Category Archives: boats

British Canal and Narrow Boat Blog

Great Britain (well, a GOOD Britain, anyway) has an extensive system of canals and the narrow boats that were once used for hauling freight are now used as pleasure craft. This morning I received a comment on my other blog (http://houseboatshantyboatbuilders.wordpress.com/) from Andrew Denny who has this wonderful blog that is well worth your time perusing… http://www.grannybuttons.com/granny_buttons/

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Lunch or Dinner?

Here’s a scary photo and it’s NOT photoshopped, either. Once again found on Duckworks, one of the really great sites for and about boats.

That kayaker is actually in the mouth of the whale who is feeding. Read the whole story. Apparently the man wasn’t injured in the incident.

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Great Working Boat Pictures

There is a whole niche of blogging that I follow and in which I plan to participate when I settle in in Panama. It’s called The Daily Photo. There are a couple of these blogs that I look at every day. On is in Avignon and the other in Menton, France. I’m not going to use any of their photos. Go there and see for yourselves by clicking the town. Only drove through Avignon one time without stopping, but I’m very familiar with Menton and like so many of the towns and villages along the Cote d’Azur I adore the “old towns.”

The Daily Photo main web site is: http://www.citydailyphoto.com/portal/ each day on this home page there are thumbnails of blogs from all around the world. Click on any of the 16 choices on each page (and there are usually around 18 pages per day) and you’ll open that blog.

One I found today has lots of nice pictures of working water craft in Le Guilvnec, France at the top of the Bay of Biscay. Working boats are one of my nautical interests. I’m going to add this link on the sidebar. http://leguilvinecdailyphoto.blogspot.com/

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Dylan Winter Scores Again

It’s been too long since I’ve posted anything by the video blogger Dylan Winter. I enjoy his short films about sailing around Britain in a 19′ boat and his shots of classic and working watercraft on his voyage. Also a passion of mine. In this contribution of Dylan’s he gets to ride in a West Mersea Winkle Brig (isn’t that a wonderful name for a class of boat?). This boat is a plasticized version of the old working boats. One of the things I especially like about this is the balanced lug , an old rig I find both beautiful and have done a lot of reading on. My next sailboat will be fitted with one.

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A Good Time Had By All

I found this on the Duckworth site this morning in a post by Paul Cook of Las Cruces, NM.

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New Dylan Winter Web Site

As readers of this blog know, I have featured quite a few of Dylan Winter’s videos of his trip around England in his 19 foot boat. I have also been fortunate to have been in sporadic email correspondence with Mr. Winter who has not only done his bit on the water, but once bought a couple of horses and trekked across much of the western part of the United States with them.

Recently he sent me an email telling me he had a new web site: www.keepturningleft.co.uk. and asked me for my opinion on how it worked. Well, as with everything I’ve seen from this gentleman, it’s superb, and well worth the time for any of my readers to spend their time on clicking and viewing his work.

I especially like the videos that feature the different boats found over there. So many of them reflect the long nautical tradition of England and are either restored working craft of boats patterned after long-established designs.

This is a great place to spend a cold wintry afternoon or an evening when those three hundred channels on the telly have absolutely nothing worth watching. Dylan Winter’s videos certainly are worth the time.

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Time Slips Away

Last weekend they held the 35th Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race. Thirty five years ago I was part of the crew on Rainbow, a 65-foot long Cheoy Lee ketch, taking part in the Inaugural race.

Rainbow is the biggest boat in the picture.

To this day it is still one of the most exciting things I ever did.

Rainbow was, I believe, the last all-custom built boat Choey Lee made. It had a steel hull, aluminum deck house and two beautifully varnished wood masts. It was definitely not a racing boat, but the owner, Charles Scripps of the  Scripps publishing family wanted to do the race for the fun of doing it and for the party in Key West afterwards. I was invited along as crew because the mate on the boat was the first captain I had ever worked for a couple of years earlier. The fact was that the entire crew, with the exception of Mr. Scripps and his son Charlie, were professional sailors.

We started off well on a sunny Friday morning, but since it was a cruising boat and not a racer we weren’t fairing well. It was a laborious beat every few minutes between the north-flowing Gulf Stream and the shore. By the time we  reached Fowey Rock in Miami all of the other boats in our class were over the horizon and most of the smaller boats in the fleet were ahead of us as well.

In the middle of the afternoon the predicted cold front reached us and the wind shifted from south easterlies into the west and clocking into the northwest. We were now on a beam reach and we started to truck. We began to pass the smaller boats ahead of us with the lee rail awash. As it began to grow dark we tucked the first reef into the main sail but left the huge genny flying and hurtling us through the water like a locomotive.

