SpinSheet June 2014

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IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 20 | ISSUE 6

features

40

38

Over and Out

His writing career started at SpinSheet, but it’s far from over. by Andy Schell

40

Don’t Sell Your Boat, Mister

An ad that reads “boat for sale” sparks thoughts about desire, happiness, and why you shouldn’t skip that Tuesday night race. by “Saving Sailing” author Nicholas Hayes

42

42

Summer Cruising Section

ARC DelMarVa ralliers’ preparation for adventure, sailing with teenagers (not as bad as you think), and why crowded or not, you should sail to St. Michaels. by Molly Winans, Cindy Wallach, and Eric Vohr

48

Stuck in the Mud with Dad A springtime father-daughter adventure involved dead air, current, mud, and lasting memories. by Sheridan Monroe

68

68

The Crazy Chesapeake Kicked In at the NOOD

Chesapeake sailors topped 10 of 14 classes at the 2014 Sperry Top-Sider Annapolis NOOD in May. Find the full recap here.

72

Bermuda Bound!

Whether in the Annapolis to Bermuda (June 6) or the Newport to Bermuda Race (June 20), racing sailors from the Bay prep to sail long and fast.

on the cover

Al Schreitmueller snapped this month’s cover shot at the start of the 2012 Annapolis to Bermuda Race. See page 72 for news about the June event.

8 June 2014 SpinSheet

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departments 12 14 15 24 26

cruising scene

50 Charter Notes: Missing the Boat 52 A Foot in Each World by Eva Hill 53 Bluewater Dreaming: The Atlantic 10K and

Editor’s Note

Readers Write Dock Talk

Offshore Fitness by Cindy Fletcher-Holden

Start Sailing Now by Russ Borman Chesapeake Calendar sponsored by the

Boatyard Bar & Grill

36 Chesapeake Tide Tables sponsored by Annapolis School of Seamanship 88 Biz Buzz 89 Brokerage Section: 295 Used Boats for Sale

56 Cruising Club Notes sponsored by Norton Yachts

racing beat

67 Youth and Collegiate Focus 68 Chesapeake Racing Beat: NOOD,

Bermuda Races, AYC Overnight, and more.

sponsored by Pettit

100 Subscription Form 102 Marketplace 105 Index of Advertisers 106 Aft Deck: SpinSheet Summer

83 PHRF Racing 201 by James E. Schrager 85 Southern Bay Racing by Lin McCarthy 86 The Small Boat Scene by Kim Couranz

Cover Contest

Fun videos and more! Visit spinsheet.com

GOT SAILS? NEED HELP? Cruiser? Racer? Daysailer? If you sail, Scott Allan and his staff can help! P P P P P With four decades of experience, assisting customers with their sail needs, we can help you too. Let us be your sail advocates and you will learn what is best for your boat.

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612 Third Street, Suite 3C, Annapolis, MD 21403 (410) 216-9309 spinsheet.com Associate Publisher JC McCracken jc@spinsheet.com

PUBLISHER Mary Iliff Ewenson mary@spinsheet.com

EDITOR Molly Winans, molly@spinsheet.com SENIOR EDITOR Duffy Perkins, duffy@spinsheet.com

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Steve Allan Lisa Borre Kim Couranz Eva Hill Fred Hecklinger Tracy Leonard Andy Schell Cindy Wallach

Nathan Bickell Franny Kupersmith Lin McCarthy Ed Weglein (Historian)

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Walter Cooper Dan Phelps Al Schreitmueller Mark Talbott CONTRIBUTING ARTIST Merf Moerschel DISTRIBUTION Jerry Harrison, Ed and Elaine Henn, Ken Jacks, Merf Moerschel, Dad’s Delivery, and Norm Thompson

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Beth Crabtree, beth@spinsheet.com FOUNDING EDITOR Dave Gendell Director of Sales and Marketing Dana Scott, dana@spinsheet.com ADVERTISING SALES Brooke King, brooke@spinsheet.com ART DIRECTOR / PRODUCTION MANAGER Cory Deere, cory@spinsheet.com

SpinSheet is a monthly magazine for and about Chesapeake Bay sailors. Reproduction of any part of this publication is strictly prohibited without prior consent of the officers. SpinSheet Publishing Company accepts no responsibility for discrepancies in advertisements. SpinSheet is available by first class subscription for $28 per year, and back issues are available for $4 each. Mail payment to SpinSheet Subscriptions, 612 Third St., 3C Annapolis, MD, 21403. SpinSheet is distributed free at more than 750 establishments along the Chesapeake and in a few choice spots beyond the Bay. Businesses or organizations wishing to distribute SpinSheet should contact the office.

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10 June 2014 SpinSheet

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• We’re racing five nights a week, and we have the pictures to prove it! Photos and videos from around the Bay are online … how does your crew look this year? http://spinsheet.com/photos • The J/22 North American Championships were held over the weekend of May 17-18. While there wasn’t a lot of wind, there was still a lot of fun. And we were there to capture it. http://spinsheet.com/j22-north-americanchampionship-photos/ • The ELF Classic Regatta always brings the most beautiful boats to the Bay for a unique, gorgeous sailing experience. http://spinsheet.com/elf-classic-regatta-photos/ • Columbus Day came early to the Chesapeake when reproductions of the Nina and Pinta arrived on the shores of St. Michaels. http://spinsheet.com/columbus-day-comes-early/ • Need a good docking tutorial? Let Captain Ron show you how. http://spinsheet.com/docking-101-captain-ron/

From a recent poll:

What’s your boat’s go-to beverage? • Beer in cans: 43% • Beer in bottles: 6% • Rum and anything: 19% • Gin and Tonics: 1% • White Wine: 4% • Red Wine: 4% • Sodas and Gatorades for this crew! 5% • Red Bull: 1% • Water: 17%

To cast your vote in a new poll each week, visit spinsheet.com

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SpinSheet June 2014 11


Editor’s Notebook

by Molly Winans

Fathers and Friends

T

he sun set over the lovely anguests, give tours, and test the anchor chorage. The bartender cleaned and steaming lights. When we clinked up in the twilight. A dozen glasses in the cockpit, Charlie lifted his stray racers lingered and finished their Bloody Mary and said, “Here’s to new drinks. A man wearing Bermuda red friends.” pants tugged at my sleeve and said, An old friend crossed my path the “You don’t know it yet, but you’re same week. While teaching sailing at coming to a party on our boat.” It was Annapolis Sailing School 20 years ago, not the first time at a regatta party’s end that I was asked to come have a drink on a boat. It was just the first time that the guy who asked was 87 years old. When I penned my request for family sailing stories in honor of Father’s Day (June 15), I had no idea that I would end up walking into two terrific ones. Meeting Charlie Deakyne and his two sons Scott and Doug at the SCC Gibson Island Spring Race was one of them. As you can imagine from the party invitation, Charlie is a fit octogenarian. He doesn’t hesitate when stepping from the dock to boat, over the lifelines and across the cabintop of his neighbor’s boat, and then back over the lifelines, and down to the deck of his own rafted-up boat, Scrim##Griffen in his Blue Jay, set to launch Memorial Day. shaw, the Alberg 37 he bought new in 1975. “It was a perfect day for sailing for us,” said his son Scott, who’s I used to see Eric Richardson every in his 60s and lives on the Eastern weekend. These days, I only “see” him Shore. The light winds made for a on Facebook. When I saw his post pleasant sail. Charlie was able to steer; about a backyard boatbuilding project, I that’s what he likes best. And the sent a note to ask for the story. Deakyne men took first place in their On Craigslist, Eric found a partly class. “We do this for our dad,” his son rehabbed 14-foot Blue Jay dinghy, told me. complete with parts and a trailer. He Charlie gave me a tour of the old bought it for $300. For his son, who boat, with her oil lamp (which emits caught the sailing bug last summer at heat, he says), wooden cabinetry, and YMCA Camp Letts, it was an 11th plaid upholstery. I watched him easily birthday surprise March 12. Eric and climb up and down the companionway his wife Jenny didn’t say anything and at least three times to fetch beers for waited for their son to notice. “Griffen

12 June 2014 SpinSheet

looked through the door and saw the boat, and his jaw dropped,” Eric says. “He freaked out.” What started as a father-son project has turned into a family project. Eric’s dad, who’s in his late 80s, is finishing the centerboard cap. Griffen sands and paints. Eric does most everything else, which is more work than he expected — a familiar boatbuilding refrain. Eric’s mom has also reacquainted herself with sandpaper. The boat sits in the backyard, and various freshly varnished wooden parts hang to dry in the shed. “It’s a pain in the neck to paint the inside,” says Eric. “But then once it’s done, it looks really nice. When I start to see how it’s going to look in the end, I get excited.” He hopes that Griffen can sail the boat by himself off the neighborhood beach by the end of the summer if not sooner. He’s been mostly patient with the long process, but sometimes, his son says, “Can’t we just go now without the wood?” As this magazine hits the docks, at a launch party, the family will sail together, with a wooden block from granddad’s boat (circa 1942) on the new Blue Jay. One more memorable story came via email in response to my call for family sailing tales. A 14-year-old sailor, Sheridan Monroe, wrote about a spring sailing adventure with her father, Scott (“Stuck in the Mud with Dad” on page 48). If you haven’t been stuck in the mud yet with your dad, it’s time to take him, or someone else’s dad, sailing on the Chesapeake. Happy Father’s Day!

spinsheet.com


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SpinSheet Readers Write

I

A Better Farewell

n your “Farewell to Friends” about Steve Black, you fail to mention why you’re saying farewell to Black. If this was an attempt at an obituary, it is a feeble one indeed since there is nothing about when, where, or why. What was his age? Where did he live? Any survivors? C’mon, now, even amateur writers and editors can do better than that. You improved a bit with your farewell to Tara Quinn who, incidentally, was a special sailmaker because she would also pick up and deliver your sails personally at your home. But announcing her untimely death from “ALS” in the very last paragraph? Is there no Journalism 101 style manual at your office? Jack Sherwood Severna Park, MD

T

hank you for pointing out our omissions. For the record, Steve died March 17 after a long battle with cancer. As he requested, there was no memorial service. As for Tara, memorial donations may be sent to alshopefoundation.org. ~M.W.

14 June 2014 SpinSheet

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Summer Cover Contest

f you are a photographer, turn to page 106 to enter SpinSheet’s Summer Cover Contest.

##Photo by Mark Baummer

W

SpinSheet Seeks Writers

e have an amazing stable of freelance writers at SpinSheet, but we could always use more. If you are a racing sailor who likes to write, especially about the Eastern Shore or the Northern Bay scene, we would like to talk to you. We would also like to talk to anyone with an environmental background who wants to write about topics of interest to sailors. When it comes to qualifications, we are more interested in your sailing resume than your publishing one. Email molly@spinsheet.com if you are interested.

spinsheet.com


DOCK TALK

Summer Sailstice by Beth Crabtree

O

thers may call it the summer solstice, but those who live life on the slant will want to call it the Summer Sailstice. Why? Because since 2001 Summer Sailstice has been helping sailors at the grassroots level to organize sailing celebrations worldwide. The goals are to help sailors connect with each other, introduce our sport to the non-sailing world, and encourage care for the waters upon which we sail. How can you join the fun? It can be as simple as an evening sail on your own boat or as complex as a multi-day cruise with all your sailing friends. The point is to connect with other sailors in a way that’s right for you. And the idea is catching on; the number of participating boats has grown from 200 in 2001 to 5000 boats with nearly 20,000 sailors in 2013. This year registered participants hail from all across the U.S., including Hawaii and Alaska. Additionally there are registered sailing groups in the

United Kingdom, Croatia, Mexico, Israel, and even the Marshall Islands. “It’s been great to watch Summer Sailstice grow, connecting more sailors across the country and around the world in a common celebration. We have sailors who have participated all 14 years and clubs and fleets where it’s become an annual tradition. As hoped, we’re getting closer to a truly global event showcasing all of sailing with all sailors sailing and celebrating ‘together’ everywhere. We’re also gratified to be able to reward participation with the prize list — six or seven Sailstice winners have enjoyed free BVI charters. Plus hundreds of participants have joined to support Sailors for the Sea, which educates boaters about protecting the oceans,” says Sailstice founder John Arndt, associate publisher of the West Coast sailing magazine Latitude 38. Arndt has logged thousands of miles racing and cruising and enjoys sailing all kinds of boats. Bay-based groups that have already registered with Summer Sailstice include Hamp-

ton Roads’ Fleet 30 gathering at Pirate’s Beach, Chesapeake Bay NonSuch spring rendezvous in Solomons and Getaway Sailing in Baltimore. Register today and show the world that the Chesapeake ranks among the top sailing spots in the world! This year, June 21, the longest day of the year, falls on a Saturday, and there are plenty of sailing events planned for that weekend, including a demo day at Annapolis Yacht Sales, Stingray Harbour YC’s annual summer cruise, the Jeanneau Sailboat Owner’s combined Chesapeake Rendezvous and Summer Sailstice threeday event, and Annapolis Community Boating’s pirate-themed day at Ellen Moyer Nature Park and Boating Center. Sailors who use the official Sailstice website to organize or join an event, or even to just share their plans, will be entered to win great prizes, such as a windlass, SUP, BoatU.S. membership, radar reflector, sailing knife, and so much more.

Visit summersailstice.com and spinsheet.com/sailstice for updates on how Chesapeake sailors are getting in on the action!

##What’s the best playground on the planet? The Chesapeake! Let’s prove it by signing up at summersailstice.com Photo by CB2

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SpinSheet June 2014 15


DOCKTALK

SpinSheet Century Club Update: The Endless Summer is On

W

ith temperatures in the low 80s for multiple days now, it’s clear that winter is finally over and spring is here to stay. Around the SpinSheet office we’re tracking days on the water, getting all the Vitamin D and saltwater facials that cold weather prevented. And happily, we aren’t the only ones. At present, the SpinSheet Century Club has 45 members signed up, logging their days on the water and making it a point to get out on the Bay. Geographer and Eastport local Gretchen Esbensen has put in a total of 26 days so far, while Severn Sailing Association’s rear commodore and Laser Radial fleet captain Dorian Haldeman has 21 days on the books. T2PTV producer and videographer Ashley Love clocked her 50th day on the water on May 19, but it’s SpinSheet columnist and fulltime liveaboard cruiser Tracy Leonard who has already pulled in her 100th day. We

asked her to keep counting to see what kind of bar she can set. If you’re thinking about how to best track all your days on the water, Club member Dave Nestel has provided a very helpful example. “I use a loose leaf notebook and enter each trip on a single line,” he writes, along with “the wind velocity, miles traveled, and maximum speed (as measured by a GPS), as well as specifics of the trip and the number of hours on the water.” Nestel’s log helped motivate him to get in 105 days of sailing on a 16-foot Windrider trimaran in 2013: we’re positive he can break even that in 2014. Quite a few questions have come up from readers interested in knowing what actually counts as “time on the water.” The Century Club is about getting out on the water and all that entails, so the SUP’ing, windsurfing, kayaking, tubing, and powerboating all count toward the final goal.

##Being a Century Club me all eleme mbe nts. Just ask A shle r means sailing in y Love.

The only water-based activity that will not count toward the final total is swimming: no matter how many hours you have logged at the pool, they won’t count toward Century Club totals. The Century Club isn’t just about the Chesapeake Bay, either. Count your days on that charter in the BVI and your time at Key West Race Week. All we ask is that you send us some pictures. So what are you waiting for? Grab a notebook and your calendar, get the friends together and get out on the water. It’s shaping into a great summer, and you don’t want to miss a day of it.

To join the SpinSheet Century Club, email duffy@spinsheet.com and start keeping track of your days. Visit us online at spinsheet.com/century-club and on social media, and tag your pictures and posts with #spinsheet100.

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16 June 2014 SpinSheet

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Tour the Pride of Baltimore

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##Deck tours aboard the Pride will be offered all season in local waters. Experience what life was like as a privateer during the War of 1812. Photo courtesy of the Pride of Baltimore II

with black fi

MATRIX TITANIUM: Proven to be strong, light and durable. Pictured above is Damien Emery’s J/105 class jib, which powered him to a close second at the 2013 North Americans. “This is my favorite sail ever. We were fast in the light and heavy air races. At first we were worried that it was too lightly built, but the sail stood up in the blow.”

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s we continue to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812, Maryland’s Star Spangled Celebration focuses on the Chesapeake Campaign 2014 with events around the state. As part of the celebration the Pride of Baltimore II is offering guided deck tours for the first time since her commissioning in October 1988. Pride usually spends the summer traveling around the world, but this year, for the first time, she will stay in Chesapeake Country all season, visiting Havre de Grace, Cambridge, Norfolk, Solomons, Washington, DC, Ocean City, Annapolis, Chestertown, Fairlee, St. Michaels, and Philadelphia. Thirtyminute interpretative deck tours will offer guests an in-depth educational experience and explain what life was like for privateers during the War of 1812. Pride will also collaborate with the Maryland Historical Society to transport a hand-sewn reproduction of the Star Spangled Banner to many ports throughout the region. The Pride of Baltimore II represents early 19th century Baltimorebuilt, topsail schooners, which were known for being sleek, fast, and maneuverable. They became famous during the War of 1812 when many privately owned and well-armed privateers ran the British blockade of the U.S. ports. Chasseur, the largest and most successful of these privateers, once made a daring voyage to Great Britain and captured 17 British ships, earning the nickname “Pride of Baltimore.” Tours are open to adults, children, and groups. Learn more about Chesapeake Campaign events and find links to Pride’s schedule at pride2.org and starspangled200.com

UKSailmakers.com SpinSheet June 2014 17


DOCKTALK

Awesome June Party Alert!

N ##The Tiki Barbarians doing their thing at EYC as they will June 5 at the Spring Cotillion. All are welcome.

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18 June 2014 SpinSheet

ow that you have washed the pollen off the decks of your boat, it’s time to party! The Eastport YC hosts a SpinSheetapproved, spectacular early summer bash you don’t want to miss. The EYC Spring Cotillion held Thursday, June 6, from 5-10 p.m. Thursday? Party on a school night? Yes, it’s Eastport, people. A whole slew of racing sailors will head out the next day and compete in the 735-mile-long Annapolis to Bermuda Race. Anyone who wants to sail that far and fast deserves a great bon voyage bash, and EYC is up to the task. One of the major highlights of this spring tradition will come at 6:30 p.m., when the EYC Foundation members honor the 2014 Outstanding Marine Wizards, a group of five men or women who work hard to keep our boats seaworthy and pretty and get very little recognition. This is their chance for those of us who appreciate their work to give them the credit they deserve. Once you’re given the title of Marine Wizard, you keep it for life, so come meet the wiz kids from 2008, 2010, 2012, and 2014. Speaking of wiz kids, Andy Fegley, from the 2008 Marine Wizard class, will join the Tiki Barbarians for live music and keep the party on the dance floor. At 8:30 p.m., the Annapolis to Bermuda (A2B) Race committee will introduce the crews for this year’s race. We’ll raise a glass to them and then watch closely to see which skippers impose strict curfews on their crews, as the rest of us enjoy ourselves until 10 p.m. Who’s invited? Everyone in town. Tickets cost $10 at the door or $5 purchased in advance by June 5 at Fawcett Boat Supply (919 Bay Ridge Avenue), Helly Hansen (132 Main Street), Long & Foster Realty (320 Sixth Street), and West Marine (112 Hillsmere Drive); and by June 4 at the EYC bar. spinsheet.com


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Celebrate South County Living at River Fest

he first annual River Fest celebration will take place on Saturday, June 14, at Discovery Village in Shady Side, MD. The event unfolds from noon to 6 p.m. and will celebrate the “roots and tides” of Southern Anne Arundel County. “We’re reviving the traditional Blessing of the Fleet with local watermen’s workboats parading under an arc of water sprayed from the deck of the county fireboat. We’ll have live music all afternoon with a backdrop of the Chesapeake Bay and fun activities for kids, in and out of the water” says Riverkeeper Jeff Holland. There will be local specialties and drinks served by area churches and caterers, as well as arts and crafts for sale. Kids will have the opportunity to learn about the heritage of the area and the ecology of the Bay.

River Fest is sure to be a good time and will showcase all the things that Southern Anne Arundel County is known best for. It is part of a movement to remind people of the small business, watermen, and family farmers that help to make up their community. Admission is $10 for adults, $4 for children 6-12, and free for kids under six years old. Proceeds help the Riverkeeper keep the West and Rhode Rivers swimmable and fishable and help the Southern Anne Arundel Chamber support local businesses. River Fest is hosted by the West and Rhode Riverkeepers, Southern Anne Arundel Chamber of Commerce, the Anne Arundel County Watermen’s Association, the Four Rivers Heritage Area, and the Annapolis and Anne Arundel County Chamber of Commerce. westrhoderiverkeeper.org

No wind?

##River Fest will include live music, activities for kids, and a blessing of the fleet of local watermen’s boats. Photo by Alison Harbaugh / frecklephotography.com

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SpinSheet June 2014 19


DOCKTALK

Wounded Warriors Sail Hard and Fast

T

he weather gods were smiling on the wounded warriors for the third Wounded Warrior Sailing Regatta in Annapolis on a sunny and windy Saturday, April 26. The regatta was hosted by the U.S. Naval Academy Sailing Team, Chesapeake Region Accessible Boating (CRAB), and the National Sailing Hall of Fame and supported by Bostonia Partners, CTC Foundation, and Sammy’s Italian Pizza Kitchen.

by Paul Bollinger

A strong contingent of wounded warriors from the region, their family members and friends, and numerous smiling and hard-working volunteers joined the fun. With the NSHOF docks serving as the launching area, all of the boarding was made much easier by the floating docks donated by the Annapolis Boat Show owners who had commandeered most of the area for the Spring Boat Show.

We have everything you are searching for!

herringtonharbour.com • 800.213.9438 20 June 2014 SpinSheet

This regatta featured eight Colgate 26s crewed by Midshipmen and the entire fleet of Freedom 20s sailed by CRAB volunteers. The first race started in light and fluky winds, with two separate races being expertly administered from Steve Rudiger’s Beneteau 46, Sales Call. From the deck of the Committee Boat Fandango Commander Les Spanheimer, head of the USNA Sailing Team, could see the wind reversing and coming on strong from the east. It wasn’t long before the course marks had to be moved to adjust for the wind shift and to give the wounded warriors and their crews better sailing angles in the busy harbor. The competition was especially evident on the marks as several USNA Colgates got close enough to “pass the Grey Poupon” to their fellow wounded warriors and Mids. For many of the wounded warriors and their family members, this is the first time they had ever been on a boat, much less a small boat sailing fast in close quarters with wind and waves splashing about. No one said it would be boring, and the racing lived up to its reputation which made the day all that more exciting and special for the Mids and warriors. Returning for his second Wounded Warrior Sailing Regatta, SFC Lizandro Mateo-Ortiz and his wife Milena knew exactly what to do and obviously picked a fast boat, as they won the CRAB Freedom 20 class with CRAB volunteer Tom Spitzer of NASA on board. SFC Mateo served two tours of duty to Baghdad before being injured and has been receiving treatment at Walter Reed for over a year. He says, “It’s a great event that provides a distraction from injuries and therapy for wounded warriors and their families.” He adds, “My wife loves the water, and this is a great event to get on the water and have a lot of fun.” The next Wounded Warrior Sailing Regatta will be held on Saturday, September 12, and the work to spread the word and increase participation and sponsorship is already underway. Anyone looking to get involved may contact Paul Bollinger at paulbollingerjr@aol.com. spinsheet.com


## Winners: Kurt Karpov, LT Matt Arreola, MIDN 2/c Dunc an Mamer, and Lisa Bode nburg.

iors Rega tta: ##Sailing in the Wounded Warr Lisa Bodenburg and Kurt Karpov.

d Warrior Lec kinger [Connecte ##Trimming sails: Jim eneau. mp Tra l Car 4/c N Founda tion ], and MID

##Tom Spitzer, CRAB board mem ber and Skipper; SFC Lizandro Mateo-Or tiz and his wife Milena; and Commander Les Spanheimer USN A Sailing Team.

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SpinSheet June 2014 21


DOCKTALK

NOAA Focuses on the Choptank

“T

##A NOAA scientist retrieving sonar equipment used to study the Bay’s bottom to help find suitable locations for oyster restoration projects. Photo courtesy of NOAA

22 June 2014 SpinSheet

he Choptank River Complex is a microcosm of the many tidal tributaries in Chesapeake Bay — and of great importance to ensuring sustainable fisheries and coastal economies,” says Peyton Robertson, director of the NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office. In early May, NOAA announced its selection of two sites as the next Habitat Focus Areas under NOAA’s Habitat Blueprint: the Penobscot River watershed in Maine and the Choptank River complex in Maryland and Delaware. The agency will focus its resources in both areas to support habitat conservation and restoration. NOAA’s North Atlantic region includes a variety of habitats, such as salt marshes, rivers, seagrass beds, and shellfish reefs. Both selected areas have experienced habitat degradation and face challenges from pollution, development, overfishing, invasive species, and barriers to fish passage. This has reduced the resilience of fish and other wildlife communities, degraded water quality and habitat health, and affected public use and tourism.

The Choptank is the largest river on the Delmarva Peninsula. Most of the surrounding land is currently used for agriculture. However, growing populations and land development threaten the traditional agricultural base as well as working waterfronts and natural shorelines and marshes. These landscape changes will continue to impact fish such as menhaden, river herring, and shad, prey for commercially and recreationally important species such as striped bass, weakfish, bluefish, and predatory birds such as osprey and eagles. Once-abundant Eastern oyster populations have been reduced to just one percent of historic levels. Oysters help filter water, and oyster reefs provide critical habitat for a range of Chesapeake Bay species, including juvenile and adult blue crabs and finfish. “Working with partners at NOAA and around the area, we hope to successfully protect and restore the ecological health of this watershed and apply the habitat blueprint model to other coastal ecosystems throughout the region,” says Robertson.

NOAA conducts mapping and acoustic survey work in the Chesapeake Bay, including the Choptank River watershed, to support native oyster restoration. NOAA also funds on-the-ground restoration work and applied research to quantify how oyster reefs provide ecosystem services. Areas in several subtributaries in the Choptank River were designated as oyster sanctuaries by the state of Maryland. This affords an excellent opportunity for intensive oyster restoration on an unprecedented scale. NOAA has also conducted extensive environmental monitoring programs. Data generated will help managers address future challenges due to storm flooding, sea level rise, barrier Island movement, degraded water quality and wetland loss. The goals in Habitat Focus Areas include: sustainable and abundant fish populations, recovered threatened and endangered species, protected coastal and marine areas and habitats at risk, resilient coastal communities, and increased coastal/marine tourism, access, and recreation Join NOAA at facebook.com/ NOAA

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I

Non-Sailing, SpinSheet-Approved Events

t’s hard to choose among the many cool summer events along the Bay. If you want to go to two well-attended, upbeat Annapolis events that bring together active, fun-loving people on and along the water, even those who do not sail (yet), here are two we recommend:

Bands in the Sand, June 14

Often called the best beach party of the summer in Annapolis, Bands in the Sand takes place on the prettiest beach in town at the Philip Merrill Environmental Center. Party goers enjoy live music, grilled food, cold drinks, cool silent auction items, and laughs with friends old and new from 5 – 10:30 p.m. In its eight years, the annual beach party has raised nearly one million dollars to support the Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s restoration, education, and advocacy efforts. And it’s fun! Colorful sundress or Hawaiian shirt recommended, but anything goes. Park your flip flops at the shoe dock upon entrance and put your toes in the sand. If you arrive by boat, there is a water taxi service. Tickets cost $100.

##A handful of SUP lovers at East of Maui’s SUP Challenge last summer. The 2014 event takes place July 12. Photo by Dan Phelps

The Chesapeake Challenge SUP Race, July 12

Last year’s premier event was such a huge success that East of Maui Boardshop of Annapolis is bringing back the fun. Last summer, 73 competitors in a wide age range showed up to paddle a three-and-a-half-mile short course or a six-and-a-half-mile long course. SUP racers started at 9:30 a.m., some finishing around 11 a.m., and enjoyed a party with awards, live music, and a keg at the Eastport YC. Beginners of all ages are welcome (a friend did it with his grandkids); but it is a Mid-Atlantic SUP Racing Association-sanctioned event, so experienced racers will be there, too. East of Maui will host mini-clinics and demos in the early afternoon. Registration costs $50. Save the date, and stay tuned to SpinSheet for more. eastofmauiboardshop.com

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SpinSheet June 2014 23


s ta r t now You’ve Just Learned to Sail

Now What? by Russ Borman

L

earning to sail is quite an accomplishment, but it’s just the beginning. The combination of knowledge and skills needs reinforcement and regular refreshing, even among seasoned sailors. The best thing you can do is to continue developing what you’ve learned, even if you don’t have a boat. Here are some ideas.

yy Review instructional books and guides from courses, including courses you haven’t yet taken. If you have a chance to get out on a boat, treat it like a final exam and study a bit beforehand. You’ll feel so much more confident wrapping line around the winch and not “putting rope around the gear thingy.”

yy Watch videos. Many people learn much better by doing, but the next best thing is to learn by seeing. Search YouTube for something particularly challenging and watch how it’s done. It beats episodes of the Kardashians.

yy Expand your learning. Go deeper into topics that confuse or interest you. Reading or videos can play a part, or you can take additional training. Speak with your local sailing school about customizing your learning experience.

yy Speak the language. As with learning any language, practicing the language of sailing is important. Try using boating terminology in your everyday thoughts. For example, “That car just passed me on my port side,” or, “I wonder what the chef is making in the galley.” (“I hope I don’t wind up in the head.”)

yy Follow online forums. They offer access to thousands of sailors around the world, who have varying degrees of experience on a wide range of sail boats and topics. Post a question here, and you’re liable to get a dozen or more responses before the day is out. Try cruisersforum.com and sailnet.com. You will find great information, as well as social interaction, in the threads. In a way, they are the Facebook of sailing but without 90 percent of the drama and dancing cat movies.

##Reaching out to clubs that welcome guest crew on boats is one way to keep your skills fresh. These sailors tested the waters at Severn Sailing Association’s Demo Day in April.

Remember that sailing is knowledge combined with skill. You can read and watch videos all day long, but until you go out and put it all into action, you can’t improve. So how do you practice sailing without a boat? yy Find sailing clubs in your area. Some are associated with yacht clubs or marinas, while others are groups of people with a common interest in sailing.

yy Rent a boat for a day. The best advice here is to start small. You may have learned to sail aboard a 38-footer, but that doesn’t mean you and a friend should take one out on your first solo attempt.

yy Offer to crew. If you can’t find a suitable boat to take out for a day, or if you’re not quite ready to go it alone, offer to crew for someone else. Sailing clubs are great places to start, or if you happen to live near a marina, ask if you can post an “offer to crew” notice on the message board. You may find yourself on the water the following weekend!

The key is to “use it or lose it.” Continue to build and polish your knowledge and skills. You know best how you learn, whether it’s by reading, seeing, or doing. Whatever it takes, do it. Don’t just sit there. Go sailing!

About the Author: Russ Borman is a freelance writer and newbie sailor who sails his S2 11.0C in Annapolis.

For more, visit: startsailingnow.com 24 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


War

of

1812

200th Anniversary Festivities

T

his summer, there will be events throughout Maryland to commemorate the 1814 British assaults on the towns of the Bay and Washington, DC, and finally our dramatic defense of Baltimore. If you want to join the festivities, check out the ones below. Click to starspangled200.com to learn more.

Raiders and Invaders Weekend

Leonardtown, MD. June 6-8. Activities throughout the town, live music, boat tours, War of 1812 landscapes then and now, theater performances, rum tastings, period demonstrations, historic boats, tours of historic sites, shops, galleries, wineries. raidersandinvaders.com

National Anthem and Star-Spangled Banner at Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History

During a Flag Day ceremony, hosted by the National Museum of American History on the National Mall, Maryland officials, including Governor Martin O’Malley and Burton K. Kummerow, president and CEO of the Maryland Historical Society, will participate in a ribbon-cutting with Smithsonian officials to celebrate the union from June 14 through Independence Day weekend, July 6. This marks the start of a summer culminating in Star-Spangled Spectacular, September 10-16, 2014, in Baltimore – the 200th anniversary of the national anthem. amhistory.si.edu/starspangledbanner

##Calvert Arundel Swordsmen.

##Oyster buy boats at Leonardtown Wharf

Battle of St. Leonard’s Creek

Public sails and free museum admission at the Calvert Marine Museum. 1812 fair and reenactment, food, drinks, crafts, children’s games and activities, exhibits, and demonstrations at Jefferson Patterson Park. Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum, St. Leonard, MD, and Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, June 19-22. choosecalvert.com/1812

Baltimore’s Star-Spangled Summer

From June 28 to September 1, the Fort McHenry Guard Living Historians will be “On Duty” with special daily programming that includes tours of the original buildings, hoisting the 30×42 flag over the ramparts, and the firing of cannons. In addition to existing ranger programs, living historians will give unique demonstrations, fife and drum concerts, talks on civilian life in 1814 and more! Special children’s programs also make history fun for the young and young at heart. baltimore. org/info/fort-flag-fire Follow us!

##The cast at Sotterly Plantation in Hollywood, MD, a site of the Raiders and Invaders Weekend.

SpinSheet June 2014 25


Chesapeake Calendar presented by

Chefs favorites Great raw bar Daily homemade soups Fresh fish specials Maine lobster rolls Fin’s fish tacos Gumbo • Crabcakes

SATURDAY, JUNE 14 •

FULL MOON PARTY

Sip cool drinks, enjoy tasty food, live music and dancing on the Philip Merrill Environmental Center beach. LIVE MUSIC— 3 GREAT BANDS!

