from the masthead - American Yacht Club
Transcription
from the masthead - American Yacht Club
December 2008 Issue 10 Sailorgram Commodore Eric Vasquez 978-521-9017 FROM THE MASTHEAD Vice Commodore Bob Chadwick 978-373-6106 Rear Commodore David W. Hewey 978-373-6038 Secretary Gary Gastman 978-462-6533 Treasurer Douglas Cornell 978-474-4323 Collector Pamela Mertinooke 978-388-4515 Measurer Augustus Harrington 978-463-8882 Membership Committee Mark Hansbury 603 887 6943 Mooring Committee Gene Piermattei 978-374-7940 “Together we are Winners.” — Eric T. Vasquez December 2008 • Eric Vasquez, Commodore To all my dear friends: I would like to express my sincere gratitude to the membership for giving me the opportunity to serve as your Commodore this past year. It is an honor and a privilege to be entrusted with such a responsibility and I am proud of what we accomplished in 2008, both as a governing board and as volunteer committees. I want to thank all of the members of the Executive Committee for their leadership, support, and hard work as Directors and Flag Officers, an effort that made real progress possible on the Club goals of maintaining and improving our membership experience. Each of the Committees, along with numerous volunteers, made for a successful year at the Club and on the water. The dedication of our members is truly a testament to the passion and focus that the AYC has for the promotion of yachting. I want to express my thanks and appreciation to you all for a job well done! Fair Winds and Following Seas, Commodore Eric T.Vasquez House Committee David Hewey 978-373-6038 Regatta Committee Bruce Brown 978-521-6802 Entertainment Committee Angela Vasquez 978-521-9017 Activities Committee Rob Brun 978-462-1948 Sailing Camp Sue Manzi 603-474-9644 Steward/Club House 978-465-9053 Flood Tide. Detail of a painting showing the mooring shed and dinghy rack by AYC member Rob Brun December 2008 Issue 10 Judy Raycroft’s Award Winning Chili Errata and Omissions The Sailorgram apologizes in advance for any errors in spelling, grammar, punctuation, or the accuracy of person or boat identifications. The content of Sailorgram articles is the sole responsibility of the author, including stated facts, opinions, commentary, and humor. We try to include as many submissions as possible and may, due to space limitations, choose to omit or delay certain submissions for later issues. In other words, the Sailorgram takes responsibility for hardly anything. From the AYC Chilifest 2008 Judy was kind enough to provide us with the recipe for her award-winning chili, as judged by popular acclaim at the 3rd annual AYC Chilifest this past October. Copy it and serve it at home, but don’t attempt to pass it off at the 2009 Chilifest or there may be a widespread tie for first place! 2.5 lbs of lean hamburger 3 cans red kidney beans 1 yellow onion 1/2 green pepper 2 cloves of garlic 1 can stewed tomatoes 2 cans diced tomatoes 1 can tomato paste 1/2 c red wine 1 tsp cayenne pepper * 2 tsp chili pepper powder * 1 tsp mustard powder salt & pepper garlic salt Mooring Ball Reminder If you have a mooring ball still in the AYC yard, you need to pick it up and store it for the winter. With winter storms and tides you might lose your mooring ball if left where it is. The club will not be responsible for any loss. Saute onion, pepper and garlic in a little olive oil.Add hamburger and brown with spices.Add tomato paste, red wine and mix.Add beans tomatoes and season with salt & pepper. Simmer for 20 minutes or so. * Add more for a chili that is warmer than “medium” For Sale/Free/Wanted We will advertise any items submitted for sale by a member for one issue and will repeat those ads only upon the request of the person placing it. There is no charge for listings. Contact the Sailorgram. The Wanderer’s new owner showing her distinctive color scheme DAY SAILOR FOR SALE 16' Mistral Day Sailor on trailer with 3.3 hp Evinrude (run only about 1 hour). Boat has not been in water for three years so needs cleaning. It is a fast and fun boat with a trapeze. Asking $1300. Call Gary O. at 978-270-5003. Wanderer continued from page 5 impressing people with a lot of show. He knows boats are there to be used and enjoyed.And he knows that it doesn't matter what your boat looks like as long as it is safe, seaworthy and you can trust it. Joel Miller, the Wanderer's new owner, explained over the past 2 years she's been undergoing extensive rebuilding "from the backbone up." He cut new horn timber and keel pieces from an oak tree which was growing on his property in Lee, NH, and replanked some of her with white cedar from a local sawmill. She also has a new bowsprit, new cockpit and an all-new interior. He's now finished and launched her again this October for an extensive cruise to the Carribean with his new bride. The day may come when you run across Arthurs' old Wanderer. She'll be sporting a very non-traditional red hull and colorful trim, but her original homespun, "can-do," yeoman spirit will still be very apparent. Looking eastward on the dirt road by the AYC. Painting by Rob Brun 2 December 2008 Issue 10 A special series highlighting the many different boats of the AYC A line drawing of Art Berube’s Wanderer, compiled from photos and some studied conjecture. The architect’s drawings for the original Seabird yawl can still be found, but Art’s had a full keel and a modified cabin trunk. WAN DERER The Wanderer Art Berube’s Seabird Yawl by Jim Grenier, Sailorgram Editor It was 1970 when I first took notice of what I then figured might be the