No wind this weekend so we kept working on the list. Plenty to do. These boats are complex and there are a lot of systems that need sorting out. Everyone has been pulling long hours trying to make up for our late start with the project.

Monday we will have the christening of the Black Pearl at Ocean Village. This will mark the culmination of five fast paced months to pull this program together and get the boat into the water. Disney is hosting the event so it should be a good show. We are hoping to head off on our 2000 mile qualfication sail right after the christening Monday evening. We have been organizing everything from the food, clothes, canting keel machinery, generator, water maker, head, and media station not to mention normal things like sails and running rigging.

We have been lucky with the weather here. No rain in the last two weeks which is great for working outside. Also, we are growing in numbers each day. Today Rodney Adern arrived from Alinghi along with Carol Nicolau, and tomorrow Jerry Kriby arrives from the USA.

All going well.

Another big day for the Black Pearl. She went for her maiden voyage and all went well. It was a beautiful, sunny, 12 knots day on the Solent and we got through about 5 different sails, ran the keel system, tuned the rig, and run other various checks. We had all the experts of the various departments onboard plus the crew. It doesn’t take long to realize these boats are going to be a handful. Further, the size of the sails makes for heavy work everywhere weather you are getting them up and down or grinding them in.

Where are the other 7 guys?

The boat sails effortlessly, not creating a big wake as you would imagine for a 14 ton-70 foot long boat.

Definitely generated a work list today. The forecast for the week is gradually increasing wind which is just perfect for us to build our

confidence day by day in the boat. I think we will have a work day tomorrow and then sail again Friday. Supposed to be raining and windy on Friday.

We had a huge day yesterday and a good one today.

Yesterday, Monday September 5th, we executed the “roll over” test as required by the VOR 70 class rule. Each boat must demonstrate that it is

capable of righting itself from a fully inverted positon. So we used a crane to roll the boat over by tying a strap onto the bulb and simply lifting the boat by its keel. Once upside down, we canted the keel manually about 6 degrees, and she righted herself. The rule requires that the Person in Charge, and two other crewmembers be inside while the roll is performed. So I was in there with Juggy and Nigel. It was an interesting experience. Very dark inside a carbon boat that is upside down.

Next big event of the day was to step the mast. This went perfectly. Everything fit, the lengths were just right. Craig Satterthwaite, our project manager for the mast and boom has done a great job of coordinating all that with Hall Spars Holland who also did a greatjob of deleivering what they said they would when they said they would. So that was another huge step forward without any glitches.

And the final piece of good news of September 5th was the Dirk De Ridder and his wife happily welcomed into this world their second daughter. Here is an excerpt from his email:

Paul,

Last night at 3:55 am our second daughter was born. She is 50 cm and weighs 3110gr and is healthy. Helena did a great job and evrything is fine with here as well. Here name is Anne Marieke de Ridder and we call her Marieke.

Later, Dirk

Today’s goal was to get the boat ready to go for its first sail tomorrow. This meant getting all the machinery working…main engine, generator, get the hydraulic keel mechanism full working, tune the rig, running rigging set, tune up the winches, check the sails, etc. A big day and we are still here at 20:00.

Tomorrow we plan to dock out at 12:00. Forecast is 10 kntos from the SSW.

Perfect conditions for a first sail. The Pearl is coming alive.

<< Faire rêver les gens>>

PAUL CAYARD, skipper du team américain Pirates des Caraíbes, revient sur son engagement dans cette course autour du monde, qu’il a déjà gagnée en 97-98.

CINQ PARTICIPATIONS à la Coupe de l’America, sept titres de champion du monde, une victoire dans l’édition de cette même course en 1997-98, qu’est-ce qui vous pousse à repartir autour de la planète ?

