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Missing Sailor’s Boat Is Found Off the Mexican Coast

Donald Lawson, 41, of Baltimore was training for a solo sailing trip around the world when he left Acapulco on July 5. His capsized boat, the Defiant, was found in the Pacific on July 24.

Donald Lawson, wearing a black shirt and a black vest, stands in a marina with sailing masts behind him.

By Chang Che

The capsized boat of Donald Lawson, a sailor from Baltimore who disappeared in the Pacific Ocean over two weeks ago, has been found off the coast of Mexico, his wife said.

A Mexican Navy search and rescue team discovered a vessel, later identified as Mr. Lawson’s trimaran, the Defiant, about 410 miles south of Acapulco, Mexico, on Thursday.

Mr. Lawson, 41, was training for an attempt to set a world record while circumnavigating the globe solo in a sailboat. His wife, Jacqueline Lawson, said in a statement on Sunday that she lost contact with him on July 12 after his boat lost engine power in a storm off the Mexican coast. Mr. Lawson was still missing as of Monday.

Here’s what to know about the search for Mr. Lawson.

Who is Donald Lawson?

Mr. Lawson, 41, is a professional sailor from Baltimore who hoped to become the fastest person to sail solo and nonstop around the world in a boat no longer than 60 feet. He also hoped to become one of the few African Americans to set world records in the sport of sailing. Mr. Lawson and his wife started the Dark Seas Project, an effort to promote more diversity in the sport of sailing. He is also the chairman of the diversity, equity and inclusion committee for U.S. Sailing, the national governing body for the sport.

In a 2022 interview published on the U.S. Sailing website , Mr. Lawson said that when he took up sailing, “I was the only African American I saw, but my passion, love and drive made me forget about issues or people who didn’t want me there.”

Mr. Lawson believed the Defiant, a 60-foot sailing vessel known as a trimaran, could help him achieve his ambitions. Before Mr. Lawson acquired it, the Defiant set a speed record in a 2017 race from California to Hawaii. It has also been used as a training boat for the America’s Cup race, Ms. Lawson said.

Mr. Lawson was last heard from on July 12.

Mr. Lawson set off on July 5 from Acapulco, where he had just finished repairing his boat. He was bound for Baltimore by way of the Panama Canal as he was gearing up for his world record sailing attempt in the fall. Four days later, on July 9, he used a satellite communication device popular among sailors to text his wife that he was experiencing issues with the Defiant. The boat had lost engine power and he was forced to rely on a wind generator.

Mr. Lawson lost the wind generator in a storm on July 12, Ms. Lawson said in her statement. It was the last time she heard from her husband.

Ray Feldmann, a spokesman for Ms. Lawson, said in a phone interview that Ms. Lawson had remained hopeful for several days that her husband would find a way to get in touch with her.

“It was not uncommon for him to shut down communications in order to conduct fixes to the boat,” Mr. Feldmann said. But on July 21, after almost 10 days without contact, Ms. Lawson reported him missing.

The capsized Defiant was found on July 24.

The U.S. Coast Guard issued an alert to vessels in the area where Mr. Lawson’s boat was last detected. According to the tracking app PredictWind , that was on July 13, roughly 320 miles south of Acapulco.

The Mexican Navy began a search. On July 24, one of its planes spotted a capsized boat later identified as the Defiant. The U.S. Coast Guard said it had dispatched a 210-foot patrol boat called the Active to assist in the search-and-rescue operation.

Rescue teams did not locate Mr. Lawson near his boat in the days after it was found. The U.S. Coast Guard said it had suspended its search mission on Friday evening, leaving it to the Mexican naval authorities to continue the search for Mr. Lawson.

The U.S. Coast Guard has “limited capabilities” for such a long-range rescue operation, said Edward Wargo, a spokesman. And Mr. Lawson’s boat, which was found hundreds of miles off the coast of Mexico, was outside its jurisdiction.

The search efforts could restart if new information about Mr. Lawson turned up, Mr. Wargo added.

Mr. Lawson might be on a missing life raft.

When Mr. Lawson set sail from Mexico aboard the Defiant, the boat was equipped with a survival suit, a 12-foot dinghy and a life raft. The Mexican Navy found the suit, which could keep him dry, and the dinghy during its search mission, Mr. Feldmann said.

But as of Sunday, the Mexican Navy had not found the life raft after repeated searches in the area where the Defiant was found.

“I view this as encouraging news,” Ms. Lawson said in her statement on Sunday. “I believe Donald used the life raft when the Defiant became disabled, and that he is still out there somewhere.”

She added that she and her family remained “hopeful and optimistic” that her husband would be found alive.

Mr. Feldmann said that neither he nor Ms. Lawson received an update on the search on Monday.

Because Mr. Lawson has been missing for over two weeks, Mr. Feldmann said, the only hope is that he is in the life raft, perhaps with a supply of potable water taken from the Defiant before it capsized.

“Maybe he’s adrift or found an island or some shelter of some kind,” he said. “Absent evidence to the contrary, we hope he’s on the raft and he will be located.”

Chang Che is the Asia technology correspondent for The Times. He previously worked for The China Project and as a freelance writer covering Chinese technology and society. More about Chang Che

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Meet Donald Lawson, the Ambitious Sailor Who Aims to Break 15 World Records in the Next 5 Years

Lawson also plans to become the first american to solo circumnavigate the globe in 70 days aboard his fast ocean trimaran, defiant., jaclyn trop, jaclyn trop's most recent stories.

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Captain Donald Lawson plans to sail around the world on his 60-foot trimaran, Defiance.

At nine years old, Captain Donald Lawson recalls walking the marinas in Annapolis, asking anyone on the docks if he could give them a hand—cleaning boats, folding sails, or carrying gear back to the boathouse.

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Captain Donald Lawson plans to sail around the world on his 60-foot trimaran, Defiance.

“The captain of the Lady Maryland allowed me to steer the boat,” Lawson recalls. “I asked him how far I could take it, and he said, ‘Technically, you could sail it around the world.’ It was a real lightbulb, life-changing moment for me, and I started working toward that goal.”

More than three decades later, Lawson, 41, is gearing up to break from 15 to 18 world sailing records by 2028. “When you compete for a record, you are competing with the past, present and future,” he says. “For me, the only way I can show who I am and what I am is to succeed in these voyages.”

This fall, he’ll set out to become the first American—and, by extension, the first African-American—sailor to circumnavigate the globe solo in 70 days on a trimaran. He will be the fifth person to attempt such a feat—a groundbreaking goal for a sailor who had few African-American role models to look up to.

trimaran defiant

Sailing was not diverse in the 1990s. By the time Lawson set foot on his first schooner, only one African-American sailor, Teddy Seymour, had sailed the globe solo, completing a 16-month journey via the world’s canals in 1987.

“People took me in because they could see my passion and drive,” he says. “I had to learn to do everything on board just to get the opportunity to help out on the docks and sail.”

After high school, Lawson taught sailing to children at the Downtown Sailing Center in Baltimore. At the same time, he earned his racing chops crewing on raceboats in events like the Governor’s Cup in the Chesapeake Bay as well as local regattas. In the winter of 2005, Bruce Schwab, who had circumnavigated the world the previous year in his 60-foot yacht, Ocean Planet , invited Lawson out of the blue to come sailing with him in Portland, Maine.

The first night on the water, the pair were caught in a snowstorm. Ever the competitor, Schwab wanted to use the storm’s winds to increase boat speed, rather than seeking shelter in port. Lawson clearly liked that idea. “The boat could sail perfectly fine under autopilot,” Schwab told Outside Online . “But Donald was so thrilled to be there that he refused to come below, preferring to sit outside and drive the boat for hours, upwind, in the snow.”

It was that kind of mettle that is prompting Lawson to go after successive solo-speed records. But he has more than just glory in mind. Last year, he founded the Dark Seas Initiative, a non-profit organization with the aim to increase diversity in the sport by inspiring the next generation of sailors. Lawson also chairs the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee for US Sailing, the sport’s national governing body.

Donald Lawson plans to break multiple records aboard his boat, Defiant.

As part of its outreach, the Dark Seas Initiative will be broadcast into hundreds of classrooms as Lawson attempts to break his records. The cameras will record the often-grueling conditions to give a sense of the reality of offshore sailing. The goal is to reach young people who might never have considered sailing as a hobby, much less a profession.

“Sailing requires a boat, and when you are struggling to live, a boat is the last thing on your mind,” Lawson says. “Yacht Clubs have historically not been very inclusive to women or minorities, so what you have is an uncomfortable scenario where individuals are afraid to ask and the clubs don’t know how to be inclusive.”

Groupama 2 was launched in 2004 as the most highly technical raceboat of its day.

Lawson acquired his pedigreed trimaran, Defiant, in April, likening it to the Formula 1 of boats for its speed and performance. Having started life as Groupama 2 , the French-built trimaran was launched in 2004, using the most advanced materials of that time. It was the last ORMA 60 produced, but won multiple races, including three years of Grand Prix titles and the 2007 Transat Jacques Vabre. The multihull got its new name from Lawson’s commitment to “defying the odds” and his favorite show, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine .

Lawson spent the first months along the California coast, visiting different yacht clubs and sailing centers, and even sailing into San Francisco Bay. He is now based in Acapulco, having put 6,000 nautical miles on Defiant.

“He’s an adventurer,” says Rich Jepsen, a board member of US Sailing. “Nobody does that much work without having an inner drive to do it—like the saying about summiting Everest, he’s doing it because it’s there. But he’s also turning his personal ambition into a proven model for doing good by inspiring the school children who watch him.”