homeliest and possibly the most ragtag boat on the Merrimac River... boxy cabin trunk. Unlike many of the craft around the AYC mooring field, she was all wood and rough finished; all paint and canvas with only her spars left for varnish.To me, she looked more like a backyard project than a yacht. T here were plenty of boats on the river in those days and I probably knew most of them by sight -- at least those moored from Hudson's float to Plum Island, because Captain Paul York and I passed them every day at dawn and again at sunset. But this boat, the Wanderer, sitting in mooring field of the AYC always stood out from the rest. I turned to Captain Paul and pointed her out to him. He was salty as they come and knew boats like I didn't. I expected him to have some funny and slanderous comment to make about this odd duck among the swans. I remember the first time I noticed this boat. It sat low in the water, hunkered down low like a great seabird at rest.And it wasn't the prettiest bird in the flock, not by a long shot. She was long and narrow, hard-chined and slab-sided with a low "She's a helluva boat." he said. "A boat just like that even crossed the Atlantic.A helluva boat." continued on page 4 3 December 2008 Issue 10 Wanderer continued from page 3 "Charlie Powers told me to get a piece of locust and showed me how to square it up and I installed it for a new sampson post. I did all kinds of things like that!" Art's eyes light up when he talks about her and is obviously proud of how he could look beyond her disrepair and see the great boat she had been and could be again. I looked back at The Wanderer with less humor and a lot more respect. "And even if the fellah that owns that little ship doesn't go anywhere past the mouth of the river I bet he has more fun on her than most men on their fancy boats.A boat like that is for using, not for impressing folks." "It took some time – years, actually – but when I was done she didn't leak a drop. I had a lot of fun on that boat, my kids and their friends too." Art chuckling his way through the statement. Clearly he has lots of great memories of that boat banked away. Captain Paul could tell a lot about a man from his boat. These days you can't look out to the AYC mooring field and find the Wanderer, but you can still find her owner who sometimes runs the club launch.The Wanderer was a fixture at the club for well over 30 years. Many members can conjure up her unique lines and rig. Sure, she's gone now. But her spirit is still there.At least for me. I'll bet some club members looked upon the Wanderer as I did when I first saw her. Maybe they thought she was homely and unseaworthy. But they couldn't be more wrong. Her design was the brainchild of Thomas Day and Charles G. Mowers who developed the design specifically for The Rudder in 1900.At 25' 7" it was big enough to cruise, yet small and simple enough to build in the common man's yard.They called it the Seabird Yawl. In an age when a sailing yacht was the domain of the wealthy few; where it took real money to buy a Herreschoff or Fife, the Seabird inspired a whole generation of less-privileged folks and opened up the possibilities of boat ownership to common men. The Rudder and the Seabird helped make boating much more mainstream. One might argue publishing the lines of the Seabird did more to open up yachting to the general public than any other single event in the 20th century. The Wanderer was purchased by life member Arthur Berube in 1970 from Pappy of the Pappy Bakery in Lawrence. Pappy had acquired her in 1940 but she had sat on a mooring while he was in the service. Unattended for long periods of time, she invariably sunk. She was refloated and used again, but she eventually ended up in pretty poor condition at Charlie Powers' boat yard. There she sat, waiting for the right person to come along.And that person was Arthur.Art, as he is often called, had never tackled a boat like this, though he had owned a power boat at one time. He knew a wood boat in tough shape is a major commitment.Yet there is something telepathic between a man and the right boat. It's kind of a love story.And so Art's affair began. The Seabird Yawl has proven to be one of the most popular small yachts of all time, thanks in part to a later adaptation by Charles MacGregor for easier plywood construction, and various adaptations for larger vessels. Phil Bolger and others have admittedly borrowed heavily from the Seabird. "I did all the work myself, says Arthur,"there were a lot of things I didn't know how to do and so I figured things out as I went." Just by her bearing, one can tell she had a workboat influence. Hard-chined and v-bottomed, her Chesapeake skipjack heritage is quite obvious. But skipjacks are shallow boats with centerboards.The Seabird was a departure with deeper draft.The original Seabird prototype indeed started with a centerboard but Thomas Day converted it to a fixed and ballasted keel to prepare for his historic Atlantic crossing in 1911.This was one of the smallest boats to ever make the passage at that time. If it weren't for her workboat heritage and influence, yacht esthetics might find plenty wrong with her. But like an old farm tractor, its devotion to necessity softens its shortcomings and force boat lovers to find honesty, dignity and purpose in her lines. Real boatmen look upon her with admiration and respect where the angular hull lines and the angular cabin structure might lead an unknowing person to feel otherwise. In all things, and especially boats, form follows function.The Seabird Yawl