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THE RACING PAGES

SITKA SOUND RACE, ALASKA

 

Race co-founder Mark Gorman claimed the overall title in the inaugural Sitka Sound Ocean Adventure Race on Saturday, June 16th in Sitka, Alaska. While most of the participants were local, this race featured competitors from as far away as Adelaide, South Australia. Mark was in an Echo Islander. Congratulations Mark!

Mark sent us a little note about the Echo rowers participating in the race.

 

Dear Echo folks
Although we only had two Echos in our inaugural Sitka Sound  Ocean Adventure Race, they did the company proud with an Islander winning overall in some pretty rough seas.  A couple pictures attached.
Best,
Mark Gorman

Sitka Sound Race
Mark Gorman, Echo Islander


PRESS RELEASE:
SITKA, June 16, 2007Race co-founder Mark Gorman claimed the overall title in the inaugural Sitka Sound Ocean Adventure Race on Saturday.
 
The race for any human-powered watercraft benefited the Sitka Maritime Heritage Society, which is renovating a historic boat house so it can be used as a museum. The entrants used kayaks, rowing sculls and two Tlingit warrior canoes (which usually have crews of between 10 and 14 paddlers). Most of the competitors were from Sitka, but there were two from Juneau, one from Kodiak, one from Salt Lake City, Utah, one from Couer d’Alene, Idaho, and one from Adelaide, South Australia, who joined the crew of one of the warrior canoes.
 
Gorman rowed a single scull to cover the event’s 17.7-nautical-mile alternate, bad-weather long course from Sitka Sound to the end of Silver Bay and back in 3 hours, 26 minutes, 38 seconds. The course was switched just before the start because of blustery winds and heavy chop on the race’s original course from Sitka Sound to Nakwasina Bay and back.
 
Race co-founder Steve Reifenstuhl, who paddled a single kayak, took second place on the long course in 3:35:37. Even though he won, Gorman said he held a gear advantage over Reifenstuhl, especially once he hit Silver Bay where the ocean chop disappeared and the water became glassy smooth.
 
“We both had GPS’s in our boat, and mine said I went 6 miles an hour and Steve’s said he went 5.7 miles per hour, which is phenomenal for a kayak in this water,” Gorman said. “If he was using my boat, he’d probably have gone 6.5 miles an hour. The only reason I beat Steve was because I had a gear advantage.”
 
Reifenstuhl said his kayak is very light, so he carried a 15-pound rock in a bag to the starting line, thinking he might tuck it into his boat’s bow for ballast. At the last minute, he decided to leave the rock in his car.
 
“It was a judgment call. It would have helped smooth things out in the chop, but it also would have meant I was carrying 15 extra pounds,” Reifenstuhl said, adding that he’s comfortable with the differences between Gorman’s rowing scull and his kayak. “With Mark and I, this is fine. It evens things out between us.”
 
Taking third place over the long course was Matthew Turner in a single kayak, who posted a time of 4:08:05. Finishing fourth was Sandra West of Kodiak, who used a brand new single scull she borrowed from Sitka’s Rob Allen to post a time of 4:22:55. The pair of Andrea Thomas and Cindy Edwards took fifth place in a double kayak, finishing in 4:29:38 to edge sixth-place single kayaker Paul Gloe in 4:29:57.
 
Gorman not only won the long-course race, but he passed all of the short-course racers who started an hour behind him. The short course was 10.7 nautical miles to the entrance of Silver Bay and back, and that race was won by the mixed double kayak of James McGowan and Ivy Hammons. The McGowan-Hammons boat covered the short course in 2:34:25, finishing just a little over a minute ahead of the hard-charging Reifenstuhl.
 
“It was fun and wet,” said Hammons, who added that at one point she and McGowan hit a spot of water where there was like an eddy that made it hard to keep their boat moving. McGowan said it was like a reverse current.
 
“We didn’t decide to do this until Thursday, two days ago,” McGowan said. “But now that we’ve done the first one I’ll be back for the next race.”
 