– J’y retourne pour deux raisons. D’abord, ma victoire en 1998 dans la Whitbread (ancienne appellation de la Volvo Ocean Race) sur EF Language reste l’un des meilleurs souvenirs de ma carrière. Je suis un homme d’équipe, j’aime affronter les difficultés et partager les succès avec les autres. On trouve tous ces ingrédients dans la Volvo Ocean Race. Et j’ajouterais même que la dureté de cette course rend la victoire encore plus valorisante. Ensuite, je trouve que le partenariat entre Volvo et Walt Disney est une belle idée. Un bateau aux couleurs du film Pirates des Caraíbes,

Unsurprisingly, given that there are just 65 days to go to the start, Cayard’s team is highly experienced. “For this campaign, it was important to start with an experienced group,” said Cayard. “We are the last team to hit the water so we don’t have a lot of time to train. We will be counting on experience to help make up ground on all the other teams”.

Cayard’s squad represents seven countries and contains four past winners of this race. Two of the crew, Rodney Ardern and Curtis Blewett, have prior commitments to the America’s Cup.

The selected crew are: Paul Cayard, Skipper; Julian ‘Jules’ Salter, Navigator; Freddie Loof, Watch Captain; Rodney Ardern, Watch Captain; Dirk de Ridder, Trimmer and Helmsman; Nigel King, Trimmer and Helmsman; Craig Satterthwaite, Trimmer and Helmsman; Justin Ferris, Bowman, Trimmer and Helmsman; Curtis Blewett, Bowman; Jerry Kirby, Bowman; and Justin ‘Juggy’ Clougher, Bowman.

Cumulatively, The Pirates of the Caribbean have enjoyed the kind of success that is rare in the Volvo Ocean Race. That success includes 12 campaigns between them and four wins – Paul Cayard, Curtis Blewett, Dirk De Ridder and Justin ‘Juggy’ Clougher. Rodney Ardern is also a veteran who has participated three times in this race. Additionally, the team has participated in 20 America’s Cup campaigns and won three – Curtis Blewett, Rodney Ardern and Jerry Kirby – as well as three Louis Vuitton Cup wins. Paul Cayard and Jerry Kirby, both of the USA, have each participated five times in the America’s Cup. Between them, the 11 Pirates have also taken part in six Olympic Games in different classes, including a bronze medal win for Freddy Loof, in the Sydney 2000 Games in the single handed Finn. Truly a talented bunch of Bucaneers.

Rodney Ardern and Curtis Blewett will be racing three legs (Vigo to Cape Town, Cape Town to Melbourne and Melbourne to Rio) as they are contracted to Alinghi in the America’s Cup. Curtis Blewett will be replaced by Jerry Kirby. The replacement for Ardern has not been finalized yet. Vend

Cayard Sailing to manage Disney’s entry to the 2005 Volvo Ocean Race

Cayard Sailing Inc. has been appointed to manage Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean entry to the famous Volvo Ocean Race. Paul Cayard, winning skipper of the 1998 Race, will skipper the entry from Hollywood. The ‘Pirates’ boat will be fully branded on the hull and sails with ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ film artwork, and will be named ‘The Black Pearl’.

Cayard Sailing will focus it efforts for the next year on this premier Ocean Race. Content will be added to this site on a regular basis, probably daily once racing starts. Some of you may have followed EF Language in the 1998 Whitbread Round the World Race though various websites. We will try to bring you as much insight as we did in 1998 if not more. Apart from www.CayardSailing.com, you can find information about the race and Pirates of the Caribbean at VolvoOceanRace.org and www.PiratesRacing.org.

Projects:

The Volvo Ocean Race is the world’s premier ocean going yacht race, and has taken place every four years since it’s birth in 1973 as the Whitbread Round the World Race. It is one of the world’s leading sporting events – an unrivalled high-seas adventure that transcends sport and gains enormous media coverage around the world over an 8-month period.

The Start of the 2005 race will be November 5th in Sanxenxo, Spain and finish in Goteborg, Sweden on June 20, 2006.

