Captain Clark on
Captain Clark
Head of the Golden
Gate Ferry Tells of Father’s Quest to be World’s Oldest
Circumnavigator
By Captain David Clark
|
The
two Captain Clarks. |
This is a story of events
leading up to my father’s attainment of the world record as Oldest Solo
Circumnavigator. This is not a description of the actual voyage, but rather my
view of the factors that motivated a member of the "Greatest
Generation" to seek and meet a monumental challenge.
My father is a character. But
his credibility has improved dramatically since he secured the record as the
oldest human to sail around the globe in a small boat by himself.
Dad has a dynamic, adventurous
spirit. He lives life to the very fullest, at times unaware that he is keeping
a pace others might be reluctant to follow. He was born in Alameda in 1924 and
he and his family suffered the hardship of the Depression years. In 1936 he
was shipped off to La Grande Oregon to live with a wealthy Aunt and Uncle in
the hopes that a more comfortable upbringing would be provided. As a
privileged youth in La Grande, he was able to pursue avant-garde activities
such as skiing, flying, and mountain climbing. It was only natural that in
1943, then 19, he would join the Army’s elite ski troops of the 10th
Mountain Division
At that ripe young age, he was
sent to the front lines in the Italian Alps. The 10th Mountain Division played
a pivotal role in the defeat of Hitler and his evil empire. Dad has never said
much about the war and the inhuman experiences he had to endure.
An appreciation of Dad’s
upbringing and the World War II experience helps set the stage for the story
about how he came to pursue and attain his world record.The indelible
experience of the war, combined with the camaraderie of fellow soldiers such
as David Brower, instilled in my father an unquenchable thirst for adventure
and accomplishment.
My father has been immersed in
his quest for the record of Oldest Solo-Circumnavigator for more than 10
years. The recently concluded trip, though successful in the end, was fraught
with challenges and setbacks. No one I know has more right to preach "you
can do it if you try". But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let’s first
go back a few decades to the beginning of this wild endeavor:
The year is 1971, and I have
just graduated from high school in Portland, Oregon. My dad has an ancient
Olds ‘98 packed to the brim with a U-Haul trailer. He’s excited about the
new life upon which he is embarking now that his oldest child has graduated
from high school and freedom is at long last coming into view. My brother
lives with us and my other three siblings are with my mother. She has long
since told Dad to pack-it, as her patience with the nomadic lifestyle he
provided wore thin years ago. Over the past 18 years our family has lived in
mountain towns around the country as he turned his wartime ski experience to
the management of the nations’ new crop of ski areas.
We lived in every corner of the
mountain world, from Oregon to New Hampshire and all points in between
including Colorado, New York, Arizona, Utah and even North Carolina. We found
and founded ski areas in places most people didn’t even realize there is
snow.
Dad, with the family in tow,
jumped from one resort to another. He worked as a run cutter and designer, ski
school director, slope groomer, eventually rising to General Manager. He knew
the best of the best in this unique niche, including those who built such
monuments as Aspen, Vail and Sun Valley. He and Warren Miller shared pine
floats and cold travel trailers as they projected the image of a dynamic
lifestyle onto the psyche of a nation recovering from the deep pain of the
war. My father and mother met in Yosemite - he was a rock climbing rescue
ranger and Mom was an emergency room nurse who treated some of the accident
victims he retrieved from the cliffs around El Capitan. Ansel Adams was a
personal friend. My childhood memories are of ice cold alpine lakes, and
vertical walls of snow.
But back to 1971. We’re in the
packed Olds ’98, steering an out-of-align course for Naples, Florida. Dad
had spent the first 50 years of his life in the mountains; he now was
determined to spend the next 50 years sailing the oceans of the world. Though
my father always told me that "you can do anything you make up your mind
to do!!" it has taken most of the past 30 years to fully realize his
goal.
He figured out a way to come up
with a down payment for a sparkling new 36 foot motor yacht and before long we
were trying to raise the sails. The boat didn’t come with a manual so we
used the trial and error method of seamanship, a technique I suppose most
yachtsmen depend on at some point.
Soon after acquiring the boat we
jumpstarted our sailing careers with a a six month trip throughout the
Bahamas, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico. Over the next few
years I went my own direction as Dad continued sailing the Caribbean. For a
time, he imported primitive crafts between Florida and Haiti, all the while
gaining gained valuable experience. He also improved the quality of his boats
by trading up until he owned a very seaworthy 31 foot double-ended cutter rig
of stout design and build, which he named Sea Me Now.
In the early ’80s the
circumnavigation bug bit him hard. In 1987 he and his wife Lynda set off on
the first circumnavigation with little fanfare and lots of chutzpah. This trip
was successful and although Lynda was aboard for most of the trip (she held in
there as far as New Zealand) Dad completed the voyage alone at the age of 67.
My four siblings and I were all there in 1989 as he sailed into Fort
Lauderdale at the conclusion of this voyage. We all figured that he had
accomplished his goal and a wild and crazy chapter of his life could be
closed. Not so.
NEXT
PAGE