THURSDAY JUNE 12 LIVE MUSIC: THE SHATNERS Drink specials

Weekend Brunch— Best in town, 8 am

5 PM

TICKETS www.cbf.org

Benefits Chesapeake Bay Foundation

Happy Hour MONDAY–FRIDAY 3-7 PM AT THE BAR

$3

Draft beer House wine Well drinks

$5 99¢

Bar appetizers Oysters

a nautical Cheers—WASHINGTONIAN Best raw bar—THE CAPTIAL Best crabcakes—BALTIMORE MAGAZINE On Restaurant Row in Annapolis’ Historic Eastport Fourth & Severn, Eastport–Annapolis

n

410-216-6206

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For more details and links to event websites, simply visit spinsheet.com/calendar

June thru Jun 1 Watercolor

3

thru Jun 1 Pirate Festival

The Battle of Midway changed the course of the war in the Pacific. 1942.

Annapolis

Club Art Show Annapolis Maritime Museum.

Blackbeard

Hampton, VA. Live entertainment, pirate camps, kids’ activities, sea battles, and more.

thru Jun 1

PocketYacht Knot Spring Cove Marina, Solomons, MD. $50.

thru Jun 1

Maritime Model Expo Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels. $15. (410) 745-3266.

thru Jun 1 Weekend and Opening

Queen of the Chesapeake Pageant Lawn Boutique Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Queen of the Chesapeake Pageant is Sunday at 1 p.m. This event is open to the public.

1

First Sunday Arts Festival 12 to 5 p.m. West and Calvert Streets, Annapolis. Arts, crafts, vendors, music, demos, and more.

1

Flip Flop Fiesta 4 to 7 p.m. Annapolis Maritime Museum. $20. Benefits The Light House: A Homeless Prevention Support Center.

Cruise Planning 7 p.m. West Marine, Rockville, MD. Sponsored by the Rockville Sail and Power Squadron.

4-6 5

EYC Foundation Spring Cotillion Combine a parking lot full of marine tradesmen, sailboat racers, friends looking for a great Thursday night party, a terrific band, and delicious food and drink ... what do you get? The EYC Spring Cotillion. 5 to 8 p.m.

5-26

“Shagging on the Riverwalk” Beach Music Concert Series Variety of beach music for all ages. 331 Water Street, Yorktown, VA. Free.

6-7

Beer, Bourbon, and Barbeque Festival National Harbor, MD.

6-8

Norfolk Harborfest Town Point Park, Norfolk, VA. Ships, food, music, and fireworks.

6-8 6-8

Potomac River Festival Colonial Beach, VA.

Raiders and Invaders Weekend Leonardtown, MD. Part of the War of 1812 Celebration.

7

Bay Music Festival 9 a.m. Centreville, MD.

7 7

Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Clean the Bay Day Tangier Island, VA.

Clean the Bay Day Volunteers all over the state, work by land and boat to give the Bay a massive spring cleaning.

7 7

Open House 1 to 4 p.m. West River Sailing Club, Galesville, MD.

Paddle Green: Celebrate the Rapp! Fredericksburg, VA. grolf@americancanoe.org

7

SUP Yoga 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Havre de Grace Marine Center. $40. No experience necessary.

7-8 7-8

Geico Cup Dangerfield Island SC, Alexandria, VA.

Maryland Safe Boater Course 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Middle River, MD. Hosted by Bowleys Quarters Junior Fire Brigade. $35.

8 8 8 8-14

Federal Hill Jazz and Blues Festival 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Baltimore, MD. Great Bay Swim Sandy Point State Park, Annapolis. World Oceans Day

ARC DelMarVa Rally Join SpinSheet writers Andy and Mia for a week of great sailing and good times!

Calendar Section Editor: Allison Nataro, allison@spinsheet.com 26 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


- 41st Running of the -

Yacht Race August 1-2 {TWO THOUSAND FOURTEEN} Annapolis to St. Mary’s City

Details & Registration: www.smcm.edu/govcup | 240-895-3039


JUNE

Continued...

9-13

Maryland Boating Safety Course 7 to 10 p.m. West Annapolis Fire Hall. Sponsored and taught by USCG Auxiliary. (301) 919-7738.

10

The United States Naval Academy had its first formal Graduation. 1854.

10-12

MD Basic Boating Safety Course 6 to 9 p.m. Ocean Pines Library. Offered by USCGAuxiliary Flotilla. $15. (410) 208-2531.

11

Jacques-Yves Cousteau, oceanographer, co-inventor of the Aqualung, was born in St-Andre-de-Cuzbac, south-western France. 1910.

12

Dog Days of Summer Cruise 6 to 7:30 p.m. Cruise on Harbor Queen with your pup! Food, music, silent auction, cash bar, doggie pools, adoptable pets. $30. (410) 268-7600.

13

Full Moon Yoga on the Floating Barge 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Havre de Grace Marine Center. $40. No experience necessary. (410) 939-2161.

13 13

Moonlight Raft Up 6 p.m. Sailing Club of Washington, DC.

The Chesapeake, the first steamboat on the Bay, sailed on her maiden voyage from Baltimore to Annapolis. 1813.

13-15

Antique and Classic Boat Festival Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels, MD. Runabouts, racers, and yachts. (410) 745-2916.

14

“Welcome to the Water” 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Norview Marina, Deltaville, VA. Nautical swap/flea market,information and safety booths, vessel safety checks and marina tours. (804) 776-6463.

Your Yacht, Your Way

14

Over 1400 Yachts commissioned in 40 years...Each one different, Just like their Owners! t our Ask abouYacht s s e in s Bu m. Pay ip Prograith tax h rs e n w O yacht w for your ntages and a v d a income!

Bands in the Sand 5 to 10:30 p.m. Philip Merrill Environmental Center, Annapolis, MD. Benefits the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

14

Beer, Bourbon, and Barbeque Festival Richmond Raceway Complex, Richmond,VA.

14 14

Flag Day

Harbor Fest 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Delaware Avenue, Cape May, NJ.(609) 884-2400.

14 14

National Marina Day

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Call today and speak with one of our sailing professionals!

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28 June 2014 SpinSheet

Nautical Flea Market 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Campbell’s Bachelor Pt. Yacht Co. and Yacht Sales, Oxford, MD. (410) 226-5592.

14

River Fest 12 to 6 p.m. Discovery Village, Shady Side, MD. Come celebrate southern Anne Arundel lifestyle. (410) 867-7171.

14

Washington Monumental Potomac River in Washington, DC. Sponsored by the East Coast Outrigger Association.

14-15

HONFest 36th Street in Hampden. Let’s celebrate Bawlmer!

spinsheet.com


14-15

Ocean City Air Show Appearance by the USAF Thunderbirds. Ocean City, MD.

15 16 - Aug 4

Father’s Day Dad wants a boat this year.

Groovin’ by the Bay Sundays. 6 to 9 p.m. Buckroe Beach, Hampton, VA.

18

In-Water Demo 5:30 p.m. Jonas Green Park. Free. Please RSVP (410) 267-0137.

18-19

20

Take Your Dog To Work Day “I care not much for a man’s religion whose dog and cat are not the better for it.” ~Abraham Lincoln

20-21

Delmarva Chicken Festival Queen Anne’s County 4-H Park, Centreville, MD.

Need more details? Check out spinsheet.com/ calendar

21 21 21 21

First Day of Summer! RivahFest Tappahannock, VA. Summer Sailstice A worldwide celebration of sailing!

Summer Sailstice Celebration at AYS 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Annapolis Yacht Sales. Please call ahead to reserve your demo spot: (410) 267-8181.

21-22

Battle of St. Leonard Creek 200th Anniversary Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum, St. Leonard, MD. (410) 586-8501.

CBMM Boater Safety Course 6-10 p.m. Van Lennep Auditorium, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels. $25. Pre-registration required. (410) 745-4941

Beer Fest 12 to 6 p.m. St. Mary’s City, MD. $20 for Tasters, $10 for Designated Drivers.

21-22

Portside Party 6 to 9 p.m. HarborView Marina Pier & the Tiki Barge. $65.

Cardboard Boat Races The Strand, Oxford, MD. Benefits Special Olympics of Maryland.

21-22

Tides and Tunes Concert Series 7 to 8:30 p.m. Annapolis Maritime Museum. Free.

Eastport-a-Rockin’ Local music festival in Eastport neighborhood of Annapolis.

19

19 - Aug 7

Follow us!

21 21 21

Selby Bay Summer Solstice Sailing Club of Washington, DC. Star Spangled Celebration: Tall Ship Invasion Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, MD.

25

Day of the Seafarer We rely on seafarers every day, yet have you ever said thank you? Today is the day to do that!

SpinSheet June 2014 29


JUNE

27-29

Family Boat Building Workshop Reedville Fishermen’s Museum, VA. (804) 453-6529.

Continued...

27

Dad’s Night Out No Moon Paddle 5:30 p.m. Ellen Moyer Nature Park. Sponsored by Annapolis Community Boating. (443) 905-1075.

28

Not on the 4th Fireworks Tim’s Rivershore Restaurant & Crabhouse, Dumfries, VA.

27-28

Gwynn’s Island Festival Friday 4 to 7 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Gwynn’s Island Civic Center, Gwynn, VA.

Need more details? Check out spinsheet.com/ calendar

28-29

Maryland Safe Boater Course 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Middle River, MD. Hosted by Bowleys Quarters Junior Fire Brigade. $35. (410) 800-8420.

June Racing

thru Jun 1

North U Youth Match Racing Clinic Annapolis YC.

thru Jun 1

The race is on . . .

Annapolis Bermuda Race 2014 Friday, June 6 First gun: 1:30 p.m. Join the spectator fleet at “R”2 on June 6. Follow the race online:

annapolisbermudarace.com

Southern Bay Race Week You know what they say down in Hampton ... Y’all come racing!

6

Annapolis to Bermuda Start Come out and bid farewell to our friends racing in the Bermuda Ocean Race. The warning signal for the first start is scheduled for 1:30 p.m.

6-8

Cape Dory Typhoon Nationals Hosted by the Rappahannock River YC on Carters Creek, Irvington, VA.

7 7 7-8 8 8 9-14

One Design Invitational Fishing Bay YC, Deltaville, VA. PSA Moonlight Race Potapskut Sailing Association. CRAB Cup AYC.

Double-Handed Race Hampton YC. PRSA Newbie Regatta Potomac River Sailing Association.

ISAF International AClass Catamaran North American Championship Manteo, NC.

Thank you, A2B Hosts and Sponsors: Hosted by Eastport Yacht Club and St George’s Dinghy and Sports Club Sponsored by Bacon Sails and Marine Supplies, Lee Chesneau’s Marine Weather, Jenifer Clark’s Gulfstream, Wichard, Inc., MISEA Group, Liberté the Schooner, Chesapeake Area Professional Captains Association, Goslings, Port Annapolis, SpinSheet, Weems and Plath, and West Marine

30 June 2014 SpinSheet

13-14

Cock Island Race Southern Bay racers of all levels enjoy a race up and down the Elizabeth River. Portsmouth Boat Club, Portsmouth, VA: the place that was nicknamed Cock Island in Colonial times for the cock fights along the river.

14 14 14

NERYC Invitational Regatta North East River YC. Moonlight Regatta Fishing Bay YC, Deltaville, VA. NERYC Invitational Regatta North East River YC. spinsheet.com


14 14-15 14-15

AYC Annual Regatta

tion in Annapolis.

Snipe Colonial Cup Severn Sailing Associa-

20

Newport Bermuda Race First warning signal scheduled for 12:50 p.m. off Newport, RI. Cruising Club of America and Royal Bermuda YC.

4

July

Smith Point Race Southern Maryland Sailing Association.

1

A School is Founded on Ten Acres of Old Fort Severn, 1845. Five years later, the Naval School in Annapolis was renamed the U.S. Naval Academy.

3 3

Fireworks 9 p.m. Rock Hall, MD. Fireworks over the Bay Chesapeake Beach, MD. 9:20 p.m.

21 21 21-22

4th of July Stars in the Sky 7 to 10 p.m. Victory Landing Park, Newport News, VA.

4 4 4

Boat Parade and Fireworks Sassafras River, Georgetown, MD.

Fireworks Display Waterfront, Cambridge, MD.

Frog Jumping Contest, Turtle Derby, and Watermelon Eating Contest Bel Air, MD. Food, fun, and fireworks.

AYC Commodore’s Cup Annapolis YC. AYC Junior Annual Regatta Annapolis, MD.

Commonwealth of Virginia Junior Championship Open to all juniors. Fishing Bay YC, Deltaville, VA.

22 22

Founder’s Race Cruising Club of Virginia.

YOUR SAILING RESOURCE!

SMSA Summer Invitational Southern Maryland Sailing Association, Solomons.

28 28 28

Broad Bay Regatta Broad Bay Sailing Association. EYC One Design Classic Annapolis, MD.

GSA Northern Bay Regatta Glenmar Sailing Association, Phoenix, MD.

28 28

Severn SA Keelboat Regatta Annapolis. J/22s, Solings, Stars.

TAYC Summer One-Design and Annual Junior Regatta Tred Avon YC, Oxford.

28-29

Log Canoe Fourth of July Series Miles River YC, St. Michaels.

29 29 29-30

GSA Northern Bay Regatta SCC Ted Osius Regatta

Washington, DC.

SCOW Invitational Sailing Club of

Rigging Inspections Furler Installation Lifelines Running Rigging Standing Rigging Dock & Anchor Lines

Contact us for all of your Rigging Needs! 888-447-RIGG Middletown, RI 379 West Main Rd. (401) 841-9880

or visit our Onsite Rigging Locations in: Annapolis, MD 113 Hillsmere Dr. (410) 268-0129

Rock Hill, SC 860 Marine Dr. (803) 909-6280

(7444)

Ft. Lauderdale, FL 2401 S Andrews Ave. (954) 400-5323

westmarine.com/rigging Follow us!

SpinSheet June 2014 31


JULY

4

The Second Continental Congress signed the Declaration of Independence Philadelphia, PA. 1776

4

Great American Picnic and Fireworks 5 to 10 p.m. Town Point Park, Norfolk, VA.

4

Independence Celebration 10 a.m. until dark, when fireworks begin. Bay Avenue, Cape Charles, VA.

4-6 5

Liberty Celebration Yorktown Victory Center, VA.

Fireworks Havre de Grace, MD. Begins around 9 p.m.

Need more details? Check out spinsheet.com/ calendar

4

Independence Day Celebration and Fireworks 6:30 p.m. Parade. 8 p.m. Concert. 9:30 p.m. Fireworks. Downtown Annapolis.

4

Independence Day Festivities Music and food at the Urbanna Town Marina at Upton’s Point. 6 p.m. Boat Parade on Urbanna Creek with a contest for the best boat decorations. 9 p.m. Fireworks over Urbanna Creek. Anchor your boat or watch from land.

4

July 4th Celebration 4 to 10 p.m. Mount Trashmore Park, Virginia Beach, VA.

4

Ports America Chesapeake 4th of July Celebration 7 to 10 p.m. Innner Harbor, Baltimore.

5

Freedom Fest 5 to 10 p.m. American Legion, Crisfield, MD.

5 - Oct 11

Thomas Point Lighthouse Tours Departs Saturday mornings from the Annapolis Maritime Museum. (415) 362-7255.

6

First Sunday Arts Festival 12 to 5 p.m. West and Calvert Streets, Annapolis. Arts, crafts, vendors, music, demos, and more.

6

John Paul Jones was born in Arbigland, Kirkbean, Kircudbright, Scotland. 1747

7

Waterman’s Day 12 p.m. Rock Hall Bulk Head, MD. Workboat docking contest, anchor toss contest, most patriotic workboat contest, dunking booth, and more to benefit kids of local watermen.

7-11

Maryland Boating Safety Course 7 to 10 p.m. West Annapolis Fire Hall, 121 Jennifer Road, Annapolis. Sponsored and taught by USCG Auxiliary. (301) 919-7738.

8

Explorer Vasco de Gama sailed from Lisbon, Portugal on the voyage on which he would discover the Cape of Good Hope and the gateway to the Orient. 1497.

8-10

MD Basic Boating Safety Course 6 to 9 p.m. Ocean Pines Library. Offered by USCG Auxiliary. $15. (410) 208-2531.

9

Herman Melville jumped from the whaler Acushnet in Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas; inspiring his novel Typee. 1842.

Baltimore’s Hottest Summer FUNraiser! Thursday, June 19 6–9 PM HarborView Marina Pier & the Tiki Barge 500 Harborview Drive, Baltimore, MD 21230

Tickets:

$65 each or 10 for $600

To purchase tickets or for more information contact

www.sailbaltimore.org

Proceeds benefit Sail Baltimore, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has been bringing tall ships and maritime events to Baltimore since 1975.

32 June 2014 SpinSheet

ANNAPOLIS GELCOAT & FIBERGLASS REPAIRS Specializing in cosmetic and structural repairs Also Carbonfiber repairs and construction

Gelcoat Scratches and Chips Imron & Awlgrip Touch-Ups Large or Small Repairs Awlgrip Painting www.annapolisgelcoat.com ● 410-263-8980 spinsheet.com


##Thomas Point Lighthouse at Sunset. Photo Eric Moseson.

11

Marlinspike Sailors and Courageous Cuttermen: American Mariners in the War of 1812 5 to 7:30 p.m. Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels. $10/ members, $15/ non-members. (410) 745-4941.

ARE YOU READY?

11-13

Pirate Fest Lock House Museum, Havre de Grace, MD. (410) 939-5780.

12

Full Moon Yoga on the Floating Barge 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Havre de Grace Marine Center. $40. No experience necessary. (410) 939-2161.

12

OtterMania! 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, MD.

12

Potomac Jazz and Seafood Festival St. Clement’s Island Museum, Colton’s Point, MD.

13 15

Beans and Franks Day There actually is such a thing.

Taste of Cambridge 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Central Square, Cambridge, MD.

15

JACKET/SMOCK/ SALOPETTE

RACING UPGRADE AVAILABLE

Henri Lloyd Phoenix Men’s Performance Gear landfallnav.com/henriphoenix

Nobeltec Timezero Trident Navigation Software landfallnav.com/trident

Harken Hardware for Dinghies and Sportboats landfallnav.com/harkenblock

SAILING SEASON IS HERE! Whether you’re racing to Bermuda or outfitting for summer adventures, Landfall has what you need to get home safely—from big boat winches and sail handling systems, to gear, guides, and clothing. You can trust our experienced sales specialists—we’ve been providing outfitting gear and advice for over 30 years. CALL, CLICK OR VISIT. Get our outfitting catalog and monthly email, like us on Facebook for exclusive deals, and shop online anytime.

800-941-2219 | landfallnav.com SAFETY | NAVIGATION | REFERENCE | WEAR ©2014 Landfall Navigation. All rights reserved.

The ship Mayflower departed Plymouth, England on the first leg of her voyage to the New World. 1620.

16

In-Water Demo 5:30 p.m. Jonas Green Park. Free. Please RSVP (410) 267-0137.

16

J. Millard Tawes Clam Bake 12 to 4 p.m. Somers Cove Marina, Crisfield, MD. $40.

16-17

CBMM Boater Safety Course 6-10 p.m. Van Lennep Auditorium, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels. $25.

Follow us!

SpinSheet June 2014 33


JUly

Continued...

19

Suddenly in Command: A Public Education Course Help keep your kids and spouse safe by teaching them what to do if you become incapacitated. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. $25 for adults, kids 15 and under and active military free.

19

SUP Yoga 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Havre de Grace Marine Center. $40. No experience necessary. (410) 939-2161.

23

The keel of Nelson’s Flagship HMS Victory was laid at the Old Single Dock, Chatham, England. 1759.

26

Mid-Atlantic Hermit Crab Challenge On the beach at 30th Street, Virginia Beach, VA.

26

Splash and Dash Competitive tube race on the James River. Richmond, VA. (804) 788-8811.

27

Osprey Paddle 5:30 p.m. Ellen Moyer Nature Park. Sponsored by Annapolis Community Boating. (443) 905-1075.

29

The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis is sunk by the Japanese submarine I-58. Only 316 of 1199 officers and crew survived the sinking and the sharks. 1945

30

The Eastport Yacht Club Invites You!

2014

Chincoteague Island Pony Swim Chincoteague, VA. Watch the wild horses swim across the Assateague Channel.

Need more details? Check out spinsheet.com/ calendar

EYC Block Party

Thursday, June 5th • 5-10 pm Eastport Yacht Club | 317 First Street | Eastport

To celebrate the Annapolis Marine Industry, honor our local “Marine Wizards” & kick off the Annapolis to Bermuda Race

What is an Outstanding Marine Wizard?

Someone in the marine industry nominated & selected who has outstanding marine skills that every boater wishes he or she had, and offers these skills for hire.

Tickets Available May 1st

Available at EYC bar, Fawcett boat Supplies, West Marine (Hillsmere dr. & Jennifer rd.) Long & Foster (Eastport) and online at eastportyc.org. Tickets $5 (Advance) • $10 (door)

Live Music • Food • Libations

Featuring The Tiki barbarians • Id’s Checked at the Gate for Everyone

Proceeds Fund the EYC Foundation’s Scholarship Fund for Further Education in the Marine Trades

For further information visit: www.eastportyc.org

July Racing

2 2

AYC Junior Annual Annapolis, MD.

SSA Sandy MacVickar Opti, Laser, 420. Severn Sailing Association, Annapolis.

6

Stars and Stripes Race Southern Maryland Sailing Association, Solomons.

11-12

Solomons Island Race Spectators enjoy the evening start off the U.S. Naval Academy wall for this popular 50-mile overnight race, and racers enjoy a starry night down the Bay to the mouth of the Patuxent River.

12 12-13

CCV Moonlight Triangle Race Cruising Club of Virginia.

Regatta

Southern Bay Leukemia Cup

SPonSorEd bY:

Crusader Yacht Sales • bavaria Yachts • Martin bird & Associates Annapolis Yacht Sales • Yacht Haven of Annapolis

34 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


12-13

SSA Summer Series Saturday for Laser, Radial, and V 15; Sunday for Day Sailer, Snipe, Jet 14, and Lightning. SSA, Annapolis.

18-20

Screwpile Lighthouse Challenge Yes, you read it right: It’s Friday through Sunday this year. The SpinSheet crew will be on the water and at the parties. See you there!

19

BCYA/MRSA Race to Baltimore A popular race from the mouth of the Magothy River to Baltimore with an even more popular Fells Point party afterward.

19

WRSC Poplar Island Race A race around government marks starting at Thomas Point (Annapolis Area Mark H) and ending at the West River Sailing Club for a crab feast.

19-25

Flying Scot North America Championships Sailing Club of Washington, DC.

Follow us!

##The Screwpile Lighthouse Challenge runs July 18-20 in Solomons.

26 26

CRYC One Design Regatta and Overnight Corsica River YC. Summer One-Design Regatta Annapolis YC.

26-27

Log Canoe Governor’s Cup Weekend Miles River YC, St. Michaels.

26-27

SSA Summer Series J18, Soling, 5O5.

SpinSheet June 2014 35


Classroom Courses • Captain’s License Training • Onboard Instruction

SeamanshipSchool.com

410.263.8848

ANNAPOLIS SCHOOL OF SEAMANSHIP

Chesapeake Bay Tide Tables

All times listed are in Local Time, Daylight Saving Time has been applied when appropriate. All heights are in feet.

BALTIMORE 1

03:11 AM Sun 09:49 AM 05:03 PM 10:23 PM

0.5 1.8 0.5 1.3

L H L H

16

03:26 AM Mon 09:47 AM 05:01 PM 10:28 PM

0.4 2 0.3 1.5

L H L H

1

01:52 AM Sun 08:30 AM 03:05 PM 08:43 PM

0.3 1.6 0.4 1.1

L H L H

16

01:55 AM Mon 08:30 AM 03:08 PM 09:00 PM

0.3 1.7 0.3 1.2

L H L H

1 05:25 AM Sun 11:30 AM 05:25 PM 11:43 PM

L H L H

16

2

0.5 1.7 0.5 1.3

L H L H

17

0.4 1.9 0.3 1.5

L H L H

2

02:39 AM Mon 09:09 AM 03:44 PM 09:33 PM

0.4 1.5 0.4 1.1

L H L H

17

02:55 AM Tue 09:20 AM 03:58 PM 10:05 PM

0.3 1.6 0.2 1.3

L H L H

2 06:04 AM 0.2 L Mon 12:11 PM 2.3 H 06:09 PM 0.4 L

17

04:50 AM 0.6 L Tue 11:09 AM 1.6 H 06:12 PM 0.5 L

18

05:42 AM 0.5 L Wed 11:34 AM 1.7 H 06:35 PM 0.3 L

3

18

12:51 AM Wed 07:12 AM 01:32 PM 07:43 PM

2.9 H -0.2 L 2.8 H 0 L

19

12:28 AM THu 06:57 AM 12:29 PM 07:23 PM

1.6 0.6 1.6 0.3

H L H L

L H L H

H L H L

H L H L

0.4 1.5 0.2 1.4

2.5 0.3 2.3 0.5

1.4 0.7 1.5 0.5

L H L H

3 12:24 AM Tue 06:44 AM 12:54 PM 06:56 PM

12:00 AM Wed 05:47 AM 11:52 AM 06:48 PM

0.5 1.4 0.4 1.2

18

4

03:28 AM Tue 09:48 AM 04:25 PM 10:26 PM

4

4 01:07 AM Wed 07:26 AM 01:40 PM 07:48 PM

2.4 0.4 2.3 0.6

H L H L

19

01:50 AM THu 08:10 AM 02:34 PM 08:50 PM

2.7 H -0.2 L 2.8 H 0.1 L

12:51 AM THu 06:51 AM 12:37 PM 07:26 PM

1.4 0.7 1.5 0.4

H L H L

20

01:31 AM 08:14 AM 01:26 PM 08:11 PM

1.7 0.6 1.5 0.2

H L H L

L H L H

19

5

0.5 1.4 0.4 1.2

2.6 H -0.1 L 2.9 H 0.2 L

6

01:43 AM 08:01 AM 01:24 PM 08:05 PM

1.5 0.7 1.4 0.4

H L H L

21

02:34 AM SAT 09:29 AM 02:23 PM 08:58 PM

1.8 0.6 1.4 0.2

7

02:35 AM SAT 09:13 AM 02:16 PM 08:46 PM

1.6 0.7 1.3 0.4

H L H L

22

03:34 AM Sun 10:39 AM 03:22 PM 09:45 PM

8

03:25 AM Sun 10:20 AM 03:09 PM 09:27 PM

1.7 0.7 1.2 0.3

H L H L

23

9

04:12 AM 11:22 AM 04:04 PM 10:11 PM

1.8 0.6 1.2 0.3

10

04:59 AM Tue 12:18 PM 05:00 PM 10:56 PM

11

03:59 AM Mon 10:28 AM 05:38 PM 11:10 PM

3

June 2014 Tides

ChesApeAke BAy Bridge-Tunnel

AnnApolis

Fri

Mon

05:44 AM Wed 01:09 PM 05:55 PM 11:43 PM

04:22 AM Wed 10:28 AM 05:07 PM 11:21 PM

H L H L

5 01:52 AM THu 08:11 AM 02:30 PM 08:42 PM

2.3 0.4 2.4 0.6

H L H L

20

21

01:22 AM SAT 07:26 AM 12:57 PM 07:21 PM

1.5 0.6 1.2 0.2

H L H L

Fri

6

02:42 AM 08:58 AM 03:22 PM 09:39 PM

2.2 0.4 2.4 0.5

H L H L

21

H L H L

22

02:22 AM Sun 08:35 AM 01:55 PM 08:11 PM

1.6 0.6 1.1 0.2

H L H L

7 03:35 AM SAT 09:48 AM 04:15 PM 10:36 PM

2.2 0.3 2.5 0.4

H L H L

22

1.5 0.7 1.1 0.2

H L H L

23

03:17 AM Mon 09:38 AM 02:51 PM 09:00 PM

1.7 0.6 1.1 0.2

H L H L

8 04:31 AM Sun 10:38 AM 05:08 PM 11:30 PM

2.2 0.2 2.7 0.3

H L H L

02:57 AM 09:19 AM 02:25 PM 08:49 PM

1.6 0.6 1.1 0.2

H L H L

24

04:07 AM 10:34 AM 03:45 PM 09:48 PM

1.7 0.6 1.1 0.2

H L H L

9

10

03:46 AM Tue 10:14 AM 03:18 PM 09:36 PM

1.6 0.6 1.1 0.2

H L H L

25

04:52 AM Wed 11:22 AM 04:34 PM 10:33 PM

1.7 0.5 1 0.2

H L H L

11

04:33 AM Wed 11:06 AM 04:12 PM 10:24 PM

1.7 0.5 1.1 0.1

H L H L

26

1.7 0.5 1 0.2

H L H L

12

1.8 0.5 1.1 0.1

H L H L

27

H L H L

6

12:17 AM 06:20 AM 11:54 AM 06:34 PM

1.3 0.6 1.2 0.3

H L H L

1.9 0.6 1.3 0.3

H L H L

7

01:13 AM SAT 07:21 AM 12:42 PM 07:18 PM

1.4 0.7 1.2 0.3

04:31 AM Mon 11:41 AM 04:19 PM 10:31 PM

1.9 0.5 1.2 0.3

H L H L

8

02:06 AM Sun 08:21 AM 01:32 PM 08:04 PM

H L H L

24

05:23 AM 12:37 PM 05:15 PM 11:16 PM

2 0.5 1.2 0.3

H L H L

9

1.9 0.6 1.2 0.3

H L H L

25

06:10 AM Wed 01:26 PM 06:07 PM 11:59 PM

2 0.5 1.2 0.3

H L H L

2 0.5 1.2 0.3

H L H L

26

06:53 AM 2 H THu 02:10 PM 0.5 L 06:56 PM 1.2 H

06:30 AM 2.1 H THu 01:58 PM 0.4 L 06:49 PM 1.2 H

Tue

27 Fri

12:42 AM 07:32 AM 02:49 PM 07:43 PM

0.4 1.9 0.5 1.2

L H L H

THu Fri

Mon

05:20 AM THu 11:55 AM 05:06 PM 11:13 PM

12:34 AM 07:18 AM 02:44 PM 07:42 PM

0.3 2.1 0.4 1.2

L H L H

28

01:24 AM SAT 08:10 AM 03:24 PM 08:27 PM

0.4 1.9 0.5 1.3

L H L H

14

01:28 AM SAT 08:06 AM 03:30 PM 08:36 PM

0.3 2.1 0.3 1.3

L H L H

29

02:07 AM Sun 08:46 AM 03:56 PM 09:11 PM

0.5 1.8 0.5 1.3

L H L H

14

12:04 AM SAT 06:53 AM 01:32 PM 06:59 PM

0.2 1.8 0.4 1.1

15

0.3 2.1 0.3 1.4

L H L H

30

0.5 1.8 0.5 1.3

L H L H

15

0.2 1.8 0.3 1.2

High –3:47 +3:11 –0:06 –2:14

Low –3:50 +3:30 –0:10 –1:58

Fri

02:25 AM Sun 08:56 AM 04:16 PM 09:31 PM

diFFerenCes Sharps Island Light Havre de Grace Sevenfoot Knoll Light St. Michaels, Miles River

02:50 AM Mon 09:21 AM 04:26 PM 09:55 PM

36 June 2014 SpinSheet

H. Ht *1.18 *1.59 *0.82 *1.08

L. Ht *1.17 *1.59 *0.83 *1.08

Spring Range 1.5 1.9 1.1 1.4

05:06 AM 0.5 L THu 11:04 AM 1.4 H 05:39 PM 0.2 L

13 Fri

diFFerenCes

Fri

Tue

05:34 AM THu 12:05 PM 05:21 PM 11:17 PM Fri

06:13 AM 1.7 H 12:44 PM 0.5 L 06:05 PM 1.1 H

Mon

05:27 AM 2.2 H 11:29 AM 0.1 L 06:00 PM 2.9 H

Fri

02:51 AM 09:08 AM 03:39 PM 09:58 PM

03:57 AM SAT 10:06 AM 04:42 PM 11:03 PM

2.4 0 2.9 0.2

H L H L

05:03 AM 2.3 H Sun 11:03 AM 0 L 05:41 PM 2.9 H

23

12:02 AM Mon 06:04 AM 11:56 AM 06:35 PM

0.1 2.3 0 3

L H L H

24

12:55 AM Tue 06:59 AM 12:47 PM 07:23 PM

0.1 2.3 0 3

L H L H

10

12:22 AM Tue 06:22 AM 12:19 PM 06:51 PM

0.1 2.3 0 3

L H L H

25

01:43 AM Wed 07:47 AM 01:33 PM 08:06 PM

0.1 2.3 0.1 3

L H L H

11

01:12 AM Wed 07:15 AM 01:10 PM 07:41 PM

0 L 2.4 H -0.1 L 3.2 H

26

02:26 AM THu 08:30 AM 02:17 PM 08:47 PM

0 2.4 0.1 3

L H L H

12

02:02 AM THu 08:06 AM 02:01 PM 08:31 PM

-0.2 L 2.5 H -0.2 L 3.3 H

27

03:06 AM 09:10 AM 02:58 PM 09:25 PM

0 2.4 0.1 2.9

L H L H

02:51 AM 08:57 AM 02:53 PM 09:21 PM

-0.3 L 2.6 H -0.3 L 3.4 H

28

03:44 AM SAT 09:48 AM 03:38 PM 10:01 PM

0.1 2.4 0.1 2.9

L H L H

Fri

28

12:00 AM SAT 06:49 AM 01:21 PM 06:49 PM

0.3 1.7 0.5 1.1

L H L H

13

L H L H

29

12:43 AM Sun 07:25 AM 01:57 PM 07:32 PM

0.3 1.7 0.5 1.1

L H L H

14

03:41 AM SAT 09:49 AM 03:45 PM 10:12 PM

-0.4 L 2.7 H -0.3 L 3.4 H

29

04:19 AM Sun 10:25 AM 04:18 PM 10:38 PM

0.1 2.4 0.2 2.8

L H L H

L H L H

30

0.4 1.6 0.4 1.2

L H L H

15

-0.4 L 2.8 H -0.3 L 3.3 H

30

0.1 2.4 0.3 2.7

L H L H

06:06 AM 1.8 H 12:44 PM 0.4 L 06:02 PM 1.1 H

12:58 AM Sun 07:41 AM 02:20 PM 07:58 PM

20

-0.4 L 2.8 H -0.2 L 3.1 H

06:17 AM -0.3 L Tue 12:32 PM 2.8 H 06:38 PM -0.1 L

1.5 0.6 1.3 0.2

05:19 AM 0.6 L 11:10 AM 1.3 H 05:50 PM 0.3 L

Fri

03:59 AM Wed 10:11 AM 04:48 PM 11:11 PM

05:24 AM Mon 11:36 AM 05:38 PM 11:56 PM

12:17 AM 06:16 AM 12:00 PM 06:30 PM

5

12 13

04:31 AM Tue 10:40 AM 05:48 PM 11:27 PM

0.2 2.4 0.3 2.7

High Mtn Pt, Magothy River +1:24 Chesapeake Beach –1:14 Cedar Point –3:16 Point Lookout –3:48