After a terrific hot meal cooked on a gimbaled stove and served on a gimbaled table the four-hour watches were set and the off watch retired below to catch a few winks. I was assigned to the boss’s watch. About five years earlier I’d turned down a job opportunity with his now-defunct Hollywood Sun-Tattler newspaper. As I stood in the cockpit with the wheel vibrating like a living thing beneath my hands I told the gentleman who could have won, hands down, any Ernest Hemingway look-alike contest, that I’d turned down the job and thought it was the best decision I’d ever made.

“What do you mean by that?” he said looking at me over the top of his wire-rimmed half moon glasses.

“Well, just think of the thousands of people who work for you on your newspapers, radio and television stations and United Press International. Every one of them would crawl through broken glass just to have the chance to sit on this boat tied up at the dock. I turned the job down and here I am driving the thing.”

Sometime shortly after midnight a cannon shot roused those of us below out of our sleep. It was a quick scramble into our foul weather gear and within minutes we were on deck where we saw the huge genoa torn to shreds and snapping like pistol shots in the winds that were gusting up to 35 knots and more. In the couple of minutes it took to comprehend the situation the #2 genny was already being hauled out and we jumped into the foredeck to remove the destroyed sail.

The temperature and dropped by more than 4o degrees since the start of the race and with the wind chill it felt like it was in the 20s. The bow would drop into a wave and the warm water would flood the fore deck up to our necks, those of us on our knees clutching at the flailing pieces of sail and working hard to open the hanks to remove it from the fore stay. And as we struggled furiously the bow would rear high into the air and the cold, arctic wind would hit us and we couldn’t wait until we descended into the warmth of the water once more. In no time the sail was down and the new one was hanked on and other crew members were churning away at the halyard winch to raise the replacement.

In all, the old sail was down and the new one flying in less than five minutes.

Back in the cockpit the on-watch crew said that they had passed five boats in the previous three hours, and the number grew as the night wore on.

In the morning as we turned into the ship channel at Key West we blew out the #2 genoa as well and in short order the working jib was raised in its place.

When we were tied up at the dock we found out we were the fifth boat over the line at the end and we had passed up 15 boats altogether. Ted Turner, yes THAT Ted Turner, who had recently successfully defended the America’s Cup, came over and shook all of our hands. He said he was glad the race wasn’t another hundred miles longer because, “Nobody would have seen you guys.”

It was something I’ll never forget…the race or the party that followed. Sunday morning I woke up on a pile of sail bags on a boat I’d never been on before and didn’t recognize a soul aboard who were in about the same condition as I was.

Fourteen years later I sat at a table on a beautiful 96 foot Bruce Roberts ketch having lunch with Mr. Scripps once again after not having seen him in the previous 13 years. He asked if I’d like to “go live in France for six months or so.” He had an 85 foot sailboat over on the French Riviera in Antibes, between Cannes and Nice, that needed a captain. I believe you can find that story in earlier posts on this blog. Those “six months or so” ended up being nearly three years in France and getting to sail the boat across the Atlantic and the job ended up with a tenure of three and a half years.

Thirty five years since that first Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race. Where did all those years go?

Trivia question: Who on the stage is a Rhodes Scholar?

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Mosquitoes and High Water

A couple of sleepless nights ago while surfing on line I came upon the wonderful resource site: Folkstreams.net and watched a great film about Gandy Dancers, the old crews who worked straightening railroad tracks and using songs to coordinate their work.

This morning I returned to the site and watched a film about the Isleños of St. Bernard Parish, Louisisana. The Isleños, from the Canary Islands, settled in St. Bernard, to the southeast of New Orleans in the 1770s. The reason I wanted to watch this video is that I am very familiar with this community. I spent two years running a crewboat in the Kerr-McGee oil field in Breton Sound and our headquarters were located in Hopedale at the very end of the St. Bernard Highway as it ends in the swamp at the edge of nowhere. To get to Hopedale you drive through the Isleño communities of Violet, Poydras and Yscloskey (pronounced Why skloski). A lot of the old traditions are carried on.  You’d see family members in the cemeteries washing the graves of their departed prior to All Saints Day and adorning them with flowers.

The following is the trailer for the full 23-minute long movie…

In the full film you’ll see great shots of the magnificent Lafitte Skiffs with their beautiful sheerlines. One of the prettiest of all boats I know. I hope you’ll check out the full film at:

http://www.folkstreams.net/film,75

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Bert & Ernie On A Boat

If you love Sesame Street but don’t like “Bad Words” then resist this video with all your might. For the rest of you who love Sesame Street and “Bad Words” are a part of your everyday vocabulary you might like this:

Stolen from: http://sea-fever.org/

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Small Boat Blog

Interested in small boat sailing as I am? Here’s a good site I stumbled upon today:

http://bills-log.blogspot.com/

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