Taking second place in the short course race was the double kayak team of Lon Garrison and Peter Gorman, who had a time of 2:38:04. The double kayak team of Tim Fulton of Sitka and Eugene Eichner of Couer d’Alene took third in 2:44:00, while single kayaker Scott Harris was fourth in 2:48:40.
 
Finishing fifth in 2:52:14 was the SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium (SEARHC) Tlingit canoe known as “Toowú Latséen,” which means Inner Strength. During training, the canoe lost six of its paddlers to injury, but captain Erin Kitka said he’s got a lot of friends. Toowú Latséen’s goal was to beat the Sitka Traditional Canoe Club’s boat, “Kaasadá Heeni Yaakw’,” which means Canoe From Indian River. Kaasadá Heeni Yaakw’ finished eighth in 3:04:22.
 
The 2008 race takes place on June 14, 2008, and race information, safety tips and entry forms can be found online at http://www.sitkaadventureracing.org/
 
Echo Rowing Sitka Sound
Sandra West - Echo

The results are as follows:

(due to windy weather and ocean chop, a protected and slightly shorter alternate course from Sitka Sound to Silver Bay and back was used for safety reasons instead of the planned course from Sitka Sound to Nakwasina Bay and back)
Long course (17.7 nautical miles, 20.4 statute miles)

1.     Mark Gorman, Sitka, male, single scull, 3 hours, 26 minutes, 38 seconds.

2.     Steve Reifenstuhl, Sitka, male, single kayak, 3:35:37.

3.     Matthew Turner, Sitka, male, single kayak, 4:08:05.

4.     Sandra West, Kodiak, female, single scull, 4:22:55.

5.     Andrea Thomas and Cindy Edwards, Sitka, female, double kayak, 4:29:38.

6.     Paul Gloe, Sitka, male, single kayak, 4:29:57.

7.     Rick Peterson, Sitka, male, single kayak, 5:04:19.

8.     Matthew Keiper, Sitka, male, single kayak, 5:15:32.

9.     Eric Haseltine, Sitka, male, single kayak, 5:58:00.

10.  Charlotte Pittman, Sitka, female, single kayak, 6:24:10.

 Sitka Sound race
Kaasadá Heeni Yaakw’
Short course (10.7 nautical miles, 12.3 statute miles)

1.     James McGowan and Ivy Hammons, Sitka, mixed, double kayak, 2 hours, 34 minutes, 25 seconds.

2.     Lon Garrison and Peter Gorman, Sitka, male, double kayak, 2:38:04.

3.     Tim Fulton, Sitka, and Eugene Eichner, Couer d’Alene, male, double kayak, 2:44:00.

4.     Scott Harris, Sitka, male, single kayak, 2:48:40.

5.     Toowú Latséen, all Sitka except Martin from Juneau, mixed, Tlingit warrior canoe (Erin Kitka captain, Carolee Martin, Alexei Desatoff, Bert Stromquist, Mike Pountney, Dave Nevins, Josh Poindexter, Clancy Boord, Kyle Stiefel, Kathy O’Gara, Amiee LeBlanc-Gloe, Linda Speerstra), 2:52:14.

6.     Bob Cita, Juneau, male, single kayak, 2:55:19.

7.     Litia Garrison and Nancy Knapp, Sitka, female, double kayak, 3:03:45.

8.     Kaasadá Heeni Yaakw’, all Sitka except Boucaut from Adelaide, South Australia, mixed, Tlingit warrior canoe (Alison Dunlap captain, John Dunlap, Renae Mathson, Vienna Vaden, Sonya Hoffay, Charlene Hoffay, Steve Johnson, Rose Boucaut, Kara Lunde, Elsie Wilson, Chatham Vaden), 3:04:22.

9.     Ed Conway and Emily Conway, Sitka, mixed, double kayak, 3:08:45.

10.  Mary Chambers and Amy Blair, Sitka, female, double kayak, 3:12:10.

11.  Bill Foster, Sitka, male, single kayak, 3:24:04.

12.  Heike Hüttonhofer and Patricia Campbell, Sitka, female, double kayak, 3:31:05.

DNF. Donna Russell, Salt Lake City, Utah, female, single kayak, withdrew.

DNF. Edith Johnson, Sitka, female, single kayak, withdrew.

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