Capt. Donald Lawson plans to break multiple records aboard his 60-foot fast catamaran Defiant.

Those first 6,000 miles have taken a toll. Recent images of Defiant in Acapulco show it looking the worse for wear, with visible hull and sail damage. Some sailing websites report the boat lost its engines. Lawson says the boat is being repaired locally and he plans to soon sail through the Panama Canal, up the Atlantic coast to his home port of Baltimore, where it will be hauled out. “It will undergo testing, modifications and upgrades for the upcoming record season,” he says.

The record-breaking attempts could start as early as next fall, with the Newport-Bermuda race. Lawson is going after the record held by his mentor Steve Fossett, who sailed the route in 1 day, 16 hours in 1999. “If time doesn’t allow for that, then the next record attempt would be the Around the World Voyage in October,” he says.

The campaign is then planned to continue through 2028.

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The making of Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson and the quixotic quest that may have doomed him

The journey of Donald Lawson and the Defiant.

Warning signs marked the last known days of the sailor, who aimed to bring diversity to the sport

Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson likely had little warning before his sailing trimaran Defiant capsized hundreds of miles off the coast of Mexico in July. We might never know what happened that day or what became of Lawson, who likely perished. Was he prepared to succeed? Was he destined to fail? In an attempt to better understand his quest, The Baltimore Banner spoke to dozens of sailors familiar with him and his boat and those who met him during the past year. We reviewed scores of his interviews, speaking engagements and social media posts. The sailor who spent the most time aboard Defiant with Lawson was his wife, Jacqueline Lawson. She declined to be interviewed.

Donald and Jacqueline Lawson spent the last day of August 2022, at sea with a steady breeze at their backs. Northerly swells unfurled under clear skies. High school sweethearts, husband and wife, business partners, captain and first mate. They were all those things as they rode the prevailing wind and current southward, following the coast of California toward Los Angeles.

The transit was probably one of the easiest the couple had experienced aboard their massive 60-foot trimaran Defiant since they took possession of it less than five months earlier. The Lawsons caught a break, even if it didn’t last long. That night, somewhere past Point Conception, their engine failed. Their batteries died, and eventually so did their electronic instruments, a portent of doom a year away.

The lighthouse on Anacapa Island.

The Lawsons sailed toward Anacapa Island, one of the five rugged islands that make up the Channel Islands National Park west of Santa Barbara. Intentionally or inadvertently, Defiant steered into Cathedral Cove, a small north-facing inlet a half-mile from the Anacapa lighthouse that marks the eastern end of the island. Without instruments, navigating in the dark, it’s possible the Lawsons saw the light and mistook Anacapa for the mainland.

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At some point, they dropped an anchor, although it did not keep their boat from hitting the rocky edge of the cove. Left to fend for itself, the pedigreed racing machine likely would have broken up against the anvil-like ledge of volcanic schist that forms most of the shoreline of the Channel Islands.

The rescue of the Defiant on Aug. 31, 2022, and into the early morning hours of Sept. 1, 2022. From Anacapa Island and Ventura Harbor.

When Donald Lawson, 41, acquired his prize trimaran on April 8, 2022, he had an unassailable and captivating backstory. He was a Black professional sailor tasked with bringing more diversity to an almost exclusively white sport. He was also determined to set speed records sailing alone around the world. The everyman from Baltimore said he could do it in 70 days. For years, he had evangelized, repeated and refined his ambitions in public appearances and interviews. Charismatic, affable and confident, Lawson was a convincing messenger. If his stories left room for skepticism, virtually none was publicly expressed.

Without a working VHF radio, Lawson called the Coast Guard for help on a cellphone, a small miracle, as service around Anacapa is spotty. The Coast Guard dispatched a patrol boat and also contacted a private tow captain.

Carson Shevitz, who operates Channel Watch Marine Services, a tow and rescue service out of Ventura Harbor less than 20 miles away, got the call about 11 p.m. As he and his partner readied their boat, he spoke to Lawson directly and asked where he was. Lawson replied, “San Francisco,” more than 300 miles to the north, an answer Shevitz attributed to fatigue.

Shevitz arrived in Anacapa by midnight and found Defiant pinned deep in the cove. He could hear the clang of its 100-foot mast glancing against the cliff wall, and the crunch of its hull settling on the rocks.

Defiant, as wide as it was long, was surrounded by kelp beds so thick that Shevitz was unable to reach it in his boat. Neither could the Coast Guard. So Shevitz put on a wet suit and entered the frigid water with a tow line tied to him. He crawled as much as he swam, clutching fronds of kelp as he pulled his way closer. He attached his tow line to Defiant’s bow, cut its anchor line, swam back to his rescue boat, and towed Defiant to Ventura Harbor, arriving at 4 a.m.

trimaran defiant

This was not the first significant challenge Lawson faced in California as the new owner of Defiant, but it was probably his biggest at that point, a moment of reckoning, an opportunity not taken to figuratively and literally change course and commit to goals more easily attained.

The Lawsons’ troubles off the California coast were eerily foretelling of what would be the final journey Donald took aboard Defiant 10 months later. On July 5, 2023, he departed Acapulco, Mexico, alone, after spending five months adding equipment to and repairing Defiant. He was bound for the Panama Canal, and ultimately his hometown of Baltimore, a journey he estimated would take a month - through the Caribbean in the middle of hurricane season. From Baltimore, he planned to embark this fall on an attempt to sail around the world alone by himself in record time. The math of miles and days, calculated against the scale of his plans, was hard to square.

Four days after leaving Acapulco, Lawson again lost engine power and use of his hydraulic system. Three days later, his wind generator failed, and with it all ability to keep his batteries charged — he communicated this to Jacqueline, in Baltimore. He was able to text his wife on July 12, as he turned back to Acapulco. The next day, Defiant transmitted a position for the last time as its electronics went silent. This time instead of being less than 20 miles offshore, Lawson was almost 300 miles from land with no sanctuary nearby.

About two weeks later, Mexican authorities located his capsized trimaran but found no sign of Lawson or the life raft he took on his voyage. Jacqueline Lawson, who goes by Tori, has since communicated through written statements delivered by a spokesman, Ray Feldmann, who operates a media relations and crisis management firm out of Annapolis. Through Feldmann, she declined numerous requests to be interviewed.

In her last statement, sent Aug. 16, she confirmed that the Mexican navy was no longer actively searching for her husband. She said she read reports and viewed photos provided by the search crew. She confirmed that Defiant was missing its mast.

“The MRCC remains on alert for any signs of Donald or the life raft,” she said in her statement. “I haven’t given up, and neither have they.”

Jacqueline “Tori” Lawson met with representatives from the Mexican Navy and Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centres during her trip to Acapulco between Aug. 7-12.

An anomaly on the water

As a competitive Black sailor from Baltimore — he started sailing at age 9 — Lawson attracted attention that began early in his adult life. In 2007, The Baltimore Sun featured him in an article about being an anomaly in the sport. Then 26, he was an avid local racer and instructor at Baltimore’s Downtown Sailing Center, where he learned to sail as a kid and taught other children of color to sail, hoping they’d follow his path. Already he aspired to sail around the world faster than any American, he told The Sun, and he would do it in a 60-foot boat.

“It’s going to happen,” he said.

He also talked about feeling discounted or overlooked as a Black sailor. He knew he didn’t look the part. Around this time, he started Donald Lawson Sailing , his early attempt to bring diversity to professional racing and gain traction in the sport. The program no longer exists.

Photo of Donald Lawson circa 2005-2006

The sports website Bleacher Report ran a 2011 profile under the headline: “From a Middle-Class Baltimorean to a World-Class Sailor.” Lawson, then 29, still taught sailing and sought work delivering boats for owners who needed them moved but didn’t have the time or skill to do it. The term “world class” was probably an overstatement, as was the article’s labeling of Lawson as the “Tiger Woods of his sport.” Even Lawson pushed back.

“I have years and a lot of achievements to go before I am in the same sentence,” he said. “But he is a bar I measure myself against.”

Lawson was not yet chasing world records, but attempted unsuccessfully to put together a team to compete for the 2013 America’s Cup.

In a 2013 interview with Rob Chichester , a local charter captain and instructor, Lawson talked about how his application was declined for financial and administrative reasons. The experience seemed to turn him away from traditional regatta sailing and toward breaking records.

“That is where my goals are now,” he told Chichester.

They also discussed race. As two Black sailors, they understood that “if you’re African-American and you show up in a given venue, you often get strange looks, or you’re not taken seriously as a sailor,” Chichester said. “He [Lawson] took that as a necessary challenge to his goal of being a world-class ocean racer of multihulls.”

Lawson said he did not face intentional barriers to the sport, or overt racism, but noted that “we will have to see how the mainstream treats me once I am fully exposed.”

trimaran defiant

Perhaps as a consequence of his race, he found himself sailing alone a lot as a kid because sailors his age “had friends from private schools they knew and they sailed and hung out together,” he told Chichester. The habit served him in adulthood. “I began finding peace of mind in solo sailing because I didn’t have to fight as hard to be seen. It was just me and I didn’t need permission to make decisions.”

Lawson found supporters, well-intentioned sailors who recognized he was a rarity in the sport and wanted him to succeed. Bruce Schwab was one of them. Lawson has often referred to him as a “mentor.” Schwab, in 2005, became the first American to complete the Vendée Globe Race, a grueling, nonstop solo race around the world, held every four years. Schwab finished ninth in under 110 days. He took a liking to Lawson and invited him to sail.

