Points East Magazine, December 2014

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! e e r F

POINTS

December, 2014

EAST

The Boating Magazine for Coastal New England

The striking art of Russ Kramer

Frostbiting Tiny boats, frigid water

ICW south Aboard the Just Ducky


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Points East December 2014

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DESIGNED WITH A HEALTHY RESPECT FOR MOTHER NATURE. NO DOUBT, THE FEELING IS MUTUAL. At Everglades, compromise is not in our vocabulary. Every boat we build is quite simply the ultimate in its class JJ PZ KLZPNULK MVY TH_PT\T ÄZOHIPSP[` HUK P[ MLH[\YLZ ,]LYNSHKLZ» MVY WLYMVYTHUJL JVTMVY[ HUK ZHML[` ;OL patented, unsinkable RAMCAP® construction, numerous Dougherty-designed innovations, and the standard S\_\Y` `V\»]L JVTL [V L_WLJ[ MYVT ,]LYNSHKLZ evergladesboats.com

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POINTS

EAST

The Boating Magazine for Coastal New England Volume 17 Number 8 December 2014 F E AT U R E S

24

32

43

Carrying the torch

OCC’s new Vertue Award, News.

20

Round Island Regatta, Racing Pages.

48

Morris Ocean Series 48, Yardwork.

58

Headed back south, Last Word.

78

When in his teens, Connecticut artist Russ Kramer was blown away by the nautical paintings of Carl G. Evers, and the seeds of the dream to be a marine artist were sown. By Bob Muggleston

Frosty fun These intrepid sailors, who race Cape Cod Frosties in New Castle, N.H., from the first weekend in November through the first weekend in May (brrrrrr!), are passionate about their sport. By Paula Harrington

It was all Just Ducky Part I: Our saga began in September, with just about the best sailing weather possible as we left Mystic, Conn., for our second trip to Florida in Just Ducky, our Hunter 37.5. By Pamela Mormino LAST WORD

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4

Why I am going back I really don’t know why, but I frequently cruise to places I have already visited. Now I am again headed down the Intracoastal Waterway, leaving my beloved New England behind. By Dick Klain

Points East December 2014

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COLUMNS

12

David Roper

Leaves of three and the sea Poison ivy almost scuttles a cruise. Randy Randall

Wharf rats are different Young watermen/waterwomen impress. Greg Coppa

Captain Lou

POINTS

EAST

The Boating Magazine for Coastal New England Volume 17, Number 8 Publisher Joseph Burke Editor Nim Marsh Associate Editor Bob Muggleston Marketing director Bernard Wideman

Every waterfront needs a character. D E PA R T M E N T S

Letters..........................................7 Capt. Mike “paints” Bermuda; On Uffa Fox and Moby Dick; Sad time at Marston’s Marina.

Mystery Harbor ............................8 A great ocean race starts here. New Mystery Harbor on page 90. News..........................................20 Peter McCrea honored by OCC; Cuckolds Light Inn seeks “keepers;” SSCA Downeast Gam hosts 61 boats. The Racing Pages ........................48 Volvo Race Leg 1 action, results; J/24 World Championship; N.H.’s fun Round Island Regatta.

Media ........................................56 Online coverage of Volvo Race rocks.

Yardwork ...................................58 L-M Monhegan 42 commuter; Morris Ocean Series 48 cruiser; Hybrid-electric aquarium study boat. Fetching Along ............................62 Cruising pushes us; we need pushing.

Final passages ............................64 Dr. Grave Klein-MacPhee, Richard S. Libby, Clifford R. Alley, Jr., William L. Mullins, James Joseph Miles; Hugh P. Chandler, Elizabeth Robinson.

Tides .....................................67-69

Distribution............................75-77

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTIONS

The Gift Locker .......................39-42

Boating URLs..........................70-71 Our hat is off to... Yankee Marina and Boatyard is this month’s featured Points East distribution point. See page 77 for more information.

.COM

ONLINE

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

Ad representatives Lynn Emerson Whitney Gerry Thompson, David Stewart Ad design Holly St. Onge Art Director Custom Communications/John Gold Contributors Bob Brown, David Buckman, William R. Cheney, Susan Cornell, Mike Martel, Norman Martin, Randy Randall, David Roper Delivery team Christopher Morse, Victoria Boucher, Peter Kiene-Gualtieri, Jeff Redston Points East, a magazine by and for boaters on the coast of New England, is owned by Points East Publishing, Inc, with offices in Portsmouth, N.H. The magazine is published nine times annually. It is available free for the taking. More than 25,000 copies of each issue are distributed through more than 700 outlets from Greenwich, Conn., to Eastport, Maine. The magazine is available at marinas, yacht clubs, chandleries, boatyards, bookstores and maritime museums. If you have difficulty locating a distribution site, call the office for the name of the distributor closest to you. The magazine is also available by subscription, $26 for nine issues by first-class mail. Single issues and back issues (when available) cost $5, which includes firstclass postage. All materials in the magazine are copyrighted and use of these materials is prohibited except with written permission. The magazine welcomes advice, critiques, letters to the editor, ideas for stories, and photos of boating activities in New England coastal waters. A stamped, self-addressed envelope should accompany any materials that are expected to be returned.

Mailing Address P.O. Box 1077 Portsmouth, N.H. 03802-1077 Address 249 Bay Road Newmarket, N.H. 03857 Telephone 603-766-EAST (3278) Toll free 888-778-5790 Fax 603-766-3280

On the cover: “Silent night, holy night. . . . .” This photo of the Cape Neddick Light, on the north side of a high rock known as The Nubble, captures the spirit of the season. Photo by Susan Cole Kelly www.pointseast.com

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

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EDITOR’S PAGE/Nim Ma rsh

Nor’easters and Good Samaritans good, old-fashioned three-day nor’easter roared Jean was towing a 100-foot barge at the end of a 775across New England Wednesday through Fri- foot hawser. day, Oct. 22-24. Beaufort-scale gale- and stormThe Greenport, Long Island-based fishing vessel force winds caused flooding and power outages on land Merit, fishing for scup out of Newport with a crew of and several mayday situations at sea. three, should have been snug in her berth in Newport; Torrential rain, hail, thunder and lightning, and however a gear breakdown kept her at sea, off Point strong winds combined to leave some 9,000 Rhode Is- Judith, into the late afternoon. Her crew heard a mayland homes without electricday at 5:54 p.m., but a halfity. The North Shore of hour after the signal was Boston was hit particularly issued, the tug sank in 85 hard, with Beverly (Mass.) feet of water, and the crew Airport logging an astrotook to a life raft. Another nomical 6.13 inches of rain vessel, the Tradition, had in two days. Gusts up to 50 picked up the sinking tug’s mph blew down trees, power position and relayed it to lines and limbs, which the Merit, which set a knocked out power in that course toward the coordicity. Milton, Brockton and nates, not knowing the tug Gardner, Mass., also rehad sunk. “Once the second ceived more than five inches call was out, there was no Map courtesy National Weather Service of rain, according to the Namore hearing from those The storm Oct. 23, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.: Green signifies 35tional Weather Service. guys,” the Merit’s skipper, The southern Maine coast 45 mph winds; yellow, 45-55; red (at top), 55-65. Sidney Smith, was rereportedly was hammered ported to have said in an by violent-storm-force blasts. After laying waste to Oct. 24 “Providence Journal” article by Donita Naylor. New England, some parts of the Canadian Maritimes The Merit’s crew spotted the barge, but not the tug, were slammed by wind gusts exceeding 50 mph and and Smith reportedly was concerned that, in the low more than four inches of rain. By Thursday morning, visibility caused by the strong wind and the rain, his more than 44,000 electric customers throughout the vessel might foul the towline or run over crew in the Northeast had been without power for varying lengths water. Finally, according to Naylor’s excellent news of time. story, the life raft – three men in it, one in the water, By Wednesday, Oct. 22, the Rhode Island coast was hanging on – was spotted, and the Merit’s deckhands, being pummeled by winds gusting close to 60 mph, Gary Detrick and Ernie Nicholson, with help from the and the Coast Guard’s Southeast New England Com- skipper, hauled the tug’s crew aboard. The last mand Center, in Boston, was fully engaged with nu- crewmember reportedly was brought aboard as a merous distress signals, notably two calls off Rhode Coast Guard vessel arrived at the scene to escort the Island’s shoreline. The first came from the 55-foot sail- Merit to Point Judith. ing vessel Swept Away (home port unknown) with five “Everybody’s lucky,” Capt. Smith was quoted in the aboard, which lost propulsion in Rhode Island Sound, “Journal” story “If you’re that close, you gotta go. If I’m and whose crew could not lower the sails in the high in the water someday, I hope somebody comes and gets winds. The 85-foot cutter Tiger Shark, from Newport, me.” was deployed, but she was unable to get the sailboat “I was lucky enough to be near the guy calling mayin tow in heavy seas. Tiger Shark radioed the 100-foot day.” cutter Sitkinak, out of Bayonne, N.J., which got a Yes, a good, old-fashioned three-day nor’easter hawser on Swept Away and towed her into Newport. roared across New England Oct. 22-24, but there Wednesday evening, a distress signal was received wasn’t much good about it. The exceptions were the from the 55-foot tug Karen Jean, with a four-man crew, selfless acts of Good Samaritans, who, like generations not far from Point Judith. The tug reported that the of seamen before them, adhered to the traditional laws she was taking on water, listing seriously, and in dan- and precedents of “they that go down to the sea in ger of capsizing in eight-foot seas, 60-mph winds, and ships” – the ethic that requires all of us, within reason, 61-degree seawater. To make matters worse, the Karen to come to the aid of fellow mariners in distress.

A

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Points East December 2014

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Letters 1948). It’s titled “Rooftops of St. George’s, Bermuda, done in November 1910. Relatively unknown for many years, his works are now gradually being rediscovered. “Well, not exactly. It’s a photo taken by me in November 2010 in St. George’s. I do a lot of work with Photoshop. You can take a photo (has to be the ‘right’ photo) and apply a transformation to it that makes it look like a watercolor (or oil, or palette knife, or charcoal). And if the photo is ‘right,’ and you fiddle with the parameters correctly, you can actually get something nice out of it that people will think is an honest-to-gosh painting.”

Did Uffa copy Chapin’s Moby Dick? Photo by Capt. Mike Martel

No, this is not a recently discovered work by forgettable luminist C. Dabbitt Butterworth, but rather the Photoshop dabblings of our Capt. Mike.

New England Autumn reverie Early morning. I step outside to low, scudding clouds, and a strong breeze coming across the land from the distant sea, smelling of sweet brine. It is warmer than it ought to be, quite humid, and I pause for there is strangeness in the air, a feeling of someplace else. It sparks my senses, tickles my memory; it is a memory of a time in the past. After barely a minute, I know what it is; it is Bermuda in November, and a gale is building. In my mind’s eye, the big orange windsock atop the far hill across the harbor is out straight; the palm trees are being lashed by the wind where they stand in profile and unprotected high on the hill above the northeast end of St. George’s. It has rained during the night; there is the scent of wet limestone, ancient coral, and always the sea on this low island, a spot of land in the midst of a wide, blue sea, a low archipelago that the ocean’s winds blow across practically unhindered without taking notice. But no, I am instead here on the mainland, preparing to head off to the day’s work, another day like many before it and many to come. The spirit is willing to cast off all lines, but the flesh is obligated. Capt. Michael L. Martel Bristol, R.I. Editor’s note: When we asked Capt. Mike about the textures in this image of St. George’s, he wrote: “Are referring to that classic watercolor by the lesser known American luminist C. Dabbitt Brushworth (1870www.pointseast.com

I do not know much about Pilgrim-class sloops or the Chapin boat (Editor’s Page, October/November, “Where Are They Now?”) but the boat in the picture labeled Whale-back sloop sure looks to me to be an Atalanta sloop, a 26-footer designed by Uffa Fox and built in the 1950s. If it is not, it sure is remarkably the same. I know because I sailed one for many years in the early ’70s. I was informed that its look came after British Naval lifeboats that were air dropped into the North Sea during WWII. It was designed to be a trailerable cruiser and to take mudflats with retractable double iron keels and rudder. Mine had an Atomic Four engine, center cockpit, and only drew just over two feet with everything up, which gave us great access to interesting gunkholes. The hull was built of cold-molded mahogany plywood, and the design had great features like rolling boom and Bakelite winches. The look was intriguing to many, and it got us several dinner invites as we cruised from Marblehead to Maine for several summers. Maybe Uffa copied the whaleback sloop named Moby Dick. Marc Lorraine Rockport Maine Editor’s note: Thanks Marc. We have not yet received any Moby Dick sightings. While this isn’t the 42foot Moby Dick, you bring up some interesting and relevant design features that apply to both boats. And let’s not forget Cy Hamlin’s and E. Farnum Butler’s 25foot Maine-built, reverse-sheer Amphibi-Con, originally cedar-strip-planked and edge-glued to oak frames in the 1950s. And the 37-foot reverse-sheer Controversy, developed by Mount Desert Yacht Yard, Hull No. 1 of which was launched in 1953 for the owner of the yard, one Farnham Butler. Points East December 2014

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It’s a sad time at Marston’s Marina This is our last weekend of the marina season. We close up shop on Oct. 15. I’ll turn off the shore power the next day, and then we’ll be flat out for two weeks pulling the docks. Keeps me very depressed. As you know, I’d much rather it was spring and we were putting the marina back in the water. Tuna guys are having one last fling. I heard today the fish are just offshore, and a crowd of boats is having a field day. I know of four boats from our place that are out, and one of them has already boated a tuna. I’ve had a couple of pump-outs today. Seems like the

last step before hauling the boat or unstepping the mast is to get the holding tank pumped out. In between, we’re dodging some rain showers. Tomorrow, however, is supposed to be sunny and clear. Should be another busy day hauling boats. Randy Randall Marston’s Marina Saco, Maine Correction: In the October/November editorial, entitled “Where Are They Now,” the editor alluded to a cruise along the Finland coast in 2012. That wonderful trip occurred 10 years earlier, in 2002.

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

Many fine short sails are from Mystery Harbor The Mystery Harbor is Marion looking out toward Ram Island and Meadow Island. Also known as Sippican Harbor. The first year we had our Freedom 30 Salacia, we kept her in Sippican Harbor while waiting for a mooring to clear in Marblehead. Our son was pre-school then, so we did a lot of short sails. It is a great place for daysails. We would go to Pocasset, Quisset or Hadley Harbor with ease. Overnight cruises to Woods Hole or Cuttyhunk were a breeze. Speaking of a breeze, the afternoon

winds were lively and fun to sail in as long as you were heading up Buzzards Bay and frequently had a reef in. The entrance to the harbor is not difficult. Coming from the north, round Bird Island. Coming from the south, watch the buoy off Converse Point. Follow the buoys and definitely don’t cut them near Ram Island. The entrance takes a 90degree turn near Ram Island, so watch your buoys carefully. There is a channel down the middle of the MYSTERY HARBOR, continued on Page 11

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MYSTERY HARBOR, continued from Page 8 harbor. Holding ground out side of Ram Island is good though it can get rolly. Moorings in Sippican Harbor are rented out by the local boatyards. It seems that only a few moorings change hands. We were told that there was a wait of 99 years to own a mooring in the harbor. Transient moorings are available from the Beverly Yacht Club. There was little in the way of provisioning near the harbor the last time I was there. A small general store is about a quarter of a mile from the Beverly Yacht Club. The yacht club rents moorings and requests that you call a day in advance to ensure a spot. The club is also one of the sponsors of the semi-annual MarionBermuda Race, along with my club, Blue Water Sailing Club, and the Royal Hamilton Amateur Dinghy Club. Just before the race starts, moorings are scarce.

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Hinckley Yacht Services 207-244-5531 Southwest Harbor, ME www.hinckleyyachtservice.com Hodgdon Yacht Services 207-633-2970 W. Southport, ME www.hodgdonyachtservices.com Kittery Point Yacht Yard 207-439-9582 Kittery, ME www.kpyy.net

Speaking of Marion-Bermuda, in 2015, the race starts on June 19. The year we were in Marion was 1991, the year of Hurricane Bob. We had planned to go to Maine in July. Our son came down with chicken pox at the end of June. We postponed our trip to August and left the weekend just before Hurricane Bob hit. Boats were tossed about and scattered in the swamp. A helicopter was brought in to help remove the boats. We were in Rockland, Maine, and missed the damage – except for our car, which was parked near the street toward the head of the harbor. Salt water was up to the windows. I have been back from time to time, and have many memories of my visits to Sippican Harbor. Steve Lee s/v Salacia Marblehead, Mass.

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

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Crocker's Boatyard 978-526-1971 Manchester, MA www.crockersboatyard.com

Seal Cove Boatyard Inc. 207-326-4422 Harborside, ME www.sealcoveboatyard.com South Port Marine 207-799-8191 South Portland, ME www.southportmarine.com

Fred J. Dion Yacht Yard 978-744-0844 Salem, MA www.fjdion.com J-Way Enterprises 781-544-0333 Scituate, MA www.jwayent.net

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Points East December 2014

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Perspectives After touching leaves of three, never go to sea was run over by a Boston Whaler; I heard over a Bermuda a.m. radio station that I was assumed “lost at sea;” I put 314 passengers through a Mississippi River tornado; and I’ve been downstream from a busted sewage holding tank. And that’s for starters. But nothing has compared to my encounter with the dreaded Toxicodendron radicans and its internal alien monster, urushiol. It all started innocently enough. It was last July, and it was time for me to head to Maine, as I have done for the past 30 years. I usually go solo (it allows me to sing loudly and off-key for three days), and my wife, Mary Kay, drives up to meet me. Before I left, she asked me if I might clear the weeds and rampant vines from our back hill. “But cover yourself VERY well,” Mary Kay said. “There’s a rumor of poison ivy lurking on that hillside.” “I don’t get poison ivy,” I said confidently. She gave me that do-what-I-say look. “Just because you’ve never gotten it doesn’t mean you won’t get it.” “What’s the big deal anyway? Isn’t poison ivy something little camper kids get, the ones you see covered in pink from the calamine lotion.” Anyway, the day before I was to head offshore, I cleared the hillside. The next day, about 12 miles off Cape Ann and headed east, I felt a silly, nagging little itch on my left wrist. Whatever. I was making good time toward the Isles of Shoals, where I planned to stop for the night. I knew I would arrive just before the thick black dungeon cloud and thunderstorm that, I swear, hits me every year at about 6:45, just after I pick up a mooring there.

I

So what’s with this itching? Now it’s on my other wrist. Heck, now it’s going up my right arm. Better wash it off. Mary Kay said something about this urushiol oil not being too good on human body parts. What about calamine lotion? Certainly none of that aboard. And that’s for sissy camper kids. Pinot grigio? Ah, plenty of that behind the port bunk. That might do the trick; at least it will stop the itching. (The trick, by the way, is to pour it down your throat and not over the poisoned body parts; it works extremely well that way when taken in some quantity, until about 0200 hours, when it has worn off and you awaken itching and scratching yourself like a maniac.) Two days later, by the time I’d reached the eastern part of Casco Bay and my wife got aboard, I had wrapped myself in gauze. Now, Mary Kay fears little in life, but poison ivy terrifies her. “Did you sit on my bunk? Did you touch this? What towels did you use? You need to stay on your side of the boat from now on. Do you have calamine lotion?” “No, but I have something better. It could even work around the clock if I took it non-stop, but I don’t think that’s the best idea if I’m captain.” “What are you talking about?” “It’s called pinot grigio. No prescription. You just need a proper ID. Yes, it’s more expensive than calamine but, heck, it’s all I have to treat this dreaded thing.” She rolled her eyes: “Might even be an antidote for you, dear. I’ll share some with you. In your very own glass, of course.” Things got worse. It started to rain. For three days.

David Roper

12 Points East December 2014

editor@pointseast.com


One night, at about one minute after 2 a.m., I awakened in such a state that I considered jumping into the icy Maine water. My hope was not to eradicate the itching – I now believed it would never go away – but to drown. And the pinot grigio was running low. One night, at about one minute after 2 a.m., I awakened in such a state that I considered jumping into the icy Maine water. My hope was not to eradicate the itching – I now believed it would never go away – but to drown. “Why don’t you just leave the boat here and go home?” Mary Kay said from her side of the cabin. “Why? So I can itch at home?” I replied. “If I’m going to itch, I’m going to do it on my beloved boat on my beloved Maine coast with my beloved wife.” When I dropped Mary Kay off in Brunswick, we were able to take her car and find a CVS store. I hurried in and headed for the pharmacy section. “Excuse me, but where is your calamine lotion?” “What type do you need, sir – calamine or Caladryl? I mean, how bad is the condition?” the pharmacist asked. At this point, showing him any body part would do, but I held up my left inner wrist, a particularly gruesome manifestation of the dreaded Toxicodendron radicans. “Oh,” he said with a withering look, “that’d be

calamine; but you’re close to a staph infection.” I bought the Brunswick CVS’s entire stock of calamine, along with enough gauze to re-supply the Mass General ER. My wife dropped me off back at the boat. I went below, took off my clothes, and had myself a calamine shower. Then I headed to sea. I now had calamine and pinot grigio. And good, warm weather. But it just got worse. My clothes aggravated the poison ivy. So, on the last day, I took them off. All of them. This was fine offshore. Quite nice, actually, and I really got used to it. As I rounded Cape Ann and adjusted my course close to the Eastern Point breakwater in Gloucester, I began to encounter other boaters, and sailed close by a young family anchored and fishing from their little cabin cruiser. Forgetting that the entirety of my sartorial splendor consisted of only a large straw hat and sunglasses, I raised my gauze-wrapped arms and waved. No one waved back. We all know why. Dave Roper’s book, “Watching for Mermaids,” which climbed to No. 4 on the “Boston Globe” Best-Sellers List, is available through www.amazon.com. t e si or lies s Vi St pp ift w Su de G Ne nvas Ma e Ca ain M

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GUEST

PERSPECTIVE/R a ndy

R an dall

Wharf rats are different ax came into our fuel dock for some gas, and, as always, we were glad to see him. This time he had his father along; the two were headed out onto the bay to check Max’s lobster traps. Max is a quiet, somewhat shy teenager who has been pulling his own traps since he was 11. I had last seen Max as he was being towed up the river earlier in the summer. At the time, I surmised then that Max was experiencing one of those lifelessons you don’t learn in a classroom. Turns out his old Mercury outboard had self-destructed. Max told me it was worn out. His father told Photo courtesy Randy Randall how they had found a “runner” at a Max Mourmouras with friend Zach local boat shop, a venerable Yamaha Tardif and one of Max's customers, two-stroke of uncertain vintage, and Pam Lacy of Saco. when it was time to pay for the en-

M

gine, it was Max who’d pulled a wad of bills out of his pocket. “The oil system doesn’t work,” Max told me as he poured oil directly into the fuel tank. When I hung up the pump nozzle, Max peeled a few more twenties off his roll and paid for his gas. “He’s doing good,” dockmaster Jeremy said as we watched Max and his dad motor down the river and around the bend. “Yeah,” I said. “Kind of makes you think twice about kids these days.” We decided some kids get a bad rap. It’s too easy to generalize about young people and their electronically controlled lives. But we know Max, and he’s doing all right, pulling his traps, paying his way, and spending time on the bay. Dan the local lobsterman laughs when we mention Max. “Yeah,” Dan

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Photo courtesy Randy Randall

Max and his fishing buddy, Mitchell Farley, both from Biddeford, Maine, are living the life on the broad Saco River.

says, “he’s doing all right borrowing bait out of my shed.” Then he laughs again and says something about how you have to start somewhere, and you got to help

the youngsters. We nod in approval. Fact is, Dan and I and most of the other waterfront regulars all see a little bit of ourselves in Max and his old Carolina skiff.

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In a candid moment Max’s Dad referred to his son as a pain-in-the-butt; so Max doesn’t get off scot-free, but from what we see of him on river, he doesn’t deserve the bad rap most kids his age get. The same is true for Nick. Nick is another certified wharf rat we know well. Nick is in the eel business. A few summers ago, he asked us if he could hang his eel traps off our docks. Again, seeing a bit of our old selves in young Nick, we agreed to help him along. Nick plays catcher for the local Little League team and checks his eel traps in between games. When he has enough eels, his mother drives him to the bait shop, where he gets paid so much per pound. More then that, Nick is an ardent fisherman. His parents helped him buy an aluminum fishing boat all rigged up with rod holders and downriggers and a steering wheel. Nick also pays for his own fuel when we gas up his boat. We watch him head down the river and think what it must feel like to be 14, to be in charge of your own boat, and to have the whole river and bay as your classroom and playground. The local fishing guides all know Nick. When they return to the marina at the end of a long day, Nick is usually there to grab a dock line and then ask how the fish were biting, what were they using for bait, and what the tide was. I wouldn’t be surprised if some day in the future Nick didn’t become a salt-water guide

himself and work the summers taking people out to fish. He’s already got a good start made on that profession. When you get to know Nick, it’s hard to lay the same bad rap on him that kids his age usually receive. Meghan LaPlante and her father were customers of ours for a few years, back when she began her lobster business. Using her Dad’s boat and probably some seed money from her folks, she bought traps and bait and began catching and selling. She’s an apprentice lobsterman. Fox News once did a story about her, and this past summer she earned some notoriety for landing a blue lobster. Her folks own tourist cabins in Old Orchard Beach, and out front there’s a prominent sign that announces “Miss Meghan’s Lobster Catch.” She’s in high school and probably as attached to her smart phone as any other young woman, but like Max and Nick she’s also a wharf rat and making her own way. Taken together, from our point of view at least, these three teenagers dispel the usual broad brush we tend to lay on kids today. More then just being some colorful local kids we happen to know at the marina, Max, Nick and Meghan, and other wharf rats like them, are also the future of our river and our bay and the way of life we enjoy here working on the water. Frequent contributor, correspondent and friend Randy Randall is co-owner of Marston’s Marina in Saco, Maine.

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GUEST

PERSPECTIVE/Greg

Coppa

Captain Lou very little New England fishing village has its Old Salt, but only East Greenwich, R.I., has Captain Lou. Most fair days he can be found sailing the East and West passages of Narragansett Bay. Rarely is he ever seen without a cigar or pipe in his mouth – and never without his black, wool, Greek fisherman’s cap, which nicely complements his thick, silvery white mane. Captain Lou, sometimes called “Lucky Lou” or “Lou the Leprechaun” is an exceptional sailor, and, at times, he actually seems to be an extension of his boat. I have seen him tack through a crowded Newport Harbor with a dead engine and ghost right into an inside slip with so little momentum that the dock boy could stop Tiki with his little finger. Due to a temperamental diesel, Lou was able to repeat this remarkable feat in my presence several times at different ports throughout New England. On

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Capt. Lou once received a standing ovation for docking engineless in a gale at Block Island's Old Harbor. Photo by Greg Coppa

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one occasion he did it during a gale bad enough to cause cancellation of the Block Island ferry. The local fishermen and stranded yachtsmen at Old Harbor were so impressed that they gave him a standing ovation as he stepped smartly onto the dock. As a sign of tribute, Lou was given free food and drink by throngs of admirers over the next few days. Although Lou’s memory is not what it once was, his wit is still as sharp as ever. Often he will begin telling a joke that you heard him tell the previous week. But having forgotten the original punch line, Lou will substitute another, which makes the story all the more hilarious since expecting one ending you are totally unprepared for the other. Just being with Lou is always an experience, and many people go aboard his vessel for an afternoon just so that they will have something interesting to talk about back home. One spring day, I remember sitting in Tiki’s cockpit in Greenwich Cove, enjoying a beer, nachos and warm sunshine, when out of the blue, a fairly large quahog fell from a great height right into the guacamole. The quahog, which should have been dropped on hard pavement about 20 feet away from the boat’s berth, to crack it open in the usual fashion of Rhode Island seagulls, was easily large enough to kill a man. (There is some question about whether the dropping of the quahog was inadvertent since other guests have

reported similar bombardments of Lou’s boat and the enmity between the captain and the black-backed gulls of Narragansett Bay has been well documented). Not the least disconcerted by the aerial strike, Captain Lou smiled and deftly removed the bivalve from the guacamole. It reappeared, sometime later, transformed into a delicious Italian soup called clam zuppa. Before the latter was served, the captain said a brief grace and reminded all present that the Lord acts in mysterious ways, sometimes providing things when least expected and other times taking things away that we thought were pretty well secured. Besides making clam zuppa, Lou does amazing things with squid. Lack of time prevents me from elaborating, but did you know that Americans consume about a thousandth of a gram of squid per capita annually? Well Captain Lou consumes somewhere around a half a metric ton in the same time period. Lou has always maintained that, dollar for dollar, squid is the best food bargain around, and further points out that if, on any given day you don’t want to eat squid, you can always go down to the town dock in the late afternoon, call it bait, and trade a frozen hunk of it for cod when the fishing boats come in. Down in South County, we call this “squid pro scrod.” As well as I know Lou, I can still be surprised by his ingenuity and sense of humor. One September I went bluefishing with him in the East Passage, near New-

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port. The bluefish were everywhere, and the captain’s eyes were lit up like a little boy’s on Christmas morn. Lou had just hooked a goodsized one, which bent his rod nearly in half, when we heard the deafening horn of a tanker bound for Providence. “Cut it loose,” I said. “No way am I going to lose this fish and my lucky lure,” he said. The tanker blared again. We were clearly just inside the channel, where we should not have been. Lou cursed the tanker and indicated that the tanker should vary its course toward the center of the channel. The tanker skipper apparently did not agree, and gave us a few more resonating blasts. I got real nervous when Lou started smiling. But Lou is no fool, and many, many slick people have regretted underestimating the capabilities of this local legend. “Here Greg, reel this fish in,” he said, while he grabbed his quahauging tongs. Tongs are used to catch quahaugs in 20 feet of water or less. We were in a hundred feet of water. Lou slipped the tongs over the side and pretended to be tonging away, even occasionally going through a charade of

pulling up the tongs and picking out quahogs. The deck officer aboard the tanker, who viewed this spectacle through binoculars, evidently was pretty convinced that Lou was in water too shallow for the tanker. What with the QE2 grounding incident about that time, he decided to take no chances, and so he steered around us. I gaffed the very respectable blue just as the monstrous vessel came close abeam, while Lou waved animatedly at the crewmembers who had assembled on deck to watch the spectacle of a very small boat being run down by a very large one. Yes, lots of fishing villages have their “Old Salts.” But none can compare to East Greenwich’s Captain Lou!