01:26 AM Mon 07:59 AM 02:33 PM 08:18 PM

Low +1:40 –1:15 –3:13 –3:47

H. Ht *0.88 *1.12 *1.33 *1.37

Spring L. Ht Range *0.88 1.0 *1.14 1.1 *1.33 1.4 *1.33 1.4

Fri

04:32 AM Sun 10:41 AM 04:40 PM 11:03 PM

diFFerenCes Onancock Creek Stingray Point Hooper Strait Light Lynnhaven Inlet

High +3 :52 +2 :01 +5 :52 +0 :47

04:54 AM Mon 11:03 AM 04:57 PM 11:14 PM

Low H. Ht +4 :15 *0.70 +2 :29 *0.48 +6 :04 *0.66 +1 :08 *0.77

Spring L. Ht Range *0.83 2.2 *0.83 1.4 *0.67 2.0 *0.83 2.4

spinsheet.com


Upcoming Classes

Captain’s License Renewal: May 17 Sail and Towing Endorsements: May 18 Basic Navigation and Piloting June 7-8 Nav 2: iNavigation June 9-10 Captain’s License 100 Ton 2 weeks June 9-20 First Aid & CPR: June 21 Sail and Towing Endorsements: June 22 Marine Diesel Basics June 21-22 Marine Diesel Level II June 23-24 Captain’s License (Six Pack) 3 weekends Jul. 11-27

Tidal Current Tables

For a complete listing of courses visit annapolisschoolofseamanship.com

Baltimore Harbor Approach (Off Sandy Point) 1

Slack Water Max Current Speed

Slack Water Max Current Speed

11

0031 0753 1454 1933

0419 1.2 1109 -1 1710 0.4 2234 -0.6

21

0023 Mon 0531 1216 1920

0300 -0.5 0902 0.8 1543 -0.9 2210 0.6

12

0113 0835 1539 2024

0502 1.2 1153 -1.1 1756 0.5 2321 -0.7

22

3

0119 0626 1258 2000

0353 -0.4 0950 0.7 1627 -0.9 2258 0.6

13

0159 0917 1620 2116

0546 1.3 1236 -1.1 1842 0.5

23

0216 Wed 0727 1342 2039

0451 -0.4 1042 0.6 1712 -0.8 2347 0.7

14

0010 -0.7 0631 1.2 1319 -1.2 1929 0.6

24

5

0551 -0.5 1138 0.5 1758 -0.8

15

0101 -0.7 0718 1.2 1403 -1.2 2017 0.7

25

0035 0.8 0651 -0.5 1237 0.5 1845 -0.7

16

0122 0.8 0750 -0.6 1337 0.4 1932 -0.7

17

0208 0.9 0845 -0.7 1435 0.4 2018 -0.7

18

2

Tue

4

THu

6

Fri

7

SAT

8

Sun

9

0311 0836 1429 2118 0405 0950 1518 2157 0455 1102 1610 2234 0542 1210 1701 2312

Mon 0627 1311 1753 2351

10 Tue

0710 1405 1843

0047 1.1 0720 -0.8 1312 0.5 1905 -0.8

1

0143 1.1 0824 -0.9 1418 0.5 2001 -0.8

2

0237 1.2 0923 -0.9 1520 0.5 2056 -0.7

3

0703 1358 1845

0329 1.2 1017 -1 1618 0.5 2149 -0.7

4

0033 Wed 0750 1448 1942

0418 1.2 1106 -1.1 1710 0.5 2240 -0.7

5

0156 -0.7 0808 1.1 1447 -1.1 2107 0.7

26

0120 0833 1533 2036

0504 1.2 1151 -1.1 1759 0.5 2328 -0.6

0007 0537 1213 1901

0254 -0.7 0901 1 1534 -1.1 2159 0.8

27

0206 0914 1614 2128

0110 Wed 0646 1301 1945

0357 -0.7 0958 0.8 1623 -1 2254 0.9

28

0253 1 0936 -0.8 1530 0.4 2104 -0.6

19

0214 0800 1352 2030

0504 -0.7 1059 0.7 1715 -0.9 2350 1

29

0336 1.1 1024 -0.9 1621 0.4 2149 -0.6

20

0319 0920 1446 2117

0613 -0.7 1205 0.6 1809 -0.9

30

Wed

THu

Fri

SAT

Sun

0247 1000 1700 2210 0339 1043 1740 2307

Mon 0435 1127 1820 Tue

THu

Fri

SAT

Sun

0421 1040 1544 2206 0519 1154 1645 2255

Mon 0613 1300 1746 2345 Tue

THu

Fri

SAT

Sun

0251 0953 1653 2218 0336 1030 1730 2307

Mon 0421 1107 1806 2357

Slack Water Max Current Speed

Slack Water Max Current Speed

21

0206 0725 1439 2026

0439 0.8 1114 -1.5 1723 1 2353 -1.3

0624 1112 1828

0307 -1.5 0844 0.9 1507 -1.8 2121 1.5

22

0314 0819 1536 2133

0541 0.7 1211 -1.5 1826 1

13

0033 0711 1200 1915

0355 -1.6 0932 1 1554 -1.9 2209 1.6

23

0156 0.8 0841 -1.1 1417 0.5 2048 -1.1

14

0122 0800 1251 2004

0443 -1.6 1022 1 1643 -1.9 2259 1.6

24

0015 0535 1303 1738

0245 0.7 0932 -1.1 1512 0.5 2147 -1.1

15

0211 0850 1344 2056

0532 -1.6 1113 1 1735 -1.9 2349 1.6

25

6

0112 0622 1353 1845

0338 0.7 1024 -1.1 1610 0.6 2247 -1.1

16

0301 Mon 0942 1440 2151

0624 -1.6 1206 1 1830 -1.8

26

0009 0646 1123 1844

0325 -1.3 0900 0.6 1522 -1.6 2136 1.1

0548 1.1 1234 -1.1 1845 0.6

7

0209 0711 1442 1953

0432 0.6 1115 -1.2 1707 0.7 2345 -1.1

17

0042 1.5 0718 -1.6 1303 1 1929 -1.7

27

0049 0726 1201 1923

0406 -1.3 0938 0.6 1601 -1.6 2213 1.1

0015 -0.6 0630 1.1 1314 -1.1 1928 0.6

8

0306 0800 1528 2058

0526 0.6 1204 -1.3 1803 0.8

18

0137 1.3 0814 -1.6 1404 0.9 2032 -1.6

28

0124 0803 1237 2002

0444 -1.3 1015 0.6 1639 -1.5 2247 1.1

0101 -0.6 0711 1 1353 -1 2011 0.6

9

0039 -1.2 0618 0.7 1250 -1.4 1855 1

19 THu

0536 1237 1757

0235 1.1 0913 -1.5 1508 0.9 2139 -1.4

29

0157 0840 1314 2040

0521 -1.3 1051 0.6 1717 -1.5 2322 1

0148 -0.5 0753 0.9 1431 -1 2053 0.6

10

0131 -1.3 0708 0.7 1336 -1.6 1945 1.2

20

0058 0630 1339 1912

0336 1 1014 -1.5 1616 0.9 2247 -1.4

30

0228 Mon 0917 1351 2119

0558 -1.2 1129 0.6 1755 -1.4 2358 1

All times listed are in Local Time, Daylight Saving Time has been applied when appropriate. All speeds are in knots.

Sun

Mon 0334 1033 1456 2232 Tue

0411 1121 1542 2322

Wed 0452 1211 1636 THu

Fri

SAT

Sun

Mon 0359 0848 1613 2157

Tue

0449 0936 1657 2252

0627 -1.2 1156 0.6 1822 -1.4

11

0028 1 0709 -1.1 1239 0.5 1906 -1.3

12 THu

0110 0.9 0753 -1.1 1325 0.5 1954 -1.2

Slack Water Max Current Speed

0220 -1.4 0756 0.8 1421 -1.7 2033 1.4

0258 0949 1415 2147

Wed 0537 1024 1742 2343

Fri

SAT

Sun

Tue

0351 1038 1540 2249

Wed 0443 1136 1646 2352

Fri

SAT

Sun

Mon 0416 0911 1629 2232 Tue

0513 0959 1718 2324

Wed 0602 1043 1802 THu

Fri

SAT

Sun

0054 -1.3 0639 0.7 1304 -1.6 1923 1.1 0150 -1.3 0732 0.6 1354 -1.6 2013 1.1 0240 -1.3 0818 0.6 1439 -1.6 2057 1.1

All times listed are in Local Time, Daylight Saving Time has been applied when appropriate. All speeds are in knots.

Current Differences and Speed Ratios Secondary Stations Baltimore Harbor Approach

Time Differences

Min. before Flood

Flood

Min. before Ebb

Speed Ratios Ebb

Flood

Ebb

Secondary Stations Chesapeake Bay Entrance

Time Differences

Min. before Flood

Flood

Min. before Ebb

Speed Ratios Ebb

Flood

Ebb

Cove Point, 3.9 n.mi. East

-3:29

-3:36

-4:08

-3:44

0.4

0.6

Chesapeake Beach, 1.5 miles North

+0:29

+0:48

+0:06

+0:00

1.0

0.7

Sharp Island Lt., 3.4 n.mi. West

-1:39

-1:41

-1:57

-1:43

0.4

0.5

Chesapeake Channel, (bridge tunnel) +0:05

+0:38

+0:32

+0:19

2.2

1.2

Thomas Pt. Shoal Lt., 2.0 n.mi. East

-1:05

-0:14

-0:22

-0:20

0.6

0.6

Stingray Point, 12.5 miles East

+2:18

+3:00

+2:09

+2:36

1.2

0.6

Pooles Island, 4 miles Southwest

+0:59

+0:48

+0:56

+1:12

0.6

0.8

Smith Point Light, 6.7 n.mi. East

+2:29

+2:57

+2:45

+1:59

0.5

0.3

Turkey Point, 1.2 n.mi. Southwest

+2:39

+1:30

+0:58

+1:00

0.6

0.8

Point No Point, 4.3 n.mi. East

+4:49

+5:33

+6:04

+5:45

0.4

0.2

Corrections Applied to Baltimore Harbor Approach

Follow us!

Corrections Applied to Chesapeake Bay Entrance

SpinSheet June 2014 37

June 2014 Currents

0442 1136 1840

0209 -0.5 0817 0.9 1500 -1 2123 0.6

Sun

Chesapeake Bay Entrance

Slack Water Max Current Speed


Over

and

Out by Andy Schell

I

heard recently that you’re most creative when you first wake up in the morning, that it benefits you to immediately start writing before you have any ‘inputs’ for the day. Facebook. Email. That kind of thing. Write before you start ‘reacting’ to those myriad inputs that will come to define the rest of your day. Proactive creativity. It’s just after six in the morning now as I start this, my last article for SpinSheet. Shortly after my first article about my experiences living aboard my dad’s boat Sojourner at Sarles Boatyard was pub##The author and his wife Mia Karlsson on Arc turus in Öregrund, summer. Mia has tak Sweden last en almost all of the pho tos for Andy’s colum the July 2013 cover sho ns as well as t. It was the bikini cov er. You remember it!

in 2009 on his 35-foot yawl ##Andy as he appeared in SpinSheet e he and his wife Mia wher ville, Delta Arcturus en route to spring trans -Atlantic. would complete the refit before their

lished in SpinSheet in June 2008, I had coffee with the editor, Molly Winans, at City Dock Café in Annapolis and somehow convinced her to give me a column. That Sarles article wasn’t just the first article that I had published in SpinSheet. It was my first published article. My evolution with SpinSheet paralleled my career as both a writer and a sailor — and really, a person — outside of the 38 June 2014 SpinSheet

magazine. I got my first offshore delivery in the fall of that year and have continued sailing, covering about 30,000 bluewater miles since then, including two Atlantic crossings. Unbeknownst to me, I got the name of my business and website from an article I wrote in SpinSheet [December 2008] that I titled “Fifty-Nine Degrees North,” about my first experience sailing in the Baltic with my (now) wife Mia and my

best friend Ryan. Subconsciously, I must have recalled that title when brainstorming over business names last winter, because I only remembered that article when I saw it this morning as I reviewed my archive. My SpinSheet columns helped me get through my mom’s illness and eventual death from brain cancer. Writing on those difficult topics was my form of therapy. My mom was my biggest source of inspiration, and losing her was (is) brutal. This helps. Since 2008, I’ve been published in almost a dozen other magazines. It’s been an amazing run. And SpinSheet, simply, has been the one constant over that period. Alas, it’s coming to an end. For now, I’m signing off my regular SpinSheet column to pursue other creative endeavors. My ‘59º North Sailing Podcast’ is taking off, so that’s the first priority, and I want to write a book. I’ve wanted to write a book for some time now, but I’ve since realized that wanting to write it is a lot easier than actually putting in the work and writing it. I only have so much creative energy to spend. spinsheet.com


…I’ve followed my passions and managed to cobble together a career out of them… While it’s hard in the moment to feel as if I’ve been ‘successful’ over the past seven years, upon reflection, I’m beginning to accept it, at least cognitively if not emotionally. I’ve wanted to share some of my ideas on success, as I define it, and reflecting on this column has inspired a few points I’d like to make. Success should come from within. I don’t make much money doing what I do, but I’ve followed my passions and managed to cobble together a career out of them, a career that’s taken me across oceans and to many parts of the world and recently with the podcast, has allowed me to have in-depth conversations with my sailing heroes. I never said ‘no’ to opportunities (sometimes to my own detriment, when I make promises I can’t fulfill). But that’s my definition of luck: to stay open to opportunities and be able to pounce on them when they arise. In practice, that has meant living for long periods in my dad’s basement and loading up on the credit card debt! But after seven years, it’s finally paying off. But only just. Finally, at age 30 (and believe me, I know how young that is, and I don’t feel a day older than 16), I’m putting into practice what I’ve suspected all along (what my mom always knew). That life is for living, so why not enjoy it? It’s a liberating feeling being in control of your own destiny. I eat right and exercise daily. I drink a little bit of alcohol, but not too much. I go to bed by 10 p.m. and wake up before 7 a.m. I’ve started meditating (only just, but it’s awesome). I’m pursuing goals that are my own, and not someone else’s. For the first time since I started this passionate pursuit that my mom had always encouraged, I feel content. There is risk in that last statement, for contentment can lead to complacency, and that’s the beginning of the end. Which is precisely why I’m moving on. I’ve got to find new challenges to replace the old, to inject new enthusiasm into my work and life to stoke the fire. To ride that razor’s edge between contentment and complacency, to enjoy the former and ward off the latter. It goes without saying that I wouldn’t even have a writing career were it not for Follow us!

SpinSheet (and a very old friend of mine, Katie D, who read my blog once and told me I should try and get published) and the folks who’ve been reading my columns ever since. Sincere thanks to you all. Molly took a chance on me back in 2008, for which I’m eternally grateful. I hope I’ve made her proud.

About the Author: Andy writes regularly on his sailing blog at 59-north.com and continues to publish his 59º North Sailing Podcast weekly on iTunes and on his website. And if you don’t see a book from him in the next two years, start bugging him!

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Don’t Sell Your Boat, Mister by “Saving Sailing” author Nicholas Hayes

##We think we’re too busy to go to Paris or India, or for that matter, to go sailing one night a week... Are we? Photo by Dan Phelps

This popped into my email inbox a few days ago:

“The desire is there, but no time to get out on the water so... Laser boat for sale. Very good condition.” What occupiers of time would have such pull as to overrule desire? Desire is, after all, a bold, aspirational word. Its use suggests that the seller would be much happier sailing than not and deeply regrets this unfortunate position. Needing to know more, I stalked the guy on Facebook and LinkedIn. I’ve seen him around. Seems nice. Forties, maybe. Fit. Doesn’t hang with kids, so I don’t suspect he has any. Not sure about a partner. Works in IT for a big firm. I can only guess that the pressures at his job are large but that he makes a nice living and figures sailing can wait. If you’re like me, you’re probably sick and tired of all the “live in the moment” memes posted on Facebook (of all the places to preach about gumption). And Carpe Diem is so ‘80s. The present is fine. What about the future? I’ve been looking to 40 June 2014 SpinSheet

experts to learn why we make the choices we do at the moment we make them. For example, why answer the boss’s call on a Tuesday evening instead of launching your Laser and sailing with friends? Or why get rid of the Laser in the first place, if sailing it is something you “desire”? Daniel Gilbert, a social psychologist at Harvard and author of the 2007 book “Stumbling on Happiness” has done the research and concludes: 1.) We tend to imagine an idealized future in the same way that we impose biases on our memories and recall things as better or worse than they actually were (this explains both nostalgia or regret and undue optimism or pessimism). 2.) Since we imagine the future inaccurately, we base our present happiness, or lack thereof, on what we feel and see now. This explains why GM owners will say that spinsheet.com


GM is better, though it may or may not be, and may buy another even after a terrible experience. 3.) We hold firm to a belief that the future will be better or different, even when we are doing nothing to make it that way. “The reality of the moment is so palpable and powerful that it holds imagination in a tight orbit from which it never fully escapes” says Gilbert. This is why we might say, “I’ll see the world when I retire,” while not wondering if we realistically will. Will we even make it to retirement? Will our savings support our ambitions? Are our ambitions imagined, too? How can we know? And then we’re doing the same thing we were doing yesterday, and the future isn’t much different from the present. We’re still going to work, and we still think we’re too busy to go to Paris or India, or, for that matter, to go sailing one night a week. Is it any surprise? To make matters worse, the years reveal, at least to me, that perceptions of the sources of happiness shift as one ages. By the time one reaches their fifth or sixth decade, having worked so hard for so many years, Laser sailing doesn’t make the list as sufficiently restorative or rewarding, or even potentially fun. (Don’t tell that to the Laser sailing grandfather of six “tillerman” at propercourse.blogspot.com). The point is, if the batteries are weak, it may not boot up.

Social science and hindsight aside, there are at least two basic things one can do to avoid having busy-ness overrule desire. It starts quite simply, with a bit of prioritization and reorganization. Take a look at your calendar and count the hours in a week spent on commuting and spectating. Americans, whether we like it or not, now spend more time driving (or riding) to work or school and more time staring at and surfing media than ever in our history. For most of us, our discretionary time vaporizes in traffic and in front of a screen. I’ve observed that the folks who seem most content, active, and happy in their time firmly follow a few rules. They live near what they do, even if it means giving up space and material things. They often have fewer cars and fewer bedrooms, but they don’t need them or the associated costs. Proximity to work and play buys hours. They also avoid most spectating. This starts by not signing a cable-TV contract, and sometimes it means not having a screen anywhere where work isn’t done. Breaking the habit of watching means creating a new habit of doing. When a life is organized this way, hours magically appear for things that bring happiness — such as Laser sailing on a Tuesday night. Don’t sell your boat, Mister.

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SpinSheet June 2014 41


Summer Cruising ‘Round the DelMarVa They Go

The Myths about Sailing with Teens

St. Michaels

Stuck in the Mud with Dad

‘Round the DelMarVa They Go

“I

had read about groups of cruisers nected to others that have done it before traveling difficult or dangerous and are willing to share their knowledge waters in flotillas or groups, so and experiences. We first heard about the the idea of being with other boaters has ARC while reading an article about weathalways appealed to me,” says Gary Wells, er forecasting and Robin and I decided that first-time participant in the 450-mile-long we would put a hard date on the calendar ARC DelMarVa Rally June 7-14. for our adventure to begin by signing up Wells and his wife Robin have only for the Caribbean 1500 this November.” actively sailed for six years, but now that After signing on to the 1500, the couple they are both newly retired, they have big attended a WCC seminar in Annapolis in dreams for life aboard their Amel Super March and decided to consider the DelMaramu 53, a bluewater cruiser they MarVa rally as a test run. purchased in January and brought to Herrington Harbour North. That the boat was designed to be double-handed was a big selling point, as the couple plans to live aboard for six years or more. “My wife and I are both equally trained and certified with ASA and previously sailed a Sabre 28 in Florida and on the Chesapeake,” says Wells. “Having said that, our experi##If you see the SpinSheet photo boat at the start of ence (by blue water the DelMarVa Rally June 8, wave and smile! cruising standards) Photo by Dan Phelps is limited… My wife and I make a good team though, and we are looking forward to casting off and startWells says, “Preparations have been ing our adventure.” going on in earnest… Since this is a newThe World Cruising Club’s ARC to-us boat, we are very busy learning what DelMarVa, a circumnavigation around the we have on our hands and what we need to peninsula, with parties along the way, had do to get outfitted and absolutely seawor23 entries at print time. The rally departs thy. We›ve been doing some practice with June 8 following a captains’ meeting and the boat, getting lots of hours reading and welcome party at J/World Annapolis the watching videos and attending the Cruisprevious night. Participating boats range ing Seminar put on by the WCC.” from a J/105 to 54-footers, with many in The couple has followed WCC’s guidthe 35- to 40-foot range. Most of the ralliance and checklists for preparation. “The ers are first-time participants. list is long (and expensive), so we find “This is our first rally of any kind,” says ourselves prioritizing and moving forward Wells. “It makes sense that as we start to as best we can given the constraints of time explore the intricacies of cruising and start and finances. A week ago, we were inspectclimbing the learning curve, we get coned by the Coast Guard Auxiliary, and we 42 June 2014 SpinSheet

are proud to have passed. The information we received from WCC was instrumental in preparing us for that, and we didn›t even really know it.” “At this moment we are considering hiring an experienced captain so that we can glean as much as possible from the experience,” says Wells. “There›s a lot for us to try out, and having someone aboard who›s ‹been there› will not only offer that extra safety margin, but likely save us time and expense in the future. We will join the 1500 in November, and that will be our full indoctrination into passagemaking. We plan to winter in the Caribbean, returning to the area where this dream all started. Then, and this is what this is all about, we will cross to the Med in 2015.” What are the Wells looking forward to the most? “Sailing this boat that we have schemed and dreamed for nine years now is definitely going to be the best part. What›s going to be very cool about the rally is the meeting and networking with experienced sailors, learning about available resources, and learning how to do the things we are looking forward to doing on a grand scale. This will take place in a setting of safety and within the ‹confines› of an organized and scheduled event. We are definitely looking forward to seeing new sights, meeting new people and learning as much as we can.” The SpinSheet staff wishes the ARC DelMarVa Ralliers a safe and pleasant trip and encourages them to email molly@spinsheet.com with updates and photos. spinsheet.com/delmarva spinsheet.com


Myths about Sailing with Teens The

by Cindy Wallach

S

alty dogs and armchair sailors alike seem to hold fast to the idea that there is a sweet spot for cruising with kids. Under six years old and you’re asking for trouble. Over 13 and your kids will hate you for dragging them away from their friends, phones, and Facebook. But more and more families are not letting the stereotypes stop them from enjoying time under sail with their teen-aged kids, and believe it or not, the kids are enjoying it, too. BJ Porter says the myth that sailing with teenagers is bad news is nonsense. “They are not the sullen, withdrawn monosyllabic teens. They are excited, engaged, and can converse comfortably with adults,” says the father of two. “So there really isn’t a lot of room to point out how horrific cruising with teens might be when you’ve got two happy kids in front of you.” The Porter family left Rhode Island in 2012 with 15-year-old Will and 12-year-old Danielle for some long-term cruising. After a shake down through the Chesapeake Bay, they hopped to the British Virgin Islands, through the Caribbean, and then over to Panama. After transiting the Panama Canal in December 2013, the family is now aboard their Hallberg-Rassy 53 in the Galapagos waiting for a weather window to cross the Pacific to the Marquesas. Dad BJ Porter says the kids, now 17 and 14 years old, have no trouble passing the time underway. “They read, listen to audiobooks with the family, watch for wildlife, hang out in the cockpit and talk with the family, stand watch, and catch up with sleep from watch. If it’s calm enough, they might watch a movie or use their laptops, but that’s not a frequent passage activity.” Follow us!

##A group of teens on Bravo.

The Portela family cast off from Brazil for Annapolis when their children were 11, 13, and 14 years old. After living in the Chesapeake Bay for six months, they circumnavigated on their St. Francis 44 catamaran. Claudia Portela says that the secret to sailing with teenagers is that you must like actually hanging out with them. “We loved to play together,” Claudia remembers of their three-year cruise. “We had a lot of board games on the boat for rainy days, we watched movies together, we did cooking classes, we fished, and we had storytelling hour. They used to say that they were very happy to see that their parents had time for them because living in a big city their friends’ parents had no time for their kids.”

Teens who sail with their parents all seem to have some level of involvement in running the boat. Danielle Porter is in charge of the relieving the 3 a.m. to 6 a.m. watch person and staying at the helm until breakfast. Will Porter has always had a keen interest in sailing and stands the 9 p.m. to midnight watch on the family boat so that mom and dad can get some solid shut eye. “I also get to help sail the boat, handle the helm, and drive the dinghy. I am the ‘willing and able seaman’ who will gladly do the grunt work to hoist the spinnaker or staysail and get extra boat speed,” says Will. “Some older couples express envy that we have extra young, strong, and competent watch standers onboard,” adds BJ “I’m still training the kids on maintaining SpinSheet June 2014 43


Summer Cruising ‘Round the DelMarVa They Go

The Myths about Sailing with Teens

St. Michaels

##The Bravo girls make new friends easily.

Stuck in the Mud with Dad boat systems, doing things such as oil changes, basic electrical work, and other maintenance tasks. It’s coming along, but they’re not totally doing that stuff yet.” Long-term cruisers and weekend sailors both seem to get the same question when it comes to bringing along teens: what about their social life? Maddy Thomas sails out of Annapolis with her dad on his 35foot S2. The 16-year-old says that even though sailing the Bay with her dad on weekends means being away from her peers, she can always take lots of selfies to zap onto social media to make her friends jealous. “I like that it’s something he and I have been able to bond over since I was little. It’s hard for a 40-something year old man to know what to do with a 16-year-old girl, but sailing has always been something we loved,” says Maddy.

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Long-distance cruisers agree that finding other teen boats is key. “The downside was that I had limited people my age to hang out. For months we encountered no liveaboard teens. I missed that a lot, but now I see it was a really small price to pay considering all the experience, culture, and fun that I had,” says Lygia Portela, the oldest of the Portela kids who is now 23 and living back in Brazil. Danielle Porter agrees. “Almost all of my small group of friends are jealous of what I get to do,” Danielle remarks. “I think the fact that we get to see so many things and have so much fun is what makes our land-bound friends jealous. I have met many cruising kids along our path. In Grenada, there was a large group of cruising kids that met up on the beach every afternoon and hung out.” Dad BJ Porter admits finding other teen boats isn’t easy. Aside from the fact that there aren’t a lot out there, they’re also difficult to spot. “One thing that might make it harder, they don’t look much like kids anymore, especially from a distance. A ‘Kid Boat’ is usually easy to spot, as there are

smallish, pint-sized humans scrambling around the deck and visible to the naked eye.” Overall it seems there are far more perks than pitfalls when it comes to sailing with teens. They can entertain themselves, they can stand watches, they can help cook, and they seem to truly appreciate the experience. “The highlight of being grown up was that I was able to enjoy parts of our tourist and cruising life that younger kids were not really interested in, like history or geography,” remembers Lygia. “We have really enjoyed experiencing all this cool stuff with their more mature perspective. They are confident enough to join in our family discussions, with humor and wit. They definitely have their own unique take on things,” says BJ Porter. “For us being able to be a part of this time when so many parents are cut out of their kids’ lives is really wonderful. I feel as if I am starting to get some insight into the adults they will become.”

##The views are different for cruising teenagers but never dull.

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SpinSheet June 2014 45


Summer Cruising ‘Round the DelMarVa They Go

The Myths about Sailing with Teens

St. Michaels

Stuck in the Mud with Dad

See the Bay

St. Michaels

Story by Eric Vohr, photos by Michaela Urban

I

first visited St. Michaels in a car before I bought my C&C Mark II Merritt. I remember walking along the dock and drooling over the boats. I think that was when I first realized that I had to get a sailboat. I had just moved to Baltimore from Vermont and had traded skiing for sailing. My second time to St. Mikes was on my friend’s S2 race boat Gale Force. One of the crew had a house on San Domingo Creek on the Choptank. We would dock the boat in St. Mikes and stay at his house, which always involved drinking beer and eating steak and crabs — you can’t beat that. I’ve actually crashed that party a couple of times when I wasn’t racing on Gael Force; it was that good. When all is said and done, I’d have to say St. Mikes is one of my favorite “town” destinations on the Bay. It’s a do-able, albeit long, sail from Baltimore, if your depth allows you to cut through Kent Island, and an easy trip from Annapolis. What I like about sailing from Baltimore is that you almost always seem to have some kind of beam reach both coming and going. At the very heart of St. Michaels is the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. Each time I visit the place, I love it more. I was recently there for the launch of the restored Rosie Parks skipjack — one of the coolest event on the Bay this year. Next time you’re down there, take a stroll through the boatbuilding shop. And don’t worry about

Where Why Drawbacks 46 June 2014 SpinSheet

bothering the workers. These shipwrights are paid to fix boats and talk to visitors. In fact, the reason the Rosie Parks’ project took so long and cost half a million bucks is because it is a part-restoration, part-educational project. Translation: the workers spent half their time talking to boat lovers and tourists. The best place to stay in St. Mikes is the

could pull in. So we followed the directions and went into a small channel that deadended into a crappy little beach. I dragged the dinghy up and tied her off. After dinner and drinks, we returned to find the dinghy had totally deflated; the motor was bobbing on its side, the gas can floating around with our life preservers and paddles. It was 1 a.m. The water taxi was no longer running. Everything was shutting down, and everyone was ##The old Hooper Strait Lighthouse (circa 1879), going to bed. We had no authentically restored way to get to our boat. and decorated as part of the permanent exhibit at So I gathered the CBMM at Navy Point. mess out of the water and pulled it all on land, and my friend went off to see what she could do. She came back with a waterman who not only was “willing” to help us, but super happy to save our butts. We collected my battered dinghy, motor, and paddles, and we loaded it all on his waterman’s boat and headed out to the Hambleton Inn. It’s on the water, a stone’s anchor field. Of course, it took me forever throw from the Museum, and it boasts the to find my boat (I have always thought it coolest porch in town. Just don’t go there if would be good to get a distinctive anchor you’re on a diet. The breakfast, incredible. light, maybe a colorful stroboscopic one. One of my favorite St. Mikes stories He drove around in the 15-knot breeze, took place a few years back. I sailed down swinging between the anchored boats as if there with a friend. We anchored out he were walking the dog. Finally, I found and took our dinghy in for dinner. It was Merritt, and the waterman expertly and summer, so it was typically crowded, and effortlessly backed his stern ever so gently we couldn’t find space on the dinghy dock. up against the leeward side of my boat, let Some guy standing on the dock said there us out, and waved goodbye. Watermen rule was a place around the corner where we on the Bay, hands down.

On the Miles River, 38.7836° N, 76.2222° W Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, great provisioning, historical and quaint town, good anchorage Gets crowded in the summer spinsheet.com


##The boat shop at CBM M, where craf tsmen w ork on boat s an their knowle dge with visit d share ors.

The Town That Fooled t h e B ritis h

T

he event to commemorate the Battle of St. Michaels during the War of 1812 unfolds August 10-11. Come and witness the lighting of lanterns in the trees, a CBMM exhibit, skipjack and carriage rides, and Watermen’s Appreciation Day. Click to starspangled200. org for details, and look for more coverage of such events in SpinSheet this summer.

If you have never sailed to St. Michaels, you are missing one of the Bay’s best destinations. I haven’t even begun to talk about the bars and restaurants—some of the best on the Bay. And while I’d like to tell you about some of the wild nights I’ve had in St. Mikes, some stories are better left untold. About the Author: Eric Vohr and photographer Michaela Urban are an outdoor adventure and travel writing team. Vohr has raced and sailed his C&C Mark II Merritt on the Bay for 10 years out of Baltimore.

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Life Is Short. Go Now. SpinSheet June 2014 47


Summer Cruising ‘Round the DelMarVa They Go

The Myths about Sailing with Teens

St. Michaels

Stuck in the Mud with Dad

Stuck in the Mud with Dad by Sheridan Monroe

##On an Easter sailing adventure with her dad in 2013, the (now) 14-year-old author reaching up the Potomac.