“He always had a very positive disposition and a good sense of humor,” said Schwab, 63. “Yes, I could see he had a tendency to sidestep the more technical aspects in favor of the pure simple sailing side. But I could also see that he was highly motivated. I hoped he would fill in the blanks in his experience and knowledge as needed to achieve his sailing goals.”

In 2006, Lawson a 24 years old crewed on the boat called Ocean Planet owned by skipper Bruce Schwab.

According to Lawson’s LinkedIn profile , he was an instructor for nine years at Baltimore’s Downtown Sailing Center. He also taught for one year, 2005, at the U.S. Naval Academy, where he likely was one of the many summer volunteer instructors who taught basic sailing skills to incoming plebes. His credentials also include certificates earned at the Annapolis School of Seamanship in celestial navigation, marine electronics, and a captain’s license.

In March 2021, US Sailing, the national governing body of the sport, appointed Lawson the chair of a newly created committee on diversity, equity and inclusion, a position it sought him out for. By then, diversity had become part of his calling card. Lawson was “integral” to US Sailing’s decision to hire three paid staff to implement its diversity efforts, said president Richard Jepsen.

“He was authentic in his desire, and effective in his performance,” Jepsen said.

The title of chairman bestowed more credibility to all of Lawson’s efforts. It also earned him Jepsen’s deep appreciation and loyalty. Like many, Jepsen didn’t question Lawson’s sailing credentials.

“You can count my offshore races on both hands,” Jepsen said. “When it came to his resume, I couldn’t hold his jockstrap as an offshore sailor.”

Lawson was featured in US Sailing’s newsletter before and after his appointment as committee chair, parroting his dreams of sailing around the world and breaking records. Last year, US Sailing put together a video to celebrate its 125th anniversary that included a segment on “legends” of sailing . The video featured Olympians, Hall of Famers, and America’s Cup skippers. The last sailor to be featured was Lawson. As the camera went to black, this text appeared:

“In January 2023, Captain Donald Lawson will set out on his non-stop voyage to become the fastest person who has ever sailed around the world…etching himself into history as the next sailing legend.”

In hindsight, US Sailing’s unquestioning, wide-eyed conflation of Lawson’s aspirations to the concrete achievements of proven champions might not have served him well.

“I regret I didn’t give him that whack on his fanny,” Jepsen said, pausing several times as he struggled with his thoughts. “It did seem quixotic to take a fast and fragile vessel like that and single-hand it halfway around the Americas.”

Jepsen was reluctant to communicate doubt at the time, lest he become yet one more white person in Lawson’s life to show bigotry in the form of “lowered expectations,” he said.

“We had many conversations about it,” Jepsen said. “I never said, ‘Donald, this is mad,’ but I did ask him a lot of questions. He wasn’t taking no for an answer. ... His position was no one is going to dissuade me, this is my destiny, I’m going to do a lot of good.”

“It did seem quixotic to take a fast and fragile vessel like that and single-hand it halfway around the Americas.” US Sailing president Richard Jepsen

Lawson’s sailing credentials are mostly anecdotal. He has said he “stopped counting” after logging 25,000 nautical miles. He told The Baltimore Sun in 2022 that he had completed 100 passages of 1,000 miles or more and crossed the Atlantic multiple times. He told another interviewer he had completed “hundreds of deliveries all over the world.” His longest solo passage, he said during a 2021 lecture , had been 19 days in a 21-foot racing boat.

By then, he spoke regularly of his desire to sail nonstop around the world and break speed records. It had become part of his brand.

In March of last year, Lawson spoke, by video, to students at a middle school in Brooklyn, New York, about his plans to be the fastest sailor around the world. In a quick aside, he offhandedly told the children the Vendée Globe “is a race I will do in 2024 … but we’re not going to talk about that right now.”

It was a nearly impossible vow. Competitors are required to have started at least two and finished at least one of five qualifying races held from 2022 to 2024, each one a herculean feat in itself. Lawson did not compete in either of the 2022 races.

The boat of his dreams — an ORMA 60

In April 2022, Lawson flew to San Diego and became the owner of an ORMA 60-class trimaran called the Mighty Merloe. It was a proven winner in the Atlantic and the Pacific, admired as one of the fastest race boats in the world, capable of sailing faster than 40 knots. Acquiring it conferred legitimacy to Lawson’s aspirations.

A photo of Donald Lawson from April 8, 2022 when he acquired the Defiant.

“Donald loved high-performance boats,” Schwab said. “He’s not alone there. However, the ORMA 60 he acquired was a very dangerous vessel, beyond the abilities of all but a very few pro sailors on Earth. I myself would have had to put in considerable training time with crew on board before I would have even dared to single-hand it. But because of its extreme nature, it couldn’t possibly have been more appealing and irresistible to Donald.”

It was designed and built in France, christened in 2004 as Groupama 2, bankrolled by a French insurance group by the same name. Skippered by the famous French sailor Franck Cammas, it won its class championship in 2004, 2006 and 2007, before the class was discontinued. It is widely considered the best ORMA 60 built.

The U.S. America’s Cup team used it for training in 2010 before it was eventually sold in 2014 to Howard Enloe, the founder and chief executive of a successful ambulance service in El Paso, Texas. He renamed it Mighty Merloe. In 2017, at age 81, Enloe set a record with a crew of eight in the Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu, finishing the journey in four days, six hours, and 33 minutes, covering about 500 miles per day. No boat has yet to finish in less time.

“When I raced the boat, we had some of the best sailors in the world,” said Enloe, now 87.

His ORMA 60 was extremely light and fast, but also delicate. After the Transpac victory, it was gingerly sailed home to San Diego and put into a boatyard in Mission Bay for several months. Enloe hired construction cranes to lift the 60-foot-wide boat out of the water because it was too big for a conventional boat lift. The hull was inspected by engineers using ultrasound to identify the smallest of fissures. Repairs were performed in an enclosed tent to control temperature and humidity. Merloe, and Groupama 2 before it, led pampered lives, tended by technicians, mechanics, riggers, painters, and sailors, its huge bills paid by wealthy owners.

trimaran defiant

Merloe raced only a few more times after setting the Transpac record. Enloe felt he was getting too old for the physical demands of sailing. After Merloe’s last race in 2018, Enloe put it up for sale. The budget needed to maintain it, the expertise and crew needed to sail it, made it a boat for few owners. With cash buyers scarce, Enloe opened to the idea of donating his trimaran for a tax write-off. He needed a nonprofit organization, and Lawson had one.

In February 2022, Lawson announced the creation of the Dark Seas Project, aimed to get more people of color into sailing. A few months later, he announced that his foundation had acquired Mighty Merloe. The two men never met, transacting the deal through written correspondence that started in 2021. Lawson had closely followed the winning exploits of Mighty Merloe, “like a kid following Mickey Mantle,” Enloe said.

Tax forms Lawson filed for the Dark Seas Project in March 2023 list the boat as a donation valued at $1.75 million. He and Jacqueline are named as the foundation’s only employees, founder and co-founder. According to the form, each worked a total of 80 hours a week and received no compensation. Dark Seas reported $118,776 in total revenues in 2022, and a nearly equal amount in expenses, leaving net revenue of $11,863.

Jay Davis, a core member of Mighty Merloe’s crew, met Lawson in San Diego when he took possession of the boat. Davis expected to greet a team of sailors. Lawson showed up with a few friends. Lawson’s social media posts show that he was joined in San Diego by Scott Marshall, whom Lawson referred to as my “program partner” and “righthand man.” (On his LinkedIn profile , Marshall indicates he is “self-employed” at the Platinum Talent Agency in Newport Beach, California, an LLC formed in December, 2021.)

Lawson introduced himself as “captain,” Davis said. “He dropped names of other sailors. He could talk the game.”

Davis helped him rig the sails and prepare the trimaran for the first leg of Lawson’s journey, an 80-mile upwind voyage to Newport Beach. When Lawson departed in mid-May, his boat was “race ready,” Davis said.

As they parted ways, Davis ended their conversation with a passive warning: “Well, I’m not going to tell anyone you can’t do something.” Davis and many other sailors who met Lawson had the same takeaway: Liked the guy. Loved his message. Worried about him.

“I just hope he’s sitting on a beach somewhere, watching all this go down,” Davis said.

Lawson reached Newport Beach and stayed in the harbor for at least a few nights. He befriended some local boaters who helped him set his anchor. Defiant was not an easy boat to anchor, he would come to find out.

An audience in San Francisco

On May 23, he reached San Francisco, posting a live video on Facebook as he approached. Sailing north along the Pacific Coast, against the prevailing wind and current, is an accomplishment for any sailor, and Lawson had done it in a very large, complex vessel without the help of expert crew. Most of the effort and skill of sailing Defiant, Lawson learned, was spent trying to slow it down and control its speed.

Posted by Captain Donald Lawson on Monday, May 23, 2022

Members of the Corinthian Yacht Club came out in a powerboat to greet Defiant and escorted it to a mooring ball near their docks in Tiburon, California. The next morning, Lawson gave an interview on a local radio show and talked about sailing for a world record, seeming to grasp the caliber of competition he aimed to challenge.

Defiant made him “the only American who has the ability to actually compete for world records,” Lawson said on the show. “It’s a really, really elite group of people who do this kind of stuff. And sometimes I have to pinch myself to think I’m competing against the elite French sailors, and it’s just me. It’s mind-boggling.

