Today, March 6   four  builders  familiar to readers of Duckworks Magazine  begin an epic journey of personal discovery, the Everglades Challenge.  Gary Blankenship, Andrew Linn, Michael Monies  and John Hargrove Wright are part of the unofficial “Team Duckworks” sailing  from Tampa Bay to Key Largo, Florida, over 300 miles in small, wooden boats,  boats they built themselves. 
              Duckworks will follow the four, along with other challengers  here daily with live reports from the route. 
              Once a year adventure boaters leave Fort Desoto, Florida’s  beach for  a trip most small boat sailors  and paddlers only dream of   starting.  This year seventy boats  will meet on the beach to begin the trip leaving for destinations within the  Everglades Challenge, a trip of 300 miles from Tampa Bay to Key Largo or  the Ultra Marathon, a two-day race from Tampa  Bay to Placida, Florida. For those eight challengers taking part in  the Ultimate Florida Challenge, it is a 1,200  mile race that starts and ends near the entrance to Tampa Bay, an event that  must be completed in less than 30 days. The Ultimate Florida Challenge or UFC  happens only once every four years while the Everglades Challenge is held  annually. 
              WaterTribe is a group of over 2,000 like minded individuals  who choose tribal names to represent themselves.  It was founded in 2000 by Steve (Chief)  Isaac, a former U.S. Marine, to create opportunities for people to compete in  long distance small boat adventure races.   All WaterTribe events are expedition style, unsupported races for human  or wind powered craft.  No motors or  assistance is allowed from support teams.   Challengers must decide for themselves how far or how fast to travel.  They face shifting winds, tides and waves  while pushing themselves to their personal physical limits. 
              Checkpoints and time limits are set for each segment of the  trip.  Filters in the forms of the  checkpoints and routes limit type of boats utilized, as to draft, size or sail  and mast setups.  The boats must be  physically launched  by human power from  the beaches, if sailed, rowing and paddling is usually necessary.  Both human and sail powered boats must meet  the same time constraints.  All craft  departing must arrive in Key Largo within the same deadlines, making all  checkpoints along the way. 
              WaterTribe has over 2,000 members.  This year’s events  with seventy participant challengers is the  largest that has ever assembled at Fort Desoto.   It is  common in  these events for less than half to complete  the entire route.  Commitment and  determination get you to the beach to start.   What kind of skill, luck, karma, sheer will power gets you to the end? 
              Gary (LugNut) Blankenship is the veteran among the four “Team  Duckworks” sailors, in his Michalak   designed “Oaracle“, a   Frolic2    with a small cuddy cabin.  Gary added a  small mizzen sail and a hard cover for the cabin slot. Gary/LugNut has entered  five previous Everglades Challenges, he has completed four. His previous  challenges can be read about here in Duckworks archives.   As the most experienced of the group, Gary has assisted with routing, GPS  coordinates, chart information and other sailing tips for the new members of  Team Duckworks.  This year, for the first  time, Gary will be sailing in the Class 4   monohulls category as a solo competitor.  
              Gary commented, “No matter how many times you do the  Everglades Challenge, it is never the same.   The weather, the tides, everything is different each year. I have always  wanted to do the EC as a solo challenger and this year it worked out that I did  not have a partner.”  Doing it solo is  Gary’s personal challenge this year. 
              John Hargrove (Krank) Wright, a veteran sailor but a first  time participant in the Everglades Challenge. will be sailing a self-designed  14 foot scow , the “Grok.”  “ Grok “ was  previously known as “ U-14 “ when John sailed her in last year’s TX 200.  She has changed to a single  masted boat, with a roller reef main and jib.   Last year she was a  schooner  rigged, twin masted scow.  John has added  a dodger of clear vinyl for protection from the cold and wet conditions, some  additional water diverters on her deck and a self-steering vane. She now has  foam insulation on the interior of the cabin, removable wheels for moving, her,  which makes her amphibious. “ Grok”  is  extremely shallow draft and can sail in six inches of water.  John has repainted her but says, “She is the  same ugly little boat!”  John will be  celebrating his seventieth birthday by single handing in Class 4 monohulls  category as a solo competitor. 