L

ast Easter, I had just turned 13 and I was ready for adventure. My dad and I agreed it would be fun to team up to move our boat from Solomons to a boatyard in Herring Creek for some repairs on the way to its ultimate destination in Washington. The catch is that our 30-foot sailboat does not have a normal engine. When the original engine died a couple of seasons ago, my father replaced it with an electric motor that works well as long as there is still electricity in the batteries. When asked how long the electricity will last or how far the boat can go on a charge, 48 June 2014 SpinSheet

my dad is not concrete about the answers. I actually don’t think he knows. My mom and brother figured this out and found excuses to not join us on the trip. The plan was to spend Friday night on the boat in the marina and get underway just before dawn on Saturday. We would then sail out of the Patuxent River, down the Chesapeake Bay, up part of the lower Potomac River, and finish near the headwaters of Herring Creek, in rural southern Maryland. My dad said the trip was around 40 miles. He left driving directions for Mom to pick us up at the small

off-the-beaten-path boatyard. We thought we would arrive home at a reasonable hour on Saturday night and enjoy a lazy Easter Sunday at home together. What could possibly go wrong? Our Saturday trip began with us oversleeping a little. We did see a beautiful sunrise as we departed Solomons. The wind was light, but at least there was some wind, so Dad turned off the engine. I did most of the sailing out of the Patuxent River, and Dad adjusted the sails. He says he enjoys “light air sailing,” but when we got into the Chesapeake Bay, the wind disappeared entirely. After some grumbling about the forecast not matching the conditions we were seeing, my father gave in and started to use a mix of the motor, the sails, or both. With so little wind, I lost interest at this point and went below to watch DVDs on my computer. Several hours later, we were at the mouth of the Potomac River. The predicted winds finally showed up. We were behind schedule, but when we turned up the Potomac River, even more wind filled in behind us, and it felt as if we were flying up the river. I enjoyed my turn steering again. The sun was setting as we dropped the sails just outside the entrance to Herring Creek. It was a beautiful scene, and it seemed like everything was going as planned. Turning into the channel that leads into the creek, there was a surprising amount of current flowing against us. It was clear the tide was going out, and the creek was longer than we thought. We realized this trip would finish in the dark. At this point, Mom called us on the cell phone to explain she was hopelessly lost on the two-lane roads of southern Maryland. I suggested that we just anchor for the night, and send Mom home for now. We could finish sailing on Easter morning. Unfortunately, my dad seemed intent on finishing. spinsheet.com


##Wing on wing near Solomons.

My job was to use a hand-held floodlight plugged into the boat to scan for markers and hazards. We arrived at a place where my dad could just make out the docks of the small boatyard. My light picked up white reflective tape on a piling between us and the boatyard. We could not see if there was a red or green shape associated with it, and the chart just indicated it was a private marker. Dad assumed it was a shoal. We went to the right of the marker. Suddenly we stopped moving. Dad tried unsuccessfully to reverse back into deeper water. Dad then tried to toss the anchor and chain as far he could in the direction of deeper water and pull the boat out of the mud. It didn’t work. At this point, Dad said I got my wish, and we would see Easter sunrise from the boat out in the creek. Since we were stuck in soft mud with the tide going out, Dad called Mom and told her to drive back home. We would try again in the morning. I was happy because I just wanted to curl up in the V-berth and go to sleep. Dad slept in the main cabin so he could monitor conditions. At some point in the

early morning hours, the combination of wind and the rising tide popped us out of the mud like a cork. By sunrise, we were backed into a slip at the boatyard with everything organized and put away. Mom found better directions and came to pick us up. Although that Easter sailing trip did not turn out how we planned, it is one that I will always remember.

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SpinSheet June 2014 49


Charter Notes

Missing the Boat W

hen Karen and Carter Morris took their 13-year-old twins, Katy and Annie, on a sailing vacation in the British Virgin Islands (BVI) in April, they turned down the WiFi option on the Lagoon 400 catamaran they chartered from Dream Yacht Charter out of Hodges Creek Marina on Tortola. The original plan was to have another couple join the trip, but because of a family emergency, the others had to back out, leaving the family of four together on a spacious catamaran. One night on the boat, Karen overheard her daughters discussing that perhaps their parents couldn’t afford the WiFi. As a parent, she was pleased about their awareness that there wasn’t an unlimited budget, but she came clean and told them it was a choice. The kids already knew when packing and not being able to bring a flat iron to do their hair and downloading DVDs that this was not going to be like life at home. The Morris girls and their parents were no strangers to sailing. Karen and Carter had traveled to the BVI for their honeymoon and a charter vacation 10 years later. They had sailed as a family in Maine and Croatia, and their children had taken sailing lessons. “They had never been on a longer trip,” says Karen. As a mother of teenagers, Karen admits that she was a little bit concerned with 50 June 2014 SpinSheet

Island time worked wonders for the Annapolis family. “Once you moor and get everything settled in the afternoon, you take a swim or snorkel; we had some cheese and crackers; we would grill. Then it would be dark, and we would still be up talking. It was a nice rhythm we got ##What they thought was a sailing into.” vacation turned into so much more. Her two children “who hem and haw at home,” says their mother, did dishes and the other “work” of life onboard without hesitation. “They knew when it was time to catch a mooring or to get the bumpers out. As soon as Carter was at the ##Looking out on helm, they knew he was e the anchorag the captain. There were no from Anegada. questions.” Although her personal goal was to spend time on Anegada, Karen says that the highlight of the trip was en route home from the more remote island when they stopped in Dix Bay on Virgin Gorda to see friends who ##Katy and Annie in the BVI. were staying in a hillside villa. She figured the how the “lack of being able to share every girls would want to stay at the villa, where moment” on their smart phones was going they had television, chargers, and WiFi. to go. “After one night, they forgot about The reverse took place. The kids missed the it,” she says. “At Virgin Gorda, they did boat. Even after a few days, it already felt connect to WiFi and shared some pictures, like “home” to them. but by the time we got back to the dinghy, While staying at Dix Bay, they took they forgot.” After that, the girls used their their friends, who also had three teenaged phones for pictures only. spinsheet.com


children, out sailing. “The kids had never been on this kind of boat. Carter let them all steer. The girls had a chance to share their skills and knowledge… All of the kids, even the ones who stayed in a beautiful villa, wanted to be on the boat. It was more adventurous for them.” As well as helping with boat duties, the Morris girls “became conscious of trash and how to dispose of it properly; they became conscious of nature and knew not to touch the coral.” They appreciated the beauty of the place. Katy said, “I’ve never been anywhere where the water was the color of a crayon.” In the absence of WiFi connection, the family reconnected in unexpected, pleasant ways. “We talked so much. They talked about things like their fears of college and other things… We learned that we need to reconnect to our kids. They are at this age where they are on the verge of being independent, but they still liked being with us.” The Morris family thought they were going on a sailing vacation. “It was so much more than that,” says Karen. “It was so different from a beach vacation, where you lie on the beach or go for a swim. Each day you have a mission, a plan. You read the charts and figure out where you’re going. You’re always helping each other… It was so amazing to connect with teenagers in this way. I recommend it to anyone with kids that age.” The 13-year-old twins, in case you had not guessed, are absolutely hooked and ready to take another charter vacation. Karen says that the family discussed how great it was to talk to each other. “Now that we’re home, we all get along better. We are interacting in a different way.” She says of her children, “They are bright and funny and have very mature feelings, not often shared on land — which only scratches the surface of why I consider it the best vacation ever. It is not until you actually catch a boat that you realize that you have been missing ‘the boat.’” dreamyachtcharter.com

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SpinSheet June 2014 51


A Foot in Each World by Eva Hill

##The very nature of a boat doesn’t leave much room for sloppiness.

I

woke early, in a dark New Orleans hotel room. Pulled on a pair of shorts and a tee shirt, and stepped into flipflops. Slapped a hat on my head and a pair of shades on my face and walked a few blocks to pick up coffee and iced café au lait. Before showering that morning, I took off those shorts and tee shirt and actually thought about wearing them again. A year ago, this Big Easy scenario would have been incomprehensible to me. Having gone to college here and visited regularly since, there were certain habits ingrained in me. I never would wear flip flops on those dirty streets. I never showed myself in public — even to get coffee — without makeup and clean, styled hair. I never dreamed of wearing an outfit again without having laundered it first. But this trip was a little different. I make an annual pilgrimage to New Orleans to attend Jazz Fest and book it almost a year in advance, so our 2014 trip was planned and paid for before we had even an inkling that we would be cruising during the Fest. Not wanting to ruin our track record, there was no question that we’d go. We left Calypso in a marina in Morehead City, NC, drove home, and caught our plane to New Orleans. While we were temporarily back in a world that didn’t sway beneath our feet, many of the habits of living aboard still came as second nature to us. Thus, when making that morning caffeine run, I barely gave a second thought to my attire. When in the Bahamas, shorts, a tee shirt and

52 June 2014 SpinSheet

flip-flops count as dressy enough for dinner. Make-up consists of sunscreen. Hair washed every second or third day suffices — that’s what hats, elastics, and barrettes are for! It’s not just the personal grooming regimens that had changed while living aboard. It was a constant awareness of limited resources that informed our lifestyle. Thus, clothes that didn’t smell too bad after being worn once would be worn again, both water and laundry facilities being in short supply; and that load of laundry had better be full, because some places in the Bahamas charged $10 a token for a load of washing, and another $10 for a load of drying. I often used the hand pump in the galley sink to avoid wasting water; that habit became so ingrained that I pumped a handful of soap when reaching for the hand pump at my kitchen sink in my house.

The very nature of a boat — living in a tight space, with stuff and gear stowed in every possible place — doesn’t leave much room for the luxury of sloppiness and not putting things away properly. This boat habit didn’t stick as tenaciously on land, since in my hotel room, one might think I was slovenly, with toiletries, shoes, clothing, bedding, and towels being strewn about. This, from the same woman who insists on making up the bunks on the boat every single day. But at least now I think very hard about putting those shoes away, since they might go flying when we’re heeled over. So far, the only situation in which we have had no difficulty transitioning from boat life to land life, even on a day-to-day basis, is marina and home showers. On land, we have no problem just letting the water run! spinsheet.com


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hen my husband Robert and I were planning our Atlantic crossing, one of the things I feared, among big storms, rogue waves, and shrinking bank accounts, was getting out of shape and specifically, lacking cardio exercise. I believe it’s important to be strong and fit before sailing across an ocean. I also wanted to stay in shape while passage making. A certain degree of fitness helps prevent accidents and comes in handy with the actual sailing of the boat. While there are ways to stay strong while sailing offshore, cardio exercise was a challenge. I knew we would be out there for weeks, and this would be a long time to go without a good heart pumping workout. I know I am not alone. I have met several sailors who won’t even venture out there because they can’t go running. I have also met folks who won’t try sailing adventures because they can’t get their nails done, but that is another topic entirely. Early on in our planning, I explored several options for cardio. We own a few

Follow us!

by Cindy Fletcher-Holden

Pilates DVDs and these have limited cardio moves, but they don’t seem safe or easy in an open moving cabin in big seas. I worked with a trainer at my gym, and he came up with several high intensity workout routines that involved

a variety of moves, such as jump squats and pushups. These actually can get the job done, but again, in an open cabin in big seas, they may not be efficient or safe. It was a casual conversation with my friend Scott that changed the whole scenario. I was voicing my concern,

and Scott said, “Just go buy yourself a mini elliptical.” Could it be that simple? It was! I searched online and found a mini elliptical, floor unit only, no arm handles, for only $75 and ordered it. It was perfect. It fit under the dinette and tucked in a corner out of sight when not in use. It could easily be pulled out when needed. We glued felt pads under the base so that we could slide it along the cabin floor without scratching the varnish and placed it in front of a grab rail that runs along the length of our main salon. Whoever wanted to use it could hold onto the grab rail, prop up a book, and get a complete workout even while the boat was tossed around in rough water. If the engine was running, we could even run the DVD player and watch a movie just like at the gym! In really heavy weather, the elliptical was not an option. But this kind of weather was short lived, and just getting around was a huge physical endeavor. During our Gulf Stream cross-

SpinSheet June 2014 53


ng

Bluewater Dreaming

presented by:

continued...

ing, we all found that steering was a bunk was a core strength exercise. a steady routine of fitness as well. I major workout. We would notice every Once past the Gulf Stream, when would try to do a 45-minute elliptity • Practical Equipment muscle was sore after three hours of the sailing got smoother, we got into cal session in the morning, after my lying in a a rhythm of life at sea. Then I got into watch. I found it easier to do the ems handling the helm. •Even Vessel Safety elliptical for 45 minutes than to do ndence • Heavy Weather Readiness the high-intensity, mixed-up routines, because I didn’t have to think about it Blog Entry: July 19, 2011 37:34.00N 61:59.00W and knew that I would be safe holding thee grab t rail. In calmer seas, I 752 | w w w. M y a c h t s e r v i c e s onto .n incorporated hand weights and added s many of you know I am (was) While we don’t have freshly launmoves like bicep curls and straight arm ARY OFFSHORE an avid member of the AnderedEVAluATION towels, we do have the Delux Ever lifts while pedaling. napolis Athletic Club (AAC). I Damp Towel system, one per person in During my watch, I discovered the bright designer colors… we offer the rethink we should open our own gym out cockpit could be an entire gym for here called the North Atlantic Athletic cently patented exclusive King Neptune great strength training, working all the Club. While not as nice as AAC, we do Ocean Spray Salt and Sun Skin Care major muscles. If it was windy, steerhave some unique qualities. While we system, keeping your skin damp and ing required a lot of arm, core, and clammy, along with the King Neptune can’t offer individual TV monitors with leg use. If the winds were light, I used Ocean Spray Salt and Wind Hair Care unlimited cable, we do offer a brightly workout bands, which are thick long System, always sure to frizz even the lit GPS screen giving thrilling accounts rubber bands with handles. One of my silkiest hair! And while we are not able on where you’ve been and where you’re favorite uses of the band was to double going in bright blue and pink. And while to offer free classes like Pilates or Yoga, it around the bimini frame, holding we can’t offer clean hot showers, we do we’ll give you a compass course and a both handles in one hand and pulling offer constantly moving trickle showers wheel to steer and three hours to do it! it across in front. This works shoulders Get strong core muscles in just days! ( a workout in itself) that compel you to and deltoids. Adding a twist will work brag about how little water you’ve used… Sign up now! the waist. Another one was to extend

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an arm straight down, holding the band and pulse back. Excellent for triceps. A good quad exercise out there was to brace my back against the mizzen mast and sit in the “invisible chair.” Rising up and down on my toes worked the calves. These moves, along with many more combinations of band uses, were not only ways to stay fit, but also tremendous ways to stay awake during long middle of the night watches by counting sets of 20 for each move. I must say, no gym can match being out there under a dazzling display of stars and galaxies surrounded by open ocean. Armed with all the tools I needed, the addiction to fitness, and no excuses not to do the work, I actually felt stronger when we arrived in the Azores after 18 days at sea than before we left. We had one nasty storm, no rogue waves, and only a mild shrinkage of our bank accounts. I did get cardio workouts. Now I just have to figure out how to run a 10K out there!

Blog Entry July 19, 2011 37:24.00N 59:53.01W

North Atlantic Athletic Club

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his week at NAAC, we’re featuring Cockpit Wave Riding in the Tenacity Aft Fitness Center. Experience hand steering down 10- to 12-foot-plus waves in 20- to 25-knot winds on the stern quarter. A real workout for calf and core muscles! Also try our Bucking Bronco Portable Elliptical in the main salon. Please follow the one hand on the Ballet Barre rule at all times. Also this week is Bunk Pilates, just lie down while the boat is flying down these waves and feel your whole body hold on.

Next week we will feature Thrashing Showers, Extreme Food Chopping and Weird Yoga. Thanks to our crew for making last week’s “Boat Sails So Balanced You Don’t Have To Touch the Wheel For Three Hours” session, a great two days. Perkins the cat is our member of the month. Catch her on Facebook later this month when we arrive in the Azores, and I can get to a WiFi to download photos.

About the Author: Cindy Fletcher-Holden and her husband Robert returned last spring from a two-year-long adventure to Portugal and Spain on their 47foot ketch Tenacity. They live aboard in Annapolis, where Cindy paints boat transoms, murals, and other commissioned artwork. fletcherart.net

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What’s Your Club Doing June 21?

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uy your ice early, friends — when the longest day of the year falls on a Saturday, as it will the third weekend in June, you know you’re not the only sailor on the dock who needs ice for the big day. Gear up. The Summer Sailstice is almost here. Convincing this crowd to go sailing June 21 is preaching to the choir, but I will remind you to do this: visit summersailstice.com and register for free for this international sailing celebration. Even if you don’t really want to qualify

for a free charter vacation (really?) or free sailing gear, it’s worthwhile to sign up. Let’s show the world how wonderful it is to sail on the Chesapeake by participating in droves! We’ve heard from a dozen clubs who have celebrations planned. A few noteworthy ones: the Jeanneau Sailboat Owners host their Sailstice Rendezvous at Herrington Harbour North June 20-22; The Sailing Club rafts up and barbeques at Rock Hall June 21-23; and Stingray Harbour YC ends its June 14-22 annual Summer Cruise, if the

Annapolis Community Boating Open House June 21-22

wind gods cooperate, at Yorktown that weekend. What are your plans? If you visit summersailstice.com, you will note that there are only eight events listed on the Chesapeake. Here at SpinSheet, we know of more, so please register to show your event to the world. Even if you’re sailing solo June 21, or with your sweetheart instead of the whole club, go sign up. Even those who register their private events qualify for prizes. Send July club notes and photos to molly@spinsheet.com by June 10. See you on the water!

##Kayaks, stand-up paddleboards, sailboats... it’s all about getting out on the water at ACB.

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rghh! All pirates and pirettes are welcome to join at Annapolis Community Boating (ACB) as it turns the Ellen Moyer Nature Park and Boating Center into its own pirates’ lair. ACB will use SUPs, kayaks, canoes, paddleboards, and sloops to celebrate the longest day of the year. Add an eye patch and your best pirate’s hat to your rash guard, sunscreen, and sunglasses and explore the nooks and crannies of Annapolis’ Back Creek at Smuggler’s Cove. Join ACB for the afternoon and take a chance at winning a free private lesson, paddling or sailing session, or even a free season’s membership. ACB’s mission is to make boating accessible and fun for all. We try to accommodate all ages and abilities. Our fleet of stand up paddleboards, canoes, kayaks, dinghies, and small keelboats is waiting for you at the Back Shack on Annapolis’s Back Creek at 7314 Edgewood Road. annapolisboating.org

56 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


West River Sailing Club Open House and Start of the Season

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ou’re Invited. The West River Sailing Club (WRSC) will host an open house June 7 from 1 – 4 p.m., open to the general public, featuring sailing demonstrations and on-water experience. Enjoy the views and meet fellow sailing enthusiasts. WRSC put an official stake in winter’s heart with its annual Flag Raising Celebration April 19. This signaled the start of our racing and cruising seasons, and club members didn’t waste any time. The following weekend WRSC held its Spring Regatta featuring races for the Club’s three catamaran fleets, the A-Cats, F-16s and Nacra-20s. The Lasers hit the water May 2 beginning their summer-long Friday Night Series, and the rest of the one design fleets, C-20s, Flying Scots, and Albacores, joined the catamarans for the start of the Summer Series May 3. The Cruisers kicked off their season with the traditional Early

##Commodore Greg Whalen (center) opens the 2014 sailing season at the West River SC.

Bird Cruise to St. Michael’s on the third. Eighteen boats (and one car) managed the trip, and the sailors ages ranged from 80 to two. We were especially gratified to welcome back Mark and Jen Schaefer and their son Kai after his year and a half stint in Afghanistan.

The tiller time will continue throughout May with One Design Racing nearly every weekend, the Cruisers and Scots heading for SERC for seminars on the Bay’s environmental prospects, and Big Boat racing to Miles River. So, good bye winter. WRSC is on the Bay! westriversc.org

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SpinSheet June 2014 57


CRUISING CLUB NOTES Portsmouth Boat Club Welcomes Spring in Smithfield Station

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fter a long winter, far harsher than most in memory, six boats from the Portsmouth Boating Club (PBC) broke out of their harbors and headed up the Elizabeth, James,

and Pagan Rivers to find berths at Smithfield Station in Smithfield, VA, during the weekend of April 2527. All boats moored “just in time” before a wicked frontal system (which

##As you can see from the PBC boats along the dock, club members like all kinds of boats, sail and power.

Chesapeake Bay and Severn River Access, Downtown Annapolis, Eastport…

spawned tornados in nearby Edenton, NC) tore over the Southern Bay on Friday evening. In contrast, Saturday morning and Sunday were spectacular days for exploring the local area. Smithfield is a beautiful historic area with military sites ranging from the Civil War to the Cold War. The downtown area has rows of homes that stretch back to the Revolutionary War era and a nearby forested trail, which made for good exercise and pleasant spring-time strolls for the crews. Twenty-four members and guests joined up for dinner Saturday night and enjoyed great seafood and the typically fun-filled PBC atmosphere. All boats enjoyed a “downwind run” home on Sunday afternoon. This cruise to Smithfield was the first of eight organized cruises offered by PBC this year. Guests (and their boats) are always welcome to join us! For more information, please visit our website at: portsmouthboatclub.org

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Stingray Point Lighthouse, Then and Now

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##Stingray Harbour YC members burn socks at the annual blessing of the fleet in Deltaville by the replica screwpile lighthouse.

by Mary Ann Moxon

he Chesapeake Bay has lost much of its lighthouse heritage. Only one out of 42 screwpile-style lighthouses, Thomas Point Shoal Light, survives in its original location. From 1858 to 1950, Stingray Point Lighthouse marked a dangerous shoal a little more than one mile from shore between the mouths of the Rappahannock and Piankatank Rivers. A hexagonal wooden cottage sat there upon six piles that were screwed into the Bay bottom. One hearty lighthouse keeper, Larry Marchant, served at Stingray for 32 years, from 1888 to 1920. In one newspaper interview, Marchant said that the structure swayed back and forth like a rocking chair during big blows. In 1950, the lighthouse was automated and boarded up. The cottage was moved to shore in 1965 and burned. So it was quite big news in 2002 when Stingray Point Marina owners, Jim Rogers and Brent Halsey, hired a Deltaville

company to recreate Stingray Point Lighthouse at their marina. The architect based his plans on original drawings. They completed the exact full scale replica lighthouse at the marina in March 2003. It quickly became the scenic backdrop for the annual blessing of the fleet and burning of the socks. But Halsey and Rogers went a step farther in 2011 when they refurnished the interior for a marina office and comfortable clubhouse for Stingray Harbour YC members. The only major difference between the original and the current lighthouse, in addition to heating and AC, is that a small bulb illuminates the fifth order drum-type lens in the lantern so that slip holders are not bothered and it is not mistaken for a navigational tool. Brent Halsey said that the lighthouse replica was meant to be an icon for both

the marina and Deltaville “celebrating the seafaring traditions of the community.” Eleven years later, at this year’s blessing of the fleet, Jim Rogers said, “We really enjoy seeing it used so often by yacht club members.” Marina manager Lisa Morrow has orchestrated many recent updates and renovations for the marina and 233 slips, filled primarily by sailboats. Captain John Smith, who named this point after being stung by a stingray offshore, would be very happy to relax here now. Mary Ann Moxon, s/v MicMac, is an environmental blogger and freelance writer in Williamsburg, VA. Her blog at easygreener.blogspot.com focuses on Tidewater Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay.

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SpinSheet June 2014 59


CRUISING CLUB NOTES A Waterside Wedding

W

by Eileen Turner

hat a wonderful way to start married life together. That is what James Beaudry and Danielle Rountree enjoyed when they recently tied the knot in Hampton, VA. James has spent a lot of time on the family sailboats with his parents Jim and Melinda Beaudry, members of the Old Point Comfort YC (OPCYC) at Fort Monroe. And Danielle shares her groom’s enjoyment of being on the water. So it was an obvious decision to celebrate their wedding day by the water and on the Beaudry family boat, Black Dog. It was a balmy spring day, perfect for a wedding ceremony on the lawn of the Hampton YC. And it was also perfect for taking respite onboard Black Dog right after the ceremony. Additionally, this spring two more members of OPCYC married. Steve Harvey (rear commodore – fleet) and member Sue Worbois eloped for their special occasion. Steve has a Sea Ray motor vessel named Sea-Raynity, and Sue has a sailboat named Daisy Sue. While this couple enjoys being out on the water in either boat, there are rumors in the wind that another boat will be in the family. Will it be a motor boat or sailboat?

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L

Miles River YC Foundation Honors Langley Shook

ast month, the Miles River YC (MRYC) Foundation of St. Michaels honored Langley Shook, president of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum (CBMM), with its Distinguished Service Award. The afternoon ceremonies were held in at a Bayside reception at the Harbourtowne Resort in St. Michaels. Shook is the fifth recipient of the MRYC Foundation’s Distinguished Service Award, established in 2011 to honor distinguished Chesapeake Bay citizens or organizations involved in competitive water sports or youth-oriented maritime educational activities. Previous award winners have been Gary Jobson, yachting author and television commentator; Marc Castelli, Chesapeake artist and chronicler of the log canoes; Matt Rutherford, the first to sail single-handed non-stop around North and South America; and Adam Werblow, America’s winningest collegiate sailing coach from St. Mary’s College of Maryland. The event benefited the newly-established Langley Shook Scholarship Fund, a permanent fund of the MRYC Foundation Endowment, to be used for scholarships for in-need children to attend non-profit

swimming, sailing, rowing, boating and maritime exploration programs on the Chesapeake Bay. Shook joined the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum as its President in 2009 after a distinguished nearly 35 year career as a Partner at Sidley Austin, a Washingtonbased law firm. Shook was previously a member of the Board of Governors of CBMM, and Secretary of the USS Sequoia Preservation Trust working to save the presidential yacht. According to the MRYC Foundation’s citation, Mr. Shook has transformed CBMM in his five years into one of the pre-eminent maritime museums in the United States and dramatically increased its public visibility nationwide. During his tenure, Shook has managed the museum successfully through the nation’s recent major recession, restored CBMM to fiscal health, significantly increased its membership and donor base, raised millions of dollars of support, re-invigorated the museum’s planned giving program, and made The Boating Party the most significant fundraising event on the Eastern Shore. On his watch, the museum has preserved, restored, and added to the larg-

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est Chesapeake Bay collection of historic boats, mounted outstanding exhibits, broadened the diversity of the museum’s following, built an experienced and motivated staff and volunteer cadre, and increased its educational outreach. The MRYC Foundation, founded in 2010, is a tax-exempt organization dedicated to promoting and supporting youth-oriented competitive water sports and maritime educational activities in the Chesapeake Bay region. It has so far donated $101,022 to 18 Chesapeake Bay area non-profit organizations, including CBMM. It makes grants twice yearly for facilities, equipment, scholarships, and general support. mrycfoundation.org

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CRUISING CLUB NOTES Why Get a Vessel Safety Check?

A

nnapolis Sail and Power Squadron (ASPS) wants you to know about the Vessel Safety Check (VSC), a free and risk-free yearly check of your vessel to be sure you meet state and federal requirements necessary to operate a vessel in local waters. The most cautious boaters can experience unexpected problems on the water. That’s why the U.S. Coast Guard recommends that all recreational boaters, including personal watercraft and paddle sport users, take advantage of the free VSC program every year. The courtesy VSC is performed at your boat — whether in a slip, at the launch ramp, or in your driveway — by a certified Vessel Examiner at a mutuallyconvenient time and usually takes 20-30 minutes, depending upon the size of your boat. Most vessels are checked for proper registration and documentation, life jackets, flares, fire extinguishers, ventilation, fire suppression in the engine, sound producing devices, proper discharge placards, marine sanitation devices and battery storage. The educa-

tion provided to boaters on recommended items and some new options available is outstanding. Once the vessel passes the exam, the boater is given a decal for his boat that shows current compliance with the state and federal Laws. The decals are different colors each year, so your local DNR and Coast Guard patrols may easily spot whether you have already been checked. If your boat does not pass, no report is filed. You are provided a written report that aids you in correcting any discrepancies noted. Often, a quick trip to the local marine chandlery is all that is necessary to obtain missing safety items and easily pass a re-inspection. A coupon may be offered by the examiner and if shown with your examiner-signed VSC report, you may receive a discount on your missing or discrepant items. Some errors found on local vessels have included ventilation fans being hooked up backwards so the air is blowing in, not out of the bilge; expired flares; rotten life jackets; nonworking navigational lights; incorrect display of vessel documentation numbers;

STAY ON THE WATER. KEEP YOUR ENGINES RUNNING LIKE NEW.

V

and uncovered batteries. All were found on vessels where owners thought their boats were in good shape. Completing a VSC is easy and free. You will know your basic safety equipment is appropriate and in good shape and may also avoid substantial fines should you be boarded by law enforcement and found to be in violation of safety requirements. ASPS is actively trying to get more boaters to participate with the VSC program to promote safety on the water. Please contact us to sign up for a free, no risk VSC! You may call or email our Vessel Safety Check Chairman, Homer Sandridge, at (443) 831-0564 or sherrysand@ hotmail.com. You may also visit aspsmd.org

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Havre de Grace Sailors Race for National Hospice by Betty Caffo

I

n addition to the chance to spend April in sunny St. Petersburg, FL, Havre de Grace YC (HDGYC) sailors were also able to compete in three days of sailboat racing to support Hospice. Competing at the national level as one of 18 teams from the United States and Canada, Havre de Grace should take pride that our own team finished in fifth place. Local dentist and avid J/24 racer, Chuck Sheets, skippered the winning boat at last June’s Senator Bob Hooper House Hospice Regatta. That win qualified him and his crew to participate at the National Hospice Regatta. Rick Prothero, a Havre de Grace physical therapist and regular

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SpinSheet June 2014 63


CRUISING CLUB NOTES crew aboard Sheets’ boat, joined Sheets at the event along with crew members David Boonstoppel and Dave Lauser. The skipper said that the crew gave him a hard time because the team didn’t have matching team shirts like other racers. Even without a coordinated, professional look, the team from HdGYC stayed quite

competitive in the light to moderate wind conditions. Chuck says, “Our crew work was flawless, we had great downwind speed, and we only hit one boat!” The team was a bit intimidated competing at this level, as “We didn’t know what to expect, but by the end of the first day, we saw that no boat was more than 50

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yards ahead of us,” Prothero says. The team had never sailed the type of boats used in the regatta, the Ideal 18 and Sonar 22. The boats were “a far cry from the J/24 we race weekly. And of course, sailing on Tampa Bay is very different than the typical Thursday night races off Tidewater Marina.” The team was very pleased to support Hospice, and they look forward to the local qualifying Regatta. The 15th Annual Senator Bob Hooper House Hospice Regatta is scheduled for Saturday, June 7, at the Lighthouse. That regatta raises funds to keep services at the Senator Bob Hooper Hospice House affordable for Harford County residents. The Hospice House is an assisted living community that specializes in end-of-life care. Many people needing this level of care also need help paying for it; regatta funds provide this help. The sailboat race, provided by HDGYC, is preceded by a Memorial Parade of Sails when each competing sailboat flies burgee flags named in memory of prior Hospice patients. During and after the race, guests will enjoy a party with music, dancing, silent and live auctions, along with the priceless opportunity to support local hospice care. And the winning boat will be eligible to compete in the 2015 National Hospice Regatta. Tickets for the Hospice Regatta, June 7, are available at: uchfoundation.org

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64 June 2014 SpinSheet

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##And the winner is‌ Joe Zebleckes, commodore of Club Beneteau Chesapeake Bay.

##Corinthians members and guests at play.

##The Sailing Club members look forward to the Summer Sailstice at Rock Hall.

##The Potomac River SA welcomed 16 Lightnings for the Doc Gilbert Potomac Cup May 3-4. Photo by Michael Heinsdorf

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www.portbook.net SpinSheet June 2014 65


CRUISING CLUB NOTES ##Hunter Sailing Association members Carl and Sue are back from the Bahamas!

##The Potter Navy at Marsh Creek in Pennsylvania.

Find your club’s notes at spinsheet.com/clubs

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Visit spinsheet.com and find your photo today! 66 June 2014 SpinSheet

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Youth & Collegiate Sailing Focus

Sailing Championships Bring out the Best

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High School Sailing

nnapolis and Broadneck High Schools both qualified for the Interscholastic Sailing Association’s (ISSA) High School Team Racing Championship, held this year in Houston, TX. Eleven area schools showed up to the Mid-Atlantic Scholastic Sailing Association’s Team Race Championship, sponsored by Annapolis YC and SSA. Shifty, puffy conditions started out the day, as a northerly wind ended up clocking to the west and finally landed in the south. By the time the full round robin of 55 races was completed and racing concluded for the day, gusts were recorded in the 20-knot range.

##Front Row, left to right: Ali MacDonald, Tessa Fulmer, Lilla Salvesen, Lexi Pline; Second Row: Kyle Comerford, Tilgman Meiser, Harrison Hawk, Charlie Lomax

Sunday’s sailing split the fleet for the Gold and Silver rounds of six races each, where Annapolis (15-3) and Broadneck (13-5) came out on top over Christchurch and Severn School. Annapolis skippers Charlie Lomax, Harrison Hawk, and Kyle Comerford demonstrated excellent boat speed and team racing tactics, with excellent crew work coming from Ali MacDonald, Tillman Meiser, Tessa Fulmer, Lilli Salvesen, and Lexi Pline. Senior skippers Andrew Schoene, Zach Hill, and Scott Bankert brought Broadneck in second with crew Jessica Bennett, Nastia Jones, and Erin McElwee. Two wins separated the Follow us!

Bruins from Severn School’s third place finish. Hill and Schoene later traveled to the ISSA’s Double-Handed National Championship Regatta on May 10, sailed out of San Diego YC. Bennett, Jones, McElwee, and Katherine Selley crewed for the Bruins skippers, who placed sixth overall in A Division (Hill) and ninth overall in B Division (Schoene). Annapolis HS skipper Harrison Hawk finished fifth in B division. Both the Panthers and the Bruins will be headed to Texas to compete for the Baker Trophy at the ISSA’s Team Race National Championships, held May 24-25. For more information, visit hssailing.org.