Walt Disney Pictures ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ – a global film property

‘Pirates of the Caribbean, The Curse of the Black Pearl’, was released at cinemas in 2003 and became a worldwide phenomenon grossing a global box office of $653 million. The film gained 5 Academy award nominations including Best Actor. Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley will be reuniting with producer Jerry Bruckheimer for ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ II, which will be filmed in the early part of 2005 with the cinema release in July 2006.

The next Volvo Ocean Race starts in November 2005 and finishes in June 2006, reaching its peak to coincide with the global release of ‘Pirates of the Caribbean II’.

Buena Vista International (BVI) and the Volvo Ocean Race have concluded a film marketing deal resulting in the creation of a unique and unparalleled partnership between the worlds of entertainment and sport. This partnership has produced a fully competitive ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ entry in the Volvo Ocean Race

This groundbreaking initiative will inspire a global audience and deliver massive media coverage for the race, the film and the boats marketing partners.

The Team

James “Kimo” Worthington will manage the Pirates entry for Cayard Sailing. Worthington brings a large amount of management experience to Pirates through his six America’s Cups and one previous Round the world Race. Worthington is joined shoreside by Curt Oetking, who like Worthing, possesses a strong resume in both the America’s Cup and Round the World competitions. Oetking is the technical director of the team, running the “pit crew”, whose primary responsibility it is to make the Black Pearl race ready. The “shore team” will number about 20 and more information and CV’s will be posted soon.

The Boat

For the 2005 Volvo Ocean Race, a new class of yacht has been designated. The Open 70 is more of a weapon than a boat. It is 70 feet overall and has a 2 meter bowsprit. It weighs just 114 tonnes and carries a maximum of 6700 square feet of sail area. The boats have canting keels gving them a similar righting moment to the current America’s Cup designs but at close to half the wight, these machines will fly.

Telefonica, the Spanish entry who has been sailing since March, has already set a new monohull 24 hour record notching up 530 miles in 24 hours. They hit 35 knots regularly and it is estimated that 40 knots of boat speed will be achieved.

The Crew

The crew onboard the Black Pearl will consist of just 10 for the offshore legs and 11 for the import races. This relatively small number of crew means that there will be a huge physical requirement for the 10 who are onboard. Remember we sailed the 60’s with 12 and they had roughly

Only those who have competed in the Volvo Ocean Race know how grueling and exhausting the event can be.

Paul Cayard tested the elements of wind and sea and pushed the limits of human endurance while leading EF Language to victory in the 1997-98 Whitbread Round the World Race.

For Cayard, whose reputation was built on round-the-buoys racing, it was a life-changing experience.

“It was the most exciting race of my life, one that has left an indelible mark on my professional career and provided me with the most on a human level,” Cayard said recently.

That statement helps explain why Cayard agreed to skipper the Disney entry in the 2005-2006 Volvo Ocean Race. The 46-year-old San Francisco native considers the around the world adventure the ultimate challenge in competitive sailboat racing.

“I think the Volvo is a unique opportunity to explore the most extreme side of our sport,” Cayard said last week in an interview with The Capital.

“Those four weeks in the southern ocean were just spectacular. It was some of the most thrilling and exhilirating sailing I’ve ever experienced.”

Cayard was immediately intrigued when initially approached about captaining the Walt Disney Company’s Volvo 70. For a sailor with a swashbuckling personality, the thought of steering a pirate ship known as the Black Pearl was appealing.

“There’s no question that Disney’s involvement with this project was the determining factor,” Cayard said. “It’s an enormous opportunity to introduce the general public to sailing and the Volvo Ocean Race. I just couldn’t say no to a proposal of this scope.”

Disney intends to use the Volvo Ocean Race as a platform for promoting “Pirates of the Caribeean II: Dead Man’s Chest.”

“Most of the sponsors I’ve worked with were looking to promote a brand name or a product,” Cayard said. “It will be interesting and different to promote a film. Disney is a very well-known international company and I’m honored to be involved with its first venture into professional sailing.”

