Points East Magazine, March/April 2015

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POINTS

March/April, 2015

EAST

The Boating Magazine for Coastal New England

J.O. Brown North Haven mainstay for 127 years

In the zone The zen of boat restoration

Ringtail 18th 18th century century sail, sail, 21st century boat 21st century boat


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Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


Westerbeke™ and their dealers let you cruise coastal New England with confidence. & Engines & Generators

Marine Propulsion Engines

RUGGED

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MAINE Handy Boat Service Falmouth, ME 207-781-5110 www.handyboat.com

Hodgdon Yacht Services W. Southport, ME 207-633-2970 www.hodgdonyachtservices.com

Kittery Point Yacht Yard Kittery, ME 207-439-9582 www.kpyy.net

Universal Diesel Engines

QUIET Westerbeke Digital D-NetTM Diesel Generators

Portland Yacht Services Portland, ME 207-774-1067 www.portlandyacht.com

MASSACHUSETTS Brewer Plymouth Marine Plymouth, MA 508-746-4500 www.byy.com/plymouth

Burr Brothers Boats Marion, MA 508-748-0541 www.burrbros.com

Crocker’s Boat Yard Manchester, MA 978-526-1971 www.crockersboatyard.com

Forepeak/Marblehead Trading Co. Marblehead, MA 781-639-0029 www.marbleheadtrading.com

Robinhood Marine Center Georgetown, ME 800-443-3625 www.robinhoodmarinecenter.com

Kingman Yacht Center Cataumet, MA 508-563-7136 www.kingmanyachtcenter.com

Royal River Boat Yarmouth, ME 207-846-9577 www.royalriverboat.com

Merri-Mar Yacht Basin Newburyport, MA 978-465-3022 www.merri-maryachtbasin.com

Wayfarer Marine Camden, ME 207-236-4378 www.wayfarermarine.com

Niemiec Marine New Bedford, MA 508-997-7390 www.niemiecmarine.com

Whiting Marine Services

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South Berwick, ME 207-384-2400 whitingmarine@yahoo.com

RHODE ISLAND

Yankee Marina & Boatyard

New England Boatworks,

Yarmouth, ME 207-846-4326 www.yankeemarina.com

Portsmouth RI 401-683-4000 www.neboatworks.com

NEW HAMPSHIRE Great Bay Marine Newington, NH 603-436-5299 www.greatbaymarine.com

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Spare Parts Kits That Float!

Hansen Marine Engineering, Inc Marblehead, MA 781-631-3282 www.hansenmarine.com

CONNECTICUT Mystic Shipyard Mystic, CT 860-536-6588 www.mysticshipyard.com

Points East March/April 2015

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POINTS

EAST

The Boating Magazine for Coastal New England Volume 18 Number 1 March/April 2015 F E AT U R E S

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32

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A ringtail for Ariel Our Atkin cutter Ariel already could fly a main, jib, staysail, square, and two raffees, a pretty good downwind or reaching rig. Then a Montague Dawson print revealed the clever “ringtail.” By David Milne

Introducing M/V Points East Letters.

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An anchor to windward For 127 years, J.O. Brown & Son has been an ever-present community catalyst on Penobscot Bay’s North Haven Island, and current owners don’t want that role to change. By Steve Cartwright

Aussie misadventure, News.

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Paralympic sailing cut, Racing Pages.

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Persistence launched, Yardwork.

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Riding the dream It’s a good place to be when restoring an old wood boat. It’s all about what you are going to do with the boat, where you are going to go with it, and the oft-dreamt-of launch day when it finally arrives. By Capt. Michael Martel LAST WORD

90

4

How to keep your boat-mover happy “Russ would you please teach a course on how to get your boat ready to launch?” asked Independent Boat Haulers’ Rick. Well, here’s an article on the topic. By Russ Roth

Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


COLUMNS

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David Roper

A bridge over troubled sailors The bridge clearance/mast height conundrum. Bill Hezlep

Technology Rules. Live with it. The learning curve is steep, muddy, lumpy. Mike Pothier

Where everybody knows your name Eliot, Maine’s, Great Cove Boat Club. D E PA R T M E N T S

Letters..........................................7 Go to Tampa Bay, Just Ducky; Points East meet m/v Points East; Women Under Sail celebrates 20th.

Mystery Harbor...........................10 It’s a mecca for Maine cruisers. New Mystery Harbor on page 13.

News..........................................20 Aussie blizzard sailors Interviewed; Dodge Morgan’s record is not broken; Mystic Shipyard hosting SailQuest Show. The Racing Pages ........................52 Sailing cut from Paralympics; Mainer excels at Montego Bay race; M-B Race seeks Youth Challenge boats.

Fetching Along ............................58 Discovering Halifax Island.

Media ........................................60 “Republic of Pirates” by Colin Woodward; “Snow Squall” by Nicholas Dean and David Switzer; “Between Land and Sea” by Christopher L. Pastore.

Final passages ............................63 Robert Lane, Loraine S. Hamilton, Robert S. Erskine Jr., Kathleen F. Hicks, Peter Noyes Toulmin, Samuel Gelston King, Capt. Virginia A. Wagner, Kenneth W. Putnam Sr., Martin A. (Skip) Purcell.

Yardwork....................................67 Jim Sharp completes Friendship sloop; Sabre building its largest motor yacht; Hull No. 1 of the Bermuda 50.

Calendar ................................76-79 The Maine Boatbuilder’s Show.

Distribution............................80-83 Tides .....................................84-87 Our hat is off to... Bohndell Sails as this month’s featured Points East distribution point. See page 83 for more information.

.COM

ONLINE

Marine goods and services Need a quick guide to goods and services for your boat? Check out the Points East Marine Directory at www.pointseast.com

On the cover: Graham McKay, Master Boatbuilder/Education at Lowell’s Boat Shop, in Amesbury, Mass., applies a jack plane to a strake and frame on a Salisbury skiff. Photo by Bob Barton www.pointseast.com

POINTS

EAST

The Boating Magazine for Coastal New England Volume 18, Number 1 Publisher Joseph Burke Editor Nim Marsh Associate Editor Bob Muggleston Marketing director Bernard Wideman Ad representatives Lynn Emerson Whitney, David Stewart, Peter Partridge Ad design Holly St. Onge Art Director Custom Communications/John Gold Contributors Bob Brown, David Buckman, William R. Cheney, Susan Cornell, Mike Martel, Norman Martin, Randy Randall, David Roper Delivery team Christopher Morse, Victoria Boucher, Peter Kiene-Gualtieri, Jeff Redston

Points East, a magazine by and for boaters on the coast of New England, is owned by Points East Publishing, Inc, with offices in Portsmouth, N.H. The magazine is published nine times annually. It is available free for the taking. More than 25,000 copies of each issue are distributed through more than 700 outlets from Greenwich, Conn., to Eastport, Maine. The magazine is available at marinas, yacht clubs, chandleries, boatyards, bookstores and maritime museums. If you have difficulty locating a distribution site, call the office for the name of the distributor closest to you. The magazine is also available by subscription, $26 for nine issues by firstclass mail. Single issues and back issues (when available) cost $5, which includes first-class postage. All materials in the magazine are copyrighted and use of these materials is prohibited except with written permission. The magazine welcomes advice, critiques, letters to the editor, ideas for stories, and photos of boating activities in New England coastal waters. A stamped, self-addressed envelope should accompany any materials that are expected to be returned. Mailing Address P.O. Box 1077 Portsmouth, N.H. 03802-1077 Address 249 Bay Road Newmarket, N.H. 03857 Telephone 603-766-EAST (3278) Toll free 888-778-5790 Fax 603-766-3280

Email editor@pointseast.com On the web at www.pointseast.com

Points East March/April 2015

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EDITOR’S PAGE/Nim Ma rsh

Mad dogs, Ducks and Pilgrims many different folks, working one No other country looks after seagonight a week at the site of the origiing amateurs, tyros, and nitwits as Matt Murray's does this country. If you get in a jam 87-year-old nal Shiverick yard, on the Jones and you’re not too far away – and you Alden-designed River in Kingston, Mass. It was great can go a mighty long way – you’ve only Duxbury Duck to restore this boat at the same place Merry Wing is got to holler for the [U.S.] Coast that it was originally built. We felt back on the Guard. that Mr. Shiverick would have been bay. This was not posted on a maritime pleased to know that a boat he built chat board in response to the Aus85 years ago would be once again tralian father-and-son duo that, in sailing the waters of Duxbury Bay.” mid-February, departed Jamestown, Our first response regarding the R.I., in a long-dormant 43-foot sloop Pilgrim design came from a childhood bought on eBay, bound for Australia. Duxbury acquaintance, who wrote: The above sentiments were, rather, “Dwight Smith, owner of Long Point expressed by voyager, adventurer and Marine (www.longpointmarine.com) author Alan Villiers in 1938, in “Adin Duxbury, has a Duxbury Duck and venture” magazine. The more things a Pilgrim in his shed. He would be change, the more they remain the the source of information about the same. designs.” Photo courtesy Matt Murray The Aussies sailed straight into We tracked down Dwight as he was clearly forecasted blizzard conditions, including 52- driving down the Florida Keys, and he put us in touch knot (60-mph) winds and 25-foot seas 150 miles south with Sherman Hoyt, who told us: “The Pilgrim is 27 of Nantucket – yes, to be rescued by the Coast Guard. feet overall. Roughly eight were built, in the 1920s and For details of this escapade, see Bob Muggleston’s in- ’30s. It’s a mini-J Boat. If you saw one out of the water, terview with the boat’s owner on page 20. it made you cry. The Pilgrim Invader, in Long Point’s shed, is owned by a local couple; the Duck, Drake – *** stored on a sand floor so it doesn’t go out of shape – is In the October/November issue, we asked readers for mine.” details about specific boats and designs that refused Another Pilgrim, High Hat, is owned by Reuben to slip into the cracks between the dusty folds of the Smith’s Tumblehome Boatshop (www.tumblehomeeditor’s cerebrum. Among these were the centerboard boats.com), in Warrensburg, N.Y. Because High Hat is Duxbury Duck and the one-ended, keel/centerboard a ship of childhood dreams, we called Reuben, who told Duxbury Pilgrim, indigenous designs of the first half us that the Pilgrim was designed by Crowninshield & of the 20th-century that thrilled a boy for whom Burbank as the Duxbury One Design Class. Three of Duxbury (Mass.) Bay was John Masefield and the original eight exist today: Invader, High Hat and a hulk owned by a Pembroke, Mass., boatbuilder. Reuben Winslow Homer rolled into one. Our first response was from Duck owner Matt Mur- also gave us the elusive Pilgrim specs: LOA 26’ 9”, LWL 16’, Beam 7’, Draft (board up) 3’, Sail area 350 sq.ft. ray, of Kingston, Mass., who wrote: “The Pilgrim was the first boat with a triangular, hol“The Duxbury Ducks are a John G. Alden design with an overall length of 18 feet and a beam of six feet, low mast,” Sherm Hoyt said. “It has a hell of a lot of sail, four inches [and a maximum draft of two and a half is a very powerful boat, and [with its draft] never did feet, perfect for Duxbury Bay]. Our boat, Merry Wing, well among the Duxbury flats. It has a self-bailing cockwas built by George Shiverick back around 1928. Shiv- pit, a lead shoe on the keel, and was self-righting. Most erick was a well-known builder of boats in the Ply- were galvanized-fastened, but Shiverick, who built only mouth, Kingston and Duxbury area. He began one Pilgrim, copper-riveted pine planking to the building boats in the 1895, on the Jones River, in frames.” “I am also restoring a 1957 Beetle Cat,” Duck rehabKingston, Mass., and built and designed over 350 ber Matt Murray added. “I hope to finish it soon: It has boats until he retired in 1940. “Our restoration began back in 2008, and continued been a long, but fun, project. After three years, my wife until Merry Wing was launched and sailed last fall. is hoping to get her side of the garage back soon.” The boat was restored by an enthusiastic group of The more things change . . . . 6

Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


Letters Our group was terrific, and we enjoyed swapping stories during lunch. We really enjoyed the sandwiches and snacks that you provided. If you ever decide to run seminars on other systems such as electrical, plumbing or electronics, count me in. Ron Denny Shelton, Conn.

Just Ducky: Go to Tampa Bay

A couple of years ago we purchased an older boat in Connecticut. The hull, a 35-foot Duffy, was finished by Malcolm Pettegrow in Southwest Harbor, Maine. I have spent the past couple of years restoring the boat, and she’s still a work in progress. She is moored on the Merrimack River when not cruising in Maine, Boothbay and beyond. We deliberated on a name for a long time. Downeast is where we like to cruise, and Points East was a logical choice. Dave Goodwin m/v Points East Plaistow, N.H.

I read “It Was All Just Ducky: Part 2” by Pamela Mormino (Midwinter 2015) with great enthusiasm. They were going to explore the Gulf Coast of Florida. To my dismay they did not go up far enough; they stopped at Fort Meyers. They missed Tampa Bay and the rest of the Gulf Coast up to Deston and beyond. Tampa Bay area is my favorite destination – not by boat, but by air or driving. Not that I would not like to, but I am afraid I would not qualify for a delivery crew person. I have seen that Gladding-Hearn Shipbuilding, just down the road from me, has delivered a few pilot and patrol boats to the Maryland area and to St. Petersburg in Tampa Bay. That would be a great trip, but I have trouble with my knees and walking. But I can dream of the trip. I hope the Mormino couple cruises down to Florida again, but, this time, gets up to Tampa Bay. And don’t worry about the Sunshine Skyway Bridge: It’s 191 feet above the 1,200-foot-wide shipping channel. Your 59foot mast will have plenty of room. When you go down again, be sure to write about your trip for the rest of us stuck on the hard until spring (what’s another trip to The Sunshine State, but pure joy). We do safety patrols, with station Menemsha, in Buzzards Bay in the summer out of South Dartmouth. Ken Tait, Sr. Seekonk, Mass.

This was a great diesel seminar

Report from Tom and Karlene

Photo by Dave Goodwin

The purposeful 35-foot Duffy Points East calls at Matinicus.

Points East meet m/v Points East

I just wanted to drop you a note and let you know that I really enjoyed the Points East diesel seminar on Jan. 31. Bob Gerwig did an outstanding job of taking us through the systems and principals of the diesel engine. The timing could not have been better for me as I purchased a 1985 Crosby Canyon last year, powered by a CAT 3208, which I have no experience with. Bob took the time with each of his to address our questions specific to our engines and inform us of what to look out for and how to service the engines. www.pointseast.com

In the last issue, Randy Randall, co-owner of Marston’s Marina, in Saco, Maine, told us, in “Letters,” that he had received an email from Tom and Karlene Osborne – members of the Centerboard Y.C. in Portland, Maine – about their cruise south last fall. Here it is: Left Portland, Maine on Oct. 1, and have arrived in Florida. We are on a mooring at Fernandina Harbor Marina for a couple of days. Yesterday we traveled on bad sections of the ICW in Georgia, and had to leave St. Simons Island before Points East March/April 2015

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dawn to avoid low tide and going aground again. We are almost in a stupor realizing we have made it, and we have lived on a 40-foot boat for two months. And we’re still together! We made it to our niece’s at St. Simons on Sunday, late for Thanksgiving, but were so glad to sleep in a real bed and be with them. I couldn’t say good-bye, and thought about just staying there as the area was so beautiful. We now will try to figure out where we will settle for a bit, visit my cousins in Sebastian, Venice and Dunnellon, Fla. We helped, and had a lot of help from, the Sail Magazine Rally sailors while trying to motor in really bad parts of the ICW in the past week, and we celebrated with them last night. We are also surprised and happy that this marina is so reasonably priced. This morning, we had the appraiser from our boat insurance company, BoatUS, look at the damage done to our boat from a cabin cruiser on Thanksgiving. Now we will have to get the damage repaired somewhere in Florida. The owner of the cabin cruiser is docked at this marina, also. Don’t know if we are following them, or they us. In any event, they are very nice so far. The skipper of the cabin cruiser had tried to dock his 55foot boat, which he’d purchased three weeks earlier, next to us during high winds and a horrible current. Looks like we are missing some nasty weather in Maine. We woke up to dense fog this morning and thought for a minute that we were back in Maine. @##$%! Karlene and the Captain S/v Nest Egg In transit

Women Under Sail 20 years old Twenty years! Wow! How can that be? There’s a saying – “time flies when you’re having fun” – that is so true. The time has flown by, and we have had so much fun. When I was young, and a new nursing graduate, I couldn’t imagine having to “put in my 20 years.” Now I am looking back on 38 years of nursing, as many as a sailor, and celebrating my 20th year with Women Under Sail. I didn’t just wake up one morning and say, “I am going to have a sailing school for women.” Women Under Sail has evolved, as I have. Over two decades ago, while working as a nurse, and psychotherapist, I had a goal of somehow getting more of my work on the water. At the time, I envisioned doing group therapy on the boat, but I couldn’t wear both therapist’s and skipper’s caps. I then started Freeport Sailing Adventures, a charter business, and Women Under Sail evolved. I listened to friends, customers and fellow sailors, and here

U.S. Navy photo by Specialist 2nd Class Nick Brown

Reading to kids Logistics Specialist 1st Class Korilyn Barrett, from York, Maine, records herself reading bedtime stories for her children in the ship’s museum aboard aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) as part of the United Through Reading program. Carl Vinson was under way in the Pacific Ocean, in the U.S. 3rd Fleet area of responsibility.

MC3 Amanda L. Owens Navy Office of Community Outreach I am with a three- or six-day live-aboard sailing school for beginner, intermediate and advanced women sailors based out of Freeport, Maine. In those 20 years, I have taught close to 800 women from all walks of life, all areas of the country, and even one movie star. Many of my students have gone on to own their own boats, make major passages, and have learned to love to sail. During those 20 years, my husband and I made three passages from Maine to the Caribbean, as far as Venezuela, and one coastal trip to the Bahamas. All have been wonderful, and each has had something more to teach us. I learned to sail in Northern Michigan on Lake Superior. My mentor was a serious, skilled sailor, thus I learned the mechanics of sailing well. Upon arriving in Maine, I immediately fell in love with the beauty of the Maine coast, and I bought my second sailboat. A 25-foot Hunter. I thought I was a confident sailor, but quickly learned that sailing in New England waters is much more than just knowing how to sail a boat. I didn’t know how to read a chart. I knew nothing about tides, rocks and fog. The first time (note I say “first”) I hit a rock, I exclaimed “What in the world was that?” I had a lot to learn. From this realization came a greater love of sailing and all of the other challenges to be mastered: chart reading, weather, navigation, safety, engine and boat maintenance – and managing the situations that arise when on a large body of water controlled by Mother Nature. During my years at Women Under Sail, we’ve enLETTERS, continued on Page 10

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Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


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LETTERS, continued from Page 8 countered many unexpected challenges – from weather changes, rigging failures, engine issues, and emotional issues – and we always learn from them. I might be sweating bullets, and the students will say, “Wow, that was a great learning experience.” Stuff happens, and we learn. I am asked frequently, “Why only women?” There are many reasons: Women learn better with women. We feel less vulnerable, and know we are all on the same page, with the same goal. Women Under Sail is much more than a sailing class. It is an adventure, a challenge, and a gift you give yourself. It is about empowerment – an opportunity to challenge yourself physically and mentally, and face fears and anxieties head on. We are a group of four or five women who join together with a common goal of learning more about sailing, often addressing fears or discomforts related to boating.

Within a few hours, we know a great deal about one another. We bond, we share our special skills, fears and anxieties, and individuality. We talk about everything. We laugh. We heal from past experiences. Using a supportive team approach, and sailing as a metaphor for life, I encourage the women to talk about, and get in touch with, who they are as women and sailors, not what they are in a career. Each individual is unique, but we easily blend, learning and laughing together. We all know that when savvy, multitasking women get together, the result will be a little bit of everything. The experience becomes a three-day slumber party along the coast of Maine aboard a beautiful classic yacht with great food, great company, hard work, and tremendous personal satisfaction. What more could I ever have asked for? Capt. Sharon Renk-Greenlaw Freeport, Maine

MYSTERY HARBOR/And th e win ner is...

What a guy will do to get a free Points East hat So, it is just not recognizing the harbor but writing an essay as to how we identify with the harbor in order to claim our valued chapeau. Well, I have lived, worked, and boated on this harbor for 35 years. It’s Camden, Maine, photographed from Library Park. I recognized the harbormaster’s Boat and the schooner Surprise. In the middle of the picture is Richard Stetson’s restored 1938 Elco motor yacht. 10 Points East March/April 2015

It was an unusual angle that the picture was taken from that didn’t allow recognition immediately. But within a couple of minutes, one could make out some familiar boats, especially the harbormaster’s tender, the dinghy dock, and numerous boats of friends on their inner-harbor floats. It is a long wait to get an inner-harbor float in Camden, so the same boats are on the same floats almost every year. editor@pointseast.com


We all must know the virtues of Camden: It’s scenic beauty, great food – both prepared and fresh – good hiking and walking, and a community that puts it’s soul into learning and reading. We still have four independent bookstores, and a library that rivals any town’s. If you are a visiting cruiser, the disadvantage is that the anchorage in the outer harbor can tend to roll, so I might suggest trying the town harbormaster for a slip, or to see if he might have a float available in the inner harbor. Wayfarer Marine and P.G. Willey can also offer this service, but being a selectman in town, I’ll push what we have to offer. There is also fuel at Wayfarer and full-service repair if you are experiencing any problems. Be sure to visit Harbor Park, perhaps take a walk up to the State Park, or just maybe our new harbor trail walk will be starting to shape up to add to the experiences that we have at our disposal in Camden Harbor. It’s a great place to visit, but a better place to live. Leonard Lookner Camden, Maine

We’ve never tired of the view It’s Camden! My wife and family live very near the harbor, and we pass it every day. In the 10 years we’ve

lived at 6 High Street, we haven’t gotten tired of the view. Camden is a great town. Jesse Bifulco Windward House Bed & Breakfast Camden, Maine

Ran hydrographic surveys here I have conducted hydrographic surveys on Camden Harbor many times over the last 41 years. I recognize the Wayfarer Marina and Camden Yacht Club, as well as the Town Landing. The picture was taken in the vicinity of the waterfall and library. Paul O’Brien via email

We’ve sailed there many times My name is Joe Krusas. My wife Kathy and I sail our Catalina 30 out of Salem, Mass. We live in Northfield, Mass. Every year we take trip along the coast of Maine. I am probably too late (because I just got my midwinter issue at the New England Boat Show), but I believe the Mystery Harbor is Camden, Maine. We have sailed into Camden many times. Thanks for publishing such a wonderful magazine. Joe Krusas Northfield, Mass.

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Points East March/April 2015

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The great Mystery Harbor contest answers For those of you who stopped at our booth at the Boston Boat Show last month and took a guess at the identity of the six Mystery Harbors we had on display, here are the answers. We picked nine winners, who are listed on the right. Thanks to all for playing the game, and look for it again at other boatshows this spring!

Boston Boat Show Myster Harbor winners Geoff Ewenson Walter Antoine Joel Rodriguez Bruce Garifales Jill Hallisey

Craig Baker Kathleen Tyrell Jonathan Payne Grant Herbert

#1: Winthrop

#2: Marion

#3: Wareham

#4: Hingham

#5: Westport

#6: Scituate

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Mystery Harbor

Be the first to identify this Mystery Harbor and you’ll win a designer Points East yachting cap that will make you the envy of every boater. Please tell us a bit about how you know the spot. Send your answers to: editor@pointseast.com or mail them to editor, Points East Magazine, P.O. Box 1077, Portsmouth, NH, 038021077.

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Perspectives A bridge over troubled sailors y bridge-too-low story has made the rounds; it happened many years ago, in my boat-delivery days, during the delivery of a gorgeous, half-million dollar 50-foot yawl to Florida. But the other day I got the strangest comment at the end of my telling – this from a well-meaning lady with tiny yacht club flags on her lime-green belt. But I’ll save that for the end of this column. I will say that it was a comment on the same level as the one from a lady in Fergus Falls, Minn., uttered years ago when she heard about the adoption of Daylight Savings Time in her region: “That’s a ridiculous idea; my garden doesn’t get enough sun as it is.” Hmmmmm. Anyway, on this delivery, my crew consisted of two Mississippi River pilots, one pilot’s girlfriend, my girlfriend, and yours truly. It had been a stressful trip, mostly because of what usually happens when five people are packed into a 50-foot space and traveling 3,800 miles for 39 days (from the Great Lakes to Southeast Florida): human incompatibility. In short, no one warmed to the captain’s girlfriend, who spent most of her time uninvolved with the rest of the crew and curled up reading C.S. Lewis’ “Mere Christianity.” As you might suspect, not many river pilots read C.S. Lewis’ “Mere Christianity,” so this alone was a bit off-putting for these folks. My girlfriend became more and more withdrawn, and, as captain, I didn’t have the maturity to rectify the situation. Things were tense, but they were about to get a lot tenser. We were offshore – off central Florida’s Ponce de

M

Leon Inlet as I recall – when storm warnings made us retreat into the Intracoastal Waterway (ICW). Our first stop was a dock within walking distance from a hardware store. The goal was to buy a really long tape measure, winch our lightest crewmember up the mast with the tape, and determine our mainmast height. The specs on board said the maximum height of our rig was 63 feet above the water, but, since fixed bridges in this part of the ICW posted either 64 or 65 feet of clearance at mean high water, this was cutting it very close. I felt better measuring things for myself, and the 63 feet was confirmed. So what’s to worry about, right? We were inside now, had enough clearance to continue on in “the ditch,” and were safe from the storm, which we could now feel even in the relative protection of the waterway. So on we went – not merrily on, but on just the same. Until we came to the first fixed bridge. Now, most of us have witnessed the illusion of seeing no clearance as we stare upward while slowly going under a bridge. Well, that happened to us, too. Only it was so close that the VHF antennae bent over as we slowly crept under. Tension. “What’s going on, Cap? You sure you measured right? And it’s not even high tide,” said one of my crewmembers. Well, can’t go back now. So it’s onward to the next bridge, a few miles away. Real slow now, then reverse to stop and look up, then edge ahead and – yikes! – there’s that VHF antennae bending again; no, it’s snapped off as the head of the mast and the anemometer instrument cups just clear. Tension. “What’s going

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14 Points East March/April 2015

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on, Cap? You sure you measured right? And it’s not even high tide,” echoed another of my crewmembers. Well, can’t go back now. New plan: We roll out the genoa, then all of you straddle the furled mainsail, and I push out the boom (Big John, you climb way out toward the clew end) – then we wait for a big puff to heel the boat and reduce the mast height. “You sure about this plan, Cap?” said a third crewmember. “You got a better plan?” I replied. Then, phew, we just made it. Sort of. (Real sailors don’t need those silly wind instruments anyway.) Okay, crew, the chart shows close-together double-span Interstate fixed bridges next. We’ll use the same plan: Roll out the genoa, crew out on boom. Should work. Indeed, it does, and we get under the first span. But there was one thing I didn’t factor into this plan: between the spans, blocked by one huge bridge support, the wind stopped, and the big yawl turned more upright. I was now the captain of a half-million dollar yacht stuck in the small space between two U.S. Interstate Highway bridge spans. Real tension. That first crewmember chimed in: “What you going to do now, Cap? Can’t punt.” And so I did what any veteran captain would do: I drove around in circles between the two bridges, around and around and around, like a pacing caged lion, until I had a plan. It never came. But slightly

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lower water did. And we finally got under. Well, minus our masthead light. (But who really needs one of those, anyway?). It was time for a cocktail. We found a tiny fishing club with a few tired docks and tied up. There was no one around. Good. We went below to drink and lick our wounds. Along about the third rum, there came a knock on the hull. It was from a tiny, baldheaded man who proclaimed himself the commodore of the tiny fishing club. “Nice boat,” he said as I stuck my head out of the companionway. “We don’t get many real yachts in here. You’re welcome to stay the night. May I come aboard?” It was then that I learned from this local that the pressure and flooding through the inlets from onshore storms can raise the normal height of the water in this part of the ICW. Where was that little fellow when I needed him? Anyway, I promised I’d tell you what the lady with the tiny yacht club flags on her lime-green belt said when I told her what you’ve just read: “Honestly, Dave, you’d think the Corps of Engineers would dredge out under those bridges so many of our bigger yachts could get through.” Hmmmmmm. Dave Roper’s book, “Watching for Mermaids,” which climbed to No. 4 on the “Boston Globe” Best-Sellers List, is available through www.amazon.com.

Points East March/April 2015

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GUEST

PERSPECTIVE/Bill

Hezlep

Technology rules. Live with it. omputers and smartphones are great except when they aren’t. We spent most of the last week on the boat, and I was sans computer and e-mail, even the phone was not working right. The evening before we were to leave on a planned 10day or so cruise down the coast, my four-year-old laptop did what four-year-old laptops that have been carried around on boats do – it died…mother board failure… electronic cardiac arrest. But the hard disk was OK, so no data or programs were lost. Right. I figured I could use the smartphone while on our little cruise, and I’d get a new laptop when we got back. For the first day of our cruise the phone worked fine. Then it didn’t: Phone calls, text messages and those marine apps we all have, no problem, but email and web surfing…zip…nada. I tried everything you learn in smartphone school: first a soft reset, then a hard reset, then I used Betty’s phone to call tech help at Verizon. Verizon thought my phone was about to follow my computer to that great recycling center over the ocean somewhere. Great. Thanks guys. This made me remember the good-old low-tech days, or at least back when I was significantly younger. Forty-

five or so years ago, when you went on vacation, you’d throw a few things in the back of the car, heave the canoe onto the roof, hop in, crank it up, and head off across country to Montana or maybe a Santana concert in Los Angeles. If you really needed to talk to someone, well, gas stations had pay phones and they, mostly, worked. Of course, back then, my old Dodge had a slant-six engine that could be taken apart with a simple socket set, a couple of screwdrivers and a hammer and then reassembled with the same tools and it would run. Today, if you are like me, you open the hood, peer at the mess inside and head off to the car guru. In 1996, Betty and I phoned home from Georgetown in the Bahamas to let someone know we were heading south, and then pulled the anchor and sailed off to the Caribbean. When we got to the right island, we cleared in, put a Jimmy Buffet tape in the cassette player (remember them?), and then looked for the pay phone on the dock and phoned home. On that first cruise down yonder, we left Georgetown with a primitive GPS, a full set of paper charts, my sextant, one VHF Radio, an autopilot that failed the first day out, and a rubber ducky dinghy that we carried inflated

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on the foredeck…it was the life raft. We had no SSB, EPIRB, chartplotter, radar, satellite phone, working autopilot or real life raft. That’s the way a lot of people went down-island. Of course, two years later when we got tired of clearing in and out every time we went for a 15-mile sail to a different island, and turned the bow north to New England, we had acquired all that stuff and then some – except for the satellite phone; never did get one of those. We also wondered how we ever got down there in the first place. Today we’re older, we putt up and down the coast aboard a small Downeast hardtop, and we don’t seem to be able to leave the dock without three phone calls, several text messages and the odd email to friends and relatives. When we do actually leave the dock, we carry all the good stuff mentioned above – except for the satellite phone; never did get one of those. We also carry a computer (sometimes two) and two smartphones, both loaded with a full set of good, useful and maybe even necessary marine apps. Necessary apps? Well, I can check the weather on half a dozen different apps. If I don’t like what one says, I try a different one. And suppose the chartplotter fails? I have a full set of apps on the smart phone and they work pretty well. Anyway, as you can probably tell by now, I am back in the communications business, but it was a struggle. The cell phone, for reasons known to no one (Verizon included) cured itself. Buying the new computer was easy,

but it came with Windows 8, and when I tried to load the data and programs from the old computer’s hard disk, well, we won’t go into the ugly details. So, OK, I still had Microsoft Office 2007 on its original disk, but, when I put the disk in the computer, I got a polite message that said something about the disk having a three-installation license and, so sorry, but this try is No. 4. OK, the new computer came with an offer from Microsoft –for $89.00: I could download Office. After the better part of a night and three tries, I had Office 2013 for Windows 8. Office 2013 for Windows 8 is not the same as Office 2007 for Windows 7. Then, three days late, Microsoft announces a free up-grade to Windows 8.1. The learning curve has been steep, muddy and lumpy. Technology is a communicable disease, and most of us have it. Times have changed. Technology rules. Live with it. Keeps the brain in gear. A professional cartographer, Bill’s lifelong infatuation with the sea, ships and boats began in 1961 when, at 17, he went to sea on a square-rigged Norwegian school ship. He met his wife Betty – an aerospace engineer, mathematician, pilot and experienced sailor – in a sailing club in Annapolis in 1993. A year later, they left the Chesapeake on what was supposed to be a one-year, round-trip cruise, south to the Florida Keys, over to the Bahamas and back to the bay. They never returned to their former lives. They spend half the year cruising the East and Gulf coasts and the Bahamas aboard their Nauset 28.