The deck officer aboard the tanker, who viewed this spectacle through binoculars, evidently was pretty convinced that Lou was in water too shallow for the tanker.

Greg Coppa has been sailing on Narragansett Bay for over 50 years in Blue Jays, Lightnings, Ensigns, assorted Bristols and Pearsons, and most recently in a Sabre 28, Coppacetic. He is a Presidential Awardee in Science (1992) and an Albert Einstein Congressional Fellow (1996), and he participated in a Fulbright program in Hanamaki and Morioka, Japan (1997).

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Points East December 2014

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News Peter McCrea wins OCC’s new Vertue Award Doug and Dale Bruce, Ocean Cruising Club (OCC) regional rear commodores, USA NE, announced at the 60th Anniversary Maine Rally that the OCC in North America is instituting a new award to be called the Vertue Award in honor of Humphrey Barton, his ocean crossing 25-foot sloop Vertue XXXV and his creation of the Ocean Cruising Club. It is to be “given to the OCC member in North America who best represents club founder, Humphrey Barton, through sailing achievements or service to the club and cruising community.” Hum Barton was a living symbol of the strong friendships between cruisers from Great Britain and those from North America. He created this marvelous club and a legacy that we shall always cherish. Peter McCrea, of Thomaston, Maine, was chosen as the first winner of the Vertue Award. Peter fulfills all the criteria. He has been an OCC member for 21 years, having qualified in 1990 on a passage from Norfolk, Va. to Virgin Gorda, B.V.I. His shorthanded-sailing (solo and doublehanded)

Photo courtesy OCC

Longtime OCC member Peter McCrea (middle) poses with OCC Regional Rear Commodore Doug Bruce (left), and Susi Homer, port officer for Southwest Harbor.

record includes voyages along the entire U.S. East

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Coast from Maine to Key West; Bermuda (many times); an Atlantic Circle in 1994-95; the Eastern Caribbean in 1991 and ’95, the Bahamas in 1999; Nova Scotia, along the South Coast to Cape Breton in 2000; plus 11 Bermuda 1-2 races, every other year from 1987 to 2013, sailing single-handed to Bermuda and 2-handed on the return to Newport. Peter has attracted numerous cruisers to the OCC as a result of his association with the Bermuda 1-2. He has been one of OCC’s best port officers, having served effectively in Newport, R.I. and currently in Thomaston/Rockland Maine. He has been a ready helper to those of us organizing events and gatherings. He gladly does the hard work and prefers to stay out of the limelight. Interestingly, Peter’s boat, Panacea, with sail number 35, is a Freedom 32 – a small boat, not unlike Hum Barton’s Vertue XXXV. FMI: www.oceancruisingclub.org.

Inn at Maine’s Cuckolds Light seeks two full-time innkeepers The Inn At Cuckolds Lighthouse, on an island off the coast of Maine, is seeking two, full-time “InnKeepers” – partners who reside on island, and one part-time, shore-based keeper’s assistant. With just two guest suites, this retreat is dubbed “a beacon to adventurous travelers.” Keepers should be professional, fun and fit, gracious hosts with proven management, hospitality and culinary skills, able mariners, with a service ethic, a sense of style and aesthetics, and an ability to make every visitor carry away lasting memories. Keepers will be living on an island one-third of a mile offshore, and, thus, will need to be adept at safe, small-boat handling in sometimes challenging conditions. This includes keeping launches and

boats clean and “guest-ready,” Coast Guard inspected, and in good working order. Keepers will be responsible for serving hearty/healthy breakfasts made with local farm-to-table fare, and high tea in the afternoons. Lobster bakes and island dinners are available from a select menu at additional charge. The position offers seasonal residence in restored keepers’ midMay through mid-October, a monthly stipend, and an incomparable experience. Short course necessary for required USCG Launch Operator’s License. Email resumes and cover letter describing your interest, special qualifications, and compensation expectations to jreingold@reingold.com. FMI: www.innatcuckoldslighthouse.com.

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SSCA’s Gam at Islesboro, Maine welcomes 61 boats, 147 cruisers The 24th annual Seven Seas Cruising Association Down East Gam was held on Aug. 1-3, at Dick and Kathy de Grasse’s (s/v Endeavour) cottage on Gilkey’s Harbor, Islesboro, Maine. What a Gam! Sixty-one boats anchored in the harbor and 147 cruisers attended. It sprinkled in the morning but, as usual, it cleared up in time for an outstanding potluck lunch. There was a delightful mix of sailors from all over the world, including those of Seven Seas Cruising Association, Ocean Cruising Club, and the Waterway Radio and Cruising Club, and many new attendees. There were more than six circumnavigators, and about half the sailors on the lawn had sailed at least one ocean in their own boats. It’s easy to feel humble among such great sailors. The host boat, I Wanda, sailed by Mary and Christian Verlaque, had 41 dinghies tied behind them during the Friday afternoon cocktail-party raft-up. After lunch on Saturday, guest speaker Capt. Skip Strong, a Penobscot Bay and River pilot and author of “In Peril,” signed copies of his book. He told of maneuvering his 688-foot loaded oil tanker off the Bethel shoal in Florida to save a disabled tug and NASA barge. Sunday Pam and Denis (s/v Glide) spoke about their

Photo courtesy Kathy de Grasse

During the Friday afternoon cocktail party raft-up, host boat I Wanda had 41 dinghies tied up behind it.

July 2014 voyage to the Arctic. Special thanks to all the helpers and especially to Dick and Suzy Guckel (s/v Cerca Trova, Herb and Ruth Weiss (m/v Ancient Mariners) and Irv Halper, (s/v Hangout), for their photos. Representing Seven Seas Cruising Association were president Scott Berg (s/v Chardonnay), treasurer Steve Kauffmann (s/v Celebration) and corresponding Secretary Betty Romberg (s/v Bright Ayes). Mark your calendars: The 25th annual Down East Gam will be held Friday and Saturday, July 31 and Aug. 1, 2015. Dick and Kathy de Grasse

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Briefly CG modifies lifejacket code scheme In a move that’s expected to benefit recreational boaters, on Oct. 22 the U.S. Coast Guard dropped the current lifejacket-type code scheme – Type I, II, III, IV and V – to label the types of life jackets and their specific use. Chris Edmonston, BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety president and chairman of the National Safe Boating Council, said that removing the type coding is a first step toward new standards to simplify life-jacket requirements for recreational boaters. However, Edmonston cautions boaters must still abide by the current standards when using older life jackets marked with the Type I-V labeling, as they will remain legal for use. A full list of the current life jacket types and descriptions can be found at BoatUS.org/life-jackets, and any update on new life jacket types and styles will be posted there when available.

Three rescued after sailboat capsizes A rescue crew from Coast Guard Station South Portland saved three people after their sailboat capsized in Portland Harbor, Maine, on Sunday, Oct. 26. The rescue crew from Station South Portland immediately launched their 25-foot response boat small and picked the three people out of the water. “From the time we got the emergency call to the time we were on scene was under eight minutes,” said Chris Berry, a search-and-rescue coordinator at Sector Northern New England. FMI: www.coastguardnews.com.

Photo courtesy Maine Maritime Academy

They’re well suited for their task Maine Maritime Academy (MMA) students strike a survivalsuited pose prior to a Halifax trip earlier this summer on the schooner Bowdoin. Built in Maine of white oak and Australian greenheart in the winter of 1920-21, the Bowdoin sailed for many years in icy Arctic waters. Today, true to her calling, she still plies the frozen waters of the north, as a training vessel on runs to Labrador and Greenland.

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In his mid-teens, Connecticut artist Russ Kramer was blown away by the marine paintings of Carl G. Evers, and the seeds of the dream to be an artist were sown. By Bob Muggleston For Points East uss Kramer was just 15 when he stumbled across a book by the marine artist Carl G. Evers. The book was called “The Marine Paintings

R

24 Points East December 2014

of Carl Evers,� and, for Kramer, it was a seminal moment. Inside the book was an explosion of color and light and a seemingly endless variety of ships, all rendered in exquisite detail, many set against turbulent oceans editor@pointseast.com


Carrying the torch

Oil painting by Russ Kramer

“Annual Cruise of the New York Yacht Club - 1911: Grand Illuminations at Station 4 - New London.” Kramer used the NYYC’s library and Model Room to recreate this scene from the club's annual summer cruise in 1911.

so realistic as to create dread and awe in even the saltiest of sailors. What 15-year-old wouldn’t be enchanted? “Something about them spoke to me,” Kramer says. As an adult, Kramer recognized that the sketches and paintings were more than just dramatic pieces. www.pointseast.com

The German-born Evers was a master of watercolor, and a master of painting water in all its infinite moods. Kramer dreamed of a career like that of Evers, who worked nonstop painting tugs, liners, freighters, and the working waterfront for every major line, including Cunard, Grace Line, Farrell Lines, United Points East December 2014

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Fruit and Moran Towing. Evers created artwork for “Readers Digest” and “The Saturday Evening Post.” He painted ships for the U.S. Navy (today, there’s even a Carl G Evers’ room aboard the U.S.S. Alabama). To work as a gallery artist – a fulltime, professional painter – for Kramer, that was the dream. In the meantime, Kramer successfully navigated the often-turbulent waters of journalism and advertising, working as an illustrator and graphic designer. During this time, he never lost touch with the ocean. For a time, anyway, he lived aboard a 48-foot Hatteras motor yacht in Florida, aptly named Watercolor. As crew in various blue-water sailboat races, he studied the effects of tide and wind upon waves. In quiet moments aboard, he thought: When? At age 40, Kramer painted “Teamwork,” featuring the America’s Cup boat Endeavour. It was done in gouache (a type of paint that Evers used), and was visually Oil paintings by Russ Kramer reminiscent of Evers’ dramatic style. But it’s as much a human Clockwise from top: “New Day Off Block Island,” “Last character study – the helmsman’s But Not Least: J-Boat Whirlwind, 1930” and “Volunteer wife is aboard, as well as Endeavand Thistle: America’s Cup Start 1887.” our’s designer, Charles E. Nicholson, and 11 other crewmembers – as it is a depiction of a beautiful Jstripped of its sand by a hurricane. However, it was boat. There’s a first-person feeling to the narrative. Much of Evers’ work focuses on inanimate objects, very much a conscious decision on Kramer’s part to ships being pummeled in a hostile sea, a beach being use people as a means of communicating with his au-

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dience. “I’ve been on the water all my life,” Kramer says. “So, for me, these paintings are about bringing you along with me on an experience, or reliving a hu-

man experience from the past.” The painting showed in Mystic, Conn., in 2002, and Kramer has been a working marine artist ever since.

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Oil paintings by Russ Kramer

Of “Zephyrrr” (above), Kramer writes, “This is typical of some of the commission work I do for clients, who often want me to recreate a winning race or depict themselves and their crew onboard. All of these, however, are more than just ‘boat portraits’ since I never work from a single photo, but rather, like my historical paintings, like to romanticize and embellish reality.” “The Joy of Sailing: Cara Mia and the New York 30s of 1905” (left), “The Masthead Men” (top right) and “Onboard Intrepid, 1970” (right). FMI: www.russkramer.com.

28 Points East December 2014

editor@pointseast.com


In 2010, he moved into in an unassuming second-floor studio/gallery in downtown Mystic, next door to the famous eatery in the Julia Roberts movie, “Mystic Pizza.” Since then, Kramer has been recognized as one of the world’s premier marine artists, and his work has appeared in such publications as “Yachting,” “WoodenBoat,” “Sail,” and Italy’s leading yachting magazine, “Yacht Design” (and now “Points East,” of course). He is a gallery artist whose work is commissioned by legends in the world of North American sailing and patrons in far-off lands like the United Arab Emirates and India. www.pointseast.com

It is hard for someone who loves the water to look upon a Kramer painting without feeling emotion. In people who live and play on the water, there are deep currents of emotion regarding the sea, and boats, though, oddly enough it’s the rare artist – writer or painter – who can create something authentic enough to stir these currents. Points East December 2014

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Besides the first-person narratives Kramer creates – in which friends and family dressed in period clothing often pose as stand-ins for historical figures (his wife is featured in at least one painting hanging in his gallery) – another hallmark of Kramer’s work is his depiction of the ocean in all its vagaries. Given the fact that water is such an elusive creature (every sailor knows, for instance, that the best way to calm a stormy sea is to take a picture of it), and, therefore, nearly impossible to reproduce except by using one’s mind, one would have to say that Kramer has a mind that’s custom-made for the job. Pressed on the topic, Kramer offers this: “I would say painting water is like prose and poetry. Certainly, there is structure – laws of nature, hydrodynamics, light and reflective effect one must understand and employ, but it’s also about feeling, interpretation and emotion. In my paintings, I’ll break a wave at you, or

make you squint at the sun, because of the chance that I can move you to feel something – and that’s the whole reason to do it.” It is hard for someone who loves the water to look upon a Kramer painting without feeling emotion. In people who live and play on the water, there are deep currents of emotion regarding the sea, and boats, though, oddly enough it’s the rare artist – writer or painter – who can create something authentic enough to stir these currents. Russ Kramer was moved when he saw Evers’ work for the first time, and all of us are luckier for it. When he’s not applying his “buy high, sell low” strategy to houses, cars and boats, Points East associate editor Bob Muggleston is raising a young family in East Hampton, Conn., and plying his beloved Connecticut River in a number of small boats.

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Look for stories in the details of Russ Kramer’s paintings No more than 20 yards into my first tent at this year’s Newport International Boat Show, I succumbed to my personal Siren on the Rocks, marine art – the exhibit of Mystic, Conn.’s Russ Kramer. The silent, yet irresistible, entreaties of the oil-painting prints within drew me into a world of wind, water and waves, black nights at sea, glorious dawns and sunsets, valiant vessels and crews, and unspoken sea tales waiting to be told. If there is a fourth dimension in painting, Russ Kramer has a handle on it. Aside from the usual length, width and depth, Russ’s works demand that you listen to their stories, and, barring that, encourage you to create your own narratives from the details in each. Stepping farther into the booth – each painting seeming to cry out, “Look at me” – I spied a small print that blocked out all the chatter from the others. Entitled “Dawn Swells,” I already knew its story, or thought I did. This is my take: The painting is set in the North Atlantic, in the early-20th century. The light-boards, to hold the large schooner’s kerosene sidelights, tell me this passage occurred before

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World War II. The plum stem, mast hoops, and deadeyes setting up the shrouds also speak of an earlier time, as does the profile of the ship on the horizon. With her tall mast and bright light, she could be a lightship, similar to the old Boston light vessel of the early 20th century. However, I can make out some apparatus aft – a gantry of sorts – which could identify her as an early 1900s trawler or a small liner. The sun will soon be rising in the east; the schooner is sailing in a southerly direction. It’s cold, and the decks are wet. The swells are large, the seas confused, and only her topsail is full and drawing in a light northwest wind. The main, foresail, jib and staysail are sheeted in a bit Oil painting by Russ Kramer so they won’t slam around in the lumpy seas; she is running a bit freely, though, possibly on a beam reach. A gale has passed; the wind has dropped but the swells remain. Dolphins, or perhaps pilot whales, cartwheel out of the front of the wave in the foreground. Of course, I bought the print. I hung it over my desk, and the details – right or wrong – keep unfolding. Nim Marsh

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Frosty fun

The Frosty is built from two fourby-eight sheets of quarter-inch plywood, using the stitch-and-glue method.

Photo courtesy Frosty Fleet 9

These intrepid sailors, who race Cape Cod Frosties in New Castle, N.H., from the first weekend in November through the first weekend in May (brrrrrr!), are passionate about their sport. Or crazy. By Paula Harrington For Points East any, including me, might add “crazy� to a description of this diverse group, whose members don dry suits to keep the elements at bay

M

32 Points East December 2014

as they scoot around the harbor in boats the size of a bath tub. They sail in frigid temperatures. Rain, sleet, snow or high winds rarely stop them. The fleet is made up of sailors whose ages range from 12 to 70. Their Back Channel Goat Island venue editor@pointseast.com


is restricted by our refor the office of comgion’s nine-foot tidal modore. Rather than range. Each season’s passing a torch, a capcommodore consults tain’s cap is presented the tide charts to deto the new commodore termine when the at the festivities followfleet will be able to ing the Nationals. race based on each You’ll spot the dozen Sunday’s high tide. It’s or so tiny sails out somewhat complithere during times of cated in that sailing high tide on Sunday can only be done from mornings throughout two hours before high the winter. On espetide to two hours after, cially windy days, the or thereabouts. Races Frosty sailors gather are planned for two ashore to assess the series with winners wind speed and sea Photo courtesy Frosty Fleet 9 being declared after conditions before headPerhaps these sailors are slightly insane and definitely passionate, each. The season culing out. Once the decibut they love being on the water, pitting their skills against the eleminates with the Na- ments and fellow racers. sion is made to tionals, which are held continue, a race comnear the beginning of May, and this is when trophies mittee sets out in the chase boat to establish the day’s are awarded. windward/leeward course. The Frosty sailors rig their In addition to being responsible for the scheduling boats and head for the start line. The races are short, of races in the year the commodore is in office, she or which allows many as many as 10 or 12 per day when he also chooses the following year’s times. It is an un- conditions are perfect, six to eight at other times. wise Frosty sailor who voices any complaints: Anyone In between races, many of the skippers get out of who complains quickly becomes a potential candidate their boats to stretch their legs. For the taller, huskier

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Points East December 2014

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Photo courtesy Frosty Fleet 9

You'll spot tiny sails off New Castle, N.H., during times of high tide on Sunday mornings throughout the winter.

participants in the group, folding a six-foot-plus frame into a six-foot, four-inch boat has its challenges. As Tom Leach, the designer of the Cape Cod Frosty, was quoted in the February 1997 “Cape Cod Frosty News” article “The Grand Design: A Conversation With Tom Leach: Part 3” (found on the official Cape Cod Frosty website, www.capecodfrosty.org) “You’ve got to stand up every other race or sit on the gunwale or do some-

thing. Otherwise you’re going to kill yourself – twenty years from now you’ll be in a wheelchair unless you get your circulation started again.” Our Frosty Fleet 9 sailors have the advantage of having access to a float from which the race committee runs the races. Designed in 1984 by Harwich, Mass., harbormaster Tom Leach, the Frosty is celebrating its 30th year. According to the Frosty website, the first Cape Cod

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Frosty Class Championship was held on April 28, 1985, at the Hyannis Yacht Club in Hyannis, Mass. Twenty-one sailors – all from the Cape – competed in the six-race series. The following year, the event became a two-day regatta. As the popularity of the Frosty spread beyond the confines of the Cape, the number of Frosties built increased from a handful to over 1,000. One of the reasons for the Frosty’s popularity is that it is built from two four-by-eight sheets of quarter-inch plywood, using the stitch-and-glue method of construction. A minimum of tools and woodworking skills is needed to build a decent boat. Most Frosty Fleet 9 boats have been built by their skippers. You’ll also find class-legal fiberglass boats – whose molds have been approved by Tom Leach – among the fleet. The boats’ lightweight allows them to be transported in the back of a car and carried easily for launching. Frosties are an established onedesign racing class meant mostly for experienced sailors. The novice sailor will undoubtedly “Captain Nemo,” the code-phrase for capsizing. Capsizing is something to avoid anytime of year, especially when the air temperature is below freezing and the water temperature is just slightly above. The novice will also quickly become a nimble and able sailor who recognizes how the wind and current affects one’s ability to make it around the racecourse. Rules require that the Frosty weigh at least 34 pounds including flotation, but without rudder, daggerboard, spars and sail, and have a minimum combined weight of boat and crew of 214 pounds, using plastic water jugs to increase weight, as needed, to a limit of four gallons. Also stipulated is that ballast bottles may not be moved while racing. Complete, full-sized building plans and instructions are available by mail from Tom Leach www.pointseast.com

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Photo courtesy Frosty Fleet 9

Frosties must weigh at least 34 pounds including flotation, but without rudder, daggerboard, spars and sail.

for a $50 fee. Hull/sail numbers cost $10 per boat. His contact information can be found on the Cape Cod Frosty Fleet website. Frostbiting sailors are found throughout New Eng-

36 Points East December 2014

land and beyond, and Frosty Fleets can be found in Maine, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and in Canada. And frostbiting is not limited to Frosties. This year’s New Hampshire Film Festival, in

editor@pointseast.com


Frosty Fleet 9 2014-15 schedule Looks like some early starts and a few late nights if we want to sail in the Back Channel. Many of these races will already have been run by the time the December issue comes out, but this schedule, and thinking behind it, will illustrate the challenges we have in coming up with workable times. Nov. 2: 6:43 a.m. high tide, but it is first day of standard time (fall back). First gun 7 a.m. (will feel like 8 a.m.). Nov. 9: 12:40 high; first gun 11 a.m. Nov. 16: 6:24 a.m. high; first gun 7 a.m. Nov. 23: 11:22 a.m. high; first gun 10 a.m. Nov. 30: 5:22 a.m. high; 5:47 p.m. high. May need to find some place else to race. Dec 7: 11:36 a.m. high; 10 a.m. first gun. Dec. 14: 4:53 p.m. high; sundown 4:12; 2 p.m. first gun. Dec. 21: 10:14 a.m. high; 9 a.m. first gun. Dec. 28: 4:24 p.m. high; sundown 4:19; 2:00 p.m. first gun. Please print this and put on your refrigerator. For future dates and times, visit Commodore Tim P’s post on the Frosty Fleet 9 Facebook page, www.facebook.com/groups/346679728760505.

Portsmouth, N.H., featured a short documentary film (written, directed and produced by Thurston Smith) exploring the extreme winter sailing sport of Frostbiting, where it is done, who does it, and why. It features exclusive interviews with some of America’s top sailors, and hundreds of video clips and photography stills from sources and sailing organizations all over the Northeastern United States. While Thurston was in town for the film festival, he offered to show the documentary to our own Frosty Fleet 9. Several of our sailors make appearances on the screen, providing insight into why these women, men and youngsters choose to sail in blizzards, ice storms, wind and freezing waters. Thurston also provided additional insight into why he created this film, which has been featured at several film festivals throughout the country, including the 2014 Palm Beach International Film Festival. One of his hopes is to make the general public aware of the various boat designs that are sailed throughout the winter in New England waters. His film describes how frostbiting originated on New Year’s Day in Manhasset Bay, N.Y., by the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club in 1932, and how it continues today through the efforts of various yacht clubs in the upper latitudes of the United States and Canada. Close your eyes and the film’s sound effects can make you feel like you’re on the water on a frigid winter’s day. The word “COLD” comes up in most of the interviews, along with “insane” and the statement “I www.pointseast.com

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love it!” Obviously, the cold hooked. They are even does not stop these men, more devious in August, women and children from exwhen they hold an annual periencing the exhilaration of summer regatta to entice racing a one-design boat prospective members into against others in often-exexperiencing the Cape Cod treme conditions. Perhaps Frosty in warm weather, these sailors are slightly inwithout having to gear up sane and definitely passionin warmer and dryer ate, but they love being on the clothes. water, pitting their skills against the elements and felPaula “Dorothy Gale” low racers. Harrington has been enjoyIn addition to Thurston ing life aboard boats with Smith’s documentary, Frosty her husband, Tim PuringFleet 9 sailors have been featon (2014-2015 Frosty Fleet tured on Manchester, N.H.’s 9 Commodore) for many WMUR “Chronicle,” in a Seayears. She and Tim have coast Newspapers article, and called four boats “home” in a YouTube posting that since 1984, when they Photo courtesy Frosty Fleet 9 can be found online. moved aboard a Westsail Frosty sailors will share a boat with you to get you Anyone with a dry suit is 32. Their most recent boat, welcome to tap into the joy of hooked. They hold a summer regatta to entice you in an Osmond Beal 38, purwarm, non-threatening weather. winter sailing. Simply stop by chased as a bare hull and Kittery Point Yacht Club, on then fitted out by Tim for Portsmouth Avenue in New Castle, N.H., near high year-round New England living, is their most recent tide on Sundays throughout the winter. These enthu- “condo on the water.” She has been a crazy spectator on siastic Frostbiters will share a boat with you to get you cold winter days, but has never stepped foot in a Frosty.

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Main photo: Sunrise at North Carolina's Fishing Creek. Insets from top: The author and husband Mat in Annapolis. The Empire State Building from the East River. A South Carolina shrimpboat.

It was all

Just Ducky

Photos by Pamela Mormino

Part I: Our saga began in September, with the best sailing weather possible as we left Mystic, Conn., for our second trip to Florida in Just Ducky, our Hunter 37.5. By Pamela Mormino For Points East t was in the back of our minds that we would turn this boat in for a trawler, so we looked forward to this last trip south in the sailboat we had come to

I

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love. We purchased the tracking device called SPOT, and sent the link to our friends in case they wanted to follow our trip and see our path. It also has an emergency function to notify them if we were in trouble; we felt it was well worth the money. Before I get started, Points East December 2014

43


Photos by Pamela Mormino

Left: It’s time for lift-off, Pam said to Mat in Mystic. Right: Fleece with long pants was the uniform of the mornings. Below, a rough map of Just Ducky’s route south.

just so you know, when I say “we,” it usually means Mat, my husband and skipper, doing the heavy lifting and me standing by waiting for orders and making all of the necessary phone calls. Most of the time I am sooooo glad we don’t have equal responsibilities. But as you will see later, it didn’t end up that way. Just Ducky took us along the Connecticut shore, in Long Island Sound, to Westbrook and then to Branford, sailing most of the way. Although we were under way, it didn’t feel like we were since we were still in local waters. The start of every day was cool on the water, so fleece and long pants gave way to shorts and tee shirts as the day progressed – at least for Mat. I still had a hard time giving up my sweatshirt. One of the most exciting parts of the trip, for me, was coming through Hell Gate in Manhattan. Of course, Mat was at the helm fighting the currents and traffic, and I got to sit back and enjoy, so he may have a different opinion. Rushing down the East River, coming around to see the Statute of Liberty in the distance was awesome. The 911 Memorial Building, although not finished in September, was a sight to see, even visible about 20 miles away. We went through on the 13th, so 911 was on the top of our minds.

