ready to greet her. Day 95: 06 Mar 2006 – (unavailable) 14 Mar 2006 – ANTIGUA! ello from one very happy ocean rower, now chilling out in Antigua, enjoying good food and warm hospitality...and wishing the ground would stop swaying. Day 91: 01 Mar 2006 – (296 miles from Antigua) ita Savage: When I saw that Roz had done 44 miles yesterday, and moved up to 1655.74 degrees of latitude it all seemed so exciting and a real beginning to count down. Combined with my own preparations to fly there, confirmation of accommodation and other vital details, I can hardly wait! A few more days to go yet. H R ita Savage: I was shocked when I did eventually get onto the Internet about midday today - about 4 pm your time in Britain - to see the Roz had only done 4 miles yesterday. I have met Lucy from Woodvale, and also phoned her when I saw the figure 4. She has been very reassuring, and it is a fault with the weather. The wind was blowing in quite the wrong direction and Roz looped a loop. After that she probably had to put out Sid the para-anchor and just sit it out. Today the wind has changed. I can hear it whistling around the house now, and with a bit of luck will be pushing Roz on quite nicely. It may prove to be a disappointment for the Island Academy if she does not arrive on a school day. We were really hoping that she would make it on Thursday. It may yet happen if that wind cooperates. I can see the school from the house where I am staying; and with the help of a lovely friend I have been to the harbor and seen where the boats come in. Yesterday I got up at 4 am to start rowing. With the finish line finally in sight I rowed nonstop for 10 hours to make sure I got to Antigua before sunset. If only I’d realized earlier I was capable of such rowing feats I might have got here weeks ago! I had no idea what kind of a welcome awaited me. I’d envisaged pulling in at a jetty, giving my mum a hug, and then pottering off for a bite to eat. I certainly hadn’t expected a flotilla of boats coming out to greet me, hundreds of people standing on the quayside, a choir of schoolchildren singing to me, and presentations from a series of local dignitaries. After months of solitude and silence it was pretty overwhelming. And really, really good. Day 99: 08 Mar 2006 – 17 25N, 59 45W R ita Savage: Roz has crossed the Atlantic in fewer than 100 days! She has passed the magic longitude of 59 degrees 37 minutes. 135 miles to go to reach the Woodvale Race Finishing Line at Cape Shirley, Antigua. There was a heartstopping moment this morning when those of us who check the race website found Sedna Solo totally missing. Whatever the cause she is now safely reinstalled, along with the news that she has done 21 miles so far today. ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 7 October 2006 What’s Happening... What’s Happening... The Wave which is part of the Lewis and Clark expedition bicentennial. During the commemoration, pilots and scientists flew the skies above the trail route while Arias put his feet on the ground, running in eight locations that were once visited by the Corps of Discovery O n August 3 Bob Zeman told the Club about his trip to see the Wave on the Arizona/Utah border. Here is his photo of the Wave that shows its spectacular features. New World Altitude Record The Wave Fossett & Enevoldson tucked into a modified German glider F Gene Arias Leads the 500th Military Police Detachment he 500th Military Police Detachment, Special Troops Battalion, had a special running partner during their physical training Aug. 24. His name is Gene Arias, but he wasn’t running for the cardiovascular Photo – Prudence Siebert benefits. Gene was running as part of the Flight of Discovery 2006 Expedition: The Return, red Hareland recently published an article in his local paper, The News Review, about the altitude record-setting glider flight of Steve Fossett (62) and Einar Enevoldson (74) that took place on August 30, high above the crest of the Argentine Andes. They reached a whopping 50,699 ft., 1,662 ft. above the previous record. T October 2006 Russel Alcot Reed (#560) ember Bob Aronoff recently informed us that he was visiting a neighbor across the street and met Russ, a guest of his neigh- M 8 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS What’s Happening... bor who was visiting from Florida. During the conversation, Bob mentioned the