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Points East March/April 2015

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GUEST

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Where everybody knows your name estled along the northern shores of the Piscataqua River – just upriver from the Route 95 Bridge and adjacent to the Spinney Creek outfall in Eliot, Maine – sits an unusual boating facility known as the Great Cove Boat Club. It’s unusual because it’s owned and operated by its members. Great Cove’s roughly 100 members annually elect a board of directors responsible for setting policy, and hiring staff, including an operations manager responsible for day-to-day operations. Each slip owner, or “key member,” gets one vote for the directors and one vote on important policy issues. Democracy in action. The facility was owned and operated by the Berounsky family as a marina, from the late 1950s to the mid 1980s. Then it was reorganized as a memberowned and -operated club to promote boating and provide a safe, well-protected area to store boats all season long. Great Cove Boat Club has about 100 slips, and a handful of moorings. The owners occupy some of the slips, and others are leased on a seasonal basis to associate members. Amenities include a boat ramp,

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haul-out facility with a railway and an indoor heated workspace, and a clubhouse with ample parking. The clubhouse is heated and air-conditioned and contains reasonably priced laundry facilities, three showers, three heads (including one with handicap accessibility), and a lounge area with TV, cable and Wi-Fi. The space also includes commercial cooking equipment, and a bar and seating area for all members and guests. A tent is erected during the boating season to provide cover on those “less-than-wonderful” boating days. All members have access to several gas grills. Many evenings people gather around the fire pit with their favorite beverages, relax and watch the moon rise. The vast majority of the members own powerboats in varying sizes, from 18 to 45 feet. There’s a small contingent of sailors, 10 to 15 in an average year, and we have to endure the good-natured harassment from the powerboaters. People who have navigated the Piscataqua frequently know it can be challenging, with ferocious currents, tricky winds and three bridges to negotiate; tankers, freighters and even submarines to avoid. To

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make the journey to Great Cove Boat Club in an auxiliary sailboat requires timing the opening of two bridges, and avoiding the worst of the current flow, which can max out at six to seven knots in places. Standing waves can appear when the current and wind are opposing each other. Tricky stuff, but exciting and challenging, too. Belonging to this club feels more like being part of a boating family. The operation manager, Butch, and his friendly staff, Ray and Ian, are always there to help boaters with docking and fueling, they even help members with their dock carts. Butch has a lifetime of experience building boats, transporting boats, and servicing them. There isn’t much he can’t help you with; if he can’t, he’ll send you to a person who can. Need canvas work, fiberglass repairs, engine work or painting? Butch will suggest someone to help. He is like a mother hen for 100-plus chickens. In the 12 years I have been at Great Cove, the members have always been extremely friendly and very accepting of my handicapped son, Derek. After a month-long cruise, there’s always be a smiling face to greet you and grab a dock line, usually accompanied by lighthearted kidding. It’s true that we have all “aged a bit,” and the weekend parties aren’t quite as loud or as long as they used to be. Some captains have moved on to the “big-

ger ocean” somewhere on the other side. A lot of faces have changed, but the boating bonds remain. Like any group of people this large, there are always differences of opinion, and occasionally some dockside politics get involved. But, generally, people are there to relax and have fun, whether cruising extensively on their own boats or just enjoying the dockside experience. We have our contingent of snowbirds who migrate south every year as the days get shorter, the temperatures colder. They are always enthusiastically welcomed back in the spring, when we usually gather around and listen to their winter adventures. Some summer weekends Gosport Harbor in the Isles of Shoals looks more like a Great Cove Boat Club convention. There’s never a shortage of boats and people to visit. A lot of the members have become lifelong friends, and maintain those friendships through the off-season. Some pick up the bonds again in the spring, like there was never a winter at all, and a new boating season begins. Good friend Mike Pothier has been sailing off and on for close to 40 years on a wide variety of boats. He presently owns Dragonfly, a 1990 Hunter Legend 35.5, which is berthed in Eliot, Maine. He sails with his son Derek (known up and down the coast as “Big D”) and sometimes with Elphis, “The Hiking Goddess.”

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Points East March/April 2015

19


News An Aussie misadventure, writ large By Bob Muggleston copter. For Points East A predictable outcome? Maybe. Details that emerged On a bitingly cold day in February, with a fierce winter after the rescue made the attempt seem, at the very least, foolhardy. Take the boat, for storm bearing down on them, Jainstance. It was a fast and capason and Reg McGlashan – 37 and ble racer that had been to 66 years-old, respectively – left CoBermuda several times, but it nanicut Marina in Jamestown, hadn’t been used in a while, and R.I., headed for Bermuda and ultinever got a proper shakedown mately their native Australia, via prior to leaving Jamestown. It the Cape of Good Hope. The was also revealed that Reg, the younger McGlashan had recently father, was a non-sailor. The day bought the boat they sailed – Sethey left? Friday the 13th. dona, a 43-foot custom racing yacht So what, exactly, were they built in 1995 – for a song on eBay. thinking? Two days later, their U.S. Coast Photo courtesy U.S. Coast Guard Now we know. Points East Guard rescue roughly 150 miles Supremely confident, or plumb loco? In Februcaught up with Jason Mcsouth of Nantucket, Mass., in 60 ary, two Australian men were rescued approxiGlashan, who is now back in Ausknot-winds, made national news, mately 150 miles south of Nantucket when tralia, and was nice enough to and included footage of the two they tried to outrun a nor'easter in a boat give us some of his time. A few of men being hoisted into a heli- they'd recently bought on eBay.

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20 Points East March/April 2015

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Photo courtesy Jason McGlashan

Miracle Men: By the time the U.S. Coast Guard helicopter crew (pictured, with Reg and Jason, Reg on left) arrived on scene, it was blowing 60, with 25-foot waves.

his answers to our queries beg even more questions, which is understandable when trying to encapsulate a succession of monumental occurrences in a small number of words.

Points East: How experienced a sailor are you? Have you ever done any singlehanding? McGlashan: I have been sailing for about 25 years on everything from windsurfers to yachts and multihulls.

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Points East March/April 2015

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I have done a lot of short-handed sailing, but only limited singlehanded. PE: How long had you been looking for a boat when you found Sedona? McGlashan: I had been looking for a yacht like Sedona for years. Every time I had money there were no yachts, every time there were yachts, I had no money. This one came up at a time when I had money, it appealed to me, and so I purchased it. PE: What was it about her that made you consider the trip from Newport all the way to Australia? McGlashan: The lines appealed to me – it looked like a quick yacht, and durable. It had the room I needed on board and the speed, and it also had a pretty heavy keel helping with the ballast. PE: How long did it take to get her in shape, and what sacrifices did you have to make in order to fulfill this dream? McGlashan: It took a bit over six weeks to get her into shape. We had planned on doing some sightseeing while in the States, but, unfortunately, we didn’t have time for this. I had stopped running my own business of sailmaking, selling boat accessories and working on boats, to start working for other people to try and speed up the process of getting ahead in life to be able to afford something like this. The last three years, I have spent working in the mines trying to get enough money to pay my bills, save up and purchase a nice boat.

PE: Did you have any second thoughts once you actually saw Sedona? McGlashan: I had purchased the boat around three months before I actually saw it. The photos I had on it were good – they showed me a lot of detail – so once I turned up at the yard, I found it pretty easy. It was what I thought it was. All I wanted to do then was to get it together and get it wet. PE: The brutal winter we’ve been experiencing here in New England: How closely were you following the weather, and did the overall pattern make you reconsider? McGlashan: We had been checking the weather every day. We had made the decision that, if the guys hadn’t finished the install on the new autopilot by mid-Friday, we wouldn’t leave until after the storm. We had been told via email we had to leave the jetty by Saturday as the storm coming Sunday could cause damage to the jetty and our boat if we stayed on it. Everything was finished on time. PE: Why Bermuda and the Cape of Good Hope, instead of a western route, on which you could make multiple stops (to fix stuff) and enjoy some warm weather? Maybe you could explain the game plan for trying to beat the weather system that eventually caught you. McGlashan: The reason we chose that route was, that the trades were in our favor, making the trip much quicker. The route had deeper water making it much

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22 Points East March/April 2015

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Photos courtesy U.S. Coast Guard and Michael Brown

Safe and sound in the Coast Guard helicopter (left) and Sedona just before the ill-fated voyage. The gelcoat was falling off in chunks, but McGlashan was aware of this prior to placing his winning bid, and considered it an aesthetic issue.

safer – more of a rolling wave than short and sharp ones to pound the boat. (Editor’s note: Elsewhere, Jason has mentioned wanting to get back to Australia before winter set in, the eastabout route being ostensibly faster). We had planned on stopping in Bermuda and then sailing under South Africa, where we would stop if needed, then on to Australia, where we would most likely stop in

Perth. We knew the boat could do at least 150 miles in a day if we didn’t have the problems that came up, including with our back-up gear. [Making those miles] we would have easily outrun the storm. PE: Was there an adequate shakedown for Sedona? Describe the safety equipment aboard her. McGlashan: We had the boat in the water for almost

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Points East March/April 2015

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a week, finishing off the repairs and installs of new gear. We didn’t go sparingly with safety gear, with most of it being brand new, including an EPIRB for the boat and a personal EPIRB each, flares, safety harnesses, wetweather gear, raft, VHF radio for the boat and a hand-held, latest GPS and AIS – the list could keep continuing. PE: What happened to the sails and engine? McGlashan: What happened was, the charging unit for the Yanmar started to fail, so we connected the wind generator, only to find this didn’t last long and was most likely faulty – we had just purchased this from a local shop. Once both charging units failed, I pulled the sails down to do some repairs, as part of the main had come out from under its lashing and caught on one of the winches, I suspect, and both sheets had come off the headsail – I still don’t know how this happened, as the clips were a double safety clip. I’m not sure how this sail tore. Once the sails were torn we tried to motor, as sunrise was a couple of hours away, and it would be best to fix the sails then. We motored for around 1.5 hours, doing around six knots so as not to push the motor, at which

time it shut itself down. This is when we tried to call for assistance. Initially there were light winds and warm temperatures. We had tried on the radio, but unfortunately there were no other boats nearby. We then tried the sat phone, but were having trouble connecting with the U.S., so we called numbers we had for home to relay the message. When this was taking a long time we thought we would set off the EPIRB. The storm only came up about an hour before we were rescued. Unfortunately I had to leave my boat behind. PE: What’s the status of the boat right now? McGlashan: The boat is currently drifting in the ocean. I would do almost anything to get it back. PE: What did you learn from all this? Given what happened, would you do it all again? McGlashan: You can never have enough spares. Given what happened I would do it again. My only regrets are getting the Coast Guard to come and get us, and leaving my yacht. Bob Muggleston is the associate editor for Points East magazine.

You can never have enough spares. Given what happened I would do it again. My only regrets are getting the Coast Guard to come and get us, and leaving my yacht.

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Paris aborts second record attempt Stanley Paris had several goals in mind when he began his solo nonstop around-the-world attempt on Dec. 2, 2013 from St. Augustine, Fla. – Set a reference for time from St Augustine, Fla. – Set a reference for time from Bermuda. – Set a reference for age (was then 76 years old). – Set a reference for energy (green-mode, using no hydrocarbons). However, on Jan. 11, approximately 1,700 miles west of Cape Town, he reported that his boat had failed, and his attempt had ended. Paris was sailing his custom-built 63-foot Kiwi Spirit, designed by Farr Yacht Design and constructed by Lyman-Morse Boatbuilding. Embarking on a second attempt at age 77 years, Paris departed Nov. 9, 2014 from St. Augustine, believing that Kiwi Spirit was ready.

But apparently it wasn’t. Here’s what Paris wrote following his decision to stop: “Once again my attempt to complete a solo circumnavigation has come to an end. On Christmas Eve, the top quarter of the mainsail separated along a seam from the rest of the sail. This is not repairable by me at sea and given the gales I can expect before I round the tip of South Africa, it is once again not advisable to continue. “This is, of course, a big disappointment to me and to many who have wished me well. But that is life. I have never let difficulties get in my way of trying something worthwhile. “I am always aware that failure can occur but I have never let the fear of failure deter or prevent me from trying. To do so would be to accept mediocrity and that I will never do.”

Briefly Mystic Shipyard will host 8th Annual SailQuest Show

In late February SailQuest Boat Show Companies announced that Mystic Shipyard in Mystic, Conn., will be the location for its annual boutique boat show (May 1-3). This family-oriented show will feature new sailboats, trawlers, Downeast-style powerboats, kayaks, paddleboards and select brokerage yachts for sale, from 12 to over 50 feet long. Located in the heart of historic Mystic, Mystic Shipyard is offering free parking and free admission to the show. The docks at Mystic Shipyard will showcase a wide range of models, including: Catalina, Bavaria, Jeanneau, Hunter, Lagoon, Beneteau, Minor Offshore, Nordic Tug, Hunt, Blue Jacket, X-Yachts, Southport and more to be announced. SailQuest Boat Show Companies will be supporting Sails Up 4 Cancer Organization at the show. Sails Up 4 Cancer is a non-profit organization dedicated to funding research in the education, prevention, and cure for all types of cancer through the art and enjoyment of sailing. FMI: www.sailquestboatshow.com.

Winter storage, repair & refit Rumery's wants to store your boat inside this winter. Let us take care of your boat; upgrade systems, integrate electronics, provide onboard WiFi. Have us design a solar charging system and manage your energy consumption. Perhaps it is time to improve your sanitation system to eliminate residual odors and tank issues? Consider repowering that tired or unreliable engine. Rumery’s is located a short walk from the Saco DOWNEASTER station so you can get your crew back to Boston or New York with ease. We are dedicated to making your time on the water safer and more relaxing. Call us to reserve space and discuss your next project.

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Points East March/April 2015

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Ariel now carries a squaresail, a pair of raffees above the yard, and a ringtail along the roach of the main. ŠAlison Langley / langleyphoto.com


Ariel

A ringtail for

Our Atkin cutter Ariel already could fly a main, jib, staysail, square, and two raffees, a pretty good downwind or reaching rig. Then a Montague Dawson print revealed the clever “ringtail.” By David Milne For Points East riel is a double-ended cutter, 35 feet on deck, displacing 26,000 pounds, crossing a square yard on a varnished spruce mast with two headsails. This is the story of how we added a new sail to the inventory. Ariel is a Vixen design, the culmination of John and Bill Atkin’s double-enders, designed and built in the

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early 1950s for a round-the-world trip. That vessel, Vixen, is still sailing, and visited Maine in 2011 after a second world circle. The design was featured in “Rudder,” and, in a book of designs and commentary, by L. Francis Herreshoff and Boris Lauer-Leonardi. For Ariel – first touching water in 2004 and built by Ferdinand “Red” Nimphius in the 1980s – a square yard was added with the permission of John Atkin. A square-rigged vessel was born. At the end of the first


decade of the 21st century, Ariel could fly a main, jib, staysail, square, and two raffees, small sails set above the yard. All in all, it’s a pretty good rig for downwind sailing or on a reach, and a great looking image bearing down on a headland or entering harbor. In 2011, on the Internet, we saw an oil painting by Montague Dawson, possibly the finest marine artist of the 20th century. Backwards in time, the painting features a British revenue brigantine under sail with all her regular sails, stuns’ls (studding-sails), topsails, and a strange looking addition outboard of the main. That sail was called a “ringtail.” It was a stuns’l for the main, sometimes used in the late 18th century and into the 1800s, but developed earlier in a variety of forms. Originally, the fore-and-aft sail on the aftermost mast was much smaller. Primarily a light-wind sail (although probably used in higher winds, if required, by a smuggler or revenue cutter), it added significant square-footage to the main, and was flown from the head of the gaff and secured with a boom as an extension to the main. The main problem with adding the sail to Ariel was that we could find no one who actually had flown a ringtail. I had never seen it on a yacht or square-rigged vessel in real life. I now know that the replica Pride of Baltimore has flown one. The solutions were both modern and historical. First

All in all, says the skipper, it’s a pretty good rig downwind or on a reach.

©Alison Langley / langleyphoto.com

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and most important, it was necessary to find the right boatyard that could look at the concept and translate the idea into wood and canvas (Dacron). That yard was Traditional Boat (www.mainetraditionalboat.com) in Unity, Maine. In the past, owner John Flanzer, has demonstrated uncommon intelligence and flexibility in working with our boat. This was a no-brainer. The historical part of the issue was to find as much information about the sail and the rigging of it on ships long gone in memory. In this we were fortunate, as artists of the period were remarkably accurate in their depictions of vessels and rigging. As well, seamanship and rigging were incremental developments, so it was possible to watch the historical evolution of the sail. The earliest marine dictionary in the English language is William Falconer’s “Dictionary of the Marine” (1769). In part, it was based on the earlier French dictionary of “Mess. Du Hamel, Aubin, Saverien, &c.” Included in Falconer are drawings of sails, rigging, anchoring, and ship handling. The ringtail is defined in this way: “A ringtail is a name given to a sort of studding-sail, hoisted beyond the after edge, or skirt of those main sails which are extended by a boom and gaff, as in all sloops, brigs, and schooners. This ringtail is accordingly of the same depth with that part of the main sail upon which it borders.” After that, for more information we looked to David Steel’s “The Elements and Practice of Rigging and Sea-

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manship,” the first attempt in English to publish a compendium of all the knowledge required of a seaman. It included sections on mast making, anchor making, sail making, block making, rigging, seamanship, naval tactics, and tables of the quantities and dimensions of standing and running rigging, as well as the vocabularies for each section. Also, Darcy Lever’s “Young Sea Officer’s Sheet Anchor” (1808 and later, both British and American editions). A maritime classic, Lever’s book became the standard guide to rigging and seamanship in 19th-century England and America, and went through numerous editions up to the time of the Civil War. The handsome engraved plates – one for every page of text – show all aspects of rigging and handling sails in all kinds of weather. I have found no reference to this sail after Lever. The best modern book we have located on historical seamanship is “Seamanship in the Age of Sail” by Harland and Myers. This scholarly and brilliant work, with many drawings and photos, is really the best source for an intelligent discussion of the development of any sail or seamanship maneuver from the great Age of Sail. To read it is to appreciate scholarly obsessiveness. The next step was to try to figure out how to rig the ringtail. For that we have only general information and John had to figure out how long to make the boom, how to secure it to the mainsail boom and the head of the

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gaff, and how to control and not time-stamped or best limit its travel along the by. It made us look at the boom. This he did, experipast in a new way, and – menting with block placemaybe, just maybe – it ment and other hardware to will encourage other peoinsure free movement and ple to re-examine their maximum control of the sail own histories and attiwhich adds about 30 per cent tudes. If you see us on sail area to the main. the water, come on over Finally, the sail had to be and tell us what you made. We originally asked a think – if you can catch local sailmaker who cancelled us on a broad reach. after a staff shortage occurred We are looking at stunin his loft. Then we went to s’ls for 2015. And a Jamie other sailmakers, but the cost Green (a sail set beneath was too high for our budget. the bowsprit and the jibThe fact is, the ringtail is an boom) and a watersail easy sail to make. No glass (set beneath the boom). battens, no reef points, just The past is future. The cringles at the foot and head past is prologue. There is for lacing. The sailmakers we no end of ideas. Some spoke to seemed to have a even may work. hard time with simple work. We went to several overseas David Milne is a sailmakers, all based in pseudonym. Milne was a China, as a second choice beEnglish naval officer Art from Lever’s “Young Sea Officer’s Sheet Anchor” cause we ran out of time for during the Napoleonic the summer. With some of Wars. Originally, he was these, we had language diffia merchant officer who culties; others could not visubecame a very successful alize what we were proposing. frigate captain and capThe nomenclature of squaretured a state of the art sails, which they had not French vessel. Author built, made them uncomfortDavid Gerstel is a retired able, which, in turn, made us merchant marine officer nervous. with an unlimited liNow that the sail is on the cense, any gross tons, boat the sail is spectacular. It steam or motor. He has draws well, adds speed on a worked on the New York reach or run, and looks wonwaterfront and in Monderful. Most importantly, it forced us, and perhaps the treal. He divides his time between Montreal, Vermont, people who see the boat, to realize that technology is Maine and Italy.

The fact is, the ringtail (top row, left), is an easy sail to make. No glass battens, no reef points, just cringles at the foot and head for lacing. The sailmakers we spoke to seemed to have a hard time with simple work.

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Sailing under squaresail Handsome is as handsome does, Sailing under squaresail is different than under and Ariel does very the Marconi rig. It’s generally a slower world, a well, thank you. world of friendship sloops, coastwise schooners, English Blackwallers, tea clippers, and long-voyage Downeasters. It seems that the strain on the vessel is lighter, and you are more going with the flow. As long as you are not trying to go upwind, the motion is easier and it feels like the ship is lifting with the sails. The apparent wind is different. The apparent motion is different. With the squares come an absence of the urgency felt under some conditions with Marconi sail. Not long ago, Ariel, with her usual one-person crew, left Pulpit Harbor to go north towards Castine, Maine. The wind was quite strong from the southsouthwest. Other boats wanted to head north, but they were concerned with jibing and the four-foot seas. What the few that went out did was tack downwind. Fast, but longer, and still not comfort©Alison Langley / langleyphoto.com able. gone a thousand miles without touching the sails. What Ariel did was set a small square, about 250 square Of course, upwind, we would have taken a nap at Pulpit and feet, a jib, and the two raffees (60 square feet). We had a wonwaited for a day or so. Each rig has its benefits. I have not seen derful sail, relaxed with a cappuccino and snack food (smoked a square rig in the America’s Cup for some time. oysters). Our speed was six and a half knots. We could have David Milne

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An anchor to windward For 127 years, J.O. Brown & Son has been an ever-present community catalyst on Penobscot Bay’s North Haven Island, and current owners don’t want that role to change. Story and photos by Steve Cartwright For Points East You can’t visit North Haven Island, in Maine’s Penobscot Bay, without taking note of Brown’s boatyard. Situated next to the state ferry dock, the yard is as vital to the community as the daily ferry service itself.

32 Points East March/April 2015

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J.O. Brown and Son exudes character and stability. Inset: Fourth-generation family member Kim Alexander and her fifth-generation son Adam.

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A summer resident commissioned J.O. Brown to build a fleet of North Haven dinghies, and Brown built 70 of them in this shop.

Brown’s bills itself as “a full-service boatyard,” offering moorings, hauling and trailering, boat storage, shower, a small chandlery, and a fuel dock. But, to the North Haven community, it is so much more. Islanders generally agree that Brown’s is a lifeline, whether you need fuel, your boat’s run aground, or your truck’s stuck in the ditch. There’s nothing glitzy about the yard, with its hand-

painted signs, tin roof, board-and-batten siding, and wood-planked dock on wooden pilings. The great posts and beams of the main shed were erected in 1855. Today, eight employees tackle a variety of shore and maritime challenges using both traditional hand tools along with modern machinery. The Brown’s crew includes three marine technicians, three certified captains, and a certified diver.

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For 127 years, the Brown family – now the fifth generation – has been building and maintaining boats, setting moorings, selling hardware, and occasionally rescuing a recreational mariner or fisherman at sea. Today, Brown’s sells fuel; has a 15-ton Travelift; and does engine, prop and hull repairs. Brown’s also delivers heating oil to island homes, and sells gas for island cars. If you’ve got a problem, call Brown’s. Next door to the boatyard is the impressive $3 million Waterman’s Community Center – funded by summer folk and local fundraisers – tucked into the former Waterman Company Market buildings. But in many ways Brown’s itself is also a community center. It’s where you might hear the latest gossip and a weather report. It’s where, in warmer weather, you can buy lobsters from a dinghy converted into a holding tank. As fourth-generation family member Kim Alexander puts it, “We seem to feel the need to help the viability and sustainability of the island.” A theater-arts major, she likes Henrik Ibsen’s quote: “A community is like a ship; everyone ought to be prepared to take the helm.” When the boatyard was founded in 1888, James O. Brown was just 23, working in a rented fish house. Summertime resident Charles Weld of Boston took an interest in Brown, and commissioned him to build a fleet of North Haven dinghies, small racing sloops. Over the years, Brown built 70 of them, and you can still see them today at the yacht club or the boatyard.

The dates of storms, and high levels of storm surges, are marked on one of the old shop's cast-iron saw supports.

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The fish house burned, and Brown built a new shop. But Weld saw a chance for expansion when the nearby lobster and clam cannery closed in 1897. Weld bought the property and installed machinery for Brown, with a lease-to-own contract. J.O. Brown’s gray-shingled boatbuilding shed still stands, half over the water, now used for storage. In those early years, Brown’s built dozens of dinghies, catboats, dories, peapods and sail-powered fishing boats. And the island’s first motorboat in 1902. Brown asked son Foy to join the business in 1926, hence the name “& Son.” The elder Brown died a year later at 61. In 1939, Foy built a 42-foot vessel named the J.O., and used for years to ferry goods and people across the bay. It was Foy’s last job. He died in 1940, age 51, and his son James took over at 23 – the same age at which his grandfather started the business. He left the island for wartime military service, and swore he’d never leave again. The hub of yard activity is the large ex-cannery. A post-and-beam structure with sagging eaves, it has been expanded with a new dock financed by a $240,000 state grant to preserve working waterfront. Brown’s invested half again that amount in a dock that has long been used by local fishermen. “Not only has the business done a lot of things for the community,” said Alexander, “but the first J.O. and [son] Foy were town clerks, as was Aunt Ivaloo. Dad was a selectman, brother Foy was on the planning board; I’ve been on the school board, Waterman’s board, planning board, and board of appeals. Foy the younger was a selectman, Adam (Kim’s son and fifth-generation Brown) is on sustainable housing, and his wife Kat just replaced someone as selectman.” Past meets the present at Brown’s, where old tools and oldtimers mingle with modern eleceditor@pointseast.com


Above, a mosaic of prints shows crews that served J.O. Brown during the yard's 127-year history. Below: The hardware store.

tronics and young people. Grandchildren – kids who may someday take over the family business – play at boatbuilding. “We plan on handing it down,” said Kim, who runs Brown’s office in a former Knights of Pythias hall overlooking the yard. Kim shares responsibility for the yard with her older brothers, Jimmy and Foy, Foy being a name, along with Jim, that is passed down from generation to generation. Kim’s father – also a James Brown, but known as Jim – died www.pointseast.com

four years ago after a lifetime at the boatyard. Her Aunt Ivaloo also devoted her life to the business as bookkeeper. In Jim’s last years around the yard, he could no longer do the day-to-day work, and claimed he did the “heavy looking on.” Before he died at 91, in 2008, he said, “It’s all I ever really wanted to do. All I really knew how to do, actually.” The yard passed to the next generation, Kim and her brothers Jimmy and Foy – those names just keep going – and Kim’s cousin Linda. Now there’s a fifth genPoints East March/April 2015

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Left: Herreshoff 12 1/2s share shed space with lobster-pot buoys, cordage, and yard detritus. Right: a current project.

eration, and Kim’s son Adam, 31, is part of it. A recent magazine article called him “operator” at the yard, and he’s taken some ribbing for that. He said he actually has no title. The Brown family doesn’t need a designated boss. Each person knows what to do, and when and where to do it, family members say. “We were all ‘sail’ to start with,” Kim said. “We haven’t built a sailboat in a long time.” In fact, the last boat built from scratch was the Agnes, a traditional wooden motor launch modeled on the Brown’s Boat Yard workboat. A couple had seen the workboat and commissioned a more elegant version of it in 2007.

Brown’s boatyard keeps busy maintaining 14-foot, five-inch North Haven Dinghies, known as the oldest actively raced one-design class in North America. The 1919 John Alden design is raced at the nearby North Haven Casino, the yacht club that was organized in 1912. No one seems to know why it’s called The Casino: Maybe some gambling occurred there at one time or another. The late John Leather, in his 1982 book “Sail and Oar,” wrote: “In the early years, J.O. Brown built the North Haven Dinghy for $425, but in 1949 . . . . his grandson was building them for $750 each.” Repair

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“Dad was a selectman, brother Foy was on the planning board; I’ve been on the school board, Waterman’s board, planning board, and board of appeals. Foy the younger was a selectman, Adam (Kim’s son and fifth-generation Brown) is on sustainable housing, and his wife Kat just replaced someone as selectman.”

Kim Alexander

and maintenance work on a variety of craft never ceases, and Brown’s reputation recently attracted a Massachusetts lobsterman, who wants some work done on his boat. College students from the island can find summer work at Brown’s, and Adam himself did just that while studying at Concordia University in Montreal, where he majored in literature. He just bought his grandfather’s house in the village, where he and wife Kat are raising two kids. They’re part of a baby boom on North Haven. This is encouraging since the island has the smallest accredited K-12 school in Maine: 66 students, 21 of them in the high school. The North Haven Community School – financed by $6.2 million in private donations and $1.9 million in municipal bonds – was completed in 2008, and includes a year-round greenhouse. For the other end of the life continuum, a seasonal resident has donated a

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$1.5 million seaside home as a facility for elders, so they can stay on their beloved island. The Brown family is committed to keeping the business going, and Kim said she would like to hire more workers if she can find them. Housing is in short supply on North Haven. Then there’s the challenge of island life: You’re in a small place with the same people, for a long period of time. Twelve miles from the mainland city of Rockland, North Haven is a Penobscot Bay cruiser’s paradise. With a year-round population of about 350, it’s is a community where, for better or worse, you know all your neighbors. If you’re a member of one of the old families, you’re related to many of them. Kim, a founder and mainstay of the Waterman Center, said, “It’s hard to grow up in a fishbowl.” The Waterman who ran the store was her uncle. Island life, she said, means “you have to wear a lot of hats, and let

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a lot of stuff roll off your back. For some people, living here is perfect,” she said. “It’s all connected, and the people are all connected.” On North Haven, fishermen and organic farmers mingle with the affluent, including such longtime summer residents as the IBM Watson family, which owns a private airstrip. Another resident is U.S. Congresswoman Chellie Pingree, who moved to the island years ago to raise a family and establish an organic farm. In 1981, she started a cottage industry for island knitters, marketing knitting kits nationwide. Her daughters have stayed on the island, with forays to the mainland. Chellie and her husband, Donald Sussman, operate Nebo Lodge, catering to anyone who wants to dine and bed down on North Haven. Their organic farm, Turner Farm, supplies the lodge. Hannah Pingree, former Maine Speaker of the House, helps her mom,

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and Hannah’s sister, Cecily, is reviving Calderwood Hall, an island gathering place, with plans for a brew pub. To say that North Haven is unspoiled almost seems an understatement. From one shore to another, there are winding narrow roads on which everyone waves to one another; there are sweet anchorages such as protected Pulpit Harbor, a favorite for cruising boats. The tree-lined village is a cluster of older houses, a true close-knit neighborhood. “Some of us like to call it North Heaven,” one resident said. And Brown’s Boatyard can take a bow for the role it has played in sustaining that feeling for well over a century. Steve Cartwright lives and writes in Midcoast Maine. He loves to sail, run, and raise a mug at the local pub. He can be reached at writer@midcoast.com.