              “Grok” is a term meaning to share the same reality or line  of thinking with another physical or conceptual entity.  Coined by the writer Robert A. Heinlein in  his best-selling book  “Stranger in A  Strange  Land”, the Oxford English  Dictionary defines grok as “ to understand intuitively or by empathy, to  establish rapport with, also to experience enjoyment.”  In an ideological context, a grokked concept  becomes part of the person who contributes to its evolution, by improving the  doctrine,  espousing the belief, refining  the idea or proofing the theory.  What  better boat  in which to do the  Everglades Challenge than a “Grok”? 
              “Laguna Dos-The Blue Laguna” is a 23 foot Michalak designed  Laguna, built and captained by Mike (WoodCutter) Monies and crewed  by Andrew (Krunch) Linn, both veteran sailors and part of the Texas 200 “legends”.  Mike and Andrew met in the  2009 Texas 200 when Andrew helped rescue Mike after a capsize in Corpus Christi  Bay.  Mike went on to finish the 200 mile  event with a borrowed and improvised sail, thanks in part to Andrew.  They formed a friendship and found that both  had always wanted to compete in the Everglades Challenge.  Mike was building a Laguna for the Texas 200,  as was Andrew.  Andrew’s Laguna was to be  beach built, so Mike’s was decided to sail in.   They formed a two man team, Mike building and  equipping the   boat, Andrew making sails and   planning the navigation and route.   Mike launched Laguna Dos one week prior to the EC, taking her to Florida  for essential practice and Andrew met him one day prior to the race, with one  day to  practice as a team. 
              This years Everglades Challenge has a total of   twelve boats   entered, in the monohull class,   counting “Team Duckworks.”  The  boats are as varied as the entrants themselves.   There are three Sea Pearl 21’s, shallow draft Florida built boats that  have  done well in past Challenges.  A veteran Blue Jay 14,that has  finished in past Challenges, a Core Sound 20  designed by Graham Byrnes, legendary Everglades Challenge designer and sailor,  sailed by past winners of the Challenge.   A Wayfarer 16, an O’Day 17,  and a  new and  revolutionary design from Matt  Layden/Wizard, that  is also entered in  the Ultimate Florida Challenge.  Most  unique of all is a board boat, “Yellow Thing” designed and built by legendary  designer/sailor Meade (Yellow Thing) Gougeon of West System Epoxy. 
              With a field so interesting, where to start?  “Yellow Thing”, a 17 foot sloop best  described as a board  boat is perhaps the  most unusual of  all entrants.  Meade says “Yellow Thing” was so named, for  lack of any other way to describe her.   He designed her two years ago for a flats fishing boat, for the waters  of  St. Joseph Sound where he has a winter  home in Oscona, Florida.  “Yellow Thing”  is a seventeen  foot scow, twenty-seven  inches wide.  She can be poled, paddled  or sailed. 
              “Yellow Thing” has a large flat surf-board shaped surface,  with threaded inserts every twelve inches around the  outer edges.   Appendages can be bolted on, giving her great flexibility of use.  Her overall weight for the EC is about 140  pounds. 
              Meade and his brother   Jan began building ice boats in the 1960’s using epoxy,  going on to form West System Epoxy.  They continued to build light, fast sailboats  as the Gougueon Brothers, Inc. and have   won numerous DN iceboat championships, as well as  building   numerous record setting catamarans and trimarans.  Age has not slowed Meade down, as he will  sail in the Everglades Challenge  as a  young seventy-one year old. 
              Meade said, “I was attracted to the Challenge this past  summer after hearing Randy Smythe give a talk about his recent attempts.  I began making changes on the “Yellow Thing”  in the fall and began sea trials in November.   By the first of February I felt I had a viable candidate worthy of the  Challenge that was at least capable of getting me there within the eight day  time limit, which is my main goal. I have been a life-long sailor for over  sixty years and for the past twelve years have been a committed  cruising-sailing canoe skipper.  I  started my career in small boats is it is now appropriate and joyful that I  finish it in small boats. 
                The Challenge is a great event of which I hope I can be a  worthy entrant .” 
              Matt (Wizard) Layden is a legendary builder/designer of  small sailboats for coastal cruising.  He  has designed a number of coastal cruisers, however it was his sixth  micro-cruiser, “Enigma” a light twelve foot v-bottomed boat, weighing only 140  pounds that accomplished the incredible feat of completing the 1200 mile  Ultimate Florida Challenge as her maiden voyage, a trip that included a forty  mile portage of his boat. 