“There are certain boats that only the best sailors can sail. And so, we have it. So literally, I get trained by the former crew all the time. Jay Davis, shout out to him, he spent a week with me going through the boat. Artie Means, the navigator, one of the top navigators who ever lived, he’s one of the guys who helped me get the boat together.”

“...sometimes I have to pinch myself to think I’m competing against the elite French sailors, and it’s just me. It’s mind-boggling.” Donald Lawson

Davis said he did not sail with Lawson, apart from taking Defiant out into the bay together to rig the mainsail. Means, another one of Merloe’s core crew, said he only met Lawson.

“In my view, he was a great media machine, saying all the right things to drum up support,” Means told The Banner in July when Lawson was reported missing. “But, at the same time, it is obvious to myself and nearly all of the sailing community that he does not have the knowledge, training, or team to handle a boat like Mighty Merloe. Enloe had a professional sailing team, and then hired the appropriate experts to help us with training and maintenance. Mr. Lawson was running his project himself, with a few Facebook volunteers.”

trimaran defiant

Lawson, as the new owner of a famous race boat, commanded an audience in San Francisco and appeared to relish it. He told the sailing magazine Latitude 38 that he planned to sail onward to Seattle for more lectures and outreach. He told Outside magazine he planned to sail to Hawaii in September, from Los Angeles, and try to break the late Steve Fossett’s singlehanded Transpac record of just under eight days.

He told the host of the “Good Jibes” podcast on June 6 that his boat “was crewed by eight of the best sailors in America [Enloe’s crew],” acknowledging the audacity of his plans. “Now I’m taking the same boat and I’m doing it solo. So when you think about it from that standpoint, I’m replacing eight of the best sailors this country has ever made. These guys are like legends. And now I’m replacing all of them. And I’m going to do the same route they just did. And I’m trying to do it as fast they ever did it.”

“...it is obvious to myself and nearly all of the sailing community that he does not have the knowledge, training, or team to handle a boat like Mighty Merloe.” Artie Means

During the podcast, Lawson brought up the 2011-2012 Volvo Ocean Race, a multi-leg, crewed race around the world, won that year by a French team led by Franck Cammas, the former Groupama 2 skipper.

“I was in that race,” Lawson casually mentioned, although we found no accounts of Lawson competing. Nor is he listed as crew for any of the six teams that year on the race website. He also claimed Cammas’ team “helped train me.”

The journey of Donald Lawson and the Defiant.

Defiant on the loose

The end of June brought new problems. Sometime that month, Defiant hit “something at high speeds in San Francisco … I don’t know if it was marine life or trash in the water,” Lawson posted on Facebook. The collision, which occurred June 21 while sailing with members of the St. Francis Yacht Club, damaged Defiant’s carbon-fiber hull and rudder. To work on the problem, the Lawsons took refuge in Clipper Cove, an area protected from San Francisco’s strong thermal winds.

John von Tesmar, who runs a kite boarding business called KiteTheBay out of the Treasure Isle marina in Clipper Cove, remembered seeing “an impressive looking trimaran” anchored in the cove. He watched its owners row to the cove’s small beach in a cheap inflatable raft — Tesmar found it odd and incongruous. Tesmar and the Lawsons exchanged hellos and eventually names and introductions.

After a few days, Tesmar noticed that their trimaran was out of the water, pushed onto the shore of the cove, its hull exposed as the tide rose and fell. At low tide, the Lawsons made repairs to the bottom of the boat. (Both Davis and Means insisted that the trimaran was not designed to be beached. Doing so risked causing damage. “Nobody with any understanding of composites would ever beach an ORMA 60,” Means said.)

Photos from the end of June 2022, on the shore in Clipper Cove.

On June 25, Lawson posted a photo of Defiant in Clipper Cove, writing: “The mental and physical strain from taking care of a boat and program like this is intense. … I am hoping for a better July than June and I am hoping that I can finally assemble a team that I can pass the ball to when I am getting double or triple teamed.”

Although he did not mention the incident on his Facebook feed, this happened to be the day Defiant started drifting into the bay. Tesmar had finished his lessons for the day and was putting away his speedboat when he saw Tori running toward him and shouting frantically. The tide had lifted Defiant off the sand, and the wind was blowing it out of the cove.

Tori tried to board Tesmar’s speedboat so quickly that she fell in the water. He helped her in, and tried to calm her down. As they went out to intercept the loose trimaran, Tesmar saw Donald rowing after it. He picked up Donald and together the three of them caught up to Defiant. Tesmar helped the couple anchor near the shore. The anchor, he thought, looked very small and the anchor line very short.

The crew of Mighty Merloe never anchored it, Davis said. It is unlikely it ever saw an anchor before Lawson sailed it. The trimaran was built for racing, not cruising, so it didn’t have typical anchoring gear, or even a deck cleat to tie an anchor line to.

trimaran defiant

On June 28, Lawson posted photos of Defiant on the sand, writing that “we had no idea so many people around the world were following us and making assumptions about the boat being abandoned and failed! The boat is fine!”

He posted more photos the next day, insisted the boat was safe sitting on the soft mud of the cove, and spoke optimistically of the “easy, quick repairs” that he had made. On July 12, Lawson posted his final photo from Clipper Cove. “Finally,” he wrote in the post. “After 2 weeks of work on the Defiant at Treasure Island, we were able to depart for Richmond Yacht Club to begin a fun filled 3 weeks of sailing and presentations!”

Turning back south

By all accounts they indeed enjoyed a fun-filled three weeks of sailing and presentations, taking members out for sails, speaking to rapt audiences, letting the kids in the club’s summer camp tour the boat. The Lawsons befriended club commodore Susan Hubbard, staying in her home for a few weeks.

“We were proud to host them,” Hubbard said. “Some of the members were forever changed by his message. Donald and Tori’s energy and compassion were infectious. Donald’s dreams of equity and inclusion in sailing resonated with our club members.”

On the afternoon of July 23, Lawson took several members of the Half Moon Bay Yacht Club for a brisk sail, reciprocation for a donation a few members had given to the Dark Seas Project a month earlier when Lawson gave a talk at the club.

trimaran defiant

Joe Rockmore was one of the club members who sailed with Lawson. He watched a confident, capable, and agile Lawson direct the large crew of experienced sailors. The boat reached a speed of 26 knots that day, Rockmore said, a thrill for everyone aboard, most of whom hadn’t sailed on a trimaran before.

“I’ve been racing my whole life,” Rockmore said. “The number of control lines on this boat was beyond anything I’d experienced.”

About one week later, some of the Richmond members helped the Lawsons take the boat from San Francisco to Half Moon Bay, about a 40-mile sail to the south. The Lawsons stayed for most of the month, tied to a mooring ball provided by the Half Moon Bay Yacht Club, adjusting sails and enjoying the amenities of the club. Defiant, like all race boats, had no creature comforts below deck. On Aug. 28, they posted a live video on Instagram as they departed Half Moon Bay, bound for Los Angeles, about a 400-mile journey.

According to tracking data, the Lawsons sailed close to shore as they passed Point Conception, about 250 miles south of Half Moon Bay, where offshore winds tend to intensify. But instead of adhering to the coastline, Defiant veered away toward the Channel Islands, a logical course for their planned destination of San Pedro and the Port of Los Angeles.

Typically, two sailors can sail without stopping, each taking a turn at the helm while the other sleeps. A nonstop transit to Los Angeles was nothing compared to what Lawson was preparing to do alone in the Southern Ocean. It is unclear why they chose to stop in the Channel Islands, and why they chose Cathedral Cove when wide and sandy Smugglers Cove, 10 miles away on Santa Cruz Island, would have been far more hospitable.

Shevitz thinks they did not intend to. He grew up sailing in Santa Barbara and was very familiar with the Channel Islands, a popular boating destination. He believes the Lawsons, without experience in the area and without electronic navigation aids, lost their way and ended up in Anacapa.

The Lawsons’ basic insurance policy covered only liability and not the cost of the very expensive rescue and tow from Anacapa. Lawson told Shevitz he needed time, but that he would pay what he owed. True to his word, Lawson paid most of his debt by March 2023. Shevitz waived the remaining balance, calling it a discount. When they last spoke, about five months ago, they wished each other well, Shevitz said.

Within days, reports and images of Defiant in Cathedral Cove had trickled into sailing blogs and newsletters. The mishap required a rescue, and was now public.

The Lawsons sailed Defiant from Ventura to the Los Angeles Yacht Club. Fall arrived. Instead of sailing to Hawaii in pursuit of a solo record, Lawson and his wife flew to Baltimore. Donald gave more interviews that relied on his feel-good backstory. He was profiled in The Times of London , The Baltimore Sun, the Robb Report and Chesapeake Bay Magazine . The coverage was unblinkingly positive.

Photos from Captain Donald Lawson's Facebook page on Sept. 3, 2022 after they couple made it to L.A.

Evolving plans

In late October, he was a guest on the Justin, Scott and Spiegel morning show on Baltimore’s “98Rock” radio station. He shared his revised plan: In February, he would sail to Hawaii, and from there, begin his attempt to sail around the world alone in 70 days, taking a route that would first take him down the coast of South America past Cape Horn.

“I’m competing against pretty much 10 of the top sailors in the world,” he said on air.

As if cued, one of the hosts said: “You’re a dude from a movie. I mean you’re someone that they’re probably going to make a film about.”

Official sailing records have to be certified by the World Sailing Speed Record Council in England. Any attempt to set a record has to be registered in advance, requiring a signed agreement and a substantial fee of 1,880 British pounds. According to secretary Simon Forbes, Lawson corresponded with the Council in 2007 and 2011, and again in 2022 after he acquired Defiant, but did not register any record attempts.