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As Mike chips, he's dreaming of crossing the Gulf Stream in Privateer (inset).

Riding the dream

It’s a good place to be when restoring an old wood boat. It’s all about what you are going to do with the boat, where you are going to go with it, and the oft-dreamtof launch day when it finally arrives. Story and photos by Capt. Michael L. Martel For Points East fter working on the interior of the cabin for a couple of hours the other night – painting, repairing, and re-installing hardware – I took a break and sat down at the chart desk and happily sur-

A

42 Points East March/April 2015

veyed my progress, while the little electric heater on the deck of the saloon hummed away. I knew that I was back into my boatbuilding groove, and it felt natural, comfortable, and satisfying. It’s a good place to be, I thought. It’s a place in time that’s almost meditative; time and schedule have beeditor@pointseast.com


come meaningless. There’s no rush; do it right, take your time, and savor each little bit of progress. Until you arrive at this place, it’s all painful, uncomfortable work, fraught with worries about weather, timing, schedules, what the neighbors are thinking, the immensity of the project – and you begin to doubt whether you will ever finish it. But once you’re in the groove, life attains a certain balance, and it becomes a pleasure to watch the slow transformation of the vessel beneath your hands. You are no longer trudging along, strapped into the traces; you are now riding the dream. I have been to this place before, every time I got into building or rebuilding a boat. You don’t know when you’re going to get here, but when you finally do, well, you’re here. The mind, as Milton once observed, is its own place. The cold, blustery November wind was whistling through the bare tree branches outside, a front coming through, a gift from Canada. It blew in from the northwest, under a star-lit evening sky. It rattled and shook the heavy tarpaulins covering my woodframed boat enclosure, cold drafts blowing up and around the motionless hull. But within that cocoon stood my boat, on its jack-stands, surrounded by the scaffolding I had built, ladders, and hanging beat-up shop-lights shining an eerie fluorescent glow on the upper works, while the hull below the waterlinelevel scaffolding was enfolded in darkness and shadow. Throughout the summer season, I had finished restoring the decks, and now the hatches were all in place, and the boat could be closed up to contain the feeble output from the little space heater. It actually made a difference because, when it’s very cold, water hoses become rock-like; the solid block of an engine numbs any fingers that touch it; paint won’t flow, and epoxies become heavy syrup and hard to

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The author can "romance rotted wood" because of the dream.

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Until you arrive at this place, it’s all painful, uncomfortable work, fraught with worries about weather, timing, schedules, what the neighbors are thinking, the immensity of the project – and you begin to doubt whether you will ever finish it.

mix and apply. Varnish goes on like painting molasses. But with the boat closed up, I can work inside, continuing into the winter, at least through the milder earlier parts of it. January may be another matter. But even now, later on a dark weeknight evening, the dream keeps me going. While I work, I think of sailing the broad ocean. When I install a new timber or deck beam, I think of a ton of green water coming down on it from a rogue wave, and I make sure to set it in right, and strong. The dream is what sustains you through the long process of refit. It’s a daydream, and like a warm fire on a winter evening, imagination is the kindling. Once you get it going, the intimidating, huge project becomes simply work, and who is afraid of work? When people tell me that I’m crazy, or that the task is too big or impossible, I simply respond that editor@pointseast.com


Once you get it going, the intimidating, huge project becomes simply work, and who is afraid of work? When people tell me that I’m crazy, or that the task is too big or impossible, I simply respond that it’s only work, and you just keep plodding away. That’s all it is. it’s only work, and you just keep plodding away. That’s all it is. You buy the materials and tools that you need along the route. You make time to do the work, and the key to success is to stay in it; do something every day that you can, even if it is a small thing, for all accomplishment is cumulative. If you start making excuses to do something else when it is cold outside, or too hot, or find yourself avoiding it, or going too many days without doing anything on it, the flame will begin to fade, like a candle flame sinking to a tiny blue dot. But it is, once again, just a boat made of wood, and anything made of wood, as my friend Karl the violinmaker tells me, can be repaired. I agree. “But when will it be finished?” The question is asked in an almost desperate manner. “When it’s done,” I reply, “whenever that will be.” You cannot set a schedule for a project like this any www.pointseast.com

When Mike installs a new timber, he thinks of a ton of green water falling on it from a rogue wave.

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Left: Privateer as Mike found her in the Chesapeake. Bottom left: She's back in Bristol, R.I. and, bottom right, covered by her new frame.

more than a certain almanac can predict the weather long-term. But you can think each separate project through and make sure that you do it right. A job done 46 Points East March/April 2015

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But within that cocoon stood my boat, on its jackstands, surrounded by the scaffolding I had built, ladders, and hanging beat-up shop-lights shining an eerie fluorescent glow on the upper works, while the hull below the waterline-level scaffolding was enfolded in darkness and shadow. at the bow and work my way back to the transom. That’s ironic, because I found out at the beginning that the stem timber needed to be replaced. I was getting no breaks from this boat. Then I discovered that the transom had to be replaced, plus a whole lot that was in-between. I shook my head, and set to work.

But the dream is not about what you are doing now, or any part of the rebuilding schedule. It is simply all about what you are going to do with the boat, and where you are going to go with it, once the work is done and the oft-dreamt-of launch day has finally arrived.

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This is the second time that I have restored this boat. I restored her years ago, sailed her for some years, sold her, and then got her back quite a few years later when she needed me. Of course, it seemed just a coincidence that the Maryland boatyard owner where she had been abandoned called me one day out of the blue, and I began the whole re-acquisition process from there, but I wonder sometimes if there are truly any real coincidences in a universe where the longer we live, the more we learn that nothing is truly random. He had finally cut the lock and gone into the boat and found my contact information in papers in the chart desk. But long before that, I had bought the boat and decided to fix her up and get sticks in her and take her sailing. That first time around, life was different. I was younger, there had not yet been a Y2K or even a 9/11. Business was good, and I had lots of free time and still made money working out of a home office. So on afternoons in the summer, I’d be up on a ladder under the shade of a big oak tree out back, hammering away at the hull and sweating, cooled by occasional gusts of the prevailing southwest breeze that came up from Narragansett Bay and blew across the Bristol peninsula and onto my boat and me, rustling the oak leaves far above my head. I could smell the sea in the onshore breeze, and it kept me focused on where I wanted to go. I often wondered if, in some way, the boat could smell the salt breeze, too. I will spread my sails to that breeze sometime soon, I used to tell myself, and, eventually, I did. But even so, as I ground, chipped, and hammered away 10 feet above the ground, my mind was hundreds of miles away, crossing the Gulf Stream, my boat plunging headlong into the great troughs between the sapphire-blue warm swells of the Stream, happily surging toward the empty horizon and islands of spices, palm trees, coconuts, rum and white beaches that lay at the far edge of my imagination and well over the dis-

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Once in the groove, it's a pleasure to watch the transformation of the vessel beneath your hands.Clockwise from above: Privateer's new oak stem. Mike crafts a white-oak frame. In the midst of the deck and cabin rebuild. The settee by the stove looks cozy. The saloon, with oriental carpet, is standing tall.

50 Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


tant horizon. But I was riding that dream, and it sustained me and kept my bow pointed ahead and water moving beneath the keel of my mind and energy. I would think about my boat all the time, much the same way a young man thinks about sex every 30 minutes or so, not because he wants to (or perhaps he does), but because his chemistry drives him to. I would plan ahead, like a master chess player plans his moves to checkmate his opponent 20 moves ahead or more, including planning for contingencies. I planned each stage and step of what had to be done next, seeing the finished product in my mind’s eye. I found my old leather-bound “nothing” book that I had started many years ago, filled with notations and crude drawings and scribblings and measurements, and lists of “needs” for each boat that I have worked on. I stopped at consignment shops, big box DIY home stores, yard sales, any place that I felt I could find the tools and materials I knew I would need. I became the “dented-can guy” at the boatbuilding supply shop, buying heavily discounted paint and epoxy in dinged and rusted cans so that I could put that saved discount money toward a tool that I needed, or another can of paint. What did I care about what the can looked like, as long as the contents were intact? Let the can look ugly, and the boat look pretty. These planning and calculating exercises helped my memory and sharpened my mind, keeping it busy before I went to bed, so I could sleep on these plans and process them in my subconscious. Nowadays, in this boat-restoration redux, the work keeps my body moving, especially now that I am older, stiffer, and have less energy and motivation. But the dream is back; it lives again. But this is the end of the affair. I will not need to do a refit like this to this boat again in my lifetime. She is more than 80 years old now, and my www.pointseast.com

work should carry her for another 20 or more with proper care afterwards. Rebuilding and restoring big, old wood boats is a hard-work affair – dirty, difficult and time-consuming. I will never take on a project of this magnitude again, alone. But I will happily make a winter project of building the occasional small wooden dinghy in my basement workshop; all bright, clean, new wood, shiny copper rivets and fastenings, aromatic linseed and

M Y S T I C

varnish. That will be fine. The dream comes back to you then, too. Capt. Mike Martel lives in Bristol, R.I., where he writes about marine subjects and is restoring, in his free time, his 1930 Alden-designed gaff yawl Privateer. An ex-Coastie and a licensed Master, he seeks opportunities to get out on the sea as a delivery skipper or professional crew while romancing rotted wood in his boat shed.

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THERACIN Two sports -- 7-a-side football, and sailing -- were cut from the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics. Officials cited a lack of worldwide reach as the reason.

Photo courtesy U.S. Paralympics

Sailing cut from 2020 Paralympic Games At its meeting in Abu Dhabi, UAE on Jan. 31, the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) Governing Board announced that two sports – football 7-a-side, and sailing – will not be included in the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

Maine’s Harris helps Class 40 Win OD class at Montego Bay Testing conditions prevailed for the 32nd edition of the Pineapple Cup – Montego Bay Race, a biennial 811-mile jaunt in February from Port Everglades, Fla., to Montego Bay, Jamaica. With speeds that were furiously fast at the start but frustratingly slow at the end, George Sakellaris’ (Framingham, Mass.) defending 72-foot Shockwave took line honors plus overall HARRIS, continued on Page 55 52 Points East March/April 2015

Sailing was introduced at the Atlanta 1996 Paralympic Games as a demonstrative sport, using the triplehanded Sonar, and then became a medal sport at PARALYMPIC, continued on Page 56

Shockwave seemed destined to break the course record set in 2005, but in the end fell short by 40 minutes.

Photo courtesy Shockwave/Facebook

editor@pointseast.com


NGPAGES New Premiere Sailing League is announced

Ideal conditions early on in the 505 Midwinter Championship eventually gave way to, by day three, windless conditions -- which sent many racers home early.

Premiere Sailing League, America, promises to change the way we think about amateur sailing. Announced at the Strictly Sail boat show in Chicago on Jan. 15, the series kicks off this August and will be comprised of four district qualifying regattas that divide 72 sailing club teams by region (North-Chicago; South-New OrNEW, continued on Page 56

Youth Challenge Boats wanted for Marion-Bermuda

Photo courtesy 505 Midwinter Championship

505 Midwinter Championship taken by Zagol/Buttner team Mark Zagol (Stonington, Conn.) and Drew Buttner (Westwood, Mass.) bested the top U.S. 505 sailors to win the class’ 2015 Midwinter Championship in St. Petersburg, Fla., on Feb. 20-22, breaking a threeway tie in the final race. For the entire six-race series the tricky St. Pete breeze kept the top six boats guessing, constantly trading places and often finishing within only a few boat lengths of each other, a rarity for a www.pointseast.com

class whose focus on boatspeed is known to see splits times of minutes not seconds. It was the first Midwinters win for the pair, adding to a handful of regional and North American titles captured since they began sailing together in 2012. “It’s hard to beat the Floridians,” said Buttner, referring to accomplished class veterans like former world champion Ethan Bixby 505, continued on Page 56

The 2015 Marion Bermuda Race is the first Category 1 ocean race to offer a trophy class for 16- to 23-year-old sailors. New to the 2015 race is the Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy. The Marion Bermuda Race Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy was created to enable youngadult sailors to experience the challenge of sailing offshore in a U.S. Safety Equipment Requirements (USSER) Oceans event in the accompaniment of experienced adult mentors. So who’s eligible? The class is open to sailors between the ages of 16 and 23 years old who are 16 years of age or older by June 18, 2015, but not over 23 years of age by the same date. A minimum of four youths must be YOUTH, continued on Page 54 Points East March/April 2015

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AmericaOne pledges $5 million to Olympic youth development In an effort to dramatically improve the U.S. Olympic youth-development system, US Sailing and the AmericaOne Foundation announced in February a historic new initiative: Project Pipeline. To give the effort the strong start it needs, the AmericaOne Foundation will support Project Pipeline with a lead gift of $5 million. Targeting the best American youth talent, Project Pipeline is the strategy behind a new-look Olympic Development Program, which aims to better serve young sailors, lead them into high-performance boats earlier in their development, and build well-rounded sailors with complete skill sets. Providing training/racing opportunities with world-class coaching and the highest level of technical standards are the core principles of the initiative. The Project Pipeline plan will train top youth talent through national training camps and campaigns foYOUTH, continued from Page 53 aboard to qualify as an Offshore Youth Challenge boat. One or more adults must be aboard, and must be at least 23 years of age by June 18, 2015.

Photo by Yvette Eenkema/US Sailing

Youth champions (from left): Quinn Wilson (Ojai, Calif., 29er), Haddon Hughes (Houston, Texas, Laser Radial) and Riley Gibbs (Long Beach, Calif., 29er).

cused on excellence at the world-championship level, while aligning with US Sailing’s broad-based youth development initiatives. FMI: www.ussailing.org. If you have a boat that is capable of qualifying for an USSER Oceans-level offshore event, and would like to offer young sailors the voyage of a lifetime, visit www.marionbermuda.com.

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HARRIS, continued from Page 52 victory. Also dialed in to win was MacKenzie Davis/Brian Harris’s (Mill Valley, Calif.) Class 40 AMHAS, which claimed the onedesign Class 40 class of four boats with an elapsed time of 4:05:56:40 and impressively finished second in fleet based on corrected time. The team finished just after 7 p.m. on Tuesday night just in time for the Early Bird Party at Montego Bay Yacht Club. Oakcliff Racing/Bodacious Dream finished about four and a half hours later and were proud to be the first double-handed boat to finish. The Friday (Feb. 6) start was Photo courtesy Pineapple Cup - Montego Bay Race called a “raucous affair,” with one competitor over the line early, two Maine Yacht Center's general manager Brian Harris accepts the Class 40 trophy. In others pushing port/starboard winning their one-design class, they also came in 2nd overall on corrected time. boundaries, and every boat carrying shortened sail on the first leg that would take the record set in 2005 by Titan 12, but in the end fell them to the Bahamas. A tough slog across the Gulf 40 minutes short of it, finishing just after midnight on Stream got everyone into race mode right off the bat, Monday with an elapsed time of 2:11:05:03. FMI: especially Shockwave, which looked on course to break www.montegobayrace.com.

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PARALYMPIC, from Page 52

Turbo-charged The crude bowsprit on this Lightning was fashioned to accommodate an asym, which the class is considering adopting.

Photo courtesy Jeffrey Hayden/YouTube

the Sydney 2000 Games. The singlehanded 2.4mR and doublehanded SKUD 18 were added for the Qingdao 2008 Games, with all three non-gender-specific events held at London 2012 Games and planned for Rio 2016 Games. Sailing events have been open to athletes with any type of physical impairment and the classification system is based on four factors: stability, hand function, mobility and vision. Sir Philip Craven, IPC President, said, “The Board’s final decision was not an easy one and, after much debate, we decided not to include two sports – football 7-a-side, and sailing – from the Tokyo 2020 program for the same reason: Both did not fulfill the IPC Handbook’s minimum criteria for worldwide reach.” The IPC Handbook states only team sports widely and regularly practiced in a minimum of 24 countries and three IPC regions will be considered for inclusion in the Paralympic Games and, for individual sports, a minimum of 32 countries in three IPC regions.

Photo Premier Sailing League

The goal of the Premier Sailing League is to create excitement around sailboat racing and increase the sport's fan-base. Initially, anyway, J/70s will be used to try and accomplish this.

NEW, continued from Page 53 leans; East-Newport; West-San Francisco) to compete for top ranking. The best four teams from each district then compete headto-head in the Premiere Sailing League National Championships to be held in Annapolis, Maryland during the United States Sailboat Show in October. “The Premiere Sailing League (PSL) is structured after the enormously successful sailing leagues pioneered in Germany and Denmark (www.sailing-championsleague.com), said PSL’s director and founder Benjamin A. Kazak, a businessman and avid 56 Points East March/April 2015

sailor who recently moved from Germany to Newport, R.I. To reach the broadest audience, Premiere Sailing League regattas will be held close to shore, have a stadium-style atmosphere and utilize the latest social media technologies, allowing the sailing and general public to support and encourage their teams. Sailing will be conducted in fun, easy-to-sail J/70s. Kazak will announce a Warmup/Test-Run event at the beginning of the season for prospective competitors, team and event sponsors, and organizers for host venues. FMI: www.premieresailingleague.com.

505, continued from Page 53 (sailing with Chris Brady), who finished one point behind Zagol/Buttner and Augie Diaz (sailing with 2014 world champion crew Rob Woelfel) who took 3rd. While this regatta is traditionally sailed in the open water of the Gulf of Mexico, swells left over from a storm earlier in the week relegated the fleet to Tampa Bay, which brought unique challenges for the three race days. Friday saw excellent flat-water conditions for the first three races, but Saturday became trickier, leading to a couple of abandoned races. Sunday offered shorts and flip-flops weather, but not enough wind to go sailing, so the fleet got an early start on their trips home. FMI: www.505tanktalk.com. editor@pointseast.com


Volvo Ocean Race, Newport, launches educational program Sail Newport announced the launch of a national education program with an online learning site linking the Volvo Ocean Race with K-12 classrooms. The Volvo Ocean Race started in October and continues on a global route with a stopover in North America May 5-17 in Newport, R.I. The program will link students with the race by offering lesson plans at no cost to participating schools on such topics as geography and culture, marine science, math, sustainability, navigation, sailing, art, ocean conservation, currents and weather. In addition, schools will have the opportunity for a destination field trip to the Newport Stopover. Brad Read, executive director of Sail Newport and director of the Stopover announced that Newport school

teacher Donna Kelly, and Sailors for the Sea President R. Mark Davis, will co-chair the educational program. Read also announced that Sail Newport will collaborate with other non-profits to create the “Blue Zone” – interactive displays and exhibits showcasing marine-based programming and modules related to ocean conservation, sailing, weather and sustainability – for visiting students. Joining Sail Newport for the educational program content will be “National Geographic,” 11th Hour Racing, Sailors for the Sea, US Sailing’s REACH Program, New England Science and Sailing, Tall Ship Oliver Hazard Perry and the University of Rhode Island. FMI: www.sailnewport.org.

“Sailing World” announces its Boat of the Year winners In December, “Sailing World” magazine revealed the winners of its Boat of the Year Awards program, naming the Farr 280 as its 2015 Boat of the Year. The high-tech, 28-foot raceboat was designed by Farr Yacht Design, of Annapolis, Md., and built by Premiere Composite Technologies (Dubai, UAE). The magazine’s independent judges tested 15 performance sailboats, and afterwards said the Farr 280 stood out for its construction, forwardthinking features, and performance under sail.Other

award-winning entries include the Gunboat 55, Topper Topaz Argo, RS Aero, and Seascape 27. The Topaz Argo, from Topper Sailboats, in England, was deemed an ideal design for sailing clubs, and the Seascape 27, imported from Slovenia, a boat best suited for short-distance coastal racing. The RS Aero, a 13-foot dinghy from RS Sailboats, United Kingdom, was praised for its potential to become sailing’s next great singlehanded dinghy. FMI: www.sailingworld.com.

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Points East March/April 2015

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FETCHING

ALONG/David

Buckman

David Buckman photos

A small cove off the north shore of Halifax Island, in Maine's Englishman's Bay, provides a secure and beautiful anchorage.

Fathoming Halifax Island ome things are so obvious we hardly see them. For years, Halifax Island, on the seaward reaches of Maine’s Englishman Bay, was often the last sight of U.S. shore as we headed the Leight for various Canadian ports in fog, thick and thin. With time taking full measure of every mile and minute, as it does in the mists, we admired the spectacle of it, and vowed to land there one day – but we didn’t. Five years passed, then 10 and 20. The wind was wrong, time was tight and other plans prevailed, but still we’d look at the island wistfully as it faded away. Bold, beckoning, and showing no signs of man’s ambitions, the half-mile-long swell of grass, granite and greenery presents stirring prospects. Punctuated with tufts of meadow and scattered knots of trees, a sinewy billow of ledge rising high above the water on its westernmost point promised to repay the modest effort of climbing it with breathtaking seascapes. Possessed of a certain primitiveness, it seemed a long way from home.

S

58 Points East March/April 2015

There was a pregnant sense of discovery in the air when Leigh and I finally sniffed our way into westernmost bight under the north shore of the island. Creeping in close, we circled in single-digit soundings. Casting a lead line occasionally to get a feel for the bottom, I guessed it was mud, from the soft grounding and momentary stickiness when pulled free. The CQR took up immediately, and we were soon carrying the dinghy above rock and wrack. Landing on a wild island, particularly a first visit, is possessed of a certain epic quality, it being a landscape of raw experience, indifference, and things felt more than thought. We’d only taken a few steps when we were drawn to the sound of breaking waves. A dozen yards away, a tiny eel rut on the seaward shore nearly cut the island in half. At the head of it were mounds of beach stones, polished by eons of crashing seas. It’s not easy to explain the compulsion to skip rocks across the water, or search for a perfect speckled agate to take home, but we did both, which editor@pointseast.com


was invested of a certain innocence. Climbing through a knee-high corruption of grass and coarse scrub on the west point, Leigh gained the rocky crest first, and I heard her exclaim, “Oh, David, look at that.” Gaining her side, a scattering of islands – ebony green close in, and pale gray a dozen miles off – gave shape to stirring prospects that had a visceral, minimalist dimension to them. To the north, a crescent of sandy beach at Roque Island stood proud, and turning east, we could just make out the loom of Grand Manan Island, 25 miles away. Gulls squalled, a flight of swallows arced low, and the Libby Island foghorn sounded its dirge – take care, take care. Skirting shore, daisies faded as asters bloomed. Rocks shifted under our feet. Sidewalks of ledges were a treat. Coming upon a tangle of boards, speculation arose as to what sort of a shelter a marooned sailor might fashion from them. I thought it must have a board floor. We stumbled upon another potential landing spot at a shingle beach near the northeast point, and, in a grassy hollow, came across a campsite and fire pit. Stopping to listen to the islands murmur, bees buzzed, seas washed and every step had something to tell us. The inspiration and energy of discovery are compelling. While barely scratching the surface of it, we need the tonic of wild places, which after all these years, there are still many to be fathomed. As Thoreau wrote, “An absolutely new prospect is a great happiness.” Halifax Island is wildlife refuge, administered by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. David Buckman sails out of Round Pond, Maine. His book, “Bucking the Tide,” is about discovering the New England and Fundy coast in a wreck of a $400 sloop. Almost sold out! The remaining stock is on sale for $10, which includes shipping. Order at buckingthetide@gmail.com. Cash, check, or Hershey bar with almonds accepted. www.pointseast.com

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MEDIA/Resources for cr uisers

These three seabooks strike close to home Republic of Pirates

By Colin Woodward, Mariner Books June 2008, 400 pp., paperback $16.95.

Snow Squall

By Nicholas Dean and David Switzer, Tilbury House Publishers 2001; 320 pp., hardcover $30.

Between Land and Sea

By Christopher L. Pastore, Harvard University Press 2014, 312 pp., harcover $35.

Reviewed by Sandy Marsters For Points East It was fun in this winter’s reading to several times find myself reading about my own backyard. In Colin Woodard’s “The Republic of Pirates,” looking for a break from the pressure Britain was putting on the pirates in the Caribbean, a couple of ships head for Maine and a rendezvous at remote Damariscove Island. Trouble is, they don’t know how to get there. So the pirate captain of one of the vessels, Paulsgrave Williams, an associate of the notorious Sam Bellamy, puts ashore in my hometown of Cape Elizabeth aboard the Marianne. This was mid-May of 1871. It must have been lovely as a captured pilot guided the ship

into Richmond Harbor, where they anchored. Ashore they found little home belonging to a farmer, Dominicus Jordan, who had smelled trouble and skedaddled. I believe that is the same Jordan clan that still farms in Cape Elizabeth. Williams and his men enjoyed a sleepover and the next day kidnapped a fisherman who wandered into the harbor and said he knew the way to Damariscove. In “Snow Squall,” Nicholas Dean and David C. Switzer strike even closer to home with an account of the salvage of the bones of the last American clipper ship, which had been abandoned in the Falkland Islands. Snow Squall was built in 1851 in South Portland, just a mile or so from my current home. After a daring recovery in 1987 in the aftermath of the Falklands War, her bones were returned to South Portland before finally resting at the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath. And many Points East readers and boaters will find very familiar the descriptions of Narragansett Bay in Christopher L. Pastore’s very studious “Between Land and Sea,” which explores the impact of development during the settlement of the New England coast in 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. Even here, I found close connection during Pastore’s discussion of the impact of the Blackstone Canal on a long stretch of New England terrain. The Blackstone River –

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the old canal – ran thick and weedy at the bottom of the hill where I grew up in North Grafton, Mass. Perhaps it seems odd – narcissistic, parochial – to approach a book review by cataloguing its personal connections to me, but that was certainly part of the joy of reading these very different books about maritime history. A close physical connection is part of the wonder that will bring history to life for a New England reader of these books. Colin Woodard is a prolific Maine author and journalist. His work isn’t always as fun as “Republic of Pirates.” On a recent cruise, we had to quit reading aloud his decade-old “Ocean’s End: Travels Through Endangered Seas” because it was just too depressing while sitting on a boat. But “Pirates” is great fun. Imagine coming aboard one of these pirate ships to see these grizzled tough guys walking around in women’s dresses and silk finery. They loved dressing up – even wearing make-up – and they had lots of opportunity to do so as they overtook ship after ship and helped themselves to the passengers’ trunks as well as to any treasure on the ship. They were indeed a colorful bunch. And crafty. They were talented seamen and fierce fighters when they needed to be. But the romantic vision of the murderous pirate is overstated, Woodard asserts. Rather, they were a product of their times, offering an attractive and often profitable alternative to scratching out an existence farming parched Bahamian soil or, worse, being kidnapped to serve on a British Navy frigate in worse-than-miserable conditions. At one point it even looked like they would have their own republic in the Bahamas, until infighting

and a full-court press by the British brought them to a stop. “They were the die-hard outlaws,” Woodard writes, “angry men who saw themselves not as businessmen or thieves, but as rebels or guerrilla insurgents in a war against ship owners, merchants, and, in many cases, King George himself.” Bellamy, an associate of the famous Blackbeard, who really did put firecrackers in his beard to frighten his victims, had no tolerance for authority. “They vilify us, the scoundrels do, when there is only this difference: They rob the poor under the cover of law…and we plunder the rich under the cover of our own courage.” The heroes of “Snow Squall” are a small group of historians and archaeologists obsessed with the idea of preserving the history of the great clipper and returning her to her roots. They are all volunteers who use cunning and improvisation and imagination to overcome the engineering challenges of pulling the bow timbers of the ship from oily muck under a dock in Port Stanley and getting it home. But while the archeological challenges are interesting, it is the story of this great ship before the accident that ended her life – and the clipper era – that enthralls. Here again are pirates who would drop “nauseating stink bombs” on the ships they were taking; there was greed; there was superb and sometimes incompetent seamanship; there was political intrigue. In “Snow Squall,” it all winds out as a fascinating and captivating narrative. Finally, the point of view of “Between Land and Sea” reminds me of some advice Dodge Morgan gave us long ago when he was advising us on the mission of

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Points East. He thought it should be a serious journalistic endeavor that viewed natural and human life of the coast from a point about five miles at sea and then 10 miles inland. I never really understood what he meant, but I this book makes his advice a little clearer. Once there was the New England coast in a condition largely untouched by man on any grand scale. In 1636, settlers come, altering the boundaries of man and nature to suit their needs – draining swamps, damming the big rivers, and building canals for short-term benefits that often had drastic consequences. The Blackstone Canal seemed like a good idea for moving goods from the coast into the growing inland cities. But its backers were blind to the complexity of the project. “Canal managers

had failed to account for environmental variability, including extended periods of rain, snow and drought that either damaged the canal or made it impassable.” It was a disaster and was abandoned almost as soon as it had opened. Trains proved to be a much better idea. As boaters, we think of New England from a perspective of a few miles off the coast or anchored in a quiet harbor as a pastoral and unchanging landscape. We forget that man and nature are constantly changing it, and that nature is not as resilient as we imagine it – and that what we see is not what was always there. Sandy Marsters, co-founder of Points East along with Bernie Wideman, is the magazine’s media reviewer.

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FINAL

PASSAGES/they

Robert Lane

90, Friendship, Maine

By Chris Finn For Points East This winter, the sailing community said good-bye to Robert “Bob” Lane. Born to the sea, Bob was best known for starting the Penobscot Boat Works, “Penbo,” in Rockport in 1951, with his father Carl D. Lane. The boat shop turned out a diverse stable of high-quality wooden vessels ranging from runabouts to trawlerhulled, oceangoing cruisers. Bob and his dad rediscovered the derelict and rotting whaling vessel Charles W. Morgan in the 1940s.

will be missed

Carl and his Sea Scout troop, Bob included, were enlisted to provide additional manpower as the Morgan was moved to her permanent berth at the Mystic Maritime Museum. The Sea Scouts were signed on as official crew for insurance purposes, and, as a result, Bob Lane was the last surviving crew member of an American sailing whaler. After retirement, Bob and his wife Esther made 10 voyages to the Bahamas on the Penbo-built Star of Maine. Summers since 1966 were spent on Cranberry Island in Muscongus Bay. In later years, Bob was a highly skilled ship-model builder. Some of his works are on display in the Bath Maritime Museum. During WWII, when 19 years old, Bob captained a seagoing tug, which helped to build the artificial harbors that allowed tanks and heavy equipment to get ashore during the D-Day invasion of Normandy.

Loraine S. Hamilton 66, Searsport, Maine

Loraine passed away peacefully at her home on Jan. 8. During high school, Loraine worked summers at Jordan’s Dairy Bar in Searsport where she met the love of her life, Wayne Hamilton, to whom she was married for 46 years. After high school, she worked at

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Merrill Trust Bank in Belfast, then became vice president and “chief cook and bottle washer” at Hamilton Marine. She was a lifetime member of The Penobscot Marine Museum and the Searsport Historical Society. From Susan Swanton, executive director of the Maine Marine Trades Association: “Loraine was a wonderful woman. Although she kept a fairly low profile, she was certainly an integral part of Hamilton Marine. But I will remember her best for her warmth and kindness, her laugh, and her generosity. We would meet often, and in the summers, Loraine was always quick to welcome us to her and Wayne’s summer cottage on the bay. She always made sure that we were comfortable (and well-fed) no matter what time we were meeting or how busy she was at the store. She will be sorely missed by all who knew her.”