C

College Sailing

loser to home, 28 college teams are competing for the Miller Trophy at the Sperry Top-Sider Women’s ICSA National Championship held at the US Naval Academy May 26-30. On May 31, The College Sailing/APS Team Race Championship brings 16 of the country’s best collegiate team racing teams for a three-day championship held at St. Mary’s College of Maryland. And finally, on June 3, 18 qualifiers from the seven ICSA conferences will be competing for the Henry A. Morss Memorial Trophy at the College Sailing/Gill Coed Championships, also held out of St. Mary’s College of Maryland. For more, visit 2014nationals. collegesailing.org SpinSheet June 2014 67


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2014 Sperry Top-Sider Annapolis NOOD Weekend:

The Crazy Chesapeake Kicked In

D

on’t like the conditions? Just wait until aged to pull off a win with two bullets and tomorrow. Those two sentences aptly a second. “We were the lightest team out sum up the 2014 edition of the Sperry there,” Moore says, “and that makes it chalTop-Sider Annapolis NOOD Regatta lenging for us upwind, but it puts us on the presented by Sailing World. More than 200 offensive downwind. On Sunday, everyone boats came from around the East Coast and was having a great time, planing around.” Midwest to participate, and the weekend Next up for the Viper class is Southern Bay forecast made sure that there was something Race Week. for everyone. On Friday, five- to 10-knot winds out of ##Skipper Staredown: Kevin McNeil and his crew onboard Seabiscuit pulled out the win the west were shifty in the Farr 30 class. Photo by Dan Phelps and unpredictable, with a stronger current than usual after the Chesapeake experienced its biggest flood in 15 years earlier in the week. Saturday’s racing greeted sailors with a wind delay, keeping sailors at the docks until an afternoon southerly kicked in. Sunday started out as ideal racing conditions with shifty winds in the 10-15 knot range, but later in the afternoon gale force winds shook up the ride in and brought While the Vipers were new to the event, many a sailor back home soaking wet. the majority of sailors had more than a few Bay racers managed to win top honors NOODs under their belts. Brothers in law in 10 of the 14 classes. The largest fleet was Bob Rutsch and Mike Costello onboard certainly the J/70 fleet, with 54 boats makthe J/30 Bebop have raced in all 16 of the ing it out to the race course, but one of the Annapolis NOOD regattas and in 2014 celmost exciting classes to get involved in was ebrated their seventh win. But that doesn’t the Viper fleet, which made its debut at the mean it was all easy sailing. NOOD this year. Hampton skipper Tyler “We started strong on Friday with a 1-2Moore wasn’t sailing with his usual crew of 1,” Rutsch says.” Saturday after the postseven-, five-, and three-year old children on ponement we salvaged a six on a course that the Viper Tumbling Dice, but he still manwas shortened to two legs at the leeward

68 June 2014 SpinSheet

gate that still took 90 minutes. We spent about 25 minutes making zero progress to the gate with about one knot of boat speed about equal to the speed of the ebb. We even had the anchor down for a little while.” On Sunday, Bebop clocked gusts at 31. Ron Anderson and his crew onboard Insatiable handled the heavy air day like pros, but Bebop managed to maintain the podium’s top spot. In the J/80 class, Will and Marie Crump, Thomas Klok, and Chris Larson were back on Crump’s Rash Decision after racing Klok’s Do It for Denmark during Charleston Race Week. The different boat didn’t slow them down at all: finishing with only nine points in six races, a full 11 points in front of their next competitor. On Saturday, however, Annapolitan John White and his crew managed to snag the day’s only bullet and was later selected as North Sails’ Local Skipper of the Day. “Those guys (the Crump-Klok syndicate) are so good, and so fast, but they made one little mistake on the last leg to allow us to win this one,” White says. Annapolis J/80s are set to have a banner year in 2014, with the East Coast Championships, North Americans, and Worlds all held in Annapolis between August 30 and October 5. spinsheet.com



##Rubbing is racing! Photo by Dan Phelps

It’s clear that the Annapolis NOOD Having experience as a Bay sailor proved was being used as a practice regatta, getto be helpful in the light, shifty conditions, ting everyone in the mindset for racing in but other racers came in with their own bags championships around the country and not of tricks. “We were alert to the necessity just Annapolis. “We have been preparing of knowing what the current is doing and for the World Championships in Newport playing the shifts,” says Caison, “but the this coming June, and things are starting to boats that come down from the Great Lakes come together,” says Jose Fuentes, whose tend to be excellent heavy air sailors. The crew onboard the Etchells Caramba made wisdom of putting up your chute when it’s winning look easy throughout the weekend. “Conditions were indeed very difficult, with a ripping ##A disqualification in the final race killed what would have current, shifty winds, and varying been a podium finish for Thom Bowen’s Reach Around, but wind strength making starts that we know he’ll be back for more soon. Photo by Dan Phelps. much more important,” Fuentes said. “Fortunately, the RC did a very good job, or it would have made the whole series a game of chance.” “It’s a humbling experience to come together with so many people who have the same boat, who finish one inch in front of you,” says Fred Caison, whose S2 7.9 Defiant pulled out a second place in the regatta. “You realize that the talent is really deep out there,” says the West River skipper. “You have people coming from the Great Lakes, Canada, and New England to race here, and they’re highly motivated to win. They have to have a fairly realistic expectation that they’re going to do well,” he says. 70 June 2014 SpinSheet

gusting over 25 … that proved to be a hair-raising experience,” he says. Later, a 180-degree shift turned the upwind leg into a downwind leg. “The Great Lakes sailors got super confused, and that’s when we did best: when the Crazy Chesapeake kicked in.” If the sign of a strong Bay racer is being able to adapt to erratic conditions, it’s the sign of one of our finest when a sailor can anticipate conditions. Walt Pletcher had wife Tricia and John Moran onboard his J/70 Occam’s Razor, sailing short-handed while most of the fleet sailed with four bodies. “I anticipated a light air regatta, so I went with three,” Pletcher says. “We wanted the boat to come in right around 600 pounds, and we managed to get to 570 with our crew. It meant all the difference: I was able to sail lower and faster than the rest of the fleet, and that meant being able to go around everybody.” Pletcher finished in 11th place overall, third in the Corinthian division, and secured a spot for Occam’s Razor at the J/70 Worlds in Newport this fall. For pictures, videos, and more, visit spinsheet.com. For complete results, visit sailingworld.com

spinsheet.com


2014 Sperry Top-Sider Annapolis NOOD Regatta Winners J/22

J/80

Bad News Too

Mike Marshall

Rash Decision

Will & Marie Crump/Thomas Klok

Mo’Money

Victor Snyder

Le Tigre

Glenn Darden

Scooby

J.R. Maxwell

More Gostosa

Conor Hayes

J/24 USA 4006

Viper 640

Peter Rich

Rush Hour

Pat FitzGerald

Spaceman Spiff

Pete Kassal

S2 7.9 Matros

Tom Bryant/Roger Gamache

Defiant

Fred Caison

Peregrine

Bart Welden

Alberg 30 Windswept

Lanny Helms

LinGin

Tim Williams

Laughing Gull

Jonathan Adams

Cal 25 White Cap

Timothy Bloomfield

Krigare

Erik & Marty Lostrom

Zephyr

David Hoyt

J/70 Professional Savasana

Brian Keane

Black River Racing

Doug Strebel

Touch2Play

Martin Kullman

J/70 Corinthian B Squared

Bryan Cameron

Joint Custody

Jenn & Ray Wulff

Occams Razor

Walt Pletcher

J/30

Tumbling Dice

Tyler Moore

Live Wire

Joseph Healey

Zorro XF

Gary Prieto

Etchells Caramba

Jose Fuentes

Whirlwind

Christopher Brady

Playmaker

Alan Kelly

J/35 Aunt Jean

Jerry Christofel/James Sagerholm

Dakota Girl

Stephanie Reuer

Medicine Man

Chuck Kohlerman

J/105 Hey Jude

James Rathbun

Mirage

Lewis/Salvesen

Live Edge

Michael Mountford

J/109 Rush

Bill Sweetser

Heat Wave

Gary Weisberg

Nordlys

Bob Schwartz

Farr 30 Seabiscuit

Kevin McNeil

David Moss

Ramrod

Rodrick Jabin

Ron Anderson

Press Gang

Roland van Hazel

Bebop

Bob Rutsch & Mike Costello

The White Boat Insatiable

For 2014 NOOD cumulative results, visit: sailingworld.com Follow us!

SpinSheet June 2014 71


Down the Bay and On to Bermuda

The Annapolis Bermuda Race

“W

by Beth Crabtree

hat’s the best way from A to B? Down C, of course.” We love that slogan for the biennial Annapolis to Bermuda Race, nicknamed A2B, and hosted by Annapolis’s Eastport YC and Bermuda’s St. George’s Dinghy and Sports Club. At 1:30 p.m. on June 6, nearly 30 sailboats will cast off their lines and head down the Bay, hang a left at the southernmost tip of the Eastern Shore, and then sail as fast as they can to Bermuda. The race begins with a 125-mile inshore leg that often challenges racers with unpredictable winds and coastal shipping traffic. As they cross the Gulf Stream, skippers and crews encounter eddies and currents and face decisions about how to play the rhumb line. The final leg of their journey is the last 300 miles, capped by navigating the reefs encircling Bermuda. All in, it’s a total of 753 nautical miles.

##A spinnaker start is always popular on the SpinSheet boat! Photo by Al Schreitmueller

New Name, New Contest “While 2014 marks the 19th Annapolis Bermuda Race, it’s the first running under this name,” says publicity coordinator Tracy Leonard. “We wanted the name to focus not only on the end of the race, but also on the beginning of the race with its challenging leg down the Chesapeake, something we think distinguishes this race and makes it special. “This year we conducted a “Win A Sail” contest over A2B’s Facebook page. Viewers voted, and A2B sponsor Bacon Sails & Marine Supplies 72 June 2014 SpinSheet

donated a custom sail to the winner. The contest generated a great response and even greater altruism. The friends, family, and crew of Mike Boylan’s Medley had so much fun participating that even though they were runners-up (to Nate Owens’s Poco a Poco), they donated $500 to charity in the name of the race.”

Meet Three First-Time A2B Skippers

At the end of April, we caught up with three sailors preparing to skipper this race for the first time: John

Hartke, Mike Boylan, and Captain Lauren Anthone. Hartke sails a shoal-draft Dehler 39, Delphin II, that he bought a couple of years ago. “Although I’ve crewed ocean races in the past, racing my own boat offshore has been on my bucket list for a while,” he says. Boylan, owner of the J/46 Medley out of Worton Creek, also has always wanted to race to Bermuda. “This is my second season with Medley, so this trip will be an opportunity to expand our boundaries, have a valuable learning experience, and see what the boat can do,” he says. spinsheet.com


Anthone, whose home port is Annapolis, says, “I’m not a racer because I’m not competitive, but I do like to sail fast and sail well. My friends tell me that my Nordic 34 Rover is fast.”

Crew Prep

“I’m very fortunate to have a crew comprised of extremely competent and vastly experienced sailors,” says Hartke. “I’m a firm believer in surrounding oneself with more experienced and capable individuals, and that’s just what I’ve done in getting this crew together. “We’ve got a practice session most every weekend up until the race, and we’re going to do the Down The Bay Race. We’ve gone over the operation of all the boat’s systems, location of the safety equipment, how to deploy the Man Overboard Module, and how to activate the MOB position on the chart plotter, and we plan to do MOB drills with all sorts of sail plan configurations. We’ll also practice rigging the preventer and the storm sails. “We rotate through different positions so that everyone is familiar with how the nav system works, the feel of the helm, location of instruments, and where reef lines and halyards are in the clutches. I like to do a hotwash of the practice sessions and the races to get input from the crew on ways to improve our sailing the boat, systems that need fixing, and stuff that needs to be bought and installed,” he adds. Boylan’s crew on Medley will include his nephew and his son Mike Jr., who will serve as navigator. “The crew is an amiable bunch and all good sailors,” observes Boylan. “The Down the Bay Race will be our dress rehearsal for running down the Bay as we leave for Bermuda. I hope it will provide a chance to drill when we’re a little tired, which is precisely the time when one should drill. We’ll also spend time on the boat building muscle memory. I intend to set every sail we’ve got a couple of times, Follow us!

##The Poco a Poco crew at the start of the 2012 Bermuda Ocean Race, now the A2B. Photo by Al Schreitmueller

Spring Commissioning for your Body Annapolis ATHLETIC CLUB

My favorite class is Functional Fitness. It suits those of us who need work on balance, flexibility and strengthening. Great for those just starting at the Club since it introduces so many principles of exercise and the use of various equipment. Mary is wonderful as a trainer and cheerleader!” E.H. AAC member since 2003

Annapolis ATHLETIC CLUB

annapolisathleticclub.com | 410.990.1095 SpinSheet June 2014 73


The Annapolis Bermuda Race (continued) especially the ones that might stay in the bag if we were just day sailing or cruising around the Bay.” Aboard Rover, Anthone says some of her crew are seasoned ocean sailors, and a couple are relative newbies to ocean sailing. “On long sails it’s important to enjoy each other’s company. Attitude, eagerness, and willingness make a huge difference.” She continues with a grin, “I vetted my crew in many ways, but my main concern was how they drank their coffee. The first (and most experienced) offshore sailor answered, ‘black,’ and that’s all it took to get a spot on Rover, because it’s easy for an off-watch crew to hand up a cup of black coffee. Unfortunately, I was unable to find a full set of blackcoffee-drinking crew, so I had to rely on other factors, such as seamanship skills.” Anthone adds, “We’ll do a training series including an overnight passage and hopefully some heavy weather

##Lauren Anthone on Rover.

74 June 2014 SpinSheet

sailing. I’ve delegated responsibilities such as safety, communications, weather, and systems to a lead and a backup person.” All but one of Rover’s crew have participated in a Safety At Sea seminar, and Anthone has attended all of the education and preparation seminars offered by race organizers.

Boat Prep

“Getting ready for this race has been stressful,” says Hartke. “But as the race gets closer and we go through more practice sessions and races such as the [140-mile-long] Annapolis YC Overnight Race (which posed challenging weather at night), I become more and more confident that we’ll not only get to Bermuda and back in one piece, but we’ll do it safely and have a terrific experience. Each investment I’ve made in the boat added to its safety, performance, and ease of use. “I’ve relied heavily on my crew, leveraging their extensive experience ocean racing and in some cases their gear. I’ve sailed for 10 years with Tom and Debbie Carrico (who sail the Beneteau AirMail), and Tom is part of my offshore crew. He has been beyond generous with his time, experience, and some of AirMail’s offshore gear. Debbie is helping me with provisioning planning. Good food is a great morale booster. Aboard Medley, Boylan says with a chuckle, “It may seem exciting and extravagant to prepare a boat to sail to Bermuda, but I’ve really been down in the nooks and crannies getting ready.” In addition to personally digging into the bilge and generator, Boylan’s had work done on Medley’s mast, boom, and standing and running rigging. “I have lists of lists of lists of things to do.” Anthone says preparing Rover has been challenging for her too. “People told me it would be expensive, but I didn’t have a clue when I began. One thing leads to another. For example,

##John Hartke during the AYC Overnight Race in preparation for the A2B.

I had to update my insurance for offshore, which required a rigging inspection, which led to some upgrades to the rig. And due to the late winter, I had to wait to get hauled out, so I got a bit of a late start.”

A Voice Of Experience

Nate Owens, who will skipper his Annapolis-based Beneteau 36.7 First Poco a Poco, has completed several ocean races, including three to Bermuda. His crew has a collective 22 ocean races notched into their belts. Owens offers this advice for first timers, “Your first race may seem overspinsheet.com


whelming in terms of prep work and the sheer cost. A life raft, sat phone, sat phone minutes, jack lines, tethers, EBIRBs, PLBs, PFDs, flares, buckets of stout construction, and on and on. It will add up. Think about this as an investment in an adventure you can do time and time again, as the second race costs much less. Most of the items are for safety, and a prudent mariner should have them anyway.” Owens emphasizes, “Do the race because you’ll test and strengthen yourself and your crew and form lasting memories with friends. For a skipper you’ll further forge your leadership skills. For me, the effects of the adventure stay with me long after the boat is safely docked in St. George.

For updates, race tracking, and blogs, visit spinsheet.com/a2b “My crew and I recently completed the AYC Overnight Race; the weather was four to 32 knots, wild velocity changes, rain, lightning, thunder, and waves. We did what seemed like 700 sail changes, and it ended up being great practice for being on the ocean. I’d recommend that any Bermuda crew have a similar shakedown trip. The farther the better; the stranger the weather the better; the more sail changes and crew development the better. Practice ways of handling challenges, because the challenges are much more critical on the ocean. Good prudence will have you doing MOB drills, practicing reefing, sail changes, moving around on the boat, cooking strategies, and ensuring the boat is as well kept as can be.” Last summer Owens secretly stowed an engagement ring under his girlfriend’s berth as they raced to Newport. When he popped the question, she said, “Yes,” and they will be married in St. George among family and friends. “If we race fast enough,” says Owens, “a shotgun blast will signal we are the first boat to finish. In this sense, we are in a rare position of wishing for a shotgun wedding!” Follow us!

##The 2012 edition of the 750-mile race started in light breeze that picked up quite well. Photo by Al Shreitmueller

BBSA

The 11th Annual

Broad Bay Sailing Association

Presents

Cape Charles Cup

Saturday Aug. 16th & Sunday Aug. 17th, 2013 The Cruising Event For Serious Racers! The Racing Event For Serious Cruisers! Cruising and PHRF Class victors BOTH win a

beautiful Weems & Plath Yacht Lamp trophy!

Saturday: Little Creek, VA to Cape Charles, VA

Post-race party on Saturday evening at beautiful King’s Creek Marina!

Sunday: Cape Charles, VA to Buckroe Beach, VA

Entry Fee - $95 if received by July 23rd, otherwise $115. Includes registration, hat, tee shirt, four Saturday dinner tickets, skipper’s bag, and our FAMOUS PARTIES! For more information, visit: www.CCCup.net SpinSheet June 2014 75


July 18th, 19th, 20th Friday | Saturday | Sunday

The best three days of racing and parties on the Bay! The same great race management, parties by the Holiday Inn Pool Bar, and fun!

PHRF Spinnaker, PHRF Non-Spinnaker and One-Design Racing with the best from the Bay and beyond...

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Bay Area & Fleet Bermuda Race Entries Running High

##Photo by Carrie Sullivan

Chesapeake Bay Boats Headed to Bermuda

T

he Newport Bermuda Race entry list held strong as of the first week of May, with 176 boats signed up for the 49th “Thrash to the Onion Patch,” which starts on Friday, June 20. As usual, the Chesapeake Bay area is very well represented with a total of 27 boats. Three of the Bay area boats will be sailed by U.S. Naval Academy midshipmen; two Navy 44s, Defiance and Swift, skippered by Padraig O’Brien and Nick Tucker, and the TP 52 Constellation, whose skipper is Joshua Forgacs. The two 44s will sail in the 95-boat St. David’s Division for racer-cruisers, and Constellation will race in the 10-boat Gibbs Hill Lighthouse Division, reserved for light-displacement racing boats with a large sail area. The USNA team in the 2012 Bermuda Race had unprecedented success, finishing in second, third, and fourth place in the St. David’s Lighthouse Division. Two new prizes in this year’s race are tailored for Bay sailors. One is the new competition for the top boats hailing from five regions: the Chesapeake, Canada, the Great Lakes, the Pacific Coast, and the Deep South. The other new prize is the award for best combined finishes in last year’s Annapolis-Newport Race and this year’s Newport Bermuda Races. Follow us!

Boat

Type

LOA

Skipper

Home Port

Windborn

J120

40

Richard W. Born

Lutherville, MD

Isola

Baltic 52

52

Howard M Eisenberg

Baltimore, MD

Icebear

Morris 48

48

Carolyn J. Harrington

Germantown, MD

Constellation

TP52

59

Joshua Forgacs

Annapolis, MD

Defiance

Navy 44

44

Padraig O’Brien

Annapolis, MD

Moneypenny

J 120

40

Ken R Comerford

Annapolis, MD

Shinnecock

J120

40

James Praley

Annapolis, MD

Stormy Weather

Swan 44

44

Michael K Maholchic

Annapolis, MD

Swift

Navy 44

44

Nick Tucker

Annapolis, MD

Crocodile

Beneteau 40.7

40

Scott C Ward

Dowel, MD

Bandana

Swan 47

47

Charles F Benson

Easton, MD

Flyer

Cal 40

39

Douglas R. Abbott

St. Michael, MD

Donnybrook

Andrews 80

80

James P. Muldoon

Washington, DC

Kalevala II

Grand Soleil 37

37

Tapio O Saavalainen

Washington, DC Washington, DC Round Hill, VA

Reindeer

Morris 47

47

Anthony Parker/ Peter Driscoll

Haerlem

Swan 55

55

Hendrikus Henk Wisker

Cecilie Viking

Elan 450

45

Vidar Skjelstad

Alexandria, VA

Widow Maker

C&C 44

44

George Bauer

Alexandria, VA

Schematic

J42

42

Bob Fox

Arlington, VA

Razor’s Edge

Sabre 362

36

Frank Kendall

Falls Church, VA

Orion

J/122

40

Paul Milo Jr.

Leesburg, VA

GrunDOOM

Carkeek47

47

James Grundy

Horsham, PA

Brigand

Custom

50

Sean D Saslo

Jefferson Township, PA

Sleijride

J37c

38

Andy Schell

Lancaster, PA

Akela III

Swan 43

43

Djoerd Hoekstra

Malvern, PA

Actaea

Hinckley B40

41

Michael M Cone

Philadelphia, PA

KingDaddy

Swan 56

56

Devin McGranahan

Sewickley, PA

SpinSheet June 2014 77


##Invictus (foreground), the US Naval Academy TP52, led the Onion Patch Series With a first in the NYYC Annual Regatta races and a second in the Onion Patch fleet of 23 boats in the Newport Bermuda Race. Stephen Murray’s Decision finished ahead in the RBYC Anniversary Regatta to overtake her for the Henry B. DuPont Trophy. Photo by Talbot Wilson

78 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


While the race is considered one of the longer distance races for many sailors, it’s the preparation leading up to casting off that is the true test of endurance and determination. “The application process is a lot of work,” says Bob Fox, who will be racing onboard his boat Schematic in his second Bermuda Race. “But it’s good; it forces people to really think hard about the conditions their boats are going to be put through.” Fox initially went through the rigorous preparation in 2006, which meant that the boat only needed to be updated for 2014. But that doesn’t make the job a whole lot easier.

Want More Bermuda Coverage? Find racer interviews, photos, and more at spinsheet.com/n2b “There’s a lot of work: customs and immigration paperwork, first aid, food, crew, travel arrangements, berth arrangements, sail inventory, electronics, navigation, weather; it’s a really long list,” Fox says. It helps when crew take on different responsibilities. “One guy is a doctor, so he’s in charge of making sure we have the best meds and materials in our first aid kit,” he says. “Two others freeze and package all the food ahead of time, so we can be sure we’re eating well each day.” This can be more challenging for double-handed sailors, who essentially sail the entire distance solo. Jonathan Green, co-skipper of the Beneteau 451 Jeroboam, depends on two-hour watches to keep himself and co-skipper Russ Hancock moving. “It allows the off watch to get a good 1.5-hour nap and eat something, which is all you really need to keep going for another two hours on deck,” he says. The boats that have well rested and well fed crew will find the stamina to get through the final tricky currents leading into Bermuda. “It’s just phenomenal when you see Bermuda on the horizon,” Fox says. “It’s like summiting Everest.”

##Photo by Carrie Sullivan

Family Fun! Pursuit Start Race! Mount Gay Hats!

Regatta to Benefit Saturday, August 23, 2014 • Eastport Yacht Club

Racer Entry Fee: $55 to benefit CRAB Party: 5-8pm. $5 Entry (Cash Only). Food and drink tickets available for purchase. Band: Misspent Youth All-Star Trophy awarded to the team or individual that hauls in the most funds for CRAB Trophies for podium finishers.

More info at crabsailing.org Regatta Chairs: Dick Franyo, Boatyard Bar & Grill and Mary Ewenson, SpinSheet

CRAB is a non-profit organization dedicated to making sailing available for people with disabilities. www.crabsailing.org

Interested in Regatta Sponsorship?

Please contact Sue Beatty at sue@crabsailing.org Your sponsorship will support CRAB’s mission and sailing activities on the Bay

EASTPORT ANNAPOLIS, MD

YACHT CLUB

Follow us!

SpinSheet June 2014 79


AYC Overnight Race: High Risk Sailing

W

hen the first warning signals went off at 11 a.m. on April 26, the sailors onboard 13 boats participating in the annual AYC Overnight Race were anticipating nothing out of the ordinary. The course was either 77 or 103 nautical miles in length, aimed at providing racers with 24-30 hours of sailing. And that meant there was plenty of time for conditions to change.

Winds were originally out of the south until sailors started nearing the Choptank River, when the breeze clocked to the west and kept the boats hugging the right side of the course for protection from waves. Gusts were registering in the 20-24 knot range, but skies were for the most part blue and cloudfree. Sailors spent the afternoon having fun and getting ready for a long night on the Bay. As the day went on, however, the 20-knot gusts started sustaining, and boats became more aware of the massive container ships moving along the shipping channel. “We hit the turning mark around 6:30 p.m., and we noticed thunder and storm cells on the west. But then they started showing up in the south, and then in the north within lightning and rain,” says John Morfit, skipper of Tardis, a Catri 24 trimaran. “It started getting dark just before 7:30, and that’s when we saw our first big guy (container ship) bearing down on us. They move so fast that it only takes 10 or 15 minutes before someone is shining their lights on you. And in a higher risk situation, we have to be extremely conscious of whether or not we’re in the shipping channel.” That high risk situation involved a storm cell that sat directly on top of the fleet for the better part of the night. The pleasure sailing of the afternoon turned into sustained winds of 30-40 knots and

##Ivars Ivanson enjoying 10-12 pounding rain. knots of pleasant sailing onboard While earlier in Tardis. The calm before the the day racstorm. Photo by John Morfit ers had put in between 10 and 20 sail changes, now reefs were put in and blade jibs were furled. Alerts on VHF radio confirmed gusts of 60 knots at Kent Island bridge. Russell Wesdyk was onboard Lola 3 and I can’t tell you how fast the boat was The Wild Child, going because at that moment the chart a Corsair F27, in the lead with the plotter lost satellite reception. What I rest of the fleet on the horizon behind can tell you is that it was unlike anything him when he realized the situation we have encountered on Lola before, and was about to change. While they were we have raced repeatedly in 30-40 knots sailing in settled conditions under of breeze.” full main and screecher, the sky was Both multihull skippers found condiominous, and both NOAA and Coast tions so extreme that safety became the Guard Station Baltimore were reportonly concern. “If anything had gone ing 60-knot gusts on Kent Island and wrong, we would have had a serious advising small craft to seek immediate situation,” says Morfit. “On a sailboat, shelter. “We dropped and secured there are so many single points of the screecher, and proceeded caufailure. One halyard goes, one shackle tiously under blade jib and reefed main blows, and you’ve lost your jib and can’t toward shelter in Annapolis,” says steer. It’s serious business at that point.” Wesdyk. “Our course was constrained Further up the course, Wesdyk had his by the commercial traffic and Thomas jib fully secured to the deck, and was Point, and much to my surprise the considering an attempt to get the boat to wind backed and bare poles within a confined space with we were suddenly commercial traffic when he managed to in the infamous jury rig a trysail and push through the ‘death zone’ reach,” stormcell. Using paper charts, Lola 3 he says. “Then the crossed the finish line at 11 p.m. under wind went to a ludimilder conditions. “I have to tell you, crous speed. I can’t doing only seven knots of boat speed tell you how high never felt so good.” the wind speed was,

2014 AYC Overnight Race Overall Winners

80 June 2014 SpinSheet

Multihull A

Lola 3 The Wild Child

Russell Wesdyk

PHRF A2

Lady Grey

Joe Laun

PHRF B

Anneliese

Joe Zebleckes

PHRF C

Actaea

Michael Cone spinsheet.com


The Winds of Change Blow toward Solomons

F

rom your cave this winter, as you were stomping snow off your boots and taking Advil for your back and hot buttered rum for your bad attitude, you may have heard the chatter, some of it confusing, some overblown. This much of it is true: when it comes to the waters that lead to Solomons, change is in the air. The Eastport YC Solomons Race, a popular overnight race with a Friday evening start, has been for many years an unofficial feeder race for the Screwpile Lighthouse Challenge, a Sunday through Tuesday regatta and memorable party scene for sailors from Baltimore to Norfolk.

July 26). We assume that on the 12th or 13th, most racers will head home after some rest and get back to work on Monday. The following Thursday night, skippers will hold their meeting, and on Friday morning, July 18, the Screwpile Regatta will begin and run through the weekend, with a final awards party on Sunday, July 20. The rumor is true: Screwpile is not CBYRA-sanctioned for 2014. The Solomons Race is. The running of the BCYA Race to Baltimore Saturday, July 19, during the Screwpile presents an interesting overlap that may be the determining factor for the Northern Bay contingent dedicated to the 20-mile race from the mouth of the Magothy to Baltimore. But then again, some like the excuse to escape to Solomons… Screwpile organizers are working hard to mix it up in this year of change and keep racing sailors engaged. All ##SpinSheet tattoos at the party tent is part of the fun at the fleets will participate Screwpile Regatta, held Friday through Sunday, July 18-20. in a distance race on Saturday, July 19. Fleets may sail different distances, but all What so many loved about the “marwill finish in the Patuxent River off downriage” of the back-to-back regattas — the town Solomons. five day vacation — was precisely what For the first time in its 20-year history, doomed it. Finding 100 volunteers who the Screwpile Regatta includes a cruising could take off so many weekdays proved to class (at a reduced fee) to do the distance be more difficult every year. Skippers say race on Saturday and a different course on the same about crew. Screwpile numbers dropped off enough to sting in 2013. Orga- Sunday that works best and provides the most fun. The goal is to invite more sailors nizers had to make racer-friendly changes to race; cruising class sailors do not need to to carry the regatta into the future. The belong to clubs or have ratings. Screwpile idea of running the regatta over a weekorganizers will assign ratings. Cruising end rather than Sunday through Tuesday class racers are also invited to the Friday had been thrown around for some time. It night party, even though they do not sail finally came to fruition this winter. that day. Here is the 2014 schedule: the SoloScrewpile organizers are paying attenmons Race will start at 6:30 p.m. off the tion to racer feedback about the loud music U.S. Naval Academy’s Triton Point Friday, and will adjust it according to racer preferJuly 11, and finish in the early hours July ence; they will also conduct daily awards 12, with Bloody Marys at the Holiday ceremonies at 6 p.m. (or earlier) rather Inn Select as tradition dictates (and a final than 7 p.m. as requested. awards party at 5 p.m. at EYC Saturday, Follow us!

Live music, parties in the courtyard and around the Holiday Inn Select pool, “cook your own steak night” by the party tent, and Mount Gay night on Saturday will all be part of the festivities racers have grown to know and love. Here at SpinSheet, we have sailed in both regattas and covered both regattas for as long as we can remember— in steamy conditions and thunderstorms! We hold both of them dear and think they are two of the best summer events on the Bay. Our greatest wish is that they both continue and thrive, much like some separated couples we know. We will be on the water in the SpinSheet photo boat at the start of the Solomons Race, as usual, and shooting photos on the water and interviewing racers and tattooing them at the parties during the Screwpile, as always. We will see you at one of these summer events, if not both. We welcome reader feedback on the changes and are curious which regattas you will attend and why. Send feedback to molly@spinsheet.com. Register for the Solomons Race at eastportyc.org/on-the-water/ racing; Screwpile Regatta at screwpile.net

Club vs. Club: Bring Back the Challenge

U

.S. Sailing’s championship series had its start back in the 1920s when the focus of the competition was between yacht clubs and not necessarily between individual sailors. East Coast yacht clubs fielded teams that competed against each other locally through a series of knock-out regattas. The best teams progressed to the national finals, originally for the Adams Cup and later on for the Mallory Trophy as well. A similar program was also created for juniors. Hundreds of young sailors still compete for the right to represent their home yacht club or sailing center at the Chubb U.S. Junior Sailing Championships for the Sears, Bemis, and Smythe trophies. With the increased number of onedesign classes, adult interest in a small SpinSheet June 2014 81


regatta, in which only 11 teams advanced through to the finals, waned over the years. Bigger events attracted the best sailors, and the focus was more on the individual rather than a club’s performance. Over the past five years competition between clubs has experienced a resurgence. The New York YC and others now host invitational regattas between representing yacht clubs. U.S. Sailing has looked to its history as it considered the future of adult sailing championships for men and women. In 2013, a new championship was launched. The U.S. Adult Championship honors the traditional “yacht club” vs. “yacht club” competition by mixing the best elements of the former Mallory Trophy and Adams Cup, while at the same time recognizing that sailors may belong to a community sailing organization. With the full support of the Clifford D. Mallory family, the U.S. Adult Championship now provides more opportunities for sailing clubs to participate in head-to-head competition. There are more events to

##One-design racing in Annapolis. Photo by Al Schreitmueller

qualify through and more room on the starting line at all levels. Any type of sailing community can field a team to compete at the regional and national levels. Beginning this summer, all American sailing organizations are invited to field teams to attend regional qualifiers with the goal of being one of the 20 teams who will sail for the right to have their organization’s name engraved on the Clifford D. Mallory Trophy. Are you interested in fielding a team? Here is a list of considerations: Team members must be 18 years old or older;

women can helm, and men can crew for them; teams can be all men, all women, or mixed; crew weight limit must meet class rules; and current membership in US Sailing by all parties, including the sailing organization a team represents. The finals will be raced the last weekend of September at Fort Worth Boat Club in Texas on J/22s. The Royal Victoria Trophy will be awarded for excellence in Seamanship by a team; the Staton J. Peele, Jr. Trophy will be awarded for Sportsmanship by an individual. championships.ussailing.org/adult.htm

DATE: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2014

CHALL H S E FI

ce

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E NG

SU N

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W W W .HRSUNFISHR ACE.COM 82 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


The Mind’s Eye in Racing: Part 2 by James E. Schrager

L

ast month we looked at what expert skippers think about while racing. We saw great athletes use key questions to prompt action. For sailboat racing, we start as the gun goes off, cross the starting line, and continue with our first and most important question: Are we fast? If you are not fast and are stumped on what to do, look at your competitors, the ones going fast. Which headsails have they selected? How far in or out is their boom? How hard is their mainsail leach? How flat are they trimming the genoa? How do you compare with the leaders on each detail? If you can’t make the boat go fast, don’t worry too much about anything else. Stay working on boat speed. If you are hopelessly slow week after week, invite a sailmaker onboard. How long will it take to improve? It could take a few years, but don’t give up. You can win a few races by getting lucky, but boat speed is the foundation for regular victories. One of the best sailors we ever sailed with, Rollie Kahn, tells the story of racing with John Bertrand, the Australian who won the America’s Cup in 1983. Rollie and two friends owned a Wylie 28, which would go on to win Chicago Boat of the Year. One day with Bertrand onboard, he was most interested in watching progress against other boats. At one point, John started pacing around the boat saying

Follow us!