Cayard, a seven-time world champion, five-time America’s Cup participant and two-time Olympian, was announced as skipper of the Black Pearl last Tuesday. However, the 1988 Rolex Yachtsmen of the Year has been working behind the scenes for the syndicate for months, sources said.

What’s for certain is that Cayard was completely organized by the time of last week’s announcement. He and operations manager Kimo Worthington have already selected the 10-man crew, which will be announced within the next month.

“We have put together a very good crew that includes four past winners of the event and will represent seven different countries,” said Cayard, speaking from Palma de Mallroca Spain, where he was competing in the Copa del Rey Regatta.

Worthington will not sail aboard the boat, but there will be other Americans in the crew, Cayard said.

“Make no mistake, we are representing the United States,” he said.

Cayard became the first American skipper to capture the Volvo Ocean Race through thorough preparation. EF Language was trialing on the water well ahead of the other syndicates in 1997 and thus created a tremendous advantage in sail development.

That certainly will not be the case this time around as Disney is will behind the other six syndicates, all of which have launched Volvo 70s and are on the water training. Additionally, Cayard will work with a budget of approximately $14.6 million that is far less than the competition.

“Clearly, our campaign has a lot of catching up to do. I’m not naive enough to minimize that problem and figure we might not be up to speed until we’re three-quarters of the way around the world,” Cayard said. “The good news is that only one third of the points will have been awarded by the time the race reaches Rio de Janeiro.

“Our strategy is to learn and improve as we go and reel the others in during the latter stages of the race. It will be important to minimize our losses between the start and Rio.”

Cayard is thrilled to again be working with Farr Yacht Design. The Annapolis-based firm designed EF Language and he trusts the quality of its work.

Disney’s Volvo 70 was constructed using a mold owned by Allant Racing and is being built at Green Marine in Lymington, United Kingdom. Allant Racing, comprised of Richard Brisius and Johan Salen, is organizing and managing the Swedish entry sponsored by Ericsson.

There has been much speculation as to what Allant/Ericsson would receive in return for allowing Disney to piggyback off its program. It was presumed there would be some level of cooperation between the two syndicates.

Cayard somewhat squelched that idea, saying that Allant Racing “would have no role” in the Disney program. He was unsure whether the two teams would trial against one another to test sails and boat speed.

Russ Bowler, president of Farr Yacht Design, said he’s witnessed an unprecedented level of cooperation among the Volvo Ocean Race syndicates this time around.

Cayard said that’s true to some extent. For instance, the Spanish entry Telefonica Movistar shared information with the other teams regarding a design flaw in the structural part of its Volvo 70.

“On the down side, Ericsson discovered a problem that it tried to keep from us,” Cayard said.

Cayard is excited about the Volvo 70, which replaces the 60-footer previously used in the race. Telefonica has already established a 24-hour speed record for a monohull, hinting at the potential of the class.

“These boats are extremely cool and very, very fast,” Cayard said. “They are a cross between an Open 60 and a Volvo 60. Sailing them will be incredibly demanding physically.”

Cayard is concerned about how a crew of 10 will handle the powerful machines. In 1997-98, he raced EF Language with 12 men aboard.

Cayard hopes to have the Black Pearl on the water by Sept. 1 and will conduct initial sea trials off England. The Pirates of the Caribbean boat will then embark on its 2,000-mile qualifying run before returning to Spain for further practice in preparation for the Nov. 5 start of the Volvo Ocean Race.

The Volvo Ocean Race added a marquee name yesterday with the announcement that Olympian and America’s Cup veteran Paul Cayard will skipper the U.S. entry Black Pearl. As has been rumored for months, Cayard will steer the Disney-sponsored boat when the fleet of seven boats leaves Spain in November for the quadrennial ’round-the-world event.