Club, whereupon Russ identified himself as Club Member #560, and stated that he was the first member to join the Club in 1950. Russ asked about Al Adams, John Goddard, Bob Sechrist, and Percy Chase, at which point Bob went home and got his roster for Russ to examine. Anyone wishing to contact Russ may do so by email at [email protected]. resume, and testimonials are an enormous help, especially from such a prestigious association as the Adventurers’ Club.” So, any member who heard Roz’s presentation, and who would like to give her a testimonial, please prepare a short statement, and include your name and a brief description of your adventure qualifications. Email your testimonial to Steve Bein at [email protected]. The Enchanted Quest of Dana and Ginger Lamb Presenting the Adventurers’ Club Meritorious Service Medal T he University Press of Mississippi has notified us of the publication of The Enchanted Quest of Dana and Ginger Lamb, written by Julie Huffman-Klinkowitz and Jerome Klinkowitz. This book is reviewed in this issue. This is a great adventure book that you won’t want to miss. T he Adventurers’ Club Meritorious Service Medal – the Board will figure out how to award this gem. Stay tuned for further information Editor’s Note: Each month we will feature recent activities of members and friends on this page. We have now expanded to two pages. Let’s keep it there. Please send your material along with any photos to the Editor by email or snail mail. Designate it for “What’s Happening....” Request from Roz Savage R oz Savage (Atlantic solo rower) sent us a request following her presentation on September 21: “I am working on developing my speaker’s ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 9 October 2006 NOHA NOHA – Night of High Adventure ANNOUNCING N. O. H. A. 2006 5:00 pm: 6:30 pm: 7:30 pm: Cocktail Hour and Silent Auction Dinner Adventures on Land, Air, Sea, and Beyond LAND: JOANNE VANTILBURG, Ph.D (Working Archeologist ) “Among Stone Giants, One Woman’s Adventure on Easter Island” AIR: FRED MADENWALD, III (Director of Flight Tests – Lockheed/Martin) “Significant Flight Test Events Including New Joint Strike Fighter,” SEA: TED RALSTON (Aero-Mechanical Engineer) “Hoku Lea, Rebirth of Polynesian Voyaging” – Trips to Easter Island, Tahiti, Hawaii, and San Pedro, California using ancient native navigation BEYOND: PAUL WEISMSMAN, Ph.D. (Senior JPL Research Scientist) “Exploring Comets: Back to the Beginnings” 10:00 pm: Adjourn Date: Time: Place: Sunday, October 22, 2006 5:00 PM Sheraton Delfina Hotel 530 West Pico Boulevard Santa Monica, California 90405 Tickets: $95.00 Contact: Jim Heaton – (310) 465-9500 Dress: Dinner Dress – Black-tie Formal Ethnic Formal October 2006 10 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Book Review - Tillandsia BOOK REVIEW The Enchanted Quest of Dana and Ginger Lamb by University Press of Mississippi Authors: Julie Huffman-Klinkowitz & Jerome Klinkowitz, University Press of Mississippi, Jackson, MS, 2006, hardcover, (240p; 6 x 9) - ISBN: 1-57806-796-0 B Lambs as spies in Mexico. After World War II they launched their Quest for the Lost City, which yielded another book and documentary. Drawing on historical records, the Lambs’ books and letters, and recently declassified espionage documents, biographers Julie HuffmanKlinkowitz and Jerome Klinkowitz show how the Lambs succeeded in marketing their conquests and films to armchair explorers around the world and how they became, in popular imagination, the quintessential American adventurers. As an independent scholar, Julie HuffmanKlinkowitz has published widely in genealogy and popular culture. Jerome Klinkowitz is Professor of English at the University of Northern Iowa and is the author of several books, including Pacific Skies: American Flyers in World War II (University Press of Mississippi). The Enchanted Quest of Dana and Ginger Lamb is available in book stores, directly from the University Press of Mississippi, from Amazon.com, and in the Club’s library. estselling authors, sensational lecturers, documentary filmmakers, amateur archaeologists, spies for FDR – Dana and Ginger Lamb led the life of Indiana Jones long before the movie icon was ever scripted. “We blaze the trail,” Ginger said, “and the scientists follow.” The Enchanted Quest of Dana and Ginger Lamb is the first biography of this captivating, entrepreneurial couple. In