Miami Saturday 2015 Triton Today

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S at u rd ay • Fe b. 14, 2015

o o o Test Your Mates Test your mate’s nautical expertise with this question: n What is the significance of these nautical flags: Y, W and O? ANSWERS on page 2

Sun & Moon Sunset: 6:13 pm; Sunrise (Sunday): 6:56 am Moonrise (Sunday): 3:44 am; 22% illuminated Low tides (Sunday): 12:10am; 12:43am High tides: 5:35pm; 6:30am (Sunday)

Weather Today: Mainly sunny; high 71; wind NNW 10-15 mph; 0% chance of rain Tonight: Clear; low 51; winds NW 5-10 mph Tomorrow AM: Sun; high 74; winds N 10-15

Did you see that? Take this leadership lesson from Triton columnist Paul Ferdais. With crew’s focus on keeping the boat looking its best during the boat show, it’s a good time for yacht crew managers to recognize the specific tasks crew do to get it there. Recognition from their superiors does a couple of things for yacht crew. First, it reinforces what’s expected of everyone on the team. When one crew member is applauded, other team members can compare their work to the work being recognized and know if it meets the standard. The other benefit of recognizing good deeds is that it creates a spark of initiative. If you acknowledge a senior deckhand for helping to train a new deckhand, they will take the initiative to do it again. Remember, yacht crew leaders, whatever behavior you pay attention to, you will get more of. By publicly recognizing your crew for the good work they do, you’ll get domino effects well into the future. Paul Ferdais writes the Taking the Helm column each month in The Triton. A former chief officer, he is CEO of The Marine Leadership Group, which delivers leadership training workshops and coaching for crew.

USHER IN: Crew onboard M/Y Usher, a 154-foot Delta, offer a warm welcome yesterday at the 27th annual Yacht & Brokerage Show in Miami Beach. PHOTO/TOM SERIO

Recognizable old boat is still a classic By Lucy Chabot Reed While most camera lenses are focused on the shiniest new yachts at the show this week, it’s one of the oldest that has veteran yachties talking. The 122-foot M/Y Never Say Never, a 30-year-old Oceanfast, looks as cool as it did when it launched in 1985, drawing comments from people walking past and stirring up memories from those who can’t believe it’s been 30 years. “I was coming out of Nantucket as it was coming in and I remember saying, ‘Oh wow, look at that’,” said Capt. David Nichols, now a broker with IYC.

“We docked at Shooters one night, and everyone in the two adjacent restaurants stood up and applauded,” said Capt. Peter Nord, who was her first mate from late 1986 to late 1987. “She used to draw crowds when we docked in Newport and Boston, and the U.S. Coast Guard stopped us over 20 times in ’87, mostly so they could get tours.” The yacht was revolutionary when it launched, perhaps the beginning of the reason concert pianist Jon Bannenberg is so famous as a yacht designer. Built on spec by the Oceanfast shipyard

See CLASSIC, page 3

For more news, visit www.the-triton.com


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