Robert S. Erskine, Jr. 88, Essex, Conn.

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Bob passed away on Dec. 20. Bob loved sailing, and cruised many miles with his family. He was a lifelong member of the American Yacht Club, sailed many Bermuda, Transatlantic, and Fastnet races, and was a member of the New York Yacht Club and the Cruising Club of America. A longtime summer resident of Nantucket, he was also member of the Nantucket Yacht Club and a founding Commodore of the Shimmo Yacht Squadron. He served in the Merchant Marine, and also in the U.S. Army until 1954. He practiced law his entire career at Carter, Ledyard and Milburn in New York City, becoming a partner in 1964. He met his wife Barbara through their shared love of music, and they settled in New York City after their wedding in 1959. They were both active members of the Blue Hill Troupe and Canterbury Choral Society in New York. editor@pointseast.com


Kathleen F. Hicks 78, Narragansett, R.I.

Kathleen died Dec. 18, with her husband, Dr. Peter Hicks, by her side. She and Peter loved cruising on their boat Sea Fever, and their cruising took them north to the Bay of Fundy and across the “Reversing Falls” at the entrance to the St. John River in New Brunswick, down the Eastern Seaboard to the west coast of Florida and the Caribbean. She also was an avid tennis player and swimmer, and a lover of Irish Setters. Kathleen taught in the Barrington, R.I., Akron, Iowa, and the Narragansett, R.I., school systems for more than three decades. She was a longtime docent at South County (R.I.) Museum, and a member of the Point Judith Yacht Club.

Peter Noyes Toulmin 88, Providence, R.I.

Mr. Toulmin died Dec. 18. He was a former treasurer and commodore of Center Harbor Yacht Club, in Brooklin, Maine, and president of the Harvard Club of R.I. Mr. Toulmin retired from Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank as first vice president and senior loan officer in 1991, having started with the bank in 1956. Previously, he was with the Central Intelligence Agency in

Washington, D.C., Japan, and Korea, and also served with the U.S. Army during that period. He was a WWII U.S. Navy veteran. He also was an enthusiastic tennis player, skier, sailor, and white-water canoeist, logging canoeing trips to Portugal, Scotland, and Iceland.

Samuel Gelston King 87, New Bedford, Mass.

Sam died on Jan. 9, surrounded by his family. Spending every summer at Quissett Harbor on Cape Cod, he was an avid sailor and loved everything to do with ships, sailing and the sea – a love he shared with his sister, Jib Beale, and brother, Bunge King. Family cruises to Maine, ski trips to Cannon Mountain and walking in the woods in Dover, Mass., where he raised his children gave Sam’s kids the opportunity to love and appreciate nature as he did. He was a pragmatic environmentalist actively supporting the Coalition for Buzzards Bay and the Nature Conservancy. After Harvard Law School, he began a career-long association with the firm of Herrick and Smith. The welfare of children was important to Sam, and he served on the boards at the Judge Baker Children’s Center, the Brimmer and May School and the Holderness School.

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Capt. Virginia A. Wagner

Martin A. (Skip) Purcell

Virginia passed away on Jan. 30 in Newport. Holding both a 3,000-ton USCG and an MCA Ocean Master, she devoted most of her 28-year career to the command of traditional sailing vessels. Virginia sailed more than 400,000 sea miles, most of them navigated with the traditional navigation tool, the sextant. She served as mate on the 135-foot Corwith Cramer and the 125-foot Westward, then was captain of the 125-foot Ocean Star, the 125-foot schooner Galaxy, the 158-foot Clipper City, and the 140-foot replica schooner America. Virginia also skippered private and charter yachts, including Matau, True North, Aria, Moonlight II, Shiwara and Coro Coro. In 2012, Virginia joined Nicholson Yachts Charter Management in Newport.

Skip died Feb. 12. Sailing was his life’s passion, and his talents and accomplishments in that arena were formidable. He first earned the nickname “Skipper” on Long Island Sound, where won the National Junior Sailing Championship (Sears Cup), a memorable honor, given that his future wife was on his crew. He also won the National Interscholastic Championship (Mallory Trophy) while skippering for Phillips Academy Andover. Later, as owner, part-owner, or principal helmsman and tactician, he won the North American One Ton Championship, the J/44 North American Championship, and the New York 40 Class Championship. He was also overall winner of the 1966 Newport to Bermuda Race, the Northern Ocean Racing Championship, and a member of the United States Admiral’s Cup and Onion Patch Trophy Teams. He was a member of the Bath and Tennis Club in Palm Beach, New York Yacht Club, Cruising Club of America, and the Storm Trysail Club. He was formerly a member of Indian Harbor Yacht Club in Greenwich, Conn., and American Yacht Club in Rye, N.Y. His force of spirit, sense of humor, and deep affection for good times, close friends, and family will be deeply missed by those who knew and loved him.

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YARDWORK/Peopl e & Proj ects

Capt. Jim sits at the wheel of the Friendship sloop that took close to half a century to complete.

Photo by Jim Scott

1966-2014: Persistence finally kisses the salt By Nina M. Scott For Points East Capt. Jim Sharp’s Sail, Power & Steam Museum, in Rockland, Maine, was a lively place on the morning of Aug. 14, 2014. The day was sunny and beautiful after a major storm two nights before – and an iffy prognosis by the meteorologists – but Capt. Jim had ordered up a fine day, and, as usual, he got his wish. www.pointseast.com

The 27-foot Friendship sloop Persistence sat on her jack stands while volunteers swarmed around to trim her with bunting. Three and a half years of effort had transformed a partially built hull, begun by Friendship boatbuilder Carlton Simmons in 1966. Her restoration was effected with salvaged parts from a derelict sloop, the Eagle, built in 1915 and rotting away in a Spruce Head boatyard. Jim Sharp acquired Points East March/April 2015

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parts of both sloops by donation, and then he and the volunteers began to build the rest of her. She is, in effect, a nautical collage. The volunteers are a dedicated and skilled group of people, both male and female. I made a preliminary visit to Persistence before the launching, to get an idea of who the volunteers were and how they worked together (alas, I cannot mention everyone). Locals Tom Hammermeister and Charlie Witherell were among the most loyal workers (it was Tom who found the partial hull of the sloop and alerted Capt. Jim to its existence), while others were from “way away,” like Texas and Montana. Texan Photo by Nina M. Scott Robert Guenther, who now lives in Camden, said, “I had Volunteers like Rachel Davis, from Billings, Montana, and Tom Hammermeister, a local, always wanted to build a boat, worked together as a team to get Persistence into the water. but had neither the money that initial visit, turned out to be a former neighbor nor the space to do so, so this is the next best thing.” Rachel Davis, from Billings, Mont., had worked for from Amherst, Mass. Volunteer John Holliday told me that the man who a year at the Apprenticeshop and wanted to keep on boatbuilding. While walking her dog one day, she found had really held them all together was Dennis Gallant, the museum and the group of volunteers, who were former owner/captain of the schooner Angelique and very welcoming, and she joined in. Rachel had earlier an accomplished boatbuilder. “We have a whole list of participated in the group delivery of a reconstructed ‘Dennisisms,’” he said, of which the most used was, whaleboat from the Apprenticeshop to Mystic Seaport, “Not like that, you guys!” Rolly James showed up for sailing and rowing their craft from one destination to the launching with his photographing drone and his another. Tom Goettel, to whom I introduced myself on iPad, so not everyone was locked into the ways of

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hauling!” Jim Sharp led the spectators in an emotional “Hip hip hooray!” The captain climbed aboard, and volunteers hoisted the sails. It had taken 48 years to get this lady into her element. Nina M. Scott and her husband, Jim, sail their Triton, Caledonian, out of Friendship in the summers, and are enthusiastic supporters of, and participants in, the Friendship Chowder Cup Race every August. The rest of the year they live in Amherst, Mass.

Photos by Nina M. Scott

yesteryear. Jim Sharp and his wife Meg had organized a lobster bake for all volunteers and their spouses to celebrate the day; the group Rusty Hinges sang classic sea chanteys like “Going down to Old Maui” to keep the diners happy. Capt. Jim got up to emphatically say, “This is the most accomplished group of volunteers ever, and if anyone does not agree with me they get my cane!” At the appointed hour, boat-hauler Ed Herlbit arrived with his hydraulic rig to bring Persistence to the sea. Bagpiper and fellow captain Ken Barnes accompanied the sloop to the town landing, followed by Capt. Jim and wife Meg, who bore the bottle of champagne for christening the sloop. Before she expertly smashed the bottle over her bow, Meg said, “During all this time, sometimes we called her Persistence, and other times Patience, and we called her other things as well, but today I christen her Persistence!” Herlbit slid his rig into the water, and released the boat into the sea. Huge applause erupted when she floated free, and as Ed drove back up the ramp, he grinned and said, “This is pass/fail! There is no such thing as a B+ in boat

Charlie Witherell bends on Old Glory, and, above left, Capt. Jim and wife Meg discuss lastminute details.

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Sabre begins building largest ‘motor yacht’ Up until now, Sabre’s largest “motor yacht” offering has been the Sabre 54 Salon Express and Fly Bridge, the first of which was unveiled at the 2014 Miami Yacht and Brokerage show. But owners of these models requested a larger design, Sabre says, and the company’s response is the Sabre 66, scheduled to debut in mid-2015. Construction of the 66, begun in Sabre’s Rockland, Maine, facilities, was designed by the in-house team led by Kevin Burns. Kevin has been busy with this project for some time, developing hull shapes, deck styling, and mechanical and interior layouts. The 66 will be equipped with Volvo Penta IPS1200 pod drives, and will cruise in the mid 20-knot range. Her displacement will be 80,000 pounds, and her interior will feature a full-beam master stateroom below her helm deck. Social connectivity of the cockpit and interior spaces is the key to this open and airy layout,

Photo courtesy Sabre Yachts

The 66 will be equipped with Volvo Penta IPS1200 pod drives, and will cruise in the mid 20-knot range.

Sabre says. When Sabre first began building 28-foot sailboats in 1970, there were very few large, owner-operated motor yachts in use. Over the past 40-plus years, the fleet of large, private vessels has grown dramatically, with new operating systems allowing owner operators to be the masters of their own yachts. Sabre followers have watched as the size of the yachts we offer has shifted with the times. FMI: www.sabreyachts.com.

Hull No. 1 of the Bermuda 50 is morphing into a windship The second Bermuda 50 is slightly behind No. 1, and The Bermuda 50 is taking shape on the shop floor at Hinckley’s Trenton, Maine, facility, and Hull No. 1 is the two offer visitors a real inside look at how these looking closer every day to the elegant sailboat the yard boats come together. Two more Hinckley sailboats – 42foot daysailers – are expects her to be under way nearby. It upon her launch this has been more than spring. In January, ten years since The the first hull was beHinckley Company ing readied for the has had four sailboats deck to join to the in the production mix, hull, and the deck Hinckley says. hardware was being placed, nearly ready Bermuda 50 esoterica: The 50 incorpoto handle the lines off what will be an 80rates parts from foot rig. Mexico, Canada, New Down below, the inZealand, Italy, South terior spaces are well Africa, Germany, Beldefined, with 75 pergium, France and cent of the arrangeChina. Some 22,000 square feet of carbon, ments installed. The and 2,200 square feet Bermuda 50s lifting Photo courtesy The Hinckley Company of core, will be in each keel retracts into a Bermuda 50 esoterica: Some 22,000 square feet of carbon, and 2,200 boat. There are no keel trunk that is square feet of core, will be in each boat. metal chainplates in shaped in carbon the boat. More than fiber, and will be clad in the owners’ choice of wood. The keel trunk forms a three miles of wire will be in each boat. The Bermuda bulkhead that supports the cabin roof, resulting in a 50 is fully digital. The 50’s electrical panel is smaller rigid structure. The remainder of the boat’s bulkheads than the Bermuda 40’s. have all been cored with Corecell to reduce weight. FMI: www.hinckleyyachts.com. 70 Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


The Mayflower gets a major makeover at Mystic Seaport Mayflower II arrived at Mystic Seaport, Mystic, Conn., late in 2014 after being towed from Plymouth, Mass., for a restoration in the museum’s Henry B. duPont Preservation Shipyard. Restoration work will honor Mayflower II’s original construction and traditional building methods, with the goal of restoring the ship to her original state when she first arrived to Plymouth in 1957. Inspections in 2013 revealed that Mayflower II was in need of a major refit, which is normal for a 57-yearold wooden ship. Plimoth Plantation recently completed some major repairs so the ship could safely continue operations on the Plymouth waterfront. These efforts were the initial steps toward addressing the long-term restoration plan, which will follow three phases: survey, document and restore. A comprehensive marine survey will be completed by Paul Haley of Capt. G.W. Full & Associates, in Orleans, Mass. This is the same firm that surveyed the whaler Charles W. Morgan, the USS Constitution and the USS Constellation. Stone

Photo courtesy Mystic Seaport

Throughout the restoration, the public will be able to view the historic replica during the Seaport Museum’s operating hours.

and iron ballast will be completely removed for the first time since the ship’s construction to allow proper inspection of the bilge area. The scope and plan for this winter’s restoration work will largely be determined by the needs identified once the ship is out of the water and the ballast is removed. Throughout the restoration, the public will have the opportunity to view the ship during the Museum’s operating hours, and the plan was to permit people to board the ship on land beginning in mid-February.

If repairs go as planned, Mayflower II is expected to return to Plymouth in May 2015. The restoration of the 57-year-old wooden ship will be carried out over several years, with the ship spending winter and spring at Mystic Seaport and returning to Plymouth each summer and fall. The project is scheduled for completion before 2020 – the 400th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ arrival in North America. FMI: www.mysticseaport.org.

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Herreshoff Museum’s building one-sixth-scale Reliance model A team of 15 volunteers at the Herreshoff Marine Museum, in Bristol, R.I., is finishing, from a bare fiberglass hull, a onesixth scale, museum-quality model of Reliance, the Herreshoff-designed and -built 1903 America’s Cup winner. Project Manager is Arthur (Sandy) Lee. Owned by Cornelius Vanderbuilt III, and skippered by Capt. Charlie Barr, the 144foot Nat Herreshoff-designed Reliance was victorious over Sir Thomas Lipton’s Shamrock III in a three-race competition. The 33-foot model will educate visitors on the beauty of these large, extreme boats – and to illustrate Capt. Nat’s engineering, design and manufacturing genius. Its mast will be more than 37 feet high compared with Reliance’s 220-foot spar. As of mid-February, a fiberglass hull, wood rudder, aluminum-tube mast, and solid-wood topmast had been procured. The hull was built to scale by Marine Concepts in Florida. The original Reliance was built of bronze plating on an “eggshell-steel frame.” By mid-February, North Carolina twine and cordage maker Martin Combs had delivered the full allotment of scale 7/32inch and 1 1/2-inch through four-inch manila. Reliance carried 3,000 feet of four-inch manila for her 16,200 square feet of sail. Museum personnel also have been busy worming, parceling and serving wire rope: FMI: www.therelianceproject.com.

The helmsman looks tiny in the cockpit of the onesixth-scale model of the 144-foot Reliance.

Photo by Arthur (Sandy) Lee

Boatwise MarineTraining est. 1990

SEE ALL CLASS DATES ON WEBSITE; Portsmouth, NH starts April 6 (1 week) Danvers, MA starts June 1 (1 week) Newburyport, MA starts April 9 (2 wknds) Saco, ME starts April 9 (3 wknds) Seekonk, MA starts April 9 (3 wknds) LOTS OF LAUNCH CLASSES TOO

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editor@pointseast.com


Dream dory built by Compass Project for Maine Lakes, bays Several years ago Barry Worthing, of Portland, Maine, started dreaming about a sailing/rowing dory he could use on Maine’s lakes and bays. He wanted a boat that could be handled solo, but could accommodate friends and family. His search led him to Compass Project. Barry commissioned the Deblois St. Dory, under construction by the Biddeford Middle and High School boatbuilding crews. With the help of instructors Shane Hall and Margaret Mountcastle, volunteers Fred Fowler, David Fernald and Charlie Higgins, as well as input from designer Clint Chase, the crew will launch the dory next spring in the Saco River. Photo courtesy Compass Project Barry learned of Compass Project when his nephew, Jake Anderson, was Compass instructor Margaret Mountcastle and Chance, a Biddeford Middle a student at Compass Project. Jake School student, work on the commissioned Deblois St. Dory. went on to work for Chase, a local designer of boat kits and former Compass Project Pro- Hall, Barry discovered that he could commission a Degram Director. When his uncle started looking for a blois St. Dory, ensuring that he’d get the boat he dory, Jake knew the perfect boat and the perfect wanted while supporting our work with at-risk kids. builders. After speaking with Compass Project’s Shane FMI: www.compassproject.org.

BETA MARINE Smoother...Quieter! New England Certified Dealers Whiting Marine Services South Berwick, ME (207) 384-2400 whitingmarine@yahoo.com

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Briefly

Hunt offers new 44, 52 interiors for families, long-term cruising Hunt Yachts, in Portsmouth, R.I., builders of semi-custom yachts featuring the Hunt deep-V hull, is offering new cabin arrangements for its popular express cruisers, the Hunt 44 and Hunt 52. The Hunt 44 is now available in a family friendly, three-stateroom layout, and the Hunt 52 now features a midships master-suite option. The new Hunt 44 three-stateroom layout is perfect for active, growing families. The new third stateroom is located aft and features a full-size berth, built-in settee, bureau, and three storage lockers. A twin stateroom is on the starboard side, opposite the galley, and near the second head. The master stateroom with en suite head is forward. The Hunt 52 midships master stateroom has a queen berth and full-size en suite head. It also has a private, step-down dressing area with large hanging locker, ample storage, and full size washer/dryer. A VIP stateroom, with head, is forward, providing privacy and comfort for two couples, Hunt says. Both the Hunt 44 “can be easily handled by two people, thanks to their practical size and flush-deck design,” Hunt says. FMI: http://www.huntyachts.com. The Hunt 52 (top) has a midships master-suite option. The Hunt 44's threestateroom layout (bottom) is ideal for growing families.

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GMT Composites, in Bristol, R.I., has supplied a U.S. Government contractor with a series of ballistic housings. These housings cover sensitive antennas and protect them from damage from enemy fire. Manufacturing consisted of 50 layers of compacted Kevlar 29 and epoxy. The housings have a half-inch-thick solid Kevlar wall, a machined outer surface, and specific hole patterns with threaded inserts. They were finished with a paint resistant to chemical and biological agents. The contractor was having problems sourcing this very specific housing. Previous suppliers had not delivered the product as required, and they were faced with not making a delivery deadline until they contacted GMT. GMT delivered all parts on time and to specification. www.gmtcomposites.com. North End Composites, in Rockland, Maine, is building boats for two different Maine brands – Back Cove Yachts and Sabre Yachts. In 14 months, the staff has been increased from 100 to more than 170, North End has added a third assembly line, and now they’re working on a brand-new prototype. The plant is has 160,000 square feet of manufacturing space, enabling 24 different boats to be in production at any given time, and work continues year-round. FMI: www.necomposites.com.

Hodgdon Yacht Services, in Southport, Maine, reports that Alexander “Sandy” Spaulding, HYS president, has been appointed and sworn in as a board member of the Maine Technology Institute, representing the composites and advanced materials sectors. MTI is an industry led, publicly funded, nonprofit corporation offering early-stage capital and commercialization assistance. This is in the form of competitive grants, loans and equity investment for the research, development, and application of technologies that create new products, processes and services that generate jobs across Maine. FMI: www.hodgdonyachtservices.com. Brewer Yacht Sales, in Westbrook, Conn., has launched a new website – breweryacht.com – that includes Responsive Web Design and Social Sharing Capability. The new site will incorporate features de-

Renderings courtesy Hunt Yachts

BRIEFS, continued on Page 75 editor@pointseast.com


SW Boat is building a Beal 44 for ‘Wicked Tuna’ cable show A Calvin Beal-designed 44-foot Downeast-style commercial fishing boat is being built by SW Boatworks, in Lamoine, Maine for a tunaboat skipper participating in National Geographic Channel’s “Wicked Tuna” cable show. The new boat will be christened Tuna.com. Capt. Dave Carraro met with SWB owner Stewart Workman to discuss a new vessel, and he came away with a bug in his ear about the Calvin Beal 44. The 44, with great stability, versatility, and a spacious working area, was designed for offshore commercial fishing. Her maximum beam is a whopping 17 feet, six inches. Stewart showed Capt. Dave a recently finished 44, and Capt Dave knew immediately that this was what he wanted. Stewart and Capt. Dave designed the layout for the new vessel, and settled on a larger wheelhouse and deck to fill the needs of the “Wicked Tuna” show as well his main business, charter fishing. Tuna.com’s hull and deck were completed in the lay up shop in July and moved to the finish shops directly afterwards. Throughout the process, Capt Dave has been available, not only by phone but also as part of the crew. He and his first mate, Sandro, have been helping by sanding, grinding, and building deck space. Capt. Dave said he had never seen a complete build, and was excited with the new experience.

BRIEFS, continued from Page 74

signed to make searches for over 600 online boat listings faster and easier. Responsive Web Design technology, Brewer says, provides fluid multi-platform viewing from any device: desktop computers, tablets, and smart phones. “Our marketing team spent months analyzing customer behavior – how and what our customers used to find us,” said David Pugsley, general manager and vice

Photo courtesy Capt. Dave Carraro

Capt. Dave Carraro, of TV's "Wicked Tuna," said some of his commercial colleagues suggested he visit SW Boatworks.

During the construction, Capt. Dave has been able to secure quite a few sponsorships for the new vessel, including CAT, Pompanette, Northern Lights and Diamond Sea Glaze. In early March, Tuna.com was in Phase III, which includes working on primer and gelcoat on the wheelhouse and deck. Once this is completed, the crew will start phase IV: hook-ups, wiring, electronics and windows. An April launch is planned. FMI: www.swboatworks.com president. “In the last three years, tablet and mobile user traffic tripled. IPhone and iPad use accounted for 80 percent of our mobile traffic in 2014. . . .” Brewer says the site offers advanced search capabilities, larger boat photos, social-sharing capability for listings, and the ability to email a friend. The sales-team pages display broker profiles, testimonials, and links to social media. FMI: www.breweryacht.com.

Reo Marine 207-767-5219 South Portland, ME www.reomarine.com

Great Bay Marine 603-436-5299 Newington, NH www.greatbaymarine.com

Kingman Yacht Center 508-563-7136 Cape Cod, MA www.kingmanyachtcenter.com

Merri-Mar Yacht Basin 978-465-3022 Newburyport, MA www.merri-maryachtbasin.com

Authorized Dealer support from trained technicians. Repowering specialists. www.pointseast.com

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CALENDAR/Points East planner

POINTS

MARCH

EAST

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is proud to sponsor the 2014/2015

THE HERRESHOFF MARINE MUSEUM AMERICA’S CUP HALL OF FAME

Winter Speaker Series Doors open at 6pm lectures begin at 7pm Admission: $10 members / $18 non-members.

For more information, or to register, call 401-253-5000

Photo by Sophie Oldelberg

or visit www.herreshoff.org/programs

March 19th Ask the experts: A panel of boating experts discusses spring maintenance work, mistakes to avoid, and more.

April 16th Halsey Herreshoff, “What You Don’t Know About the Herreshoffs: NC4, Automobiles, Motorcycles, & Much More”

May 11th Charlie Enright & Crew of Team Alvimedica Updates & Experiences in the Volvo Ocean Race.

June 18th Dyer Jones The History of the 12 Metre Class

The Lecture Series is made possible thanks to:

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Sail Newport presents at the Jane Pickens Theater On Thursday, March 12, Sail Newport will present a big screen update on the Volvo Ocean Race race drama, the standings, the leg ahead and what’s in store for the Newport Stopover events. The presentation will include a live video call with Charlie Enright, Amory Ross, Nick Dana and Mark Towill aboard the home team boat, Alvimedica. Onne van der Wal Also, Kenny Read will unveil the plan for the new racing yacht Comanche, a seriously crazy 100’ maxi-yacht that has been called a surfboard on steroids. In addition, Volvo Ocean Race veteran Kenny Read will also join Brad to interact with Volvo Ocean Race sailors - from the comfort of a warm theater. www.sailnewport.org, info@sailnewport.org

IYRS welcomes friends and supporters to the 11th Annual Winter Event at the New York Yacht Club On Thursday, March 12, 2015, IYRS School of Technology and Trades will host its 11th annual winter cocktail reception and dinner in New York City. Generously sponsored by The Hilton Group at UBS and Paul Weber Architect, the evening will again be in the Model Room of the venerable New York Yacht Club. IYRS is proud to welcome Mr. Rhett Butler, founder of E.R. Butler & Co., as the keynote speaker. E.R. Butler & Co is a New York City based manufacturer of fine architectural, builders’ and cabinetmakers’ hardware. An apostle of tradition-steeped crafts, Butler combines his passion for antique hardware with the use of both traditional and cutting edge materials and technology. Mr. Butler will talk about the fusion of historic preservation and modern technology. Additionally, guests will enjoy our Alumni Spotlight from Mr. Robin Oglesbee-Venghaus, an alumnus of the IYRS Boatbuilding and Restoration program, Class of 2005. Mr. Oglesbee-Venghaus is currently enrolled at the Pratt Institute where he expects to graduate this May with a bachelor’s degree in industrial design. At Pratt, Robin has twice been the recipient of the Rowena Reed Kostellow Award for Excellence in 3D Design. The evening will pay tribute to members of the Restoration Society from 2004-2014, with the presentation of the Founders Society plaque. This group of private philanthropists has provided critical financial support during a key growth phase for the school, helping to establish IYRS as the gold standard for trade education. IYRS will also present the school’s Wave Award to trustee Peter W. Gonzalez and generous supporter of IYRS and trade education, Gerry Lenfest. The IYRS Wave Award acknowledges members of the IYRS community who has made significant contributions to maintaining the momentum behind the school’s

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progress and success. The Wave Award is our highest honor to express our gratitude and recognition of the tremendous support shown by the honorees and was first awarded to Joseph T. Dockery in 2010. IYRS has since presented the Wave Award to Edward M. Kane, John Mecray, Bryan Hunt Lawrence, George Dooie Isdale and Terry Nathan. The evening begins with cocktails at 6:00 PM, followed by seated dinner at 7:30 PM. Ticket pricing: $250 per couple; $150 per person; IYRS Alumni $100 per person. Seating is limited. RSVP to events@iyrs.edu or by calling Jenny at 401-8485777 ext. 231. Reservations are confirmed with payment. www.iyrs.edu events@iyrs.edu

R.I. Land & Water Conservation Summit The 12th annual Summit will be held on Saturday March 14 at the URI Memorial Union. You don’t want to miss it! The Summit is the best opportunity this year to network with land and water conservation peers and attend workshops to help your organization be more effective. www.landandwaterpartnership.org/summit.php mkerr@cleanwater.org

West Marine Announces New Product Review Day on March 20. An opportunity for inventors and vendors to showcase innovative new products to West Marine merchandise team is coming soon. West Marine, one of the world’s largest waterlife retailers, recently announced that its New Product Review Day is set for Friday, March 20, 2015. West Marine’s New Product Review Day allows prospective inventors and vendors to pitch new products to West Marine category managers for consideration to be sold in West Marine retail stores and westmarine.com. New product review day is a fun way for us to see creative innovations in boating, fishing, paddling and sailing gear, said CEO, Matt Hyde. Our category managers get introduced to new companies and new products and some end

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up being added to our product line. All inventors and vendors wishing to attend New Product Review Day must schedule an appointment. To submit a product and request an appointment, email the West Marine new product team at vendorinfo@westmarine.com for an application that contains additional information and guidelines. The deadline for submitting an application is Monday, March 9, and successful applications will be given appointments by March 13. The next New Product Review Day will be in late September 2015. www.westmarine.com vendorinfo@westmarine.com

Maine Boat Builder’s Show A gathering of the finest fiberglass and wooden custom boat builders on the East Coast. Also exhibiting numerous manufacturers of boating equipment. Sailboats, powerboats, canoes, kayaks, and rowing boats with the builders there to discuss and sell their work. The show times for the 2015 Maine Boat Builders are: Friday, March 20, 10-6pm; Saturday March 21, 106pm; and Sunday March 22, 10-4pm. www.portlandcompany.com/boatShow/ shows@portlandcompany.com

6th Annual Great Northeast Boat Show Life is great with a boat, an investment for family memories. Buy your boat tax free in NH! The Great Northeast Boat Show is the largest indoor boat show in the Northeast north of Boston. A celebration of the boating lifestyle featuring everything needed, wanted or desired by the boating enthusiast. A one stop shop, showcasing everything from power boats, jet skis, cruisers, motor yachts, docks, canoes, kayaks, inflatables, runabouts, fishing boats, sailboats, pontoon and deck boats. Every aspect of the boating industry will be represented from 25 boat dealers offering over 75 brands and more than 100 boats all under cover in a convenient location less than one hour from most major

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areas in the northeast. Additionally there will be more than 50 other companies supporting the boating lifestyle as well as informative seminars to educate the boating enthusiast. There will also be key feature areas that will be fun for the family to participate in. www.greatnortheastboatshow.com greatnortheastboatshow@gmail.com Pre- Marion to Bermuda Safety at Sea Symposium The 2015 Safety at Sea Symposium is scheduled for March 21-22, 2015 at the University of Massachusetts in Boston. The symposium is sanctioned by US Sailing and the seminars fulfill a part of the Marion Bermuda Race Safety Requirements: At least 30% of those aboard the boat, but not fewer than two members of the crew, unless racing single-handed, including the person in charge, shall have attended a one-day or two-day US Sailing Safety at Sea Seminar within the last 5 years, or other courses as accepted by US Sailing. SAS attendees: It is not required (currently) that return crew attend, but we strongly recommend it. Safety is just as important cruising home from Bermuda as it is racing to Bermuda. This symposium features a very experienced group of speakers to address a series of topics which are of vital interest to all serious sailors. In addition to the safety topics there will be breakout sessions for the Marblehead to Halifax Ocean Race and the Marion Bermuda Race. On-site registration will begin at 0700, March 21, 2015. The program begins promptly at 0730 and is scheduled to continue until 1600. For more information, visit: bit.ly/MBR_SAS www.marionbermuda.com/sas/index.php race@marionbermuda.com

Seamanship class This 6-week course in Seamanship, from 7-9pm at Portsmouth High School in Portsmouth, NH, examines various types of boats, skipper’s responsibilities, preparing the boat for use, handling and maneuvering a vessel, rules of the road, anchoring, emergencies, knots and marlinspike. Cost for the textbook is $65. Call Peter Wright (603)225-3350. www.usps.org/portsmouth/public_boating.html peter.wright@law.unh.edu

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America’s Boating Course Earn your Safe Boating Certificate in a 6-evening class held by the NH Portsmouth Sail & Power Squadron, Tuesdays from 7-9pm at Portsmouth High School. Only $50 for the great supplies: a 244 page textbook, computer disks of navigational software and coursework. Call Peter Wright at 603-225-3350 www.usps.org/portsmouth/public_boating.html peter.wright@law.unh.edu

MAY 1-3

Mystic Shipyard to Host 8th Annual SailQuest Boat Show In late February SailQuest Boat Show Companies announced that Mystic Shipyard in Mystic, Conn., will be the location for its annual boutique boat show (May 1-3). This family oriented show will feature new sailboats, trawlers, Downeast-style powerboats, kayaks, paddle boards and select brokerage yachts for sale, from 12 to over 50 feet long. Located in the heart of historic Mystic, Mystic Shipyard is offering free parking and free admission to the show. The docks at Mystic Shipyard will showcase a wide range of models, including: Catalina, Bavaria, Jeanneau, Hunter, Lagoon, Beneteau, Minor Offshore, Nordic Tug, Hunt, Blue Jacket, X-Yachts, Southport and more to be announced. SailQuest Boat Show Companies will be supporting Sails Up 4 Cancer Organization at the show. Sails Up 4 Cancer is a non-profit organization dedicated to funding research in the education, prevention, and cure for all types of cancer through the art and enjoyment of sailing. FMI: www.sailquestboatshow.com. www.sailquestboatshow.com anne@windcheckmagazine.com

JUNE 4

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C. Thomas Clagett, Jr. Memorial Clinic and Regatta Annual Fundraiser This event takes place at Belle Mer, Goat Island, Newport, RI between 5:30pm-8:30pm. www.clagettregatta.org trishwalcott@clagettregatta.org

Heat, Wave: Summer on the Water Visitors of all ages will enjoy this summer exhibition of work by the country’s premier maritime artists, on view in the Lyme Art Association’s beautiful sky-lit gal-

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leries. A juried exhibition of marine art by the Association’s member artists will be on view simultaneously. Opening Reception: Friday, June 19, 6-8pm. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 10am to 5pm, or by appointment. Admission is free but a $5 donation is suggested. Lyme Art Association, 90 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT (860)4347802; www.lymeartassociation.org. www.lymeartassociation.org

Stamford Hooks for Heroes 4th Annual Fishing Tournament. Some 200 participants are expected for the 4th annual Stamford (Conn.) Hooks for Heroes Fishing Tournament to benefit wounded U.S. military veterans from the Walter Reed Army Hospital and Connecticut veteran hospitals. The event has been scheduled for Saturday, June 20, 2015 at the Halloween Yacht Club (HYC), 10 Seaview Avenue in Stamford, Connecticut. There is an entry fee of $35.00 per fisherman, which includes both breakfast and lunch. The day will start with a pre-tournament breakfast at 5:15am and posttournament activities including lunch, awards and more begin at 1:30pm at the Halloween Yacht Club. For more information about the event please go to the HYC website http://hyc.net. To register a boat team of fishermen, please visit http://bit.ly/1MP6HNM or call Pat Buzzeo at (203) 559-5205 for registrant or donation information. All entries by U.S. Mail must be received by Friday, June 19, 2015. Sign up is also available at the Halloween yacht Club in person on Wednesday, June 17th from 5:00-7:30 p.m. or until 6 a.m. the morning of the tournament. Please make all checks payable to Operation Gift Cards C/O: Halloween Yacht Club, 10 Seaview Avenue, Stamford, CT 06902. www.hyc.net

Newport Charter Yacht Show The Newport Charter Yacht Show is the only one of its kind in the U.S., inviting industry professionals and discriminating consumers (attending with brokers) to dive into the world of luxury chartering. For four days, show attendees tour a collection of world-class yachts – ranging in size from 80 feet up to the superyacht length of 150 to 225+ feet – dockside at the Newport Yachting Center while enjoying a variety of events, including industry focused educational seminars, lively crew competitions and a festive Yacht Hop social, where captains and crew entertain their special guests onboard the participating yachts. Register online at http://bit.ly/1BuMLKG. Discounts apply for early registration of yachts, brokers and agents. For more information on exhibiting contact Lisa Knowles, Sales Manager, Newport Exhibition Group, (401) 846 1115, ext. 216, lknowles@newportexhibition.com. For information on Sponsorship Opportunities contact Nancy Piffard, Show Director, Newport Exhibition Group, (401) 846 1115 ext. 212, npiffard@newportexhibition.com.