44 Points East December 2014

When a cruiser asks you if you have ever gone aground, and you say, “No,” the stock response is, “You will.” Well, we did not have to waste too much time getting stuck in the sand in Sandy Hook, N.J. “Okay, you got that out of the way early,” our son Rick said. With the assistance of a fellow sailor, we set the anchor on the starboard side of the boat and turned the bow around, and we quickly left that proposed anchorage in search of deeper water. Not wanting to risk the shallow and turbulent inland waters along the coast, we set our course for Atlantic City. We set sail at daybreak and saw the beautiful sunrise with the moon and the planet Uranus visible; it was well worth getting up for. As exciting as Manhattan is, the Jersey Shore is as boring. Mile after mile of flat beach doesn’t inspire any photos. All I could think of was, What part of the Jersey Shore is Snooky from? Thirteen hours later, at dusk, we arrived in Atlantic City after the harbormaster had gone home. It was tricky finding our slip at the marina, but, flashlight and binoculars in hand, we found it, and spent two nights there before heading for Cape May. With winds predicted at 25 to 30, and the seas six to JUST DUCKY, continued on Page 46 editor@pointseast.com


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Points East December 2014

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JUST DUCKY, continued from Page 44

sailing races under way, as well as harbor tours and a pirate ship to maneuver around. We had a wonderful eight feet, we put off our trip up the Delaware River for mooring right in front of the Naval Academy, and had more favorable weather. Feeling confident, we decided our first crab dinner. In Maryland, crab is what it’s all to follow the same course we followed in 2005, following about. close to shore around Cape May Point. As we proceeded, Although a bit off the beaten path, we set out for St. we noticed, just ahead of us, waves breaking from out Michael’s on the Eastern Shore. Once there, we rode our of nowhere. Knowing that means shallow water (rocks bikes, and went for a tasting tour of the local micromaybe?), we quickly brewery and to the did a 180. If you were Maritime Museum. following us on SPOT, Another crab dinner you probably thought under our belts and we we were already startwere on our way. ing our “Five o’clock I wished I had a somewhere” celebra“Life is Good” T-shirt tions. It was a wise as we entered Mill move, even though it Creek, just south of took a bit longer, and it Great Wicomico River; was a good reminder this was our best anthat the ocean bottom chorage so far. The washifts over the years. ter was deep, the It’s important to make banks lined with trees sure your data is curand beautiful homes. rent. Menhaden, which The Delaware River were jumping all is wide, and since we around the boat, are caught the incoming Photo by Pamela Mormino processed for fish oil tide, it was a pleasant We entered the Dismal Swamp, with its succession of 22 bridges and two and fertilizer. So next trip. We made it to time you take your locks, transited on a schedule, or by requesting their opening. Chesapeake City to Omega 3, you’ll now anchor for the night know where it comes from. before entering Chesapeake Bay. Having noticed a waHaving passed Mile Marker 0 of the Intracoastal Water leak in the engine area, Mat investigated; it seemed terway (ICW), in Portsmouth, Va., we were officially out to be coming from the seawater pump. Since this gismo of the Chesapeake Bay and officially in the hot weather. keeps the engine from overheating, it has a necessary This was our last stop before entering the Dismal function. Swamp, and the beginning of the 22 bridges and two We called a marine-supply store in Annapolis and locks we had to pass through on a schedule, or request were pleasantly surprised when they said they had the their opening. part. First major outlay, but we could change the part The first part of the swamp was narrow and shallow, ourselves. (Remember when I said what “we” meant?) and we bumped bottom about five times (sounds like So off to Annapolis. Arriving on a Saturday morning I’m going to confession). It was a bit tedious, but we got was a challenge since there were five or six different to the Welcome Center and rafted for the night. We

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timed our departure the next day for the next lock. This part was wider, deeper and prettier. We headed for Elizabeth City, N.C., where people were waiting to help us tie up. Everyone says you have to do the Dismal Swamp. Now we can say, been there, done that, forgot to buy the Tshirt. Somewhere along the way, our depth gauge started blinking, indicating that it no longer was reading the bottom. This is not a good thing down here, where depths are often around five to seven feet: Our boat draws five feet. We traveled with another sailboat that acted as our seeing-eye dog as we followed them in an out of shallow anchorages, for which we are very grateful. Arriving in Beaufort, N.C., they continued their travels and we sat and waited for a new depth gauge to be installed. We found an honest, conscientious and capable electronics tech, Fernando, who assessed the problem, got and installed the new depth gauge, and set us on our way – six days later than we had planned. It’s a good thing we are not driven by a schedule. We started to see an increase in the number of dolphins, and saw our first palm trees. We even saw an alligator. Guess where? Alligator Bay, of course! The krill attached themselves to the bottom of the boat, and we could hear the snap, crackle, pop as they munched away. To me, this all means you are in the south. We were grateful to have both chartplotter and radar guiding us as we had a few heavy rainstorms along the way. We encountered some low-water spots when coming out of Wrightsville Beach, but they were not where we expected them to be. The Cape Fear River was nothing to fear this time. The winds and waters were calm, maybe too calm, as we left a little too early to get the benefit of the outgoing tide to push us along. We received advice from our marina

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THERACIN Leg 1, Volvo Race:

Walker just ekes out a Volvo win Ian Walker (GBR) and his Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing crew barely snatched a wink of sleep for nearly 48 hours prior to the finish, but in the end it paid off after an epic first-leg victory in the Volvo Ocean Race on Nov. 5. There have been many close finishes in the 41-year history of the event, but few will have been quite so tense for the victors, who have been feeling the hot breath of Dongfeng Race Team (Charles Caudrelier/FRA) down their necks for the best part of a week in the 6,487-mile stage. Even with the finish under Table Mountain in Cape Town in sight two miles away, Walker could not relax, with wind in perilously short supply and the Chinese boat able to close again before Azzam finally claimed the hardest fought of victories.

The Class 2 Single Paddle division of the Round Island Race, which featured a Le Mans-style start, saw a few characters, and even a few dogs (note: Points East’s editor [pink hat] and publisher are visible in the background, furiously rowing to get out of the way).

VOLVO, continued on Page 53

USA in top-10 in four classes at the 2014 ISAF Worlds

Photo courtesy US Sailing

470 sailors Stuart McNay and David Hughes placed 5th, qualifying them for Rio 2016.

48 Points East December 2014

The US Sailing Team Sperry TopSider arrived at the ISAF Sailing World Championships looking to turn in peak performances, and enjoyed a successful week at the most significant regatta before the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. With American sailors finishing in the top-10 in four classes, the results in Santander, Spain represent a positive step towards the team’s larger goals.

For the US Sailing Team Sperry Top-Sider, the U.S. national team, the highlights of the event were a 5th place finish in the Men’s 470 by Stuart McNay (Providence, R.I.) and David Hughes (San Diego, Calif.), 7th in the Women’s 470 by Annie Haeger (East Troy, Wisc.) and Briana Provancha (San Diego, Calif.), 7th in the Men’s Laser by Charlie Buckingham (Newport ISAF, continued on Page 50 editor@pointseast.com


NGPAGES Round Island Regatta 2014: offbeat plaint from a winner

Photo by Hunter Normandeau

Guck seizes U.S. Multihull Championship As soon as the U.S. Multihull Championship began in Bristol, R.I., Sept. 18-21, it was clear Photo courtesy US Sailing that multi-time A-Cat North The U.S. Multihull Championship, hosted American Champion Lars Guck by Bristol Yacht Club, was decided in A(Barrington, R.I.) was the most Class Catamarans for the first time in MULTI, continued on Page 51 event history. www.pointseast.com

By Charles Doane For Points East Note: the following is a first-person accounting of himself in the Round Island Race held late last summer in Portsmouth, N.H., by Charles Doane, “SAIL” magazine’s executive editor. The Round Island Race is a charity event that features small sailboats and various paddle craft battling each other in one of the back bays of the city. I must confess I am supremely embarrassed by the results of the fourth annual Round Island Regatta (RIR), held on Saturday, Aug. 23, right here in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, my hometown. You will (hopefully) recall that the event this year was sponsored not only by this august comic, Points East magazine, but also by a host of other seemingly reputable businesses and organizations. The regatta’s great success, with all this sponsorship and a sold-out entry list of 100 competitors in three different classes, I’m afraid has only aggravated my condition. After missing last year’s event, I managed again to get Mimi, our trusty 15-foot Drascombe Dabber, to the start line this year. And no, I did not sail her any faster than the other boats. Quite the opposite. That distinction, in fact, went to Class 1 (Sail) winner Joie Paciulli, who sailed a very cool, confident race aboard her banged-up old Banshee. The Banshee proved an ideal boat for the condiRIR, continued on Page 54 Points East December 2014

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The 2014 J/24 World Championship, hosted by Sail Newport, featured a close battle between American Will Welles and Brazilian Mauricio Santa Cruz.

Photo courtesy Sail Newport

Welles clinches the J/24 World Championship With just a few points between Will Welles’ Cougar (USA) and Mauricio Santa Cruz’s Bruschetta (BRA) going into the final day, there was no room for error in the final two races of the 2014 J/24 World Championship hosted by Sail Newport Sept. 22-26. Welles had used his throw-out on Thursday, so the only way to assure a win was to stay ahead. And that’s what he did. Sailing with Nick Turney, Richard Bowen, Daniel Rabin and Luke Lawrence, Welles sealed the deal with a 2, 5 to win the day and the World Championship with 38 points. Mauricio Santa Cruz’s Bruschetta (BRA) settled for 2nd place with a total of 55 points,

while John Mollicone’s Team Helly Hanson (USA) finished 3rd with 70 points. The final day’s weather (Friday) was sunny with wind speed from 10 to 12 knots out of the northeast. In the first race of the day, Welles finished 2nd to Mollicone, while Greg Griffin’s Team Tarheel (USA) placed 3rd. Matias Seguel’s Semi Pro (CHI) closed the regatta with a victory in Race 10. Luis Olcese’s Scaramoush (PER) and Shigetoshi Shirahama’s White Squall (JPN) rounded out the top three. Sixty-nine teams competed from 13 nations. FMI and complete standings: www.sailnewport.org

the best by an American Finn sailor at the Worlds since 2010. Beach, Calif.) and 7th in the Also up for grabs at the SanMen’s Finn by Caleb Paine (San tander 2014 World ChampiDiego, Calif.). Also turning in a onships were the first berths notable performance was Laser awarded to countries (but not Radial athlete Erika Reineke individual athletes) for the Rio (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.), who nar2016 Olympic sailing competirowly missed a berth in the tion. Half the available berths medal race and finished 14th. for Rio 2016 in each of the 10 Sunday, Sept. 21 saw the final Olympic sailing classes were races held at the event, includawarded in Santander, and the Photo courtesy US Sailing ing the medal race for the Finn United States has now qualiclass. Top-ranked American Finn sailor Caleb Paine, who finished 5th in the fied for The Games in the Laser, Finn athlete Caleb Paine (San medal race, boosted himself to a 7th-place finish Laser Radial, Men’s 470, Diego, Calif.) capped his best- overall, the best American finish at a Worlds Women’s 470, and Finn. Amerisince 2010. ever performance at a Finn can sailors in the remaining World Championship by finishing 5th in a very light classes will have other opportunities to qualify for Rio and difficult medal race. This boosted Paine to 7th 2016 at World and Continental Championship events overall in the 78-boat fleet. Paine’s performance was in 2015 and 2016. FMI: www.ussailing.org. ISAF, continued from Page 48

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editor@pointseast.com


Briefly

What Can We Build for You?

Photo courtesy US Sailing

The final day ended up being a halfday due to no wind, but enough races were completed to crown Ladies and Gentlemen victorious.

U.S. defending titlists make it a two-peat at Team Racing contest Light winds were the theme for the 2014 U.S. Team Racing Championship, sailed on Sept. 26-28 in Marblehead, Mass. Twelve teams competed in the new Zim 15, with defending champions Ladies and Gentlemen surviving the abbreviated series to take the 2014 title. The championship team, which includes Tyler Sinks (San Diego, Calif.), Lucy Wallace (Middletown, R.I.), Justin Law (Balboa, Calif.), Adrienne Patterson (Miami, Fla.), Michael Menninger (San Francisco, Calif.) and Ben Lezin (Santa Cruz, Calif.) will qualify for the 2015 ISAF Team Racing World Championship in Great Britain on July 19-24. FMI: www.ussailing.org.

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MULTI, continued from Page 49 accomplished and experienced ACat sailor in the fleet of 15. On Sunday’s finale, Guck finished the regatta like he started on Friday, and won three more races to go undefeated through 11 races. Guck won the Hobie Alter Trophy by 18 points over Andrew Gaynor, who came on strong Saturday and Sunday. Philip Kinder (Portsmouth, R.I.) placed 3rd. The U.S. Multihull Championship was decided in AClass Catamarans for the first time in event history. This championship rotates in discipline each year to showcase the classes in multihull racing. FMI: www.ussailing.org. www.pointseast.com

Points East December 2014

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GC32 foiling cat Argo slashes the Around Jamestown Record

Photo courtesy IYRS

Alumni Regatta winners Congratulations to the team that won the 7th Annual Alumni Regatta, and represented all three International Yacht Restoration School (IYRS) programs: skipper Brian Firth (holding trophy) and his crew of (left to right) Jake Gilbert, John Aubrecht and Will Steiss. IYRS alumni, students, staff and faculty enjoyed a fun BBQ on a beautiful Saturday afternoon on the Newport, R.I., campus.

A new outright record and time to beat was set Oct. 26 for the Mount Gay Rum Around Jamestown Record. Jason Carroll of New York City helmed his new GC32, Argo, around Jamestown with an elapsed time of 58 minutes and 31 seconds, besting the previous record of 01:03:38 by four minutes and seven seconds. The 20-plusmile course passes around Conanicut Island in Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay. The record setting crew included Chad Corning, Mischa Hemmskerk, Mike Barnes, Cameron Appleton and Mike Kuschner. They chose to sail the course around the island to starboard, sailing south from the start off Fort Adams at 11:33:31 ET, on a northwesterly breeze ranging from 20 to 30 knots on an outgoing tide. Argo is a foiling catamaran and is the first and only GC32 in North America. Owner/helmsman Jason Carroll, purchased Argo this summer with the goal of having her in the water in Newport in time to break the Around Jamestown Record. Owner/Helmsman Jason Carroll said, “To be honest, there could have been a little bit less [wind]. Coming around the top of the Island we hit our top speed of 37.1 knots. I’m happy, but a little bummed that we can’t go sailing again today because we broke both foils during the attempt.” FMI: www.aroundjamestownrecord.com.

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VOLVO, continued from Page 48

medals. In contrast, Caudrelier looked like he had thoroughly enjoyed every minute of the chase and the opThe crossed the line at 1510 UTC, just 12 minutes beportunity to prove to those who doubted that his crew, fore Dongfeng, after 25 days, three hours and 10 minwhich included two Chinese rookies, could seriously utes of sailing. compete. The win is a personal triumph for 44-year-old Walker. Dongfeng Race Team’s second place was all the more The Briton was forced to motor miserably back into Alremarkable since twice icante on the first night of their progress was slowed the opening leg in 2011-12 through damage to the boat after a Mediterranean – first through a smashed storm dismasted his boat. rudder and then through a This time, he and the shattered padeye, which crew have barely made an caused a domino-effect of error since setting out with damage including a broken the rest of the fleet on Oct. wheel. However, in the last 11 from Alicante, and their week, they nibbled away at Volvo Ocean 65 has withAbu Dhabi Ocean Racing’s stood everything that the lead. But Walker and his Med and the Atlantic could team had sailed too well for throw at them. too long to give victory But they still could not Photo courtesy Volvo Ocean Race away after such a struggle. shake off Caudrelier’s crew, Eking out a victory: In the end Azzam, Team Abu Dhabi’s Volvo Final results, Leg 1, Aliwho tried all manner of ma- 65 skippered by Ian Walker, was nearly caught by the wily cante to Cape Town: 1. neuvers, some under the French skipper Charles Caudrelier, of Dongfeng Race Team. Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing, cover of darkness, to get the 2. Dongfeng Race Team, 3. better of the front-runners. Team Brunel, 4. Team Vestas Wind, 5. Team Alvimedica, Walker, red-eyed after sleep deprivation for so long, 6. Team SCA, 7. MAPFRE. was finally able to celebrate surely one of the sweetest FMI: www.volvooceanrace.com. wins of a career, which also includes two Olympic silver

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RIR, continued from Page 49

at the start), thanks to the very strong current. But I also made some truly terrible tactical decisions tions (weight is just 120 pounds with 82 square feet of trying to get around the windward mark, which was, sail), which were very light, and Joie (daughter of as Points East’s editor, Nim Marsh, described it, “like Bruno Paciulli, head trying to round Cape sailing instructor at Horn,” thanks again the Kittery Point to the strong current Yacht Club) handled and fickle breeze. it expertly, easily During our first two besting the other 34 laps of the course, I sailboats in the Class so misjudged the line 1 fleet, which into the mark that I cluded a Hobie 16 twice had to jibe catamaran. around for another The embarrassing go. Only on the third bit has to do in part and final lap did I with my performance manage to get on Mimi, which was around in one atexecrable. I do have a tempt. couple of excuses to The most embartrot out: a. we were rassing fact is that I very heavy this year, was actually rePhoto by Hunter Normandeau with three adults and warded for this pitione child onboard, The author rows Mimi, his sprit-rigged Drascombe Dabber, out to the ful effort. Being and b. Mimi’s archaic starting line, where myriad humiliations awaited him and his crew. primarily a nonsprit rig doesn’t work competitive event, well in very light wind. This led us to sometimes move the RIR recognizes only 1st-place line-honors winners backwards for extended periods (most noticeably right in its three classes (Classes 2 and 3 are for paddle- and

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oar-powered craft) and also grants awards to the “Handsomest Boat and Crew” in each class. The grandest prize, which features the bestowal of a handsome perpetual trophy plate, is the Sportsmanship Award, “which is presented to the individual whose behavior and seamanship best exemplify the spirit of the regatta.” Thanks primarily to Tom Brown, of Great Bay Marine, who served as the regatta’s master of ceremonies and color commentator, and who regaled the audience with an ongoing comic description of my misadventures on the racecourse, I was selected as the grandprize winner this year. And really I can’t even say I was honestly a good sport about being the butt of Tom’s stream of abuse, as most of the time I couldn’t even hear it. So, as I say, thanks to Tom, my name is now inscribed on the trophy plate, which I get to keep for a year, and I have received (from regatta sponsor Tim-

berland) an enormous stainless-steel quartz watch that could easily serve as an anchor for Mimi. The complete list of this year’s winners: Class 1 Sail: 1st place: Joie Paciulli, Handsomest Boat & Crew: Tori Henkes. Class 2 Single Paddle: 1st place: Peter Sawtell, Handsomest Boat & Crew: Erin BoBo-Caron and Collin Caron. Class 3 Multi Paddle: 1st place: Ray Panek, Handsomest Boat & Crew: Bob Mangold, Leah and Sally Mangold. The proceeds of this year’s regatta were donated to the Wentworth Lear Historic Houses, which hosted a fabulous prize-giving party. Special thanks are due to Robin Normandeau of Chandler’s Loft and Charles Lassen of the South End Men’s Ocean Sailing Association, the event’s primary organizers, and to the many sponsors, which are listed on the Round Island Race website: www.roundislandregatta.com.

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MEDIA/Resources f or cr uiser s

Best seat for Volvo Ocean Race? On your couch Daily Volvo Ocean Race Web Coverage, October into May www.volvooceanrace.com.

By Bob Muggleston For Points East As recently as 40 years ago, long-distance ocean racers enjoyed the kind of romantic aura normally reserved for knights of the crusade, or explorers of the Amazon. A big part of it was the anonymity. Once the gun went off, and they sailed out of the harbor, it was up to us to fill in the narrative of their existence for the next three weeks, three months, or a year. And we filled their days with howling winds and angry seas, and gear failures, and loneliness, and maybe even a sea monster or two if it felt right. The sailor was 50 miles away, or a thousand – based on his relayed positions. If we were lucky, someone aboard a passing freighter would snap a Polaroid and forward it to an interested news outlet. This was a time when massive hoaxes could be perpetrated (think: the brilliant, but doomed, Donald Crowhurst)

and legends born (think: Moitessier). The text and images of Bernard Moitessier’s grand adventure, etched forever into sailing lore, flew to us in film canisters that were shot aboard the decks of passing freighters with a slingshot. How times have changed. Today, scarcely a minute passes in a long-distance racing sailor’s life that isn’t recorded. For the most part, we always know exactly where he (or she!) is. Images are plentiful, and in high-def. Highs, lows, all the trials and tribulations faced at sea - thanks to embedded reporters and their high-tech gadgetry, we’re right there, experiencing it alongside them. It might be the best time to be an armchair sailor ever. Because, while it might be fun to fantasize about being on Alvimedica, the 65-foot racing machine skippered by American Charlie Enright, very few of us want to be aboard the 65-foot racing machine skippered by American Charlie Enright. Sailing’s funny like that. We fantasize about the adventure in total, but – ugh – the specifics. The sail changes, the dampness, the temperature swings, the snoring bunkmates,

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the lack of privacy, the constant noise, the . . . well, you bundled French skipper of the boat, Charles Cauget the drift. It’s so easy to fill the Bad column of the drelier, who states, “The padeye broke. So it’s not a Good/Bad list (though, of course, many amazing things mistake from us. It’s something very strange. First occur at sea). time I’ve seen that.” At the time of this writing, in early November, much In the background, the Southern Ocean hisses by at has happened in the Volvo high speed. These videos – Ocean Race 2014-15. The viewed from the comfort of boats are just now dropping one’s couch – are mesmerinto the Roaring 40s. Yesizing stuff. For three and terday, the vessel of half minutes you’re in the Dongfeng Race Team, a feared Southern Ocean, padeye blew apart, taking dealing with Southern most of the on-deck systems Ocean issues, and then – on the rear starboard quaryou’re not. You’re free to ter of the boat with it. The get up and walk away. video of the accident itself, In this highly docuand then commentary from mented environment, in two crewmembers, is availwhich we no longer have to able on YouTube. Photo courtesy Team Alvimedica fill in the narrative of their The music that accompaexistence, heroes will unThe skinny on Team Alvimedica: They are young, hardnies the video is spot-on, a charging, fun-to-watch, and might have the most gifted em- doubtedly become scarcer. light trickle of piano keys bedded reporter, Amory Ross. But the men and women that conveys the tenuous aboard these boats are still predicament of Dongfeng, which no longer has a rear knights. Now we have the evidence to prove it. stanchion, or starboard wheel, or a place to attach the block for the boat’s biggest sails. It’s three minutes and Associate editor Bob Muggleston has had his computer23 seconds that include disaster, followed by a cleanup, room Barcalounger fitted out with a hard dodger and lifeand then a grim assessment of the situation by the lines.

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YARDWORK/People & Proj ects

Monhegan 42 to be ‘sophisticated commuter’ cording to L-M, “they A combination of facwere blown away by the tors led this client to performance of and atLyman-Morse Boattention to details on building, in Thomaston, Peregrine.” This was exMaine. They were lookactly what they were ing for a “sophisticated looking for. commuter,” with the caThis will be Lymanpacity to ferry 15 people Morse’s first fully certito their island retreat fied USCG vessel (the on Lake Ontario. Their USCG-certification proresearch led them to a cess is more stringent C. Raymond Hunt-dethan an ABS certificasigned hull because of tion), and L-M says it their proven ride and anticipates more proseaworthiness. An exjects that require this tensive study of availextra documentation able boats on the and research. Fireproofmarket left them unPlan courtesy Lyman-Morse ing and fire retardation able to tie together the All systems will be in compliance with USCG requirements, includ- will be a priority, and list of specific features ing watertight bulkheads, larger cockpit scuppers, taller bow rail, electrical, mechanical they were after. and wider doors. and safety systems are A subsequent web search produced the press release on Peregrine, Hull being scrutinized for compliance with the Coast Guard No. 1 of the Monhegan 42, launched in 2013 at Lyman- requirements for “Subchapter T” small passenger vesMorse. The Monhegan 42’s hull shape fit their draft sels. Watertight bulkheads, larger cockpit scuppers, and beam restrictions as well. This led to the next step of the site visit and a test run on Peregrine, and, acMONHEGAN, continued on Page 61

Morris unveils improved Ocean Series 48 cruiser The new Ocean Series 48 GT is a refinement of the Ocean Series 48 blue-water cruiser, Morris Yachts says. Many changes and innovations reportedly have been added to the 48 GT’s interior, rig, and cockpit. Morris reports that highlights of the Ocean Series 48 GT include a new interior with updated amenities, raised saloon with panoramic views and a side-berth lounge, a larger rig for improved sailing performance, self-tacking jib and Leisure Furl mainsail for easier sail handling, full-service galley with a cross-beam utility station, en-suite owner’s cabin with circular shower, and an in-mold swim platform with a passerelle transom door for easy cockpit access to and from the water. Specifications: LOA 48’ 9”, DWL 42’ 10”, Beam 13’ 10”, Draft (standard keel) 6’ 6”, Draft (optional Keel) 5’ 10”, Displacement (half-load) 32,000 lbs., Ballast (standard) 10,700 lbs., Ballast (optional) 10,860 lbs., Sail Area (waterway rig) 1,124 sq. ft., Mast height above DWL 58 Points East December 2014

Photo courtesy Morris Yachts

Morris says that the new Ocean Series 48 GT (Grande Touring) raises the offshore game of their Ocean Series 48 with many changes and innovations to the interior, rig and cockpit.

66.5’, Fuel 90 gal., Fresh Water 175 gal., Holding tanks 50 gal, Powerplant Yanmar 4JH4-TCE x SD50 Saildrive unit, 4-cylinder, direct-injected, freshwater-cooled, turbocharged diesel, maximum 75 hp@3,000 rpm, Flex-O-Fold 18” three-blade prop. FMI: www.morrisyachts.com. editor@pointseast.com


The floating classroom will expand opportunities for students and the public to explore Long Island Sound.

Photo courtesy Maritime Museum at Norwalk

This aquarium ‘study’ boat runs on hybrid-electric propulsion The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk (Conn.) christened a larger, “greener” research vessel in later September. This ceremony also launched a new era in examining, monitoring and teaching about Long Island Sound. The research vessel Spirit of the Sound is revolutionary in design, being the only research vessel in the

country running on hybrid-electric propulsion. Launched in December, the $2.7-million boat will run virtually silently on electric power for the Aquarium’s public “study cruises” on Long Island Sound. The 65-foot all-aluminum catamaran will replace the Aquarium’s 40-foot 34-year-old diesel-powered HYBRID, continued on Page 60

Remotely view and control TZtouch with apps designed for your smartphone and tablet. NavNet TZtouch opens the door to cutting edge WiFi features, such as tablet and smartphone apps, points of interest (POI), real time weather data, software updates and more. The TZtouch Remote app allows you to operate your system remotely with your smartphone or tablet over WiFi, when connected to the network. Take full control of your NavNet in a whole new way!

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59


Sabre’s 54 Express/Fly Bridge will debut at Miami Boat Show Sabre Yachts has been building the Sabre 54 Salon Express and Fly Bridge, its largest motor offering since the company Sabre began building 28-foot sailboats in 1970. The first of the 54s will debut at the 2014 Miami Yacht and Brokerage show in February. Sabre is also announcing the design of the Sabre 66, which will make its debut in mid-2015. HYBRID, continued from Page 59 trawler, r/v Oceanic. The new boat will have a climatecontrolled indoor classroom and an outdoor research space. With more room inside and out, the new research vessel doubles the Aquarium’s capacity for getting visitors out on the water, from 29 to 60 people per cruise. When docked, Spirit of the Sound gives the Aquarium an additional classroom for on-site programs. Spirit of the Sound’s hybrid-electric propulsion system will reduce fuel consumption by an estimated 75 percent. Running quietly on electric will be a benefit to wildlife, to other boaters, and to the delivery of educational programs on board.

POINTS

“Over the past forty years, the fleet of large, private vessels has grown dramatically with new operating systems allowing owner operators to be the masters of their own yachts,” Sabre says. Built in Sabre’s Rockland facilities, the 54 is designed by their in-house team, led by Kevin Burns. The 66 will be equipped with Volvo Penta IPS1200 pod drives and will cruise in the mid 20-knot range, Sabre says. Her displacement will be 80,000 pounds, and her interior will have a full-beam master stateroom below her helm deck. FMI: www.sabreyachts.com.

You don’t have to be a school student to sign on; R/V Spirit of the Sound will be used for the aquarium’s public study cruises as well. Initial public outings on the boat begin in mid-December with Seal Spotting Cruises, offered on weekends through mid-April. Even greater opportunities to experience the boat begin in May, with the Aquarium’s 2015 season of Marine Life Study Cruises, during which crabs, mollusks, squid and a wide variety of saltwater fish are brought up out of Long Island Sound for examination. Designed by Incat Crowther of Australia, Spirit of the Sound was built in Mamaroneck, N.Y, at the Robert E. Derecktor Inc. shipyard. FMI: www.maritimeaquarium.org.

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60 Points East December 2014

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Photo courtesy Lyman-Morse

The clients' research led them to a C. Raymond Hunt-designed hull, the Monhegan 42, Hull No. 1 of which was Peregrine, launched in 2013.

MONHEGAN, continued from Page 58 taller bow rail, wider passage entry and doors are a few of the required updates. Upholstered settee seating with custom armrests on either side of the pilothouse will house the 11 passen-

gers seated inside. Those who prefer fresh air can sit in open seating in the C-shaped transom seat, or find more shelter in the seating along the aft bulkhead. There will be purpose built luggage and briefcase shelving below along with a spacious head. Passengers will be kept comfortable with air conditioning and reverse-cycle heating for the late-fall runs on the lake, in an elegantly finished interior of varnished mahogany interior. The boat will be outfitted with a pair of Cummins Marine Diesel QSB 6.7 480-horse engines that will produce a top speed over 30 knots and cruise in the high 20s. Side Power bow and stern thrusters will provide control during tight handling maneuvers required on the route. The Humphrey Interceptor trim-tab system will enable control of running trim with variable passenger loads. Launching is scheduled for summer 2015. FMI: www.lymanmorse.com.

Briefly Great Bay Marine, 61 Beane Lane in Newington, N.H., is now a dealer, service center and parts source for Cummins Marine Engines. Cummins offers a full line of both commercial and recreational marine diesel engines, marine application engineering services, and a global parts and service network. Cummins recreational propulsion engines range from 5.9 to 11L. FMI: www.greatbaymarine.com.

Latitude Yacht Brokerage, with offices in Newport and Jamestown, R.I., has hired Matthew Leduc to add his expertise to boat sales in Rhode Island. Matt has spent nearly 20 years honing his skills to become one of Rhode Island’s leading yacht brokers. He joins Latitude Yacht Brokerage, with his friend Ryan Miller, and is looking forward to working with fellow brokers Tim Norton and Tom Miller. FMI: www.latitudeyacht.com.

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FETCHING

ALONG/David

Buckman

David Buckman photos

The fog-faded East Quoddy Head Lighthouse on Canada's Campobello Island. Inset: The GPS shows the Leight making over nine knots.

