Setting sail on a healthy voyage
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Lolita Harper
The sun was high in the Newport Beach sky on Saturday morning, as
were the spirits of the crew of the Alaskan Eagle, which was readying
for the first leg of its Pacific Island tour.
Dennis Mendenhall, of Lakeview Terrace, was anxious to set sail
Saturday on his third trip with the Orange Coast College School of
Sailing and Seamanship.
“It’s great to be out here,” Mendenhall said. “It’s great to be
alive.”
Mendenhall was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma a few years
ago and was told by his doctor his days were numbered. Lymphoma is a
cancer of the body’s lymph system tissues, which are important in the
function of the immune system.
Sailing was one of those things Mendenhall always wanted to try
but had never gotten around to.
That changed.
The 58-year-old Los Angeles city firefighter took beginning
sailing lessons and reached the skill level required to sail on the
Alaskan Eagle. And he’s back this summer for the “third annual
thank-God-I-am-alive tour,” he said.
“It’s a wonderful adventure,” Mendenhall said. “It really enhances
my life.”
Mendenhall said he doesn’t want anyone to think his is a sob
story.
He’s been through a lot -- including combat in Vietnam -- and
takes his challenges as they come, Mendenhall said.
But some he goes looking for -- like this Alaskan Eagle voyage.
Mendenhall said he chose the first leg because it’s the longest
nonstop trip the training program has ever embarked on, from Newport
Beach to Easter Island in the South Pacific -- about a 3,800-mile
leg.
The voyage serves as training for those who wish to hone their
boating skills, school officials said. Each leg of the trip will have
between nine and 12 students, who fly in and out of destinations
according to the itinerary.
Mendenhall will sail with about eight other people to Easter
Island, where another group will take the leg from there to Pitcairn
Island. And the pattern of island stops continues, as various groups
take the responsibility of navigating the Alaskan Eagle to Marquesas,
Tuamotus, Tahiti, Moorea, Bora Bora, Fanning Island, Hawaii and back
to Newport.
Mike Hodson, 21, was at the docks making sure the final tasks were
taken care of before they took off. He flew in from Long Island, N.Y.
for this trip, a precious space of time for him between the end of
college life and the beginning of full-blown adulthood.
“I just graduated from [Middlebury College in Vermont] and was
looking for something to do before going off into the real world,”
Hodson said.
* LOLITA HARPER is the enterprise and investigative reporter for
the Daily Pilot. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by e-mail at
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