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www.newportchartershow.com info@newportexhibition.com C. Thomas Clagett, Jr. Memorial Clinic and Regatta Annual Fundraiser This event takes places at Sail Newport, Fort Adams Alofsin Pier, Newport, RI between 8am and 6:30pm. www.clagettregatta.org trishwalcott@clagettregatta.org Upcoming exhibitions, Blue Water Fine Art Blue Water Fine Arts is pleased to present three upcoming exhibitions of internationally acclaimed artist Barbara Ernst Prey’s never before seen work in 2015. Barbara Ernst Prey, one of America’s most renowned contemporary landscape painters, is the only painter appointed by the President of the U.S. to the National Council on the Arts, the advisory Board to the National Endowment of the Arts. Her paintings are in some of the most important collections worldwide including The Brooklyn Museum, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Kennedy Space Center and the White House. She was commissioned by the President of the United States to paint the official White House Holiday Card and by NASA to document space history. Prey is a graduate of Williams College with a Master’s from Harvard and was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship and a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation to work/paint in Europe and Asia. She is adjunct faculty at Williams College. Barbara Ernst Prey: Prints and Drawings: July 18 - August 31; Re/Viewing the American Landscape: September 1 - September 20; Oil on Water: Paintings of Land and Sea. www.bluewaterfinearts.com inquiries@bluewaterfinearts.com

Oliver Hazard Perry Rhode Island Fundraiser After six years of planning and construction, Rhode Island’s Official Sailing Education Vessel, the 200foot SSV Oliver Hazard Perry, will sail this summer. This year’s fundraiser, at Newport Shipyard, in Newport, R.I., will honor the impact that this $16 million economic development project has had on hundreds of jobs in the Rhode Island marine industry as well as the efforts of Oliver Hazard Perry Rhode Island Board Chairman Bart Dunbar for his unfailing devotion to the non-profit organization behind the building of the ship. The evening, which begins with cocktails and tours of the ship, includes a catered sit-down dinner with dessert, followed by music, dancing and a live auction to raise funds for the ship’s educational programming. Tickets, starting at $200, must be purchased in advance and are not available at the door. Sponsorship opportunities available. For more information visit www.OHPRI.org or contact Kelly Crawford at OHPRI headquarters, 29 Touro Street, Newport, R.I., 401.841.0080. www.OHPRI.org info@ohpri.org

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Find Points East at more than 700 locations in New England MAINE Arundel:The Landing School, Southern Maine Marine Services. Bailey Island: Bailey Island Motel, Cook’s Lobster House Bangor: Harbormaster, Young’s Canvas. Bar Harbor: Acadia Information Center, Bar Harbor Savings & Loan, Bar Harbor Yacht Club, College of the Atlantic, Lake and Sea Boatworks. Bath: Kennebec Tavern & Marina, Maine Maritime Museum. Belfast: Belfast Boatyard, Belfast Chamber of Commerce visitors’ Center, Coastwise Realty, Front Street Shipyard, Harbormaster’s office, Nautical Scribe Bookstore. Biddeford: Biddeford Pool Y.C., Buffleheads, Rumery’s Boatyard. Blue Hill:, Bar Harbor Bank, Blue Hill Books, Blue Hill Food Coop, Blue Hill Peninsula Chamber of Commerce, Compass Point Realty, EBS, Kollegewidgwok Y.C., Mill Stream Deli, Rackliffe Pottery. Boothbay: Boothbay Mechanics, Boothbay Resort, Cottage Connection. Boothbay Harbor: Boothbay Harbor Inn, Boothbay Harbor Shipyard, Brown’s Motel, Cap’n Fish’s Inn, Carousel Marina, Gold/Smith Gallery, Grover’s Hardware, Hammonds, Municipal Office, Poole Bros. Hardware, Rocktide Inn, Sherman’s Bookstore, Signal Point Marina, Tugboat Inn. Bremen: Broad Cove Marine. Brewer: B&D Marine, Port Harbor Marine. Bristol: Hanley’s Market. Brooklin: Atlantic Boat Co., Brooklin General Store, Brooklin Boat Yard, Brooklin Inn, Center Harbor Sails, Eric Dow Boatbuilder, WoodenBoat School. Brooksville: Bucks Harbor Market, Bucks Harbor Marine, Bucks Harbor Y.C., Seal Cove Boatyard. Brunswick: Bamforth Automotive, Coastal Marine, New Meadows Marina, Paul’s Marina. Bucksport: Bookstacks, Bucksport Bay Area Chamber of Commerce, EBS Hardware. Calais: EBS Hardware. Camden: Camden Chamber of Commerce, Camden Y.C., French & Brawn, Harbormaster, High Tide Motel, Owl & Turtle, PJ Willeys, Port Harbor Marine, Waterfront Restaurant, Wayfarer Marine. Cape Porpoise: The Wayfarer. Castine: Castine Realty, Castine Y.C., Four Flags Gift Shop, Maine Maritime Academy, Saltmeadow Properties, The Compass Rose Bookstore and Café. Chebeague Island: Chebeague Island Boat Yard. Cherryfield: EBS Hardware. Columbia: Crossroads Ace Hardware. Cundy’s Harbor: Holbrook’s General Store, Watson’s General Store. Damariscotta: Maine Coast Book Shop, Poole Bros. Hardware, Schooner Landing Restaurant. East Boothbay: East Boothbay General Store, Lobsterman’s Wharf Restaurant, Ocean Point Marina, Paul E. Luke Inc., Spar Shed Marina. Eastport: East Motel, Eastport Chowder House, Moose Island Marine, The Boat School - Husson. Eliot: Great Cove Boat Club, Independent Boat Haulers, Kittery Point Yacht Yard. Ellsworth: Branch Pond Marine, EBS Hardware, Riverside

80 Points East March/April 2015

Café. Falmouth: Falmouth Ace Hardware, Hallett Canvas & Sails, Handy Boat, Portland Yacht Club, The Boathouse, Town Landing Market. Farmington: Irving’s Restaurant, Reny’s. Freeport: Gritty McDuff’s, True Value Hardware. Gardiner: Kennebec Yacht Services Georgetown: Robinhood Marine. Gouldsboro: Anderson Marine & Hardware. Hampden: Hamlin’s Marina, McLaughlin Seafood, Watefront Marine. Hancock Pt.: Crocker House Country Inn. Harpswell: Dolphin Restaurant, Finestkind Boatyard, Great Island Boat Yard. Harrington: Tri-Town Marine. Holden: McKay’s RV. Islesboro: Dark Harbor Boat Yard, Tarratine Club of Dark Harbor. Jonesport: Jonesport Shipyard. Kennebunk: Landing Store, Seaside Motor Inn. Kennebunkport: Arundel Yacht Club, Bradbury’s Market, Chick’s Marina, Kennebunkport Marina, Maine Yacht Sales. Kittery: Badger’s Island Marina, Cajun Lobster, Frisbee’s Store, Jackson’s Hardware and Marine, Kittery Point Yacht Yard, Port Harbor Marine. Lewiston: Al’s Sports. Livermore Falls: Lunch Pad Café. Machias: EBS Hardware, Helen’s Restaurant, Viking Lumber. Milbridge: Viking Lumber. Monhegan Is: Carina House. Mount Desert: John Williams Boat Company North Haven: Eric Hopkins Gallery, JO Brown & Sons, North Haven Giftshop. Northeast Harbor: F.T. Brown Co., Kimball Shop, Mt. Desert CofC,, McGraths, Morris Yachts, Northeast Harbor Fleet, Pine Tree Market. Northport: Northport Marine Service, Northport Yacht Club. Owls Head: Owls Head Transportation Museum. Peak’s Island: Hannigan’s Island Market. Penobscot: Northern Bay Market. Port Clyde: Port Clyde General Store. Portland: Becky’s Restaurant, Casco Bay Ferry Terminal, Chase Leavitt, Custom Float Services, DiMillo’s Marina, Fortune, Inc., Gilbert’s Chowder House, Gowen Marine, Gritty McDuff’s, Hamilton Marine, Maine Yacht Center, Portland Yacht Services, Ports of Call, Sawyer & Whitten, Vessel Services Inc., West Marine. Raymond: Jordan Bay Marina, Panther Run Marina. Rockland: Back Cove Yachts, E.L.Spear, Eric Hopkins Gallery, Gemini Marine Canvas, Hamilton Marine, Harbormaster, Johanson Boatworks, Journey’s End Marina, Knight Marine Service, Landings Restaurant, Maine Lighthouse Museum, North End Shipyard Schooners, Ocean Pursuits, Pope Sails, Rockland Ferry, Sawyer & Whitten, The Apprenticeshop. Rockport: Bohndell Sails, Cottage Connection, Harbormaster, Market Basket, Rockport Boat Club. Round Pond: Cabadetis Boat Club, King Row Market. Saco: Lobster Claw Restaurant, Marston’s Marina, Saco Bay Tackle, Saco Yacht Club. Sargentville: Eggemoggin Country Store, El El Frijoles.

editor@pointseast.com


St. George: Harbormaster Scarborough: Seal Harbor Y.C. Seal Harbor: Seal Harbor Yacht Club Searsport: Hamilton Marine. South Bristol: Bittersweet Landing Boatyard, Coveside Marine, Gamage Shipyard, Harborside Café, Osier’s Wharf. South Freeport: Brewer’s South Freeport Marine, Casco Bay Yacht Exchange, DiMillo’s South Freeport, Harraseeket Y.C., Strouts Point Wharf Co., Waterman Marine. South Harpswell: Dolphin Marina, Finestkind Boatyard, Ship to Shore Store South Portland: Aspasia Marina, Bluenose Yacht Sales, Centerboard Yacht Club, Joe’s Boathouse Restaurant, Port Harbor Marine, Reo Marine, Salt Water Grille, South Port Marine, Sunset Marina. Southwest Harbor: Acadia Sails, Great Harbor Marina, Hamilton Marine, Hinckley Yacht Charters, MDI Community Sailing Center, Pettegrow’s, Sawyer’s Market, Southwest HarborTremont CofC, West Marine, Wilbur Yachts. Spruce Head: Spruce Head Marine. Stockton Springs: Russell’s Marine. Stonington: Billings Diesel & Marine, Fisherman’s Friend, Inn on the Harbor, Island Fishing Gear & Auto Parts, Shepard’s Select Properties. Sullivan: Flanders Bay Boats. Sunset: Deer Isle Y.C. Surry: Wesmac. Swan’s Island: The Island Market & Supply Tenants Harbor: East Wind Inn, Pond House Gallery and Framing, Tenants Harbor General Store. Thomaston: Jeff’s Marine, Lyman-Morse Boatbuilding, Slipway. Turner: Pompodora’s Italian Bistro. Vinalhaven: Vinal’s Newsstand, Vinalhaven Store. Waldoboro: Stetson & Pinkham. Wayne: Androscoggin Yacht Club, Wayne General Store. Wells: Webhannet River Boat Yard. West Boothbay Harbor: Blake’s Boatyard. West Southport: Boothbay Region Boatyard, Southport General Store. Windham: Richardson’s Boat Yard. Winter Harbor: Winter Harbor 5 & 10. Winterport: Winterport Marine. Wiscasset: Market Place Café, Wiscasset Yacht Club. Woolwich: BFC Marine, Scandia Yacht Sales, Shelter Institute. Yarmouth: Bayview Rigging & Sails, East Coast Yacht Sales, Landing Boat Supply, Maine Sailing Partners, Royal River Boatyard, Royal River Grillehouse, Yankee Marina & Boatyard, Yarmouth Boatyard. York: Agamenticus Yacht Club, Stage Neck Inn, York Harbor Marine Service. NEW HAMPSHIRE Dover: Dover Marine. Dover Point: Little Bay Marina. East Rochester: Surfside Boats. Gilford: Fay’s Boat Yard, Winnipesaukee Yacht Club. Greenland: Sailmaking Support Systems. Hampton: Hampton Harbor State Marina, Hampton River Boat Club. Manchester: Massabesic Yacht Club, Sandy’s Variety. New Castle: Kittery Point Yacht Club, Portsmouth Yacht Club,

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Wentworth-By-The-Sea Marina. Newington: Great Bay Marine, Portsmouth: Gundalow Company, New England Marine and Industrial, West Marine. Seabrook: West Marine. Tuftonboro: Tuftonboro General Store. MASSACHUSETTS Amesbury: Larry’s Marina, Lowell’s Boat Shop. Barnstable: Coast Guard Heritage Museum at the Trayser, Millway Marina. Beverly: Al’s Bait & Tackle, Bartlett Boat Service, Beverly Point Marina, Jubilee Yacht Club. Boston: Black Rock Sailing School, Boston Harbor Islands Moorings, Boston Sailing Center, Boston Yacht Haven, Columbia Yacht Club, The Marina at Rowes Wharf, Waterboat Marina. Bourne: Taylor’s Point Marina Braintree: West Marine. Buzzards Bay: Dick’s Marine, Onset Bay Marina. Cataumet: Kingman Marine, Parker’s Boat Yard. Charlestown: Constitution Marina, Shipyard Quarters Marina. Chatham: Chatham Boat Company, Ryders Cove Marina, Stage Harbor Marine. Chelsea: The Marina at Admiral’s Hill. Cohasset: Cohasset Y.C. Cotuit: Peck’s Boats. Cuttyhunk: Cuttyhunk Town Marina. Danvers: Danversport Yacht Club, Liberty Marina, West Marine. Dedham: West Marine. Dighton: Shaw’s Boat Yard. Dorchester: Port Norfolk Yacht Club, Savin Hill Yacht Club. Duxbury: Bayside Marine. East Boston: Boston Harbor Shipyard & Marina, Orient Heights Yacht Club. East Dennis: Dennis Yacht Club, North Side Marina. Edgartown: Edgartown Moorings, Harborside Inn. Essex: Flying Dragon Antiques, Perkins Marine. Fairhaven: Fairhaven Shipyard, West Marine. Fall River: Marine Consignment and Supply Falmouth: East Marine, Falmouth Ace Hardware, Falmouth Harbor Town Marina, Falmouth Marine, MacDougall’s Cape Cod Marine Service, West Marine. Gloucester: Beacon Marine Basin, Brown’s Yacht Yard, Cape Ann’s Marina Resort, Enos Marine, Three Lanterns Ship Supply. Green Harbor: Green Harbor Bait & Tackle, Green Harbor Marina. Harwich Port: Allen Harbor Marine Service, Cranberry Liquors, Saquatucket Municipal Marina. Hingham: 3A Marine Sales, Eastern Yacht Sales, Hingham Shipyard Marinas, Hingham Yacht Club. Hyannis: Hyannis Marina, West Marine. Ipswich: Ipswich Bay Yacht Club. Manchester: Manchester Marine, Manchester Yacht Club. Marblehead: Boston Yacht Club, Corinthian Yacht Club, Eastern Yacht Club, Marblehead Yacht Club, The Forepeak, West Marine. Marion: Barden’s Boat Yard, Beverly Yacht Club, Burr Bros. Boats, Harding Sails, New Wave Yachts. Marshfield: Marshfield Y.C. Marston’s Mills: Peck’s Boats. Mattapoisett: Mattapoisett Boatyard.

Points East March/April 2015

81


Nantucket: Glyns Marine, Nantucket Boat Basin, Town Pier Marina. New Bedford: Bayline Boatyard and Transportation, C.E. Beckman, Cutty Hunk Launch, Hercules Fishing Gear, Lyndon’s, Niemiec Marine, New Bedford Visitors Center, Pope’s Island Marina, SK Marine Electronics, Skip’s Marine. Newburyport: Merri-Mar Yacht Basin, Newburyport Boat Basin, Newburyport Harbor Marina, Newburyport Yacht Club, North End Boat Club, Riverside Café, The Boatworks, Windward Yacht Yard. North Falmouth: Brewer Fiddler’s Cove Marina. North Weymouth: Tern Harbor Marina. Oak Bluffs: Dockside Marketplace. Onset: Point Independence Yacht Club. Orleans: Nauset Marine. Osterville: Crosby Yacht Yard, Oyster Harbors Marine Service. Plymouth: Brewer’s Plymouth Marine, Plymouth Yacht Club, West Marine. Pocasset: Little Bay Boatworks Provincetown: Harbormaster. Quincy: Captain’s Cove Marina, Marina Bay, Nonna’s Kitchen, POSH, Squantum Yacht Club, Wollaston Yacht Club. Rockport: Sandy Bay Yacht Club. Salem: Brewer’s Hawthorne Cove Marina, Fred J. Dion Yacht Yard, H&H Propeller Shop, J&W Marine, Palmer’s Cove Yacht Club, Pickering Wharf Marina, Salem Water Taxi, Winter Island Yacht Yard. Salisbury: Bridge Marina, Cross Roads Bait & Tackle, Harbormaster, Riverfront Marine Sports, Withum Sailmakers. Sandwich: Sandwich Marina, Sandwich Ship Supply. Scituate: A to Z Boatworks, Cole Parkway Municipal Marina, Front Street Book Shop, J-Way Enterprises, Satuit Boat Club, Scituate Harbor Marina, Scituate Harbor Y.C. Seekonk: E&B Marine, West Marine. Somerset: Auclair’s Market. South Dartmouth: Cape Yachts, Davis & Tripp Boatyard, Doyle Sails, New Bedford Y.C. Vineyard Haven: Owen Park Town Dock, Vineyard Haven Marina. Watertown: Watertown Yacht Club. Wareham: Zecco Marine. Wellfleet: Bay Sails Marine, Town of Wellfleet Marina, Wellfleet Marine Corp. West Barnstable: Northside Village Liquor Store. West Dennis: Bass River Marina. Westport: F.L.Tripp & Sons, Osprey Sea Kayak Adventures, Westport Marine, Westport Y.C. Weymouth: Monahan’s Marine, Tern Harbor Marina. Winthrop: Captain’s Quarters Coffee Shop, Cottage Park Y.C., Cove Convenience, Crystal Cove Marina, Pleasant Park Y.C., Ward Marine, Winthrop Harbormaster’s Office, Winthrop Lodge of Elks, Winthrop Y.C., Woodside Ace Hardware. Woburn: E&B Marine, West Marine. Woods Hole: Woods Hole Marina. Yarmouth: Arborvitae Woodworking. RHODE ISLAND Barrington: Barrington Y.C., Brewer Cove Haven Marina, Lavin’s Marina, Stanley’s Boat Yard, Striper Marina. Block Island: Ballard’s Inn, Block Island Boat Basin, Block Island Marina, Champlin’s, Payne’s New Harbor Dock. Bristol: All Paint, Bristol Bagel Works, Bristol Marine, Bristol

82 Points East March/April 2015

Yacht Club, Hall Spars & Rigging, Herreshoff Marine Museum, Jamestown Distributors, New England Yacht Partners, Quantum Thurston Sails, Superior Marine. Central Falls: Twin City Marine. Charlestown: Ocean House Marina. Cranston: Rhode Island Yacht Club. East Greenwich: Anderson’s Ski & Dive Center, East Greenwich Yacht Club, Norton’s Shipyard & Marina, West Marine. East Providence: East Providence Yacht Club. Jamestown: Conanicut Marine Supply, Clark Boat Yard, Dutch Harbor Boatyard. Middletown: West Marine Narragansett: Buster Krabs, West Marine. Newport: Brewer Street Boatworks, Casey’s Marina, Goat Island Marina, IYRS, Long Wharf Marina, Museum of Yachting, New York Yacht Club, Newport Harbor Hotel & Marina, Newport Maritime Center, Newport Nautical Supply, Newport Visitor Information Center, Newport Yacht Club, NV-Charts, Old Port Marine Services, Sail Newport, Seamen’s Church Institute, Team One, The Newport Shipyard, West Wind Marina. North Kingstown: Allen Harbor Marina, Johnson’s Boatyard, RI Mooring Services. Portsmouth: Brewer Sakonnet Marina, East Passage Yachting Center, Eastern Yacht Sales, Hinckley Yacht Services, Ship’s Store and Rigging, The Melville Grill. Riverside: Bullock’s Cove Marina. Tiverton: Don’s Marine, Life Raft & Survival Equipment, Ocean Options, Standish Boat Yard. Wakefield: Point Jude Boats, Point Judith Marina, Point Judith Yacht Club, Point View Marina, Ram Point Marina, Silver Spring Marine, Snug Harbor Marine, Stone Cove Marina. Warren: Country Club Laundry, Warren River Boatworks. Warwick: Apponaug Harbor Marina, Bay Marina, Brewer Yacht Yard at Cowesett, Greenwich Bay Marina, Pettis Boat Yard, Ray’s Bait Shop, Warwick Cove Marina. Wickford: Brewer Wickford Cove Marina, Johnson’s Boatyard, Marine Consignment of Wickford, Pleasant Street Wharf, Wickford Marina, Wickford Shipyard, Wickford Yacht Club. CONNECTICUT Branford: Birbarie Marine, Branford River Marina, Branford Yacht Club, Brewer Bruce & Johnson’s Marina, Dutch Wharf Boat Yard, Indian Neck Yacht Club, Pine Orchard Yacht Club, West Marine. Chester: Castle Marina, Chester Point Marina, Hays Haven Marina, Middlesex Yacht Club. Clinton: Cedar Island Marina, Connecticut Marine One, Harborside Marina, Old Harbor Marina, Port Clinton Marina, Riverside Basin Marina. Cos Cob: Palmer Point Marina. Darien: E&B Marine, Noroton Yacht Club. Deep River: Brewer Deep River Marina. East Haddam: Andrews Marina East Norwalk: Rex Marine. Essex: Brewer Dauntless Shipyard, Boatique, Conn. River Marine Museum, Essex Corinthian Yacht Club, Essex Island Marina, Essex Yacht Club. Fairfield: J. Russell Jinishian Gallery. Farmington: Pattaconk Yacht Club. Greenwich: Beacon Point Marine. Groton: Pine Island Marina, Shennecossett Yacht Club, Thames View Marina.

editor@pointseast.com


Guilford: Brown’s Boat Yard, Guilford Boat Yard, Harbormaster. Lyme: Cove Landing Marine. Milford: Milford Boat Works, Milford Landing, Milford Yacht Club, Port Milford. Mystic: Brewer Yacht Yard, Fort Rachel Marina, Gwenmor Marina, Mason Island Yacht Club, Mystic Point Marina, Mystic River Yacht Club, Mystic Seaport Museum Store, Mystic Shipyard, West Marine. New Haven: City Point Yacht Club, Fairclough Sails, Oyster Point Marina. New London: Crocker’s Boatyard, Ferry Slip Dockominium Assoc., Hannah Macs Bait and Tackle, Hellier Yacht Sales, Thames Shipyard and Ferry, Thames Yacht Club, Thamesport Marina. Niantic: Boats Inc., Harbor Hill Marina, Marine Consignment of Mystic, Port Niantic Marina, Three Belles Marina. Noank: Brower’s Cove Marina, Hood Sails, Noank Village Boatyard, Palmers Cove Marina, Ram Island Yacht Club, Spicer’s. Norwalk: Norwest Marine, Rex Marine, Total Marine, West Marine. Norwich: The Marina at American Wharf. Old Lyme: Old Lyme Marina. Old Saybrook: Brewer’s Ferry Point Marina, Harbor Hill Marina & Inn, Harbor One Marina, Island Cove Marina, Maritime Education Network, Oak Leaf Marina, Ocean Performance, Ragged Rock Marina, West Marine. Portland: J & S Marine Services, Yankee Boat Yard & Marina. Riverside: Riverside Yacht Club. Rowayton: All Seasons Marina, Wilson Cove Marina. South Norwalk: Norwalk Yacht Club, Rex Marine Center, Surfside 3 Marina. Stamford: Czescik Marina, Halloween Yacht Club, Hathaway Reiser Rigging, Landfall Navigation, Ponas Yacht Club, Stamford Landing Marina, Stamford Yacht Club, West Marine. Stonington: Dodson Boat Yard, Dog Watch Café, Madwanuck Yacht Club, Stonington Harbor Yacht Club. Stratford: Brewer Stratford Marina, Brown’s Boat Works, West Marine. Waterford: Defender Industries. Westbrook: Atlantic Outboard, Bill’s Seafood, Brewer Pilots Point Marina, Duck Island Yacht Club, Pier 76 Marina, Sound Boatworks. West Haven: West Cove Marina. Westport: Cedar Point Yacht Club. NEW YORK City Island: Harlem Yacht Club Halesite: Ketewomoke Yacht Club Mamaroneck: McMichael Yacht Brokers New Rochelle: Huguenot Yacht Club New York: New York Nautical Ossining: Shattemuc Yacht Club Rockaway: Hewlett Point Yacht Club Sag Harbor: Sag Harbor Yacht Club. West Islip: West Marine. FLORIDA Key West: Key West Community Sailing Center.

The Bohndell family started out in Thomaston, in the mid 1860's as riggers. Schooner ANNIE 1901 built in Rockport, rigged by Bohndell They moved north to Rockport - across the street from our present location - just a few years later. At that time, they expanded into the sailmaking business. The business was passed from father to son for three generations. Bob started as an apprentice in the spring of 1973. We purchased the business in 1980 with two partners, Del Babb and Mac McMullen, and bought Mac's share out within a couple of years. Del remains our partner to this day. In the spring of 1994 we moved to our current building. When Bob started in the business, they were still doing a lot of hand sewing, and cotton canvas was still popular with the schooners. Roller furlers for genoas were primitive and unreliable, so most people still hanked on their sails. Computers, much less CAD equipment were unimagined! What an amazing ride it has been - and there are so many more boats in every harbor on the coast. Who would have thought? Bob and Sue Chace with Will ShawChapman, Kara Ray and Vince Bemis behind.

We welcome visitors to the loft anytime. Come in, check us out, and pick up the latest issue of Points East Magazine! www.bohndell-sails.com

Follow link to view other Hats Off http://www.pointseast.com/about/distribute.shtml www.pointseast.com

Points East March/April 2015

83


March Tides Bridgeport, Conn.

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

01:58AM 02:50AM 03:36AM 04:17AM 04:56AM 05:33AM 06:09AM 12:31AM 02:06AM 02:43AM 03:24AM 04:10AM 05:04AM 06:06AM 01:00AM 02:04AM 03:05AM 04:03AM 04:57AM 05:50AM 12:18AM 01:07AM 01:56AM 02:47AM 03:40AM 04:37AM 05:37AM 12:30AM 01:32AM 02:30AM 03:22AM

0.51 0.36 0.2 0.05 -0.06 -0.12 -0.13 7.1 7.04 6.95 6.84 6.73 6.65 6.66 0.68 0.38 -0.06 -0.53 -0.96 -1.26 8.43 8.48 8.32 7.99 7.55 7.09 6.69 0.86 0.9 0.79 0.6

L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

08:09AM 08:59AM 09:44AM 10:25AM 11:03AM 11:39AM 12:15PM 07:46AM 08:24AM 09:04AM 09:50AM 10:41AM 11:39AM 12:41PM 07:10AM 08:14AM 09:15AM 10:11AM 11:05AM 11:56AM 06:41AM 07:32AM 08:23AM 09:16AM 10:11AM 11:09AM 12:10PM 06:40AM 07:42AM 08:39AM 09:30AM

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

04:51AM 05:41AM 06:23AM 07:00AM 12:39AM 01:19AM 01:58AM 03:35AM 04:10AM 04:44AM 05:22AM 12:38AM 01:30AM 02:28AM 03:32AM 04:40AM 05:45AM 06:42AM 12:54AM 01:49AM 02:43AM 03:33AM 04:20AM 05:07AM 12:17AM 01:14AM 02:12AM 03:13AM 04:17AM 05:19AM 06:11AM

3.17 3.27 3.36 3.42 -0.2 -0.29 -0.31 -0.27 -0.17 -0.03 0.11 3.11 3.1 3.14 3.26 3.48 3.8 4.13 -0.71 -0.84 -0.86 -0.75 -0.53 -0.22 4.01 3.65 3.33 3.09 2.97 2.97 3.05

H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H H H H H

11:19AM 11:47AM 12:12PM 12:39PM 07:34AM 08:07AM 08:39AM 10:12AM 10:48AM 11:28AM 12:14PM 06:06AM 07:04AM 08:21AM 09:45AM 10:53AM 11:45AM 12:32PM 07:35AM 08:25AM 09:15AM 10:05AM 10:56AM 11:50AM 05:57AM 07:15AM 09:13AM 10:17AM 11:03AM 11:36AM 12:02PM

M O O N

6.59 6.69 6.79 6.87 6.91 6.89 6.82 -0.09 -0.01 0.11 0.25 0.38 0.45 0.4 6.79 7.06 7.41 7.74 8.0 8.11 -1.37 -1.3 -1.05 -0.67 -0.24 0.16 0.47 6.43 6.33 6.38 6.49

H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

02:35PM 03:21PM 04:02PM 04:39PM 05:15PM 05:49PM 06:23PM 01:52PM 02:30PM 03:10PM 03:55PM 04:47PM 05:45PM 06:47PM 01:44PM 02:44PM 03:40PM 04:32PM 05:22PM 06:11PM 12:46PM 01:37PM 02:28PM 03:21PM 04:16PM 05:15PM 06:16PM 01:11PM 02:08PM 03:00PM 03:46PM

Newport, R.I.