In December, the Lawsons returned to Los Angeles, where they repaired some of the damage caused in Anacapa. They left before Christmas, not for Hawaii but San Diego, finding another reliable — and free — beach to ground their trimaran, this one next to the Coronado Municipal Golf Course. On occasion they tied to the small public dock near the Coronado boat ramp until they were told to move by harbor patrol.

While in San Diego, Lawson revised his plans again. The new destination was Baltimore, they told their new friends Pat Brogan and Jim Mason, who met the Lawsons while cycling along San Diego Bay. The two couples ate Christmas dinner together outside in a park next to the dock. Wherever they went, the Lawsons made friends easily, and quickly. Brogan and Mason were cruising sailors, not racers. They invited the Lawsons to come sailing with them in the Bahamas, where they kept a catamaran. A few days after that Christmas dinner, the Lawsons and Defiant left San Diego.

Tori and Donald Lawson Christmas Day in a park by the Coronado public dock in San Diego.Pat Brogan

Battered and bruised in Acapulco

The Lawsons posted nothing about their activities for the next month (or they have since deleted them). Brogan sent messages to them, but none were returned, she said. Whether, or where, the Lawsons stopped on their way to Acapulco is unclear although one report in Latitude 38 indicated that the Lawsons stopped in Cabo San Lucas with the boat in a state of disarray before plotting a course for the Galapagos Islands. It was likely a challenging journey from San Diego to Acapulco, with or without stops. The trip took a toll on the boat. Photos taken in Acapulco showed Defiant missing its bowsprit, and damage to the hull and sails.

In a Facebook post on Jan. 28, Lawson alluded to a “collision” and a need to make repairs, but did not provide many details about the journey to Acapulco, which he referred to as “a very eventful delivery/training trip south.”

The same day, another American sailor in Acapulco named Rob Macfarlane wrote about meeting them in his blog : “He and his wife arrived looking exhausted, the boat banged up, two of the jibs shredded on their furlers, the mainsail in a big pile on the trampolines, and some of the port ama hull coring exposed where the carbon skin is missing.”

trimaran defiant

Macfarlane, an experienced long-distance cruising sailor from California, had arrived in Acapulco several days earlier. Vincente Herrera, the man who operated the local mooring field, alerted them that a large trimaran with engine trouble would be coming in “tonight” and tying up to a mooring ball next to them — Herrera asked Macfarlane if he could help. Two days later, the Lawsons finally arrived. The next morning, Macfarlane noticed Defiant’s mainsail, unstowed and cooking in the sun. With the Lawsons nowhere in sight, he called Herrera and offered to help put it away.

Two days passed before the Lawsons, with Herrera, finally returned. After an exhausting effort, the group managed to lift the sail off the deck, hoist it, and fold it into a protective sail bag mounted on the boom. Defiant’s high-performance racing sails, like all racing sails, are very thick and heavy, likely weighing more than 500 pounds.

trimaran defiant

Thankful for the help, Donald Lawson invited Macfarlane below for a tour of the spartan cabin. Although Defiant’s dimensions are huge, its cabin is small, entered through a narrow hatch. Engine parts were scattered about; they had clearly tried to fix it. The deck was in a similar mess with gear sitting out in the cockpit and on the trampolines. Macfarlane returned the favor and offered a tour of his boat, a 45-foot racing monohull he rebuilt. Lawson took a particular interest in Macfarlane’s wind generator; he decided he needed one for Defiant.

“Donald and Tori were super nice people,” Macfarlane said. “I’d never heard of him until that time. He had so many ideas, we’re going to do this, we’re going to do that, he lays out the whole thing. He’s got all of his records, he describes what he’s going to do. To me, they seemed very pleasant, very excited. They treated none of this as a huge setback.

“He did an awful lot of name dropping. ... He made a real effort to mention he’s working with all these top name people and big programs.”

Lawson was also very aware of his critics, Macfarlane said.

“My takeaway,” he said, “was the moment you doubted what he could do, you were instantly shifted over into what he called haters, and he was really tired of the haters. If you weren’t for him, you were a bad person. The implication was that he drove himself into a corner by ignoring everyone that didn’t support him 100 percent.”

By now, Lawson had a new plan: Sail through the Panama Canal, into the Caribbean, and up the East Coast to Baltimore. He planned to more thoroughly repair the boat in his home waters and begin his lap around the world from there sometime in the fall, a tough hypothetical that grew tougher the longer Defiant remained in Mexico.

“If you weren’t for him, you were a bad person. The implication was that he drove himself into a corner by ignoring everyone that didn’t support him 100 percent.” Rob Macfarlane

The journey of Donald Lawson and the Defiant.

A ‘tough love’ approach

Ronnie Simpson, another sailor with ties to the Chesapeake, was among the people Lawson communicated with in the days before he left Acapulco. Their friendship of about 10 years began online, through social media and email, accelerating after Lawson acquired Defiant. The two met in person last October and again in April when Lawson was in Baltimore.

“Every time I did anything at all he was always the first one to message me, ‘Hey you got this bro.’ He was so overwhelmingly positive,” said Simpson, who plans to compete in the Global Solo Challenge this fall. “I wanted to see him succeed. I believed in his mission to spread diversity. I’m getting ready to sail around the world myself so I’m into people chasing their dreams.”

To the best of Simpson’s knowledge, Lawson has no experience racing on the open ocean, either solo or as part of a crew. Nor is he aware of any instance Lawson has sailed across an ocean, apart from a delivery from Bermuda to Rhode Island, a journey of about 750 miles. Lawson likely earned most of his miles delivering yachts, not racing them.

“Was he a malicious, fraudulent individual? Or did he really believe what he was saying? I think he really believed it.”

Lawson’s qualifications aside, there is no level of skill, no amount of experience or preparation, no number of crew, and no type or size of vessel that guarantees safety. One of the greatest American sailors, Mike Plant, was lost at sea in 1992 on his way to the Vendée Globe, one of many lives claimed by the sport . Lawson was fluent in the lore of competitive sailing. He knew the sport’s household names and marquee events, and could recite their history. He knew the culture and the boats. Yet Lawson did not seem too interested in being part of the sport’s establishment.

Schwab offered to help Lawson with Defiant. All he had to do was ask.

“Was he a malicious, fraudulent individual? Or did he really believe what he was saying? I think he really believed it.” Ronnie Simpson

“He didn’t,” Schwab said, “so I assumed that he was working with an experienced team with knowledge of the boat to get him up to the level required to deal with it. In hindsight I was obviously wrong, and I feel bad for not scrutinizing things more closely, and perhaps providing Donald with the warnings that he either wasn’t getting, or wasn’t listening to.”

By all accounts, the five months the Lawsons spent wintering in Acapulco tied to a mooring ball were blissful. They posted cheerful updates about progress on repairs, and new equipment. They befriended Herrera and stayed with his family in their home.

Donald Lawson in Baltimore, posted April 17, 2023 on his Facebook page.

The Lawsons took time to travel to Baltimore in the spring. He did more interviews while there. In late May, he and Tori posted a video that summarized some of their progress. Donald explained the damage in January was caused by “storms” and “debris.” He showed off some new equipment including a new wind generator and a life raft. Defiant at least looked vastly improved.

He was no longer without skeptics, but he doubled down on his plans to go around the world. Delayed yes, but not done. He had sailed at least 3,000 miles aboard Defiant after all, and that meant something.

In his final social media post on June 27, a Friday, Lawson wrote about planning his departure and his route around weather forecasts. Hurricane season had begun. A powerful storm closed the port of Acapulco for the weekend, he noted. He listed some safety measures aboard Defiant, an emergency beacon and an electronic Automatic Identification System (AIS) that identifies vessels on the water. He was now able to transmit Defiant’s location to a live map so anyone could track Defiant’s course, he wrote.

On June 29, less than a week before Lawson departed Acapulco, he and Simpson traded messages. Simpson said he strongly suggested Lawson sail close to shore so that he could duck into a port if need be. Lawson rebuffed the advice. He wanted to sail offshore where there was more wind, a better test for Defiant.

“I had tried tactfully to get him to re-shift his goals,” Simpson said. “I suggested he find a good team of amateurs and pros to sail that boat, maybe break some course records. I guess I tried a tough-love approach. But if you tried to get real with him, he’d shut down and not communicate.”

Late last year, Lawson appeared in a video ad for T-Mobile , intended to promote its partnership with Starlink, the satellite internet service used by many offshore sailors. The ad features Lawson, wearing foul-weather gear, sailing Defiant and talking about fear.

“People always ask me, am I afraid, if I get scared when I’m sailing, and the answer is yes. When things go wrong at sea, they go wrong really fast. There’s nothing more terrifying than not being able to communicate.”

Data editor Ryan Little contributed to this story.

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Hugo Kugiya

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Hugo Kugiya

Hugo Kugiya is a reporter for the Express Desk and has formerly reported for the Associated Press, Newsday, and the Seattle Times.

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trimaran defiant

Mexican navy says it has found the boat of missing Maryland sailor

The Mexican navy said the crew of one of its surface vessels, operating in the Pacific late Thursday, found the capsized boat of missing Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson , two nights after searchers in a military plane spotted an overturned boat that appeared to be Lawson’s craft.

Authorities said Lawson, 41, has not been found.