Passamaquoddy pale t all started out well enough. Sailing into the rockbound slash of Head Harbor on Campobello Island, with a fair tide and singing breeze, the sky was so crystalline we could see a pale thread of Nova Scotia coast off to the east. Then the weather went south. The following morning arrived smothered in a dungeon of white satin, a snotty southeasterly whipping the treetops about – just what we didn’t want for our tour of these tumultuous waters Passamaquoddy Bay is a dramatic place in good weather, and more so otherwise. The fang of racing Bay of Fundy tides, grizzled swells, and fog of exceptional density are possessed of a tension not to be taken lightly, despite the reassurance of a GPS. We made an escape attempt midday, and encountered a corruption of warring cross-seas that slowed progress to an actual crawl. Better to retreat early than late, we turned tail, feeling the raw forcefulness of this place. Drip, drip, drip – foggy dewdrops plashed down on the cabin top at the dawning of our third day in Canadian waters. Wiping condensation from the port, Leigh and I

I

62 Points East December 2014

peered into the nothingness, wondering how to address it. The commitment to chance along ebbed and flowed. We’ve sailed the waters often, but never without wariness and wonder. There was a stirring dimension to the moment we slipped past East Quoddy Lighthouse the next morning, and into a world deaf with fog. Our destination was St Andrews, New Brunswick, 14 miles to the north. Shaping a course toward Black Rock under main and jib, the flood tide spooled down Head Harbor Passage, spawning local eddies that bullied the 26-foot Leight bodily. We missed sighting the daymark on Black Rock, though it wasn’t far off. Shaping a westerly course, tide at cross-purposes, the wind took off, but the chartplotter showed we were making more than six knots, thanks to the tide. Heading for a waypoint off Casco Bay Island, which would keep us clear of unmarked ledges, the bearing kept shifting as the sloop was set down toward them. Steering sharply northward, I wished for more wind as she crabbed along, nothing to be seen a few boat lengths beyond the bow. editor@pointseast.com


The mate thought she heard a wash of breaking wave to port. Sound plays tricks in the fog, and so does the imagination. After a few minutes of silence, we’d barely dismissed it as an imagining, when it whispered once again, this time farther off. Leigh smiled. Then, at the edge of the visibility, emerged the faded loom of yet another ledge, where nothing was shown on the chart. Sheering away, the main jibed over with a clatter. Hard on wind and tide, progress reduced to a crawl, it was not easy to focus in the mists, but, at length, the mate announced that the “ledge” was a floating tree. My heart had barely settled down when Leigh excitedly pointed to port and said, “Look, a green can. It must be Halftide Ledge!” Clearing Chocolate Shoal close enough to see tide rips radiating from it, we could feel the Passamaquoddy thrum. Then came the rumble of a fishing boat off to the west. Leigh blew our plastic foghorn, which seemed pitifully inadequate. On it came. I started the engine. On it came. I put the engine in gear, ready to sheer away. On it came. Then a blossoming bow wave materialized into the Deer Island ferry, which crossed our bow and evaporated. Our various travails had taken their toll in time. We were late making Western Passage, which is to be avoided the top half of the flood, as whirlpools are spawned by 22-foot tides squeezing into a narrowing channel. There wasn’t much for it but to go with the flow. A few minutes later, I was just about to tell Leigh that it

wasn’t all that bad, when a hissing torrent swelled up astern and gave the sloop a whip-snap of a shove. Staying a heartbeat ahead of her trendings, I’d give the helm a sharp stab to port as the tension rose, then to starboard just before the pressure peaked, and back to the sweet spot in the middle. “Eight knots, David,” the mate called out. Swirling whitewater carried the sloop along in a rush, handing her off from one boil to another. “Nine-pointthree,” Leigh announced above the fray. Dancing the dance through the foggy fury, excitement in the air, and predatory seas in pursuit, the bow carved a foaming furrow through the melee. She and we trembled at the power of it. Then the speed readings retreated to an ordinary seven knots. Not much later, the fog began to scale up, feathers of mist ascended from the rugged Canadian islands to port. There was a sense of satisfaction to having made good, as the mate picked up a mooring under the village of St. Andrews. Looking back on our cruise, it was among the most memorable of days. Cruising pushes us, and we need pushing. David Buckman’s book, Bucking the Tide,” is about a trio of greenhorns discovering the New England and Fundy coast in a wreck of a $400 sloop. Buy one at www.eastworkspublications.com. Not available on Amazon.

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63


FINAL

PASSAGES/They

Dr. Grace Klein-MacPhee 74, Narragansett, R.I.

Grace passed away September 20, at home, after a battle with cancer. She was a marine Research scientist who received her Bachelors and Masters of Art in Biology from Boston University, and received her PhD from the University of Rhode Island Biological Sciences in 1978. She worked for the EPA in the Narragansett laboratory, and was known for her outstanding ability to raise larval winter flounder. She worked at the University of Alaska-Juneau fisheries department, in addition to teaching. She also taught at Northeastern University, CCRI, and as an adjunct professor at the University of Rhode Island. Grace was a member of the American Fisheries Society, the Fisheries Society of the British Isles, the Estuarine Research Federation, American Society of Zoologists, American Association for the Advancement of Science, World Mariculture Society, American Institution of Biological Sciences, International Study of Artemia, Southern New England Chapter of PMI and the Rhode Island Natural History Survey. She received the Rhode Island Natural History Sur-

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Richard S. “Dick” Libby 87, Augusta, Maine

Dick passed away on Sept. 13. Raised on Kennebec Street in Bar Harbor, he spent his youth sailing the waters of Frenchman Bay or playing on the docks of his grandparents’ business, beginning what would prove to be a deep love of the sea. Dick received a bachelor’s degree in nautical science in 1946 from Maine Maritime Academy, sailed as a 2nd mate with American Export Lines for several years on its Europe and North Africa runs. Later, he served with the U.S. Navy aboard the USS Daly, conducting operations off the Korean coast, and he accompanied the ship on its east-west voyage around the world. Dick served with the U.S. Naval Reserve until 1970, retiring at the rank of captain. He was awarded the

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64 Points East December 2014

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Navy Occupation Service Medal (Europe), the Korean Service Medal with One Star, the United Nations Service Medal and the National Defense Service Medal. In between shipping out, Dick skippered private yachts and crewed in ocean races, including the Newport Bermuda and Marblehead to Halifax races. Dick worked with the First National Bank of Bar Harbor, starting as a loan officer in 1959 and retiring as the vice president of trust services in 1990. He also remained active on the ocean, teaching youth sailing, delivering yachts, racing and continuing a 30-year tradition of sailing Downeast each fall with his two brothers in-law and local friends John Reeves and Bernie Staples. He was a member of the Tin Can Sailors, the Bar Harbor Historical Society, the Bar Harbor Yacht Club, the Coast Guard Auxiliary, a 50year member of the Bar Harbor Rotary Club, and a 73-year member of the Bar Harbor Congregational Church.

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Clifford died Aug. 2, with his family by his side. He loved his trade of building wooden lobsterboats for 40 years, building homes with Gilbert Berry, and lobster fishing. He was inducted in the Boat Builders Hall of Fame, and served as Church Deacon and usher of the Beals Wesleyan Church. Burial was in the Sewell Field Cemetery, Beals.

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Points East December 2014

65


December Tides Bridgeport, Conn.

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

12:09 AM 01:06 AM 02:01 AM 02:54 AM 03:43 AM 04:30 AM 05:15 AM 05:58 AM 12:37 AM 01:21 AM 02:05 AM 02:51 AM 03:40 AM 04:30 AM 05:22 AM 06:13 AM 12:49 AM 01:39 AM 02:28 AM 03:16 AM 04:03 AM 04:51 AM 05:40 AM 12:21 AM 01:11 AM 02:03 AM 02:59 AM 03:57 AM 04:57 AM 05:58 AM 12:45 AM

-0.07 -0.13 -0.19 -0.24 -0.24 -0.18 -0.07 0.09 6.79 6.65 6.51 6.4 6.33 6.31 6.36 6.48 0.7 0.55 0.36 0.14 -0.08 -0.27 -0.4 7.2 7.27 7.29 7.27 7.23 7.21 7.22 -0.02

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

06:20 AM 07:18 AM 08:13 AM 09:04 AM 09:52 AM 10:38 AM 11:23 AM 12:06 PM 06:42 AM 07:26 AM 08:12 AM 09:01 AM 09:52 AM 10:47 AM 11:42 AM 12:37 PM 07:04 AM 07:53 AM 08:40 AM 09:26 AM 10:12 AM 10:59 AM 11:47 AM 06:30 AM 07:23 AM 08:20 AM 09:20 AM 10:23 AM 11:27 AM 12:31 PM 06:58 AM

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

02:45 AM 03:48 AM 04:48 AM 05:42 AM 06:31 AM 12:02 AM 12:45 AM 01:28 AM 02:12 AM 02:55 AM 03:38 AM 04:24 AM 12:11 AM 12:56 AM 01:41 AM 02:29 AM 03:22 AM 04:17 AM 05:08 AM 05:56 AM 06:42 AM 12:31 AM 01:20 AM 02:10 AM 03:00 AM 03:51 AM 04:48 AM 12:25 AM 01:23 AM 02:24 AM 03:28 AM

3.91 4.06 4.22 4.36 4.43 -0.18 -0.17 -0.13 -0.05 0.07 0.22 0.4 2.92 2.87 2.87 2.94 3.08 3.3 3.59 3.89 4.15 -0.55 -0.61 -0.6 -0.49 -0.29 -0.03 3.86 3.82 3.78 3.77

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

09:33 AM 10:31 AM 11:19 AM 12:03 PM 12:44 PM 07:18 AM 08:02 AM 08:46 AM 09:28 AM 10:11 AM 10:54 AM 11:37 AM 05:15 AM 06:17 AM 07:31 AM 08:43 AM 09:41 AM 10:30 AM 11:14 AM 11:58 AM 12:43 PM 07:29 AM 08:18 AM 09:08 AM 10:00 AM 10:55 AM 11:51 AM 06:02 AM 08:08 AM 09:29 AM 10:28 AM

M O O N

Day Dec.1 Dec.2 Dec.3 Dec.4 Dec.5 Dec.6 Dec.7 Dec.8 Dec.9 Dec.10 Dec.11 Dec.12 Dec.13 Dec.14

7.36 7.58 7.76 7.88 7.9 7.82 7.65 7.42 0.27 0.46 0.64 0.8 0.91 0.94 0.87 0.7 6.66 6.9 7.17 7.44 7.68 7.85 7.92 -0.46 -0.43 -0.34 -0.21 -0.11 -0.07 -0.13 7.26

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

12:49 PM 01:48 PM 02:44 PM 03:35 PM 04:23 PM 05:08 PM 05:51 PM 06:33 PM 12:49 PM 01:33 PM 02:19 PM 03:07 PM 03:58 PM 04:52 PM 05:47 PM 06:41 PM 01:29 PM 02:19 PM 03:08 PM 03:55 PM 04:41 PM 05:28 PM 06:16 PM 12:37 PM 01:30 PM 02:25 PM 03:23 PM 04:25 PM 05:29 PM 06:32 PM 01:32 PM

Newport, R.I.

Moonrise ---1:21 PM ---1:56 PM ---2:33 PM ---3:14 PM ---3:58 PM ---4:46 PM ---5:39 PM ---6:34 PM ---7:30 PM ---8:27 PM ---9:24 PM ---10:21 PM ---11:18 PM ----

0.31 0.17 0.05 -0.02 -0.06 4.39 4.26 4.05 3.78 3.49 3.21 2.97 0.57 0.69 0.7 0.6 0.43 0.21 -0.01 -0.22 -0.39 4.34 4.43 4.4 4.26 4.06 3.82 0.22 0.33 0.28 0.2

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

Moonset 1:21 AM 2:29 AM 3:36 AM 4:12 AM 5:16 AM 6:45 AM 7:39 AM 8:28 AM 9:10 AM 9:48 AM 10:21 AM 10:52 AM 11:21 AM 11:49 PM

66 Points East December 2014

03:11 PM 04:14 PM 05:12 PM 06:04 PM 06:52 PM 01:23 PM 01:58 PM 02:31 PM 03:06 PM 03:41 PM 04:19 PM 05:01 PM 12:20 PM 01:02 PM 01:48 PM 02:40 PM 03:39 PM 04:36 PM 05:29 PM 06:18 PM 07:06 PM 01:29 PM 02:14 PM 02:58 PM 03:41 PM 04:27 PM 05:19 PM 12:49 PM 01:47 PM 02:49 PM 03:53 PM

Dec.15 Dec.16 Dec.17 Dec.18 Dec.19 Dec.20 Dec.21 Dec.22 Dec.23 Dec.24 Dec.25 Dec.26 Dec.27 Dec.28 Dec.29 Dec.30 Dec.31

-0.08 -0.32 -0.53 -0.67 -0.71 -0.65 -0.51 -0.31 7.15 6.85 6.54 6.25 6.01 5.85 5.79 5.84 0.44 0.13 -0.19 -0.5 -0.75 -0.92 -0.99 7.86 7.67 7.39 7.05 6.74 6.52 6.42 -0.24

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

3.55 3.58 3.66 3.76 3.81 -0.07 -0.04 0.01 0.09 0.2 0.31 0.42 2.78 2.64 2.57 2.57 2.66 2.85 3.11 3.38 3.62 -0.51 -0.57 -0.56 -0.47 -0.33 -0.16 3.59 3.39 3.25 3.21

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

06:51 PM 07:50 PM 08:45 PM 09:36 PM 10:24 PM 11:10 PM 11:54 PM

6.82 6.88 6.97 7.03 7.05 7.01 6.92

07:15 PM -0.07 07:57 PM 0.16 08:40 PM 0.38 09:26 PM 0.57 10:15 PM 0.71 11:05 PM 0.78 11:57 PM 0.78

07:34 PM 08:24 PM 09:12 PM 09:59 PM 10:46 PM 11:32 PM

07:05 PM 07:56 PM 08:49 PM 09:46 PM 10:45 PM 11:45 PM

07:32 PM

5.99 6.2 6.44 6.68 6.9 7.08

-0.97 -0.85 -0.66 -0.44 -0.24 -0.1

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

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

6.43

H

09:11 PM 0.09 09:58 PM 0.0 10:40 PM -0.09 11:21 PM -0.15

L L L L

07:39 PM 08:24 PM 09:08 PM 09:53 PM 10:39 PM 11:25 PM

3.79 3.71 3.56 3.38 3.19 3.03

05:50 PM 0.5 06:46 PM 0.51 07:45 PM 0.45 08:39 PM 0.33 09:29 PM 0.15 10:15 PM -0.05 11:00 PM -0.25 11:45 PM -0.43

07:54 PM 08:44 PM 09:36 PM 10:30 PM 11:27 PM

3.8 3.9 3.94 3.93 3.89

06:20 PM -0.01 07:30 PM 0.09 08:39 PM 0.12 09:36 PM 0.09

12:15 AM 1:13 AM 2:13 AM 3:15 AM 4:18 AM 5:20 AM 6:22 AM 7:19 AM 8:11 AM 8:58 AM 9:39 AM 10:16 AM 10:51 AM 11:25 AM ---11:59 AM ---12:35 PM ---1:13 PM

12:17 PM 12:46 PM 1:18 PM 1:55 PM 2:36 PM 3:24 PM 4:20 PM 5:22 PM 6:30 PM 7:41 PM 8:52 PM 10:03 PM 11:13 PM ---12:21 AM 1:28 AM 2:33 AM

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

H H H H H

L L L L

New London, Conn.

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

04:35 AM 05:32 AM 12:15 AM 01:07 AM 01:57 AM 02:44 AM 03:29 AM 04:14 AM 04:59 AM 05:47 AM 12:15 AM 01:07 AM 02:01 AM 02:57 AM 03:53 AM 04:46 AM 05:33 AM 06:16 AM 12:43 AM 01:30 AM 02:17 AM 03:04 AM 03:53 AM 04:44 AM 05:40 AM 12:07 AM 01:04 AM 02:05 AM 03:10 AM 04:15 AM 05:15 AM

2.96 3.12 -0.08 -0.08 -0.07 -0.03 0.04 0.13 0.24 0.36 2.46 2.43 2.42 2.43 2.49 2.58 2.7 2.84 0.21 0.09 -0.03 -0.15 -0.22 -0.24 -0.21 2.72 2.76 2.78 2.81 2.87 2.93

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

11:10 AM 12:08 PM 06:22 AM 07:09 AM 07:54 AM 08:39 AM 09:24 AM 10:11 AM 10:58 AM 11:45 AM 06:38 AM 07:32 AM 08:28 AM 09:22 AM 10:15 AM 11:07 AM 11:56 AM 12:45 PM 06:56 AM 07:36 AM 08:17 AM 09:02 AM 09:49 AM 10:39 AM 11:32 AM 06:40 AM 07:43 AM 08:48 AM 09:51 AM 10:53 AM 11:52 AM

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

06:12 AM 12:49 AM 01:47 AM 02:41 AM 03:33 AM 04:21 AM 05:08 AM 05:52 AM 12:42 AM 01:25 AM 02:08 AM 02:53 AM 03:40 AM 04:28 AM 05:18 AM 06:08 AM 12:40 AM 01:30 AM 02:20 AM 03:08 AM 03:56 AM 04:43 AM 05:32 AM 12:20 AM 01:09 AM 02:01 AM 02:55 AM 03:51 AM 04:49 AM 05:50 AM 12:27 AM

10.34 -0.05 -0.04 -0.07 -0.07 -0.02 0.1 0.28 9.57 9.37 9.18 9.0 8.88 8.83 8.89 9.05 1.31 1.16 0.9 0.57 0.21 -0.14 -0.41 10.3 10.45 10.51 10.5 10.45 10.39 10.37 0.24

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

12:26 PM 07:11 AM 08:07 AM 09:00 AM 09:50 AM 10:37 AM 11:22 AM 12:05 PM 06:37 AM 07:21 AM 08:06 AM 08:53 AM 09:42 AM 10:35 AM 11:29 AM 12:23 PM 06:58 AM 07:47 AM 08:34 AM 09:21 AM 10:08 AM 10:54 AM 11:42 AM 06:21 AM 07:12 AM 08:06 AM 09:02 AM 10:01 AM 11:04 AM 12:08 PM 06:50 AM

-0.02 -0.14 3.25 3.31 3.32 3.28 3.19 3.07 2.92 2.75 0.47 0.55 0.59 0.58 0.52 0.42 0.27 0.09 2.99 3.12 3.24 3.31 3.32 3.25 3.12 -0.15 -0.09 -0.06 -0.06 -0.1 -0.15

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

Sunrise 6:54 6:55 6:56 6:57 6:58 6:59 7:00 7:01 7:02 7:02 7:03 7:04 7:05 7:06 7:06

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

04:57 PM 05:52 PM 01:04 PM 01:55 PM 02:43 PM 03:28 PM 04:12 PM 04:56 PM 05:40 PM 06:25 PM 12:34 PM 01:24 PM 02:18 PM 03:16 PM 04:13 PM 05:06 PM 05:54 PM 06:37 PM 01:31 PM 02:17 PM 03:03 PM 03:49 PM 04:36 PM 05:25 PM 06:17 PM 12:26 PM 01:23 PM 02:25 PM 03:31 PM 04:36 PM 05:36 PM

Boston, Mass. 0.08 10.61 10.88 11.09 11.2 11.19 11.06 10.83 0.52 0.8 1.08 1.34 1.55 1.65 1.62 1.43 9.32 9.69 10.13 10.6 11.03 11.39 11.61 -0.59 -0.63 -0.55 -0.38 -0.18 -0.02 0.03 10.4

DECEMBER 2014 Day

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

Sunset 4:13 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:11 4:11 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:12 4:12

PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PMDay

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

06:40 PM 01:28 PM 02:27 PM 03:21 PM 04:12 PM 04:59 PM 05:44 PM 06:27 PM 12:48 PM 01:31 PM 02:16 PM 03:03 PM 03:52 PM 04:45 PM 05:39 PM 06:33 PM 01:17 PM 02:08 PM 02:58 PM 03:46 PM 04:33 PM 05:20 PM 06:07 PM 12:31 PM 01:23 PM 02:17 PM 03:14 PM 04:14 PM 05:17 PM 06:23 PM 01:11 PM

2.53 2.52 -0.24 -0.32 -0.36 -0.34 -0.27 -0.17 -0.05 0.08 2.57 2.4 2.24 2.13 2.07 2.08 2.12 2.19 -0.1 -0.28 -0.43 -0.53 -0.56 -0.54 -0.47 2.93 2.7 2.48 2.31 2.22 2.2

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

9.85 -0.21 -0.53 -0.8 -0.95 -0.96 -0.84 -0.62 10.52 10.15 9.76 9.36 8.99 8.69 8.51 8.47 1.09 0.62 0.09 -0.45 -0.95 -1.35 -1.6 11.65 11.49 11.15 10.67 10.15 9.69 9.37 -0.04

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

11:21 PM -0.08

06:43 PM 07:30 PM 08:16 PM 09:02 PM 09:49 PM 10:37 PM 11:26 PM

L

2.52 2.53 2.53 2.53 2.52 2.5 2.48

H H H H H H H

07:12 PM 08:08 PM 09:05 PM 10:03 PM 11:00 PM 11:56 PM

2.28 2.36 2.45 2.53 2.61 2.67

-0.38 -0.28 -0.19 -0.12 -0.06 -0.02

H H H H H H

07:42 PM 08:41 PM 09:36 PM 10:27 PM 11:14 PM 11:59 PM

9.83 9.87 9.92 9.92 9.87 9.74

H H H H H H

07:27 PM 8.57 08:19 PM 8.79 09:09 PM 9.09 09:57 PM 9.43 10:44 PM 9.77 11:32 PM 10.07

H H H H H H

07:27 PM

H

07:13 PM 08:01 PM 08:49 PM 09:36 PM 10:23 PM 11:09 PM 11:56 PM

07:19 PM 08:00 PM 08:43 PM 09:30 PM 10:19 PM 11:12 PM

0.2 0.29 0.35 0.38 0.38 0.36 0.3

07:10 PM -0.31 07:52 PM 0.03 08:36 PM 0.39 09:22 PM 0.74 10:09 PM 1.03 10:58 PM 1.24 11:49 PM 1.34

06:56 PM 07:46 PM 08:37 PM 09:32 PM 10:28 PM 11:27 PM

-1.66 -1.54 -1.26 -0.86 -0.43 -0.04 9.22

L L L L L L L

L L L L L L

L L L L L L L

L L L L L L

Times for Boston, MA Dec.16 Dec.17 Dec.18 Dec.19 Dec.20 Dec.21 Dec.22 Dec.23 Dec.24 Dec.25 Dec.26 Dec.27 Dec.28 Dec.29 Dec.30 Dec.31

7:07 7:08 7:08 7:09 7:10 7:10 7:11 7:11 7:11 7:12 7:12 7:12 7:13 7:13 7:13 7:13

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

4:13 4:13 4:13 4:14 4:14 4:15 4:15 4:16 4:16 4:17 4:18 4:18 4:19 4:20 4:21 4:21

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

S U N

editor@pointseast.com


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

06:05 AM 12:44 AM 01:43 AM 02:38 AM 03:29 AM 04:17 AM 05:03 AM 05:46 AM 12:36 AM 01:18 AM 02:01 AM 02:45 AM 03:30 AM 04:18 AM 05:08 AM 05:58 AM 12:27 AM 01:17 AM 02:06 AM 02:52 AM 03:39 AM 04:25 AM 05:13 AM 12:05 AM 12:55 AM 01:47 AM 02:42 AM 03:41 AM 04:42 AM 05:45 AM 12:24 AM

9.91 0.0 -0.02 -0.06 -0.06 0.0 0.14 0.34 9.23 9.0 8.78 8.59 8.47 8.42 8.46 8.61 1.36 1.22 0.98 0.66 0.31 -0.02 -0.27 9.88 10.01 10.06 10.05 10.0 9.95 9.95 0.25

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

Portland, Maine

12:21 PM 07:06 AM 08:03 AM 08:56 AM 09:46 AM 10:32 AM 11:16 AM 11:58 AM 06:29 AM 07:12 AM 07:56 AM 08:43 AM 09:32 AM 10:25 AM 11:20 AM 12:16 PM 06:48 AM 07:36 AM 08:23 AM 09:08 AM 09:53 AM 10:39 AM 11:26 AM 06:02 AM 06:54 AM 07:49 AM 08:48 AM 09:51 AM 10:58 AM 12:06 PM 06:47 AM

0.13 10.2 10.49 10.72 10.84 10.82 10.67 10.41 0.6 0.88 1.15 1.39 1.57 1.66 1.63 1.45 8.88 9.24 9.68 10.14 10.58 10.93 11.14 -0.43 -0.46 -0.38 -0.23 -0.06 0.05 0.03 10.01

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

06:34 PM 01:25 PM 02:25 PM 03:19 PM 04:09 PM 04:55 PM 05:40 PM 06:22 PM 12:40 PM 01:22 PM 02:06 PM 02:52 PM 03:41 PM 04:33 PM 05:28 PM 06:24 PM 01:10 PM 02:00 PM 02:48 PM 03:34 PM 04:19 PM 05:04 PM 05:51 PM 12:16 PM 01:08 PM 02:03 PM 03:01 PM 04:04 PM 05:11 PM 06:19 PM 01:11 PM

9.47 -0.2 -0.55 -0.83 -0.99 -0.98 -0.84 -0.58 10.07 9.69 9.3 8.91 8.55 8.26 8.07 8.02 1.13 0.69 0.18 -0.34 -0.81 -1.19 -1.41 11.17 11.0 10.67 10.21 9.72 9.3 9.03 -0.1

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

07:39 PM 08:38 PM 09:33 PM 10:23 PM 11:09 PM 11:54 PM

9.49 9.58 9.65 9.66 9.59 9.44

H H H H H H

07:19 PM 08:10 PM 08:59 PM 09:46 PM 10:32 PM 11:18 PM

8.12 8.35 8.67 9.02 9.36 9.66

H H H H H H

07:04 PM -0.26 07:46 PM 0.1 08:28 PM 0.45 09:12 PM 0.78 09:58 PM 1.06 10:46 PM 1.26 11:37 PM 1.37

06:39 PM 07:30 PM 08:23 PM 09:19 PM 10:19 PM 11:21 PM 07:25 PM

-1.47 -1.35 -1.09 -0.73 -0.34 0.01 8.93

L L L L L L L

L L L L L L

H

Corrections for other ports

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

Massachusetts Gloucester Plymouth Scituate Provincetown Marion Woods Hole

Rhode Island Westerly Point Judith East Greenwich Bristol

Connecticut Stamford New Haven Branford Saybrook Jetty Saybrook Point Mystic Westport

Time Corrections

Height Corrections

Boston Boston Boston Boston Newport Newport

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

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

New London Newport Newport Newport

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

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

Bridgeport Bridgeport Bridgeport New London New London Boston Newport

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

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

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

d e c e m b e r New Moon

Dec. 21 www.pointseast.com

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

2 0 1 4

First Quarter

Dec. 28

Bar Harbor, Maine

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

05:44 AM 12:29 AM 01:27 AM 02:23 AM 03:14 AM 04:03 AM 04:48 AM 05:32 AM 12:14 AM 12:56 AM 01:39 AM 02:23 AM 03:09 AM 03:58 AM 04:47 AM 05:38 AM 12:14 AM 01:04 AM 01:52 AM 02:39 AM 03:25 AM 04:11 AM 04:58 AM 05:47 AM 12:34 AM 01:26 AM 02:21 AM 03:20 AM 04:21 AM 05:24 AM 12:09 AM

11.47 -0.05 -0.1 -0.16 -0.18 -0.11 0.05 0.31 10.83 10.54 10.27 10.05 9.89 9.82 9.86 10.01 1.55 1.41 1.16 0.81 0.44 0.08 -0.2 -0.37 11.76 11.8 11.76 11.68 11.61 11.59 0.31

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

12:05 PM 06:45 AM 07:43 AM 08:36 AM 09:26 AM 10:13 AM 10:57 AM 11:40 AM 06:15 AM 06:58 AM 07:43 AM 08:29 AM 09:19 AM 10:11 AM 11:05 AM 12:00 PM 06:29 AM 07:18 AM 08:05 AM 08:51 AM 09:36 AM 10:22 AM 11:09 AM 11:58 AM 06:39 AM 07:34 AM 08:33 AM 09:36 AM 10:42 AM 11:48 AM 06:26 AM

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

05:45 AM 12:38 AM 01:37 AM 02:33 AM 03:25 AM 04:14 AM 05:00 AM 05:44 AM 12:11 AM 12:54 AM 01:38 AM 02:23 AM 03:10 AM 04:00 AM 04:51 AM 05:43 AM 12:26 AM 01:19 AM 02:10 AM 02:59 AM 03:48 AM 04:35 AM 05:23 AM 06:12 AM 12:42 AM 01:33 AM 02:26 AM 03:23 AM 04:22 AM 05:23 AM 12:16 AM

19.38 -0.05 -0.19 -0.38 -0.5 -0.47 -0.27 0.1 18.91 18.49 18.06 17.66 17.33 17.14 17.11 17.29 2.27 1.97 1.48 0.88 0.24 -0.34 -0.78 -1.04 20.39 20.36 20.18 19.9 19.63 19.46 0.45

