Shavings Volume 11 Number 6 (November-December 1989)

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S H A V I N G S V O L U M E XI, N U M B E R 6

Published for members of the Center for Wooden Boats November-December 1989

BEST STORY COMPETITION

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE YEAR GONE BY The year began dramatically with the occupancy permit for Boat House, the last piece in our Waterway 4 planned development. We now have four buildings, three of them floating on our 1.5 acre site, of which .9 acre is under water? Maybe we should change our name to the "Museum of Float." About 50,000 people visited us, half repeat visitors. About five percent came from foreign countries. After Canada, the international set came mainly from Europe, to our surprise. Our collection grew from 80 to 100 historically significant small craft—all were on display until November when ten were moved to temporary winter storage. Our collection represents over 10% of all small craft in U.S. museum collections, over 50% of those in West Coast museums. About 35 of our boats were available for the public's use. Restoration is ongoing. This year five boats were rehabilitated to exhibit condition and six more are underway. We p r o v i d e d 16 lectures and demonstrations, including those by Norm Blanchard (who built so many large a n d s m a l l vessels at the Blanchard Boat Yard) on his favorite boats; Tage F r i d on woodworking every which way but klutzy; and four squarerig sailors, ranging in age from 70 to 106, holding the audience breathless with experiences as foreign to the rest of us as a trip to Mars. Our 1989 workshops included plane making, model making, lapstrake boatb u i l d i n g , strip plank boatbuilding, brightwork, casting, laminating, sculling, sailing, Salish Indian maritime skills, and boat handling for grades 5 through 8 of Alternative School 1. We hosted "Puget Sound Celebration," a Northwest maritime folklife exhibit; the Pedal Power Potlatch; field trips by summer camps, Cub Scouts, schools, and senior citizens; and a reception for all those running for office in our city and county. For a week in August, our parking lot was "home on the paving" for ten Clydesdale horses and two Dalmatians, fugitives from a Budweiser commercial.

Special events included our 13th A n nual Wooden Boat Festival, Spring and F a l l Regattas, a gig regatta, a Kid's Day toy boatbuilding and rowing event, a marine gear sale, a sail on the schooner Zodiac, a reception on the 18th-century replica brigantine Lady Washington, a two-week Northeast maritime museum tour, a zucchini boat contest, launchings of three student-built boats, and dedication of Boat House. Fresh energy has carried on, completed, a n d expanded a bunch of projects. Vera Velez has instituted weekend sailing instruction, adding to the old standby weekday sessions. G i g rowing has become a popular activity due to the constant coaxing and coxing of Victor Eskanazi. Victor also gets visitors to try out our 32-foot Makah Indian dugout canoe. Tom Parker holds court every weekend in the Boat Shop, offering advice on repairing and restoring wooden boats. How did it all happen? Money freely donated, money earned through sweat and ingenuity, sharp-pencil budgeting, and the volunteers. There is our whitehot core of success. We have an army of volunteers who make the Minute Men look like slackers. About 24 per month put in an average of 580 hours per month. We're t a l k i n g about David Erskine doing grading, Tom Parker b u i l d i n g the h a n d i c a p p e d r a m p (another "how did they think of that?" floating structure), Rebecca Wittman giving our Chesapeake sharpie the u l timate face lift and beauty treatment, Barney Abrams rebuilding our sails, Vera Velez rigging our boats, Rollie Wulff tidying up everything else in sight, Horace Ingram orchestrating the livery fleet, weekday sailing lessons done by Dave Sorocco, and our Board of Trustees in the trenches (guess who sold you the "I Support C W B " stickers at the last boat festival?). I saw dogs wearing those stickers. That's what we call volunteer effort! That was 1989 at CWB. Some year! Or, as C.L. Ponti of Paris, France wrote in our guest book, "Formidable!" —Dick Wagner 1

As great as Shavings already is, it hasn't reached its potential in literary quality. To encourage good stories— stories that bring laughter, excitement, sighs, wonder, or insight in prose, poetry, or pictures—we are instituting an Annual Best Story Award. Our goal is a broad range of articles relating to wooden boats. The judging, by the Publication Committee, will lean favorably toward first-hand experience about such things as buying a boat, selling a boat, sailing a boat, sinking a boat, battling a man-eating clam in the Celebes Sea, cooking a simply "mah¬ velous" quiche in a 100-foot fantail steam yacht, boats and people, boats and dogs, boats and aliens. The committee is p l a n n i n g the award. Whatever it is, you can be assured it will be unique. New Yorker, eat your heart out.

LETTERS... Many thanks for the copy of Shavings (not Soundings, as WoodenBoat fooled me to believe!). It is as good as I had hoped. I am very much infected with classic wooden boat fever, but I also enjoy reading about the Pacific Northwest. Your piece about Prince Rupert was very nice as I traveled around quite a lot in British Columbia and Washington in 1973. Hiking along the Pacific coast, Port Renfrew to Barnfield or down the shore of Olympic N a t i o n a l P a r k , leaves you w i t h impressions that never fade away. Now I work as an artist, sculpting and print engraving (in wood, naturally) and live in a village on the shore of Lake Fryken, where I sail my stjarnbat named Elfvan, a beauty built in 1920. Enclosed is a subscription fee. Keep the Shavings flying over the oceans! —Bo Jonzon Lysvik, Sweden


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Shavings Volume 11 Number 6 (November-December 1989) by The Center for Wooden Boats - Issuu