                Matt finished first in his class and third overall, an  unbelievable accomplishment. 
              Most recently Matt built an eight foot cruiser, the “Sand  Flea” which he entered in the Everglades Challenge of   2008,   finishing near the top of his class.   Matt has completed nine WaterTribe Challenges, including one Ultimate  Florida Challenge.  He has placed at the  top of  class 4 monohulls as a single  male three times since  2003, again in  2006 and 2007, setting record times. Matt’s newest creation for this year’s  Everglades Challenge  was featured last  month in Duckworks.  
              Paul(BroganTwo) Myers from Port Charlotte, Florida will be  sailing in class 4 monohulls as a two man team with his partner  Rod (Polecat) Hesse of  upstate New York.  Paul’s boat is the Sea Pearl 21, “Brogan“.  She is a cat ketch, with a blue hull, sail #415.  Paul says the only modifications he has made  to the boat have been some additional safety gear, sleeping arrangements for a  second person and  some LED lighting,  purchased from Duckworks, for night sailing. 
              The Sea Pearl 21 is an open cruiser produced in Florida for  coastal cruising. She has leeboards and a tombstone transom,  nearly double -ended, with a  relatively  narrow 5’ 6” beam on an overall 21 feet.   The Seapearl has flared, rounded topsides, giving the impression of a  miniature whaleboat, but in fact has the flat bottom of a dory.  She is a scaled up  model of Herreshoff’s l8 foot Carpenter  dory/whaleboat/tender designed in 1929. 
              The flat bottom makes her easy to beach and gives her an  unloaded draft of about five inches.  The  Sea Pearl is not a large boat despite her length, being narrow on the bottom  and light.   She sails best when well  heeled and heels easily. She has considerable load carrying ability, but only  weighs about 650 pounds. 
              Paul commented on  his  and Rod’s entrance into this year’s Everglades Challenge:  “This is our first entry and will be  a learning experience.  Our goal is to finish this expedition in a  safe and efficient manner, with as little drama as possible.  The value of an event like this is to provide  a way to challenge yourself and push beyond your comfort zone.  The planning and preparation for this  unsupported expedition-style adventure race starts long before the week of the  race.  In fact, just making it to the  start line is an accomplishment!  We plan  on finishing the race and pushing ourselves to do the best we can, but just  finishing will also be a win.” 
              Added Paul, “Rod and I are retired seniors who have sailed  in a variety of boats for over forty years, but this will be the first time on  a long distance coastal race in a small open boat.” 
              Channing (DancesWithMullet) Boswell lives in Bokeelia,  Florida on the north end of Pine Island.   “Mullet” is his 14 foot Blue Jay sailboat dating from the  mid-seventies.  He has modified her with  a hard dodger to give a little protection from the spray, but also to house the  electronic, provide a mount for the solar cell and make up the forward section  of his canvas cabin.  Channing has a  removable seat for rowing and a small A-frame on the transom to forms the end  of his canvas cabin.  For the race he  also added a very deep reef in the mainsail. 
              “I use a GPS plotter that is powered by a lawnmower battery,”  Channing said.  “I also use this battery  to recharge the cell phone and backup VHF.   In preparation for the race last year I removed and inspected or  replaced all hardware except for two fittings, and that came back to bite me.  The shroud chainplates were behind the glassed-in flotation tank.  I remedied that situation this year with a Sawzall  and some reinforced chain plates.  Other  than that, “Mullet”  is ready to go  again.  I am just hoping it gets a lot  warmer by start time.” 
              “Oh,  and the value of  the Everglades Challenge?” Channing added, “I am starting to think of it as a  sickness.  I just seem to have gotten  addicted.”   
              The Blue Jay sailboat continues to be one of the leading  one-design, sloop rigged sailboats in existence today.  She was fathered by the great Drake H.  Sparkman, head of the famed deign firm of Sparkman and Stephens, Inc. after he  had chaired a junior sailing program at his yacht club.  She was “pencil drawn” in 1947 and is still  being produced today.  Designed as  a junior or   “baby Lightning” it now numbers over 7,200 hulls.  It is used from Florida to Maine, over 99% of  all Blue Jays being on the East Coast.   Originally designed to be constructed of wood, fiberglass was allowed in  the early l960’s, however wooden boats continue to be built today. The  original  fiberglass molds are now being  used by Allen Boat Co. , builder of the Lightning for many years, to continue  building of the Blue Jay. 