Southern California, they started married life in 1933 by building a canoe. With only $4.10 in their pockets, they paddled to Central America and through the Panama Canal. Three years later they returned triumphant, bearing a photographic record of the amazing trek that made them famous. After releasing their bestselling book, Enchanted Vagabonds, the two became exactly that. They relentlessly lectured for the public and mooned for the media until they were able to fund more exotic voyages to remote jungles and rivers. So convincing were they on the circuit that their most powerful fan, President Franklin Roosevelt, coerced J. Edgar Hoover into hiring the ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 11 October 2006 Thrawn Rickle THE THRAWN RICKLE From the Ancient Scottish: thrawn = stubborn; rickle = loose, dilapidated heap Robert G. Williscroft #1116 - Editor T but tickets still are available. This gathering promises to be one of the best, so even if you missed the good price, it’s still more than worth the cost. Get your tickets as soon as possible. A continuing thank you to Bob Silver (#728) for volunteering his time and effort to distribute The Adventurers’ Club News. Remember, each month about the time of the last meeting of the month, Bob will have your copy of the magazine at the Club ready for you to take with you. If you can’t make it to the meeting, of course, Bob will mail you a copy. I’ve been promising Bob that I will set up the system to put names and address on the magazines automatically, but – unfortunately – Bob is still waiting. I admire his patience. The Adventurers’ Club of Los Angeles now has a beautiful Meritorious Service Medal that will be awarded from time to time to a worthy member. The Board will be discussing how to make the awards, and setting up appropriate rules. You can see the medal in the What’s Happening... section of this issue. The actual medal will be on display in the Library. his month we feature our speaker for September 21, Roz Savage, who rowed solo across the Atlantic, starting last December and arriving at Antigua 103 days later. This is a story you don’t want to miss. I will pit my adventurous career against any member, but I stand aside in awe of this adventurous maiden. For sheer guts and bravado, she trumps anything I ever did! To returning members Gene Arias (#1107) and Pierre Odier (#988), welcome back! We will feature Gene’s accomplishments during the Flight of Discovery, and Pierre’s trip to Borneo in coming issues. This month, we review two lives of adventure in The Enchanted Quest of Dana and Ginger Lamb. This is a wonderful book of entrepreneurial adventure – a how-to book for the wannabe. Step aside, Indiana... Don’t forget October 22, our annual Night of High Adventure – NOHA. The deadline for discounted tickets has passed, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR It had to happen sometime – Chill Out, already! BTW, you might try reading the book before criticizing. You never know... – Editor Little Agenda, is the most valuable information in the smallest package imaginable. It is the best education in nuclear reactors for the layman that is available anywhere today...Thank you for sharing your fabulous life with this needy planet. I agree with you that all members should behave as friends. – Mason Armstrong #765 To the Editor: Your wonderful book, The Chicken I guess you don’t agree with the other writer. Thanks for the support. – Editor To the Editor: This is B...S.... Williscroft is the “self-appointed expert.” No more commercials for crackpots, Please! – (Name withheld) October 2006 12 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS SS Norway SS FRANCE/NORWAY – THE LAST OF HER KIND Fredrick Gary Hareland F storm, but that’s another story. The Norway was being used to berth some NCL employees, and as an occasional classroom. I took a crowd management course as well as crisis management and human behavior course onboard her. I vividly re- ew man made machines are as beautiful and massive as the transatlantic passenger liners circa 1930s to 1960s. SS France, launched May 11, 1960, had the distinction of being the longest liner in the world, and of being the last of her kind, because SS Norway – Formerly SS France member the shipboard monument to those killed in the explosion. I peered at each photo, into mostly young faces, and said