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

12:11 PM 06:45 AM 07:43 AM 08:37 AM 09:27 AM 10:14 AM 10:59 AM 11:43 AM 06:27 AM 07:10 AM 07:53 AM 08:39 AM 09:26 AM 10:17 AM 11:10 AM 12:04 PM 06:36 AM 07:27 AM 08:16 AM 09:03 AM 09:49 AM 10:36 AM 11:23 AM 12:11 PM 07:02 AM 07:54 AM 08:50 AM 09:48 AM 10:48 AM 11:51 AM 06:24 AM

0.11 11.78 12.11 12.38 12.52 12.51 12.34 12.04 0.62 0.95 1.26 1.53 1.73 1.83 1.81 1.62 10.29 10.69 11.17 11.7 12.2 12.6 12.85 12.9 -0.4 -0.32 -0.17 0.0 0.1 0.09 11.65

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

06:14 PM 01:08 PM 02:06 PM 03:00 PM 03:50 PM 04:37 PM 05:21 PM 06:04 PM 12:22 PM 01:05 PM 01:49 PM 02:35 PM 03:24 PM 04:15 PM 05:09 PM 06:04 PM 12:53 PM 01:43 PM 02:31 PM 03:17 PM 04:02 PM 04:47 PM 05:34 PM 06:22 PM 12:50 PM 01:45 PM 02:43 PM 03:46 PM 04:51 PM 05:58 PM 12:52 PM

11.05 -0.26 -0.64 -0.95 -1.12 -1.11 -0.95 -0.65 11.66 11.23 10.78 10.35 9.97 9.66 9.47 9.43 1.29 0.82 0.28 -0.28 -0.79 -1.19 -1.43 -1.48 12.73 12.38 11.9 11.39 10.96 10.68 -0.05

Eastport, Maine 0.23 19.8 20.28 20.7 20.96 21.0 20.8 20.41 0.57 1.1 1.62 2.09 2.47 2.69 2.71 2.48 17.7 18.31 19.05 19.84 20.59 21.19 21.57 21.67 -1.08 -0.92 -0.61 -0.23 0.09 0.23 19.46

M o o n Full Moon

Dec. 6

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

06:15 PM 01:13 PM 02:11 PM 03:06 PM 03:56 PM 04:43 PM 05:28 PM 06:11 PM 12:26 PM 01:10 PM 01:54 PM 02:41 PM 03:29 PM 04:21 PM 05:15 PM 06:09 PM 12:58 PM 01:51 PM 02:42 PM 03:30 PM 04:18 PM 05:05 PM 05:53 PM 06:41 PM 01:02 PM 01:55 PM 02:50 PM 03:50 PM 04:51 PM 05:55 PM 12:54 PM

18.9 -0.24 -0.8 -1.28 -1.56 -1.59 -1.38 -0.97 19.87 19.25 18.59 17.93 17.35 16.9 16.65 16.65 1.98 1.26 0.4 -0.48 -1.28 -1.91 -2.3 -2.41 21.45 20.96 20.26 19.49 18.81 18.36 0.15

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

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

07:17 PM 08:16 PM 09:10 PM 10:00 PM 10:47 PM 11:31 PM

11.11 11.23 11.33 11.36 11.27 11.08

H H H H H H

06:58 PM 07:49 PM 08:38 PM 09:24 PM 10:10 PM 10:56 PM 11:44 PM

9.56 9.84 10.21 10.63 11.03 11.37 11.62

H H H H H H H

07:02 PM 10.59

H

07:16 PM 08:14 PM 09:07 PM 09:57 PM 10:44 PM 11:28 PM

19.03 19.27 19.48 19.57 19.5 19.27

H H H H H H

07:03 PM 07:55 PM 08:44 PM 09:32 PM 10:18 PM 11:05 PM 11:53 PM

16.92 17.41 18.03 18.71 19.34 19.87 20.23

H H H H H H H

06:58 PM

18.2

H

06:46 PM -0.28 07:28 PM 0.12 08:12 PM 0.52 08:57 PM 0.89 09:43 PM 1.2 10:32 PM 1.43 11:23 PM 1.55

07:13 PM 08:07 PM 09:04 PM 10:04 PM 11:06 PM

-1.35 -1.07 -0.69 -0.28 0.07

06:53 PM -0.43 07:36 PM 0.17 08:19 PM 0.77 09:04 PM 1.33 09:51 PM 1.81 10:41 PM 2.16 11:33 PM 2.33

07:32 PM -2.23 08:24 PM -1.8 09:18 PM -1.19 10:16 PM -0.53 11:15 PM 0.06

L L L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L L L

L L L L L

P h a s e s Third Quarter

Dec. 14 Points East December 2014

67


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

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

01:43 AM 02:37 AM 03:27 AM 04:14 AM 04:57 AM 05:39 AM 12:14 AM 12:54 AM 01:34 AM 02:15 AM 02:59 AM 03:45 AM 04:35 AM 05:27 AM 12:07 AM 01:03 AM 01:58 AM 02:51 AM 03:42 AM 04:33 AM 05:24 AM 12:02 AM 12:52 AM 01:43 AM 02:37 AM 03:34 AM 04:33 AM 05:35 AM 12:23 AM 01:23 AM 02:20 AM

04:32 AM 05:28 AM 06:17 AM 07:03 AM 12:27 AM 01:10 AM 01:53 AM 02:35 AM 03:17 AM 03:58 AM 04:41 AM 12:10 AM 12:53 AM 01:41 AM 02:35 AM 03:36 AM 04:36 AM 05:32 AM 06:23 AM 12:16 AM 01:09 AM 02:01 AM 02:53 AM 03:44 AM 04:38 AM 12:05 AM 01:03 AM 02:03 AM 03:08 AM 04:14 AM 05:12 AM

M O O N

-0.03 -0.05 -0.06 -0.06 -0.03 0.03 6.7 6.64 6.57 6.49 6.4 6.33 6.31 6.35 0.69 0.55 0.31 -0.01 -0.35 -0.66 -0.89 7.58 7.7 7.69 7.58 7.38 7.17 6.99 0.19 0.25 0.22

3.83 3.91 3.96 3.96 -0.17 -0.2 -0.19 -0.13 -0.03 0.12 0.29 2.82 2.81 2.86 2.96 3.16 3.46 3.82 4.16 -0.76 -0.86 -0.86 -0.75 -0.54 -0.23 3.92 3.75 3.58 3.46 3.43 3.48

Day Jan. 1 Jan. 2 Jan. 3 Jan. 4 Jan. 5 Jan. 6 Jan. 7 Jan. 8 Jan. 9 Jan. 10 Jan. 11 Jan. 12 Jan. 13 Jan. 14

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

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

Bridgeport, Conn.

07:56 AM 08:48 AM 09:37 AM 10:22 AM 11:05 AM 11:46 AM 06:19 AM 07:00 AM 07:41 AM 08:25 AM 09:12 AM 10:03 AM 10:58 AM 11:55 AM 06:22 AM 07:16 AM 08:10 AM 09:02 AM 09:52 AM 10:42 AM 11:32 AM 06:15 AM 07:08 AM 08:03 AM 09:01 AM 10:02 AM 11:05 AM 12:09 PM 06:37 AM 07:36 AM 08:31 AM

7.32 7.36 7.37 7.34 7.26 7.12 0.11 0.22 0.35 0.49 0.62 0.7 0.72 0.62 6.49 6.74 7.06 7.41 7.74 7.99 8.1 -1.0 -0.97 -0.82 -0.59 -0.33 -0.13 -0.01 6.89 6.87 6.91

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

02:28 PM 03:19 PM 04:06 PM 04:50 PM 05:30 PM 06:09 PM 12:26 PM 01:06 PM 01:48 PM 02:31 PM 03:17 PM 04:07 PM 05:02 PM 05:59 PM 12:52 PM 01:47 PM 02:40 PM 03:31 PM 04:20 PM 05:09 PM 05:57 PM 12:22 PM 01:14 PM 02:08 PM 03:04 PM 04:04 PM 05:07 PM 06:10 PM 01:11 PM 02:09 PM 03:01 PM

-0.37 -0.47 -0.52 -0.5 -0.43 -0.32 6.95 6.74 6.5 6.24 6.0 5.8 5.68 5.68 0.41 0.1 -0.27 -0.64 -0.97 -1.21 -1.34 8.06 7.85 7.51 7.11 6.71 6.39 6.22 -0.01 -0.08 -0.17

Newport, R.I.

11:17 AM 11:59 AM 12:37 PM 01:09 PM 07:45 AM 08:25 AM 09:03 AM 09:40 AM 10:17 AM 10:55 AM 11:35 AM 05:31 AM 06:32 AM 07:45 AM 08:58 AM 09:58 AM 10:49 AM 11:36 AM 12:23 PM 07:12 AM 08:02 AM 08:52 AM 09:43 AM 10:37 AM 11:32 AM 05:46 AM 07:51 AM 09:15 AM 10:16 AM 11:06 AM 11:47 AM

Moonrise ---1:55 PM ---2:41 PM ---3:30 PM ---4:24 PM ---5:19 PM ---6:16 PM ---7:13 PM ---8:10 PM ---9:07 PM ---10:04 PM ---11:01 PM ---11:59 PM ---12:58 AM

0.13 0.07 0.01 -0.04 3.9 3.77 3.59 3.37 3.13 2.91 2.72 0.44 0.54 0.54 0.41 0.19 -0.06 -0.32 -0.54 4.41 4.54 4.52 4.37 4.11 3.81 0.09 0.29 0.32 0.29 0.23 0.17

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

Moonset 3:36 AM 4:36 AM 5:32 AM 6:22 AM 7:07 AM 7:46 AM 8:22 AM 8:53 AM 9:23 AM 9:51 AM

04:55 PM 05:48 PM 06:36 PM 07:21 PM 01:38 PM 02:09 PM 02:41 PM 03:14 PM 03:48 PM 04:23 PM 05:02 PM 12:18 PM 01:05 PM 01:57 PM 02:57 PM 04:01 PM 05:01 PM 05:56 PM 06:47 PM 01:11 PM 01:57 PM 02:41 PM 03:24 PM 04:07 PM 04:53 PM 12:29 PM 01:27 PM 02:28 PM 03:33 PM 04:35 PM 05:30 PM

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27

10:19 AM

Jan. 28

10:47 AM

Jan. 29

11:18 AM 11:51 AM

Jan. 30

68 Points East December 2014

Jan. 31

3.3 3.4 3.48 3.53 -0.08 -0.1 -0.09 -0.05 0.02 0.12 0.21 2.59 2.51 2.49 2.56 2.74 3.04 3.39 3.73 -0.72 -0.82 -0.83 -0.75 -0.58 -0.35 3.52 3.26 3.07 2.99 3.04 3.16

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

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

08:29 PM 09:20 PM 10:08 PM 10:52 PM 11:34 PM

6.54 6.63 6.69 6.73 6.73

06:47 PM -0.18 07:25 PM -0.02 08:04 PM 0.15 08:46 PM 0.33 09:30 PM 0.5 10:19 PM 0.63 11:12 PM 0.71 06:56 PM 07:52 PM 08:44 PM 09:35 PM 10:24 PM 11:13 PM

06:46 PM 07:36 PM 08:28 PM 09:23 PM 10:21 PM 11:21 PM

07:13 PM 08:10 PM 09:02 PM

5.8 6.04 6.35 6.71 7.05 7.36

-1.33 -1.18 -0.92 -0.6 -0.26 0.02 6.19 6.27 6.41

10:24 PM 0.03 11:04 PM -0.04 11:45 PM -0.11

08:04 PM 08:45 PM 09:25 PM 10:05 PM 10:46 PM 11:27 PM

3.51 3.43 3.3 3.15 3.0 2.89

05:47 PM 0.28 06:41 PM 0.3 07:41 PM 0.24 08:43 PM 0.1 09:41 PM -0.11 10:34 PM -0.35 11:25 PM -0.58

07:37 PM 08:27 PM 09:19 PM 10:12 PM 11:07 PM

05:47 PM 06:51 PM 08:08 PM 09:20 PM 10:12 PM 10:53 PM

1:59 AM 3:01 AM 4:02 AM 5:01 AM 5:57 AM 6:47 AM 7:33 AM 7:19 AM 8:14 AM 8:51 AM 9:27 AM 10:38 AM ---11:15 AM ---11:56 AM ---12:40 PM ---1:27 PM ---2:19 PM

4.0 4.17 4.23 4.19 4.08

-0.1 0.11 0.23 0.25 0.2 0.1

12:28 PM 1:12 PM 2:03 PM 3:01 PM 4:07 PM 5:18 PM 6:31 PM 7:45 PM 8:58 PM 10:09 PM 11:19 PM ---12:26 AM 1:30 AM 2:30 AM 3:27 AM 4:18 AM

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

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

H H H

L L L

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

H H H H H L L L L L L

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

06:09 AM 12:52 AM 01:42 AM 02:29 AM 03:13 AM 03:54 AM 04:36 AM 05:19 AM 06:04 AM 12:33 AM 01:22 AM 02:13 AM 03:07 AM 04:02 AM 04:55 AM 05:42 AM 12:14 AM 01:05 AM 01:56 AM 02:47 AM 03:37 AM 04:30 AM 05:25 AM 06:23 AM 12:43 AM 01:42 AM 02:46 AM 03:53 AM 04:57 AM 05:54 AM 12:36 AM

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

01:27 AM 02:24 AM 03:16 AM 04:04 AM 04:49 AM 05:32 AM 12:20 AM 12:59 AM 01:38 AM 02:18 AM 03:01 AM 03:45 AM 04:33 AM 05:23 AM 06:15 AM 12:52 AM 01:46 AM 02:39 AM 03:31 AM 04:22 AM 05:13 AM 12:01 AM 12:51 AM 01:42 AM 02:34 AM 03:29 AM 04:27 AM 05:27 AM 12:05 AM 01:06 AM 02:04 AM

2.98 -0.03 -0.02 -0.01 0.0 0.04 0.1 0.18 0.27 2.44 2.41 2.38 2.38 2.44 2.55 2.71 0.12 -0.05 -0.23 -0.4 -0.52 -0.56 -0.53 -0.43 2.91 2.85 2.78 2.73 2.72 2.72 0.09

0.31 0.37 0.37 0.36 0.37 0.42 9.37 9.31 9.24 9.14 9.05 8.99 8.98 9.07 9.28 1.14 0.85 0.42 -0.09 -0.59 -1.01 10.82 11.04 11.1 11.01 10.78 10.5 10.23 0.53 0.77 0.84

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

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

New London, Conn.

12:49 PM 06:57 AM 07:41 AM 08:24 AM 09:07 AM 09:51 AM 10:34 AM 11:18 AM 12:02 PM 06:54 AM 07:46 AM 08:40 AM 09:34 AM 10:28 AM 11:21 AM 12:14 PM 06:27 AM 07:12 AM 07:57 AM 08:43 AM 09:32 AM 10:23 AM 11:15 AM 12:08 PM 07:24 AM 08:27 AM 09:31 AM 10:33 AM 11:33 AM 12:30 PM 06:43 AM

-0.22 3.01 3.01 2.98 2.92 2.85 2.75 2.62 2.47 0.36 0.42 0.43 0.4 0.32 0.18 0.0 2.89 3.07 3.22 3.31 3.32 3.25 3.1 2.88 -0.31 -0.21 -0.13 -0.09 -0.08 -0.11 2.74

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

Boston, Mass.

07:50 AM 08:45 AM 09:36 AM 10:22 AM 11:05 AM 11:46 AM 06:14 AM 06:55 AM 07:37 AM 08:21 AM 09:07 AM 09:55 AM 10:47 AM 11:42 AM 12:38 PM 07:08 AM 08:01 AM 08:53 AM 09:44 AM 10:35 AM 11:25 AM 06:04 AM 06:56 AM 07:49 AM 08:44 AM 09:42 AM 10:43 AM 11:47 AM 06:29 AM 07:31 AM 08:28 AM

10.48 10.57 10.63 10.64 10.59 10.47 0.5 0.63 0.8 0.99 1.18 1.32 1.37 1.28 1.02 9.64 10.11 10.66 11.2 11.66 11.94 -1.29 -1.37 -1.26 -0.97 -0.58 -0.19 0.11 10.04 9.98 10.01

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

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

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

7:13 7:14 7:14 7:14 7:14 7:13 7:13 7:13 7:13 7:13 7:12 7:12 7:12 7:11 7:11

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

Sunset 4:22 4:23 4:24 4:25 4:26 4:27 4:28 4:29 4:30 4:31 4:32 4:33 4:34 4:35 4:37

PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PMDay

02:12 PM 03:08 PM 03:58 PM 04:43 PM 05:25 PM 06:05 PM 12:26 PM 01:06 PM 01:47 PM 02:30 PM 03:16 PM 04:04 PM 04:56 PM 05:51 PM 06:48 PM 01:34 PM 02:27 PM 03:19 PM 04:10 PM 04:59 PM 05:48 PM 12:16 PM 01:08 PM 02:01 PM 02:57 PM 03:56 PM 04:58 PM 06:03 PM 12:52 PM 01:55 PM 02:52 PM

2.25 -0.27 -0.31 -0.31 -0.28 -0.22 -0.14 -0.04 0.06 2.31 2.15 2.01 1.93 1.91 1.96 2.06 -0.2 -0.4 -0.58 -0.7 -0.75 -0.73 -0.64 -0.51 2.63 2.39 2.19 2.09 2.07 2.12 -0.14

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

-0.19 -0.36 -0.48 -0.53 -0.5 -0.4 10.29 10.04 9.74 9.39 9.03 8.69 8.43 8.32 8.37 0.57 0.0 -0.64 -1.25 -1.74 -2.05 12.0 11.81 11.39 10.8 10.14 9.53 9.07 0.26 0.24 0.13

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

07:16 PM 08:01 PM 08:45 PM 09:29 PM 10:14 PM 11:00 PM 11:46 PM

2.29 2.33 2.37 2.42 2.45 2.46 2.46

H H H H H H H

06:50 PM 07:35 PM 08:21 PM 09:09 PM 10:00 PM 10:53 PM 11:47 PM

2.2 2.35 2.51 2.66 2.78 2.88 2.92

H H H H H H H

07:00 PM

2.19

H

08:28 PM 09:23 PM 10:13 PM 10:58 PM 11:40 PM

9.27 9.31 9.36 9.4 9.4

H H H H H

07:44 PM 8.61 08:38 PM 9.0 09:31 PM 9.48 10:22 PM 9.98 11:11 PM 10.45

H H H H H

07:09 PM 08:12 PM 09:08 PM

H H H

07:17 PM 08:03 PM 08:51 PM 09:40 PM 10:30 PM 11:22 PM

0.16 0.24 0.3 0.33 0.31 0.24

07:44 PM -0.35 08:42 PM -0.19 09:42 PM -0.06 10:41 PM 0.03 11:40 PM 0.08

06:44 PM -0.24 07:24 PM -0.02 08:04 PM 0.24 08:46 PM 0.52 09:29 PM 0.81 10:16 PM 1.06 11:06 PM 1.23 11:58 PM 1.27

06:37 PM 07:26 PM 08:17 PM 09:10 PM 10:06 PM 11:04 PM

-2.14 -1.98 -1.6 -1.07 -0.46 0.1 8.83 8.8 8.88

L L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L L L L

L L L L L L

Times for Boston, MA

JANUARY 2015 Day

06:29 PM 01:40 PM 02:27 PM 03:10 PM 03:50 PM 04:30 PM 05:10 PM 05:50 PM 06:32 PM 12:48 PM 01:35 PM 02:28 PM 03:25 PM 04:24 PM 05:17 PM 06:05 PM 01:04 PM 01:53 PM 02:41 PM 03:28 PM 04:15 PM 05:03 PM 05:54 PM 06:48 PM 01:04 PM 02:03 PM 03:08 PM 04:16 PM 05:19 PM 06:13 PM 01:21 PM

Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

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

7:10 7:10 7:09 7:09 7:08 7:08 7:07 7:06 7:05 7:05 7:04 7:03 7:02 7:01 7:00 6:59

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

4:38 4:39 4:40 4:41 4:43 4:44 4:45 4:46 4:48 4:49 4:50 4:51 4:53 4:54 4:55 4:57

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

S U N

editor@pointseast.com


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

01:26 AM 02:23 AM 03:16 AM 04:03 AM 04:47 AM 05:28 AM 12:14 AM 12:51 AM 01:28 AM 02:07 AM 02:47 AM 03:30 AM 04:17 AM 05:07 AM 06:00 AM 12:33 AM 01:29 AM 02:23 AM 03:15 AM 04:06 AM 04:56 AM 05:48 AM 12:38 AM 01:29 AM 02:23 AM 03:20 AM 04:20 AM 05:23 AM 12:04 AM 01:08 AM 02:07 AM

0.29 0.32 0.31 0.31 0.35 0.44 9.03 8.92 8.81 8.7 8.61 8.55 8.54 8.62 8.82 1.19 0.91 0.5 0.01 -0.47 -0.87 -1.12 10.58 10.62 10.52 10.31 10.04 9.81 0.51 0.69 0.71

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

Portland, Maine

07:48 AM 08:43 AM 09:33 AM 10:18 AM 11:00 AM 11:39 AM 06:07 AM 06:46 AM 07:26 AM 08:07 AM 08:51 AM 09:38 AM 10:30 AM 11:26 AM 12:24 PM 06:54 AM 07:48 AM 08:40 AM 09:31 AM 10:21 AM 11:11 AM 12:02 PM 06:40 AM 07:35 AM 08:33 AM 09:34 AM 10:39 AM 11:47 AM 06:27 AM 07:29 AM 08:26 AM

10.12 10.23 10.3 10.3 10.22 10.06 0.56 0.71 0.88 1.06 1.22 1.35 1.4 1.32 1.07 9.17 9.64 10.19 10.73 11.18 11.46 11.5 -1.19 -1.08 -0.82 -0.49 -0.17 0.05 9.66 9.63 9.69

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

02:12 PM 03:07 PM 03:56 PM 04:41 PM 05:23 PM 06:01 PM 12:18 PM 12:56 PM 01:35 PM 02:16 PM 02:59 PM 03:47 PM 04:39 PM 05:36 PM 06:34 PM 01:21 PM 02:15 PM 03:07 PM 03:56 PM 04:45 PM 05:33 PM 06:22 PM 12:55 PM 01:49 PM 02:46 PM 03:48 PM 04:53 PM 06:02 PM 12:54 PM 01:56 PM 02:51 PM

-0.29 -0.48 -0.6 -0.63 -0.55 -0.4 9.84 9.57 9.26 8.92 8.57 8.24 7.99 7.86 7.92 0.64 0.08 -0.54 -1.12 -1.59 -1.88 -1.95 11.3 10.89 10.32 9.7 9.13 8.74 0.11 0.04 -0.09

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

08:26 PM 09:21 PM 10:10 PM 10:54 PM 11:35 PM

9.02 9.09 9.15 9.16 9.11

06:39 PM -0.19 07:15 PM 0.05 07:52 PM 0.32 08:31 PM 0.59 09:12 PM 0.85 09:56 PM 1.08 10:45 PM 1.25 11:38 PM 1.3

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

07:32 PM 8.17 08:28 PM 8.57 09:20 PM 9.07 10:10 PM 9.58 10:59 PM 10.03 11:48 PM 10.38

H H H H H H

07:09 PM 08:11 PM 09:05 PM

H H H

07:13 PM 08:05 PM 09:00 PM 09:58 PM 11:00 PM

-1.79 -1.43 -0.94 -0.38 0.13 8.56 8.58 8.69

L L L L L

Corrections for other ports

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

Massachusetts Gloucester Plymouth Scituate Provincetown Marion Woods Hole

Rhode Island Westerly Point Judith East Greenwich Bristol

Connecticut Stamford New Haven Branford Saybrook Jetty Saybrook Point Mystic Westport

Time Corrections

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

Height Corrections

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

Boston Boston Boston Boston Newport Newport

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

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

New London Newport Newport Newport

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

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

Bridgeport Bridgeport Bridgeport New London New London Boston Newport

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

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

j a n u a r y New Moon

Jan. 20 www.pointseast.com

2 0 1 5

First Quarter

Jan. 26

Bar Harbor, Maine

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

01:11 AM 02:08 AM 03:00 AM 03:48 AM 04:32 AM 05:14 AM 05:54 AM 12:30 AM 01:08 AM 01:47 AM 02:27 AM 03:11 AM 03:57 AM 04:48 AM 05:41 AM 12:20 AM 01:15 AM 02:09 AM 03:01 AM 03:51 AM 04:42 AM 05:33 AM 12:16 AM 01:08 AM 02:02 AM 02:59 AM 03:59 AM 05:02 AM 06:06 AM 12:52 AM 01:51 AM

0.34 0.36 0.34 0.34 0.39 0.49 0.65 10.58 10.43 10.29 10.16 10.07 10.04 10.1 10.3 1.53 1.23 0.77 0.21 -0.34 -0.8 -1.09 12.49 12.52 12.37 12.1 11.78 11.49 11.31 0.86 0.87

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

07:27 AM 08:22 AM 09:12 AM 09:58 AM 10:41 AM 11:21 AM 12:00 PM 06:33 AM 07:12 AM 07:54 AM 08:37 AM 09:25 AM 10:16 AM 11:11 AM 12:08 PM 06:36 AM 07:30 AM 08:22 AM 09:13 AM 10:03 AM 10:53 AM 11:44 AM 06:25 AM 07:20 AM 08:17 AM 09:18 AM 10:22 AM 11:28 AM 12:33 PM 07:08 AM 08:05 AM

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

01:18 AM 02:15 AM 03:08 AM 03:57 AM 04:42 AM 05:24 AM 06:05 AM 12:29 AM 01:09 AM 01:50 AM 02:33 AM 03:19 AM 04:07 AM 04:59 AM 05:53 AM 12:40 AM 01:36 AM 02:31 AM 03:23 AM 04:14 AM 05:04 AM 05:55 AM 12:24 AM 01:15 AM 02:07 AM 03:02 AM 04:00 AM 05:00 AM 06:02 AM 12:56 AM 01:55 AM

0.49 0.46 0.36 0.29 0.3 0.43 0.64 18.48 18.26 18.01 17.75 17.52 17.37 17.38 17.62 2.12 1.6 0.82 -0.09 -0.98 -1.71 -2.17 21.42 21.39 21.05 20.5 19.85 19.26 18.87 1.28 1.29

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

07:25 AM 08:20 AM 09:11 AM 09:58 AM 10:42 AM 11:24 AM 12:04 PM 06:44 AM 07:25 AM 08:06 AM 08:50 AM 09:37 AM 10:28 AM 11:22 AM 12:18 PM 06:48 AM 07:42 AM 08:35 AM 09:26 AM 10:16 AM 11:05 AM 11:55 AM 06:45 AM 07:37 AM 08:31 AM 09:27 AM 10:26 AM 11:28 AM 12:32 PM 07:04 AM 08:01 AM

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

01:52 PM 02:47 PM 03:36 PM 04:22 PM 05:04 PM 05:43 PM 06:21 PM 12:39 PM 01:18 PM 01:59 PM 02:42 PM 03:29 PM 04:21 PM 05:16 PM 06:14 PM 01:04 PM 01:58 PM 02:50 PM 03:39 PM 04:28 PM 05:16 PM 06:05 PM 12:36 PM 01:30 PM 02:27 PM 03:28 PM 04:32 PM 05:39 PM 06:44 PM 01:34 PM 02:30 PM

-0.25 -0.46 -0.6 -0.63 -0.56 -0.38 -0.14 11.21 10.86 10.48 10.1 9.75 9.48 9.35 9.43 0.88 0.28 -0.4 -1.05 -1.57 -1.89 -1.97 13.2 12.76 12.14 11.46 10.85 10.41 10.21 0.21 0.05

Eastport, Maine

M o o n Full Moon

Jan. 4

11.77 11.91 12.01 12.02 11.94 11.77 11.52 0.84 1.05 1.27 1.46 1.61 1.68 1.6 1.34 10.67 11.2 11.82 12.45 12.99 13.32 13.4 -1.17 -1.05 -0.77 -0.41 -0.05 0.2 0.28 11.28 11.36

19.63 19.85 20.04 20.14 20.1 19.93 19.63 0.92 1.24 1.59 1.92 2.21 2.38 2.33 2.0 18.15 18.94 19.89 20.86 21.69 22.25 22.43 -2.3 -2.09 -1.59 -0.9 -0.19 0.38 0.66 18.76 18.89

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

01:54 PM 02:50 PM 03:40 PM 04:26 PM 05:09 PM 05:50 PM 06:29 PM 12:44 PM 01:25 PM 02:07 PM 02:52 PM 03:40 PM 04:31 PM 05:26 PM 06:22 PM 01:15 PM 02:11 PM 03:04 PM 03:55 PM 04:45 PM 05:34 PM 06:24 PM 12:46 PM 01:38 PM 02:32 PM 03:30 PM 04:30 PM 05:33 PM 06:37 PM 01:34 PM 02:31 PM

-0.12 -0.45 -0.71 -0.83 -0.79 -0.6 -0.3 19.22 18.73 18.19 17.62 17.09 16.69 16.53 16.68 1.34 0.41 -0.65 -1.69 -2.55 -3.11 -3.29 22.21 21.6 20.69 19.65 18.66 17.9 17.51 0.63 0.38

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

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

08:02 PM 08:57 PM 09:46 PM 10:31 PM 11:13 PM 11:52 PM

10.69 10.78 10.86 10.87 10.82 10.71

H H H H H H

07:12 PM 08:07 PM 08:58 PM 09:48 PM 10:37 PM 11:26 PM

9.72 10.19 10.77 11.36 11.89 12.28

H H H H H H

07:46 PM 10.22 08:41 PM 10.36

H H

07:57 PM 08:52 PM 09:41 PM 10:27 PM 11:09 PM 11:50 PM

18.34 18.51 18.67 18.76 18.75 18.66

H H H H H H

07:19 PM 08:13 PM 09:06 PM 09:56 PM 10:45 PM 11:34 PM

17.17 17.92 18.84 19.76 20.56 21.14

H H H H H H

07:38 PM 17.49 08:34 PM 17.7

H H

06:59 PM 07:37 PM 08:17 PM 08:58 PM 09:43 PM 10:32 PM 11:25 PM

0.14 0.46 0.78 1.09 1.37 1.57 1.64

06:56 PM -1.8 07:49 PM -1.41 08:44 PM -0.87 09:42 PM -0.27 10:44 PM 0.28 11:48 PM 0.67

07:08 PM 07:48 PM 08:29 PM 09:13 PM 09:59 PM 10:50 PM 11:44 PM

07:13 PM 08:05 PM 08:58 PM 09:54 PM 10:52 PM 11:54 PM

0.09 0.53 1.0 1.49 1.92 2.24 2.33

-3.07 -2.49 -1.64 -0.66 0.26 0.94

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P h a s e s Third Quarter

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Photos by Pamela Mormino

The author curls up on a cold morning off North Carolina. Hooper Light at St. Michaels. Tabby (an ancient coast concrete) ruins on the South Carolina coast.