              “Maggie” is a Sea Pearl 21 sailed by Dave (DaveOnCudjoe)  Combs.  Dave is a veteran of many  Everglades Challenges and resides on Cudjoe Key in the lower Florida Keys.   She is hull #334, best described Dave says  as a cat ketch rigged dory.  “Maggie”  stands out Dave added  from most Sea  Pearls.  “She is fitted with a  centerboard instead of the usual leeboards that most Sea Pearls have. She has  been modified over the years primarily for this event.” 
              Dave has started and completed all five Everglades  Challenges he has entered.  When asked  what he considered the benefit of entering an event such as the Challenge, he  said, “This event is life changing in that it forces one to face unforeseen  obstacles and danger and to dig deep to overcome these challenges. 
                Facing the unknown alone is something most people never  experience and builds confidence that one can carry over into any walk of  life.  The competitors in this challenge  have formed a bond unlike any other in life.   We only see each other once a year, but   oh, what a time we have!” 
              Changes that Dave made to the  “Maggie” for   the Everglades Challenge include a new rig with a lower center of  effort, along with fully battened sails with moderate roach and slab  reefing.  He also added a mizzen staysail  to her sail plan. He also added a full electrical system with VHF radio and a  masthead mounted  antenna, along with LED  navigation lights, auto pilot and charging for a cell phone. 
              “Maggie” additionally has dual anchors with dual rodes, a  parachute sea anchor an a drogue fitted to the bow to hold her into the wind in  an emergency.  She also has dual magnetic  compasses, a porta potti to reduce environmental impact, and a canvas cabin for  nighttime and shelter.  Dave also added a  foil shaped rudder for improved control, especially in following seas. 
              David (Freebyrd) Bolduc of   North Carolina is sailing Matt Layden’s “Enigma” in this year’s  Everglades Challenge. “Enigma” is the ll foot 10 inch legend of  the past   Ultimate Florida Challenge of 2006, sailed by her creator Matt (Wizard)  Layden.  David owns another Matt Layden  design, a fifteen foot boat called “Little Cruiser” which he has sailed to the  Bahamas seven times.  David’s says his  primary interest is in cruising, but he is doing the EC for the first time  because  he thought it would be fun to  sail with others with an interest in small boat voyaging. 
              David has considerable experience sailing in Matt’s boats,  as owner  of “Little Cruiser” which Matt built  and sailed for many years, David  has  logged over 10,000 miles sailing her to and from the Bahamas. He sailed “Enigma”  in this years first North Carolina Challenge, 2009. “Enigma” was the lightest  of all Matt’s boats when built, weighing only 140 pounds.  She is stitch and glue, a sharpie that could  be lifted onto the top of a car and transported.  This design incorporated many of the best  features in Matt’s older sharpies.  It  has an efficient roller furling system, and a distinctive low aspect ration lug  sail. She also has an improved fold down dodger, as well as chine runners made  shorter and wider. 
              “After watching this race from the sidelines,” David says, “it  is my chance to be a participant, even though I know I have no chance of  winning in tiny “Enigma”.  For me, I’m  just hoping for some favorable winds along the way so I can make the  checkpoints and just finish on time.” 
              Duncan (Ika) Vaughan lives in  the United Kingdom.  He is English, his wife an American.  They   acquired the “Ika” Duncan’s 1969 O’Day   Day Sailor from its’ original owner, his wife’s uncle, who had owned it  continuously since 1969 and sailed her in Colorado lakes.  “Ika” means fish in Fijian and also squid in  Japanese.  This is appropriate, as Duncan  is a fisheries manager in England, having studied and worked in Fiji doing  coral reef work. 