The announcement that the crew of a long-range navy patrol boat, searching 356 nautical miles southwest of Acapulco, Mexico, located the 60-foot, tri-hulled sailing craft eased confusion this week about whether Lawson’s trimaran had been recovered.

A spokesman for Lawson’s wife, Jacqueline Lawson, said Wednesday that the sailboat, named Defiant, had been found and that Jacqueline Lawson had identified it in a photo sent to her by authorities. But the Mexican navy contradicted that statement, saying that after an aircrew spotted a capsized boat Tuesday night that resembled Lawson’s, surface vessels had been unable to find it in foul weather.

It is unclear whether the photo sent to Jacqueline Lawson had been taken Tuesday evening from the plane, before the crew of the patrol vessel located the stricken sailboat Thursday. The boat was found about 8 p.m. Pacific time, according to a Mexican navy spokesman, Capt. Edbert Sanchez Mijangos, who said navy divers looked for Lawson in the area but did not find him.

“The search continues,” Sanchez Mijangos said.

Jacqueline Lawson said her husband set sail from Acapulco on July 5, bound for Baltimore, and that she had been communicating with him electronically from their Maryland home. She said she was last in contact with him July 13, when he told her that Defiant had lost engine and electrical power in a storm south of Acapulco.

Donald Lawson, an experienced ocean sailor, is chairman of the diversity, equity and inclusion committee of U.S. Sailing, the national governing body for the sport, and founder of the nonprofit Dark Seas Project , which seeks to promote recreational sailing among African Americans and other minorities.

An earlier version of this story misspelled Donald Lawson's name in the photo caption and last paragraph. This version has been corrected.

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Latitude38

We spoke with Capt. Lawson about the situation that occurred in the dark hours of Wednesday night. “It was around midnight,” Lawson told us over the phone. “We’d motorsailed through some dead spots coming out of Half Moon Bay, and around Point Conception we got some breeze.” Although the wind allowed Lawson and his crew, his wife, also an accomplished and experienced sailor, to pick up speed on their southbound journey, they still had several miles to go when they decided to drop anchor and get some rest before making their way into LAYC the next morning.

“Not everyone has dock space for us,” Lawson said, “and there was a lot of traffic.” They dropped anchor at Anacapa Island, part of the Channel Islands group. While it initially seemed like a safe place, Defiant dragged anchor, bringing the boat perilously close to the shoal. Lawson raised the anchor but quickly realized they were destined to meet the ground. “We were smashing onto the shoal, bouncing around.” That was when they decided to call for a tow, rather than risk further damage by trying to sail or motor out of the cove. During the 90 or so minutes that it took for TowBoatUS to arrive, Lawson lowered the daggerboard to try to stave off some of the damage to the outer hulls. “It took the brunt,” he added. The boat was eventually pushed up against the rock wall, which he said actually steadied the boat and helped stop it from slamming further against the wall and the shoal.

Defiant against wall

TowBoatUS Ventura and Channel Islands reported on social media, “Along with the US Coast Guard, Captains Paul and Carson responded to Defiant ‘s distress call. A large kelp bed and shallow waters prevented resources from getting too close. To get the victims out of harm’s way and to act as quickly as possible to preserve the value of the vessel and before pollution could have occurred within the Channel Islands National Park and NOAA Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, Captain Carson was placed in the water to bring a towing hawser through the kelp and make an attachment to the vessel. The vessel, and the two people on board, were safely removed from the island and towed back to Ventura Harbor where they were brought to the launch ramp because of their size.”

Defiant at launch ramp

Capt. Lawson reports that both he and his wife, and the vessel, are fine. Defiant was scheduled to be hauled out and have reinforcements made to her hulls. So some of the damage will be taken care of in this way. But regardless, she is currently being surveyed to determine the full damage, which includes some damage to her port bow, the rudders and the daggerboard.

In response to an article posted by Scuttlebutt , Capt. Lawson wrote the following: “Those who have sailed with us and been following us have seen how difficult it has been to anchor or moor the boat as she tends to sail right over her anchor or mooring. We have tried a bridle system off the beams, the bow and even found some success at stern anchoring her.

“Ultimately, the boat with her wing mast tends to catch the wind and tries to sail.

“That evening as we were placing the anchor, a giant Danforth, with 50ft of line and chain out, the anchor wouldn’t catch and we drifted. We let out more line but still no catch.

“The new anchor we have is a giant plow anchor, which I didn’t want to need for this type of boat because it will be tough to raise up but at this point, the need for a reliable anchor is most important.”

Defiant from port bow

The coming weeks will be filled with scheduled maintenance and upgrades, and now necessary repairs, as Lawson prepares to undertake his first record sail this coming fall. In the meantime, he is grateful for the assistance he received in bringing his boat and crew to safe shores. “I just want to say a big ‘Thank you’ to the TowBoatUS crew who came out to help us,” he concluded.

You can learn more about Captain Donald Lawson and his plans here .

trimaran defiant

“They dropped anchor at Anacapa Island.” With Scorpion, Little Scorps, Smugglers or Yellowbanks nearby, why would Rocky, kelp strewn Anacapa be the choice? And anchoring an ORMA 60? Maybe slow down, to time arrival or bring extra crew? Always easy to second guess, but with this program, the hits keep coming.

trimaran defiant

The Coast Guard and professional rescuers do an awesome job every day rescuing sailors and boats that are in harm’s way. A big thank you to them for all that they do! I hope Captain Lawson can repair his boat and continue on his adventures – best of luck!

trimaran defiant

Would a stern anchor helped? Or two stern anchors? I am guessing as she sailed towards the bow anchor it was unable to hold and turn the boat towards the anchor point? Would it have been safer to just stay out in open water? I am not criticizing but asking, I am planning to get down to the Islands sometime later this year. Seems here are very unusual weather events happening this year all over.

trimaran defiant

Anacapa isn’t usually thought of as having very good overnight anchorages. For other boaters coming through the area, the east end of Santa Cruz Island has generally better anchorages (Smuggler’s Cove, Little Scorpion) and is only about 5 miles away

trimaran defiant

There is a lot to be said about how strong modern boats are today. I watch the SailGP boats hit and instead of sailors being crushed mid torso the foils completely fend off the other boat. SailGP boats are big heavy things and to see the foils stop them is amazing. I doubt marine grade plywood would have taken being in that cove as well. In this case he actually lowered the daggerboard to try to stave off some of the damage!

Brad Smith, like a spud on a spud barge, but carbon fiber & epoxy, not steel.

trimaran defiant

In my experience the twin flukes of a danforth style anchor tend to snag a wad of kelp preventing them from digging into the bottom. A plow is much better at cutting thru’ to the ground. If the lighter weight anchor is preferred, avoid anchoring around kelp. I have a horror story myself on that subject. To avoid the yawing and lunging of a race-horse kind of boat you almost have to have 2 bow anchors at at least a 60° angle. But to avoid doing a complete flip, which is sounds like this boat might want to do, you would probably need a 3rd stern anchor (with short scope so it can drag if the wind shifts). A lot of work. Maybe a stern sea anchor/drogue would do it? Marc Hughston of Newport has made studies of these anchoring quirks.

Pulling into Anacapa at night I liked south of the lighthouse in 50′ of water; outside the kelp, lots of sand, no rocks. But with a plow if your boat likes to sail circles around the anchor all night. :-}

trimaran defiant

I heard that he ran out of fuel coming down the coast and since he had no motor, couldn’t recharge his batteries. If you look at historical AIS data, it goes out 12 hours before the accident probably when his batteries died so more than likely ran out of fuel a while before that. This would mean he tried to anchor with no motor which is very stupid. What I find more probable is that he was sailing with no navigation, saw the light on the end of Anacapa thinking it was land, and stayed half a mile offshore of the light, realized it was an island, tried to turn around but got sucked ashore.

trimaran defiant

I worry about this guy…

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Captain Donald Lawson Onboard ORMA 60 Trimaran Defiant Sailing into San Francisco, CA

Captain Donald Lawson - Dark Seas Project Sailing finishing Delivery into San Francisco through the Golden Gate Bridge.

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16 Best Trimarans For Sailing Around The World (And a Few For Daysailing)

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Trimarans are growing in popularity worldwide, due to their light construction and high stability these multihulls are even faster than catamarans. Trimarans are still one of the lesser-known boat types so in this article ill be checking out some of the most popular models.

The best trimarans include: 

  • The Neel 43 
  • The Neel 47 
  • Dragonfly 28 
  • The Pulse 600 
  • Corsair 37 

These tris are built with your safety in mind while also packing powerful speed and a wide array of comfort features to optimize your sailing experience , some are even foldable making them possible to load on a trailer and transport to the sailing destination of your choosing.

In this article, I have created a list of the 16 best trimarans in the market and their unique features. You’ll also learn the best options for different purposes such as circumnavigation, weekend sailing, racing, and more. 

Table of Contents

What Is a Trimaran?

trimaran defiant

A trimaran is a multi hulled sailboat with three individual hulls; the main hull ( vaka ) and a pair of outrigger hulls ( amas ). These smaller outrigger hulls are attached to the main hull using beams. 

While trimarans have a rich history dating back nearly four millennia, these types of sailboats have only gained popularity in the late 1900s and early 2000s. 

Trimarans are primarily used as personal boats for sailing enthusiasts or racing. These sailboats draw their versatility from their lightweight design, making them faster and easier to handle at sea when compared to single-hulled boats (monohulls). Additionally, the three hulls also contribute to better stability, making it very hard to capsize (although more likely than a cat according to this study)

Trimarans come in various sizes, and some can be as small as 19 feet (5.8 meters) in length, while others go up to 60 feet (18meters). They’re also used for different purposes. Most trimarans are used for racing and recreational purposes, although some units are still used as ferries.

