BRIAN JANNEY: A MONTH IN THE LIFE OF A NORTH SAILS EXPERT
BRIAN JANNEY: A MONTH IN THE LIFE OF A NORTH SAILS EXPERT
Here, There and Everywhere
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Pacific Cup Line Honors
Predicting their finish time in the Pac Cup became crucial when Bill McKinley asked Janney if he could make it to the Great Lakes in time for the two races to Mackinac. “I knew it was going to be tight, with only a two or three day window for travel. But I said yes. I was hoping I could maybe get 24-48 hours in Hawaii—maybe even get my feet wet. Turns out that was wishful thinking.” Instead, thanks to a “weird weather system in the Pacific,” Pyewacket’s line honors victory took a full six days shutting the door on any R&R in Hawaii. “The Denali3 team said they were watching the tracker like crazy.” he laughs. Only a few hours after the finish in Hawaii, Janney jumped a redeye back to San Diego. “I guess I was really tired, because I fell asleep before takeoff and didn’t wake up until we were actually landing. ” But he gathered his bags and headed home, where he had just enough time to repack. “I had to take all the Pyewacket gear out, put the Denali3 gear in, go back to the airport, fly all day to Detroit.” After an hour’s drive to Port Huron, he fell into a hotel bed at 2am. “And then we started the Port Huron to Mac race at 1pm that same day. My body didn't know what timezone it was in!”![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0688/6549/1220/files/Pyewacket70.jpg)
Bayview-Mac: Class Victory
The Denali3 crew was obviously happy—and a little surprised— that he made it in time, Janney continues, adding that he felt a little bad about his lack of preparation. “I was one of the watch captains and helped with tactics, but I didn't have time to wrap my head around the weather and make a solid plan. Fortunately it was a light air race, so nothing too crazy. We never actually saw the wind speed drop to zero, but we sure did get close a couple times.” The 280 mile race took the Ker 46+ 48 hours to complete. “We were definitely the small boat, in the same class with all the TP52s and Great Lakes 70s. When we won, the owner was pretty happy.” But they had barely tied up to the Mackinac dock before it was time to head offshore once again. “I said I’d help deliver the boat down to Chicago” in time for the next weekend’s race, Janney explains, because there wasn’t enough time to fly back to San Diego. “And as soon as we got to the island, the boat captain says, ‘Hey, there's weather coming in. If we don't leave right now, we're gonna get our teeth kicked in’. So we didn’t even get a shower or a proper meal, just took off. By that point, I was pretty much eight days straight on a boat. And it's another two days down to Chicago.”Chicago Mac: Storm watch
Janney did finally get two nights sleep in a Chicago hotel room, before starting the Chicago-Mackinac Race. “The boat captain for Denali3 does a really nice job, and the boat was totally sorted out,” so he focused on weather homework. “It was a pretty bad forecast,”he admits, “and it actually came true. Chris Bedford predicted hours of thunderstorms overnight, and he was very honest with us; the models had a hard time resolving how much wind there was going to be, or from what direction.” Based on what they knew, the team decided to head north as fast as they could after the start—even though the heading to Mackinac was northeast. “We basically went up the west coast of Lake Michigan.” Despite this plan, they couldn’t escape the bad weather that night. “The storm ended up being about 200 miles north to south, and Lake Michigan is 300 miles long, so it pretty much covered the entire race area. We got hit pretty hard. I saw the wind speed hit 38, and it may have been higher; there was so much rain and the drops hurt, making it hard to look at the instruments.” For more than two hours of constant thunderstorm cells, Denali’s navigator watched the radar and counted down to each one for the team. “There really wasn't an opportunity to dodge them,” Janney says. ”We had talked prerace about taking all our sails down - covered every scenario, just in case - because we knew it could be anything.” But they were able to keep up a reefed main and J4, while focusing on safety and trying to minimize the chance of damage. Less than a week after their previous win to Mackinac, they again saved their time on the bigger boats in their class and also finished second in their division. This time, Janney was able to stay a few days and enjoy the island and several nice crew dinners, before flying home for a well-deserved rest.![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0688/6549/1220/files/BJ_ChiMac.jpg)