              Duncan and his wife have owned the “Ika” for about six years  and have sailed her in Florida and Georgia while they both attended the  University of Florida.  Duncan’s good  friend is Channing (DancesWithMullet) Boswell, who is sailing “Mullet” the 14  foot Blue Jay again this year.  “My  friend Channing was telling me about the race and I was hooked.  I have not tried anything like it before and  think it will be a major adventure.  The  most I have ever sailed the boat before is for a four hour sail.: 
              The O’Day Day Sailor is a day sailor for pleasure sailing,  as well as racing and is sailed throughout North America.  Designed in 1958 by Uffa Fox and George O’Day,  she is a 17 foot fiberglass sloop with a beam of six feet, flotation fore and  aft, a small cuddy cabin, an aluminum mast and boom and carries a total of 145  feet of sail in a main  and jib.  Over 10,000 have been built and are raced  throughout the U.S.  In 2003 the O’Day  Day Sailor was inducted into the American Sailboat Hall of Fame.  She is l6 feet, 9 inches on the water  and  draws 3 feet  9 inches. 
              Another first timer in the Everglades Challenge will be the  team of John (SirPercival) Nasser and Ken (BlackwaterKnight)  Winders. They will be sailing a Wayfarer 16  belonging to John.  John’s Wayfarer has  a  green and white hull, with white  decks.  She is sail number 10195.   
              John said he had made a few modifications for the race,  including the installation of oarlock sockets.   He also said, “I have also given some thought to flotation issues.  If you check the technical info on the  Wayfarer you will see where the watertight compartments are located in the  boat.  Because they are low in the hull,  there is a tendency in a knockdown to turn turtle.  To address that problem I have had a pocket  and flotation added to the head of the sail and have installed attachment  points under the gunnels to which I will attach additional flotation.” 
              “Ken and I also modified the boat to allow us to unstep the  mast from the cockpit.  We had to change  the attachment point for the forestay, which otherwise required  work on the bow.” 
              John  said  that the Everglades Challenge was his first  event of this nature.  “However, I have  been sailing since I was  a kid in Fort  Lauderdale, but until recently I have been kayaking.  I have kayaked the Wilderness Waterway and  kayaked in and out of the Everglades on numerous occasions, including a few  solo overnight trips including night paddles.   I am familiar with Indian Key and the channel that we will be taking for  the second check-in.” 
              The  Wayfarer 16 is a  sloop of l5 feet, 10 inches length,   beam  of six feet and draft of  eight inches.  With her centerboard down  she draws three feet, ten inches.  Her  weight is 365 pounds, and her sail plan includes a main of 95 square feet, as  well as a genoa, jib and spinnaker. She features a kick up rudder and  retractable centerboard . The design was first developed in the 950’s and has  been continuously sailed and raced throughout the U.S.  Until recently Abbott Boats of Canada was  making the Wayfarer 16.  
              Bill (JarHead) Fite and his   partner Jonathan (HonestJohn) Arthur are sailing the “Moon Shadow” a  SeaPearl 21.  The “Moon Shadow” is a cat  ketch.  “ Like all ketches, it has a main  mast and a mizzen mast.  
                What makes it a cat ketch is the placement of the main mast  well forward in the boat like a catboat and the absence of a jib.”  Bill adds,   SeaPearls are made one at a time in Tarpon Springs, Florida by Marine  Concepts.  I believe the popularity of the SeaPearl 21, which  has been in production for over 25 years, is due to its simplicity and all  around excellent performance.” 
              “Moon Shadow” has the standard sail plan of mainsail  and  mizzen that furl around unstayed  rotating masts.  “In addition, I can  deploy a mizzen staysail between the two masts if the point of sail is a beam  reach or close to a beam reach.  I have  made no modifications for this year’s race.” 
              “I am a retired Marine and live in Tampa, Florida.  Jonathan and his family are from Melbourne  Beach, where they have owned and operated   Honest  John’s Fish Camp on the  Indian River Lagoon for many years.  I  have entered three Everglades Challenges and finished two.  One my EC in 2007 my sails were severely  ripped on pilings at the railroad trestle a few hundred yards from Checkpoint  1.  We rowed to the Checkpoint but had to  withdraw at that point.  This is Jonathan’s  first EC, but he owns a Sea Pearl 21 and sailed it alone to the Bahamas.  I was going to do the EC solo this year when  my partner from 2008 had to back out due to ill health, but I  jumped at the chance to sail with Jonathan.” 