As with all things, to find out which is the best we need to understand what it will be used for. There is a big difference in requirements between a boat used for day sailing compared to offshore around the world sailing.

The list below highlights the best trimarans for different purposes.

Best Trimarans For Cruising, Liveaboard and Sailing Around The World

The Neel 43 is a French trimaran best suited for cruising. Its key features include: 

  • Easy maneuverability on the open sea by only a small number of crew members 

This unit is also built for comfort, ideal for more extended travels. This 43-feet (13-meter) trimaran is also made with recyclable and bio-sourced materials, highlighting the manufacturer’s commitment to environmental consciousness. 

This trimaran has a base price of  €329,000 excluding VAT. This translates to approximately $370,138. 

2.Neel 47 Possibly The Best

Named the best full-size multihull for 2020, the Neel 47 is a strong contender for one of the best trimarans in the market. This 47-foot (14.3-meter) long trimaran features optimized exterior and interior ergonomics for a unique design and look. 

Still on design, the Neel 47 is ideal for couples looking to take a weekend off or spend some time as liveaboard. It has a spacious owner’s cabin and two bedrooms. It also features a spacious living room and kitchen and is optimized to ensure comfort for a couple. 

The Neel 47 also has two basic guest cabins so your friends or children can tag along on your sailing adventure. Accordingly, this unit is ideal for those looking to explore the sea for the sheer joy of sailing. 

The Neel 47 comes at a 571,139 euro ( $643,600 ) price tag, excluding VAT. 

3. Rapido 60 The Fast and Comfortable Circumnavigator

The Rapido 60 offers a blend of performance, safety, and luxury, making it one of the best options for bluewater sailing. Measuring 59.3 feet (18 meters) in length, the Rapido 60 is an imposing unit. It’s made from lightweight sandwiches and carbon materials that provide speed and strength, allowing it to stand up to strong ocean currents. 

The Rapido 60 also has spacious living spaces and is built for comfort at all points of the sail. Its design also optimizes safety. While it’s an ideal option for circumnavigating, it’s also an excellent choice for racing due to its speed. 

This is also the same boat that The Youtube channel La Vagabond just purchased.

The Rapido 60 retails at $1,400,000 . 

4. Rapido 40

The Rapido 40 measures 39.4 feet (12 meters) in length and is ideal for cruising around the world. The Rapido 40 features twin “C” foils, which provide added lift, enhancing its speed and performance whether you are sailing downwind or upwind. 

Because it has C foils, this trimaran doesn’t have a central daggerboard, increasing interior space. Accordingly, it’s an excellent option for couples looking to cruise and enjoy great performances .

The Rapido 40 is made from high-tech all-carbon materials for a lightweight yet sturdy design. This material is also used for the countertops and furniture, and the cork flooring adds a touch of style.

This trimaran retails for $595,000 , making it a cheaper option than the Rapido 60. 

5. Dragonfly 40

The Dragonfly 40 measures 40 feet (12 meters) in length. It features high-comfort standards, making it one of the best trimarans in the market for taking your family for a cruise. Because of its larger size, it has a better capacity, being capable of accommodating six to eight people, so you can bring your family and friends along. 

It’s easy to navigate and extremely safe. With a maximum speed of 24 knots (44.5 km/h), this trimaran also provides fast speeds to make your cruise even more exhilarating. 

The Dragonfly 40 retails from €509,000 exclusive of VAT, which rounds up to $572,000 . 

6. Dragonfly 32

The Dragonfly 32 is a high-performance cruiser. Like the Dragonfly 28, this unit features a contemporary design for racing. This trimaran can accommodate five to seven crew members. 

Although slightly longer than the Dragonfly 28 with its 32-foot (9.8-meter) length, the Dragonfly 32 has a max speed of 23+ knots (42.6+ km/h), making it one of the fastest trimarans for racing. This unit also has comfortable accommodation, which makes it an ideal option for a weekend cruise with family and friends. 

The Dragonfly 32 has a base price of $350,000 . 

7. Corsair 37

Thanks to a variable draft with a retractable rudder, the Corsair 37 is an ideal choice for shallow water exploration. This 37-foot (11.3-meter) long trimaran features advanced foam-cored construction designed for safety, making it virtually unsinkable. 

The carbon hulls minimize weight, this makes for a lightweight ocean exploration sailboat with blistering speeds. One of its selling points is that this trimaran has previously been used for Arctic expeditions, possibly marking it as one of the better options for circumnavigation and offshore sailing in the northern waters. 

This trimaran has a base price of $189,000 but can go up to $204,125 .

Best Trimarans For Day/Weekend Sailing

8. dragonfly 28.

The Dragonfly 28 is a 28-feet (8.75-meter) long sailboat that can accommodate up to five people. It comes in two versions: 

  • Touring version: This version is ideal for families.  
  • Performance version: This is built to provide optimal performance for the sports enthusiast within you. 

It clocks a maximum speed of 22+ knots (22+ km/h) and is beam-folded. It’s an excellent option if you want a high-performance, comfortable yet smaller unit for your day or weekend cruise. 

The Dragonfly 28 starts at  €188,280 inclusive of VAT, which comes to around $211,600. 

9. Dragonfly 25

Like other trimarans under the Dragonfly brand, this 25-foot (7.62-meter) trimaran is great for both racing and short term cruising. However, this high-performance boat delivers easy handling, making it perfect for couples looking to take a ride out over the weekend and seasoned sailors looking for an exhilarating racing adventure. 

The Touring version features a lightweight build and offers comfort and accommodation to keep you, and the few guests you can fit, comfortable during the ride. This trimaran also has a Sport version, which is optimized for racing. 

The Dragonfly 25 retails from EUR 86,800 . 

10. Pulse 600

The Pulse 600 trimaran is a compact sailboat. It’s made from lightweight, carbon-reinforced construction and vacuum-formed materials for optimal speed. This trimaran is an ideal option if you are looking for speed. 

It also features ample deck space, greater stability, and volume than most trimarans of similar size and build. 

This trimaran measures 19.8 feet (6 meters) in length and can be sailed single-handedly by one person with minimal effort. The Pulse 600 has a base price of $38,800 , which places it in the lower price range. 

The F-22 is one of the smaller trimarans in the market. Developed in New Zealand, the F-22 is a folding trimaran built for speed. The hulls are made from narrow fiberglass tied together using fiberglass beams and aluminum, minimizing bulk while optimizing speed. 

The F-22 is roomy and is not as pricey as other models in the market. This trimaran has two main versions: 

12. 2019 Weta Trimaran

The 2019 Weta trimaran is a 14.5-foot (4.4-meter) trimaran featuring a carbon frame, centerboard, rudder foil, and rudder shock. The hull is made from fiberglass and foam. The Weta is built for strength and speed based on these lightweight materials. 

The 2019 Weta trimaran is easy to sail and is worth considering whether you want to take a quiet sail, race with your friends, or take kids to a sailing lesson. It has a simple design and is easy to set up independently. Thanks to its collapsible design, this trimaran is easily stored away with minimal space demands. 

13. WindRider 17

The 17.4-foot (5.3-meter) WindRider 17 is one of the more versatile trimarans in the market. It packs high performance for a low cost. This trimaran has a light rotating mast to boost performance, and a full-battened mainsail optimizes visibility. 

This sailboat is made from rotomolded polyethylene, which is more durable than fiberglass and demands less maintenance.

The WindRider 17 has a comfortable interior and can fit six adults. This is an ideal choice for social sailing for a couple or a family and friends. It’s easy to ride, and a shallow draft allows easy maneuverability. 

14. Astus 22.5

If you’re looking for something small but still comfortable, this 22.5-foot trimaran is for you. Built for speed and maneuverability, the Astus 22.5 has optional foils to optimize speed. The modern design, coupled with the spacious interior, can fit up to four beds. Accordingly, this trimaran is suited for family outings. 

This trimaran also has a foldable design, collapsing to only 16 feet (4.9 meters) for easy storage. 

15. Multi 23 Trimaran 

The Multi 23 trimaran has a contemporary design, featuring a vinyl ester and PVC foam core construction. The section below the waterline is made of solid glass for a sturdy base.

The beams are made of lightweight carbon, and the trimaran features a 33-foot (10-meter) aluminum rotating wing mast for optimal harnessing of the wind. While ideal for weekend excursions with family, once rigged with the asymmetrical spinnaker will get your heart pumping.

This trimaran packs high performance at a lower cost than most other options in the market. It’s a good choice if you are looking for a high-performing unit without spending an arm and a leg. 

16. Challenger Class Trimaran

The Challenger Trimaran 15 is the best choice for persons with disabilities. It’s designed to provide disabled sailors an opportunity to explore their passion for sailing without worrying about aspects like safety or operation. 

A man named Geoff Hold circumnavigated the British Isles in 2007, becoming the first disabled person to achieve this feat. He had quadriplegia. 

Living up to its name, the Challenger can withstand harsh weather conditions while blending performance with speed. 

Final Thoughts 

Admittedly, no trimaran is best for everyone. But whether you are looking to race with your friends, take your loved ones or friends for a cruise over the weekend, or circumnavigate the ocean, you can rest assured that these lightweight trimarans will deliver speed, safety, and comfort to make it worth your while. 

These brands are innovatively designed and feature intricate safety mechanisms that make them virtually unsinkable. Give them a shot and begin your ocean adventure. 