Day Moonrise March 1 ---2:03 PM March 2 ---2:59 PM March 3 ---3:56 PM March 4 ---4:52 PM March 5 ---5:49 PM March 6 ---6:46 PM March 7 ---7:43 PM March 8 ---9:41 PM March 9 ---10:39 PM March 10 ---11:37 PM March 11 ---March 12 12:36 AM March 13 1:33 AM March 14 2:28 AM March 15 3:20 AM March 16 4:09 AM

0.32 0.22 0.09 -0.04 3.44 3.4 3.32 3.19 3.05 2.91 2.8 0.26 0.38 0.4 0.27 0.02 -0.26 -0.52 4.39 4.52 4.51 4.35 4.1 3.79 0.13 0.44 0.59 0.61 0.57 0.48 0.35

L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L L L L L

Moonset 3:45 AM 4:23 AM 4:57 AM 5:28 AM 5:58 AM 6:26 AM 6:54 AM 8:23 AM 8:54 AM 9:27 AM 10:04 AM 10:46 AM 11:35 AM 12:30 PM 1:31 PM 2:38 PM

84 Points East March/April 2015

05:08PM 05:55PM 06:37PM 07:15PM 01:09PM 01:41PM 02:13PM 03:44PM 04:14PM 04:47PM 05:25PM 01:05PM 02:00PM 03:00PM 04:05PM 05:12PM 06:13PM 07:07PM 01:18PM 02:04PM 02:48PM 03:32PM 04:14PM 04:57PM 12:45PM 01:42PM 02:39PM 03:40PM 04:42PM 05:39PM 06:27PM

Day March March March March March March March March March

0.21 0.11 0.01 -0.05 -0.08 -0.06 0.01L 6.72 6.57 6.4 6.22 6.07 6.01 6.1 0.21 -0.1 -0.46 -0.8 -1.06 -1.17L 8.07 7.88 7.57 7.18 6.8 6.47 6.28 0.64 0.66 0.59 0.48

3.09 3.25 3.39 3.49 -0.15 -0.22 -0.23 -0.19 -0.12 -0.04 0.06L 2.74 2.74 2.83 3.03 3.38 3.82 4.26 -0.72 -0.82 -0.82 -0.71 -0.5 -0.22L 3.5 3.25 3.07 2.98 3.0 3.12 3.29

17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

March 26 March 27 March 28 March 29 March 30 March 31

L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L L

08:38PM 09:25PM 10:06PM 10:45PM 11:21PM 11:56PM

07:59PM 08:36PM 09:16PM 10:02PM 10:55PM 11:55PM

07:50PM 08:50PM 09:46PM 10:38PM 11:29PM

6.41 6.62 6.81 6.96 7.06 7.11

0.12L 0.28L 0.46L 0.64L 0.78L 0.81L

6.37 6.79 7.29 7.78 8.19

H H H H H H H L L L L

07:00PM 07:48PM 08:39PM 09:31PM 10:27PM 11:27PM

H H H H L L L L L L

10:42PM 0.26L 11:20PM 0.09L 11:59PM -0.07L

H H H H H H H L L L L L

H H H H H H H

07:17PM 08:15PM 09:07PM 09:53PM

07:50PM 08:24PM 08:57PM 10:31PM 11:08PM 11:50PM

06:12PM 07:12PM 08:26PM 09:45PM 10:57PM 11:58PM

07:59PM 08:49PM 09:39PM 10:30PM 11:22PM

05:43PM 06:37PM 07:48PM 09:25PM 10:38PM 11:22PM

Moonrise 4:53 AM 5:34 AM 6:13 AM 6:51 AM 7:28 AM 8:07 AM 8:48 AM 9:21 AM ---10:19 AM ---11:10 AM ---12:03 PM ---12:57 PM ---1:53 PM ---2:50 PM ---3:46 PM

-1.12L -0.91L -0.56L -0.14L 0.29L 0.65L

6.25 6.35 6.55 6.78

3.53 3.52 3.45 3.36 3.26 3.17

0.16L 0.23L 0.22L 0.06L -0.2L -0.48L

4.61 4.8 4.82 4.66 4.37

0.11L 0.42L 0.63L 0.69L 0.59L 0.43L

Moonset 3:49 PM 5:03 PM 6:18 PM 7:33 PM 8:47 PM 9:58 PM 11:06 PM ---12:09 AM 1:07 AM 1:58 AM 2:43 AM 3:23 AM 3:58 AM 4:30 AM

H H H H H H

H H H H H

H H H H

H H H H H H

H H H H H

New London, Conn.

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

12:19AM 01:10AM 01:55AM 02:35AM 03:13AM 03:50AM 04:28AM 06:07AM 12:24AM 01:02AM 01:42AM 02:27AM 03:22AM 04:27AM 05:33AM 12:26AM 01:24AM 02:21AM 03:15AM 04:07AM 04:58AM 05:50AM 06:44AM 12:52AM 01:48AM 02:47AM 03:52AM 05:00AM 06:04AM 12:55AM 01:46AM

0.25 0.2 0.12 0.06 0.0 -0.02 -0.02 0.01 2.73 2.68 2.63 2.58 2.57 2.61 2.72 0.13 -0.1 -0.34 -0.56 -0.7 -0.75 -0.69 -0.55 3.27 3.06 2.83 2.63 2.51 2.46 0.45 0.37

L L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L

06:25AM 07:09AM 07:50AM 08:29AM 09:08AM 09:47AM 10:26AM 12:05PM 06:50AM 07:36AM 08:28AM 09:23AM 10:19AM 11:16AM 12:12PM 06:31AM 07:24AM 08:14AM 09:03AM 09:53AM 10:43AM 11:34AM 12:27PM 07:40AM 08:39AM 09:38AM 10:38AM 11:36AM 12:30PM 06:57AM 07:43AM

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

01:42AM 02:37AM 03:25AM 04:08AM 04:48AM 05:27AM 12:01AM 12:35AM 02:11AM 02:49AM 03:29AM 04:14AM 05:04AM 05:59AM 12:47AM 01:48AM 02:48AM 03:46AM 04:42AM 05:35AM 12:15AM 01:05AM 01:54AM 02:45AM 03:37AM 04:32AM 05:30AM 12:11AM 01:13AM 02:14AM 03:09AM

1.23 1.09 0.86 0.62 0.41 0.24 9.73 9.8 9.81 9.76 9.69 9.62 9.58 9.64 1.08 0.73 0.18 -0.5 -1.18 -1.73 11.82 12.0 11.9 11.57 11.05 10.44 9.88 1.33 1.56 1.55 1.35

L L L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

08:06AM 08:59AM 09:45AM 10:26AM 11:04AM 11:41AM 06:05AM 07:43AM 08:23AM 09:04AM 09:48AM 10:36AM 11:30AM 12:28PM 06:59AM 08:01AM 09:01AM 10:00AM 10:55AM 11:49AM 06:27AM 07:19AM 08:10AM 09:02AM 09:56AM 10:53AM 11:52AM 06:32AM 07:34AM 08:34AM 09:28AM

2.56 2.58 2.6 2.62 2.61 2.58 2.53 2.45 0.06 0.13 0.19 0.21 0.2 0.13 0.02 2.87 3.02 3.14 3.2 3.19 3.12 2.99 2.83 -0.35 -0.15 0.03 0.17 0.26 0.3 2.46 2.49

H H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H

March March March March March March March March March March March March March March March

Sunrise 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

6:20 6:18 6:17 6:15 6:14 6:12 6:10 7:09 7:07 7:05 7:03 7:02 7:00 6:58 6:57

AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM

0.07 0.04 0.01 -0.02 -0.03 -0.01 0.04 0.12L 2.36 2.25 2.14 2.06 2.04 2.11 2.29 -0.13 -0.3 -0.45 -0.57 -0.61 -0.56 -0.42 -0.22L 2.64 2.46 2.32 2.24 2.26 2.36 0.3 0.28

Boston, Mass. 9.55 9.66 9.81 9.93 10.0 10.01 0.15 0.15 0.22 0.34 0.49 0.63 0.7 0.62 9.84 10.21 10.69 11.2 11.62 11.87 -2.05 -2.1 -1.86 -1.38 -0.74 -0.07 0.51 9.45 9.23 9.21 9.32

H H H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

Sunset 5:34 5:35 5:36 5:37 5:39 5:40 5:41 6:42 6:43 6:45 6:46 6:47 6:48 6:49 6:50

PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM

02:29PM 03:18PM 03:59PM 04:37PM 05:13PM 05:49PM 12:17PM 01:54PM 02:33PM 03:13PM 03:57PM 04:46PM 05:41PM 06:40PM 01:28PM 02:28PM 03:26PM 04:20PM 05:12PM 06:02PM 12:41PM 01:33PM 02:25PM 03:18PM 04:13PM 05:11PM 06:13PM 12:55PM 01:57PM 02:53PM 03:42PM

0.62 0.48 0.33 0.21 0.13 0.1L 9.93 9.77 9.54 9.27 8.99 8.76 8.63 8.68 0.35 -0.09 -0.65 -1.19 -1.63 -1.87L 11.88 11.64 11.19 10.58 9.92 9.31 8.86 0.91 1.08 1.06 0.94

L L L L L L L

06:40PM 07:23PM 08:03PM 08:44PM 09:24PM 10:04PM 10:44PM

H H H H H H H L L L L L L L

2.28 2.41 2.53 2.64 2.72 2.76 2.76

H H H H H H H

2.53 2.8 3.07 3.28 3.42 3.46 3.41

H H H H H H H

06:57PM 07:42PM 08:32PM 09:28PM 10:26PM 11:26PM

0.23L 0.34L 0.43L 0.46L 0.43L 0.32L

06:57PM 07:47PM 08:36PM 09:25PM 10:16PM 11:07PM 11:59PM

H H H H H H L L

07:51PM 08:51PM 09:54PM 10:56PM 11:57PM

07:14PM 07:57PM

0.01L 0.22L 0.38L 0.47L 0.49L 2.49 2.63

H H

L L L L L

08:45PM 09:33PM 10:14PM 10:51PM 11:26PM

8.74 8.96 9.19 9.41 9.6

H H H H H

07:41PM 8.97 08:41PM 9.47 09:38PM 10.11 10:33PM 10.79 11:25PM 11.4

H H H H H

07:16PM 08:17PM 09:11PM 09:58PM

H H H H

H H H H H H H H L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L

06:24PM 08:01PM 08:39PM 09:20PM 10:04PM 10:53PM 11:48PM

0.15L 0.28L 0.46L 0.69L 0.92L 1.11L 1.18L

06:51PM 07:41PM 08:30PM 09:21PM 10:15PM 11:11PM

-1.85L -1.59L -1.1L -0.47L 0.22L 0.86L 8.63 8.63 8.8 9.07

Times for Boston, MA

MARCH 2015 Day

12:55PM 01:40PM 02:20PM 02:56PM 03:31PM 04:06PM 04:41PM 06:18PM 12:44PM 01:24PM 02:06PM 02:56PM 03:58PM 05:03PM 06:04PM 01:07PM 01:59PM 02:50PM 03:38PM 04:26PM 05:13PM 06:03PM 06:55PM 01:20PM 02:17PM 03:17PM 04:23PM 05:28PM 06:25PM 01:21PM 02:05PM

March March March March March March March March March March March March March March March March

16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

6:55 6:53 6:51 6:50 6:48 6:46 6:45 6:43 6:41 6:39 6:38 6:36 6:34 6:32 6:31 6:29

AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM

6:52 6:53 6:54 6:55 6:56 6:57 6:58 7:00 7:01 7:02 7:03 7:04 7:05 7:06 7:08 7:09

PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM

S U N

editor@pointseast.com


March Tides 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

01:47AM 02:41AM 03:28AM 04:10AM 04:47AM 05:22AM 05:56AM 12:23AM 01:55AM 02:30AM 03:09AM 03:52AM 04:42AM 05:38AM 12:23AM 01:28AM 02:33AM 03:33AM 04:30AM 05:24AM 12:04AM 12:54AM 01:44AM 02:35AM 03:28AM 04:25AM 05:26AM 12:13AM 01:18AM 02:19AM 03:14AM

1.06 0.89 0.68 0.49 0.33 0.24 0.21 9.34 9.34 9.31 9.26 9.21 9.17 9.2 1.08 0.79 0.26 -0.4 -1.06 -1.6 11.36 11.52 11.41 11.07 10.56 9.98 9.44 1.27 1.43 1.37 1.16

L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

Portland, Maine

08:05AM 08:57AM 09:42AM 10:22AM 10:59AM 11:33AM 12:07PM 07:30AM 08:05AM 08:43AM 09:25AM 10:12AM 11:06AM 12:06PM 06:41AM 07:46AM 08:50AM 09:49AM 10:45AM 11:39AM 06:16AM 07:08AM 08:00AM 08:54AM 09:50AM 10:50AM 11:53AM 06:30AM 07:34AM 08:34AM 09:27AM

9.22 9.34 9.47 9.56 9.59 9.54 9.42 0.23 0.29 0.38 0.49 0.59 0.65 0.59 9.36 9.7 10.17 10.69 11.13 11.37 -1.91 -1.95 -1.73 -1.28 -0.71 -0.12 0.37 9.05 8.86 8.86 8.98

H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

02:28PM 03:17PM 03:59PM 04:36PM 05:10PM 05:42PM 06:13PM 01:41PM 02:16PM 02:54PM 03:37PM 04:25PM 05:20PM 06:22PM 01:10PM 02:13PM 03:13PM 04:08PM 05:00PM 05:50PM 12:31PM 01:23PM 02:16PM 03:10PM 04:08PM 05:09PM 06:13PM 12:58PM 02:00PM 02:55PM 03:43PM

0.35 0.22 0.12 0.06 0.06 0.12 0.22L 9.24 9.02 8.78 8.54 8.33 8.2 8.24 0.36 -0.06 -0.59 -1.13 -1.55 -1.76L 11.38 11.13 10.68 10.09 9.47 8.92 8.52 0.69 0.82 0.79 0.69

L L L L L L

08:43PM 09:30PM 10:10PM 10:47PM 11:20PM 11:52PM

H H H H H H H L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L

8.54 8.74 8.94 9.11 9.23 9.31

H H H H H H

07:26PM 8.51 08:30PM 9.02 09:29PM 9.67 10:23PM 10.36 11:15PM 10.96

H H H H H

07:45PM 08:19PM 08:56PM 09:38PM 10:26PM 11:21PM

0.35L 0.52L 0.7L 0.9L 1.06L 1.15L

06:40PM 07:29PM 08:20PM 09:12PM 10:08PM 11:08PM

-1.72L -1.44L -0.96L -0.35L 0.3L 0.87L

07:17PM 08:17PM 09:10PM 09:57PM

8.35 8.38 8.56 8.81

Corrections for other ports

Port Reference Maine/ New Hampshire Stonington Bar Harbor Rockland Bar Harbor Boothbay Harbor Portland Kennebunkport Portland Portsmouth Portland

Massachusetts Gloucester Plymouth Scituate Provincetown Marion Woods Hole

Rhode Island Westerly Point Judith East Greenwich Bristol

Connecticut Stamford New Haven Branford Saybrook Jetty Saybrook Point Mystic Westport

Time Corrections

High +0 hr. 8 min., Low +0 hr. 6 min., High +0 hr. 9 min., Low +0 hr. 6 min., High -0 hr. 6 min., Low -0 hr. 8 min., High +0 hr. 7 min., Low +0 hr. 5 min., High +0 hr. 22 min., Low +0 hr. 17 min.,

Height Corrections

High *0.91, Low *0.90 High *0.93, Low *1.03 High *0.97, Low *0.97 High *0.97, Low *1.00 High *0.86, Low *0.86

Boston Boston Boston Boston Newport Newport

High +0 hr. 0 min., Low -0 hr. 4 min., High +0 hr. 4 min., Low +0 hr. 18 min., High +0 hr. 3 min., Low -0 hr. 1 min., High +0 hr. 16 min., Low +0 hr. 18 min., High +0 hr. 10 min., Low +0 hr. 12 min., High +0 hr. 32 min., Low +2 hr. 21 min.,

High *0.93, Low *0.97 High *1.03, Low *1.00 High *0.95, Low *1.03 High *0.95, Low *0.95 High *1.13, Low *1.29 High *0.40, Low *0.40

New London Newport Newport Newport

High -0 hr. 21 min., Low +0 hr. 3 min., High -0 hr. 1 min., Low +0 hr. 32 min., High +0 hr. 13 min., Low +0 hr. 3 min., High +0 hr. 13 min., Low +0 hr. 0 min.,

High *1.02, Low *1.00 High *0.87, Low *0.54 High *1.14, Low *1.14 High *1.16, Low *1.14

Bridgeport Bridgeport Bridgeport New London New London Boston Newport

High +0 hr. 3 min., Low +0 hr. 8 min., High -0 hr. 4 min., Low -0 hr. 7 min., High -0 hr. 5 min., Low -0 hr. 13 min., High +1 hr. 11 min., Low +0 hr. 45 min., High +1 hr. 11 min., Low +0 hr. 53 min., High +0 hr. 1 min., Low +0 hr. 2 min., High +0 hr. 9 min., Low +0 hr. 33 min.,

High *1.07, Low *1.08 High *0.91, Low *0.96 High *0.87, Low *0.96 High *1.36, Low *1.35 High *1.24, Low *1.25 High *1.01, Low *0.97 High *0.85, Low *0.85

M a r c h New Moon

March 20 www.pointseast.com

2 0 1 5

First Quarter

March 27

H H H H

Bar Harbor, Maine

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

01:29AM 02:23AM 03:11AM 03:53AM 04:32AM 05:08AM 05:42AM 12:04AM 01:37AM 02:12AM 02:50AM 03:34AM 04:24AM 05:21AM 12:08AM 01:14AM 02:18AM 03:18AM 04:15AM 05:08AM 06:00AM 12:34AM 01:24AM 02:15AM 03:09AM 04:06AM 05:06AM 06:10AM 01:01AM 02:01AM 02:55AM

1.24 1.04 0.79 0.55 0.38 0.29 0.28 11.02 10.98 10.91 10.82 10.73 10.66 10.68 1.41 1.06 0.45 -0.31 -1.08 -1.7 -2.06 13.41 13.25 12.83 12.23 11.56 10.95 10.51 1.57 1.49 1.24

L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L

07:42AM 08:35AM 09:20AM 10:01AM 10:39AM 11:14AM 11:48AM 07:16AM 07:51AM 08:28AM 09:09AM 09:55AM 10:48AM 11:49AM 06:24AM 07:29AM 08:32AM 09:31AM 10:27AM 11:19AM 12:11PM 06:51AM 07:43AM 08:37AM 09:33AM 10:32AM 11:34AM 12:37PM 07:13AM 08:12AM 09:05AM

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

01:32AM 02:27AM 03:16AM 03:59AM 04:39AM 05:16AM 05:53AM 12:12AM 01:48AM 02:25AM 03:05AM 03:50AM 04:40AM 05:37AM 12:33AM 01:36AM 02:38AM 03:36AM 04:32AM 05:25AM 06:16AM 12:41AM 01:30AM 02:20AM 03:12AM 04:06AM 05:04AM 06:05AM 01:00AM 02:00AM 02:56AM

1.93 1.61 1.15 0.71 0.36 0.14 0.06 19.07 18.99 18.83 18.6 18.35 18.14 18.08 1.94 1.42 0.47 -0.72 -1.92 -2.89 -3.45 22.58 22.32 21.64 20.65 19.55 18.52 17.76 2.44 2.39 2.0

L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L

07:38AM 08:32AM 09:19AM 10:01AM 10:40AM 11:18AM 11:54AM 07:30AM 08:07AM 08:47AM 09:29AM 10:16AM 11:09AM 12:08PM 06:39AM 07:41AM 08:42AM 09:40AM 10:34AM 11:27AM 12:17PM 07:06AM 07:56AM 08:47AM 09:40AM 10:35AM 11:33AM 12:33PM 07:07AM 08:07AM 09:01AM

10.82 10.98 11.15 11.28 11.32 11.27 11.13 0.33 0.43 0.56 0.7 0.82 0.89 0.83 10.85 11.24 11.81 12.43 12.96 13.27 13.3 -2.1 -1.84 -1.34 -0.7 -0.05 0.5 0.84 10.31 10.33 10.48

H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H

02:06PM 02:55PM 03:38PM 04:17PM 04:53PM 05:26PM 05:59PM 01:22PM 01:57PM 02:35PM 03:17PM 04:05PM 04:59PM 06:01PM 12:53PM 01:56PM 02:56PM 03:52PM 04:44PM 05:34PM 06:24PM 01:02PM 01:55PM 02:49PM 03:45PM 04:45PM 05:48PM 06:52PM 01:37PM 02:33PM 03:22PM

0.52 0.35 0.19 0.09 0.07 0.14 0.28L 10.92 10.67 10.4 10.13 9.89 9.74 9.77 0.58 0.11 -0.5 -1.12 -1.61 -1.88 -1.86L 13.03 12.52 11.84 11.12 10.47 10.0 9.78 0.97 0.91 0.76

Eastport, Maine

M o o n Full Moon

March 5

18.06 18.37 18.76 19.08 19.28 19.33 19.22 0.11 0.27 0.51 0.81 1.11 1.33 1.34 18.31 18.91 19.82 20.84 21.73 22.32 22.47 -3.52 -3.11 -2.29 -1.22 -0.09 0.91 1.58 17.41 17.45 17.77

H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H

02:06PM 02:57PM 03:42PM 04:22PM 05:00PM 05:36PM 06:12PM 01:30PM 02:07PM 02:47PM 03:29PM 04:17PM 05:11PM 06:11PM 01:10PM 02:12PM 03:11PM 04:07PM 05:00PM 05:51PM 06:41PM 01:07PM 01:58PM 02:49PM 03:43PM 04:40PM 05:39PM 06:41PM 01:34PM 02:32PM 03:23PM

1.12 0.75 0.36 0.07 -0.1 -0.12 0.01L 18.98 18.64 18.24 17.8 17.4 17.12 17.12 0.99 0.25 -0.76 -1.82 -2.7 -3.22 -3.29L 22.16 21.43 20.41 19.25 18.14 17.28 16.81 1.83 1.71 1.36

L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L L L

08:18PM 09:05PM 09:47PM 10:25PM 10:59PM 11:32PM

07:31PM 08:05PM 08:41PM 09:22PM 10:10PM 11:05PM

07:06PM 08:09PM 09:08PM 10:03PM 10:54PM 11:44PM

10.12 10.37 10.61 10.81 10.95 11.01

H H H H H H

10.05 10.61 11.35 12.13 12.8 13.25

H H H H H H

0.48L 0.71L 0.95L 1.19L 1.38L 1.49L

H H H H H H H L L L

07:13PM 08:04PM 08:57PM 09:53PM 10:54PM 11:57PM

-1.56L -1.03L -0.35L 0.36L 0.98L 1.41L

07:52PM 9.8 H 08:46PM 10.01 H 09:33PM 10.3 H01

L L L L L L

08:11PM 09:00PM 09:44PM 10:23PM 11:00PM 11:36PM

17.25 17.7 18.17 18.58 18.87 19.03

H H H H H H

17.53 18.36 19.48 20.67 21.69 22.36

H H H H H H

07:42PM 16.78 08:39PM 17.1 09:28PM 17.62

H H H

H H H H H H H L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L

07:48PM 08:25PM 09:05PM 09:48PM 10:37PM 11:32PM

07:14PM 08:15PM 09:14PM 10:09PM 11:01PM 11:51PM

07:30PM 08:19PM 09:10PM 10:03PM 10:59PM 11:59PM

0.26L 0.61L 1.02L 1.44L 1.82L 2.04L

-2.9L -2.1L -1.04L 0.14L 1.23L 2.04L

P h a s e s Third Quarter

March 13 Points East March/April 2015

85


April Tides 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

04:09AM 04:51AM 05:30AM 06:07AM 12:26AM 01:01AM 01:37AM 02:15AM 02:56AM 03:44AM 04:39AM 05:41AM 12:39AM 01:45AM 02:47AM 03:45AM 04:40AM 05:33AM 06:23AM 12:44AM 01:33AM 02:22AM 03:14AM 04:07AM 05:04AM 06:03AM 12:56AM 01:54AM 02:47AM 03:35AM

12:01AM 12:40AM 01:19AM 01:59AM 02:38AM 03:14AM 03:49AM 04:23AM 05:00AM 12:15AM 01:10AM 02:08AM 03:10AM 04:16AM 05:22AM 06:21AM 12:46AM 01:39AM 02:31AM 03:21AM 04:05AM 04:48AM 05:31AM 12:47AM 01:42AM 02:37AM 03:33AM 04:32AM 05:27AM 06:12AM

M O O N

0.39 0.19 0.02 -0.09 7.36 7.37 7.33 7.27 7.17 7.06 6.95 6.89 0.67 0.37 -0.04 -0.48 -0.86 -1.11 -1.19 8.55 8.33 7.96 7.52 7.06 6.66 6.37 1.11 1.01 0.82 0.59

0.25 0.06 -0.09 -0.19 -0.24 -0.22 -0.16 -0.06 0.07 3.41 3.38 3.39 3.46 3.59 3.8 4.05 -0.47 -0.58 -0.59 -0.51 -0.32 -0.07 0.22 3.62 3.31 3.06 2.9 2.84 2.87 2.97

Day April 1 April 2 April 3 April 4 April 5 April 6 April 7 April 8 April April April April April April April April

9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

L L L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H

Bridgeport, Conn.

10:16AM 10:57AM 11:36AM 12:14PM 06:44AM 07:21AM 07:59AM 08:40AM 09:26AM 10:17AM 11:14AM 12:15PM 06:47AM 07:52AM 08:53AM 09:51AM 10:45AM 11:37AM 12:28PM 07:13AM 08:03AM 08:53AM 09:44AM 10:38AM 11:33AM 12:30PM 07:03AM 08:00AM 08:53AM 09:41AM

6.63 6.75 6.83 6.88 -0.15 -0.16 -0.11 -0.03 0.09 0.23 0.32 0.32 6.95 7.11 7.36 7.6 7.8 7.89 7.86 -1.1 -0.84 -0.49 -0.08 0.31 0.63 0.83 6.23 6.22 6.3 6.43

H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

04:28PM 05:06PM 05:43PM 06:19PM 12:51PM 01:28PM 02:06PM 02:47PM 03:33PM 04:24PM 05:22PM 06:23PM 01:17PM 02:17PM 03:14PM 04:07PM 04:58PM 05:48PM 06:37PM 01:17PM 02:07PM 02:58PM 03:50PM 04:45PM 05:42PM 06:40PM 01:25PM 02:16PM 03:04PM 03:48PM

0.36 0.26 0.2 0.19L 6.88 6.83 6.75 6.64 6.52 6.42 6.41 6.53 0.21 -0.01 -0.29 -0.54 -0.72 -0.77 -0.69L 7.72 7.48 7.19 6.89 6.63 6.47 6.44 0.9 0.88 0.79 0.67

Newport, R.I.

06:53AM 07:29AM 08:03AM 08:36AM 09:09AM 09:45AM 10:24AM 11:07AM 11:55AM 05:44AM 06:39AM 07:51AM 09:12AM 10:21AM 11:15AM 12:02PM 07:15AM 08:06AM 08:56AM 09:46AM 10:36AM 11:28AM 12:22PM 06:22AM 07:45AM 09:11AM 10:00AM 10:37AM 11:10AM 11:43AM

Moonrise ---4:43 PM ---5:39 PM ---6:57 PM ---7:34 PM ---8:33 PM ---9:32 PM ---10:30 PM ---11:28 PM ---12:23 AM 1:15 AM 2:03 AM 2:48 AM 3:28 AM 4:07 AM 4:44 AM

3.16 3.26 3.33 3.36 3.35 3.29 3.21 3.11 3.04 0.2 0.32 0.36 0.27 0.07 -0.16 -0.38 4.26 4.37 4.37 4.25 4.05 3.79 3.54 0.48 0.67 0.73 0.7 0.6 0.46 0.31

H H H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L

Moonset 5:00 AM 5:29 AM 5:57 AM 6:26 AM 6:56 AM 7:29 AM 8:05 AM 8:46 AM 9:31 AM 10:23 AM 11:21 AM 12:24 PM 1:31 PM 2:41 PM 3:53 PM 5:06 PM

86 Points East March/April 2015

12:29PM 12:59PM 01:32PM 02:05PM 02:39PM 03:12PM 03:45PM 04:21PM 05:01PM 12:48PM 01:44PM 02:42PM 03:45PM 04:50PM 05:52PM 06:47PM 12:47PM 01:33PM 02:18PM 03:03PM 03:47PM 04:31PM 05:16PM 01:17PM 02:11PM 03:06PM 04:03PM 05:00PM 05:50PM 06:32PM

0.2 0.05 -0.06 -0.13 -0.15 -0.13 -0.07 0.0 0.1L 3.01 3.06 3.18 3.39 3.71 4.12 4.51 -0.53 -0.6 -0.57 -0.46 -0.26 0.0 0.28L 3.33 3.18 3.09 3.09 3.17 3.32 3.49

L L L

H H H H H H H H L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L

L L L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L L L

H H H H H H H

10:35PM 11:14PM 11:51PM

06:54PM 07:31PM 08:09PM 08:51PM 09:38PM 10:33PM 11:34PM

07:25PM 08:25PM 09:22PM 10:15PM 11:06PM 11:56PM

07:25PM 08:15PM 09:06PM 10:00PM 10:57PM 11:56PM

07:35PM 08:27PM 09:15PM 09:59PM

07:08PM 07:45PM 08:19PM 08:52PM 09:26PM 10:01PM 10:40PM 11:25PM

05:49PM 06:49PM 08:05PM 09:31PM 10:48PM 11:50PM

07:39PM 08:30PM 09:19PM 10:09PM 10:59PM 11:52PM

06:08PM 07:11PM 08:35PM 09:55PM 10:50PM 11:34PM

7.0 7.18 7.3

0.23L 0.32L 0.44L 0.58L 0.71L 0.81L 0.81L

6.81 7.22 7.69 8.12 8.44 8.59

-0.48L -0.16L 0.21L 0.58L 0.89L 1.07L

6.53 6.7 6.92 7.13

3.46 3.59 3.69 3.72 3.71 3.65 3.57 3.48

0.21L 0.32L 0.34L 0.22L -0.02L -0.27L

4.8 4.94 4.9 4.69 4.37 3.99

0.56L 0.77L 0.84L 0.76L 0.6L 0.41L

Day April 17 April 18

Moonrise 5:20 AM 5:58 AM

Moonset 6:20 PM 7:33 PM

April 19 April 20

6:38 AM 7:21 AM

8:44 PM 9:51 PM

April April April April

8:08 AM 8:58 AM 9:52 AM ---10:47 AM ---11:44 AM ---12:41 PM ---1:38 PM ---2:34 PM ---3:31 PM ---4:28 PM

10:53 PM 11:49 PM ---12:38 AM

21 22 23 24

April 25 April 26 April 27 April 28 April 29 April 30

1:20 AM 1:58 AM 2:32 AM 3:02 AM 3:31 AM 4:00 AM

H H H

H H H H H H

H H H H

H H H H H H H H

H H H H H H

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

02:31AM 03:11AM 03:49AM 04:26AM 05:03AM 05:43AM 06:25AM 12:28AM 01:08AM 01:53AM 02:49AM 03:54AM 05:02AM 12:08AM 01:07AM 02:05AM 02:59AM 03:51AM 04:42AM 05:32AM 06:23AM 12:28AM 01:21AM 02:17AM 03:17AM 04:20AM 05:23AM 12:22AM 01:13AM 01:59AM

03:58AM 04:41AM 05:22AM 06:01AM 12:29AM 01:04AM 01:40AM 02:19AM 03:00AM 03:46AM 04:37AM 05:34AM 12:24AM 01:26AM 02:28AM 03:27AM 04:23AM 05:17AM 06:09AM 12:41AM 01:30AM 02:20AM 03:10AM 04:03AM 04:58AM 05:56AM 12:38AM 01:37AM 02:32AM 03:23AM

0.28 0.18 0.09 0.02 -0.02 -0.02 0.0 2.92 2.87 2.83 2.78 2.76 2.79 0.18 -0.04 -0.26 -0.46 -0.59 -0.63 -0.57 -0.43 3.34 3.12 2.88 2.66 2.5 2.42 0.62 0.54 0.43

1.05 0.73 0.43 0.19 10.04 10.15 10.19 10.18 10.13 10.06 9.99 9.97 0.95 0.6 0.06 -0.57 -1.19 -1.67 -1.92 12.08 11.89 11.5 10.95 10.35 9.79 9.34 1.76 1.74 1.53 1.22

L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L

L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

New London, Conn.