a prayer for their families. The memorial was incorporated into a small makeshift chapel off the starboard passageway, forward, and was quite touching. Norway was a breed apart from modern sterile cruise ships. She was built like a tank and actually looked like a ship with her classic lines and teak decks. Of all the vessels that I had been aboard, she looked to be built the most sturdily and long lasting. I wished I had been old enough to sail aboard her back in her heyday, when she was the best, the most luxurious passenger ship in the world. The morning we boarded her, she was moored in an after bay, sitting high and mighty next to the pier. The huge blue and white 11-story vessel was proud and state- she was the last great French ship of state. She was eventually bought in 1979 by Norwegian Cruise Lines. This grand lady of the sea was renamed SS Norway, and was a money-maker for NCL until she suffered a catastrophic boiler explosion on May 25, 2003, that killed seven crewmembers. It was the beginning of the end for Norway, and she was towed to Lloyd Werft Shipyard in Bremerhaven, Germany, for eventual repairs or final disposition. In January 2004, I had the opportunity to go aboard the Norway for some training classes. I was assigned to NCL’s Pride of America, as her first Electronic/Communications Officer and member of her commissioning crew. On the same evening that I arrived in Germany, the Pride Of America sunk next to her pier due to a freak North Sea wind- (Norway continued on page 21) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 13 October 2006 Minutes - August 24, 2006 THURSDAY NIGHTS AT THE CLUB August 24, 2006 Air Force CTOL (Conventional Take Off and Landing) version, the Marine Corps STOVL (short take off and vertical landing) version and the Navy carrier suitable CTOL version. The plane was made by Lockheed with help from BAE Systems and Northrop Grumman. Pratt & Whitney built the engines and Rolls Royce built the lift van. The STOVL version was designed to replace the Harrier, a British plane that works well but is difficult to operate. A shaft-driven lift fan changes the CTOL to a STOVL. More wing area is added on to the Air Force version to get the Navy carrier version. The shaft generates 28,000 horsepower which is about the same as a destroyer. There are 18,500 pounds of thrust generated by the fan; 3,700 pounds by the roll control ducts in the wing and 17,600 pounds by the duct in the rear. Interestingly, the Harrier needed additional thrust to maneuver while lifting while the X-35 does not. In landing, the Bob Zeman (#878) P resident Vince Weatherby welcomed a nice crowd including a number of pilots. Paul Isley said that he enjoyed his private tour of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and saw studies of the rings of Saturn and moons of Jupiter. Roger Haft flew to San Diego with Bernie Harris on an Angel Flight. Bob Zeman returned from a week in Jamaica. He also had backpacked up to the Treasure Lakes area west of Bishop. Bear canisters are required in the Sierras. Bob Ianello will compete for the seventh time in the one-mile rough water swim near La Jolla. Club guest Eric Simmel will swim also. Gene Wallace related his story of flying and bombing in the south Pacific in World War II before the Doolittle raid. While on a mission over Rabaul, he was shot down and later survived 10 months on New Britain before being rescued. Bob Thomas was given a certificate acknowledging his new membership. Bob Seaman said to check C-Span because our Club program is getting a lot of replays. Skunk Works Test Pilot T homas Morgenfeld’s credentials are impressive – 1965 graduate of U. S. Naval Academy; flew 120 combat missions; 500 carrier landings; top student in test pilots’ school; chief test pilot for Lockheed on YF22A and X-35, and retired as a Navy captain. His talk was on the X-35, the Joint Strike Fighter. This plane has three versions – the October 2006 14 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Minutes - August 24 & 31, 2006 X-35 can bring back more weight in terms of ordinance and fuel than the Harrier. The Harrier has three levers for control; the X35 has only two levers—better for those with only two hands. Since pilot training costs so much, this plane and others are single-seaters. Bombs can be attached to pylons but at the risk of giving up stealth capacity. During