ICW, continued from Page 47 on how to navigate Lockwood’s Foley and Shallotte Inlet, and we had no problems at those spots. It was tense going through the Rock Pile before Myrtle Beach, but worth it as we opened up to the beautiful Myrtle Beach area. As we sat in an anchorage in Prince Creek, S.C., we reviewed our course for the next day. We had to be creative with how we were going to negotiate the low water around McClellanville, as we had to approach it at low tide. After all of our planning and heartburn, we got up the next day to calm waters and the warmest day we’d had for a while – and a full moon. Mat suggested we go outside into the ocean instead of going down the ICW. Great idea, but we had to travel overnight to get to an inlet we would enter in the daylight. That meant going from our anchorage in South Carolina to Savannah, through the night, in the dark, just us and all the warm clothes I could find. My layers included wind pants, fleece pants, corduroy pants, long underwear and my winter coat, hoodie sweatshirt, long underwear shirt and … well, you know. Not to forget winter hat and gloves and hand warmers. Those who know me well know sailing at night is not on the top of my list unless the list is of things I never want to do. So 200 miles and 30 hours later, we arrived at the marina in Savannah – not a moment too soon for me. All in all it was okay for most of the time. The moon kept us in some light for most of the night; however, not all night. It was more than just a little bit spooky. We also tried to see if we had radio contact, and it appeared 72 Points East December 2014

that we didn’t. This was the scariest situation for me (yoga breath, yoga breath), so we moved closer to shore to maintain radio contact. And we sat out hurricane Sandy in Savannah, which didn’t get anything but a bit of wind. Being on the water early means we leave when it is sometimes still in the 40s. Burrrr! This was unexpected since we did the last trip almost every day in shorts. Our next big stop was St. Simons Island, Ga. Daylight savings time ended, and we now could leave earlier, but we had to be settled at night by 5 p.m. or so. So many details to keep track of. We sailed in the ocean again, from St. Simons Sound to the St. Mary’s River as we entered Florida, but this time we did it all in daylight. It was great to get through South Carolina and Georgia unscathed. Avoiding the shallows in both states was the key. And we saw tons of dolphin and lots of shrimpboats. We spent a few days in St. Augustine, one of our favorite ports. The city is so steeped in history, and it is beautiful as well. A trip out to San Sebastian winery for wine was in order as well as a visit to the Whetstone chocolate factory. Port wine and dark chocolate: Now that’s relaxation. We decided to leave the boat in Titusville, Fla. while we flew home for the holidays. Look forward to Part 2 of Just Ducky’s adventure in the Midwinter 2015 issue. Pam and her husband Mat took up sailing after their kids left the nest in 1991. Their first sailing was in Chesapeake Bay. After moving to New England, they sailed out of Groton and Westbrook, Conn., and their present home port of Mystic. editor@pointseast.com


PASSAGES, continued from Page 65 traveling together. Mr. Mullins was the owner and operator of Mullins Towing Service, Inc. until his retirement. He proudly served in The United States Army during the Korean War.

James Joseph Miles 78, Park City, Utah

The skier, sailor, golfer, sports fan, and consummate family man died at home, surrounded by his wife and children on Sept. 26. When it came to his career, Jim’s choices were charmed. The National Broadcasting Company, in Rockefeller Center, was where he met his wife Susan. They both worked in television production, where Jim was associate producer of “Concentration” 10 years. In 1970, he joined Ziff-Davis Publishing Company and began a career in advertising sales, the first 10 years with “Skiing” magazine, followed by 16 more with “Yachting.” Both life-style sports became his passions, and his wife and children lived and loved his work/play life as much as he did. During the “Skiing” years, the family resided in Westbrook, Conn., then relocated for “Yachting” to Newport, R.I., where they were regulars in the sailing community. Among his proudest moments was becoming an honorary member of Ida Lewis Yacht Club for the length of his volunteer service. Jim and Susan always planned for a post-retirement winter as ski bums in a western mountain town. Park City was the inspired choice in 1996, when Jim’s first bout with cancer prompted the couple to do it sooner rather than later. After seven years of winters in the mountains and summers by the ocean, the couple moved full-time to Park City. For many years, Jim headed the race committee for the

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Park City Sailing Association’s Tuesday-night Laser races, and, in Auckland, New Zealand, he served on the race team running the 1999-2000 America’s Cup challenger series for the New York Yacht Club.

Hugh P. Chandler 83, Boston, Mass.

Dr. Chandler passed away on Oct. 9. He was a distinguished orthopedic surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital from 1964-1998. Forty years ago, Hugh and his wife, Betsy, took up sailing, and they owned a series of six boats. They began racing, and competed in events from Canada to Key West, earning many victories. Hugh’s expert seamanship and gentlemanly competitiveness won him the admiration and respect of his fellow sailors. When not sailing, Hugh and Betsy shared a passion for skiing. Hugh also enjoyed building and flying finely crafted radio-controlled model airplanes, biking, scuba diving, running (including four marathons), and playing tennis. He skied well into his seventies and sailed until the end.

Elizabeth “Betty” Robinson 99, Matunuck Hills, R.I.

Betty passed away, surrounded by family and friends, on Oct. 17. She and her late husband Knight Dexter Robinson were avid S-boat racers in Narragansett Bay, and she was active in Rhode Island Yacht Club affairs. She graduated in Interior Design from the Rhode Island School of Design and consulted on various projects with her husband, a partner in the architectural firm of Robinson, Green and Beretta. Among many other affiliations, she was the oldest member of the Willow Dell Beach Club.

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

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

editor@pointseast.com


Sargent vill e: Eggemoggin Country Store, El El Frijoles. St. G eorge: Harbormaster Scarborough: Seal Harbor Y.C. Seal Harbor: Seal Harbor Yacht Club Searsport : Hamilton Marine. South Bristol: Bittersweet Landing Boatyard, Coveside Marine, Gamage Shipyard, Harborside Café, Osier’s Wharf. South Freeport: Brewer’s South Freeport Marine, Casco Bay Yacht Exchange, DiMillo’s South Freeport, Harraseeket Y.C., Strouts Point Wharf Co., Waterman Marine. South Harpswell : Dolphin Marina, Finestkind Boatyard, Ship to Shore Store South Port land: Aspasia Marina, Bluenose Yacht Sales, Centerboard Yacht Club, Joe’s Boathouse Restaurant, Port Harbor Marine, Reo Marine, Salt Water Grille, South Port Marine, Sunset Marina. Southwest H arbor: Acadia Sails, Great Harbor Marina, Hamilton Marine, Hinckley Yacht Charters, MDI Community Sailing Center, Pettegrow’s, Sawyer’s Market, Southwest HarborTremont CofC, West Marine, Wilbur Yachts. Spruce Head: Spruce Head Marine. Stockton Spri ngs: Russell’s Marine. Stoni ngton: Billings Diesel & Marine, Fisherman’s Friend, Inn on the Harbor, Island Fishing Gear & Auto Parts, Shepard’s Select Properties. Sul livan: Flanders Bay Boats. Sunset : Deer Isle Y.C. Surry: Wesmac. Swan’s Isl and: Carrying Place Market Tenants Harbor: East Wind Inn, Pond House Gallery and Framing, Tenants Harbor General Store. Thomaston: Jeff’s Marine, Lyman-Morse Boatbuilding, Slipway. Turner: Pompodora’s Italian Bistro. Vinalhaven: Vinal’s Newsstand, Vinalhaven Store. Wal doboro: Stetson & Pinkham. Wayne: Androscoggin Yacht Club, Wayne General Store. Well s: Webhannet River Boat Yard. West Boot hbay Harbor: Blake’s Boatyard. West Sout hport: Boothbay Region Boatyard, Southport General Store. Windham: Richardson’s Boat Yard. Winter H ar bor: Winter Harbor 5 & 10. Winterpor t: Winterport Marine. Wiscasset: Market Place Café, Wiscasset Yacht Club. Woolwi ch: BFC Marine, Scandia Yacht Sales, Shelter Institute. Yarmout h: Bayview Rigging & Sails, East Coast Yacht Sales, Landing Boat Supply, Maine Sailing Partners, Royal River Boatyard, Royal River Grillehouse, Yankee Marina & Boatyard, Yarmouth Boatyard. York: Agamenticus Yacht Club, Stage Neck Inn, Woods to Goods, York Harbor Marine Service. N EW H AMPSH IRE Dover: Dover Marine. Dover Poi nt : Little Bay Marina. East Rochester: Surfside Boats. Gi lford: Fay’s Boat Yard, Winnipesaukee Yacht Club. Greenl and: Sailmaking Support Systems. Hampton: Hampton Harbor State Marina, Hampton River Boat Club. Manchester: Massabesic Yacht Club, Sandy’s Variety.

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New Castle: Kittery Point Yacht Club, Portsmouth Yacht Club, Wentworth-By-The-Sea Marina. Newi ngton: Great Bay Marine, Port sm outh: Gundalow Company, New England Marine and Industrial, Northeast Yachts (Witch Cove Marina), West Marine. Seabrook: West Marine. Tuft onboro: Tuftonboro General Store. MASSACHU SETTS Amesbury: Larry’s Marina, Lowell’s Boat Shop. Barnstable: Coast Guard Heritage Museum at the Trayser, Millway Marina. Beverly: Al’s Bait & Tackle, Bartlett Boat Service, Beverly Point Marina, Jubilee Yacht Club. Boston: Black Rock Sailing School, Boston Harbor Islands Moorings, Boston Sailing Center, Boston Yacht Haven, Columbia Yacht Club, The Marina at Rowes Wharf, Waterboat Marina. Bourne: Taylor’s Point Marina Brai nt ree: West Marine. Buzzards Bay: Dick’s Marine, Onset Bay Marina. Cataumet: Kingman Marine, Parker’s Boat Yard. Charlestown: Constitution Marina, Shipyard Quarters Marina. Chatham : Ryders Cove Marina, Stage Harbor Marine. Chelsea: The Marina at Admiral’s Hill. Cohasset: Cohasset Y.C. Cotuit : Peck’s Boats. Cutt yhunk: Cuttyhunk Town Marina. Danvers: Danversport Yacht Club, Liberty Marina, West Marine. Dedham: West Marine. Di ghton: Shaw’s Boat Yard. Dorchest er: Port Norfolk Yacht Club, Savin Hill Yacht Club. Duxbury: Bayside Marine. East Boston: Boston Harbor Shipyard & Marina, Orient Heights Yacht Club. East Dennis: Dennis Yacht Club, North Side Marina. Edgartown: Boat Safe Martha’s Vineyard, Edgartown Moorings, Harborside Inn. Essex: Flying Dragon Antiques, Perkins Marine. Fai rhaven: Fairhaven Shipyard, West Marine. Fal l R iver: Marine Consignment and Supply Fal mouth: East Marine, Falmouth Ace Hardware, Falmouth Harbor Town Marina, Falmouth Marine, MacDougall’s Cape Cod Marine Service, West Marine. Gl oucest er: Beacon Marine Basin, Brown’s Yacht Yard, Cape Ann’s Marina Resort, Enos Marine, Three Lanterns Ship Supply. Green Harbor: Green Harbor Bait & Tackle, Green Harbor Marina. Harw ich Port: Allen Harbor Marine Service, Cranberry Liquors, Saquatucket Municipal Marina. Hi ngham: 3A Marine Sales, Eastern Yacht Sales, Hingham Shipyard Marinas, Hingham Yacht Club. Hyanni s: Hyannis Marina, West Marine. Ipswi ch: Ipswich Bay Yacht Club. Manchester: Manchester Marine, Manchester Yacht Club. Marblehead: Boston Yacht Club, Corinthian Yacht Club, Eastern Yacht Club, Marblehead Yacht Club, The Forepeak, West Marine. Marion: Barden’s Boat Yard, Beverly Yacht Club, Burr Bros. Boats, Harding Sails, New Wave Yachts. Marshf ield: Marshfield Y.C. Marston’s Mi ll s: Peck’s Boats.

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Mattapoi set t: Mattapoisett Boatyard. Nantucket: Glyns Marine, Nantucket Boat Basin, Town Pier Marina. New Bedford: Bayline Boatyard and Transportation, C.E. Beckman, Cutty Hunk Launch, Hercules Fishing Gear, Lyndon’s, Niemiec Marine, New Bedford Visitors Center, Pope’s Island Marina, SK Marine Electronics, Skip’s Marine. Newburyport : Merri-Mar Yacht Basin, Newburyport Boat Basin, Newburyport Harbor Marina, Newburyport Yacht Club, North End Boat Club, Riverside Café, The Boatworks, Windward Yacht Yard. North Falmouth: Brewer Fiddler’s Cove Marina. North Weymouth: Tern Harbor Marina. Oak Bluff s: Dockside Marketplace. Onset : Point Independence Yacht Club. Orl eans: Nauset Marine. Ostervil le: Crosby Yacht Yard, Oyster Harbors Marine Service. Plymouth: Brewer’s Plymouth Marine, Plymouth Yacht Club, West Marine. Pocasset: Little Bay Boatworks Provi ncetown: Harbormaster. Quincy: Captain’s Cove Marina, Marina Bay, Nonna’s Kitchen, POSH, Squantum Yacht Club, Wollaston Yacht Club. Rockport: Sandy Bay Yacht Club. Sal em: Brewer’s Hawthorne Cove Marina, Fred J. Dion Yacht Yard, H&H Propeller Shop, J&W Marine, Palmer’s Cove Yacht Club, Pickering Wharf Marina, Salem Water Taxi, Winter Island Yacht Yard. Sal isbury: Bridge Marina, Cross Roads Bait & Tackle, Riverfront Marine Sports, Withum Sailmakers. Sandwich: Sandwich Marina, Sandwich Ship Supply. Sci tuat e: A to Z Boatworks, Cole Parkway Municipal Marina, Front Street Book Shop, J-Way Enterprises, Satuit Boat Club, Scituate Harbor Marina, Scituate Harbor Y.C. Seekonk: E&B Marine, West Marine. Somerset: Auclair’s Market. South Dart mouth: Cape Yachts, Davis & Tripp Boatyard, Doyle Sails, New Bedford Y.C. Vineyard H aven: Owen Park Town Dock, Vineyard Haven Marina. Wat ert ow n: Watertown Yacht Club. Wareham: Zecco Marine. Well fleet: Bay Sails Marine, Town of Wellfleet Marina, Wellfleet Marine Corp. West Barnstable: Northside Village Liquor Store. West D ennis: Bass River Marina. Westport: F.L.Tripp & Sons, Osprey Sea Kayak Adventures, Westport Marine, Westport Y.C. Weymout h: Monahan’s Marine, Tern Harbor Marina. Winthrop: Cottage Park Y.C., Cove Convenience, Crystal Cove Marina, Pleasant Park Y.C., Ward Marine, Winthrop Harbormaster’s Office, Winthrop Lodge of Elks, Winthrop Y.C., Woodside Ace Hardware. Wobur n: E&B Marine, West Marine. Woods Hole: Woods Hole Marina. Yarmout h: Arborvitae Woodworking. RHO DE ISLAND Barri ngton: Barrington Y.C., Brewer Cove Haven Marina, Lavin’s Marina, Stanley’s Boat Yard, Striper Marina. Block I sland: Ballard’s Inn, Block Island Boat Basin, Block Is-

76 Points East December 2014

land Marina, Champlin’s, Payne’s New Harbor Dock. Bristol: All Paint, Bristol Bagel Works, Bristol Marine, Bristol Yacht Club, Hall Spars & Rigging, Herreshoff Marine Museum, Jamestown Distributors, Quantum Thurston Sails, Superior Marine. Central Fall s: Twin City Marine. Charlestown: Ocean House Marina. Cranston: Port Edgewood Marina, Rhode Island Yacht Club. East Greenwi ch: Anderson’s Ski & Dive Center, East Greenwich Yacht Club, Norton’s Shipyard & Marina, West Marine. East Providence: East Providence Yacht Club. Jamestow n: Conanicut Marine Supply, Clark Boat Yard, Dutch Harbor Boatyard. Middletown: West Marine Narragansett: Buster Krabs, West Marine. Newport: Brewer Street Boatworks, Casey’s Marina, Goat Island Marina, IYRS, Long Wharf Marina, Museum of Yachting, New York Yacht Club, Newport Harbor Hotel & Marina, Newport Maritime Center, Newport Nautical Supply, Newport Visitor Information Center, Newport Yacht Club, NV-Charts, Old Port Marine Services, Sail Newport, Seamen’s Church Institute, Team One, The Newport Shipyard, West Wind Marina. North Kingstow n: Allen Harbor Marina, Johnson’s Boatyard, RI Mooring Services. Port sm outh: Brewer Sakonnet Marina, East Passage Yachting Center, Eastern Yacht Sales, Hinckley Yacht Services, Ship’s Store and Rigging, The Melville Grill. Ri versi de: Bullock’s Cove Marina. Ti vert on: Don’s Marine, Life Raft & Survival Equipment, Ocean Options, Standish Boat Yard. Wakefi el d: Point Jude Boats, Point Judith Marina, Point Judith Yacht Club, Point View Marina, Ram Point Marina, Silver Spring Marine, Snug Harbor Marine, Stone Cove Marina. Warr en: Country Club Laundry, Warren River Boatworks. Warw ick: Apponaug Harbor Marina, Bay Marina, Brewer Yacht Yard at Cowesett, Greenwich Bay Marina, Pettis Boat Yard, Ray’s Bait Shop, Warwick Cove Marina. Wickford: Brewer Wickford Cove Marina, Johnson’s Boatyard, Marine Consignment of Wickford, Pleasant Street Wharf, Wickford Marina, Wickford Shipyard, Wickford Yacht Club. CON NECTICU T Branford: Birbarie Marine, Branford River Marina, Branford Yacht Club, Brewer Bruce & Johnson’s Marina, Dutch Wharf Boat Yard, Indian Neck Yacht Club, Pine Orchard Yacht Club, West Marine. Chester: Castle Marina, Chester Point Marina, Hays Haven Marina, Middlesex Yacht Club. Cl inton: Cedar Island Marina, Connecticut Marine One, Harborside Marina, Old Harbor Marina, Port Clinton Marina, Riverside Basin Marina. Cos C ob: Palmer Point Marina. Dari en: E&B Marine, Noroton Yacht Club. Deep River: Brewer Deep River Marina. East Haddam: Andrews Marina East Norwalk: Rex Marine. Essex: Brewer Dauntless Shipyard, Boatique, Conn. River Marine Museum, Essex Corinthian Yacht Club, Essex Island Marina, Essex Yacht Club. Fai rfield: J. Russell Jinishian Gallery. Farm ingt on: Pattaconk Yacht Club.

editor@pointseast.com


Greenw ich: Beacon Point Marine. Groton: Pine Island Marina, Shennecossett Yacht Club, Thames View Marina. Guil ford: Brown’s Boat Yard, Guilford Boat Yard, Harbormaster. Lyme: Cove Landing Marine. Mil ford: Milford Boat Works, Milford Landing, Milford Yacht Club, Port Milford. Mystic: Brewer Yacht Yard, Fort Rachel Marina, Gwenmor Marina, Mason Island Yacht Club, Mystic Point Marina, Mystic River Yacht Club, Mystic Seaport Museum Store, Mystic Shipyard, West Marine. New Haven: City Point Yacht Club, Fairclough Sails, Oyster Point Marina. New London: Crocker’s Boatyard, Ferry Slip Dockominium Assoc., Hannah Macs Bait and Tackle, Hellier Yacht Sales, Thames Shipyard and Ferry, Thames Yacht Club, Thamesport Marina. Ni anti c: Boats Inc., Harbor Hill Marina, Marine Consignment of Mystic, Port Niantic Marina, Three Belles Marina. Noank: Brower’s Cove Marina, Hood Sails, Noank Village Boatyard, Palmers Cove Marina, Ram Island Yacht Club, Spicer’s. Norw al k: Norwest Marine, Rex Marine, Total Marine, West Marine. Norw ich: The Marina at American Wharf. Ol d Lyme: Old Lyme Marina. Ol d Saybrook: Brewer’s Ferry Point Marina, Harbor Hill Marina & Inn, Harbor One Marina, Island Cove Marina, Maritime Education Network, Oak Leaf Marina, Ocean Performance, Ragged Rock Marina, Saybrook Point Marina, West Marine. Port land: J & S Marine Services, Yankee Boat Yard & Marina. Ri versi de: Riverside Yacht Club. Rowayton: All Seasons Marina, Wilson Cove Marina. South Norw al k: Norwalk Yacht Club, Rex Marine Center, Surfside 3 Marina. Stam ford: Czescik Marina, Halloween Yacht Club, Hathaway Reiser Rigging, Landfall Navigation, Ponas Yacht Club, Stamford Landing Marina, Stamford Yacht Club, West Marine. Stoni ngton: Dodson Boat Yard, Dog Watch Café, Madwanuck Yacht Club, Stonington Harbor Yacht Club. Stratford: Brewer Stratford Marina, Brown’s Boat Works, Housatonic Marine Services, West Marine. Wat erf or d: Defender Industries. Westbrook: Atlantic Outboard, Bill’s Seafood, Brewer Pilots Point Marina, Duck Island Yacht Club, Pier 76 Marina, Sound Boatworks. West H aven: West Cove Marina. Westport: Cedar Point Yacht Club. N EW YO RK Ci ty Isl and: Harlem Yacht Club Halesit e: Ketewomoke Yacht Club Mamaroneck: McMichael Yacht Brokers New Rochell e: Huguenot Yacht Club New York: New York Nautical Ossining: Shattemuc Yacht Club Rockaw ay: Hewlett Point Yacht Club Sag H arbor: Sag Harbor Yacht Club. West I sl ip: West Marine. FLORI DA

YANKEE MARINA & BOATYARD places integrity as its highest priority in serving customers. When partnering with you to maintain, repair or improve your boat, we are committed to providing solid technical consultation and maintaining an ongoing dialogue to ensure that we meet your needs, budget and scheduling to the best of our ability. In achieving this goal, our staff views their responsibility personally for ensuring your safety and satisfaction. Through this approach, we build the enduring, trusting relationships that enable our customers to rely on us year after year. Yankee Marina & Boatyard has ABYC, NMEA, FCC and manufacturer-certified technicians on staff, providing the highest quality service in a dedicated, heated workspace. Our Marine Mechanics, Carpenters, Marine Electronic Specialists, Riggers and Painters have years of hands-on experience servicing vessels of all types, for customers from all over the world.

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“It's been a pleasure working with Lynn on our advertising” Deborah A. Delp, President

Follow link to view other Hats Off Key West: Key West Community Sailing Center.

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http://www.pointseast.com/about/distribute.shtml Points East December 2014

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LAST

WORD/Dick

K la in

Photo by Dick Klain

South of Broad, in Charleston, S.C., is still out of reach for all but the aristocracy and nouveau-riche, but those homes can be enjoyed from the sidewalks on quiet streets.

Why I am going back ’m going back. I really don’t know why, but, like most of us, I frequently cruise to places I have already visited. Now I am headed back down the ditch, the Intracoastal Waterway, leaving my beloved New England to greet the chill of yet another predicted snowy winter in the Northeast without me. Just what is it that draws me away? Some may think that it is to escape all that snow and cold and shoveling. As a lifelong Mainiac, I enjoy the winter months. Last winter, as my PDQ 32 trimaran, Moxie Cat, was on the hard at Royal River Boatyard, I would dutifully go down after every snowstorm to check on her. On the way home I would stop off for cross-country skiing in Cumberland. It doesn’t get much better than that after a snow. I also enjoyed a trip to Maine Huts and Trails, and later to Baxter State Park. Skiing across Millinocket Lake is a tremendous high for me. All this is to say that I love the Pine Tree State in the dead of winter as much as I do at any other season. So, again, why am I drawn away for a good part of the late-fall, winter and early spring? I enjoy the trip, both going and returning. It’s a great excuse to visit the Isles of Shoals after and before the summer crowds. The Cape Ann Light Station on

I

78 Points East December 2014

Thacher Island, Plymouth, the Cape Cod Canal, Buzzard’s Bay: I get to see these places since I really don’t go south much in the summer anymore. Crossing from Block Island to Norfolk is always exciting. Trust your boat and the work you have put into it, and it will pay you back with performance and safety. I enjoy my crew. These are the moments that we all long for in our sailor’s hearts: setting up a watch schedule, checking our progress, watch on/watch off, the cobalt blue of the ocean, the sound of wind and wave and nothing else, stars that go on forever, all the joys of being offshore, but really not so far off. The light on the horizon changes from New York City to the New Jersey shore to Cape Henry Light. Then, bingo, you are over the bridge-tunnel and into the Chesapeake. The naval colossus of Norfolk brings the first bridges and the beginning of the Intracoastal Waterway, the ICW. The water has gone from blue to coffee, from salt to brackish. Heading through the Dismal Swamp, the water in my wake is brown and fresh. I begin to notice more birdlife. Anhingas outnumber cormorants. Large wading birds abound. The sounds – and especially the smells – let me know that I am not in Maine anymore. From Elizabeth City, I will head on up to New Bern to editor@pointseast.com


visit relatives to reestablish the human connection. Following the ICW through the Alligator/Pungo River Canal then to Beaufort, N.C., I now have another decision – go outside or follow the ditch to Charleston. Charleston is a must-see for me – always a stop that enriches my love of history. A city built by blacks who are only now, after three and a half centuries, beginning to share in the fruits of their ancestors forced labor and enslavement. South of Broad is still out of reach for all but the aristocracy and nouveau riche, but those homes and the perfumes of their gardens can be enjoyed from the sidewalks on quiet streets. The damage from Hurricane Hugo has been absorbed by this city as so many other storms and earthquakes have been absorbed. Each one contributes to the heritage of the people of this city “where the Cooper and Ashley rivers come together to form the Atlantic Ocean.” The War of Northern Aggression, which started in Charleston, has not been forgotten at all, but it is no longer viewed as the end of this city’s history. Charleston is a first class destination with terrific restaurants and museums, an award-winning city marina, wonderful tourist services, safe and easy walking, and friendly people. It is also an education and a medical center. I must return to Charleston for I am in love with it. Heading south always on the way, my next stop is Savannah. Savannah is right up there with Charleston, but more difficult to get to, being seven miles upriver from the ICW. I still haven’t figured out how to get there enjoyably. I must stop in Savannah to see the city squares, River Street, and, for me, an ice cream sundae at Leopold’s Ice Cream Parlor. I may have to wait in line at Leopold’s, but it is always worth the wait. After having my dessert first, then I will meander over to The Pirates House for a wonderful southern meal. My daughter fell in love with shrimp and grits there. Imagine that, a Yankee woman finding real joy in the most commonly delicious southern food. Savannah has enough to impress anyone. After the meal, a walk around Forsyth Park will aid digestion and reacquaint the visitor with this southern city that was saved from the hell of Sherman’s March to the Sea by the astute capitulation of the city fathers when faced with that Union army. Savannah is the city of “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.” It is still creating a rich and varied history in the 21st century. My final destination this year will be Brunswick, Ga. I am very much taken with this small mill town and its excellent marina. Within a few miles of Florida, it is to me more authentic than much of the Sunshine State. It was once used as a hurricane hole by the Navy. The people are friendly. The restaurants and bars are reasonable. The streets are wide enough for www.pointseast.com

me to feel safe while riding around on my bicycle. Both Jekyll Island and Cumberland Island are within an easy day’s cruise. In fact, you could even bicycle to Jekyll Island, though with golf clubs that might not be a good idea. Yep, it’s that Jekyll Island that was once the playground of the rich and famous, whose descendants let the State of Georgia take over their mansions, croquet lawns, and golf courses. Jekyll’s marina may also be a destination, if only to play some golf. When cruising I don’t carry the proper dress for croquet. Cumberland Island National Seashore is a true treasure. Because of the generosity, sometimes forced, of the Carnegie and Coca Cola heirs, this island is open to all comers who might have a boat. Camping on the island is allowed, but only in the campgrounds by reservation. This jewel is administered by the National Park Service. If you are expecting an Acadia National Park experience, you will be disappointed. There are no cars for hire, let alone an Ocean Drive. There are numerous trails through this barrier island to the eastern beach. Just watch out for the wild horses; they think they own the place. The Park Service is slowly restoring the Plum Orchard Mansion, which has a dock and an easy anchorage for shallow-draft vessels. The remnants of the Carnegie’s largest mansion, Dungeness, will not be restored. Destroyed by fire in the 1960s, this was the centerpiece of life on the island for several generations. Revolutionary war general Nathaniel Greene’s homestead, from a century earlier, is still in use but closed to the public. There are still “in holdings” on the island. These owners do have cars on the island. Watch out on the single road that goes from end to end as the drivers still drive as if they own the whole thing. Ownership on the island is a crucial issue. At this point, the only real owners are the diverse wildlife and the relentless waves on the eastern shore. Over the next generations, the Park Service will allow Mother Nature to regain her ultimate ownership. Truth be told, maybe I may go farther south or even over to the Bahamas. For now, revisiting these old haunts and the numerous anchorages and gunkholes in between will provide the joy that cruising offers. Meeting up with old friends, making new ones, and giving friends a destination in rural coastal Georgia are also high priorities. My moving water view is always changing. I have the time. I have a stout vessel. How can I not go? Dick Klain is a retired educator, life-long learner, and merchant seaman. He has visited ports from Eastport, Maine, to Key West, Fla., to San Diego to Juneau, the Gulf, and the Caribbean. When not afloat, he is a property manager in Falmouth and Harborside, Maine. Points East December 2014

79


Reserve for 2015

Po i n t s E a s t

Brokerage & Dealers

1978 RAY HUNT SURF HUNTER 23, Rockport Marine built, cold molded hull, rebuilt Olds 455, entire boat refurbished as needed and in the water ready to go, truly unique $34900

2012 LOWELL BROTHERS 38 DOWNEAST LOBSTER YACHT, 800 HP Man, incredibly designed/built and essentially new (300 hrs), see 12/2013 SOUNDINGS article $795,000

A Full Service Marina 216 Ocean Point Rd., E. Boothbay, ME 04544 (207) 633-0773 www.oceanpointmarina.com WI-FI available dockside Power

30’ Mainship Pilot 30 ’99

69,500

16’ SportCraft (no eng.) & trailer $1,500

38’ Bayliner 3818 Motoryacht

59,900

18’ Duffy Snug Harbor ’11

44,600

22’ Century Raven ’59

27,500

42’ Marine Trader ’84 twin diesel 75,000

25’ Cape Dory ’76

$4,995

29’ Hughes ’70 30' Nonsuch 30U '88

5,000 42,000

25’ Dusky Marine twin Suzuki 150's & trailer ’11 74,600

30' Pearson '77 sail

14,999

Yamaha 150’s, w/trailer

1971 25’ FRIENDSHIP SLOOP, Jarvis Newman hull, finished by Bald Mountain Boatworks, Beta diesel, Nat Wilson sails, a classic Maine beauty, in the water and ready to enjoy $38,500

Sail

49,999

24’ Grady White, ’97, w/twin 2008

1989 GRAND BANKS 32, Ford Lehman 135, in near perfect, professionally maintained condition, as good as they come $134,900

40’Ta Shing Baba ’84

115,000

Mercury engines and Mercury Inflatables in stock. Certified Mercury technicians. Storage, dockage, Ship’s Store, and a full service marina.