“We aren’t fast. What’s going on? We need to do something now.” He’d start pulling on strings or changing sails. He knew the importance of this first question, as measured in real time, during the race.

heads on straight and said, “Hey, we used to be fast in these conditions. What the heck is going on here?” Switching back to the old number one made us fast again. Only then did we realize the new sail had a slightly higher clew and needed to be trimmed differ##If you can’t make the boat go ently. We wasted those fast, don’t worry too much about first few races because anything else. Stay working on we were slow and boat speed. Photo by Dan Phelps didn’t stick to solving boat speed problems. In another early season race, we were slow and went back to basics changing our settings for everything. We discovered that we had both sails in far too tight for the light air that day. We were in full power beat mode and needed to ease off for speed. If we hadn’t changed right away, we would have been dog meat in that race. The first question never changes: “Are we fast?” But the second question is also important.

Question #2: “Are we sailing in the right direction?”

In one race early last season, we were dog slow to weather with a brand new, beautiful, All Purpose #1. At first, we didn’t even catch it; we blew it off as something strange. Then we got our

This second script actually ties in with the first on the initial leg of most races, given that leg is usually a beat. You can always go “faster” through the water by heading down off a full beat, but of course, that may not make you first to the upwind mark. You can also head up slightly

SpinSheet June 2014 83


The Mind’s Eye in Racing: Part 2 (continued) above a full beat but you will go slower through the water. Let’s say full beat mode is just what’s needed, and we are going fast. The helmsman is watching the sails, tell-tails are flying, and all is good with the world. Then question number two comes into play. This question asks when we need to tack or gybe to find the next mark. It requires a crew member very good at judging speed and distance. For us, it’s our tactician, Max. We have him looking at boats ahead of us and not just for a moment, for many minutes and making calls on where the best boats are tacking and how far we should go before a tack. The helmsman shouldn’t do this. The person driving will generally have his or her hands full steering the

boat. Years ago when I was junior crew, some offshore boats had a sign that read: “Don’t talk to the helmsman.” I wondered how that made sense—and today’s approach has everyone talking to everyone. But when I became a skipper, I realized that it can often take huge amounts of concentration to steer the boat well, and the extra mental load of talking can actually slow you down.

About the Author: Jim Schrager has raced for more than 20 years in Southern Lake Michigan, winning BotY twice, many port-to-port races, and crewing on a section winning boat in the Mac. He now races with his two sons and friends out of St. Joseph, MI. In his day job, he teaches a popular course in strategy at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.

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Your tactician needs to think about what your course will be on the next tack or gybe, and how you will meet up with competitors and boats from other sections after your change of course. It’s like a chess game, with a moving chessboard and many different players at once. And we haven’t even talked about the wind yet, but that’s where we’re headed next month.

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410.956.5700 84 June 2014 SpinSheet

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Here Come the Best Days

##Southern Bay Race Week. Photo by Allen Clark/Photoboat

of Southern Bay Summer

T

by Lin McCarthy

here are 99 days of racing in the Southern Chesapeake Bay that bring out the shorts, tee shirts, flip-flops, and smiles. These precious days fall between Memorial Day and Labor Day. June ushers in the first stint of warm water and warm wind. The racing season is already well underway with two spring series complete, one managed by Fishing Bay YC (FBYC) on the Rappahannock and the other by the Cruising Club of Virginia (CCV) in Hampton Roads, high profile Southern Bay Race Week and the 65th Annual Down the Bay Race both in the books, and several clubs’ mid-week series up and running. And, now comes June and some of the best conditions for racing on the Virginia part of the Bay. It is fitting that the final day of Southern Bay Race Week is June 1. More than 80 boats spend three days racing and four nights partying to determine the early season best in PHRF, one-design, and cruising fleets. The following weekend brings the Typhoon Nationals at Rappahannock River YC (RRYC), the Sunday Double-

hand Race hosted by Hampton YC, and a weekend gala on the Norfolk side at Milepost 0 of the ICW. After a weekend Parade of Sail and festival festivities at Norfolk’s Harborfest, racers can partake of the unique flavor of the annual Cock Island Race hosted by the City of Portsmouth and administered by Portsmouth Boat Club. The gathering of the fleet on Friday is a happening in and of itself, and Saturday’s race down and then back up the Elizabeth River, sharing the waterway with tug boats and occasional big ships, gives the pre-race and post-race parties legitimate purpose. This is the 27th year for the Cock Island Race. Let the rooster crow! For those Rappahannock River area racers who do not make the almost 50 mile trip to Hampton Roads for Cock Island, FBYC offers its annual Moonlight Regatta and RRYC its one-day spring regatta. The fourth and fifth weekends of June bring the CCV’s annual Founders Race in the Bay off Ocean View and Langley YC’s Veterans Cup Regatta off Buckroe

respectively. Also, on the fourth weekend FBYC opens its distance series with the Cut Channel Race. There is a passel of racing going on in the southern part of the Chesapeake in June. Some racers will take a breath over the July Fourth holiday, and then, rejuvenated, jump into the middle phase of the real southern Bay summer, July!

When and Where

##The “little” boats come out to play. Photo by Lin McCarthy

June 1

Final Day of SBRW

Hampton

June 5-8

Harborfest

Norfolk

June 6-8

Typhoon Nationals

RRYC

June 8

Doublehand Race

Hampton YC (HYC)

June 13-14

Cock Island Race

City of Portsmouth and Portsmouth Boat Club

June 14

Moonlight Regatta

FBYC

June 14

Spring Regatta

RRYC

June 21

VA Commonwealth Jr Regatta

FBYC, Deltaville

June 22

Founders Race

CCV in Hampton

June 28

Veterans Cup

Langley YC in Hampton

June 28

Cut Channel Race

FBYC

The 20+ clubs and sailing associations on the southern Chesapeake offer numerous club level junior, youth, adult casual, dinghy one-design, keel boat and other race events, many of them in June. Follow us!

SpinSheet June 2014 85


Small Boat Scene

Toolkit: On the Road

H

by Kim Couranz

eading out of town for a regatta? Got the boat hitched up behind your tow vehicle, sails carefully packed, sailing gear, and nutrition/hydration supplies ready to go? One more thing: be sure you’re prepared for any needed boat work with tools appropriate for your boat. Lucky for us, most small boat repairs can be accomplished by sailors, sometimes with a little extra advice from other fleet members. How you prepare for tackling any unexpected repairs while you’re away from home is up to you, but there are three philosophies you can follow. Rely on others. This is the “hope for the best and assume it will all work out” method. Often this will play out just fine, but other times, you can prove to be a burden on your fellow sailors, friends, and competitors. This way involves tossing a multitool (I’ll leave the “Gerber vs. Leatherman” debate to you) and a roll of electrical tape into your sailing bag, and asking everyone else for anything else you realize you need. This is not longterm sustainable, unless you like being the target of behind-your-back eye rolls in the boat park.

Be fairly selfsufficient. In the bell curve of sailing preparation, this is what most sailors do. It makes sense and saves time, as you don’t have to track down what you need. Most of the time, you just have it in your tool bag. It’s much easier to replace that shackle with the spare one from your toolkit than with the spare one from someone else’s toolkit, especially if they have already left the dock! Before you hit the road, consider what you need to take care of your boat and bring it with you. It’s a pretty long list, but you can pack it once and take it with you many times. Different boats have different needs, but your kit might include: yy Standard hand tools: Phillips and flathead screwdrivers, pliers, vice grips, adjustable wrench, etc.

yy A good knife

yy Sharpie markers — black and other fun colors 86 June 2014 SpinSheet

Make someone else’s day. The few sailors who travel with extra tools — above and beyond the standard kit above — are greatly appreciated by their friends in the boat park. While these tools and supplies aren’t used frequently, when they are, they’re critical: yy Cordless drill with charged battery

yy Basic sail repair kit: Dacron stickyback, some ripstop nylon if you have a spinnaker, scissors

yy Boat tuning needs: measuring tape, rig tension tool, notebook for keeping track of your measurements

yy Spare parts kit — choose a few sizes of each in the range used by your boat: shackles, ring dings, nuts, bolts, washers, screws, and the like. Are there any bits that frequently fail or can fail without notice? (I’m thinking traveler leads on Lasers.) Are there other easy-to-transport pieces? Just bring a second one along!

yy Gooey stuff and other liquids: silicon, 4200, 5200, acetone (stinky alert!), spray lubricant

yy Boat wash and polish needs: soap, sponge, bucket, polish, rags

yy Fiberglass and gelcoat repair kit, including mixing cups and stirrers (another stinky alert!—make sure you have these supplies bottled and bagged up to avoid fumes)

yy Rivet gun and supplies

yy Nicopress tool and supplies, including the proper sizes of sleeves

yy Are you flying, rather than driving, to your regatta destination? Lucky you! But be a savvy packer. The Transportation Security Administration details what you can bring on the plane with you in carry-on and checked bags. Check out their list at tsa.gov/travelerinformation/prohibited-items. Note that aerosols are not allowed to fly. Still want things to slide? Here’s a great tip: Spray McLube into contact lens holders, and let it evaporate; it will leave behind a residue. Then when you want to use it, just use your fingers to apply the “solid” version.

yy Extra lines: You don’t need to bring along a spool of the stuff, but do you have a spare set of jib sheets? Extra tie-down lines? Bring ‘em.

yy Source of fire (for burning/melting the ends of freshly cut lines) or liquid rope whipping (to solve the “fuzzies” on line that doesn’t take well to fire)

yy Range of wet or dry sandpapers; sanding block

Do you have any favorite travel toolkit items? Send a note to sailors@spinsheet.com spinsheet.com


Chesapeake Racer Profile

Terry Hutchinson

B

efore Terry Hutchinson was a world-renowned skipper onboard America’s Cup sailboats, he was a part of Ed Reynolds’ original Quantum Sails loft in Traverse City, MI. Since 2008, Hutchinson has served as both the helmsman and tactician with Quantum’s TP52 racing program, and now he returns to the company as Executive Vice President for business development worldwide. We caught up with Terry and asked what made him decide to return to Bay country.

You’ve worked for Quantum before, and now you’re back. What changes do you see in the company, and what do you want to bring to them now?

It is completely different, from product to personnel. While I am just getting my feet wet on the inner workings, the most noticeable difference is the evolution of the product, design through IQ technology, and construction process. Certainly, on the water the sails are proving to be successful (as evident with our most recent win at the Farr 40 North American Championship) and yet there is unlimited work to do to get better, which is great.

Do you envision your new position as a desk job? Or will you be sailing just as much as usual?

Both. The plan is to continue to help in developing grand prix sails and assist in developing business on and off the water. There is a lot of work to do in both arenas and I am incredibly excited by this opportunity.

What racing do you have on the 2014 schedule that you’re particularly excited about?

TP 52 Events in Europe for the TP 52 Super Series, RC 44 Circuit in Europe, Farr 40 World Championship in San Francisco, J/70 sailing with my kids and Scott Nixon’s kids, and if I am allowed back, some Wednesday night racing on Mirage with Fredrik and crew. As far as excitement levels, well, all of it is exciting! Follow us!

What have you missed about the Annapolis area?

Too much for this particular space!!!! But if I narrow it down to just a few, I would start with my family and the space that my parents have created for Shelley and me to raise our kids (Elias, Katherine, and Aden) down in Harwood. Funny how I spent the first 21 years of my life trying to get away, and now I just cannot wait to get back! Morning coffee at the Boatyard and catching up with Dick Franyo and Dave Gendell. Both have been great advisors and friends over the years, and as I went through a tough time in early 2013, Dave was a great friend and advisor. Crab cakes from the Edgewater Inn and the hot summer nights of picking crabs at Mike’s on the South River. Wednesday night racing. The simplicity and fun of the Wednesday night racing out of AYC is something that I always missed. Having seen a lot of different areas in the world, I can say that we live in a very special spot. Finally, the whipping sessions that Harry Legum gives me at Annapolis Sailing Fitness. He has a unique way of making me suffer and I go back day after day!

Your kids have grown up quite a bit since leaving. Are they interested in sailing? What kind of sailing do you do with your family?

All three have a love for the water. We have never pushed them to the

competitive side of the sport, as it seems at the young age they just need to enjoy it and be comfortable on the water before they take it on in another manner. But we are the proud owners of a J/70 with the Nixon family, so I look forward to Thursday night sailing and crewing.

Any advice for parents who want their kids to get into competitive sailing?

I would let the kids develop a love for the sport and water before pushing. There are so many distractions in the world that the simplicity of the water and the freedom it can provide to a 12-year old is over the top in developing individuality and responsibility. My personal opinion is pushing too hard at an early age will run the risk of making it not fun.

When you’re not working with a client or pursuing a professional goal, what’s your favorite boat to take out on the water?

That is a tough question! I have some great moments and memories of family sails on the Alerion 28 Juice. Inevitably the boys are asleep on the bow as we sail back and forth between the Eastern Shore and Back Creek. Unlike a lot of other areas in the world, you can go from point A to point B on the Chesapeake in a few hours, anchor, swim and have a good evening sail home. The Chesapeake is a special place! SpinSheet June 2014 87


yy UK Sailmakers Annapolis is happy to announce the addition of Mike Coe to their loft on Severn Avenue. Coe is the Executive Sales Consultant for UK Annapolis and plans on being the “go-to guy” for sail trim, helmsmanship, sail inventory management, one-design development, and more. “We all want more people sailing, and we all want more people coming to regattas,” Coe says. “UK is focused on helping them get there.” uksailmakers.com

yy Nauticus Museum in Norfolk, VA, has hired veteran sailing coach KC Fullmer as director of its Sail Nauticus Community Sailing Center. Fullmer is an Old Dominion University graduate, Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association Hall of Fame inductee, and past sailing coach at both Northwestern and Old Dominion Universities. Nauticus.org

yy A&S Smith Development, the real estate division of The Catamaran Group, has acquired Pier 7 Marina on the South River. Located at 48 South River Road in Edgewater, the property has seven full docks with slips for over 200 vessels. Catamarans.com

yy Quantum Sail Design Group is pleased to announce the addition of Rolex Yachtsman of the Year Terry Hutchinson as executive vice president for business development. Much of his work will be with the company’s racing division, overseeing development of the company’s highlevel performance products and customer racing programs, as well as providing overall sales leadership. Hutchinson has played a pivotal role in four America’s Cup campaigns. Quantumsails.com 88 June 2014 SpinSheet

yy A newly-launched peer to peer boat sharing marketplace has been launched on the Potomac and Chesapeake Bay aimed at helping you earn money by renting your boat. Boatbound works in partnership with BoatUS to offer privately-owned vessels for rent, while protecting owners with up to $3 million in insurance protection. Boatbound.com

yy There’s a new owner at the helm of Topaz Sailing: Karen Morris and Peter Cook are pleased to hand the tiller over to Jon Britt and Hardy Peters, current owners of Nor’Banks Sailing and Watersports, a full service sailing center located in Duck, North Carolina. Nor’Banks will be introducing the Topaz Argo to the United States market later this year at the Annapolis Fall Sailboat Show. Topazsailboats.com

yy Passport Yachts/Wagner Stevens Yachts recently added Jim Mosher as a broker to their team. Jim has worked with Passport Yachts at the Annapolis and Miami boat shows over the years since retiring from a career managing non-profit conservation organizations and university teaching. He’s sailed twice around the DelMarVa, assisting SpinSheet with the planning committees for each Rally. passportyachts.com

yy June 14 is National Marina Day, and to celebrate Campbell’s Boatyards will be hosting a nautical flea market at the Campbell’s Bachelor Pt. Yacht Co. location. The event will be open to the public from 8:30 am to 1:00 p.m. and can be held rain or shine. Campbellsboatyards.com

yy Jim Ireland has joined S&J Yachts as a yacht broker. Jim has extensive boating experience as well as an executive background. He will be based out of the Annapolis office at Port Annapolis Marina and will work closely with both the Rock Hall and Deltaville offices. sjyachts.com

yy Mayor P.J. Purnell was on hand to cut the canvas ribbon at the grand opening of Somers Cove Canvas Shop in the Crisfield Maritime Center. Proprietor Greg Smith and property owner Keith Campbell are proud to introduce the new shop located at the corner of Tenth and Main streets, within sight of both the Somers Cove Marina and Crisfield City Dock.

yy Gerry Robertson has been named the new director of Captain Avery Museum, effective April 2. Robertson was most recently president of Canaltowne Consulting, and he is a Maryland native. He lives in Deale with his wife and children.

Send your Bay business soundbites and high-resolution photos to duffy@spinsheet.com spinsheet.com


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS

The deadline for the Brokerage and Classified sections is the 10th of the month prior to publication (June 10 for the July issue). Contact Lucy Iliff for advertising, (410) 216-9309 or lucy@spinsheet.com

DINGHIES 10’ Bauer Sailing Dinghy ‘09 With dolly. Complete rig main sail, jib, oars. All in excellent condition. Magothy River area. contact asotzsky@verizon.net

DONATIONS

DONATE YOUR BOAT Help a Wounded Veteran

240-750-9899

BOAT4HEROEs.ORg

22’ Hunter Perfect Chesapeake Daysailer! Fast sailer. Seats 6. 500-lb centerboard. New Tohatsu 5, 3 sails, 2 bunks, good condition. $8,000. 703 346 2022 Nancy. Nancy.roblin@gmail.com. 23’ O’Day ’80 Cruising, shoal, good Cond., ’97-9.9-hp long shaft, elect.start OB, bimini, main, jib, gen, spin, tiller. At BYB Shadyside, launch paid, fully equipped, great single-hander. $3,000 OBO (443) 790-5370. peaneu4@verizon.com

Donate Your Boat to The Downtown Sailing Center Baltimore’s only 503c non-profit community sailing center. Your donation helps us run our community based outreach programs. Contact Traci at 410 727-0722. Boy Scout Sea Ship 59 Looking for tax deductible donations of sail & power boats in the Chesapeake Bay area. Donated boats must be structurally sound & in good cond. Contact Dr. Fred Broadrup (301) 228-2131. Donate your Boat to Chesapeake Region Accessible Boating (CRAB). Proceeds from boat sales fund our programs helping disabled people enjoy sailing. 410-626-0273 www.crabsailing.org

Cal 25 #1651 Indefatigable 1974 Race Ready! Solid, fast racer. Updated running/standing rigging. Large sail inventory and 2011 Tohatsu-6 outboard. $2500/offer. For details and photos, contact Scott: srsauvageot@hotmail. com, 410-569-9797.

25’ Cal MK II ‘82 Moving, need to sell! Good Condition - Sails reworked, new batteries, new shaft and seals, 11-hp Donate Your Boat, Planet Hope Atomic dsl, 4 sails, fully equipped. A fun Is a local 501(c)3. Teaching youth boat & ready to sail! $4,400 Call from DC, Maryland and Virginia to sail 410-255-8993. for over 15 years. (800) 518-2816. 25’ Hunter ’77 Well cared for, ready to www.planet-hope.org sail away. See pictures and more info @ SAIL sailboatowners.com. Email inquiries to cherlitta@hotmail.com. Located in Pasadena, MD

14’ (Old Town) Lapstrake Completely refurbished. Same model as Tinkerbelle that sailed across Atlantic ocean. 1950’s real gem. Delight to sail. Can be seen at Cambridge Boat Works. $4900 obo, (410) 820-6030, welshjo@msn.com 20’ Com-Pac ’86 Cruising sloop, w/custom trailer and 5-hp outbd, fixed keel, 2-ft draft, bronze opening portholes, sleeps 4 adults. Sea Scouts $2500, Steve Alexander, stevedalex@msn.com, 301-646-0805

Follow us!

26’ Bristol ’73 Classic Great sailing sloop. H. Herreshoff design. Thousands in upgrades since 2003. Electric start Honda 9.9, cabin cushions, Raytheon inst., teak hand rails, standing rigging, hatch AC. Asking $6,500 OBO (703) 764-1277

27’ C&C MK V ’85 10 HP Yanmar rebuilt 2013, speed, depth, 150 Mylar genoa, working jib, main 2007, spinnaker, refinished interior 2013, yard maintained, located St. Michaels, $16,500, plattski@charter.net, 203-512-1077

27’ C&C Mark II ’73 Overall Good cond., newer sails, Harken RF, lazy jacks, Atomic4 gas eng. runs well, new autotiller, 12v circuit breaker, upgraded battery switch. Includes hard dinghy & motor, located at mouth of South River $8,000 Includes sailing lessons if needed. Don at donandsue4@verizon.net or (301) 943-4637(cell) C&C 27-5 ‘85 Yanmar dsl. Race ready 6 sails good condition. Vhf/stereo-depth & more electronics-foil headstay. $9,150. Lad Mills at 410-745-4942 or lmills@cbmm.org

SLAM DUCK, Catalina 27 ‘76 race rigged. Fully found, main, 100%, 140% and 155% jibs, spinnaker and pole, rigid vang, 9.9 Johnson outboard, remote control, 4’ draft, standard rig, head, battery, battery charger, Garmin 2010 color GPS. High point winner 2013, 2011, 2010. Currently in the water, ready to sail and race. $7,000 Call John at 410-268-8756. 27’ Ericson ’73 Keel cruising sloop, good cond, main, jib, spinnaker, 9.9 Honda 4-stroke otbd, solar battery charger, $5500-obo. Sea Scouts, Ken Kessler, skipper1115@gmail.com, Steve Alexander stevedalex@msn. com, 301 646-0805. 28’ Dufour 28 ‘79 Diesel, clean. $3,700. Lad Mills at 410-745-4942 or lmills@cbmm.org 28’ Sabre ’75 Needs work, and a new engine. Great boat for the right person. Bohemia River. $2,000. celeriter7@ yahoo.com, phil.vogler@comcast.net

Sabre S28-II ’79 Sloop $12,250 Good cond. 4’8” draught, 9’3” beam. Wheel steering, NEW: batteries, alternator, charger, tachometer, chartplotter/ fishfinder, VHF, cabin lights, head, running rigging. New bimini, sail cover, binnacle cover and jib UV cover. Bottom paint 2011. Furling jib, wheel steering, AC. Volvo MD7-A. 4 sails. 2 anchors. Depth meter. Deale, MD Contact Gary: (303) 775-5453 or gary@sunshineduo.us 30’ Catalina ’87 Tall Rig Exc. cond., limited family use only. Standard outfitting. Ready for sailing. In water on KI. $17,000 Contact (410) 604-3692, bgkkmt94@aol.com 30’ Catalina ’94 Mark lll Tall Rig Wing Keel, 3’-10”, Dodger, Bimini, Main Lazy Bag, spinnaker, New 150% Genoa, Walk-thru transom, 1292 Hrs. on engine, New VHF. 410-692-0873. In Water in Oxford Maryland. $36,000 (410) 215-7360.

30’ Hunter ’80 Yanmar, bimini, roller furling, wheel steering, 4’ shoal draft, 6’3” headroom, teak & holly flooring, in water at Kent Narrows near Annapolis, $8,500 call 410-490-6137 Restored 1977 Pearson 30 New sails, Atomic 4, brightwork, Worton Creek, Good old boat. Call:Pepper (410) 708-3549. 30’ Pearson Wanderer ‘69 Roller furling. Atomic Four engine-legal headhorseshoe ring-2 mains/1working job/ 1 120 % genoa. $3,900. Lad Mills at 410745-4942 or lmills@cbmm.org

New listings are being added all the time, visit Spinsheet.com/spinsheet-broker-ads

SpinSheet June 2014 89


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED

31’ Newport ’88 Dodger & bimini, wheel with cover, 5.5” draft, winged keel, MaxProp (folding), Universal-14 hp, grill, small dinghy, wheel steering, large quarter berth, enclosed head, U-shaped galley, stereo, recent survey; The perfect Bay Cruiser for day sailing and long weekends with family and friends. $8,500 for half share. (240) 669-6764 or mcvogel15@gmail.com 32’ O’Day 322 ’89 Yanmar 2gm, roller furling, 3 cabin sleeps 6, galley wt stove, sink, cooler. new teak cabin sole buffed, and new bottom coat Gauhaur vang and traveler. many extras. (856) 854-1851.

32’ Pearson Vanguard Beautiful classic ready for new skipper to enjoy. ’01 Restoration included Moyer rebuild of Atomic4; New cushions; Awlgripped deck; electronics; Quantum sails. Good Old Boat Regatta winner. Varnished 2012. Located Rock Hall. Head turner w/ great sailing characteristics. Full keel, tiller, roller-furling boom and genoa. $14,900 PearsonVanguardforsale@ gmail.com, https://sites.google.com/ site/vanguard264forsale/home

Cal 33 ’85 Sloop Pretty, fast, 4’9” draft. Doyle Stackpack, RF, Yanmar 3GM30, Garmin chartplotter, autohelm. new cabin sole, bulkhead, headliner, head, holding tank, VHF, stereo, new throttle and gear shift. All stanchions, pulpit, etc. professionally rebedded with butyl tape in 2012. 2013 bottom paint and compound/wax topsides. $37,500 West River, MD. (703) 424-6230 for additional information or email rozenfrance@gmail.com

New listings are being added all the time, visit spinsheet.com

90 June 2014 SpinSheet

33’ Cherubini Raider Hull #25 ‘84 Tall Rig Full cruising interior, full sail inventory, slip available. Middle River. Asking $33K (410) 866-3015 or CHunti3631@aol.com 33’ Morgan O/I Roomy, Solid, Rugged. dodger bimini, new refrig/freezer, $14,000 recently spent under the water line, new depth, self steering, new main, roller furling, new drifter, Garmin GPS, 50hp 540-335-6984 $25,900 capt.grimsley@yahoo.com

34’ Beneteau 331 ‘02 Great Bay and coastal SINGLE-HANDER, cruised the Bahama out islands in luxury. Draws under 5,’ roller-furling main and headsail, anchor windlass switch at helm, GPS chartplotter. autopilot; Spacious salon, twin berth forward, queen aft; head w/shower; 12-volt fridge, propane oven, microwave and 16,000 BTU Air at dock. Priced to sell $68,400. Call 215-237-6705 or email kairos.chuck@gmail.com.

34’ C&C ’83 Yanmar dsl, complete sails, great bay boat! located in Baltimore $15,000, (443) 858-2931. 34’ Sabre ’91 Beautiful highly sought after Targa 34 w/separate aft cabin, Refit in 2002 - engine 119 hrs. All interior upholstery replaced during refit & upgraded. Shoal draft wing keel. Air/ heat, refrigeration & new electronics. $79,500 Contact 410-279-5318, jgordonco@aol.com 34’ Tartan ’71 Classic T34C Cruising Keel/CB . Good cond. A4 . wheel helm. Sails very good condition. Very large inventory upon request. Many photos available upon request. $14k -obo. h2obilly@aol,com. 410-360-8242 days please, seniors. 35’ Bristol ‘68 Roller furling-full batten main-storm jib-40 hp westerbeke diesel. $8,500. Lad Mills at 410-745-4942 or lmills@cbmm.org

35’ C&C 35 Mk II ’73 $25,000 Yanmar30 322 hrs, teak and holly sole, new 20amp breakers, rebuilt winches new hatches Furlex200S furling, main genoa. Contact Nathan (301) 730-5303, nshesse@smcm.edu

Hunter 376 ’98 Seriously, a cleaner 376 you will not find! It’s my hobby to keep it pristine while as it sits in front of my house. Go to boats.com for pictures and all details. Price reduced to $71,500. (410) 252-1115.

Catalina 350 Mk II ’08 Nicely kept 350 with furling main, 150% genoa, Raymarine electronics, AC/heat, extra water tank, wing keel, dodger/bimini, cream ultraleather, $139,000 (610) 401-0834

39’ Camper Nicholson New engine, ports, hatches. Furuno multi function display. Much new equipment. Cockpit enclosure, hard dodger, below decks auto pilot, winter cover. Good cond. throughout. Located Rock Hall, $62,500 (856) 468 3942

J/35 Rampage ’85 One of the rare J35s with an Original Wheel. Boat includes a large number of sails. (570) 336-0786.

35’ Saga ‘01 Great short-handed performance cruiser. Excellent cond., well equipped w/ updated electronics, new bottom paint, dodger, 12v refrigeration and much more. John Dennison 443-995-8670, john@outerreefyachts.com

Schock 35 ’85 Model w/recent open cockpit, many other upgrades, roller furler, etc…. Excellent cond., being sold w/basic sail inventory. Private head, Sleeps 4 to 6, Fast cruiser or PHRF racer. Great value at $19,000. Call or text 443-254-5490. Beneteau 361 ‘01 Well maintained sailing vessel, low engine hrs, reversible A/C, electronics, bimini/dodger, propane stove/oven, autopilot, jib/main furling, hot/cold running water, refig/ freezer, windlass, 4 winches. jettyjoe@hotmail.com, 301.963.7996

36’ Islander ’80 Pathfinder engine, sails: main, genoa 150, geneker. $24,000 call (443) 255-1586. 37’ Hunter ’88 cruising sloop Ready to sail, Yanmar dsl, 110 furling jib, Dutchman mainsail, well equipped instrumentation, air/heat, Sea Scouts $27,500, Steve Alexander, stevedalex@msn.com, 301 646 0805

40’ C&C 40 ‘81 Great racer/cruiser with many extras: AC, refrigeration, standing rigging rebuilt, Keep modified to 6”6”. Sails in good cond. Just too many extras to list here. $51,700. rhswank@gmail.com 41’ O’Day New Offering ‘87 $60K, 3 cabins, 2-heads, Quantum sails, GPS, autohelm, TV, inverter, Westerbeke 46, shoal draft, Dutchman flaking, bimini & dodger, dinghy, outboard, excellent cond. (610) 558-1181. Spirit of Tradition Cruising Vessel 62’ ketch built by Salthouse in NZ. Recent circumnavigation in comfort and style by two. Total refit, ready to go and better than new. Value! www.sailmarine.com, (757) 971-1811.

326 First St, Suite 18 Annapolis, MD 21403 (410) 268-4100 www.sailyard.com Hanse 400 E ’09 Left over dealer stock boat. Virtually unused ready to become your next cruising yacht. Features Epoxy hull, Yanmar dsl, Simrad electronics and Auto Pilot, electric winch, folding prop, electric windlass, and much more. Annapolis Sailyard: 410.268.4100 41’ Morgan Classic ’91 Lightly used, nicely equipped & well maintained. This center cockpit cruiser features a comfortable interior and a safe and easily managed deck and cockpit layout. Annapolis Sailyard: 410.268.4100 Taswell 43 ’96 A truly great blue water cruiser by Ta Shing. Equipped to leave right now in total comfort. All the bells and whistles including recent dark green Awlgrip. Center cockpit with 2 strms and heads . A must see. Annapolis Sailyard: 410.268.4100 Irwin 46 ’81 Recently refurbished for a knowledgeable owner. All systems upgraded, hull painted, spars pulled, hardware replaced, new paint. All hatches & ports replaced, new tanks, & too much more to mention. An economical cruiser w/all the work complete. Annapolis Sailyard: 410.268.4100

spinsheet.com


The Moorings Yacht Brokerage has the world’s largest selection of pre-owned charter yachts.

T

he Moorings Yacht Brokerage sells over 200 pre-owned charter yachts from the world’s best manufacturers each year. A fleet yacht purchase includes the same “blue-water” ready equipment used to safely sail the boat from the USA, France, or South Africa factory to one of our many global bases. You too can take advantage of the same proven value realized by every other satisfied buyer worldwide whether you plan to sail locally or internationally. Call or email for more details on our select opportunities to own today.