the 30-day test period, the plane flew 27 times which shows high reliability. First flight of the F-35 is scheduled for October, 2006. Admittedly, the F-22 is better in a dog fight but it does not have the landing and take off capabilities that the X-35 has. The X-35 is primarily for air to ground missions. Mr. Morgenfeld’s talk drew many questions from the audience and was well-received. Jim Heaton returned from eastern Europe. He visited Berlin, the Salzburg Music Festival and took a train to Kracow. Dave Yamada surprised us returning from a 12-day trip on the Trans-Siberian Express. He was delayed a bit due to the lack of a multi-entry visa. Randy Boelsem and his wife spent three weeks in Ireland. Fortunately, he flew home out of Dublin and not Heathrow, avoiding the terrorist scare. Bill Burchette participated as a judge for the 34th year at the Pebble Beach Car Show. Bernie Harris and his wife are taking an Alaskan cruise to Ketchikan, Juneau and Skagway. Bob Silver recommended the Japanese gardens at UCLA for a short local visit. He also presented a bird pen to Bob Zeman. Jim Heaton related the story of Gene Wallace who is coming to NOHA. Gene’s girlfriend (later his wife) wrote him every week while Gene was avoiding capture near Rabaul in WWII, saving the letters for his return. The re-creation of the trek of Lewis and Clark return-trek is still on despite the death of the leader’s wife in a helicopter crash. Gene Arias will be running segments of the trek. August 31, 2006 Bob Zeman (#878) S hane Berry and his wife are leaving for eight days in Alaska. At least one night will be spent north of Denali National Park. At times it is so cold there that the sewage has to be heated to get it moving. Shane also took his mother fishing. President Vince Weatherby presented a certificate to Walt Ehlers acknowledging him as a new member. Walt Ehlers No Halibut Fishing in My Future T odd Warshaw is a professional photographer. He was the official photographer for the 2004 International Olympic Torch Relay for Athens and for the 2002 Relay for Salt Lake City. The 2004 relay went through 27 countries in 35 days and covered 60,000 miles. Todd showed a sampling of his beautiful slides showing everything from giant black (Minutes continued on page 16) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 15 October 2006 Minutes - August 31, 2006 (Minutes continued from page 15) sea bass to turtles, sharks, shrimp, athletic events and NASCAR races. Todd was hired by Greenpeace to accompany its boat Pacific Storm on a trip to document research on species and the food chain around the Aleutian Islands. Prior research said that X pounds of pollock were taken last year and the same pounds were taken this year so everything is okay. But pollock are at the bottom of the food chain and they could be depleted due to more intensive fishing. The 85-foot boat left Kodiak and there were just a few Todd Warshaw hours of darkness every night in the six weeks on the Bering Sea. The researchers saw numerous humpback whales but few orcas. The natives said the orcas were there a month earlier. At Dutch Harbor huge container ships came in. It is the number three fishing port in the world in terms of tonnage. Close-up slides of red-legged kittiwake, coast auklet, fulmar, puffin and thick-billed murre were excellent. Near St. Paul Island were the first orcas. The boat had to get close to dart and tag the orcas properly. There was a huge fur seal rookery nearby and the bulls can weigh 600 pounds. The researchers had to walk a mile to the rookery. Stops were made at St. Paul which has 500 people and St. George with a population of only 100. Fishing boats land as much as 5,000 pounds of fish. Unfortunately, a fishing boat carrying a son October 2006 16 of Todd’s guide flipped, so the Pacific Storm went out to tow it back. There was lots of fog, and much fishing line had to be cut, but the crew and boat were saved. Gamble Island was overcast most of the time. Hundreds of whale carcasses cover the island. Residents are allowed eight strikes and two kills of orcas per year. A whale will feed a village for a year. There are also walruses. Residents have VHF antenna at the vertical for entertainment. Nearby are two rocks sticking out of the water which hold thousands of murres. The rocks are also the cause of many wrecks during fogs. On the return to Kodiak the