2004 27’ EASTERN CRUISER, Mercruiser 250 HP with only 230 original hours, impeccably maintained pocket coastal cruiser, with trailer $45,500

1966 36’ VINNIE CAVANAUGH LOBSTER YACHT, Steyr 246 HP diesel with 500 hrs, full accommodations, in fine condition, one handsome boat $40,000

Please visit our website to view our other fine boats

207-522-7572 www.etnierboats.com david@etnierboats.com

YAC H T

THE YACHT CONNECTION at SOUTH PORT MARINE 207-799-3600

B RO K E R AG E Newest

Boats dealer for ME, NH, VT and MA

32’ Able Marine Whistler, 1986 $39,900

CALLIOPE is a wonderful example of a classic downeast style yacht. Fine details include varnished teak cabinsides and transom, teak cockpit deck platform, custom stern seat, updated electronics and a recently installed bow thruster and trim tabs $425,000

POWER 24’ Robert Rich, 1974 $65,000 25’ Boston Whaler, 1990 15,000 26’ Mako 621, 1987 29,500

36’ Stanley, 1998 350,000 38' Stanley 1984 285,000 40’ Custom Steel Tug, 1948 28,900

207.244.7854 info@jwboatco.com / www.jwboatco.com Shipwright Lane, Hall Quarry, Mount Desert, Maine 04660

POWER 18’ Bayliner 2859 Supersport $15,000 23’ Sea Fox 236WA, ‘07w/trailer Sold 23’ Everglades 230CC, 2015 Call 24’ Everglades 243, 2015 Call 25’ Everglades 255, 2015 Call 25’ Grady White Islander 252, ’86 11,900 28’ Rampage Sportsman, ’88 18,900 28’ Hydrasport ’ 03, w/trailer 43,000 34’ Luhrs Tournament 342, ’88 25,000

28’ Islander, ’77 Excellent Condition, new Yanmar. $19,900 35’ Bayliner 3288, ’89 Great Cond.

27,500

41’ Maxum Flybridge, diesel,’99 89,900

SAIL 27’ Ericson, ‘78 30’ Catalina tall-rig, ’82

$12,000 Sold

30’ Cape Dory 300 motorsailer, ’89 62,000 30’ Pearson w/new engine, ’73 14,900 31’ IW Varvet Sloop, ’77 11,000 40’ Bristol Sloop, bow thruster

www.theyachtconnection.com

Sold


Scandia Yacht Sales Rossiter 23

340 Robinhood Road 207/371-2525 or 800/255-5206 Georgetown, Maine 04548 fax: 207/371-2899

Coastal Cruising Refined

www.robinhoodmarinecenter.com

Delivers an extremely sure footed, soft, dry ride. LOA 23’4” Beam 8’6” Draft 16” Cap. 1,650 lbs. Fuel Cap. 70 gal. Max HP 250 Weight 3,220 lbs. Rossiter 17 Classic Runabout also available ●

Po i n t s E a s t

29’ Dyer Trunk Cabin Model, 2007 $179,500

36’ Cape Dory Cutter 1988 $99,500

Woolwich, Maine (207) 443-9781

www.scandiayachts.com

POWER

SAIL

25’ Atlas Acadia, Yanmar

$75,000 30’ Nunsuch Cat rigged

30’ Fox Island Downeast Cruiser

139,500 30’ Mystic Cutter, recent re-fit

$69,500 29,500

33’ Robinhood Downeast Hardtop

269,500 38’ Cabo Rico Cutter, very nice

82,500

Gray & Gray, Inc.

36 York Street York,Maine 03909 E-mail: graygray@gwi.net

A local brokerage with personal attention and International reach

Motor 16’ NW Boatbuilding Inst. launch 16’ Dee Wite 1929 fully restored 22’ Norwegian Snekke new eng. 22’ Pulsifer Hampton 1993 26’ Webbers Cove ’99 diesel 27’ Albin Express ’86 diesel 28’ Pursuit 2860 ’99 Mercruiser 30’ Flush Deck Wooden classic 31’ Blue Seas Flybridge, 1989 31’ Tiara 3100 ’91 T Mercs 36’ Albin Express Trawler

$28,000 call 19,550 24,500 65,000 28,000 39,000 39,900 74,000 27,500 124,900

Sail 24’ Friendship Sloop ’98 diesel 25’ Eastsail Offshore Cutter ’85 26’ Pearson Sloop, ’73 well kept 28’ Shannon Cutter ’82 35’ Irwin ’89 RB Yanmar 35’ Hunter 356, 2002 36’ Bayfield Cutter, 1987 42’ Whitby Ketch, 1982

$14,000 29,900 7,000 54,000 29,900 98,500 59,500 97,500

Tel: 207-363-7997 Fax: 207-363-7807 www.grayandgrayyachts.com

Specializing in Downeast Vessels, Trawlers & Cruising Sailboats

41' BENETEAU 411 SLOOP, 2001, $119,500

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

36' J BOATS 36 SLOOP, 1982, $39,500

36' GRAND BANKS SEDAN, 1988, $146,000

36' GOZZARD CUTTER, 1989, $135,000

35' ATLANTIC DUFFY HT, 1999, $181,500

See all the details at our website

BoatingInMaine.com GulfofMaineYachtSales.com If you have a boat to sell or looking to purchase a boat-call at any time, visit us in Yarmouth or send email to info@gomys.com

( 207) 899.0909 YARMOUTH, MAINE

32' Ellis Flybridge, 1992, $160,000

Brokerage & Dealers

Maine Dealer


Classifieds To advertise: There are two ways to advertise on the classified pages. There are classified display ads, which are boxed ads on these pages; there are also line ads, which are simply lines of text. Line ads can be combined with photos, which will run above the text.

Rates: Classified display ads cost $30 per column inch. Line ads are $25 for 25 words (plus $5 for each additional 10 words). For a photo to run with a line ad, add $5.

Discounts: If you run the same classified line ad or classified display ad more than one month, deduct 20 percent for subsequent insertions.

Web advertising:

SAIL

15’ Apprentice 15, 2011 Traditionally built double-ended daysailer designed by Kevin Carney. Cedar on white oak, lapstrake construction. Dynel deck, white oak trim. Sitka spruce spars. Nat Wilson sails. All bronze fastenings and hardware. Launched June 2011. Price: $20,000. Call Eric Stockinger at 207-594-1800 or email www.apprenticeshop.org info@apprenticeshop.org 23’ Pearson Ensign Meticulously restored in pristine condition; includes main, roller furled jib, gennaker, spinnaker, trailer and outboard. $10,900. Email or call 401-965-2061. kamlaw2344@aol.com

Line ads from these pages will be run at no additional cost on the magazine’s web site: www.pointseast.com.

Payment: All classifieds must be paid in advance, either by check or credit card.

To place an ad: Mail ads, with payment, to Points East Magazine P.O. Box 1077, Portsmouth, NH, 03802-1077 or go to our website at www.pointseast.com Deadline for the Midwinter issue is January 2, 2015.

Need more info? Call 1-888-778-5790.

82 Points East December 2014

24’ Dolphin Sloop by Lunn Laminates #200. Centerboard, 6 sails, roller reefing Genoa, Palmer Husky 8hp rebuilt ‘96 & 2006. Includes unused GPS new 2009 and an inflatable dinghy. $4,500 OBO. www.jonesportshipyard.com info@jonesportshipyard.com 25’ Dark Harbor, 1921 CHARISMATIC is a 1921 Dark Harbor 17. There were 200 Dark Harbor 17s built between 1908 and 1935. The 17 is a beautiful daysailer with a roomy cockpit and low freeboard, putting you close to the water. There’s a small cuddy cabin for those who

wish an overnight, storage space, or shelter in a rain squall. $14,000. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 26’ Ranger 26, 1974 In very good condition with 5 sails, roller furler. No outboard. $2000 firm. 207-223-8885 or email info@winterportmarine.com

27’ Catalina, 1986 This is probably the best condition, standard Catalina 27 cruiser-racing sailboat available in the area: yard maintained, updated, winter stored inside. She has raced well with recent Pope racing sails. Over $40,000 spent on her by present owner. Located: Camden, ME can be seen in winter storage. Reduced to $15,000 OBO. 207-230-0347. Prefer email ahoyther@roadrunner.com 28’ Hunter 28.5 Sloop, 1987 Yanmar, 2nd owner, many upgrades, Furuno. Asking $18,000. Contact John Morin 207-6911637. www.wilburyachts.com jmorin@wilburyachts.com 28’ Islander, 1977 Excellent condition. New Yanmar. $19,900. 207-799-3600 theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com

29’ C&C 29, 1984 Sweet, clean cruiser, 6’1 headroom, new jib and furler, good main and genoa, Barient winches. 207-497-2701. www.jonesportshipyard.com info@jonesportshipyard.com 30’ Cape Dory, 1981 Full batten main, roller furling genoa, roller furling genoa jib, Dutchman for main, staysail. Dodger and sun awning. Aluminum mast and spars, stainless steel standing rigging. Oven/stove, ice box, sink, pressurized water. Marine head with holding tank, shower. Depthsounder, radar, wind/speed/direction, compass, GPS, VHF. Shorepower. Sleeps 5. 12’ fiberglass dinghy. Maine. $24,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-3264411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 30’ Cape Dory 300 Motorsailer 1989. This boat has benefited from continuous upgrading and exceptional care. “Our Little Cape” is well equipped with redundant systems for cruising and or living aboard. The boat will include new sails (spring 2014). $62,000. 207-799-3600 www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com 30’ Nonsuch 30U, 1988 Tremendous value. Boat is in great shape, is well equipped

www.MarineSurveys.com Jay Michaud Marblehead 781.639.0001 editor@pointseast.com


and has been meticulasly maintained. $46,000. 207-633-0773 www.oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com

30’ Morgan Sloop, 1970 Hull refinished with Awlgrip, 1998. Fully equipped for cruising or daysailing. Dodger, Main, working jib and spinnaker. Roller furling jib, Doyle stack-pack for main. Full electronics. Excellent condition. $15,000. For more information contact S.K. Wiley 207-833-5721.

30’ Allied Seawind, 1971 Exceptionally stable boat, very smooth. Westebeke diesel engine, mostly original equipment. Six sails included. Roller furling jib. Sleeps four. New head, holding tank. Motivated seller, asking $3,800. Call 603781-0447. mikefarrell_43@yahoo.com

30’ Pearson 30, 1977 Well maintained. New 20HP Beta Marine recently installed. Very reiable boat. A must see. $14,999. 207-633-0773 oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com 30’ Aage Nielsen-Walsted K/CB Yawl, 1960. A lovely CCAera yawl designed by Aage Nielsen, built to very high standards by the Walsted yard in Denmark. $35,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com 31’ Cape Dory Cutter, 1984 $59,500. David Perry CPYB. Robinhood Marine Center, 800255-5206 robinhoodyachts.com

www.pointseast.com

31’ Grampian, 1967 Full keel sloop, made in Canada, Atomic 4 engine. Auto helm, roller furling, sleeps 4, GPS, plotter, radar, depth sounder, propane stove. $10,900 OBO. 207-497-2701 info@jonesportshipyard.com 32’ Able Marine Whistler, 1986 Madeline Rose is a well built blue water cruiser with classic lines and beautiful interior. The Whistler 32 is regarded as one of the worlds best built sailboats and made to cross the worlds oceans.$39,900. 207-799-3600. www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com 32’ Beneteau Evasion Motorsailer, 1977. A very wellbuilt 32’ Beneteau Evasion Motorsailer ketch which not only has a powerful 28 hp engine, but has a reputation for sailing very well. $24,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com 33’ Morgan Sloop, 1979 50hp Perkins, roller furling, windlass. Marina Maintained. Asking $18,000. Contact 207691-1637 www.wilburyachts.com jmorin@wilburyachts 33’ J/100, 2005 Asking $125k. Major upgrades including 2013 Awlgrip job in Downeast red. Sail inventory includes 2013 carbon racing sails and 2008 North Marathon cruising sails. Available in Stonington; contact Todd Williams at McMichael, 203-610-1215 or email www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m toddw@mcmyacht.com

34’ C&C 34, 1981 Irish Mist is a well maintained and actively sailed and raced C&C 34, home ported in Mount Sinai, NY. Fresh Doyle sails including a spinnaker, re-engined in 2005 with a Yanmar 30hp diesel and a new bottom make Irish Mist a winner for any sailor looking to move up. Bonus-Free winter storage 2014-2015. $16,750. Call: 631-357-2012

34’ Hinckley Sou’Wester, 1950 GRANDE DAME A yachtsman’s sloop in striking condition. $29,950. Email for details/photos. 802-999-2094 Shelburne, Vermont. grandedame34@gmail.com 34’ Sea Sprite 34, 1982 Classic Luders design, Universal diesel, Harken roller furling, sleeps 5. Includes winter frame, 5 jack stands. Good shape. $25,500. Call Bob 508-2215649. myelayna@aol.com 34’ Pearson, 1984 $37,500 In the water and ready to sail. Call David Perry Robinhood Marine Center 800-2555206 www.robinhoodmarinecenter.co m

35’ Sloop, 1936 Pleiades Built in 1936 at the A.H. Kin yard in Hong Kong to a Ross design. Beam 8’6, draught 6’2, displacement 8 tons. Teak planking on iroco frames, teak decks, varnished mahogany deck joinery and varnished spars. New Beta diesel. A sailor’s cruising boat. Contact Islesboro Marine Enterprises, Islesboro, Maine. 207-734-6433.

35’ Alberg, 1960 Excellent condition, $19,995. 207-497-2701. www.jonesportshipyard.com info@jonesportshipyard.com 35’ Pearson, 1979 $25,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com 36’ Swanson, 1976 $49,500. Call David Perry CPYB, Robinhood Marine Center 800255-5206 robinhoodyachts.com 36’ Sabre Spirit, 2008 A luxury daysailer that is perfect for a sailor who wants traditional style with modern amenities. She is beautiful down below,

&

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Points East December 2014

83


complimented with ultra-suede upholstery and high-gloss varnish. Sailing is a breeze with the Leisure Furl Boom and Doyle carbon sails. For a personal inspection please contact John Fallon at McMichael, 914-7142682 or email www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m johnf@mcmyacht.com 36’ C&C 110, 2005 Asking $139,900. Modern epoxy-built racer/cruiser with deluxe cherry interior and carbon fiber mast. North 3DL inventory and full Raymarine electronics. Stored indoors for winter, now in Stonington. Contact Rick Fleig at McMichael, 401-743-6318 www.mcmyacht.com rickf@mcmyacht.com 37’ Gulfstar Sloop, 1977 The 37’ Gulfstar is known as a safe, lively performer and this owner has owned her for approximately 30 years. He has maintained her well along with the help of one of Maine’s finest boatyards. $26,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. 207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com 39’ Concordia Yawl, 1938 JAVA, built by Casey in 1938, is Hull #1 of the Concordia Yawls. The collaboration of Ray Hunt and Waldo Howland, a maritime legend, began with JAVA. She is nicely equipped while retaining the simplicity of the original yawls. Professionally maintained and stored indoor. $125,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-3264411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com

POWER

40’ Wooden Ketch, 1999 Beautiful restoration project. Solid hull. Full galley and head. Full electronics and sails. Water heater. New wiring. Ready for engine. $35,000 or BO. johnapartridge52@yahoo.com

40’ Concordia Motorsailer 1964. Bud Mcintosh built. Forespar furling main, Profurl furling jib. Wind generator, CPT autopilot, Raymarine radar/plotter, Force 10 propane stove, davits, Ideal windlass. Perkins 85hp. Email for additional information, equipment too numerous to list. $37,500 OBO. 727-365-0943 skip1shep@gmail.com 40’ Beneteau First 40.7, 2001 An immaculate racer/cruiser meticulously maintained and upgraded. Roomy cockpit and elegant interior with 3 cabins. A perfect dual purpose boat. You must see this boat. Located in Wickford, RI. $139,500. Call Rick Fleig, McMichael Yacht Brokers 401-743-6318 www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m Rickf@mcmyacht.com

GULF OF MAINE BOAT SURVEYORS

43’ Columbia Classic Cruiser 1970. Beautifully maintained, fast, upgraded for family sailing, liveaboard comfort. Huge cockpit, 6’3 headroom, newly refurbished interior and deck. Yanmar 63hp. Great value! $48,500. www.columbia43.com svserendipity@gmail.com 44’ J/44, 1989 Irreplaceable sailing yacht, with numerous upgrades that could be yours for the next blue water passage, a family weekend home, and/or a racing machine. Call John Fallon, McMichael Yacht Brokers 914-714-2682 www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m 46’ Moody 46, 2000 Asking $260k. Turnkey cruiser with generator, air, elec winches, tender and more. Single owner boat with low hours. Center cockpit layout with full canvas enclosure. Contact Tom Bobbin at McMichael Yacht Brokers, 203-554-8309 or email www.mcmichaelyachtbrokers.co m tomb@mcmyacht.com

48’ Sou’Wester 48 Yawl, 1975 Must sell my 1975 Hinckley Sou’Wester 48 yawl. Dark Star has had 4 major refits, last in 2013. Ready to go anywhere. $295,000. Need to get to work on my B40. 508-280-6860 gdeegan117@comcast.net

10’ Inflatables Odyssey Superlight RIB’s now in stock. A 10’2, 310SLR only 79lbs. The right dinghy at an affordable price. For details, contact Great Bay Marine 603-436-5299 www.greatbaymarine.com store@greatbaymarine.com 14’ Penn Yan Runabout, 1950 LITTLE DIPPER was rescued in 2007 and restored. Powered by a 15hp Johnson outboard and trailered on a 2007 Load Rite. Brooksville, Maine. $6,000. Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-3264411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com

16’ Dee Wite, 1929 Fully Restored 2012. A show winner. Call for price. Call 207 831-3168 Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales www.boatinginmaine.com 17’ Rossiter, 2014 CD Classic Runabout. 7’ beam, 115hp Yamaha 4-stroke, custom trailer. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru, 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-4439781 www.scandiayachts.com 17’ Tidewater, 2014 170CC Adventure. 7’2 beam, 70hp 4-stroke Yamaha, custom trailer. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru, 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-4439781 www.scandiayachts.com

BOAT OWNERS, FUEL PROBLEMS? SAVE YOUR FUEL!

AND MARINE CONSULTANTS

FUEL SOLUTIONS

(617) 823-2936 (cell) www.gulfofmaineboatsurveyors.com

WE CAN HELP! Water - Contaminants - Sediment?

Surveys - Insurance claims - Repair monitoring - Maintenance reviews Refit, repower, & repair consultation - Witness testimonies - Work orders

We clean & process your fuel on-site, removing water contaminants and sediment, gas or diesel.

Bernie Feeney, SAMS, AMS

Serving New England, NY and NJ

84 Points East December 2014

LAND

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

SEA

editor@pointseast.com


steering, new Standard Horizon GPS; So. Bristol. $29,500. 207563-6331 loon@tidewater.net

18’ Runabout, 1996 Glass over marine plywood. All plywood coated with epoxy. Two 40hp Honda outboards with 145 hours. Radar, GPS, depth sounder, full mooring cover, trailer. $7,500. Islesboro Marine, 207-734-6433. 21’6 Tidewater 216CC Beam 8’6, draft 14, fuel capacity 70 gal., max. HP 225. A smooth, dry ride with big fish features; dual livewells, large fish boxes, gunwale rod storage and large console for electronics. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru. 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com

22’ Pulsifer Hampton, 2001 Bristol condition, low hours on Yanmar 27hp. Custom trailer, complete full canvas set like new. Fully equipped, a must see at $24,500. Call Mike 860-3045151

22’ SISU SISU bass boat with cuddy cabin with eve berths; 2012 115hp Evinrude E-TECH; new hydraulic

22’ Norwegian Snekke, 1961 2003 Yanmar diesel. Rides the waves like a leaf. $19,550. Call 207-831-3168 Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales. www.boatinginmaine.com 23’ Rossiter, 2014 Classic Day Boat. 8’5 beam, 250hp Yamaha XCA, custom trailer. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru, 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-4439781 www.scandiayachts.com 23’ Tidewater 230CC LOA 23’, beam 8’10, draft 15, fuel capacity 103 gal., a big 23 footer designed to be a great offshore fishing machine. For further details, stop by Scandia Yacht Sales at Bath Subaru. 116 Main Street (Route 1), Woolwich, Maine. 207-443-9781 www.scandiayachts.com 24’ Frank Day & Benjamin River Marine, 2001. BOSS ALMIGHT is an Arno Daydesigned motor launch with center console. Her hull is cedar on oak and she’s powered by a Yanmar 4JH diesel. Perfect for short days on the water. $44.000 Metinic Yacht Brokers 207-3264411. www.sealcoveboatyard.com sealcoveboatyard@gmail.com 24’ Grady White, 1997 w/twin 2008 Yamaha 150’s,

TURNSTONE MARINE SURVEY

LLC

Professional Marine Surveys 508.737.5052

www.turnstonemarinesurvey.com www.pointseast.com

w/trailer. $49,999. 207-6330773 oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com 24’ Mahogany Runabout, 1974 Bass Harbor Boat Company built mahogany runabout, reconstructed 2006-2008. Recently repowered with 350hp Mercruiser. $65,000. 207-244-7854 or email billw@jwboatco.com 25’ Grady White Islander 252 1986. Powered by two 2001 Honda 130hp four stroke outboards mounted on a bracket. Transom was rebuilt and reinforced in 2009 and the boat includes a Venture trailer. $11,900. 207-799-3600. www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com 25’ Boston Whaler Walkaround 1990. Not many of these boats were built. Single 250hp Yamaha currently on the boat. A pair of Yamaha Optimax 225’s are included in the deal. $12,500. Call 207-244-7854 or email jwboatco.com billw@jwboatco.com 25’ Padebco, New Design the boat of your dreams. Padebco Custom Boats offers fiberglass 21 to 32 foot custom cruisers. Down East style, great lines, no two alike. Padebco 207-529-5106 Padebco.com 25’ Rosborough, 2006 Volvo D-3 400hrs. Garmin. Separate head, V-berth, galley. Asking $79,900. Contact John Morin 207-691-1637. www.wilburyachts.com

150hp, 59 hours. Raymarine C120 Nav Pkg, A/C with reverse cycle heat, marine head, electric stove, refrigerator, bimini. 2GPH at 7.5 knots, range 250 knots. Located in Salem, MA, at Winter Island Yacht Yard. www.wiyy.net/ranger-tugs/35ranger-tug-models/53-preowned-ranger.html rangertugs@wiyy.net 25’ Maritime Skiff Challenger 2009. Cuddy cabin w/double berth, marine head w/holding tank. Pilot house has galley unit, helm & companion seating, stowage. 2 aft-facing cockpit seats, transom bench seating, stowage. 83 gallons/fuel, 225 Honda 4-stroke outboard, 20hp Honda 4-stroke auxiliary. Plotter/radar, sonar, weather, depth. Located in Maine, $69,000. www.atlanticboat.com brokerage@atlanticboat.com

25’ Sea Fox 257 CC, 2004 With twin 150hp Merc salt water series - less than 100 hours, 2013 Load Rite tandem trailer, full electronics. Well equipped for tournament fishing: battle station, down riggers, center rigger, out riggers, air horn etc. Too much to list. Vessel has been well maintained - Great fishing and cruising. $73,800 207-6332922 jackcogswell41@yahoo.com

25’ Ranger Tugs R25 Classic 2008. $104,500. Great condition, well-maintained, one owner. Cummins diesel engine,

WINDER ASSOCIATES Yacht Surveyors & New Construction/Refit Project Managers Condition & Valuation Pre-Purchase & Insurance Surveys ■ Vessel Appraisals Newport, Rhode Island & Annisquam, Massachusetts (978) 852 -3304 http://www.marinesurveyor.com/winder

Points East December 2014

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207-363-7997. www.grayandgrayyachts.com

26’ Grady White, 2000 265 Express with twin 200hp Yamaha HPDI outboards. Professionally maintained yearly. Low hours. Basic electronics. Very clean. Brunswick, ME. $48,900. Call 207-729-3303 www.bamforthmarine.com salesandservice@bamforthmarine.com 26’ Mako 621, 1987 MAKAYLA’S WAY is ready for fishing. Engines used only one season since installation results in very low hours. Dual axle bunk trailer included. $29,500. 207-244-7854 or email billw@jwboatco.com 26’ Fortier, 1997 The Fortier 26, an EldredgeMcInnis design, is a proven design for the serious bass fisherman, picnic boat or weekend cruiser. Single diesel, $68,500. Call Gray & Gray, Inc. Accredited Marine Surveyor

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

Member of SAMS and ABYC Serving Maine

(207) 487.1783 maineboatstuff.kt@gmail.com

www.maineboatstuff.com

27’ Launch, 1908 3-cycle Universal 26hp diesel w/37 hrs. In water, ready to enjoy. Call for details. Farrin’s Boatshop 207-563-5510 www.farrinsboatshop.com 27’ Eastern Lobster-style, 2005 $52,500. Call David Perry Robinhood Marine Center 800-2555206. www.robinhoodmarinecenter.co m 27’ Picnic Launch, 1908 Raised forward deck, open cockpit picnic launch, two berths, head, with a new 3 cylinder Universal diesel. Farrin’s Boatshop, 207-563-5510. www.FarrinsBoatshop.com

28’ Albin 28, 1998 Very clean, yard maintained, blue topsides, radar, 2GPS, fathometer, SS radio, 2 showers, head, swim platform, 300 turbo diesel, 1000 hours. $46,500 OBO. 508-548-9418 or email bluechip7676@hotmail.com 32’ Dyer Trunk Soft Top, 2006 New to market. Call David Perry, CPYB. 800-255-5206 robinhoodyachts.com 30’ Mainship Pilot, 1999 This is a great boat. Well laid out

