| Ultra Marathon and Everglades Challenge! by Larry Melat
The Ultra Marathon and Everglades Challenge is put on every year by
www.watertribe.com. It is an endurance challenge for Kayak, Canoe and
small Sail Boats that starts at Fort Desoto in St Pete and ends either
in Grande Tours in Placida for the UM or Key Largo for the EC. I first
learned about this when my sister Shari and her husband Ed Francavilla
told me of their intention of Kayaking 68 miles! I thought "your
crazy!" but it did not come as a complete shock because they are
always doing adventurous things like: the 24 hours of Canaan, a mountain
bike race in West Virginia, Hair Scrabble and Enduro motorcycle racing
www.Floridatrailrider.org, Tampa Bay Watchs three mile swim across
Tampa Bay and for vacation hiking and camping five days in the rain
forest of Belize just to name a few.
Did you say small sailboats? That gave me pause to think. I have this
small sunfish on the side of the house that had not been used since
it was given to me. So started the process of getting the boat ready
for the race.
The sunfish is fitted with homemade fiberglass out riggers. The outriggers
go out and up about 10 inches in each direction. On the top of each
rigger glassed in is a 1/2 inch pipe, this is the bushing that the oar
lock rides in.
The oar locks are the type that bolt tightly to the oars, the oars
are then bungee corded to the out rigger so even in a capsize the oar
stay put. I should add that on the stern of the boat is a bungee that
holds the blade end of the oars in place when sailing. The sail rig
normally lays across the deck to the side, the rig dose not get in the
way when rowing because the out rigger lifts the oars high enough for
clean oar rotation. If the wind is light I can sail and row with one
arm, while sitting forwards. This is not nearly as efficient when compared
to rowing back wards, but works well. I used this method at the end
of the ultra marathon when trying to find my way in the dark down the
intercoastal waterway. When rowing the rudder is down this keeps me
tracking in a straight line if I need to turn, rowing with just one
oar will usually be enough to change direction, but if I need to turn
sharp I can turn the rudder with my foot. A bungee is also attached
to the end of the tiller handle and attaches to the center of the seat.
This holds the rudder straight and then can be moved from the center
to either side to help over come a current that may be pushing you to
one side or the other.
Center boards: I use two, the normal sailing board and a smaller board
just for rowing that fills the void and sticks out the bottom a few
inches. The boat is a pleasure to row and can easily be rowed at 3 knots.
If you work hard 4 knots is possible, and with some help like a small
breeze at your stern and following seas 5. 5.5 knots!
I started this project some time in January when the brother-in-law
and sister informed me of their intention of kayaking 68 miles!
Now on March 5, 2005, at 7:00 am the race started: Some 15 hour and
30 minutes later that day I finished the race. The Race went really
well. I rowed about the first 14 miles that's when the wind picked up
and I started to sail at 4 knots. Later in the day around 2 PM the wind
really picked up and the boat started to plain at 6 and 7 knots. My
GPS recorded a top speed at 9.5 knots.
I made the Venice inlet at 4:30 PM and was thinking of going farther
on the outside, but decided not to as the next inlet (stump pass) was
3 hours away with sunset approaching and a out going tide was at 6:30,
so to be on the safe side I went in Venice pass and my speed was reduce
dramatically. After dark my GPS lost the preprogram route that I had
installed, so I had to use the lighted markers to find my way down the
intercoastal waterway. I rowed into Grand Tours at 10:29 PM, sore from
head to toe. I was so happy to finish that early, I was projecting that
it would take 24 to 30 hours to complete. The fact that the wind direction
was in my favor the entire day was my saving grace. Shari and Ed paddled
the entire way in their sea kayaks. They took a break after going about
56 miles slept for four hours and finished about 8 am the next day.
(Note from their journey) while paddling in the intercoastal waterway,
both of their Kayaks were bumped hard during the night. Ed thinks it
might have been a shark checking them out.
Larry Melat
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