NW Yachting May 2018

Page 28

ws Nautical Ne The Van Belle clan rows on Puget Sound in the 1980s.

My Boat Story

Literary License, Unlimited Tonnage By Greg Van Belle

It took me three days after my dad died before I could go into his workshop. When I opened the door I was faced with tools scattered everywhere, half-completed art projects, supplies and lumber staged for some project he had planned. It was chaotic but beautiful. Late in life, as Parkinson’s got the better of him, this is how his world began to look. Tools and supplies with great intentions were left in a state of half-completion. He was no longer able to focus long enough to bring ideas from his head to reality. I know he could see what he wanted to create, but his body and brain fought him. In the chaos of broken tools, discarded sawblades, and empty tubes of thalo green paint, I could still see the order and the logic of it, but just barely. When I was a kid our garage was so strictly organized as to deter me from even using a handsaw. The black outline of the missing tool would give me away. Now saws and hammers were left everywhere. “He would hate this,” I said to myself. After a few minutes spent deciding whether to start cleaning, I noticed the pile of rags and tarps in the corner, under which

was the wooden pram we built a few years before. Cleaning and organizing his other things was a therapeutic way to stay busy in the days immediately after his death, but something about that nine-foot dinghy buried in the detritus of his workshop stopped me cold. I couldn’t bring myself to look. I loved that boat. We built it together. It sailed like a dream, rowed perfectly, and looked as salty as you could want. Boats, and that little boat in particular, presented us with one of the few meaningful connections the two of us had. In fact, other than conversations about medications and doctor visits, boats were the only topic we ever really agreed on. And yet, I never really understood my dad’s fascination with boats. I know now that it came to the surface far differently than my own. He never owned a boat until late in life. He didn’t grow up sailing. And despite living in full view of Puget Sound, he never seemed all that interested in boating as a hobby. A decade ago he had me find him a fishing boat, which I happily did. In two years of ownership he neglected it, let it slip anchor and wash up on the beach, and basically ignored it before telling me to get

it out of his driveway. My brother and I once took him sailing in the Gulf Islands, a trip he professed to enjoy but seemed to sleepwalk through. He never once took the helm. I turned my childhood fascination with boats into a full blown adult obsession. My dad somehow seemed content with the idea of boats. Going through his things after he passed away, I found an old dog-eared copy of Don Casey’s This Old Boat and a couple of Nigel Calder’s books on boat maintenance. These were casual reading for him. He loved the thought of boats. He loved the craftsmanship and the lore, but he was never a boater despite every opportunity. Years earlier, more focused and more in control of his fine motor skills, Dad built himself a wooden kayak. It was the most beautiful boat I had ever seen, and I still don’t understand how one person can turn strips of five different types of wood into a functional water craft. He paddled it once that I know of, a few feet from shore in the calm water of the bay in front of his house. Now it hangs in the rafters, covered with a plastic tarp and full of sawdust. He was strangely content to Continued on Page 30

Some things just happen Yacht Shield with its roots here in the northwest is an anchor. Since 1979 Red Shield Insurance Company has offered marine products for our Pacific Northwest waters. For docks, boathouses, floating homes or yachts, Red Shield Insurance Company is your truly local source for coverage and claims service. When it’s time to purchase insurance for your yacht, think Red Shield. A company dedicated to serving the Pacific Northwest with quality service and expertise like no other – Yacht Shield is the one for you!

Bristol Insurance Group: 206.634.1770

Boat Insurance: 800.828.2446

800.527.7397

28 NORTHWEST YACHTING || MAY 2018

Anacortes Marine Insurance: 360.588.8112

Anchor Marine Underwriters: 800.726.2728

www.redshield.com

(800) 828-2446 www.boatinsurance.net • info@boatinsurance.net


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.