CUSTOM DOCKS,RAMPS & FLOATS

and lots of features. Priced to sell. $69,500. 207-633-0773. www.oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com

Company, well known for their line of offshore cruising sailboats, built the Brendan 28 and 32 to the same high standards. $39,500. Call David Perry, 800255-5206. robinhoodyachts.com/core/listing/pl_boat_detail.jsp?&units=Fe et&id=2671365&lang=en&slim= broker&&hosturl=robinhoodyachts&&ywo=robinhoodyachts&

31’ Blue Seas, 1989 Cummins diesel. $74,000. Went to Aventura Florida in 2013. Meet boat there and cruise North in Spring. Call 207-831-3168, Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales www.boatinginmaine.com

32’ Down East New 32’ Carroll Lowell Down East design, cedar on white oak, silicon bronze fastenings, hull, trunk, deck, done, fuel tanks, shaft, rudder installed, will finish to your custom design, work or pleasure. 508-224-3709. www.by-the-sea.com/karbottboatbuilding/ jmkarbott@aol.com

32’ Nordic Tug, 2006 Cummins 270hp, low hours (580), water purifier, stove/microwave oven, full electronics, Bose, Toshiba TV, 3GPH, Lightly used. Excellent shape. $195,000. 860-550-3682. lesserlight1941@gmail.com 32’ Newman Hard Top Cruiser New Yanmar 6BY2-260 (220HP), upgraded electronics, bull varnish work (high end), in the water, ready to go. Call for details. Farrin’s Boatshop 207-563-5510 www.farrinsboatshop.com 32’ Shannon Brendan 32 Express, 1987. A well equipped and continually updated Brendan 32. Shannon Boat

Gamage Shipyard Dockage Moorings Repairs Winter Storage Inside & Out Hauling Maintenance Ship’s Store Travelift

207-294-2410

www.ShapeFabrication.com 86 Points East December 2014

South Bristol, Maine 04568 207-644-8181

33’ Sea Ray 310 Sundancer 2007. One owner. Hull, exterior accommodations and interior are in excellent condition with little or no wear and tear. Mercury MX6.2 MPI V-Drives (exhaust risers/manifolds replaced in 2013), generator, bow- and sternthrusters, electric windlass, AC/Heat, two flat-screen TV’s with DVD players, wood interior package, full canvas package including cockpit bimini and full enclosure, foredeck sunpad. Asking $120,000. email, or call 888-525-9457. ham@neyacht.com

Marine Moisture Meters Where meters peg for moisture Non-destructive meters, simple to use, understand & evaluate moisture levels. GRP-33

J.R. Overseas Co. 502.228.8732 www.jroverseas.com

editor@pointseast.com


33’ Robinhood Poweryacht 2006. Semper Fi is the latest of the Robinhood 33 to be built. Her owner equipped her very well including Genset, Air conditioning and heat, the prefered 440 Yanmar diesel, and much more. She is the hardtop model, thus more comfortable seating was included at the helm and mate positions. The beautiful Flag Blue Awlgrip Robinhood 33 is in great condition. She is now stored ashore for the off season and located at Robinhood Marine Center, where she was built. $269,500. Call David Perry, 800255-5206. robinhoodyachts.com/core/listing/pl_boat_detail.jsp?&units=Fe et&id=2631425&lang=en&slim= broker&&hosturl=robinhoodyachts&&ywo=robinhoodyachts& 34.5’ Avanti Flybridge, 1996 Dual control stations, twin 454 gas engines, fresh water cooled, w/many options included, yacht condition. Asking $33,500. Located at Carousel Marina, Boothbay Harbor, Maine. 207-633-2922 jackcogswell41@yahoo.com

Contact John Morin, 207-6911637 www.wilburyachts.com

38’ Fisher Fairways Trawler 1978. Twin Ford Sabre diesels, roomy, comfortable, economical, stable. Many upgrades 20102013. New price, $87,500. call 207-497-2701 or email info@jonesportshipyard.com 38’ Stanley, 1984 Stanley 38 Fishwife. First Stanley 38 built in 1984 and owned by the same family since her launch. She is in excellent condition. $285,000. 207-244-7854 or billw@jwboatco.com

great live-aboard. Check out our website. $170,000. Call Tim for more info. 603-770-8378. www.sites.google.com/site/dotgale38/ dotgaleforsale@comcast.net 41’ Maxum 4100 SCB, 1999 Well maintained, clean and offers a very functional layout. She is powered by efficient Cummins diesel engines, and is comfortably equipped for cruising or living aboard. $89,900. 207-799-3600. www.theyachtconnection.com tyc@southportmarine.com 42’ Marine Trader, 1984 Twin diesels. $75,000. 207-6330773 oceanpointmarina.com info@oceanpointmarina.com 47’ Novi Flybridge Cruiser 2003. CAT diesel. Composite overbuilt hull, genset, many upgrades. Asking $132,000. Contact John Morin 207-691-1637. www.wilburyachts.com jmorin@wilburyachts.com

OTHER

36’ Stanley, 1998 Great example of the classic Stanley 36. Comfortable cruiser for four and roomy day boat. Nice details including teak pilot house & cockpit sole. Brand new Awlgrip and Cummins repower (2012). $350,000. Call 207-2447854 or email jwboatco.com billw@jwboatco.com

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

37’ Paul Chapman Workboat 2011. New. Cedar on oak, CAT.

38’ Waterfront Property Our H&H Osmond Beal makes a

Book a vacation, stay awhile PORT CLYDE · TENANTS HARBOR · CAMDEN

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

Boat slip for sale. 44’ slip at Signal Point Marina in Boothbay Harbor. Asking $9000. Contact Ed Riley at 207-4154282 for details. edriley9@me.com

14’ Wheelbarrow Boat Lowell built. Designed by Pete Culler, 1978. Lapstrake skiff, cedar on oak. Professionally maintained, in excellent condition. Sprit rig and sail complete. Includes oars and trailer. A very versatile, and seaworthy craft. Row, sail, and launch from a beach. See the ‘Complete Design Catalog-Pete Cullers Boats’ by John Burke, for complete article and plans. $5000. Email for pictures and more info: oggci@yahoo.com 16hp Beta Marine Diesel with 3.5 hrs; transmission and all the installation gear; new controls, exhaust muffler and riser, fuel and raw water filters...direct replace for the Atomic 4. $6,500 firm. 603-343-6299 afternoons. allenstorms44@gmail.com

List Your Boat 5. People buy boats in the wintertime. List your boat now. Do not wait until Spring. Call John Holmes to arrange your meeting

DIRTY DIESEL? Don't let dirty, contaminated fuel leave you stranded! The most common problems with diesel engines are fuel related! ● Mobile Tank and Fuel Cleaning Service ● Diesel Fuel Polishing

Waterline Services is a mobile service serving the marine and industrial needs of New England. Our trained technicians will polish your fuel and clean your tanks.

207.975.2502 LindaBeansPerfectMaine.com

www.pointseast.com

Waterline Services Tel 781-545-4154 or toll free 1-800-256-6667 email: wecleanfuel@comcast.net Points East December 2014

87


at 207-899-0909. www.boatinginmaine.com Purchasing/Associate Buyer Hamilton Marine currently has an opening for a Purchasing Associate/Buyer. The Buyer will be responsible for executing the sourcing plan for the business. This includes maintaining the item master records, ordering and expediting product, supporting sales, and may include market analysis, product evaluation, and other duties required to support the purchasing or product line managers. Perform sourcing for assigned vendors or product line manager - Proposing, placing, and managing open and pending PO’s to achieve desired inventory and service levels Special orders - Quotes - ETA’s Maintain Item Master File - Enter New Items - Follow product line/purchasing mgr direction for: – Pricing – Min/Max’s -And all the other fields that need appropriate maintenance ales Phone team -Support sales by being on the phone team Successful candidates must have computer experience and be proficient with Excel, must have excellent communication and customer service skills, and must adhere to stringent confidentiality expectations. Please send completed Hamilton Marine Employment application (available in any of our stores or online at www.hamiltonmarine.com) and resume to jmacleod@hamiltonmarine.com or drop off in our Searsport store. EOE. www.hamiltonmarine.com jmacleod@hamiltonmarine.com 14’ Wooden Rowboat Two rowing stations, fiberglass outside of hull. Two sets of oars. Call for details. Farrin’s Boatshop 207-563-5510 www.farrinsboatshop.com

Mechanics Needed Year-round work. 100 year old business storing 80 boats inside. Training and schooling available, experience a plus. Health, 401K and competitive rates. F. J. Dion Yacht Yard Salem, MA. 978-744-0844 ext 203 fjdions@msn.com Repower, Refit & Repairs Experienced full-service boat yard - wood, fiberglass, power & sail. Carpentry, hull maintenance, painting, brightwork, electrical, engine work, rigging & tuning, un/stepping masts. Padebco Custom Boats at 207529-5106 Padebco.com Storage - Inside & Outdoor Reserve 2014-2015 inside and outdoor storage space now. Full service boat yard, winterizing, spring commissioning, mast un/stepping, spar storage. Competitive rates, professional work. Padebco Custom Boats 207529-5106 Padebco.com Moorings - Round Pond ME Seasonal and transient moorings available in well-protected Round Pond Harbor; gateway to the Penobscot Bay cruising grounds. Max 65’. Walk to restaurants. Padebco Custom Boats at 207-529-5106. Padebco.com

Selling or Buying? We are always happy to discuss either when it comes to quality, well-maintained boats. Both recreational and commercial.

Consider utilizing the services of a broker who shares your passion for boats and boating. David Etnier Boat Brokerage. Contact David at 207-522-7572. www.etnierboats.com david@etnierboats.com

Listings Wanted Quality commercial fishing vessel listings wanted. Maine fishermen should consider listing their vessels with David Etnier Boat Brokerage for prompt service and knowledgeable and effective sales effort. Reasonable commission. Please contact David directly to learn more. 207-5227572. www.etnierboats.com david@etnierboats.com Slips & Moorings Enjoy the NH Seacoast’s only full service marina, limited availability, affordable rates, complete amenities. Great Bay Marine 603-436-5299 www.greatbaymarine.com cs@greatbaymarine.com V8 350 Block Fresh water cooled, wet exhaust, B/W gear running well when replaced with a diesel engine. Farrin’s Boatshop, 207-563-5510. www.farrinsBoatshop.com Delivery Captain Your power or sail boat delivered wherever you need it. Owners welcome on deliveries. Also available for instruction. Captain Tim. 603-770-8378. dotgale38.googlepages.com tphsails@comcast.net

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

207.232.8820

Cape Elizabeth, Maine

88 Points East December 2014

www.theriaultmarine.com

Canvas Cleaning This year, have Gemini Canvas

service your bimini or dodger. Professionally cleaned w/ waterrepellent treatment. No dip-dunk tanks, only industry approved cleaners that work. We ship UPS, call us at 207-596-7705. www.geminicanvas.com Fiberglass Repair Position Permanent, year-round position available for Fiberglass/Composite Structure Repair Technician. Yankee Marina is a full-service marina and boatyard. Please send resume with cover letter summarizing work experience to www.yankeemarina.com deborah@yankeemarina.com Moorings Available Boothbay Region Boatyard has seasonal moorings available, $950. We are located in well protected Ebenecook Harbor, with free launch service, parking, showers, laundry and a well stocked ship store. Email Amy or call us at 207-633-2970. www.brby.com dockmaster@brby.com Mercury, Yamaha Service Kennebunkport Marina has the only factory trained Mercury and Yamaha technicians located on the water in Kennebunkport to service all of your mechnical needs. www.kennebunkportmarina.com managerkport@roadrunner.com Seasonal Moorings Handy Boat as one of Maine’s premier boat yards, located in the heart of Casco Bay, has seasonal moorings available for up to 65’. Enjoy all our new restaurant and marine facilities have to offer. Call now for this great opportunity. 207-781-5110 http://handyboat.com/

Heated Storage At Gamage Shipyard. Worry-free heated storage, conscientious care in new building. South Bris-

editor@pointseast.com


tol offers ideal location amid Midcoast Maine’s spectacular cruising grounds. Competitive rates. Fine repair services, too. Reserve now: 207-644-8181. gamageshipyard.com gamage@tidewater.net Handyman Service Besides residential and commercial construction, Maine Coast Construction also offers a Handyman Service to take care of those maintenance jobs on your list so you’re free to pursue your passion - boats & boating. Contact us with your to-do list today. Serving Mid Coast Maine since 1968. 207-236-6000. 107 Elm Street, Camden, Maine wwwmainecoastconstruction.co m

Are you looking for: • Boats? Selling your boat? Do you have a boat to sell or looking to buy? Call 207-8313168. Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales www.boatinginmaine.com

• Moorings? • Parts? • Repair?

Warehouse Sale Stainless steel refrigeration: Vitrifrigo DW180 Double drawer fridge/freezer, Vitrifrigo DW180 Double drawer freezer, Isotherm Cruise 49. In perfect condition, used for boat shows. For more information call: 866-209-6132

AWARD WINNING SAILING INSTRUCTION on BOSTON HARBOR and in THE CARIBBEAN!

Visit our website to learn more about why we are New England’s leading “Learn to Cruise” sailing school! www.BlackRockSailingSchool.com

Check out the Points East Marine Directory for a categorized and sorted list of marine vendors from Maine to Connecticut! www.pointseast.com/directory.shtml

marine

education TW OA IS

Captain’s License Classes

E

DOWNEAST MARITIME INC. & MID-COAST FIRST AID, LLC

B

USCG Approved Maritime Trainings

Full class schedule on website

www.boatwise.com

Classes held at: Mid-Coast School of Technology Adult Education, 1 Main St., Rockland, Maine

1-800-698-7373

Call: 207-596-7752 or email: adulted@mcst.tec.me.us

W omen Under Sail Live Aboard Sailing Instructions - Casco Bay, Maine For Women ~By Women, Aboard 44’ Avatrice

“ If you can learn to sail in Maine, you can sail anywhere.”

e-mail: sailing@gwi.net

58 Fore Street, Portland, Maine 04101

www.womenundersail.com

207-865-6399

Make a difference in a child’s life. Donate your boat to SailMaine.

REGISTER NOW for Master/Mate 100 Ton USCG January 2015 Also offering Boater Safety Courses and other USCG Licensing FMI Call 207-774-1067 or www.portlandyacht.com

www.pointseast.com

Visit us online and on the waterfront 58 Fore Street, Portland, Maine 207 - 772 - 7245 • sailmaine.org

Points East December 2014

89


Be the first to identify this mystery harbor and you’ll win a designer Points East yachting cap that will make you the envy of every boater. Please tell us a bit about how you know the spot. Send your answers to: editor@pointseast.c om or mail them to editor, Points East Magazine, P.O. Box 1077, Portsmouth, NH, 03802-1077.

Mystery Harbor Advertiser index Allied Boat Works 14 Allied Whale 38, 42 Alpenglow Marine Lights 41,64 Apprenticeshop 71 Arborvitae 71 Atlantic Outboard 63 Bay of Maine Boats 70 Bayview Rigging & Sails 17,71 Beta Marine 61 Black Rock Sailing School 26,89 Blue Frontier, LLC 55 Bluenose Yacht Sales 27 Boatwise 52,89 Bohndell Sails 56 Bowden Marine Service 18 Brewer 71 Brewer Plymouth Marine 11, 30, 92 Brewer Yacht Yard 91 Brooklin Inn 38 Bucking The Tide 41 Burr Brothers Boats 11, 92 Capt. Jay Michaud Marine Surveys 82 Chase, Leavitt & Co. 56 Chebeague Island Boat Yard 18 Cisco Brewers 73 Coastal Living Gallery 40, 46 Conanicut Marine 11, 92 CPT Autopilot, Inc. 83 Crocker's Boatyard 11, 92 Custom Float Services 53 Dark Harbor Boat Yard 45 David Etnier Boat Brokerage 80 Duchak Maritime Services 84 Eastern Yacht Sales-Hingham 63 Eastern Yacht Sales-Portsmouth 63 Everglades Boats 3 Farrin’s Boatshop 12 Fatty Knees 71 Fred J. Dion Yacht Yard 11, 30 Gamage Shipyard 86 Gemini Marine Products 45 Gray and Gray, Inc. 81 Great Bay Marine 11, 35, 57, 92 Gulf of Maine Boat Surveyors 84 Gulf of Maine Yacht Sales 81 Hallett Canvas and Sails 13,41

90 Points East December 2014

Hamilton Marine 2, 42 Handy Boat Service 92 Hansen Marine Engineering 52, 83, 92 Haut Insurance Agency 54 Herreshoff Marine Museum 37,70 Hinckley Yacht Services 11, 30, 55, 57, 92 Hodgdon Yacht Services 11,30, 34, 92 International Chrome Plating Co. 60 Island Mooring Supplies 71 J-Way Enterprises 11 J.R. Overseas 86 Jackson’s Hardware & Marine 38 John Williams Boat Company 20 John Williams Yacht Brokerage 80 Jonesport Shipyard 14 Journey’s End Marina 16,30 Kenrick A Claflin & Son Nautical 42,64 Kingman Yacht Center 11, 30, 55, 57, 59, 92 Kittery Point Yacht Yard 11, 92 Landfall Navigation 19 Lee Sails 31 Linda Bean 87 Lock One 61 Maine Coast Construction 51 Maine Sailing Partners 23, 70 Maine Yacht Center 33 Manchester Marine 11, 55, 61 Marblehead Trading Company 55, 92 Marine Learning Center 89 Marine Museum 70 Mattapoisett Boatyard, Inc. 11 McMichael’s Yacht Sales 21 Merri-Mar Yacht Basin 11, 30, 57, 92 Mid-Coast School of Technology 65, 89 Mobile Marine Canvas 51, 70 Moose Island Marine 11 Mystic Shipyard 92 Nantucket Bagg 71 Nautical Scribe Books 70 Navtronics 55, 59 New England Boatworks 11, 15, 92 New England Marine & Industrial 64 Niemiec Marine 11, 30, 92 North Sails Direct 54 Ocean Point Marina 80 Ocean Pursuits 45

Padebco Custom Yachts 16 Parker’s Boat Yard, Inc. 65 Paul E. Luke 70 Penobscot Marine Museum 71 Pierce Yacht Co. 47 Points East Diesel Workshop 60 Pope Sails 47 Portland Yacht Services 8 Portland Yacht Svces 92 Providence Boat Show 9 Reo Marine 57 Riggs Cove Rentals, LLC 40 Robinhood Marine Center 11, 22, 55, 71, 81, 92 Royal River Boatyard 22, 92 Rumery's Boat Yard 11 SailMaine 70,89 Sailmaking Support Systems 31 Salty Boats of Maine 56 Sawyer & Whitten 55, 59 Scandia Yacht Sales 81 Seal Cove Boatyard 11, 36 Shape Fabrication 86 Sound Marine Diesel 61 Southport Marine 11, 20 Tales from a Gimbaled Wrist 40 The Yacht Connection 80 Theriault Marine Consulting 88 Thomaston Boat & Engine Works 57 Traditional Boat Works, LLC Turnstone Marine Survey, LLC 85 Voyager Marine Electronics, Inc. 59 Watching for Mermaids 40 Waterline Services 87 Wayfarer Marine 11, 59 Webhannett River Boat Yard 46,70 West Harbor Yacht Service 61 Whiting Marine 61, 92 Wilbur Yachts 65 Winder Associates 85 Winter Island Yacht Yard 11 Winterport Boat Yard 60 Women Under Sail 42, 65,89 Yacht North Charters 38 Yankee Marina & Boatyard 11, 55, 92

editor@pointseast.com


From our families to yours, wishing you a peaceful holiday and bright new year! We appreciate your patronage! Kevin Acampora Michael Acebo Ned Ahlborn Joe Alves Paul Amaral Steve Anderson Greg Andrew Mark Andrews Silvia Aranda Jason Arenberg Jeff Aronson Peter Aurigemma Danny Babic Jeff Bagnati Josh Bagnati John Bahrakis Paul Bailey George Baptista Victor Baretto Jeff Barnett Josh Barnett John Barney Brian Barry Greg Bartoszuk Robin Basciano Scott Batchelder Noah Bavolack Kathy Beebe Matt Beer Paul Belisle Bruce Bennett Gage Bennett Nel Bennett Rebecca Bennett Katelyn Berardi Janet Berg Laurie Berlinguet Jeff Bernier Joe Bezandry Matt Binkoski David Bird Vinnie Bissoondial Brandon Bitka Cathy Black Mike Bolduc Pete Borchardt Paul Bottone Benjamin Bourez David Bradbury Larry Brainard Howard Braithwaite Anders Brandon Todd Breden Jack Brewer John S Brewer Chris Brown Fred Brown Hunter Brown Jim Brown Jim Brown Patrick Brown William Brown Wes Bryan Jeff Bubb Peter Burns Malcolm Bush Lance Butler Mark Byrnes Bryan Cabral Delia Cabral Marco Caceres Christian Campos Dan Capelli Susan Carlson

Scott Carpenter Greg Caruso Pat Carver Bryant Catlin Daniel Caulfield Gary Chandler Patrick Chapman Tony Chase Francisco Chaves Virginio Chaves Zach Cimaglia Roger Clark Alycia Clemons Larry Colantuono Pattie Cole Chase Coleman John Coleman Ryan Collet Gene Colvin Doug Comfort David Conger Patrice Conklin Steve Conlin Andrew Connell Bob Connell Brenna Coppola David Cox Scott Croce Phil Crouthamel Tiffany Crowley Edimar Cruz Janet Curra Andrew Cushman Bill Daly Bruce Dante Nina Davenport Brian Dechello Kiernan Decker Mitch DePalma Jenna Deslaurier Beto DeSousa Brian Detmer John Diegel Ryan Dierks Jake Dieterle Jeremy DiSpagna John Dockray Ramsey Dodge Thomas Dodge Laura DoeringPedersen Brian Dombroski Doug Domenie Henry Domenie David Doody Brian Dooley Ben Doran Allan Dorfman Paul Doucette Josh Downey Chris Doyle Katie Drake Spencer Drake Sarah Dubois Michael Dunn Jimmy Economou Bill England Mike Farman Tony Fasceon Shehan Fernando Jack Ficke Rich Fiedler Noah Flaherty Moises Flores

Keith Ford Mike Fowler Steve Franklin Jake Freilich Brittany Friel Mark Friel Carlton Garrick Lana Gaston Peter Gavett Charlie Geffers Robert Gerwig Sean Gilligan Sue Gilot Tim Giulini Peter Given Bill Goeben Doreen Goldsmith Andy Goldstein Alex Goodrich Mike Govoni David Gray Luciano Greto Amy Griffin Jarret Guercia Oscar Guerrero Joan Haber Bob Haggstrom Nicholas Hall Erik Hannson Allyson Hanover Kane Harrison Cody Hartley Andrew Haupt Amy Haverly Curtis Heath Justin Hebert Steve Heimlich Shari Herman Dave Heroux Andrew Herrmann Kathleen Hill Tom Hilton Steve Hinckley Tim Hinckley Brendan Hindley Patrick Hines Brian Hoey Dexter Holaday Brian Homan Alan Horan Michael Horan Anna Horlbogen Eric Horn Michael Hotkowski Bear Hovey Wayne Hughes Jerry Hutchins Nick Imperioli Jim Injaychock Scott Jackson

Albert Jenicek Eric Johansen Bobbie Johnson Chris Johnson Dave Johnson Brian Johnstone Jackie Joslyn Eulalio Juarez Amanda Kasimir Dave Kegel Tom Kehlenbach Mike Keller Bob Kellogg Gerald Kenna Ken Keyworth Michael Keyworth Emily King Sydney Kingsbury Ralph Kirby Sam Knoblock Ben Kopp Marielle Kraft Paul Kreiling Regina Kurz Lauren Lachapelle Lily LaMarre Haley Lamontagne Carl Langkammerer Gary Langlois Jonathan Lapointe Richard Lapointe Steve Larrimore Matt Larsen David Larusso Jeffrey Larusso Paul Latella Donald Latham Tom Lemos Brian Lenahan Willy Lewis Cy Libby Anthony Lividini Tony Lividini Garrick Lizotte Pete Lukens Carlin Lynch Jeff Maki Tammy Malcarne Diane Mann Tony Mannuppelli Rick Manwaring Joe Mariani Jake Markham Andrew Marshall Matt Marshall Emily Martin Eddie Martinez Vanda Martinez Joseph Martocchia Al Massua

Max Mastrangelo Mike Mathis Tom Mathis Tony Matzkewitz Jermey Maxwell Barbara McAdoo Denis McAuliffe Bruce McDonald Dave McGhie Doug McGinley Matt McKay Liz McKee Mark McKenna David McKenney Steph McLaughlin Gary McVeigh Brandon Michaud Chick Michaud Bruce Miller Ed Miller Jadzia Miller Will Miranda Jake Mokaba Tim Moll Brian Moniz Web Moore Angel Morales Rayon Morrison Paul Muenzinger Kim Mumola Matthew Murphy Nick Muzante Bob Myron Hugo Navarette Charlie Newcomb Dan Newell Tim Nickerson Justin Nolf Graham Norbury Chuck Noreau Gilman Nunes Arty Olive Lynn Oliver Sean O'Shea Brendan Page Joe Palmieri Loren Panowich Robert Panowich Adam Paquin Frank Parella Lynne Parenteau Phil Parrott Brian Patterson David Pavelko Barbara Pearson Patrick Peck James Pellegren Max Pelletier Justin Peltier Rose Pereira

J Santos Perez Brianna Perino Samantha Perino Kristin Peterson James Phyfe Adam Plante William Plock Lynn Porter Rives Potts Rob Preite Sara Prescott Bob Puder David Pugsley Stephen Purdy RJ Pye Brandon Raddatz Tom Raiola Rodolfo Ramirez Eric Rancourt Dave Raynor Betsy Regan Dan Reid Benjamin Renna Tyler Renz Brian Restuccia Ernesto Reyes Hugo Reyes Rich Reynolds Chris Rial Dave Richard Colin Richardson John Ridgeway Chris Ringdahl Gustavo Rios Keith Ritchie Francisco Rivas Doug Roach Jose Rodriguez Jim Rolston Eric Ross Sally Rothenhaus Richard Rotondo Ged Round Chris Ruhling Richard Rumskas Dan Ryan Hilario Saimeron Jose Saimeron Stephen Saja Juan Salinas Andres Sanchez Marcos Santana Daniel Saravia Eric Scharpf Joe Sciuto Jon Seeber Vinnie Seiders Kyle Sheridan Peter Shoares Doug Sieffert Joe Sieverman Alex Simms Corley Simon Jack Simoneau Hal Slater Bernie Smith David Smith Jack Smith Meddy Smith Stan Smith Gary Snow Ray Snow Chris Sodano Sam Sodano

Mike Sonn William Sopelak Nigel Sorensen Fred Sorrento Vien Souksavath Frank Spakoski Tom Spencer Chris Sponza Matt St. Angelo Stacy Stachura Bill Stankard Kelsey Stanton Philip Staples Mark Stein Michael Stoddart James Storms Tremaine Surro Rod Swift Roland Sylvia Eric Symeon Bruce Symes Alison Szetela David Tanzer Jodi Thomas Michael Thomas Willie Thomas John Thome Donna Teich Patrick Teich Ryan Teich Ken Tippet Carlos Tol Juarez Keith Toohey Kris Toohey Walter Tramposch Brian Tuthill Josh Twidwell Hannah Twombly John Uljens Kathleen Valentine Matt Vallante Lynne Vendetti Tim Vetter Ed Vianney Ashlei Voshell Steve Wachter Debby Wade Phillip Ward Chris Washburn Dick Waterhouse Schuyler Weiner John Werner Cassie Whaples Eben Whitcomb Shawn White Bob Wigham Kayla Wigham Kip Wiley Nancy Windsor Sam Wogan Zac Wogan James Woodhull Caitlin Worcester Brenda Wright Jason Wright Rebecca Wright Nathan Wroblinski David Youngs Andrew Yurchison Andre Zaratin Will Zariczny

Brewer Yacht Yards Brewer Hardware Store Brewer Yacht Sales www.byy.com

www.rgbrewer.com

www.breweryacht.com


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

Marine Propulsion Engines

RUGGED

SMOOTH

MAINE Handy Boat Service

Falmouth, ME 207-781-5110 www.handyboat.com

Hodgdon Yacht Services

Crocker’s Boat Yard

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

Manchester, MA 978-526-1971 www.crockersboatyard.com

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

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

Universal Diesel Engines

QUIET

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

Kingman Yacht Center TM

Westerbeke Digital D-Net Diesel Generators

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

Cataumet, MA 508-563-7136 www.kingmanyachtcenter.com

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

Royal River Boat

Niemiec Marine

Yarmouth, ME 207-846-9577 www.royalriverboat.com

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

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

RHODE ISLAND

Yankee Marina & Boatyard

Portsmouth, RI 401-683-7114 www.hinckleyyachts.com

Hinckley Yacht Services

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

New England Boatworks,

NEW HAMPSHIRE Great Bay Marine

Westerbeke 65B-Four

Newington, NH 603-436-5299 www.greatbaymarine.com

Conanicut Marine

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

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

92 Points East December 2014

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

Jamestown, RI 401-423-7158 www.conanicutmarina.com Spare Parts Kits That Float!

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

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

editor@pointseast.com


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