08:24AM 09:03AM 09:42AM 10:21AM 11:00AM 11:40AM 12:19PM 07:11AM 08:02AM 08:56AM 09:52AM 10:49AM 11:44AM 06:05AM 07:01AM 07:52AM 08:42AM 09:32AM 10:22AM 11:14AM 12:06PM 07:16AM 08:11AM 09:08AM 10:03AM 10:58AM 11:49AM 06:19AM 07:08AM 07:52AM

2.52 2.55 2.56 2.56 2.54 2.5 2.44 0.05 0.11 0.15 0.16 0.13 0.06 2.87 2.96 3.03 3.06 3.05 3.0 2.92 2.81 -0.24 -0.04 0.14 0.29 0.4 0.46 2.39 2.41 2.44

H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H

April April April April April April April April April April April April April April April

Sunrise 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

6:27 6:25 6:24 6:22 6:20 6:19 6:17 6:15 6:14 6:12 6:10 6:09 6:07 6:05 6:04

AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM

0.24 0.21 0.18 0.18 0.21 0.28 0.37L 2.37 2.31 2.27 2.29 2.39 2.59 -0.04 -0.16 -0.27 -0.34 -0.35 -0.29 -0.15 0.04L 2.7 2.58 2.49 2.45 2.47 2.56 0.49 0.48 0.45

Boston, Mass.

10:15AM 10:58AM 11:37AM 12:15PM 06:39AM 07:18AM 07:57AM 08:39AM 09:23AM 10:12AM 11:05AM 12:02PM 06:35AM 07:38AM 08:40AM 09:40AM 10:37AM 11:31AM 12:24PM 07:00AM 07:50AM 08:40AM 09:32AM 10:25AM 11:20AM 12:17PM 06:55AM 07:53AM 08:48AM 09:38AM

9.49 9.66 9.78 9.83 0.03 -0.05 -0.05 0.02 0.12 0.24 0.33 0.32 10.06 10.28 10.6 10.96 11.26 11.42 11.4 -1.91 -1.63 -1.15 -0.55 0.09 0.65 1.07 9.07 8.98 9.04 9.17

H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

Sunset 7:10 7:11 7:12 7:13 7:14 7:15 7:17 7:18 7:19 7:20 7:21 7:22 7:23 7:24 7:26

04:25PM 05:03PM 05:41PM 06:17PM 12:52PM 01:30PM 02:09PM 02:50PM 03:34PM 04:23PM 05:18PM 06:16PM 01:02PM 02:02PM 03:00PM 03:55PM 04:48PM 05:39PM 06:28PM 01:15PM 02:06PM 02:57PM 03:50PM 04:44PM 05:41PM 06:39PM 01:13PM 02:08PM 02:57PM 03:42PM

0.78 0.62 0.5 0.43L 9.81 9.72 9.58 9.41 9.24 9.1 9.06 9.17 0.16 -0.13 -0.51 -0.89 -1.18 -1.31 -1.23L 11.18 10.81 10.32 9.8 9.33 8.97 8.79 1.3 1.35 1.29 1.15

L L L L L L

08:37PM 09:17PM 09:56PM 10:35PM 11:13PM 11:50PM

H H H H H H L L L L L L L

H H H H H H H H L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L

2.85 3.13 3.38 3.55 3.64 3.62 3.52

H H H H H H H

0.46L 0.52L 0.54L 0.48L 0.36L

07:25PM 08:24PM 09:26PM 10:27PM 11:26PM

0.25L 0.44L 0.58L 0.65L 0.66L

2.69 2.83 2.95

H H H

10:40PM 11:18PM 11:54PM

9.36 9.64 9.87

H H H

07:17PM 9.49 08:17PM 9.99 09:14PM 10.59 10:09PM 11.2 11:01PM 11.7 11:52PM 12.01

H H H H H H

07:35PM 08:28PM 09:16PM 09:59PM

H H H H

06:41PM 07:26PM 08:07PM

L L L

H H H H H H

07:13PM 08:05PM 09:04PM 10:05PM 11:07PM

06:35PM 07:27PM 08:16PM 09:05PM 09:54PM 10:44PM 11:36PM

H H H H H H L L L

2.76 2.87 2.94 2.98 2.98 2.96

06:54PM 07:32PM 08:11PM 08:53PM 09:38PM 10:28PM 11:24PM

0.43L 0.49L 0.6L 0.76L 0.92L 1.05L 1.08L

07:17PM 08:07PM 08:57PM 09:48PM 10:42PM 11:39PM

-0.96L -0.51L 0.05L 0.64L 1.17L 1.57L 8.8 8.96 9.22 9.53

Times for Boston, MA

APRIL 2015 Day

02:45PM 03:22PM 03:58PM 04:33PM 05:09PM 05:46PM 06:27PM 12:59PM 01:43PM 02:32PM 03:32PM 04:37PM 05:39PM 12:39PM 01:32PM 02:23PM 03:13PM 04:02PM 04:50PM 05:39PM 06:30PM 12:59PM 01:53PM 02:50PM 03:51PM 04:53PM 05:51PM 12:37PM 01:22PM 02:04PM

PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM

April 16 April 17

6:02 AM 6:01 AM

7:27 PM 7:28 PM

April April April April

5:59 5:57 5:56 5:54

7:29 7:30 7:31 7:32

18 19 20 21

AM AM AM AM

PM PM PM PM

April 22 April 23

5:53 AM 5:51 AM

7:33 PM 7:35 PM

April April April April

5:50 5:48 5:47 5:45

7:36 7:37 7:38 7:39

24 25 26 27

AM AM AM AM

PM PM PM PM

April 28 April 29

5:44 AM 5:43 AM

7:40 PM 7:41 PM

April 30

5:41 AM

7:42 PM

S U N

editor@pointseast.com


April Tides 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

04:01AM 04:43AM 05:21AM 05:57AM 12:19AM 12:51AM 01:24AM 02:00AM 02:39AM 03:24AM 04:16AM 05:13AM 12:02AM 01:09AM 02:14AM 03:16AM 04:14AM 05:08AM 06:00AM 12:32AM 01:21AM 02:11AM 03:02AM 03:56AM 04:52AM 05:52AM 12:42AM 01:42AM 02:37AM 03:27AM

0.88 0.6 0.37 0.2 9.62 9.71 9.75 9.75 9.72 9.66 9.58 9.54 0.99 0.69 0.18 -0.45 -1.07 -1.55 -1.8 11.63 11.44 11.03 10.49 9.91 9.36 8.94 1.68 1.62 1.41 1.12

L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

Portland, Maine

10:13AM 10:55AM 11:32AM 12:07PM 06:30AM 07:04AM 07:40AM 08:18AM 09:00AM 09:48AM 10:41AM 11:41AM 06:17AM 07:24AM 08:29AM 09:31AM 10:28AM 11:23AM 12:15PM 06:51AM 07:42AM 08:34AM 09:27AM 10:22AM 11:20AM 12:19PM 06:54AM 07:53AM 08:47AM 09:36AM

9.13 9.26 9.34 9.35 0.1 0.05 0.04 0.07 0.13 0.22 0.28 0.28 9.59 9.78 10.1 10.47 10.78 10.95 10.93 -1.79 -1.54 -1.09 -0.54 0.03 0.53 0.89 8.68 8.6 8.65 8.77

H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

04:26PM 05:03PM 05:37PM 06:09PM 12:42PM 01:16PM 01:52PM 02:31PM 03:15PM 04:03PM 04:59PM 05:59PM 12:44PM 01:47PM 02:48PM 03:44PM 04:37PM 05:28PM 06:18PM 01:07PM 01:58PM 02:51PM 03:45PM 04:42PM 05:40PM 06:39PM 01:17PM 02:11PM 03:00PM 03:43PM

0.58 0.49 0.45 0.45L 9.3 9.2 9.07 8.92 8.78 8.67 8.63 8.74 0.16 -0.11 -0.47 -0.84 -1.11 -1.22 -1.12L 10.71 10.34 9.86 9.37 8.94 8.62 8.47 1.1 1.16 1.12 1.03

L L L

10:38PM 11:14PM 11:47PM

H H H H H H H H L L L L L L

06:41PM 07:14PM 07:49PM 08:28PM 09:12PM 10:02PM 10:59PM

07:03PM 08:06PM 09:06PM 10:01PM 10:53PM 11:43PM

H H H H H H H L L L L

07:07PM 07:57PM 08:48PM 09:42PM 10:39PM 11:40PM

07:36PM 08:28PM 09:15PM 09:57PM

9.07 9.3 9.49

H H H

9.04 9.53 10.15 10.77 11.28 11.58

H H H H H H

8.5 8.66 8.91 9.19

H H H H

0.5L 0.57L 0.67L 0.79L 0.92L 1.04L 1.08L

-0.83L -0.38L 0.16L 0.71L 1.2L 1.54L

Corrections for other ports

Port Reference Maine/ New Hampshire Bar Harbor Stonington Rockland Bar Harbor Boothbay Harbor Portland Portland Kennebunkport Portsmouth Portland

Massachusetts Gloucester Plymouth Scituate Provincetown Marion Woods Hole

Rhode Island Westerly Point Judith East Greenwich Bristol

Connecticut Stamford New Haven Branford Saybrook Jetty Saybrook Point Mystic Westport

Time Corrections

High +0 hr. 8 min., Low +0 hr. 6 min., High +0 hr. 9 min., Low +0 hr. 6 min., High -0 hr. 6 min., Low -0 hr. 8 min., High +0 hr. 7 min., Low +0 hr. 5 min., High +0 hr. 22 min., Low +0 hr. 17 min.,

Height Corrections

High *0.91, Low *0.90 High *0.93, Low *1.03 High *0.97, Low *0.97 High *0.97, Low *1.00 High *0.86, Low *0.86

Boston Boston Boston Boston Newport Newport

High +0 hr. 0 min., Low -0 hr. 4 min., High +0 hr. 4 min., Low +0 hr. 18 min., High +0 hr. 3 min., Low -0 hr. 1 min., High +0 hr. 16 min., Low +0 hr. 18 min., High +0 hr. 10 min., Low +0 hr. 12 min., High +0 hr. 32 min., Low +2 hr. 21 min.,

High *0.93, Low *0.97 High *1.03, Low *1.00 High *0.95, Low *1.03 High *0.95, Low *0.95 High *1.13, Low *1.29 High *0.40, Low *0.40

New London Newport Newport Newport

High -0 hr. 21 min., Low +0 hr. 3 min., High -0 hr. 1 min., Low +0 hr. 32 min., High +0 hr. 13 min., Low +0 hr. 3 min., High +0 hr. 13 min., Low +0 hr. 0 min.,

High *1.02, Low *1.00 High *0.87, Low *0.54 High *1.14, Low *1.14 High *1.16, Low *1.14

Bridgeport Bridgeport Bridgeport New London New London Boston Newport

High +0 hr. 3 min., Low +0 hr. 8 min., High -0 hr. 4 min., Low -0 hr. 7 min., High -0 hr. 5 min., Low -0 hr. 13 min., High +1 hr. 11 min., Low +0 hr. 45 min., High +1 hr. 11 min., Low +0 hr. 53 min., High +0 hr. 1 min., Low +0 hr. 2 min., High +0 hr. 9 min., Low +0 hr. 33 min.,

High *1.07, Low *1.08 High *0.91, Low *0.96 High *0.87, Low *0.96 High *1.36, Low *1.35 High *1.24, Low *1.25 High *1.01, Low *0.97 High *0.85, Low *0.85

a p r i l

2 0 1 5

Bar Harbor, Maine

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

03:43AM 04:26AM 05:05AM 05:41AM 12:00AM 12:33AM 01:06AM 01:42AM 02:22AM 03:07AM 03:58AM 04:56AM 06:01AM 12:54AM 02:00AM 03:01AM 03:58AM 04:52AM 05:43AM 12:13AM 01:02AM 01:52AM 02:43AM 03:37AM 04:34AM 05:33AM 12:25AM 01:24AM 02:18AM 03:07AM

0.91 0.59 0.32 0.15 11.22 11.28 11.29 11.25 11.19 11.1 11.0 10.95 11.02 0.79 0.2 -0.53 -1.23 -1.77 -2.05 13.37 13.13 12.65 12.02 11.35 10.74 10.27 1.72 1.65 1.41 1.07

L L L L H H H H H H H H H L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

09:52AM 10:33AM 11:12AM 11:48AM 06:15AM 06:50AM 07:25AM 08:02AM 08:44AM 09:31AM 10:24AM 11:24AM 12:27PM 07:07AM 08:12AM 09:12AM 10:09AM 11:03AM 11:54AM 06:34AM 07:24AM 08:16AM 09:08AM 10:03AM 11:00AM 11:58AM 06:34AM 07:32AM 08:26AM 09:15AM

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

03:45AM 04:30AM 05:10AM 05:49AM 12:07AM 12:42AM 01:19AM 01:57AM 02:38AM 03:23AM 04:15AM 05:12AM 12:10AM 01:13AM 02:16AM 03:15AM 04:12AM 05:05AM 05:56AM 12:18AM 01:07AM 01:56AM 02:47AM 03:39AM 04:34AM 05:31AM 12:24AM 01:22AM 02:17AM 03:08AM

1.45 0.87 0.37 0.01 19.31 19.41 19.4 19.3 19.13 18.9 18.68 18.55 1.56 1.05 0.17 -0.93 -2.0 -2.83 -3.26 22.43 22.05 21.32 20.34 19.29 18.31 17.56 2.66 2.64 2.3 1.74

L L L L H H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L

09:50AM 10:33AM 11:13AM 11:51AM 06:26AM 07:03AM 07:42AM 08:22AM 09:05AM 09:52AM 10:45AM 11:43AM 06:14AM 07:17AM 08:19AM 09:18AM 10:14AM 11:07AM 11:58AM 06:46AM 07:35AM 08:25AM 09:15AM 10:07AM 11:01AM 11:57AM 06:30AM 07:28AM 08:23AM 09:13AM

H H H H L L L L L L L L L H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

04:06PM 04:45PM 05:21PM 05:55PM 12:22PM 12:57PM 01:32PM 02:11PM 02:54PM 03:43PM 04:38PM 05:39PM 06:43PM 01:31PM 02:32PM 03:28PM 04:22PM 05:13PM 06:02PM 12:45PM 01:36PM 02:28PM 03:22PM 04:18PM 05:16PM 06:14PM 12:56PM 01:50PM 02:40PM 03:25PM

0.59 0.46 0.4 0.41L 10.92 10.8 10.65 10.48 10.32 10.18 10.11 10.21 10.52 -0.06 -0.49 -0.93 -1.27 -1.42 -1.33L 12.48 12.04 11.48 10.89 10.36 9.98 9.79 1.16 1.2 1.13 1.0

Eastport, Maine

M o o n

New Moon

First Quarter

Full Moon

April 18

April 25

April 4

www.pointseast.com

10.68 10.85 10.96 10.98 0.06 0.04 0.07 0.13 0.22 0.32 0.4 0.4 0.25 11.26 11.66 12.12 12.52 12.74 12.73 -2.04 -1.74 -1.23 -0.61 0.02 0.56 0.95 10.0 9.93 10.01 10.17

18.2 18.6 18.89 19.04 -0.2 -0.25 -0.19 -0.03 0.2 0.47 0.68 0.75 18.65 19.06 19.74 20.53 21.23 21.67 21.74 -3.23 -2.76 -1.95 -0.94 0.11 1.04 1.72 17.14 17.08 17.29 17.65

H H H H L L L L L L L L H H H H H H H L L L L L L L H H H H

04:09PM 04:50PM 05:29PM 06:06PM 12:27PM 01:04PM 01:42PM 02:21PM 03:05PM 03:53PM 04:48PM 05:47PM 12:44PM 01:46PM 02:47PM 03:44PM 04:37PM 05:29PM 06:19PM 12:47PM 01:37PM 02:27PM 03:18PM 04:12PM 05:08PM 06:06PM 12:54PM 01:49PM 02:41PM 03:29PM

0.94 0.57 0.33 0.22L 19.04 18.92 18.72 18.46 18.17 17.9 17.73 17.79 0.55 0.03 -0.72 -1.52 -2.16 -2.5 -2.46L 21.42 20.77 19.9 18.94 18.03 17.32 16.93 2.07 2.09 1.86 1.51

L L L

H H H H H H H H H L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L

L L L

H H H H H H H H L L L L L L

H H H H H H H L L L L

10:15PM 10.61 10:53PM 10.88 11:27PM 11.09

H H H

07:46PM 08:45PM 09:41PM 10:33PM 11:24PM

11.06 11.74 12.43 13.0 13.33

H H H H H

07:11PM 9.8 08:04PM 9.98 08:52PM 10.26 09:36PM 10.59

H H H H

10:12PM 18.18 10:53PM 18.69 11:30PM 19.07

H H H

06:49PM 07:51PM 08:50PM 09:46PM 10:39PM 11:29PM

18.2 18.97 19.98 21.02 21.87 22.37

H H H H H H

16.89 17.16 17.64 18.19

H H H H

06:28PM 07:01PM 07:35PM 08:13PM 08:57PM 09:46PM 10:43PM 11:47PM

0.49L 0.62L 0.78L 0.94L 1.1L 1.23L 1.27L 1.15L

06:52PM 07:42PM 08:34PM 09:28PM 10:25PM 11:25PM

-1.01L -0.51L 0.09L 0.7L 1.22L 1.58L

06:43PM 07:20PM 07:59PM 08:39PM 09:24PM 10:13PM 11:09PM

0.27L 0.43L 0.67L 0.97L 1.28L 1.56L 1.69L

07:08PM 07:57PM 08:46PM 09:37PM 10:31PM 11:26PM

-2.03L -1.28L -0.33L 0.69L 1.61L 2.31L

07:03PM 07:58PM 08:49PM 09:35PM

P h a s e s Third Quarter

April 11 Points East March/April 2015

87


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Points East March/April 2015

89


LAST

WORD/Ru ss

Roth

IBH's Rick likes being a happy man.

Photo by Russ Roth

How to keep your boat-mover happy e very rarely if ever, see Independent Boat Haulers’ Rick upset. This particular spring launch day, when climbing out of his truck, it was obvious that he was not happy. “Russ would you please teach a course on how to get your boat ready to launch?” said Rick. For the second time that week he had a boat on the launch ramp, trailer in the water and no engine. In both cases, the owners had neglected to test their engines before launch. The boat this particular day still had hoses disconnected from an engine repair as yet unfinished. Not completely sure if he was serious, my response was, “No, but I will write an article for Points East on the subject.” Rick thought that was great. We laughed and went on with our days. So now it’s Jan. 1, and I’m sitting at my desk with my boat “to do” list. I’m not an engine mechanic, and have never professed to be an expert on any boat re-

W

90 Points East March/April 2015

lated subject. What I am is a guy with a plan that I’m willing to share. For those of you who are boat “experts,” you can stop rolling your eyes and go on to the next article. One of the more important things that Marty and I do for Skiya is put her away clean and dry. It’s amazing all of the time and maintenance this save us in the spring. The salt and dirt from the sailing season only gets harder to remove as the months pass. Not to mention the mold and mildew from putting a cover over a wet boat. We also leave our hatches ajar so we get air circulating through the boat all winter. The other thing that we have done is build a frame for our cover that is tall enough to work under in the spring. On Skiya that means doing routine engine maintenance in a warm, dry environment. So here is what I feel comfortable doing on my engine. Again, I’m not a diesel mechanic, and I think it editor@pointseast.com


is very important to be on a first-name basis with your Freshwater system: Reconnect and test it. Put local professional. some fresh water in the tanks and check for leaks. Fuel filters: Change the primary and secondary Bilge pump: Confirm that your bilge pump is workfuel filters every spring. Look at the filters. Are they ing. Ours was working intermittently at the end of last really dirty? You may want to speak with your me- season and is due for replacement before launch. chanic about fuel polishing. We did this on Skiya, and Run the engine: We run Skiya’s engine as soon as it made a huge difference in our engine’s performance. the above maintenance is complete. If you have a probImpeller: Change the raw water impeller annually. lem, it is better to find it sooner rather than later. Run Every time we try to get another your engine again just before year out of an impeller, it always launch. We run ours long enough comes out with cracked or broto bring the water temp up to ken vanes. It’s just not worth the 170 degrees. hassle of a breakdown on the waCover and frame: This ter. From experience, I can guarbrings us to the point that the antee you that it will happen at cover and frame is off and stored the worst possible time. for another year. The bottom has Alternator belt: Change each been sanded and painted. The spring. They stretch and slip as prop is polished and greased. they age. Not to mention the nice The hull is cleaned and polished. screeching noise they make Mast and fittings: Don’t forwhen you start your engine. get to inspect your mast and it’s Engine oil: Change it. I put fittings. Last year we found a Skiya to bed in the fall with broken wire in our baby stay. fresh oil. In the spring, I run it Lube everything that twists or for a few weeks, then change it turns. Skiya’s mast also gets again. I think this is better than washed and polished before leaving dirty oil in the engine all launch. We store our mast under winter and then changing it in a cover all winter, and it is still the spring. needs cleaning in the spring. Batteries: We take our batterMast wires and lights: ies home and put a charge on Check all of the mast wires and them over the winter. If you left Photo by Russ Roth the lights they connect to. Do yours on the boat, inspect them they light up when connected to Back in the rig, Rick is smiling, as Russ and for corrosion and cracks. Charge a battery? Fixing it now is so Marty's Skiya slides uneventfully into the water them fully before launch. Make for another season. much easier than trying to do it sure they are holding the charge. 50 feet off the deck in a bosun’s Hoses: They get old and brittle over time. Give them chair. Just ask Marty. a visual inspection for leaks while the engine is cold, Always use new cotter pins, and lube your turnbuckand then again while the engine is warm and running. les. Your rigger will thank you for this. We have also This past spring we found one leak and a few small found that, when there’s a line of boats to be launched, cracks. The end result was, we changed out all of the those with a history of being prepared get launched coolant hoses on the engine. first. Hose clamps: Tighten everyone you can see. Raw-water intake: There is one last thing to check Thru-hulls: I test and lube all of Skiya’s thru-hull as your boat is sliding into the water, and Rick is waitfittings before launch. Every once and a while, I find ing for you to start your engine. Make sure the rawone that has frozen tight over the winter. It’s much water intake is open. I see this happen over and over easier to deal with this situation when the boat is on again. You close it in the fall to keep the critters from dry land. crawling inside, and you forget to open it in the spring. Zincs and heat exchanger: Replace the zinc in the It’s happened to me, and, thankfully, there was someheat exchanger every year. Open up the ends of the one standing by the side of the ramp to yell, “Hey Russ, heat exchanger and clean out any weed or other con- you’re not putting out any water.” taminants. Good luck with your launch this spring, and see you Here’s how we address other of Skiya’s systems prior out on the water. to launch: Steering cables and rudder bearings: EveryRuss and Marty Roth sail their C&C 40 Skiya out of thing should be lubed and inspected before launch. Portsmouth (N.H.) Harbor and Rockland, Maine. www.pointseast.com

Points East March/April 2015

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36’ Tiara Open Express Cruiser, 1987, Well maintained popular fishing/cruising boat. Repowered in 2005 with new Crusaders and drive trains. Lots of upgrades including an AB inflatable with a 6hp Mercury. $63,000

36' MONK TRAWLER, 1985, $89,500

36' PENBO FB CRUISER, 1961, $59,500

35' HINCKLEY PILOT YAWL, 1966, $89,900

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19’ Fiberglass Lightning, 1998 Has dodger and full tent-like cockpit cover by Topside Canvas for cruising with 3.3hp 2006 Mercury - very low hours, trailer. Standard and self-tending jibs. Reef points on main. Full foam floatation. Not set-up for racing. Bottom paint on bottom and centerboard suitable for mooring with 75lb. mooring mushroom & chain. $3,300. matsconn@gmail.com 22’ Pearson Ensign, 1967 MARY B is a wonderful daysailer and very popular one-design racer. $6,450. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-326-4411 www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 23’ Pearson Ensign Meticulously restored in pristine condition; includes main, roller furled jib, gennaker, spinnaker, trailer and outboard. $10,900. Email or call 401-965-2061. kamlaw2344@aol.com

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Mail ads, with payment, to Points East Magazine P.O. Box 1077, Portsmouth, NH, 03802-1077 or go to our website at www.pointseast.com Deadline for the May issue is April 3, 2015.

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24’ Dolphin Sloop by Lunn Laminates #200. Centerboard, 6 sails, roller reefing Genoa, Palmer Husky 8hp rebuilt ‘96 & 2006. Includes unused GPS new 2009 and an inflatable dinghy. $4,500 OBO. www.jonesportshipyard.com info@jonesportshipyard.com

94 Points East March/April 2015

25’ Dark Harbor, 1921 CHARISMATIC is a 1921 Dark Harbor 17. There were 200 Dark Harbor 17s built between 1908 and 1935. The 17 is a beautiful daysailer with a roomy cockpit and low freeboard, putting you close to the water. There’s a small cuddy cabin for those who wish an overnight, storage space, or shelter in a rain squall. $14,000. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com

26’ Pearson Daysailor, 1981 Family cruiser. Many new upgrades-rigging, jib, dodger, cushions and more. Underwater stripped, new barrier coat, etc. Includes main and three head sails, roller furling, porta potty, compass, VHF, Honda 15hp long shaft w/ elec. starter. Located Fairhaven, MA. Price: $10,900. Email for info or leave message 781-775-5741 redavl@msn.com

26’ Pearson, 1973 Enjoy your time on the water at a reasonable price. Offered at only $7,000. Call 207 831-3168 Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales www.boatinginmaine.com

26’ Pearson Classic Pocket 8’8 beam, 4’ draft. 9.9hp Johnson. 40.02 ballast/displacement ratio. Full head and small galley, 4 excellent sails, depth finder, new VHF radio. 2 new batteries & solar support. She’s a sweet and beautiful sail. $7,200. Don 603-3326889. ashpt@aol.com

26’ Pearson Commander Lovingly restored over a four year period - includes new main & genoa sails with new Harken III roller furler, Honda 9.9 four stroke inboard with remote start & control. Many new items too numerous to list - please call 207-232-8820. ttheriault@theriaultmarine.com

27’ Catalina 27, 1982 Excellent condition. New 15hp diesel, 2011; new main, 2008; roller reefing; spray dodger; 5 bunks; well equipped for day sailing and cruising. $10,500. Beverly, MA. 978-927-3168. jimbev241@aol.com

editor@pointseast.com


30’ Pearson 30, 1977 Well maintained. New 20HP Beta Marine recently installed. Very reiable boat. A must see. $14,999. 207-633-0773 oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com 28’ Sabre, 1974 Well built, clean, comfortable, easy and fun to sail. Full-battened main, 135%, 150%, 165%, and spinnaker. Radio, compass, electronics, Edson wheel, furler, jiffy reefing. Many extras. $8,995. Contact Roger @ 401-465-6242 rogerchauvette@cox.net 28’ Hunter 28.5 Sloop, 1987 Yanmar, 2nd owner, many upgrades, Furuno. Asking $18,000. Contact John Morin 207-6911637. www.wilburyachts.com jmorin@wilburyachts.com 28’ Islander, 1977 Excellent condition. New Yanmar. $19,900. 207-799-3600 theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com

29’ Columbia 8.7 Restored 29 feet/10 foot beam, Universal M-18 diesel, Harken furling, electric head and holding tank, dripless shaft seal with new shaft & prop. All new teak wood inside, new companionway (Lexan), perch seats, new Sunbrella cushions, new dodger and sail covers, new stove, pressure water, new aluminum water tank, new port lights (lexan) Sobstad main, 150% Genoa (good condition) new main and jib halyards, all interior coverings are new. AGM batteries, all new LED interior lights. This boat is completely refurbished and ready to sail. See website for pictures and history of restoration asking $17,900. www.joebednarz.com jbednarz2@gmail.com

www.pointseast.com

30’ Alden Malabar Jr,1990 Mahogany on oak, bronze fastened w/ solid teak decks. Yanmar diesel, complete refinish all woodwork in 2014. Original owner, $84,000. 207-468-2976 schoonersails@gwi.net

30’ Allied Seawind, 1971 Exceptionally stable boat, very smooth. Westerbeke diesel engine, mostly original equipment. Six sails included. Roller furling jib. Sleeps four. New head, holding tank. Motivated seller asking $3,800. Call 603-781-0447 mikefarrell_43@yahoo.com 30’ Cape Dory, 1981 Full batten main, roller furling genoa, roller furling genoa jib, Dutchman for main, staysail. Dodger and sun awning. Aluminum mast and spars, stainless steel standing rigging. Oven/stove, ice box, sink, pressurized water. Marine head with holding tank, shower. Depthsounder, radar, wind/speed/direction, compass, GPS, VHF. Shorepower. Sleeps 5. 12’ fiberglass dinghy. Maine. $24,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-326-4411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 30’ Cape Dory 300 Motorsailer 1989. This boat has benefited from continuous upgrading and exceptional care. Our Little Cape is well equipped with redundant systems for cruising and or living aboard. The boat will include new sails (spring 2014). $62,000. 207799-3600 www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com

31’ Grampian, 1967 Full keel sloop, made in Canada, Atomic 4 engine. Auto helm, roller furling, sleeps 4, GPS, plotter, radar, depth sounder, propane stove. $10,900 OBO. 207-4972701 info@jonesportshipyard.com 32’ Able Marine Whistler, 1986 Madeline Rose is a well built blue water cruiser with classic lines and beautiful interior. The Whistler 32 is regarded as one of the worlds best built sailboats and made to cross the worlds oceans.$39,900. 207-799-3600. www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com