  • Basco Boating: A Comprehensive Guide & Introduction to Trimaran Yachts
  • TheBoatAPP: New Trumarans: Which are the Best Ones
  • Corsair Marine: Corsair 37
  • Dragonfly: Dragonfly 28
  • Rapido Trimarans: Rapido 60
  • Neel Trimarans: Neel 43
  • Yachting World: World’s Collect Yachts: Maxi Trimaran MACIF
  • Yachting Monthly: Dragonfly 28 Performance
  • Rapido Trimarans: Rapido 40
  • Dragonfly: Dragon 32
  • Dragonfly: Dragonfly 40
  • Yachting World: Dragonfly 40 yacht tour: This cruising trimaran can do 24 knots
  • Dragonfly: Dragonfly 25
  • NauticExpo: Dragonfly 25
  • Yachtworld: Corsair 37 boats for sale
  • Cruising World: Neel 47 Trimaran: Best Full-Size Multihull0
  • Neel Trimaran: Neel 47
  • Multihull Solutions: NEEL 47 Boat Review | Cruising World
  • Yacht World: 2022 Neel 47 for sale
  • Farrier International: F-22
  • Weta Marine: The Boat
  • WindRider: WindRider 17 Trimaran Sailboat 
  • Astus Boats: Astus 22.5
  • Boat-specs: Multi 23
  • National Maritime Museum Cornwall: Challenger Trimaran #1 – BC26

Owner of CatamaranFreedom.com. A minimalist that has lived in a caravan in Sweden, 35ft Monohull in the Bahamas, and right now in his self-built Van. He just started the next adventure, to circumnavigate the world on a Catamaran!

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After acquiring a 60-foot trimaran in March 2022, Tori and Donald Lawson worked to ready the vessel for a circumnavigation attempt.

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IMAGES

  1. Defiant

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  2. Headwinds Facing Captain Donald Lawson and Mighty Merloe/Defiant

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  3. Headwinds Facing Captain Donald Lawson and Mighty Merloe/Defiant

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  4. Meet Donald Lawson, the Sailor That Plans to Break 15 World Records

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  5. 40 Defiant Tender Gallery

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  6. Americas Cup: American Magic officially launches 'Defiant' AC75

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VIDEO

  1. 👮‍♀️A defiant police officer🔥#prank #funny

  2. Pretty Nice Corsair Trimaran All Tucked into Santa Cruz Harbor

  3. self built trimaran LIGHTNESS #shorts

  4. DEFIANT Kid Leaves Disney Worker ENRAGED😂!! #shorts #disney CC: @cassiano.of

  5. Trimaran gold pen 🖊 #shorts

  6. My new trimaran for exams

COMMENTS

  1. Missing Sailor's Boat Is Found Off the Mexican Coast

    Mr. Lawson believed the Defiant, a 60-foot sailing vessel known as a trimaran, could help him achieve his ambitions. Before Mr. Lawson acquired it, the Defiant set a speed record in a 2017 race ...

  2. Donald Lawson search: missing sailor's boat was fast but complicated

    At her fastest, Defiant skimmed the surface of the ocean, riding the edge of one of its outriggers. But a sudden gust could cause the boat to go over. Once capsized, trimarans cannot recover. Although ORMA 60s like Defiant are typically sailed by a large crew, they have crossed oceans steered by one person. The singlehanded, transatlantic Route ...

  3. Meet Donald Lawson, the Sailor That Plans to Break 15 World Records

    Lawson acquired his pedigreed trimaran, Defiant, in April, likening it to the Formula 1 of boats for its speed and performance. Having started life as Groupama 2, the French-built trimaran was ...

  4. Mexican Navy says it spotted a boat believed to be of missing Baltimore

    A spokeswoman in the navy press office said the 60-foot trimaran racing yacht Defiant had been spotted capsized in the ocean. Rescue crews have not yet been able to reach the vessel because of bad weather, she said. ... The Defiant could reach speeds of 40 knots, more than five times faster than a conventional sailboat. His sailboat had won ...

  5. The making of Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson and the quest that may

    The transit was probably one of the easiest the couple had experienced aboard their massive 60-foot trimaran Defiant since they took possession of it less than five months earlier. The Lawsons caught a break, even if it didn't last long.

  6. Headwinds Facing Captain Donald Lawson and Mighty Merloe/Defiant

    Mighty Merloe, now named Defiant, seen last week in Acapulco, Mexico. Lawson's trimaran, now named Defiant, was reportedly headed to the Panama Canal and expected to be there around January 8. When we communicated with Donald via Instagram messenger over the last few days, we asked him what he was doing there and he replied that they'd ...

  7. Fast, alone and around the world: Donald Lawson, a sailor from

    Donald Lawson's trimaran Defiant, pictured this year near San Francisco, will set sail next year from Honolulu on a round-the-world solo nonstop voyage. Lawson's fortitude will be tested, too.

  8. Mexican navy says it has found the boat of missing Maryland sailor

    July 28, 2023 at 1:39 p.m. EDT. Donald Lawson disappeared in the Pacific after setting out July 5 from Acapulco, Mexico, bound for Baltimore on a 60-foot trimaran. (Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun) 2 ...

  9. 'Defiant's West Coast Tour Meets Rocky Conclusion

    Captain Donald Lawson has spent the past several months sailing up and down the West Coast raising awareness of diversity and inclusion in sailing through aiming to break 35 world sailing records aboard his ORMA 60 trimaran Defiant (formerly Mighty Merloe).After completing his last stop of the tour in Half Moon Bay, Lawson headed to L.A., where he was scheduled to haul the boat for some ...

  10. What we know about the search for Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson, who's

    The Defiant was equipped with a life raft, survival suit and other emergency gear, Lawson said last year. ... Lawson's 60-foot trimaran, Defiant, was found about 360 miles from the Mexican shore.

  11. An interview with Captain Donald Lawson on his Dark Seas Project

    But Captain Donald N. Lawson is uniquely equipped to take on both missions aboard his newly acquired ORMA 60 Defiant ... now 40, aims to do some serious offshore sailing aboard his newly acquired trimaran. While this dream is lofty, so, too, is Lawson's ambition to create the kind of role models within the sport that he struggled to find as a ...

  12. Lawson Remains Missing

    Aug 7, 2023. Photo courtesy of Dark Seas Project. It has been more than three weeks since Jacqueline Lawson last heard from her husband, Donald Lawson, aboard the ORMA 60 trimaran Defiant, which he was solo sailing from Acapulco to the Panama Canal. While the Mexican Navy located the capsized boat, a search has yielded no sign of the sailor.

  13. Donald Lawson, Baltimore sailor missing in Pacific, set out with

    Donald Lawson's trimaran, Defiant, pictured near San Francisco, is 60 feet long and weighs just six tons. Lawson plans to sail it around the world. Amy Davis/Baltimore Sun

  14. As missing Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson sought records, he acquired

    A trimaran like Defiant is a different beast, though. It's an ORMA 60, a classification of sailboat that glides over the water and is tantalizingly fast (Lawson said Defiant could reach speeds ...

  15. Mexican Navy finds sailboat of missing Baltimore man

    Lawson's ship, the 60-foot trimaran Defiant, appeared to be capsized in the ocean about 275 nautical miles away from the coast, the Baltimore Banner reports. Due to bad weather, rescue crews have ...

  16. Captain Donald Lawson

    Delivery of ORMA 60 Defiant to LA around Point Conception. Average speed 18kts Average Wind Speed 27kts. Captain Donald Lawson #boats #dei #fast #ocean #reco...

  17. Lawson Missing Off Mexico Coast

    Lawson would not be the first African American to sail solo around the world, but he would be the first to attempt a trimaran speed circumnavigation nonstop. With Defiant , he has a solid platform. The last ORMA 60 trimaran built (launched in 2004), as Groupama 2 she earned the most titles of that class and won the 2007 Transat Jacques Vabre ...

  18. Captain Donald Lawson Onboard ORMA 60 Trimaran Defiant Sailing into San

    Captain Donald Lawson Onboard ORMA 60 Trimaran Defiant Sailing into San Francisco, CA. by: YouTube. Captain Donald Lawson - Dark Seas Project Sailing finishing Delivery into San Francisco through the Golden Gate Bridge.

  19. Captain Donald Lawson Onboard ORMA 60 Trimaran Defiant ...

    @captaindonaldlawson Sailing finishing Delivery into San Francisco through the Golden Gate Bridge.

  20. Mexican Navy finds sailboat of missing Baltimore man

    Donald Lawson's ship, the 60-foot trimaran Defiant, appeared capsized in the ocean about 275 nautical miles away from the coast of Acapulco. Donald Lawson's ship, the 60-foot trimaran Defiant ...

  21. Mexican authorities inspect capsized sailboat in Pacific, find no signs

    Lawson last year acquired a 60-foot trimaran which he named Defiant. The sailboat is an ORMA 60, a classification of trimarans that are fast but also extremely difficult to handle, sailors say.

  22. 16 Best Trimarans For Sailing Around The World (And a Few For

    This trimaran retails for $595,000, making it a cheaper option than the Rapido 60. 5. Dragonfly 40. The Dragonfly 40 measures 40 feet (12 meters) in length. It features high-comfort standards, making it one of the best trimarans in the market for taking your family for a cruise.

  23. Baltimore sailor Donald Lawson

    His capsized trimaran has been found. Donald Lawson's trimaran, Defiant, pictured near San Francisco, is 60 feet long and weighs just six tons. Lawson plans to sail it around the world.