Best Boats

Best Equipment

2007 LEOPARD 46

“Natural Mystic” 4 Cabins /4 Heads Located Tortola, BVI Asking $359,000

2008 JEANNEAU 36I

“Miss Keri” 2 Cabins /1 Heads Located Abaco, Bahamas Asking $79,000 Reduced Price

2005 LAGOON 410

“Moabi” 4 Cabins /4 Heads Located St. Martin Asking $199,000

Best Locations

BENETEAU 50

Cyclades 3 & 4 Cabin layoutt with additional crew cabin and generator. Located in BVI and St. Martin Asking from $169,000 Reduced Price

2012 BENETEAU FIRST 40

“Sunsail 1001” - Cruise & Race Ready! 3 Cabins /2 Heads - Demo Boat Located San Francisco, CA Asking Only $199,000 Reduced Price

2007 BENETEAU 39

“Four Winds” 3 Cabins /2 Heads Located Tortola, BVI Asking $89,000

Best Service

2006 BENETEAU 43

“In Recess” 3 Cabins /3 Heads Located St. Martin FWI Asking $99,000

2008 JEANNEAU 39I

“Aria III” 3 Cabins / 2 Heads Located St. Martin Asking $95,000

2006 LAGOON 410

“Amigo” 4 Cabin / 4 Heads Located Tortola, BVI Asking $209,000

www.mooringsbrokerage.com | 800-850-4081 | info@mooringsbrokerage.com


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED ING SALE PEND

47’ Catalina 470 ’01 Extremely well cared for and recently upgraded with Leisure Furl and Quantum main (’08), full Raymarine package (’10), hard dodger with full enclosure (’12) plus much more. Contact harold@aycyachts.com (619) 840-3728 cell or (410) 268-7171 office. harold@aycyachts.com

CS 34 ’90 Great performance cruiser in beautiful shape. Full battened mainsail on Stoboom furler, 140% genoa & asymmetrical spinnaker w/sock. Tic Tac electronics, dodger/bimini, dinghy davits & much more. Asking $58,750 Contact Harold@aycyachts.com 410-268-7171

37’ Southerly 115 ’06 $249,000. One owner, lift-kept, fresh water boat. Attractive center cockpit model w/fully retractable swing keel, which provides deep draft performance. Raymarine electronics, bow-thruster. Andrew Smith (410) 533-5362, smitty@aycyachts.com

ING SALE PEND

Grand Soleil 54 ’08 by Luca Brenta Very well equipped fast offshore cruising yacht built by the famous Italian yard Cantiere del Pardo. Please call Harold @ Annapolis Yacht Company for pricing and complete details 410-2687171 or e-mail harold@aycyachts.com

OYSTER 55 ‘66 Extensive re-fit 2012-13 and ready for the ARC. New electronics, electricAnnapolis, furling, rigging, MD � Kentsails, Island,ultra-suede MD upholstery & much more. Asking only Rock Hall, MD � Deltaville, VA $495,000/OBO Contact: Harold@ 410.287.8181 AYCyachts.com, 619-840-3728 or 410-268-7171

ING SALE PEND Grand Soleil 40 ’03 Head south in speed, comfort and style on board this Italian beauty. Lightly used & extremely well priced at $179,000. Please call for complete details & viewing instructions. Harold @ Annapolis Yacht Company 410-268-7171 harold@aycyachts.com

Dufour 44 Performance ’05 Huge sail inventory and cruising amenities make this a true fast cruiser. Shoal keel version expands the cruising ground from the Chesapeake to Florida. Asking $270K Contact: Harold @ Annapolis Yacht Company 410-268-7171 or harold@aycyachts.com

92 June 2014 SpinSheet

ANNAPOLIS, MD • KENT ISLAND, MD ROCK HALL, MD • DELTAVILLE, VA 410.287.8181

www.AnnapolisYachtSales.com 33’ Beneteau 331 ‘00 One of the most popular Beneteau models ever! Large interior for a 33 ft boat. Very well priced at $68 000. Call Jonathan Hutchings in Deltaville, VA. (804) 436-4484 or Jonathan@AnnapolisYachtSales.com

36’ Beneteau 361 ‘01 Morgan Leigh has been well maintained by her owners. She is well spec’d with lots of extras - a turn-key boat in great condition, ready for you to take cruising this season. Come and see her soon! Call Aaron at 410-267-8181 or e-mail: Aaron@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 38’ Catalina 380 ’01 Extremely well maintained & equipped. The owners lack of time forces this sale. She is on land and available to see and purchase any time. Asking only $119,900. Call Dan: 410-570-8533 or Dan@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 38’ Hunter 38 ’06 One owner & lightly used. Well-equipped & maintained to the “nines”!! Owners business obligations are forcing the sale. Bring any reasonable offer. In Annapolis & available anytime. Call Dan: 410-570-8533 or Dan@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 38’ Sabre 38 ’85 Turnkey w/upgrades including new Raymarine C90W chartplotter/GPS, New “ultra thin” TV, propane BBQ grill, reverse cycle heat/ air, more. RECENTLY REDUCED: $64,500! Contact Bob 410-267-8181 or Bob@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 40’ Beneteau 40 ‘09 Super nice, well cared for cruising boat! Two cabins, 1 head, reverse cycle A/C, good electronics, radar, dodger & bimini, only 205hrs. Just listed! $189,900 Contact Keith (410) 267-8181 or Keith@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 40’ Beneteau 40 ’09 Rare 3-cabin, 2-head model that has been impeccably maintained. Equipped with A/C, Autopilot, Chartplotter and instruments. Located in Annapolis and easy to see. Asking $209,900, call Cliff: 410-2793999 or Cliff@annapolisyachtsales.com 40’ Beneteau First 405 ’87 Fast comfortable cruiser/racer, beautiful teak interior, dodger & bimini, many recent upgrades - elect windlass, 105 hrs. on 2009 Yanmar. $115,000 Contact Keith (410) 267-8181 or Keith@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 41’ Beneteau 411 ’02 This boat has low eng hrs & loads of upgrades. Waxed, polished & brightwork refinished in late April. Don’t miss Slainte. $135 000. See details at www.annapolisyachtsales. com or contact Jonathan Hutchings in Deltaville, VA. (804) 436-4484 or Jonathan@AnnapolisYachtSales.com www.annapolis.com

42’ Sabre 426 ‘06 Nicely equipped w/ factory options, AC, electric windlass, classic main w/Stack Pack, wind 34’ Beneteau First Class 10 ’85 generator and lots mor.e Newly Reduced to $288,000, Contact: L’Outrage is a proven race winner. Pat@AnnapolisYachtSales.com or cell: Custom trailer & new genoa await. Price 508-776-7789. Reduced for a quick sale. $37,000. Call Bob Oberg 410-267-8181 or 50’ Beneteau First 50 ’04 Absolutely Bob@AnnapolisYachtSales.com stunning boat. Perfect performance

35’ Catalina ’03 Shoal keel, excellent cond., all the extras including air $107,500 www.bayharborbrokerage. com 757-480-1073 35’ Southern Cross ’82 Excellent cond., Cutter rig offshore capable rebuilt dsl, 2006 sails, new batteries, bottom barrier coated $58,500, www.bayharborbrokerage.com, 757-480-1073 Mariner 36 Well built solid cruising boat with fin keel & skeg rudder, full enclosure, new mainsail $49,900 www.bayharborbrokerage.com 757-480-1073 42’ Endeavour Center Cockpit ’88 Inboom furling mainsail, large aft cabin, this is a very roomy good sailing boat that has received very good care. RIB with 15-hp outboard. Bottom barrier coated, 2009 AC. $106,000 www.bayharborbrokerage.com

By Atlantic Cruising Yachts

312 Third Street, #102 Annapolis, MD 21403

410-263-2311

www.bay-yacht.com www.atlantic-cruising.com Catalina C400 ’95 $129,000. Pristine condition, meticulously maintained. Call Bob Allen (443) 822-0883. 42i Jeanneau deep keel $199,000 performance boat, 2 cabin / 2 head, well equipped including spinnaker. Call Bobby Allen 443-603-2463 Jeanneau 42i ’07 New Price $215,000 Perhaps the fastest 42i built, North 3DL inventory, deep keel, epitomizes the term, “racer/cruiser”. Call Bobby Allen (443) 603-2463 Jeanneau 45.2 ‘03 3 cabin/2 head, $224,900, full electronics, new sails, includes spinnaker, shoal draft, beautiful flag blue – call Bobby Allen 443-603-2463 45’ Jeanneau ’07 $244,900, sharp, clean beautifully outfitted, full AC, electronics, canvas.. won’t last! Call Bobby Allen 443-603-2463 48’ Fountaine Pajot Salina ‘08 $549,000 loaded, 4 cabin 2 head, full electronics, perfect family cruiser - call Bobby Allen 443-603-2463

cruiser. Loaded with all the toys from Genset/Air to Great Electronics & Sails! $449,000 Contact Tim (410) 267-8181 or tim@annapolisyachtsales.com

spinsheet.com


7078 Bembe Beach Rd., Annapolis, MD 21403

26’ Tartan Fantail ’14 We have both the DaySailor and WeekEnder in stock. Ready to go excellent incentives. SailAway package at 98k DaySailor & 110k Weekender. Contact you CYS Broker today for a test sail CrusaderYachts.com 410-269-0939

37’ Tartan 3700 Two available 2006 & 2008 - Both in great shape, well equipped and ready for their next adventures. Both here in Annapolis and ready to show. $249k & $280k - Call CYS Now to see them both! 410-269-0939

38’ C&C 115 ’11 Demo model. Owner by overseas dealer. Excellent value asking $185,000 ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED. over 300k to replace. Needs Sails, Bottom paint and star to steer towards...Call your CYS broker 410-269-0939

31’ Pacific Seacraft ’89 Currently four PSC 31s on the market @ CYS with varying equipment and pricing. Great pocket cruiser w/excellent reputation. From $73,500 to $95,000 CrusaderYachts.com 38’ Freedom ’90 Amazing boat. Lots of updates & improvements. Newer electronics, painted hull & deck, Carbon rig, self tacking job & more. This boat is turnkey & ready for fall sailing now. Sellers want a bigger boat now! Asking $95,000 crusaderyachts.com 35’ Ericson 350 ’98 Built by Pacific Seacraft Well equipped, great performance – coastal and offshore. A performance cruiser built to last with beautiful lines and a functional, spacious layout. $110,000 CrusaderYachts.com 410-269-0939 40’ Pacific Seacraft ’96 ROCKIN’ CHAIR. Standout Crealock design. Meticulous care; many upgrades including Lighthouse windlass, full cockpit enclosure, AIS, cutter rig, twin furlers, 7 sails, etc. Reduced to $229,000. CrusaderYachts.com 410-269-0939 37’ Pacific Seacraft - Crealock Design CYS has four PSC 37s available ranging in year from 1987 ($79k) to 1999 ($165k) - and two in the middle 1989 ($115k) & 1994 ($152k) Call to day to see them ALL in Annapolis (410) 2690939, www.crusaderyachts.com

New listings are being added all the time, visit Spinsheet.com/spinsheet-broker-ads Follow us!

Since 1948 Full Service Yard ABYC

NEW Jeanneau & Marlow-Hunter in stock!! NEW & PRE-OWNED BOATS IN MANY LENGTHS ‘01 Hunter 410 - $124,900

‘09 Hunter 45cc - $270,000

‘07 Hunter 45CC - $249,000

‘07 Hunter 44DS - $195,000

‘11 Jeanneau 42DS - $229,000

‘05 Hunter 456 - $205,000

‘09 Hunter 50cc - $362,500

‘03 Hunter 426 - $159,000

SELECTED BROKERAGE 240 Hunter ‘00 .................$ 14,000 25 Catalina ‘78 ...............$ 6,500 26 Colgate ‘05..................$ 35,000 28.5 Hunter ’87 .................$ 14,000 320 Catalina ’96 ...............$ 56,500 326 Hunter ‘03 ..................$ 69,000 33 Hunter ’82 .................$ 14,999 33 Hunter ‘05 ..................$ 79,000 34 Hunter ’86 ..................$ 24,000 34 Irwin ‘86 ......................$ 25,000 35 Hallberg Rassy ’76....$ 39,900 36 Endeavour Cat ’99....$144,900 36 Ericson ‘81 ..................$ 29,900 36 Hunter ’05 .................$110,000 36CC Beneteau ‘99 ............$100,000 361 Beneteau ’00 .............$ 79,000 37 Jeanneau ‘01 ............$ 92,000 376 Hunter ‘97 .................$ 72,000 376 Hunter ’97 .................$ 70,000

38 Herreshoff Cat ‘85.....$ 72,000 38 Hunter ‘07 ...................$140,000 380 Hunter ’02 Sloop.......$ 95,999 405 Northwind ‘86 ...........$ 54,000 41AC Hunter ’05...................$169,000 410 Hunter ‘99...................$109,000 410 Hunter ‘00 ..................$117,500 410 Hunter ’01 .................$124,900 42 Hunter ‘91 ...................$ 91,000 42DS Jeanneau ‘11.............$229,000 426 Hunter ’03 .................$159,000 44DS Hunter ‘07 .................$195,000 45CC Hunter ’07.................$249,000 45CC Hunter ‘09.................$270,000 456 Hunter ’04.................$190,000 456 Hunter ‘05.................$205,000 46 Hunter ’01.................$195,000 460 Hunter ‘00.................$159,000 50CC Hunter ’09.................$362,500

www.nortonyachts.com

97 Marina Dr. Deltaville, VA 23043 804-776-9211 888-720-4306

SpinSheet June 2014 93


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED

40’ Tartan 4000 ’12 New Demo model, Full warranties. Ready for delivery, see her at Newport and Annapolis Shows! Genset, Air, radar/plotters. LED lighting, carbon rig, Epoxy hull PLUS all the luxuries of home. $480,000 Trades considered! 410-269-0939

41’ Tartan 4100 ’02 Midnight” - Well equipped including Genset, Air Con, blue hull, newer sails, Low hrs (700). ready for Coastal cruising. New boat On order. Contact Mike 410-269-0939 or CrusaderYachts.com

43’ Saga 43 96 Moonstruck is well equipped and ready for coastal or extended cruising. Many updates, shows well and has recently been reduced to $199,000 - Owner says sell... Offers Encouraged! 410-269-0939

49’ Jeanneau 49DS ’07 Well equipped owner’s layout w/convertible aft cabin to a kind single. Chesapeake Bay sailing only. Excellent price and value - lightly used! ! Asking $316,000 Schedule an appointment to see her today! 410-269-0939

409 Chester Avenue, Suite A Annapolis, MD 21403 1.855.266.5676 | info@curtisstokes.net

www.curtisstokes.net

30’ Seidelmann ’80 A proven classic racer/cruiser design with 11 feet of beam, she feels much larger than she is, price reduced 05/14 to $5,500. Contact Rob Dorfmeyer (216) 533-9187 Curtis Stokes & Associates, rob@curtisstokes.net

38’ Cabo Rico ‘87 New standing rigging, A/C, New cockpit enclosure. Owner Moved up ! Only $89,000 . Contact Rob Dorfmeyer 216-533-9187 Curtis Stokes & Associates rob@curtisstokes.net

40’ Hans Christian Christina ’88 World cruiser with all the safety gear, dingy w/ engine; conveyed, $157,000. She loves the oceans and the Islands. Contact Rob Dorfmeyer (216) 533-9187, Curtis Stokes & Associates, rob@curtisstokes.net

Look for Used Boat Reviews at spinsheet.com/resources1/used-boat-reviews

Join the global Summer Sailstice Celebration right here at AYS!

Get on the water June 21st with demo rides on a new sailboat model! 10AM - 3PM. Please call ahead to reserve your spot: 410-267-8181

Annapolis & Kent Island: 410-267-8181 • Rock Hall: 410-639-4082 • Virginia: 804-776-7575

40 Catalina 400 MK II ‘05 $195,000

42 Beneteau 423 ‘03, ‘04, ‘06 3 from $169,500

42 Jeanneau Sun Odyssey DS ‘10 $210,000

34’ Beneteau 343 4 from............................. $104,900 35’ Catalina 350 ‘04 .................................. $118,500 36’ Beneteau First 36.7 ‘09 ........................ $129,000 36’ Hunter 36 ‘05 2 from............................. $102,500 36’ Sabre 362 ‘01 ...................................... $179,900 38’ Bristol 38.8 ‘83 ........................................$94,900 38’ Catalina 380 ‘01 .................................. $119,500 38’ Hunter 38 ‘06 ........................................ $139,900 38’ Sabre 386 ‘05, ‘07 2 from ................... $225,900 38’ Wauquiez Hood 38 ‘86 ...................... $110,000 39’ Beneteau 393 ‘02, ‘04 2 from ............. $105,000 40’ Beneteau 40 ‘08, ‘09 5 from................ $199,900

40’ Beneteau 40CC ‘97 ............................. $117,500 40’ Beneteau First 405 ‘87 ......................... $110,000 40’ Delphia 40 ‘06 ...................................... $154,900 40’ Jeanneau 40 DS ‘03 ............................. $155,000 41’ Beneteau 411 ‘99, ‘01, ‘02 4 from ..... $104,900 41’ Hallberg-rassy 41 ‘79 .......................... $115,000 41’ Hunter 410 ‘01 ..................................... $130,000 41’ lagoon 410-S2 ‘03 .............................. $329,000 41’ lord Nelson 41 ‘87 ............................. $174,000 41’ tartan 412 ‘90 ...................................... $134,500 42’ Hunter 420 ‘02 ..................................... $139,900 42’ Jeanneau 42 DS ‘07 ............................ $210,000

42’ Sabre 426 ‘06 ...................................... $288,000 43’ Beneteau 43 ‘09 ................................... $226,000 44’ Bavaria 44 ‘95 ...................................... $142,000 44’ Beneteau oceanis 440 ‘93 ................. $139,900 44’ Cal 44 ‘85 ............................................. $118,900 44’ Dean 440 Catamaran ‘02 ................... $244,000 45’ Hunter 45 CC ‘07 ................................. $247,500 45’ Steel PH Howdy Bailey 45 ‘04 ........... $493,500 46’ Beneteau oceanis 461 ‘01 ................. $194,900 46’ Hunter 460 ‘00 ..................................... $159,900 46’ leopard 46 CAt ‘08 ............................ $599,000 46’ Scheeps & Jachtbouw Ketch ‘82 ............$95,000

46 Hallberg-Rassy 46 ‘96 $395,000 46’ tartan 4600 ‘93, ‘95 2 from ................ $225,000 47’ Beneteau 47.7 ‘04 ................................ $240,000 49’ Beneteau 49 ‘07 ................................... $299,000 49’ Jeanneau 49 DS ‘05 ............................. $315,000 50’ Beneteau 50 ‘96, ‘04 2 from................ $135,000 50’ Beneteau Custom Series ‘04 ................ $274,900 50’ Beneteau First 50 ‘07 ........................... $449,900 50’ Beneteau M-505 ‘00 ............................ $164,900 50’ Celestial 50 PH ‘99 .............................. $288,000 50’ Horizon Steel PH ‘96 ............................ $215,000 52’ tayana 52 ‘89 ...................................... $199,000 55’ Swede 55’ 78 ....................................... $157,500

ViSit our WeBSite For PHotoS oF All our BoAtS! www.annapolisyachtsales.com 94 June 2014 SpinSheet

spinsheet.com


Brokerage Sales And Marlow-Hunter Sailboat Dealer

42’ Hunter 420 Center Cockpit ’99 2 ensuite staterooms/ 2 heads. Yanmar 62hp, all weather enclosed cockpit. $124,000. Call Randy Walterhoefer 917478-4944 Curtis Stokes & Associates, Randy@curtisstokes.net

50’ Gulfstar ‘79 One of the nicest available. Rare sloop rigged . Repowered Cummins 65-hp, bowthruster, new paint. $189,000 Contact Randy Walterhoefer 917-4784944 Curtis Stokes & Associates randy@curtisstokes.net

51’ Little Harbor Pilothouse ’96 Well maintained performance cruiser. Beautiful condition. New Yanmar 160hp. $374,500. Call Randy Walterhoefer 917-478-4944 Curtis Stokes and Associates Randy@curtisstokes.net

58’ Farr ’85 Proven circumnavigator built at Dencho Marine, interior by N.A. Bob Smith, incredible boat ! $189,000 Call Randy Walterhoefer 917-478-4944 Curtis Stokes & Associates Randy@curtisstokes.net

New listings are being added all the time, visit Spinsheet.com/spinsheet-broker-ads

in association with Legend Yacht Sales

800-604-3242 www.greatblueyachts.com

45’ Hunter 456 ’02 $159,000 – Beautiful center cockpit: In-mast, Air/Heat, gen set, master suite w/ Island double – Low hrs – Clean. On display at the Spring Show! Tony 443-553-5046, tony@greatblueyachts.com 50’ Beneteau 510 ’93 In-mast furling, 4 cabin / 4 head, crew cabin, AC/Heat, pilot, CLEAN $148,500 - Call Tony or Cherie - 800-604-3242, info@greatblueyachts.com, www.greatblueyachts.com

36’ Hunter 36 ’07 CLEAN, Ready to sail away – In-mast, cruising spin, C80 plotter, AC/Heat, full canvas – A Must See! $119,000 Contact Tony or Cherie 800-604-3242, info@greatblueyachts.com 36’ Hunter 356 ’03 PRICED RIGHT! – In-mast, full canvas, AC/Heat, dinghy w/ OB, plotter, pilot – Available for demo sail. $89,000 Contact Tony 443-5535046, tony@greatblueyacht.com

Leave 10% Brokerage Fees in Your Wake

Jay Porterfield • Knot 10 Sail (410) 977-9460 • jay@knot10.com

41’ Beneteau 411 ’01 2 cabin, furling main, Gen, AC/Heat, plotter, radar – new electronics, dinghy w/ OB, cruising spin and more $123,000 Contact Tony – 443553-5046, tony@greatblueyachts.com 41’ Rival Aft Cockpit Cutter ’78 Classic Peter Brett Design, Blue Water cruiser. Beautiful lines above decks, gorgeous teak woods below. Exceptional Care and many recent upgrades – $44,500 Contact Tony 443-553-5046, tony@greatblueyachts.com

32’ Island Packet ’94 This is the nicest IP to come along in years Must See $95,500 Jay 410-977-9460 Jay@Knot10.com

410-269-0939 www.CrusaderYachts.com

HANSE 415

HANSE 345 On Order

62’ 1984 Gulfstar 62 ..................................................$339,500 53’ 1984 Mason 53 ....................................................$240,000 50’ 1984 Gulfstar SailMaster ....................................$189,000 49’ 2007 Jeanneau 49 Deck Salon ...........................$316,000 48’ 2000 Sunward 48 ...............................................$300,000 46’ 2003 Tartan 4600 ................................................$375,000 44’ 1975 Gulfstar 44 Ketch .........................................$69,000 44’ 2008 Tartan 4400 .................................................$419,000 44’ 1991 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 44 .....................$239,000 43’ 2003 Saga 43 .......................................................$199,000 41’ 2001 Tartan 4100 .................................................$195,000 40’ 1976 Bristol Classic / Refit ...................................$79,000 40’ 1996 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 40 .....................$229,000 40’ 1998 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 40 .....................$280,000 40’ 1998 Regal 402 Commodore ................................$97,500 40’ 2012 Tartan 4000 - DEMO ...................................$480,000 38’ 1988 C&C 38 Mk III ................................................$66,000 38’ 1982 C&C Landfall 38 ..........................................$55,000

Follow us!

TArTAN 4000 In Stock

38’ 1997 Tartan 3800 .................................................$169,000 38’ 1990 Freedom 38 ..................................................$95,000 37’ 1995 Custom Steel Pilot House ..........................$77,900 37’ 1999 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 37 .....................$165,000 37’ 1987 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 37 .......................$79,000 37’ 1989 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 37 .....................$110,000 37’ 1977 Gulfstar 37 ....................................................$57,500 37’ 1985 Tayana 37 Cutter ..........................................$65,000 37’ 2008 Tartan 3700 ccr ..........................................$275,000 37’ 2006 Tartan 3700 .................................................$249,000 37’ 2005 Tartan 3700 .................................................$220,000 37’ 1983 Tartan 37c .....................................................$68,500 36’ 2004 Hunter 36 ......................................................$79,000 35’ 1998 Ericson 350 by Pac Sea ............................$100,000 35’ 2004 Hunter 356 ..................................................$100,000 34’ 2007 Beneteau 343 .................................................. CALL 34’ 2001 Legacy 34 Express - Jet Drives ................$179,900 34’ 1993 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 34 .....................$122,500

TArTAN FANTAil 26 In Stock

34’ 1994 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 34 .....................$115,000 34’ 1997 Gemini 105M ................................................$89,000 33’ 1980 Tartan 33 .......................................................$35,000 33’ 1980 Tartan 33 .......................................................$35,000 32’ 2007 Luhrs 32 Open ...........................................$139,900 32’ 2006 C&C 99 ...........................................................$92500 32’ 2004 C&C 99 ..........................................................$99,000 32’ 1995 Catalina 320 ..................................................$48,500 32’ 1984 Sabre 32 Tri-Cabin .......................................$34,500 31’ 2008 Hunter 31 ......................................................$85,750 31’ 1984 Bristol 31 ......................................................$59,000 31’ 2006 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 31 .....................$150,000 31’ 1989 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 31 .......................$79,000 31’ 1990 Pacific Seacraft Crealock 31 .......................$67,500 27’ 1987 Pacific Seacraft Orion 27 ............................$75,000 26’ 2014 Tartan Fantail Daysailor - Demo .................$98,000 26’ 2014 Tartan Fantail Weekender - Demo ............$110,000 24’ 1989 Pacific Seacraft Dana 24 .............................$49,500

SpinSheet June 2014 95


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED Catalina 34 MKII ‘06 AC/Heat, Refrig, Roller main and Genoa, Sugar scoop stern, Annapolis Call 410-977-9460 37’ Tartan 37 Sloop ’82 Quality Yacht, Shoal draft, very well maintained $65,500 Jay 410-977-9460 Jay@Knot10.com

38’ Hunter 386 ’03 The Hunter 386 can be sailed single handed, has huge accommodations below and has ample storage room. Reduced to sell $98,000 Call Jay at (410) 977-9460 or jay@knot10.com Hunter 380 ‘00 Super clean all options, Arnold Call Mike 443-694-1350

800-672-1327

www.mooringsbrokerage.com

36’ Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 36i ’09 Asking reduced price $76,000. Comfortable 2 cabin version, sails & points great with fin keel. Secure decks and generous cockpit w/ deep storage lockers. Large head w/ separate shower. 800-850-4081, www.MooringsBrokerage.com.

47’ Bavaria 47 ’00 One of the most Beautiful sloops on the water. Performance and Quality-- Only one available on East Coast $200,000 Call Jay at (410) 977-9460 or jay@knot10.com

39’ Beneteau Cyclades 39 ’07 Asking Reduced price $79,000. Great cruising yacht, comfortable at anchor and underway. Nav station conveniently by companionway. Sails fast, points well. Professionally maintained. 800-8504081 www.MooringsBrokerage.com.

41’ Lagoon 410 ’06 Asking Reduced $199,000. Innovative yet traditional Lagoon. Galley-salon area opens into cockpit Clean interior, massively airy, light down below, with Lagoon conviviality, 360-degree view. 800-8504081 www.MooringsBrokerage.com.

40’ Beneteau First 40 ’12 $189,000. Our fleet of Farr First 40s used during the America’s Cup in San Francisco are now available at incredible pricing. Most boats have less than 25 to 50 days use & less than 100 hrs on the engs. Race cruise equipped. 800-850-408 www.MooringsBrokerage.com

43’ Beneteau Cyclades 43 ’06 Asking Reduced price $95,000. Blue water design, generous interior, large cockpit, dual helm, high tech, craftsmanship. Reliability, comfort, elegant finish. Large capacities for water, fuel, gear & food. 800-850-4081 www.MooringsBrokerage.com.

Look for Used Boat Reviews at spinsheet.com/resources1/used-boat-reviews

Southerly 32 - 67 ft. Variable Draft

Morgan Catalina 50 ‘90 $149,000

Island Packet NEW SP Cruiser MK II

Beneteau 473 ‘06 $279,900

57 Southerly 2012 ............................. $1,775,000 55 Trintella 2004 ..........................................U/C 52 Island Packet 485 ............. 3 from.... $549,000 49 Southerly .......................... 2 from.... $675,000 48 Bowman 1992/2006 ........................ $319,900 45 Island Packet .................... 2 from.... $239,900 45 Morgan Nelson Merek 454 1984 ..............U/C 42 Island Packet 420 2000 ................... $299,000 42 Moody 425 1991 ............................. $119,000 41 Island Packet SP Cruiser 2007......... $339,000 41 Rhodes Bounty II 1957 ..................... $52,500 40 Island Packet .................... 2 from.... $219,000 40 O’Day 1986....................................... $54,500

Island Packet 465 ‘08 2 from $525,000

Southerly 135 (45’) ‘02 Hunter 420 Passage CC ‘04 $389,900 $169,900

39 Pearson C/B 1989.............................. $97,500 38 Dufour Classic 2000 .................................U/C 38 Hunter 2005 ................................... $134,500 38 Island Packet 380 ............. 3 from.... $204,900 38 Island Packet .................... 2 from.... $139,000 38 Morgan 382 1981 .............................. $39,900 38 Sabre 386 2006 ............................... $248,500 37 Island Packet 370 ............. 2 from.... $249,900 36 Hunter 2005 ................................... $112,900 36 Island Packet Estero 2010................ $270,000 36 Pearson 362 1985.............................. $53,900 36 Tashing Tashiba 1986 ..................... $128,900 35 Island Packet 350 1998 ................... $129,500

35 Island Packet 1992 .......................... $114,900 35 IP Packet Cat 1994 ......................... $148,000 34 Catalina 1993 .................................... $57,900 34 Hunter 340 1999 .............................. $73,900 34 Sabre MKI 1980 ................................ $32,000 34 Sea Sprite 1981 ................................. $32,900 32 Island Packet ...................... 3 from.... $92,000 31 Catalina 310 2001 ............................. $69,000 31 Island Packet ...................... 2 from.... $48,900 30 Allied Seawind 1969 .................................U/C 29 Island Packet ...................... 3 from.... $69,900 27 Island Packet ...................... 2 from.... $44,900 27 John Holmes w/trlr 1987 .................. $24,900

See Our Website WWW.SjyACHTS.COM For All Our Listings

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46’ Leopard 46 ’07 Asking $359,000. Great design, comfortable spaces, bluewater cruiser. Four large cabins, Generator, 3 air conditioners. Hardtop bimini, roll down side curtains. Aft deck bench folds into swim platform. Very easy handling, very safe family cruiser. 800-850-4081, www.MooringsBrokerage.com.

29’ Bayfield ’89 Yanmar 13-hp, shoal, cutter $19,500 Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300.

29’ Dehler 29 ’98 Full set of cruising and racing sails, clean bottom w/fresh 2013 paint. PHRF is 141 (S) & 126 (A). $54,900, Contact David Malkin (410) 280-2038 or david@northpointyachtsales.com

29’ Bayfield ’84 Yanmar dsl, 3’6” draft, extended galley. $18,500 Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300. 30’ Catalina ’85 Dsl, Tall Rig, dodger. 3 avail. $22,500 Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300. 30’ Ericson ’85 R/F, wheel, dsl. Cruise equipped. Shoal. Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300. 30’ Lippincott ’83 Yanmar dsl, Roll furl, shoal draft Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300.

51’ Beneteau Cyclades 50 ’06 Asking Reduced price $149,000. 16-foot beam = terrific space—double more traditional 50-footers. Comfort unsurpassed in its class. Five cabins (convertible 3 or 4 double cabin layouts available) generator, aircon. Ideal for regattas, cruising. 800-850-8041 www.MooringsBrokerage.com.

7330 Edgewood Road, Suite 1 Annapolis, MD 21403

32’ Dufour ’07 325 Grande Large, 19-hp dsl, wheel, RF, dinghy $114,500 Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300.

26’ Catalina Capri ‘92 Very clean performance cruiser/racer, strong inboard dsl engine, new standing/ running rigging and Harken roller furler, $19,500, seller open to offers. Contact Bill O’Malley 410-703-9058 or bomalley@northpointyachtsales.com

Cal 35 ’80 Cruiser/Racer, wheel/ dsl/ spinnaker. $21,900 Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300. 47’ Gulf Craft Custom, center cockpit ketch. Solar panels, full keel, generator. $39,500 Lippincott Marine (410) 827-9300.

33’ Dufour 335 GL ’14 A suite of innovations for unique SPACE, ERGONOMICS and COMFORT. Call NPYS for more information (410) 280-2038. J/100s Call North Point today to find out about our great inventory of J/100s. Don’t limit your sailing season to just the summer. Call 410-280-2038.

New listings are being added all the time, visit Spinsheet.com/spinsheet-broker-ads

Better Than A Boat Show!

On Display at Havre de Grace:

272 O’Day 1987...................... $11,900 320 Catalina 2003 ................... $74,950 33 Hunter 2005 ...................... $82,500 33 Hunter 2005 ...................... $79,000 33 Hunter 2006 ...................... $73,500 40.5 Hunter 1994 ................... $89,000 41 Hunter 2006 .....................$152,900 43 Hunter Legend 1992 .......... $79,950

45CC Hunter 2007 ................$267,500 466 Hunter 2002 ...................$189,500 Sailboats Around the Bay:

410 Hunter 2001 ...................$124,500 44 Hunter 2006 .....................$199,500 45CC Hunter 2006 ................$259,500 45DS Hunter 2009 ................$277,500 466 Hunter 2004 ...................$199,500

Please View Our Listings At: www.tidewaterYachts.com

Exclusive Chesapeake Bay Dealer for BLuE JACkEt YACHtS

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SpinSheet June 2014 97


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED 410 Hunter ’01 Simple Pleasures is a beauty! She’s loaded w/space and equipped with 2 heads & showers, 2 ACs, VHF/radio, autopilot/GPS & more! Was $134,000, Now $124,900! Norton Yacht Sales, (804) 776-9211, www.nortonyachts.com 33’ J/100 ‘05 Flag Blue hull set up for day sailing and racing. Windsprint can race with the big boys. Offered at $99,000. Contact Paul Mikulski at 410-961-5254 or paul@northpointyachtsales.com. J/105s North Point is your source for this great 35’ one design racer and day sail boat. We have a wide selection starting at $59,900 Contact David@Northpointyachtsales. com (410) 280-8976

35’ J108 ’11 Shoal draft performance cruiser! 4ft draft, Keel centerboard, twin rudder version of the J109. Save $100k Asking $239k. Call Paul for details (410) 961-5254 paul@northpointyachtsales.com

Buy a J/35 Buy a 1984 J/35 join the fun of a great local one-design fleet. Bzing is one of the best. Painstakingly refitted. Great price $33,900. Bill O’Malley at 410-703-9058 or bomalley@ northpointyachtsales.com

44’ DS Hunter ‘07 Blue Skies is a oneowner beauty. This boat has been very well-maintained. It is loaded with options! Now $195,000, just reduced. Norton Yacht Sales, (804) 776-9211, www.nortonyachts.com www.nortonyachts.com 45CC Hunter ’07 Partnership is a spacious beauty with Radar/Plotter, autopilot, Bose, generator & more! $249,000, Norton Yacht Sales, (804)776-9211, www.nortonyachts.com www.nortonyachts.com

36’ Beneteau 361 ’02 Harken roller furling gear, auto-pilot, electric windlass for anchoring, freezer/refrigerator, huge cockpit for entertaining, 2 cabins, bathroom w/a separate shower. Bill O’Malley at (410) 703-9058 or bomalley@northpointyachtsales.com

41’ Dufour 410 GL ‘13 Best 41’ cruising design you will find. Great sailing performance combined w/fantastic accommodations - 3 cabins/1head. Contact David Malkin 410-280-2038 or david@northpointyachtsales.com

Look for Used Boat Reviews at spinsheet.com

New places to pick up Eastport Barber Annapolis, MD

Mike’s Crab House North Pasadena, MD

Elmo’s Diner Carrboro, NC

REI Rockville, MD

Fishbones Tackle Shop Pasadena, MD

Seafarers Boat Club Washington, DC

Lancaster Community Library Kilmarnock, VA

West Laurel Shell Laurel, MD

Naval Academy Museum Fairfield, CT

Aberdeen Library Aberdeen, MD

Pentagon Sailing Club Arlington, VA

Abingdon Library Abingdon, MD

Stingray Point Sailing School Providence Forge, VA

Bel Air Library Bel Air, MD

Ventnor Marina Pasadena, MD

Edgewood Library Edgewood, MD

West Marine Glen Burnie, MD

Fallston Library Fallston, MD

SpinSheet is distributed at over 800 locations. To find the spot nearest you or to suggest a spot, please e-mail: lucy@spinsheet.com

Please give us a call at 410.216.9309 if you would like to offer SpinSheet to your customers. 98 June 2014 SpinSheet

38’ C&C Landfall ’81 Great find, plenty of upgrades coming from refit in 2010 and additional upgrades in 2011 and 2012. Offered at $35,900. Randy Draftz at (843) 557-6082 or randy@northpointyachtsales.com

J42 ‘96 Great offering on a completely upgraded J42. Offshore equipped for long range cruising. This is a must see and highly recommended. $189,000. Call Paul Mikulski 410.961.5254 paul@northpointyachtsales.com.