33’ Morgan Sloop, 1979 50hp Perkins, roller furling, windlass. Marina Maintained. Asking $18,000. Contact 207-691-1637 www.wilburyachts.com jmorin@wilburyachts 33’ J/100, 2005 Asking $125k. Major upgrades including 2013 Awlgrip job in Downeast red. Sail inventory includes 2013 carbon racing sails and 2008 North Marathon cruising sails. Available in Stonington; contact Todd Williams at McMichael, 203-610-1215 or email www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m toddw@mcmyacht.com 34’ Sea Sprite 34, 1982 Classic Luders design, Universal diesel, Harken roller furling, sleeps 5. Includes winter frame, 5 jack stands. Good shape. $25,500. Call Bob 508-221-5649. myelayna@aol.com 35’ Pearson (2) From $19,900, well maintained vessels with good ownership & anxiously for sale. Call for details. Gray & Gray 207-363-7997 www.grayandgrayyachts.com

33’ Raider 33, 1983 Built by Cherubini 1983. Excellent condition. Ready for the water. email for info and pictures. terence.sullivan1@verizon.net

35’ Choey Lee Robb, 1963 GLORY is professionally maintained and stored indoors. New Yanmar diesel, electric windlass, new ribs, new prop. $39,500. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-326-4411

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Points East March/April 2015

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www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com

35’ Alberg, 1960 Excellent condition, $17,500. 207497-2701. www.jonesportshipyard.com info@jonesportshipyard.com

914-714-2682 or email www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m johnf@mcmyacht.com 36’ C&C 110, 2005 Asking $139,900. Modern epoxybuilt racer/cruiser with deluxe cherry interior and carbon fiber mast. North 3DL inventory and full Raymarine electronics. Stored indoors for winter, now in Stonington. Contact Rick Fleig at McMichael, 401-743-6318 www.mcmyacht.com rickf@mcmyacht.com

36’ Pearson (2) From $28,500. Well maintained vessels with good ownership & anxiously for sale. Call for details. Gray & Gray 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com

38’ Catalina 387 Sloop, 2003 Outstanding condition, roller furling main & genoa, $114,900. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com

36’ Swanson, 1976 $39,500. Call David Perry CPYB, Robinhood Marine Center 800255-5206 robinhoodyachts.com

38’ Bristol 38.8 Sloop, 1986 44hp diesel, new epoxy bottom, many upgrades, a true classic, $79,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997 www.grayandgrayyachts.com

36’ Sabre Spirit, 2008 A luxury daysailer that is perfect for a sailor who wants traditional style with modern amenities. She is beautiful down below, complimented with ultra-suede upholstery and high-gloss varnish. Sailing is a breeze with the Leisure Furl Boom and Doyle carbon sails. For a personal inspection please contact John Fallon at McMichael,

39’ Concordia Yawl, 1938 JAVA, built by Casey in 1938, is Hull #1 of the Concordia Yawls.

www.MarineSurveys.com Jay Michaud Marblehead 781.639.0001

The collaboration of Ray Hunt and Waldo Howland, a maritime legend, began with JAVA. She is nicely equipped while retaining the simplicity of the original yawls. Professionally maintained and stored indoor. $125,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-326-4411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com

40’ Concordia Motorsailer 1964. Bud Mcintosh built. Forespar furling main, Profurl furling jib. Wind generator, CPT autopilot, Raymarine radar/plotter, Force 10 propane stove, davits, Ideal windlass. Perkins 85hp. Email for additional information, equipment too numerous to list. $37,500 OBO. 727-365-0943 skip1shep@gmail.com 40’ Herreshoff R Boat, 1925 Nat Herreshoff designed and built. She is an excellent example of the Herreshoff genius for beauty, function and quality. Restored in 2001 by Wooden Tangent Yachts using original plans and construction notes. Gamecock is an elegant day sailor that has been well cared for. $125,000. Call 207-2447854 or email jwboatco.com billw@jwboatco.com 40’ Beneteau First 40.7, 2001 An immaculate racer/cruiser meticulously maintained and upgraded. Roomy cockpit and ele-

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96 Points East March/April 2015

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gant interior with 3 cabins. A perfect dual purpose boat. You must see this boat. Located in Wickford, RI. $139,500. Call Rick Fleig, McMichael Yacht Brokers 401743-6318 www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m Rickf@mcmyacht.com 44’ J/44, 1989 Irreplaceable sailing yacht, with numerous upgrades that could be yours for the next blue water passage, a family weekend home, and/or a racing machine. Call John Fallon, McMichael Yacht Brokers 914-714-2682 www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m 46’ Moody 46, 2000 Asking $260k. Turnkey cruiser with generator, air, elec winches, tender and more. Single owner boat with low hours. Center cockpit layout with full canvas enclosure. Contact Tom Bobbin at McMichael Yacht Brokers, 203554-8309 or email www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m tomb@mcmyacht.com

POWER

10’ Inflatables Odyssey Superlight RIB’s now in stock. A 10’2, 310SLR only 79lbs. The right dinghy at an affordable price. For details, contact Great Bay Marine 603-436-5299 www.greatbaymarine.com store@greatbaymarine.com 14’ Penn Yan Runabout, 1950 LITTLE DIPPER was rescued in 2007 and restored. Powered by a 15hp Johnson outboard and trailered on a 2007 Load Rite. Brooksville, Maine. $6,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-326-4411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 17’ Rossiter, 2014 CD Classic Runabout. 7’ beam, 115hp Yamaha 4-stroke, custom trailer. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru, 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com

editor@pointseast.com


17’ Tidewater, 2014 170CC Adventure. 7’2 beam, 70hp 4-stroke Yamaha, custom trailer. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru, 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com

18’ Runabout, 1996 Glass over marine plywood. All plywood coated with epoxy. Two 40hp Honda outboards with 145 hours. Radar, GPS, depth sounder, full mooring cover, trailer. $7,500. Islesboro Marine, 207-734-6433.

19’ Boston Whaler Montauk 2009. Mercury EFI 115 Four Stroke. Less than 100 hours of use. Two tops (Bimini and Tee Top). Rod holders. Garmin GPS/Charts. Marine Radio. Cooler. Full boat cover. Deck chairs. Swim ladder. Many extras. Located in central Vermont. $32,000. 802476-2074 or e-mail. ColDaveF@aol.com 21’6 Tidewater 216CC Beam 8’6, draft 14, fuel capacity 70 gal., max. HP 225. A smooth, dry ride with big fish features; dual livewells, large fish boxes, gunwale rod storage and large console for electronics. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru. 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com

22’ Banks Cove, 2003 Day Boat model with Honda 200hp 4-stroke. $55,000 including trailer. Also 2002 Cabin model $53,000. See website for details. 207-677-2024 www.pemaquidmarine.com info@pemaquidmarine.com

22’ SISU SISU bass boat with cuddy cabin with eve berths; 2012 115hp Evinrude E-TECH; new hydraulic steering, new Standard Horizon GPS; So. Bristol. $29,500. 207-5636331 loon@tidewater.net

23’ Tidewater 230CC LOA 23’, beam 8’10, draft 15, fuel capacity 103 gal., a big 23 footer designed to be a great offshore fishing machine. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru. 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com

24’ Frank Day Jr & Benjamin River, 2001 Arno Day-designed motor launch with center console. Hull is cedar on oak. Powered by a Yanmar 4JH diesel. Equipment includes a depth sounder, compass, VHF radio, and two anchors. $44,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-3264411 www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 24’ Grady White, 1997 w/twin 2008 Yamaha 150’s, w/trailer. $49,999. 207-633-0773 oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com

22’ Norwegian Snekke, 1961 2003 Yanmar diesel. Rides the waves like a leaf. $19,550. Call 207-831-3168 Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales. www.boatinginmaine.com 23’ Rossiter, 2014 Classic Day Boat. 8’5 beam, 250hp Yamaha XCA, custom trailer. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru, 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com

24’ Mahogany Runabout, 1974 Bass Harbor Boat Company built mahogany runabout, reconstructed 2006-2008. Recently repowered with 350hp Mercruiser. $65,000. 207-244-7854 or email billw@jwboatco.com

25’ Padebco, NewDesign the boat of your dreams. Padebco Custom Boats offers fiberglass 21 to 32 foot custom cruisers. Down East style, great lines, no two alike. Padebco 207-529-5106 Padebco.com 25’ Rosborough, 2006 Volvo D-3 400hrs. Garmin. Separate head, V-berth, galley. Asking $79,900. Contact John Morin 207691-1637. www.wilburyachts.com 25’ Ranger Tugs R25 Classic, 2008. $104,500. Great condition, well-maintained, one owner. Cummins diesel engine, 150hp, 59 hours. Raymarine C120 Nav Pkg, A/C with reverse cycle heat, marine head, electric stove, refrigerator, bimini. 2GPH at 7.5 knots, range 250 knots. Located in Salem, MA, at Winter Island Yacht Yard. www.wiyy.net/ranger-tugs/35ranger-tug-models/53-pre-ownedranger.html rangertugs@wiyy.net 25’ Maritime Skiff Challenger 2009. Cuddy cabin w/double berth, marine head w/holding tank. Pilot house has galley unit, helm & companion seating, stowage. 2 aft-facing cockpit seats, transom bench seating, stowage. 83 gallons/fuel, 225 Honda 4-stroke outboard, 20hp Honda 4-stroke auxiliary. Plotter/radar, sonar, weather, depth. Located in Maine, $69,000. www.atlanticboat.com brokerage@atlanticboat.com

25’ Grady White Islander 252 1986. Powered by two 2001 Honda 130hp four stroke outboards mounted on a bracket. Transom was rebuilt and reinforced in 2009 and the boat includes a Venture trailer. $11,900. 207-799-3600. www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com

BOAT OWNERS, FUEL PROBLEMS? SAVE YOUR FUEL!

FUEL SOLUTIONS WE CAN HELP! Water - Contaminants - Sediment? We clean & process your fuel on-site, removing water contaminants and sediment, gas or diesel.

LAND

www.pointseast.com

Buying a used boat, clean the fuel first! 508-641-0749 978-423-5306

SEA

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Aventura Florida in 2013. Meet boat there and cruise North in Spring. Call 207-831-3168, Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales www.boatinginmaine.com

25’ Sea Fox 257 CC, 2004 With twin 150hp Merc salt water series - less than 100 hours, 2013 Load Rite tandem trailer, full electronics. Well equipped for tournament fishing: battle station, down riggers, center rigger, out riggers, air horn etc. Too much to list. Vessel has been well maintained Great fishing and cruising. $73,800 207-633-2922 jackcogswell41@yahoo.com

26’ General Marine, 1990 200hp Volvo diesel, 1800 original hrs. Gentleman’s fishing boat for 20 years. Refit for 6 passenger tour boat. Comfotable seating, Bow thruster. Clean boat w/maintenance records. $48,000. 207468-2976 kennebunkportcoastaltours.com schoonersails@gwi.net 26’ Mako 621, 1987 MAKAYLA’S WAY is ready for fishing. Engines used only one season since installation results in very low hours. Dual axle bunk trailer included. $29,500. 207-244-7854 or email billw@jwboatco.com

26’ Grady White, 2000 265 Express with twin 200hp Yamaha HPDI outboards. Professionally maintained yearly. Low hours. Basic electronics. Very clean. Brunswick, ME. $48,900. Call 207-729-3303 www.bamforthmarine.com salesandservice@bamforthmarine.com 26’ Fortier, 1997 The Fortier 26, an Eldredge-McInnis design, is a proven design for the serious bass fisherman, picnic boat or weekend cruiser. Single diesel, $68,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com 27’ Eastern Lobster-style, 2005 Popular Eastern 27 Lobster model with open sides and large cockpit. Navy blue hull, 275hp Bravo III Mercruiser I/O. Radar, chartplotter, Depth and speed via Raymarine C80 network. $49,500. Call David Perry, 800-255-5206 www.robinhoodmarinecenter.com 27’ Eastern Lobster-style, 2005 $52,500. Call David Perry Robinhood Marine Center 800-2555206. www.robinhoodmarinecenter.com 27’ Picnic Launch, 1908 Raised forward deck, open cockpit picnic launch, two berths, head, with a new 3 cylinder Universal diesel. Farrin’s Boatshop, 207563-5510. www.FarrinsBoatshop.com

CUSTOM DOCKS,RAMPS & FLOATS

28’ Albin 28, 1998 Very clean, yard maintained, blue topsides, radar, 2GPS, fathometer, SS radio, 2 showers, head, swim platform, 300 turbo diesel, 1000 hours. $46,500 OBO. 508-5489418 or email bluechip7676@hotmail.com 29’ Boston Whaler Outrage 2002. with twin Yamaha 225 4S engines. Includes full head, stove, refrigerator, microwave, radar, GPS and many more great features. A real fishing boat that will sleep two. Holds 300 gallons of fuel and 100 gallons of water. Currently stored on Cape Cod. This 2002 boat is in great shape with a complete service and storage history. Call John at 617-835-6100 for more details. Listed for $55,000. johnbetz9@outlook.com 30’ Mainship Pilot, 1999 This is a great boat. Well laid out and lots of features. Priced to sell. $69,500. 207-633-0773. www.oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com

31’ Blue Seas, 1989 Cummins diesel. $74,000. Went to Accredited Marine Surveyor

Kent Thurston

32’ Cruiser Espirit Express 1988. Well maintained and much updated; with many extras. Powered by 350 crusader with low hours. Full canvas very clean. For more information call Tom at 774930-4918 before 8 pm. riverside92553@yahoo.com

32’ Nordic Tug, 2006 Cummins 270hp, low hours (580), water purifier, stove/microwave oven, full electronics, Bose, Toshiba TV, 3GPH, Lightly used. Excellent shape. $195,000. 860-550-3682. lesserlight1941@gmail.com 32’ Newman Hard Top Cruiser New Yanmar 6BY2-260 (220HP), upgraded electronics, bull varnish work (high end), in the water, ready to go. Call for details. Farrin’s Boatshop 207-563-5510 www.farrinsboatshop.com 32’ Down East New 32’ Carroll Lowell Down East design, cedar on white oak, silicon bronze fastenings, hull, trunk, deck, done, fuel tanks, shaft, rudder installed, will finish to your custom design, work or pleasure. 508-224-3709. www.by-the-sea.com/karbottboatbuilding/ jmkarbott@aol.com

20 years experience - all vessels of wood and fiberglass to 65 feet

Member of SAMS and ABYC Serving Maine

207-294-2410

www.ShapeFabrication.com 98 Points East March/April 2015

(207) 487.1783 maineboatstuff.kt@gmail.com

www.maineboatstuff.com

editor@pointseast.com


207-633-0773 www.oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com

34’ Silverton Convertible, 1987 Twin 350 Crusaders - fresh water cooled. Yard maintained. This boat is in excellent condition. Asking $18,900. Located in Yarmouth, Maine. Call 207-415-3342 robert.l.daggett@gmail.com

34’ Mainship Pilot, 2003 Green hull, 900 hrs., Gen, AC, bow thruster, Garmin GPS and radar. 370hp Yanmar. In the water, Boothbay Harbor. $115,000. 207462-5660 / 5661 ernestine@jmcamper.com 34.5’ Avanti Flybridge, 1996 Dual control stations, twin 454 gas engines, fresh water cooled, w/many options included, yacht condition. Asking $33,500. Located at Carousel Marina, Boothbay Harbor, Maine. 207-633-2922 jackcogswell41@yahoo.com 36’ Stanley, 1998 Great example of the classic Stanley 36. Comfortable cruiser for four and roomy day boat. Nice details including teak pilot house & cockpit sole. Brand new Awlgrip and Cummins repower (2012). $320,000. Call 207-244-7854 or email jwboatco.com billw@jwboatco.com 37’ Paul Chapman Workboat 2011. New. Cedar on oak, CAT. Contact John Morin, 207-6911637 www.wilburyachts.com

38’ Bayliner 3818 Motoryacht 1988. Well maintained boat with lots of room. Great for cruising or cottage on the water. $59,900.

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diesel engines, and is comfortably equipped for cruising or living aboard. $89,900. 207-799-3600. www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com 42’ Marine Trader, 1984 Twin diesels. $75,000. 207-6330773 oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com

38’ Fisher Fairways Trawler 1978. Twin Ford Sabre diesels, roomy, comfortable, economical, stable. Many upgrades 20102013. New price, $74,500. Illness forces sale. Call 207-497-2701 or email info@jonesportshipyard.com

38’ Chris Craft Catalina 381 1986. $47,000. 207-497-2701. www.jonesportshipyard.com info@jonesportshipyard.com

47’ Novi Flybridge Cruiser 2003. CAT diesel. Composite overbuilt hull, genset, many upgrades. Asking $133,700. Contact John Morin 207-691-1637. www.wilburyachts.com jmorin@wilburyachts.com

OTHER

10 1/2’ & 12’ Skiffs Maine style and quality. Epoxy bonded plywood/oak, S/S screws. Easy rowing and towing, steady underfoot. Primer paint. $1,150 and $1,500. Maxwell’s Boat Shop. Rockland, Maine. 207-390-0300. jerrymax@roadrunner.com

9’ Columbia Rowing/Sailing Dinghy A very nice fiberglass dinghy. Varnished mahogany rudder & centerboard; fir/oak mast & boom. Sail is in like-new condition. A boat cover too. $1,850/OBO. Call/text Carl at 603-548-2949 or email. carlrstevens@gmail.com

List Your Boat People buy boats in the wintertime. List your boat now. Do not wait until Spring. Call John Holmes to arrange your meeting at 207-899-0909. www.boatinginmaine.com

MAINE CAT 38’ Waterfront Property Our H&H Osmond Beal makes a great live-aboard. Check out our website. $170,000. Call Tim for more info. 603-770-8378. www.sites.google.com/site/dotgale38/ dotgaleforsale@comcast.net

Bareboat Charter Bahamas MC 30, MC 41 (2015)

ALL NEW MC 38 (2015)

38’ Stanley, 1984 Stanley 38 Fishwife. First Stanley 38 built in 1984 and owned by the same family since her launch. She is in excellent condition. $255,000. 207-244-7854 or billw@jwboatco.com

41’ Maxum 4100 SCB, 1999 Well maintained, clean and offers a very functional layout. She is powered by efficient Cummins

Enjoy the protected Sea of Abaco aboard our easy-to-sail, unique, open bridgedeck catamarans. Dramatic beaches, beautiful reef life for snorkeling and restful anchorages.

www.mecat.com 1-888-832-2287 Points East March/April 2015

99


14’ Wheelbarrow Boat Lowell built. Designed by Pete Culler, 1978. Lapstrake skiff, cedar on oak. Professionally maintained, in excellent condition. Sprit rig and sail complete. Includes oars and trailer. A very versatile, and seaworthy craft. Row, sail, and launch from a beach. See the ‘Complete Design Catalog-Pete Cullers Boats’ by John Burke, for complete article and plans. $5000. Email for pictures and more info: oggci@yahoo.com 16hp Beta Marine Diesel with 3.5 hrs; transmission and all the installation gear; new controls, exhaust muffler and riser, fuel and raw water filters...direct replace for the Atomic 4. $6,500 firm. 603343-6299 afternoons. allenstorms44@gmail.com Boat Dock for Sale Eliot, ME, prime Great Cove Boat Club slip for sale. Perfect location, 40 x 15 slip with the best views & deep water access. Center of the marina - B Dock. Plenty of parking, club house, FT manager, picnic area, haul out & fuel onsite. $75,000. Please email www.greatcove.org debbie@necaptains.com Veterinary Emergency/Specialty Maine Veterinary Referral Emergency Center specializing in canine and feline internal medicine, neurology, neurosurgery, surgery, CT scanning and MR imaging and

walk-in emergency services. 24/7/365. 1500 Technology Way in Scarborough off Route One. www.maineveterinaryreferralcenter.com

painting, brightwork, electrical, engine work, rigging & tuning, un/stepping masts. Padebco Custom Boats at 207-529-5106 Padebco.com

Boat slip for sale. 44’ slip at Signal Point Marina in Boothbay Harbor. Asking $9000. Contact Ed Riley at 207-415-4282 for details. edriley9@me.com

Storage - Inside & Outdoor Reserve 2014-2015 inside and outdoor storage space now. Full service boat yard, winterizing, spring commissioning, mast un/stepping, spar storage. Competitive rates, professional work. Padebco Custom Boats 207-5295106 Padebco.com

9.8hp Tohatsu Long Shaft Outboard Like new, 3 hours of use 2008. Includes standard and extra power prop. for sailboats, 4 gal. remote tank, electric or manual start. NADA: $955.- List: $1,495. Matsconn@gmail.com

Moorings - Round Pond ME Seasonal and transient moorings available in well-protected Round Pond Harbor; gateway to the Penobscot Bay cruising grounds. Max 65’. Walk to restaurants. Padebco Custom Boats at 207529-5106. Padebco.com

14’ Wooden Rowboat Two rowing stations, fiberglass outside of hull. Two sets of oars. Call for details. Farrin’s Boatshop 207-563-5510 www.farrinsboatshop.com Mechanics Needed Year-round work. 100 year old business storing 80 boats inside. Training and schooling available, experience a plus. Health, 401K and competitive rates. F. J. Dion Yacht Yard - Salem, MA. 978-7440844 ext 203 fjdions@msn.com Repower, Refit & Repairs Experienced full-service boat yard - wood, fiberglass, power & sail. Carpentry, hull maintenance,

Pre-purchase surveys ● Insurance surveys Damage surveys ● Appraisals Marine Consulting ● New Construction surveys Capt. Tony Theriault, NAMS-CMS

Selling or Buying? We are always happy to discuss either when it comes to quality, well-maintained boats. Both recreational and commercial. Consider utilizing the services of a broker who shares your passion for boats and boating. David Etnier Boat Brokerage. Contact David at 207522-7572. www.etnierboats.com david@etnierboats.com

Listings Wanted Quality commercial fishing vessel listings wanted. Maine fishermen should consider listing their vessels with David Etnier Boat Brokerage for prompt service and knowledgeable and effective sales effort. Reasonable commission. Please contact David directly to learn more. 207-522-7572. www.etnierboats.com david@etnierboats.com Slips & Moorings Enjoy the NH Seacoast’s only full service marina, limited availability, affordable rates, complete amenities. Great Bay Marine 603-4365299 www.greatbaymarine.com cs@greatbaymarine.com V8 350 Block Fresh water cooled, wet exhaust, B/W gear running well when replaced with a diesel engine. Farrin’s Boatshop, 207-563-5510. www.farrinsBoatshop.com Delivery Captain Your power or sail boat delivered wherever you need it. Owners welcome on deliveries. Also available for instruction. Captain Tim. 603770-8378. dotgale38.googlepages.com tphsails@comcast.net

GULF OF MAINE BOAT SURVEYORS AND MARINE CONSULTANTS (617) 823-2936 (cell) www.gulfofmaineboatsurveyors.com Surveys - Insurance claims - Repair monitoring - Maintenance reviews Refit, repower, & repair consultation - Witness testimonies - Work orders

Bernie Feeney, SAMS, AMS 207.232.8820

Cape Elizabeth, Maine

www.theriaultmarine.com

TURNSTONE MARINE SURVEY

Serving New England, NY and NJ

One of the best kept secrets on the Saco River

LLC

Professional Marine Surveys

MARSTON’S MARINA

508.737.5052

Dockage - Moorings - Gas - Ice

www.turnstonemarinesurvey.com 100 Points East March/April 2015

www.marstonsmarina.com

207-283-3727 editor@pointseast.com


Canvas Cleaning This year, have Gemini Canvas service your bimini or dodger. Professionally cleaned w/ waterrepellent treatment. No dip-dunk tanks, only industry approved cleaners that work. We ship UPS, call us at 207-596-7705. www.geminicanvas.com Fiberglass Repair Position Permanent, year-round position available for Fiberglass/Composite Structure Repair Technician. Yankee Marina is a full-service marina and boatyard. Please send resume with cover letter summarizing work experience to www.yankeemarina.com deborah@yankeemarina.com

Moorings Available Boothbay Region Boatyard has seasonal moorings available, $950. We are located in well protected Ebenecook Harbor, with free launch service, parking, showers, laundry and a well stocked ship store. Email Amy or call us at 207-633-2970. www.brby.com dockmaster@brby.com Seasonal Moorings Handy Boat as one of Maine’s premier boat yards, located in the heart of Casco Bay, has seasonal moorings available for up to 65’. Enjoy all our new restaurant and marine facilities have to offer. Call now for this great opportunity. 207-781-5110 http://handyboat.com/

6000. 107 Elm Street, Camden, Maine wwwmainecoastconstruction.com Boat Transport Best rates, 30 years experience. Fully insured, reliable service, professional drivers. Nation-wide and Ocean freight. Rob Lee, Maritime. 508-758-9409. www.marinasandtransport.com boattransport@comcast.net

More Heated Storage at Gamage Shipyard Worry-free heated storage, conscientious care in new building. South Bristol offers ideal location amid Midcoast Maine’s spectacular cruising grounds. Competitive rates. Fine repair services, too. Reserve now: 207-644-8181. gamageshipyard.com gamage@tidewater.net Handyman Service Besides residential and commercial construction, Maine Coast Construction also offers a Handyman Service to take care of those maintenance jobs on your list so you’re free to pursue your passion - boats & boating. Contact us with your to-do list today. Serving Mid Coast Maine since 1968. 207-236-

Selling your boat? Do you have a boat to sell or looking to buy? Call 207-831-3168. Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales www.boatinginmaine.com

Are you looking for: • Boats? • Moorings? • Parts? • Repair? Check out the Points East Marine Directory for a categorized and sorted list of marine vendors from Maine to Connecticut! www.pointseast.com/directory.shtml

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Points East March/April 2015 101


Advertiser index Allied Boat Works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54

Handy Boat Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 104

Alpenglow Marine Lights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16

Hansen Marine Engineering . . . . . . . .3, 72, 96

Ocean Pursuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47

Arborvitae Woodworking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88

Haut Insurance Agency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66

Oldport Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41

Atlantic Boat Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59

Herreshoff Marine Museum . . . . . . . . . .76, 88

Padebco Custom Yachts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28

Bayview Rigging & Sails . . . . . . . . . . . . .68, 89

Hinckley Yacht Services . . . . . . . . . . . . .41, 62

Parker’s Boat Yard, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49

Ocean Point Marina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93

Beta Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73

Hodgdon Yacht Services . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 62

PE Luke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88

Black Rock Sailing School . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61

International Chrome Plating Co. . . . . . . . . .16

Penobscot Marine Museum . . . . . . . . . . . . .89

Bluenose Yacht Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71

Island Mooring Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89

Pierce Yacht Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44

Boat U.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13

J-Way Enterprises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41

Pope Sails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43

Boatwise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72

J.R. Overseas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95

Portland Yacht Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35

Bohndell Sails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63

Jackson’s Hardware & Marine . . . . . . . . . . .78

Redfern Boat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18

Bowden Marine Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20

John Williams Boat Brokerage . . . . . . . . . . .92

Reo Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75

Brewer Plymouth Marine . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 62

John Williams Boat Company . . . . . . . . . . . .24

Robinhood Marine Center .3, 12, 41, 65, 89, 93

Brewer Yacht Yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89, 103

Jonesport Shipyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18

Royal River Boatyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 24

Brooklin Inn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22

Journey’s End Marina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62,63

Rumery's Boat Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25, 41

Burr Brothers Boats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41

Kent Thurston Marine Surveyor . . . . . . . . . .98

SailMaine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88

Capt. Jay Michaud Marine Surveys . . . . . . .96

Kingman Yacht Center .3, 41, 48, 62, 64, 65, 75

Sailmaking Support Systems . . . . . . . . . . . .20

Carousel Marina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60

Kittery Point Yacht Yard . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 64

Salty Boats of Maine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28

Chase, Leavitt & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14, 96

Landing Boat Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34

Scandia Yacht Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93

Chebeague Island Boat Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . .22

Langley Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66

Seal Cove Boatyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29, 41

Cisco Brewers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77

Lock One Marina & Shipyard, LLC . . . . . . . .73

Shape Fabrication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98

Conanicut Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41

M2M2B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57

Sound Marine Diesel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73

Corinthian Classic Yacht Regatta . . . . . . . . .15

Maine Cat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99

South Port Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16, 41

CPT Autopilot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .97

Maine Coast Construction . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43

Southern Maine Marine Services . . . . . . . . .38

Crocker's Boatyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41

Maine Sailing Partners . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23, 88

Sunset Marina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20

Custom Communications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78

Maine Veterinary Referral Center . . . . . . . . .18

SW Boatworks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59

Custom Float Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39

Maine Yacht Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31

The Apprenticeshop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89

Dark Harbor Boat Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47

Manchester Marine . . . . . . . . . . .38, 41, 65, 73

The Marine Museum at Fall River . . . . . . . . .88

Duchak Maritime Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . .97

Marblehead Trading Company . . . . . . . . .3, 65

The Yacht Connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93

EasyBailer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88

Marion Bermuda Race . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55

Theriault Marine Consulting . . . . . . . . . . . .100

Everglades Boats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9

Marston’s Marina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .100

Traditional Boat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47

Farrin’s Boatshop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30

McMichael’s Yacht Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21

Turnstone Marine Survey, LLC . . . . . . . . . .100

Fatty Knees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89

Merri-Mar Yacht Basin . . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 62, 75

Wayfarer Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 48, 65

Fred J. Dion Yacht Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41, 62

Metinic Yacht Brokers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92

Webhannet River Boat Yard . . . . . . . . . . .45,88

Front Street Shipyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11

Mid-Coast School of Technology . . . . . . . . . .49

Whiting Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 73

Gamage Shipyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95

Midcoast Marine Electronics . . . . . . . . . . . . .48

Wilbur Yachts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49

Gemini Canvas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47

Moose Island Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41

Winter Island Yacht Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . .28, 41

Gray & Gray, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92

Mystic Shipyard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 51

Winterport Boat Yard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14

Great Bay Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 36, 41, 75

Nantucket Bagg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88

Women Under Sail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36

Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92

Navtronics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48, 65

Wooden Boat Show . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12

Gulf of Maine Boat Surveyors . . . . . . . . . . .100

New England Boatworks . . . . . . . . . . .3, 19, 41

Yacht North Charters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22

Hallett Canvas & Sails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17

New England Marine & Industrial . . . . . . . . .69

Yankee Marina & Boatyard . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 65

Hamilton Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2

Niemiec Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3, 41, 62

102 Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


MARINAS Come see why we’re more than

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Maine Maine Freeport South Freeport South Maryland Maryland Oxford Oxford Massachusetts Massachusetts N. Falmouth N. Falmouth Plymouth Plymouth Salem Salem

65-3181 207) 8865-3181 ((207) 26-5101 410) 2226-5101 ((410) 64-6327 508) 5564-6327 ((508) 46-4500 508) 7746-4500 ((508) 40-9890 978) 7740-9890 ((978)

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71-5563 516) 6671-5563 ((516) 477-9594 (631) (631) 477-9594 (914) 698-0295 (914) 698-0295 (516) 883-7800 (516) 883-7800 (631) 477-0828 (631) 477-0828

Rhode Island Rhode Island Barrington Barrington Greenwich Bay Greenwich Bay Portsmouth Portsmouth Warwick Warwick Wickford Wickford

46-1600 401) 2246-1600 ((401) 84-1810 401) 8884-1810 ((401) 83-3551 401) 6683-3551 ((401) 84-0544 401) 8884-0544 ((401) 84-7014 401) 8884-7014 ((401)


104 Points East March/April 2015

editor@pointseast.com


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