boat steamed for 20 minutes through a flock of shearwaters. The trip covered 3,500 miles and Todd gave 3,500 photos to Greenpeace. August 24, 2006 Bob Zeman (#878) P resident Vince Weatherby greeted all to another meeting. A moment of silence was held for the recent death of Steve Irwin from Australia who brought the knowledge of animals to many. Jim Dorsey returned from a month in East Africa. He made it to 18,000 feet on Mt. Kilimanjaro but was stopped short of the summit due to stomach flu. He also stayed for two nights with his wife Irene in the boma or village of Moses Pelee. The village sacrificed a goat in Jim’s honor. Jim ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Minutes - July 27, 2006 and Irene also took a hot-air balloon ride and a photography safari. Steve Peterman took a ride in a sheriff ’s helicopter. The mission was to photograph houses on which warrants were going to be served. David Grober went camping and fishing in Alaska. He road an ATV to a glacier, and caught a 16-inch walleye pike. Marvin Garrett went to the National Air Races in Reno. Marvin attended his first air race in Cleveland in 1929. Over the years he has seen Lindbergh, Earhart, Rickenbacker and Udet. He also saw Roscoe Turner fly with a lion cub. Roger Haft leaves on September 16th for China, Tibet and the Silk Route. Roger also took a flight on a Boeing 727 to experience zero gravity. He and others did flips and maneuvers against the padded bulkheads. Jim Heaton was pleased that we have all of our speakers for NOHA and that our reservations are running ahead of last year. Bob Walters said that a reunion of the fighter aces will be held September 17th at Los Alamitos. The main topic will be those who fought against the German jet ME262. Bob Zeman visited Roy Roush in his home and Roy looks good and hopes to return to the Club in a month or so. become a veterinarian. But the increased schooling for an advanced degree and the movie Hunt for Red October inspired him to enter Navy Officer Candidate School. He graduated Capt. Charles Gaouette and earned his dolphins on a diesel submarine. He later went to engineering and electrical school and was a watch officer on a nuclear attack submarine. The boat was struck by a rogue wave in the English Channel. Gaouette was the only officer topside and was seriously injured. He spent a month in the hospital. Charles is now the commanding officer of the Bunker Hill. It is equipped with the Aegis (Shield) weapon system which uses computers to track incoming missiles. It can be sensitized to stop the worst-case threat which is many missiles. His work day starts at 5 a.m. and ends at 11:30 p.m. There are 22 officers on board and 375 enlisted. The main task of the cruiser is searching boats near the Al Basrah oil terminal. These boats are mainly commercial ones intent on going up river. But all must be searched by teams from the cruiser for contraband, drugs and weapons. This is high-risk and exhausting work for the sailors. The oil platforms were built in the 1960s by the Soviets and are in need of constant maintenance. The oil brings in $1 billion per month. USS Bunker Hill (CG-52) few weeks ago, Paul Isley toured the USS Bunker Hill as it cruised to San Diego. Paul went down to the engine room and talked with the commanding officer on the bridge. He persuaded Capt. Gaouette to speak to our Club. Charles Gaouette entered UC Davis to A (Minutes continued on page 18) ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 17 October 2006 Minutes - July 27 & August 3, 2006 (Minutes continued from page 17) There are 7,000 naval personnel in Iraq because the Navy knows how to fix things. The Army too often leaves equipment where it stopped. anniversary of the USS Bunker Hill. He also invited members to come visit the ship in San Diego in March when it returns from its next deployment in Iraq. August 24, 2006 Bob Zeman (#878) P resident Vince Weatherby opened the meeting and read a letter from Don Walsh. Don is an honorary member for being one of the first to descend to the deepest part of the ocean. And he is still active with projects in Antarctica, the Arctic Ocean and places in between. Our guest was Brian Ferenza who is planning to hike the Continental Divide trail. But he is going the full length from Cape Hope near the Arctic Ocean in Alaska 8,000 miles to the southern tip of Argentina. He plans to