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My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



April 17, 2013

Phaedo

It was only a few years ago that Lloyd Thornburg was attending the prestigious Art Design College in Pasadena and sailing out of Marina del Rey. "I had a small boat, but I would sail her all the time, usually to the end of the Santa Monica Pier and back. I loved it, especially sailing the boat back into her slip."
Lloyd is returning to California — briefly — but with a much larger and more exotic boat. "I ordered a Gunboat 66 catamaran a few years ago when I was 28," he told Latitude. "The Gunboats were being built in South Africa, so I figured I'd fly down, spend a week selecting options, then fly home until she was completed. I soon learned that having a big boat built is a long and complicated process. I ending up living in South Africa for a year until the boat was completed."
The jovial Thornburg, who splits time between homes in Santa Fe and St. Barth, didn't waste any time entering his brightly colored all-carbon Phaedo in major races in the Caribbean and Atlantic. We don't have a list of them all, but they included a couple of Caribbean 600s, a Voiles de St. Barth, some races in Antigua, a TransAtlantic, and England's classic Fastnet Race.

Among those crewing for Thornburg in this year's 600 was Brian Thompson, known to many West Coast sailors from his days running Steve Fossett's 60-ft tri Lakota, and known to many sailors around the world for his circumnavigations and other transoceanic racing exploits.

The big Phaedo news is that she left St. Barth on April 13 under the direction of Aussie skipper Paul Hand for the Panama Canal and a delivery up to Newport Beach. If you see her, you'll know it, because she's the only big boat with rust/copper-colored hulls. She'll be hauled in Newport and have her rig pulled in preparation for this summer's TransPac Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii. It's a pity, but her only multihull competition will be a Lagoon 450.

Following the race, Thornburg and Phaedo will continue on around the world — and rather quickly, we suspect. But during a conversation with us on Shell Beach during a Voiles party the other night, Thornburg confessed he sometimes misses those times sailing his smaller and more simple boat ". . . when I didn't need four people to go sailing."

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