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Past Results
History of the Race
The first outrigger race held in California was on September
20, 1959. This first race was a long distance race from
Avalon on Catalina Island to the Newport Dunes inside the
California Coast. The famous Duke Kahanamoku served as the
Grand Marshall of the first California Outrigger event and
founded the Catalina to Newport Dunes race – the original
California Outrigger Classic. The subsequent races were
underwritten by the Balboa Improvement Association and Ira
Dowd, part owner of the Newport Dunes.
First
Hawai'ian All Star Catalina Crew, 1959 |
The first race involved two canoes shipped
to California from Hawaii through the efforts of Albert
Edward “Toots” Minvielle. Both of them were
koa wood canoes with the names Malia meaning calm
waters and Niuhe, meaning shark.
The malia team was composed of Hawaiian
All Star outrigger paddlers organized by Toots. Some of
the members of that first Hawaiian team to paddle the Catalina
Channel in 1959 were Chris Bodie, Blu Makua, Archie Kuana,
Joe Gilman, Sonny Heniques, and Dougie Carr. The California
team paddled the Niuhe. This first mainland team included
George Kopa, Tom Johnson, Dan Uadis, Frank Saddler, Mike
Johnson, Dave Arne, Doug Wood, Ron Druman, Lorrin Harrison
and others.
The Hawaiian team won the race in a time
of 5 hours. The newly formed California team in the Niuhe
finished closed behind in a time of 5 hours, 11 minutes.

Lorrin
Harrison – Part of first California outrigger team,
and founder of Dana
Outrigger Canoe Club
(Est. 1972) |
Lorrin Harrison, the steersman and original
member of the first California team had the following remembrances
of the early beginnings and that first race, “when
I first heard about canoe racing here, I had a dugout canoe
that I built in 1950. We were surfing it down in Doheny.
Noah Kalama came by, he knew my sister from Hawaii, and
I knew him from body surfing. He said, “Lorrin can
you get a team together of guys down here you think would
like to paddle? We’ll have a race with a Hawaiian
team.”
“I said, ‘Yeah, we can do that!’
So we started coming here to the Dunes, paddling here till
9 o clock every night. There was about 15 guys all paddling.
Other guys would build a fire and we’d stay here and
paddle when the wind was howling. We worked for two months.
We were so sick of paddling there. I thought we would never
get out and see the ocean. Finally Noah let us go out and
it was rough outside, too. That’s the way it all started,
right here in these Newport Dunes.”
Then they brought the Hawaiian team over
so we all hooked behind some big boat, towed all the people
and the two boats over to Avalon. The race started the next
morning after we were there. It was just two boats in the
race form Avalon. Coming across we were making changes.
We had about 25 people to draw from. About half-way across,
the escort boat ran ahead to drop people in the water and
made a big wake. The wake flipped the boat straight up on
edge with the ama (outrigger) straight out of the water.
I stayed - stuck in, but my number one man was about 20
feet off the stern and it threw all the other men out too.
So Noah put a whole new 5 guys in and we kept going. At
that time we were right even with Blu Makua and the Hawaiian
team. When we came into the south end of the Newport Dunes,
they finished 11 minutes ahead of us. I had been in the
boat for 5 hours and 11 minutes with no drink of water and
I thought I'd just die when we hit the beach 'cause of the
paddle Noah gave me, he said 'You gotta have a big paddle
for this race'. That sucker weighed 10 pounds at least.
I still got the paddle, I got the proof, if any one wants
to paddle 30 miles with it, they can have it."
Newport
canoe paddlers, 1959 |
While the first Catalina to Newport Dunes Race was a culmination
of efforts and farsightedness on the part of several outstanding
persons in canoe paddling, the spirit behind the spread
and development of outrigger canoe paddling as a sport,
both in Hawaii and California, is the famous Albert "Toots"
Minvielle.
Toots Minvielle and 1958 were pivotal points
in the history of outrigger canoeing, especially for California.
In 1958 Toots met Tommy Zahn from Santa Monica, shortly
after Tommy had paddled the Molokai Channel on a surfboard.Tommy
Zahn responded immediately – there was sufficient
interest. He arranged a luncheon meeting in early 1959 with
Ira Dowd, the owner of the Newport Dunes, Sam Miller, (then
commodore of the Balboa Bay Club), and Al Oberg, Harbor
Master of Newport Beach in 1959. All the right people were
there and California’s Outrigger racing history had
begun.
Noah Kalama, sent to California by Toots
Minvielle to coach the first California Outrigger team,
and Tom Johnson, an original member of the first California
outrigger racing team, were the first to perceive the need
for California-based canoes. The boats used for that first
Catalina race were scheduled to be shipped back to Hawaii
after the competition was completed. Noah Kalama and Tom
Johnson realizing the development of California outrigger
racing would hinge upon a local boat supply, were quick
to act. They made a mold of the Malia hull – and California
outrigger boat building was born.
Although Toots Minveille initiated efforts
to bring Hawaiian Canoe Paddling to the mainland in 1958,
1959 was the year paddling arrived - the same year that
Hawaii joined the United States of America. What may have
been initially seen as merely a gesture - sharing a facet
of Hawaiian culture with the mainland through the Aloha
Celebration and the aloha spirit of Toots Minveille- has
given mainlanders, especially Californians, a tease, a feel
and a love for Hawaiian traditions.
Mahalo Hawaii, Mahalo Toots Minveille for
outrigger canoe paddling - a wonderful slice of Hawaiian
life.
– Excerpts
from article written by Michael (Jake) Jacobs |