45.5’ Bristol Center Cockpit k/cb This Bristol has received 2 rounds of extensive upgrades & improvements. Perfect for the Bay or the Bahamas. Low hrs. REDUCED $179,000. Rick Casali at 410-279-5309 or rick@northpointyachtsales.com.

Norton

YACHT SALES

804-776-9211

Marina RD • Deltaville, VA

www.nortonyachts.com

41’ Hunter ’05 Voyager is loaded with extras, radar, Refrigerator/ freezer, spinnaker, and meticulously maintained. She‘s ready to sail! $169,000, Norton Yacht Sales, (804)776-9211, www.nortonyachts.com.

46’ Hunter ‘01 Liberty Is a classic beauty. Great Cruiser w/several upgrades, including bowthruster, Raymarine c80 GPS/radar, davits, and Midnight Blue Awlcraft hull! $195,000, Norton Yacht Sales, (804)776-9211, www.nortonyachts.com. www.nortonyachts.com 50CC Hunter ’09 Quiet Wings is a oneowner dream with full options, tons of space! Come see! $362,500, Norton Yacht Sales, (804) 776-9211 www.nortonyachts.com

804-758-4457

www.regentpointmarina.com View all Listings Online 317 Regent Point Dr. Topping VA, 23169

Regent Point Marina Full Service Yacht Repair Facility. See our website for details of Winter Wet or Dry storage specials. Call Regent Point Marina Boatyard @ 804-758-4747. yardmaster@regentpointmarina.com 30’ Catalina MK II ’87 Progress, Cruisair AC/Heat, new 150% genoa, Harken roller furling, 23-hp Universal, great family cruiser, ready to sail away, Asking: $23,900 Call Regent Point Marina @804-758-4457 www.regentpointmarina.com 30’ Catalina ’80 Champagne, Many updates including A/C, new upholstery, new main w/cover, 150% genoa w/roller furling, 11-hp Universal, autohelm, dodger, bimini. Asking: $18,000 Call Regent Point Marina @ 804-758-4457 www.regentpointmarina.com 31’ Island Packet ’84 Dawn Trader , shoal draft w/CB, 130% genoa w/ RF, bimini, A/C, new batteries, autohelm, dinghy w/ OB, many updates & extras. Asking: $42,000. Call Regent Point Marina@ 804-758-4457 www.regentpointmarina.com 35’ Hunter Legend ’87 “Lady Bug Very clean family boat, New refrig/ freezer, autohelm, 24-hp Yanmar dsl, Profurl rf, Two genoas, Bimini, dodger. Asking: $29,900 Call Regent Point Marina @ 804-758-4457 www.regentpointmarina.com

spinsheet.com

Havre de Havre de

Jarrettsvi Jarrettsvil

Joppa Lib Joppa, M

Shore Sto Trappe, M

Stevens B Annapolis

Stevens B Pasadena

Stevens B Mountain

Whiteford Whiteford

Bohemia Chesapea


36’ Cape Dory ’86 Hunky Dory Clean, well cared for, Ready to go. Perkins dsl, A/C heat pump, new canvas 2010, portable generator, & much more. PRICE REDUCED: $69,900 Call Regent Point marina 804-758-4457 www.regentpointmarina.com

36’ 1996 Catalina 36 Mason 44 Cutter ’90 $269K Original owner, maintained to the highest standard, absolutely gorgeous high quality vessel, low hrs, AC/Heat, cockpit enclosure, bow thruster, beautiful interior, shows like new! RogueWave YS (410) 571-2955.

Yanmar, Air, Dinghy, w/ Davits $79,500

29’ 1989 Bayfield Cutter Yanmar 13-hp, Shoal Draft...............$18,500 29’ 1984 Bayfield Yanmar DSL, 3’6” Draft ...................................$20,000 30’ 1987 Catalina Universal DSL, 5’3” Draft......................... $22,500 30’ 1986 Catalina DSL, Tall Rig, Dodger .......................................$22,500 30‘ 1985 Ericson 30 R/F, Wheel, DSL, Cruise Equipped, Shoal $19,500 Rogue Wave Specializes in High Quality, Ocean-going vessels of substance and character. Life is short. Go now. List your boat with us! Also check out our free Buyer’s Agent Services! Call now. 410 571 2955.

Hallberg-Rassy 39 ’00 $289K Great sailing boat, easy, safe, outfit for cruising with solar, wind, windvane steering, complete electronics. Great value! RogueWave YS (410) 571-2955.

40’ Sabre 402 Sloop ’01 $219K Perfect coastal cruiser. Fast, responsive, beautiful! AC/ heat, electric winch, windlass, Espar heat, Corian counters, Maxprop, more! Price reduced a LOT! RogueWave YS (410) 571-2955.

Passport 47 ’02 $319K Aft cockpit sailing machine w/elegant, satisfying accommodations! Super clean & lightly used. Well maintained, new canvas, new cushions, new electric winch! price reduction! RogueWave YS (410) 571-2955.

US Dealer for Yachts Brokers forSoutherly Fine Yachts Brokers for Fine Cruising Yachts Annapolis 410-571-3605 Rock Hall 410-639-2777 Deltaville 804-776-0604 www.SJYACHTS.com

S&J Yachts Dealers for Island Packet & Southerly Yachts. 3 offices, 10 experienced brokers, open 7 days a week. A dynamic marketing & selling team that is ready to sell your boat or find just the right boat for you! Please contact us now! Call or email info@sjyachts.com

34’ 2001 Motorsailor Kubota 50-hp, One-Off............................$35,000 35’ 1993 Hunter Legend 35.5 Yanmar DSL, AP, Shoal Draft .....SOLD 35’ 1980 Cal 35 Cruiser/Racer, Wheel, DSL, Spinnaker.............$21,900 36’ 1996 Catalina 36 Yanmar, Air, Dinghy, w/ Davits...................$79,500

200 Slip Full Service Marina at Kent Narrows Routes 50/301 Exit 42 (410) 827-9300 fax (410) 827-9303

www.lippincottmarine.com 40’

BOATS FOR SALE! SAILBOATS 1984 Freedom 21 Catboat rig. Unstayed mast. Mainsail, jib, spinaker with shotgun mount. 4 HP Yamaha 4-stroke, fairly recent model. $3,950 1981 Tanzer 25 7.5 model with 9.9hp Mercury outboard engine. Good condition. $8,000 1975 Tartan 27 with roller furling and Atomic 4 inboard engine. Hull and deck are sound. Tough, sturdy sailboat that needs work. $2,150 1971 C&C 35 $7,500

COMING SOON Island Packet Yachts Considering a New or Brokerage Island Packet? Our brokers have sold more IPs than any other group in the World. Call S&J Yachts (410) 639-2777 www.sjyachts.com

1980 O’Day 30

POWERBOATS 1987 Cruisers 28.5 Roomy cabin cruiser with twin inboard engines. $6,500 1986 President 36.5 Large cabin cruiser. Twin Ford Lehman 275HP inboard diesel engines in running condition. $24,000 1972 Concorde Express 27 Mercruiser 302 Ford engine, enclosed electric head and stand-up shower, holding tank, sleeps 4, dinette, full galley. Economical cruiser. $5,000 All boats are sold “as is, where is”

Valiant 42 Cutter ’03 $299K Sought after queen layout, 2 strms, stall shower, rare shoal draft, genset, fridge, freezer, watermaker, dinghy/outboard, plotter/ radar, windvane, liferaft. All ready! RogueWave YS, (410) 571-2955.

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See boats’ photos at www.crabsailing.org To learn more or discuss purchase, contact CRAB at

410-626-0273

Sabre 386 ‘06 Award winning model. She is in excellent condition! A/C, power winch, chartplotter, new upholstery, LED lights, new bottom, new spinnaker…$248,500 S&J Yachts (410) 639-2777 www.sjyachts.com www.sjyachts.com

or info@crabsailing.org

Donate Your Boat If It’s In Good Condition!

Funds from the sale of boats support CRAB’s fleet operations. Chesapeake Region Accessible Boating is a non-profit 501(c)(3) which provides boating opportunities to people with physical or cognitive disabilities.

SpinSheet June 2014 99


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED 37’ Hunter Legend ‘87 Low hrs, new headsail furling system 2014, upgraded electronics in 2010, A/C. Just waxed, painted and ready to cruise. Reduced to $48,000. (410) 639-9380, www.SaltYachts.com www.saltyachts.com Southerly Yachts Leaders in variable draft – over 36 yrs and 1,100 boats. Push button swing keel. Go where others cannot! Several models available 38 – 57 feet from $375,000 to $1,775,000. S&J Yachts 410 639-2777 www.sjyachts.com

Pearson 39 CB ‘89 Comfortable, safe yet performs well enough to make a great club racer. Shoal draft. Air conditioning. Really well maintained! $97,500. S&J Yachts 410-571-3605 www.sjyachts.com www.sjyachts.com

Bowman 48 1992/2006 Virtually a New yacht with over $275,000 of refits/ upgrades from 2006-2012. Chuck Paine designed this elegant world class yacht. $319,900 S&J Yachts (410) 571-3605 www.sjyachts.com www.sjyachts.com

44’ Hunter Deck Salon ’06 Two zone A/C! Bow thruster! E80 plotters at helm AND nav station! Radar! Full canvas enclosure! Bristol Condition! .One owner Gem! ....NOW $160,000! (410) 639-9380, www.saltyachts.com www.saltyachts.com 47’ Catalina 470 ’01 Only 320 hrs! In mast furling! NEW DODGER July 2013! 2012, electronics package! Bow thruster! Genset! Air! Davits! Now listed for $235,000 (410) 639-9380, www.saltyachts.com, www.saltyachts.com

36’ Beneteau 361 ’03 Air, radar! Loaded and ready to go..... asking $99,000 (410) 639-9380, www.saltyachts.com www.saltyachts.com Sabre 362 ‘01 Loaded, meticulously maintained, low hrs. $179,000 SaltYachts.com Call Charlie (410) 639-9380

1-800-960-TIDE

410 Hunter ’01 Air/heat, GPS, autopilot, anchor windlass, spinnaker, 3 TV’s, bimini, dodger, etc. $124,500 Call (410) 209-1111 or go to www.tidewateryachts.com. 41’ AC Hunter ’06 Air/heat, In-mast furling, Raymarine autopilot, electric windlass, spinnaker, bimini, etc. $152,900 Call (410) 209-1111 or go to www.tidewateryachts.com. 43’ Hunter Legend ’92 ’92 Air/heat, GPS, chartplotter, electric windlass, autopilot, bimini/dodger, etc. $79,950 Call 443-209-1111 or go to www.tidewateryachts.com 45DS Hunter ’09 Air/heat, anchor windlass, autopilot, GPS, generator, bimini/dodger, etc. $277,500 Call 443-209-1111 or go to www.tidewateryachts.com 45CC Hunter ’07 Air/heat, in-mast furling, autopilot, generator, GPS, dodger/bimini, washer & dryer, etc. $267,500 Call 443-209-1111 or go to www.tidewateryachts.com

1-800-699-SAIL

www.TidewaterYachts.com

40.5’ Hunter ’94 Air/heat, GPS, anchor windlass, autopilot, genoa, bimini, dodger, etc. $89,000 Call 443-209-1111 or go to www.tidewateryachts.com

New listings are being added all the time, visit Spinsheet.com/spinsheet-broker-ads

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410-923-1400 • 443-223-7864

John Kaiser Cell: 443-223-7864, Office: 410-923-1400, john@yachtview. com, www.yachtview.com. Captain John Kaiser has been selling beautifully maintained power and sailing yachts in Annapolis since 1988. He offers select yacht owners complimentary dockage from 25’ to 80’, including weekly cleaning and electric. National advertising including Yachtworld.com internet exposure with hundreds of high resolution photos of every detail of the yacht. Located in Annapolis, 15 minutes from BWI airport, your yacht will be easily inspected and demonstrated to the prospective buyer. A successful sale in less than 90 days is the goal. Call or email John today.

Sales Clerk/Front Desk P/T hourly positition at Marine Consignment store. Clerk will work register, greet customers, answers and direct phone calls, floor maintenance. Sailing knowledge preferred. Send resume to gary@baconsails.com 31’ Pearson ‘86 Yanmar dsl, wing keel, new jib, standing & running rigging ‘07. Bodkins Creek $27,500 (717) 428-3494. 28’ Cape Dory Sloop Good cond., needs cosmetics, good sails – full batten main, genoa, jib, spinnaker, North dodger and sail cover, lazy jacks, new depth and wind, MD7A ,many extras, covered in dry storage for 4 yrs, Sold As Is to best offer. 703-915-9827.

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Our Water Makers, COOlblue refrigeratiOn and alternatOrs Let You Go CruisinG & not CampinG!

Endurance Yacht Deliveries Local and Long distance. Twenty-one years experience with clean insurance approved resume. Local references. Please call Simon Edwards (410) 212-9579 or email simon@enduranceyachtdeliveries.com

Cold Beer & Ice Cream for 1/2 the Power! www.TechnauticsInc.com

ELECTRONICS

Don’t Own a Boat?

Join Our Sailboat Club!

Sail all Season for less than a slip fee!

DAVITS, ARCHES, SWIM STEP - NO PROBLEM!

At Herrington Harbour

TheSailingAcademy.com Lady Sara Charter Services 37’ sailboat. Crewed half and full-day charters out of the Magothy River. Licensed captain. Call Captain Paul (410) 370-2480, www. ladysaracharterservices.com R&R Charters Crewed day, weekend, and week long charters, leaving from Kent Narrows. Also available certified ASA sail classes. Contact Capt. Dave at (570) 690-3645, (renolldh@epix.net), www. randrchartersandsailschool.net

CREW Offshore Passage Opportunities - Your Offshore Sailing Network. Celebrating twenty years helping sailors sail offshore for free Learn by doing. Gain Quality Sea Time. www.sailopo.com call-1800-4-PASSAGe (1-800-472-7724). Keep the Dream Alive for the Price of a Good Winch Handle. Since 1993

102 June 2014 SpinSheet

Spotless Stainless

Brush On Rinse Off Rust

Removes Rust and Surface Iron that Causes Rust from Stainless Steel and Fiberglass.

before

after

Available Available at at Bacon Bacon Sails Sails & & Marine Marine Supplies Supplies Annapolis Annapolis www.baconsails.biz www.baconsails.biz or or spotlessstainless.com spotlessstainless.com

WHAT IF... Autopilot fails Batteries are dead Engine won’t start Steering is broken Rudder damaged Crew incapacitated

NO WORRIES WITH HYDROVANE Totally independent self-steering system and emergency rudder.... in place and ready to go. 1-604-925-2660 info@hydrovane.com

W W W. H Y D R O VA N E . C O M

Starting at $1650 per season (410) 867-7177

EQUIPMENT

Wauquiez PS 43 - off-center installation

Let Hydrovane sail you home safely.

Yachts from 25-40’ Hunter 25 Catalina 27 O’Day 302 Hunter 375 Jeanneau 40.3

SURVIVE YOUR DREAM

J-105 Boat Lift Dry sail your J105 – 4 motor deep keel lift available to be moved and installed in your slip. Always have a race ready clean bottom (410) 647-0790

#1

Marine Reference Source!

www.portbook.net spinsheet.com


HELP WANTED

MARINE Engines

Yacht Charter Company Looking For Base Manager For La Paz, Mexico

ULTRA COMPACT GENERATORS

Are You a Serious Racer? Do you have excellent sales skills? Do you want to belong to a hard-working team that gets sailing? Then we have a great opportunity for you! SpinSheet Publishing Company is growing, and we are looking for a high energy salesperson with a love for sailing, boating, and all things Chesapeake to sell print and web advertising for SpinSheet, PropTalk and PortBook. If you think you have what it takes to join the best team on the Bay, send your resumes (work and boating) along with a cover letter to mary@spinsheet.com.

Riggers Wanted - Annapolis, MD Atlantic Spars & Rigging is looking for sailboat riggers. We are a well - established custom rigging & metal fabrication business with two locations. We are looking for riggers who are organized and have a great working attitude to be awarded with competitive wages, great benefits and a career position. Send resume to marc@atlanticspars.com or call 410-268-1570.

240-678-3605

.%84

www.shorelinefuelservices.com '%.

904-642-8555 888-463-9879

nextgenerationpower.com Westerbeke Diesel Freshwater cooled model W13 - 13.5-hp sailboat motor. Selling it complete w/ transmission, eng. panel, wiring harness, cockpit shift & throttle controls, fuel tank, fuel gauge, water-lift muffler, raw water strainer, hoses, etc. Presently installed & running in a 27’ sailboat. Low hrs excel. cond. Asking $2,700 obo. Call: 443-223-8901

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Mike’s Sodablasting LLC

Professional Mobile Service All Major Eco-Safe-Full Tenting Credit Cards Free Estimates Accepted! Fully Insured

443-758-3325 mikesblasting@gmail.com

TOP QUALITY CANVAS

MARINE Services COMPLETE UNDERWATER SERVICES N

CO

OLIS DIVI NAP N

NT R

G

North Point Yacht Sales Is hiring full time sail and power yacht brokers in Annapolis, MD. Requirements: proven track record in yacht sales, strong client relationships skills, experience in development of sales plan and execution of plans, expertise in customer support, experience in power and sailboat market analysis, four year BS/BA degree preferred. Please send all inquiries and resumes to Ken@NorthPointYachtSales.com.

Shoreline Fuel Services

Fuel Polishing • Tank Cleaning Fuel Pump Out & Disposal Servicing Gasoline and Diesel

A

Ideal candidate must be bi-lingual, fluent in Spanish and English; French is a bonus. You must be resourceful, able to adapt and fully conversant in staff management, customer service as well as boat repair, service and operation. In order to be considered your work history must include previous experiences and references from within the marine industry, preferably with a yacht charter company. Must possess excellent communication skills, along with and understanding of budgets, and basic accounting. This is the hardest job you will ever love, however, it requires professionalism and management skill. If you think you fit the bill, email your resume and references to: applybasemanager@gmail.com

MARINE Services

LC ACTORS L

• 24 Hour Emergency Service • Salvage • Hull Cleaning • Propeller Sales and Service • Zinc Replacement • Mooring Installation

410-251-6538

at Competitive Prices

443.458.5795

Covers • Dodgers Biminis • All Types

222 Severn Ave. Bldg. 2 • annapolis@uksailmakers.com

Up The C re e k Diving

Helix Mooring Authorized Installer

410.320.4798

www.upthecreekdiving.com Mooring Installation & Service Underwater Maintenance & Repair

www.annapolisdivingcontractors.com

Sailmaker Wanted - North Sails Stevensville Is looking for an experienced sailmaker. Competitive pay and benefits. Call or e-mail Chris for an interview, 410643-7381 ext. 16 / chrisS@service.northsails.com. Yacht Charter Company Looking For Base Manager For Base Manager For La Paz, Mexico. Ideal candidate must be bi-lingual, fluent in Spanish and English; French is a bonus. You must be resourceful, able to adapt and fully conversant in staff management, customer service as well as boat repair, service and operation. In order to be considered your work history must include previous experiences and references from within the marine industry, preferably with a yacht charter company. Must possess excellent communication skills, along with and understanding of budgets, and basic accounting. This is the hardest job you will ever love, however, it requires professionalism and management skill. If you think you fit the bill, email your resume and references to: applybasemanager@gmail.com Delivery Person Needed Two days a month to distribute SpinSheet and PropTalk magazines for the Middle River/Havre de Grace area. Must have a large vehicle and impeccable driving record. Call Lucy (410) 216-9309.

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Marine Engine Sales, Parts & Service 410-263-8370

www.BayshoreMarineEngines.com

Annapolis Yacht-Works LLC Personalized & Professional Yacht Repair Electrical Systems, Electronics, Rigging, Plumbing,Carpentry, Commissioning, Yacht Management

Eric Haneberg 410-693-1961 eric@annapolisyachtworks.com

annapolisyachtworks.com

Bottom Paint Removal • Gel-Coat Safe Chris Stafford 800-901-4253 www.galeforceblasting.com

SpinSheet June 2014 103


Marketplace & CLASSIFIED MARINE Services

RIGGING

SAILS Exceptional Quality at a Competitive Price.

We Blast Trailered Boats

Baking Soda Blasting

Mobile Paint Stripping & Surface Restoration

Environmentally Friendly Abrasive and Non-Abrasive Media Blasting

Mike Morgan 410.980.0857

Chesblast@yahoo.com

140 W. Mt. Harmony Rd. #105 Owings, MD 20736 www.chesapeakeblasting.com

Got Bottom Paint?

Call Dean’s YACHTSERVICES Jimmy Dean! www.CallJimmyDean.com

Rigging & Metal Fabrication

Distributor for

MOBILE SERVICE

410.280.2935

Annapolis 122 Severn Ave • 410.268.1570 Herrington Harbour 410.867.7248

www.annapolisboatservice.com

www.atlanticspars.com

sCHOOLS

410-626-1220

Miscellaneous

SAILS

Looking to Upgrade Your Tow Vehicle? Need a new regatta mobile for this summer? 2011 GMC Yukon XL SLT, 52,000 miles. Fantastic condition. Black exterior, black and grey interior. Must see! Kelly Blue Book suggested price. $30,288. Asking $29,000. This has been a well loved and cared for Crew vehicle for a professionally maintained race yacht. Owner has shipped the boat overseas and no longer needs the vehicle. Email or call for more details and pictures. gewenson@yahoo.com (410) 320-2805

Real Estate Waterfront Home with Deep Water Private Pier!

www.vacuwash.com

20Min. From DC Beltway

At Herrington Harbour North

TER CAPTAIN’S COURS E CHAR CHARTER CAPTAIN’S COURSE 100 TON MASTERS • OUPV • TOWING • SAILING

Classes Starting Sept. 4th

Kent Island Fire Dept. & Milford, DE Fire Dept. Please call or visit us online for more information Boathouse, electric and water. Updated house in great community with private beach on the Severn, marinas, etc. Conveniently located. Minutes to Severn River Bridge by either boat or car!

Coast Guard Approved to Teach and Test

CALL CAP’T KEN 410-228-0674 www.chartercapt.com

For more information, contact:

Anna Creighton 443-336-2611

sLIPS & STORAGE

RIGGING

Full Service Marina

SIPALA SPARS & RIGGING LLC Fully Mobile Rigging Services on the Eastern Shore

Splicing, Swaging, Spar Transportation and Refinishing Premium Quality Rigging at Reasonable Rates Full Rigging Shop New Shop Open in Rock Hall

(410) 708-0370 www.sipalaspars.com 104 June 2014 SpinSheet

• A Certified Clean Marina

NEW & USED SAILS BUY-SELL-CONSIGN-TRADE. 1000’s of cruising & racing sails in stock. Tax Deductions/Donation Program New Sail Covers - Loft on Site MASTHEAD ENTERPRISES (800) 783-6953 (727) 327-5361 or fax: (727) 327-4275 4500 28th St. N., St. Petersburg FL 33714 email: masthead@mastheadsailinggear.com www.mastheadsailinggear.com

• Serene Setting w/ Pool

410-867-7686 Deale, Maryland

• Minutes to the Bay www.shipwrightharbormarina.com

Harbor East Marina Call Now for Monthly Vacation Dockage May - October Annual & Transient Slips also available! Year round fun for your family!

www.harboreastmarina.com

Short Walk to: Movie Theatre Restaurants Whole Foods Liquor Store Harborplace Aquarium Fells Point Little Italy

410.625.1700

spinsheet.com


sLIPS & STORAGE On the scenic Magothy River

sLIPS & STORAGE

sLIPS & STORAGE

Bell Isle

Annapolis Deep-Water Slips 25’ - 50’ Protected Whitehall Creek location. Electric, water, restrooms with showers. Annual and shorter term slip rentals. 410-7574819. Whitehall Marina www.whitehallannapolis.com

Dry Storage to 36 feet. Repair Yard DIY or Subs. (No (No Boat Boat Tax) Tax)

55-Ton Travel-Lift 27,000 lb. Fork-Lifts (Lower (Lower Bay) Bay)

Hampton, VA (757) 850-0466 www.BELLISLEMARINA.com 15’ Up to 60’ Deep-Water Slips On the Magothy. One river north of Annapolis. Easy access to marina by Route 100. North Shore Marina (410) 255-3982.

Slips Available • Up to 50’ • Deep, calm water • Up to 16’ b, 12’ d • Scenic grounds • Full service dept. • Quick, easy access to the Bay • The Point Crab House & Grill - waterfront dining

FERRY POINT M A R I N A

YA C H T YA R D

10 minutes from Annapolis

410.544.6368

www.ferrypointmarina.com | office@ferrypointmarina.com 700 Mill Creek Road | Arnold MD 21012

Bowleys Marina, Middle River 24’-55’ slips available for sale or lease. 15 minutes off I-95, easy access to DC, Baltimore, and Philadelphia. Close to restaurants and entertainment. 410-335-3553. mary@bowleysmarina.com www.bowleysmarina.com Deep Water Sail Slips on Rhode River In Edgewater. Electric, water & showers. (410) 798-1232.

20’ - 40’ Slips. Pier 4 Marina 301 4th St., Eastport, across from Annapolis Yacht Club. Keep your boat where the Hinckley and Sabre dealers keep theirs. Electric, water & showers. (410) 990-9515.

Galesville, West River - Slips Available 12 feet x 30 feet, 15 feet x 38 feet or 17 feet x 52 feet. Water and electric are included. We have restrooms, showers, restaurant, dock bar, motel on premises. All are well maintained, security and free Wifi. Call 410 867-2300.

25’ - 40’ Slips, MD Clean Marina / Boatyard of the year. Power & sail, cozy, in protected Deale harbor, excel. boating & fishing, free Wi-Fi & pumpout. 30 mins. from DC. DIY service boatyard. Discount to new customers. (410) 867-7919, rockholdcreekmarina.com

Why Pay High Annapolis or Baltimore Rates? $1,250-$2,200 YR. Land storage $120 monthly. Haulouts $10.00, Minutes to Bay and Baltimore Beltway. Old Bay Marina (410) 477-1488 or www.oldbaymarina.com

30’ - 35’ Slips Available Annapolis City Marina, Ltd. in the heart of Eastport. Includes electric, water, restrooms with showers, and gated parking. Give us a call at (410) 268-0660, www.annapoliscitymarina.com.

TRAILErS

30’ - 50’ Deepwater Slips For Sale & Rent On the western shore of the Chesapeake in St. Leonard, MD. Flag Harbor Yacht Haven (410) 586-0070, www. flagharbor.com. Winter storage & repair (410) 586-1915. 45’ Catamaran Slip Available on Annual Basis At Eastport Yacht Center, located on Back Creek. Call 410-280-9988 www.eastportyachtcenter.com

Sailboat Trailers & Cradles

Custom-built & fit

Viking Trailers 724-789-9194

www.Sailboats.VikingTrailer.com Venture Boat Trailer ’06 Rated 1300 lb, like-new cond., OK for 17’ sailboat, Sea Scouts $950, Steve Alexander, stevedalex@msn.com, 301 646 0805

INDEX OF ADVERTISERS

Allstate Insurance....................................................84

Curtis Stokes.............................................................4

Passion Paddle Sports............................................63

Annapolis 2 Bermuda Race.....................................30

Davis’ Pub...............................................................39

Pettit Marine Paint Vivid..........................................68

Annapolis Accommodations....................................33

Doctor LED..............................................................59

Pocket-Yacht Company...........................................64

Annapolis Athletic Club...........................................73

Dream Yacht Charters...............................................7

Port Annapolis Marina.............................................14

Annapolis Gelcoat...................................................32

East of Maui............................................................49

Pro Valor Charters...................................................55

Annapolis MD Capital Yacht Club...........................58

EYC Spring Cotillion................................................34

Pyacht.....................................................................45

Annapolis Performance Sailing.................................5

Fawcett Boat Supplies.............................................49

Ready Reef.............................................................63

Annapolis Yacht Sales.......................................35,94

Forespar..................................................................47

Regent Point Marina................................................61

Atlantic Cruising Yachts..........................................28

Governor’s Cup.......................................................27

RogueWave Yacht Brokerage.................................47

Atlantic Spars & Rigging..........................................57

Harbor East Marina.................................................63

S&J Yachts..............................................................96

Bacon Sails & Marine Supplies.................................2

Harken.....................................................................41

Sail Baltimore Funraiser..........................................32

Bands in the Sand.................................................107

Herrington Harbour..................................................20

SailFlow...................................................................78

Bay Yacht Agency...................................................28

Intensity Sails..........................................................84

Sailrite Enterprises..................................................44

Beneteau.................................................................69

J. Gordon & Co........................................................60

Scandia Marine.......................................................10

Blue Water Sailing School.......................................54

J/World....................................................................54

Scandia Marine - Lehr.............................................62

BoatU.S...................................................................21

Knot 10....................................................................23

Scott Allan Sailing Services.......................................9

Boatyard Bar & Grill.................................................26

Landfall Navigation..................................................33

Screwpile.................................................................76

Cape Charles Cup...................................................75

Lippincott Marine.....................................................99

Sea Hawk Paint.......................................................29

Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.......................35

M Blue.....................................................................53

Spring Cove Marina.................................................64

Chesapeake Boating Club.......................................55

M Yacht Services....................................................18

Stur-Dee Boat..........................................................32

Chesapeake Harbour Inc........................................58

Mack Sails...............................................................61

Summer Sailstice....................................................45

Chesapeake Light Craft...........................................59

Martek Davits..........................................................65

Sunfish Regatta.......................................................82

Chesapeake Yacht Sales........................................39

MISEA Group..........................................................41

Tidewater Marina.....................................................97

Coppercoat USA.....................................................60

Moorings..........................................................6,13,91

Tohatsu America Corp............................................19

CRAB......................................................................99

North Point Yacht Sales............................................3

UK Sailmakers Annapolis........................................17

CRAB Boatyard Regatta.........................................79

North Sails Chesapeake........................................108

Vane Brothers.........................................................62

Cruise Annapolis.....................................................51

North Sails Direct....................................................16

West Marine............................................................31

Crusader Yacht Sales.............................................95

Norton Yachts.....................................................56,93

Whitehall Yacht Yard...............................................57

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SpinSheet June 2014 105


Aft Deck

The 2014 SpinSheet Summer Cover Contest

I

f you have ever seen a magazine cover and thought, “I can do better than that,” here is your chance to prove it. Enter the 2014 SpinSheet Summer Cover Contest today. The winning image will be on the cover of the August issue, and the winner will receive a SpinSheet hat and lifelong bragging rights. We prefer images of people on sailboats having fun on the Chesapeake Bay. Remember, it’s the summer cover contest, so don’t bother sending your frostbite racing and dock shoveling photos until late fall. Think sun, fun, wind, adventure, and pretty sailboats. We like images of all of the above. Our graphic designers prefer a portrait orientation, rather than a landscape one. Make sure there is some room in sea and sky for our headers and footers. The best images will be one to 10 megabytes in size. If your images are too large for email, please send them through an online service such as Dropbox, Hightail, or Flickr. We do accept good old fashioned CDs sent via snail mail, too. We choose clear images over blurry ones and photos with level horizons over crooked ones. If we have 10 sunset photos and one image of a happy sailor on deck, we will lean toward the happy sailor. If you capture a photo of a happy sailor at sunset, well, then bring it on! Send photo contest entries to molly@spinsheet. com by July 1. Please write “Summer Cover Contest” in the subject line, and make sure to tell us what your name is, especially if it’s not in your email address. We look forward to seeing Chesapeake Bay sailing through your eyes. ~M.W.

Our graphic designers prefer a portrait orientation, rather than a landscape one. Make sure there is some room in sea and sky for our headers and footers.

106 June 2014 SpinSheet

CHESAPEAKE BAY SAILING

The Big Out There Solomons and Screwpile Scoop

August 2013

FREE

##Photo by 2013 contest winner Shannon Hibberd

NO

YES

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24 years of innovation has helped 3DL power more winning teams than any other sail in history. Proven performance is now within reach. 速

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To learn more about 3DL performance and 3DL value, call your North Sails representative today... Follow North Sails on...

Annapolis 410-269-5662 Hampton 757-722-4000 Kent Island 410-643-7381


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