              Bill feels that the Everglades Challenge is a great  adventure for all participants.  “It is  one that has surely made each of us a better sailor or paddler.  Jonathan and I will treat the EC as a race in  order to push ourselves.  Our personal  measure of success will not be where we place   but how closely we come to doing our best while pushing within the  limits of responsible boating.” 
              Doug (Ridgerunner) Cameron will be sailing his Coresound 20  along with his partner Michael (Greybeard) Collins.  Doug said, “Michael and I are veterans of  many WaterTribe Challenges.  I worked as  a volunteer in 2002 rather than race because of a bout of pneumonia.  I got to meet Michael and his son Brian who  finished second that year  in their  schooner rigged Kruger Cruiser.  The next  year he competed with Brian again and I did the EC solo in a Sea Pearl.  As I finished, Michael waded out and handed  me a beer.  As we talked through the  evening he told me that Brian was going into the Air Force and asked if I would  like to race with him the following year.” 
              “In 2004 we had perfect weather for a Class 3 boat.  There was almost no wind for the first thirty  hours, then 20 knot following winds for the rest of the race.  We surprised ourselves by winning and setting  a record time.  We had one leisurely  year, taking our time and going through the   Wilderness Waterway to get our alligator tooth and another where we cut  five hours off our record-breaking time, only to be beat by eight hours by  Graham Byrnes in his Coresound 17, a boat he designed.” 
              “I then bought a set of plans for the faster Coresound 20  from Graham and built it.  Michael and I  then raced it in 2008 in a wild Class 4 monohull race where four Coresound  designs finished in the top five. 
              Doug has also volunteered to help run three Everglades  Challenges and will be helping with the Ultimate Florida Challenge after the  Everglades Challenge is finished this year.   Michael and his son, Brian also raced   in the Michigan Challenge and experienced rudder failure.  Michael and Doug entered this year’s North  Carolina Challenge but due to inclement weather   were turned back. 
              Doug is a retired high school science teacher living in  Tennessee and sailing mostly in Alabama and Tennessee.  Doug also teaches whitewater paddling in  canoe and kayak in summer camp and is a lead instructor for Wilderness Medical  Associates.  Michael, along with his son  Brian, designed  the altered Kruger  Cruiser set-up used today. 
              “I do the Everglades Challenge because they are fun and  challenging.  I have become great friends  with many participants and learn much from them each year,” Doug finished. 
              His partner, Michael (Greybeard) Collins added, “I started  doing the Everglades Challenge because I was looking for an adventure to share  with my son.  I had been his crew and coach  for several years but I wanted to find something that didn’t leave me on the  sidelines.  Our WaterTribe experiences  were a shared adventure from the beginning.   We worked together on choosing a boat and converting  it to a rather unique sailing canoe.  Every year we worked together on routes,  strategy and boat improvements.” 
              “After Brian left home, I was lucky to find  a compatible sailing partner in Doug.  I continue to find enjoyment and variety in  the Challenges, even after doing so many of them.  Every year brings new experiences and  friendships.  My favorite year was the  year we took the “leisure trip” through the Everglades.  It is always fun comparing our 40-hour  leisure trip of the Wilderness Waterway to other accounts of people rushing to  finish the same route in four or five days.” 
              Warren (Sharkchow) Richey has written a book about his  experiences in the Ultimate Florida   Challenge, “Without a Paddle- Racing Twelve Hundred Miles Around Florida  by  Sea Kayak.  It is available through amazon.com or at your  local bookstores.  This is what Warren  had to say about this year’s Ultimate Florida Challenge and why he does  this:  “One of the great things about  WaterTribe is for all the talk of racing and competition, we really aren’t  racing.” 
              “What we are doing is pushing ourselves to the edge, to  the  very brink of our own concept of  what is possible.  That is a different  journey for each of us.  Not a single  race but individual challenges.  When we  get there and break through to some new place it is the most glorious thing.” 
              “Think about it.  When  you participate in a WaterTribe event you get a tee-shirt, a paddle and a shark’s  tooth.  But what you really get is proof  that you can do more and achieve more than you ever imagined.  It is breaking down barriers, it is seeing  things in a different light.  It is doing  the impossible.  And there ain’t no  grander thing on this earth.” 
              No grander thing on this earth. 
                
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