average 20 miles per day. Dave Finnern returned from a dive trip to Lake Superior on the northern shore of Minnesota. He blew a seal on his regulator which delayed his diving but he did explore the Samuel P. Healy. Pierre Odier took an expedition flag to southern Borneo and returned. He headed upriver from Balikpapan looking for a remote village. The land has been devastated by logging. His boat broke down and he had to continue on another boat. He did find the abandoned long houses built of ironwood. But the tribe had scattered. He did find a few descendants of the small tribe. Bernie Harris returned from his Alaska cruise. The ship had port stops at Vancouver, Juneau, Skagway and Ketchikan. He USS Bunker Hill Charles talked about the future of the Navy and the build up of the Chinese Navy. China has acquired the Sovremmenny destroyer from the Russians along with 12 Kilo submarines. The destroyer is equipped with the anti-Aegis cruise missile. But the United States is building Go Fast boats which will go 40 knots, are painted blue, and use plexiglass. The Bunker Hill has a 32foot draft and the new boats have a 12-foot draft. The Bunker Hill cost $1.2 billion to build 20 years ago and the Go Fast boats cost $750 million. Other ships being built are the DD1000 Zumwalt Class destroyers. Ninty-five percent of our imports arrive by ship. The shipping lanes must be kept open. Nuclear powered ships are cheaper and easier to operate but require more personnel. But the non-nuclear powered ships that are being built these days need 20% to 25% fewer personnel to operate. The elimination of cash in favor of cash cards has reduced the administrative staff aboard ship. Captain Gaouette thanked the Club for inviting him. He presented us with a oneounce silver coin commemorating the 20th October 2006 18 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Minutes - August 3, 2006 panned for gold, hiked to a waterfall, saw glaciers along with sharks, whales, dolphins and sea otters. Roger Haft leaves on Saturday for China, Tibet and the Silk Road. Guest Jay Foonberg is just back from Tunisia where he saw the Troglodytes in caves. Jay recently donated a Masai shield that he had acquired in Kenya. Frank Haigler said that he, Bill Burchette, and others are going September 27 to the Otis Chandler automobile museum in Oxnard to see its valuable collection before it closes. Jim Heaton reiterated the need for silent auction items for NOHA. One of our speakers will be Fred Madenwald, a director of flight testing. Jim also passed around a nomination form for Adventurer of the Year. Bob left Hawaii on another boat and sailed to the Tuamotus, Marquesas, Tahiti, Rarotonga and New Zealand before reaching Australia. He did not show footage of these legs. But he left Australia bound for Africa. Fifteen days out the boat was demasted. Finally a Navy ship towed them into port. Bob eventually got to Gibraltar where he sailed to the Canary Islands. His captain and a U. S. Navy captain became friends so Bob’s boat could get provisions and electrical power to make repairs. The boat made it to the Caribbean and docked in Barbados, St. Lucia and Antigua. He had footage of boats in Bequia being turned on their side for cleaning and caulking and then rolled over. Rocks were moved for ballast. Bob was gone for five years and did it on the cheap. His film though old was good and as usual his dry sense of humor kept the audience entertained. Around the World by Sail ur own Bob Silver greeted us with some advice. Don’t wait until you’re ready. Make your own luck. About 50 years ago he and three friends built a 34-foot boat named Free Flight in Newport Beach. They then sailed it in 23 days to Honolulu. Of these 21 were clear and sunny. They navigated using a chronometer, sextant and the HO-249 book. Bob was the official photographer and took 16 millimeter film. A couple of times he was put in the dinghy to film the boat as it sailed past. Arriving in Honolulu, Bob and friends went to Makaha for some surfing. He had good footage of him surfing with a red flare at nighttime and also some tandem surfing. O ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 19 October 2006 New Members Robert C. Thomas #1122 Jerrold A. Robinson #1123 R J errold Robinson was born in Hayward, California, on August 1, 1949. Jerrold co-founded Rainforest Flora along with Paul Isley (#1088) in 