The San Francisco sailor was the first American to win the 30,000-mile race when he skippered EF Language to victory in 1998 in what was then the Whitbread ‘Round-the-World Race. Cayard, 46, was the U.S. entry in sailing’s Star Class in the Athens Olympics last year and has five America’s Cup campaigns under his belt.

In a phone interview from Palma de Mallorca, Spain, where he was competing in a big-boat regatta, Cayard said he’s assembled a crew of 10 from seven nations and expects to start training around Sept. 1, as soon as boat construction is completed in England. Nine of the crew have been around the world in the Volvo or Whitbread before, he said, and four were on winning boats.

Disney’s sponsorship was late arriving, and Cayard’s team will be one of the last to begin preparations. The team with the most experience is Movistar, a Spanish entry that began sailing last February and completed a trial run from Australia to England via Cape Horn.

“Our campaign has to be catch-up,” said Cayard, “and we may not catch up till we’re three-quarters of the way around the world. The good news is, at that point, only one-third of the points will have been awarded.

“Our idea is to get a good crew, learn and improve as we go and reel the others in. The only thing that matters is having the most points at the end of the last leg.”

Cayard is credited with taking the Whitbread/Volvo to a new level when he captained EF Language in 1998. Previously, it had been largely a race for offshore sailors who put as much emphasis on the adventure as on winning. He brought the intensity of inshore dinghy sailing. When Volvo took over sponsorship in 2001-2002, winner Illbruck was skippered by another American Olympian, fellow San Franciscan John Kostecki.

For the third straight time, the race has a Chesapeake Bay stopover scheduled in Baltimore-Annapolis in April. Chesapeake sailors will get a look at the new race boats, which at 70 feet are 10 feet longer than the last rendition and have movable keels for stability.

“The boats are extremely cool,” said Cayard. “They’re very, very fast — so fast that it may be a liability changing headsails when you’re going 30 knots in the Southern Ocean. There will be a lot of water on deck and keeping everyone on board is going to be a task.”

Cayard made it clear after his Whitbread victory in 1998 that he didn’t plan to do another ’round-the-world race but said he found the chance to partner with Disney and the challenge of assembling a new team attractive.

“Long-term, if it’s good for Disney, it could be good for the sport if we get other media companies interested in sponsoring sailing.”

Disney will use the sponsorship to promote its upcoming “Pirates of the Caribbean” movie sequel. Cayard says he’ll work with a budget of 12 million euros ($14.6 million), “which is probably a little less than the others.”

Other race entries come from Spain, Holland, Brazil, Australia and Sweden.

NEW YORK – Quando Pierre Cayard cominci

Cayard, 46, the first US skipper to win the race in 1997-98, will lead the “Pirates of the Caribbean” team in the four-yearly round-the-world race.

“It was the most exciting race of my life,” said America’s Cup star Cayard.

“And one that has left an indelible mark on my career and provided me with the most on a human level. That’s why I decided to do it again.”

The entry, with a boat named Black Pearl to be launched in August, is promoting the July 2006 film release of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest.

“Disney’s involvement in the project has been another determining factor,” Cayard added.

“It’s an enormous opportunity to introduce the general public to sailing and to the Volvo Ocean Race. I simply couldn’t say ‘no’ to a proposal of this scope.”

Cayard won the Whitbread Round the World Race, as it was known then, on EF Language in 1998.

He is a seven-time sailing world champion, a five-time America’s Cup veteran and a two-time Olympian.

His accolades include election to the Sailing World Hall of Fame in 2002 and Rolex Yachtsmen of the Year in 1998.

The race will begin on 5 November with an in-port race in Sanxenxo, Galicia, Spain.

Leg one from Vigo, Spain, to Cape Town, South Africa, starts on 12 November.

The eight subsequent legs take in Melbourne, Wellington, Rio de Janeiro, Baltimore, New York, Portsmouth, Rotterdam and Gothenburg.