1976, and has traveled off the beaten path collecting Bromeliads (exotic plants) in most countries in Central and South America. He has also sourced and developed products for Rainforest Flora in many countries in Asia including China, Taiwan, and the Philippines. Jerrold has scuba dived in Catalina, Cozumel and La Paz in Mexico, Honduras, Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Belize, Hawaii, Galapagos Islands, and the Philippine Islands, and conducted Treasure and Salvage Diving in Honduras and Quito Sueno Banks for six months (1971-72) with Fathom Expeditions. Jerrold also hang glides, waterskis, snow skis, backpacks, mountain bikes, and camps. He has been on an adventure trip nearly every year since he was eleven. obert Thomas is a native of Santa Ana, California, born on July 4, 1953 – a true “son of Uncle Sam.” In 1984 Robert planned, organized and participated in the 101st Airborne Division’s commemorative parachute jumps in Holland to mark the 40th anniversary of the invasion of Holland. This event was repeated in 1989 on a much larger scale and was covered by NBC News. Both events included original veterans who jumped in 1944, as well as Dutch Special Forces. In 1985 the 101st ABN DIV ASSOC recognized Robert at their National reunion in Clearwater, Florida, for his participation in the event, and he was made a life member of both the National Organization, as well as the Southern California Chapter. Robert has visited the Soviet Union and the Czech Republic, and has explored the Grand Canyon, and dove on the HMS Rhone off Salt Island in the British Virgins. October 2006 20 ADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS Programs / SS Norway Forthcoming Programs September 28, 2006 – “Wilderness Camping by Airplane and other Adventures” Ramona Cox October 5, 2006 – BUSINESS MEETING “Pronghorn Antelope” Richard Venola October 8, 2006 – FIELD TRIP – “Little Petroglyph Canyon” Shane Berry – A trip for Club members to this finest of all petroglyph finds in North America. October 12, 2006 October 19, 2006 – “Firearms, Antique to Modern” Gary James – “Globel Surface Travel – How Far Can You Get From Los Angeles Without October 22, 2006 – October 26, 2006 – November 2, 2006 – November 9, 2006 – November 16, 2006 – November 23, 2006 – November 30, 2006 – December 7, 2006 – December 14, 2006 – Flying” Alan Hogenauer NOHA – Night of High Adventure. Sheraton Delfina Hotel in Santa Monica. Advance tickets for $85. After September 1, $95. (Dinner Dress, Black Tie, or Ethnic Formal) “State of the Art Archery” David Dolbee BUSINESS MEETING “Short Presentations by Members” “Going for the Record” – Einor Enevoldsen. Einor and Steve Fossett will be attempting to set a new worlds Record for dual gliders in 2006. He will report on the results. LADIES NIGHT “The Nordic Underground Railway” Geert Jensen Smuggled Jews from Denmark to Sweden in WWII. CLUB DARK – Thanksgiving “Recreating the Exodus in the midst of War” Darwin Feldstein 64th Anniversary of the Attack on Pearl Harbor CHRISTMAS PARTY (Norway continued from page 13) dignified process of ship-breaking, where hundreds of uneducated workers clamber aboard her with their hammers and cuttingtorches to tear and render her giant carcass asunder, not unlike ants rendering down a road kill. What started out as one of man’s noblest endeavors requiring an army of the industrialized worlds most skilled engineers, builders, technicians and workers, will in the end be torn apart in a few short months by unskilled laborers using brute force, and the great Steam Ship France/Norway will be no more than memories in mostly old heads. What a pity...what a shame! ly, and as solid as a rock. Those of us who strolled across her massive boarding ramp that nippy overcast morning had no idea that her days were numbered, and that in less than two years she would be anchored off of the infamous shore of Alang, India, the largest of 26 ship-breaking sites located along India’s dingy, grimy west coast beaches. As of August 2, 2006, the word from the BBC News was “Toxic ship cleared for breaking!” If she is not already driven ashore during high tide and lying helpless like a giant beached whale, she will be soon. Even now she could be going through this most unADVENTURERS’ CLUB NEWS 21 October 2006 The Adventurers’ Club News PO Box 31266 Los Angeles CA 90031 FIRST CLASS MAIL October 2006