was designed to be inexpensively built, easy to sail on short cruises, single-hand, and to ride out even heavy seas easily. She was designed to be functional, not graceful. In that light, the Seabird was all that and more. Arthur and crew member aboard the Wanderer powering out of the AYC mooring field. Many boats of this design were built by home craftsmen as was continued on page 5 4 December 2008 Issue 10 Wanderer continued from page 4 intended, but many more have been professionally built.The Wanderer with a full fixed lead keel, was built in 1938, carvelplanked cedar on oak sawn frames, in New Bedford by three Fortin brothers with plans to sail her to the Bahamas. It is unknown but possible they made that trip in 1939, but she was in the hands of someone else in 1940. Arthur's Wanderer was a gaff yawl. Sailors understand the ease of handling a yawl provides.They are simple to balance and you can leave the self-tending spanker alone and deal with the mainsail and single headsail.The gaff rig brings the center of effort lower which increased the boat's stability -- though with a displacement of over 5000 lbs.The Wanderer had stability to spare. Like many old gaffers, the Wanderer used gaff jaws and mast hoops to attach the sails to the masts.As a compromise to modern convenience the sails were bent to the spars using bronze sailtracks instead of lashings. The bow sported a hogged plank bowsprit, and a short boomkin hung from the stern, adding to the visual length of the boat and making her appear even lower in the water than she actually was. interior layout. He made two very long berths that ran the length of the cabin. It was simple enough and he added more sleeping area for the small boys in the bow. She had a small galley with a water hand pump and ice box, and a Colman 2-burner propane stove for coffee and an occasional meal.A head on the port side rounded things out and made life a bit more comfortable. One of the most unique parts of the Wanderer's rigging was the V-shaped port side ladder attached to the mainmast spreader.This had to be a lot easier and more comfortable than hanging from a bosun chair when working aloft. So what, exactly, happened to the Wanderer? The original Chesapeake skipjacks didn't deal with currents and tides like we do here on the Merrimack River.This means auxiliary power is important on any boat too large to row. Some Seabirds were built with inboard engines, but the Wanderer relied on an outboard engine. "It looked kind of odd having that big engine hanging off that narrow transom, but it was all I needed and it never let me down. I just changed the plugs every now and then and flushed it out every year," says Art. "And it really looked pretty crowded when I hung my dingy back there too!" (see the photo on page 4) Art had grown weary of all the constant upkeep and maintenance an old girl like the Wanderer demands.Art explained "It was just getting to be too much for me to do by myself. I loved the old boat but knew it was time to let her go." It’s a common story among wood boat owners. Art sold her to a man from Vermont who planned to take her up to Lake Champlain.After she was sold the man drove down from Vermont a couple of times and started the required work. But he stopped coming. Checking in on the new owner,Art was told that he no longer wanted the boat and wanted to get rid of it. So Art's son bought it for cheap and gave it back to Art. Yet it still was just going to sit there. Now what? Just as he figured out how to restore an old boat,Art also taught himself to sail. "I learned to sail on that boat. I took her out on the ocean and just figured it out myself.When I got good and comfortable I asked my wife to come out with me. She used to go with me all the time in my old powerboat, but she only took one trip on that sailboat and that was that. Never set foot on it again." Art flashed a quick smile. "But my boys and their friend were with me all the time.We always had a great time." Over the years he had done more than a few trips to Cape Ann, Boston Harbor and all over the Gulf of Maine with his boys Christopher, Kevin and their friend Peter. Arthur and his wife were at the 2006 Antique and Classic Boat festival in Salem, MA.There they met a young man name Joel Miller with a very impressive small boat restoration project on the dock. Recognizing a great opportunity to do the right thing for the aging Wanderer and for the aspiring young wood boat enthusiast,Art made him an offer he couldn't refuse.Two days later the old girl was trucking her way to Derry, NH for a renewal in the hands of someone with the desire to do it right. The Seabird lines drawings I managed to locate online didn't seem to boast much room down below, with two berths, a couple of lockers and focs'le storage. "She didn't have much headroom, but I didn't mind it. I'm not too big myself.The boys always seemed to have enough room" explained Art. These days Art sails his small sloop Forever Young. Its red hull and his grandchildren's handprints on the hull sides certainly make this boat unique in its own way. Like Captain Paul showed me, you can tell a lot about a man from his boat. Clearly Art loves to be on the water and loves his family and grandkids. He is truly unique and not one who cares for Not long after he started sailing the Wanderer,Art changed the continued on page 2 5 December 2008 Issue 10 AYC Closing Day photos by Eric Vasquez continued on page 7 6 December 2008 Issue 10 Closing Day continued from page 6 7 FIRST CLASS MAIL US POSTAGE PAID Topsfield MA Permit 325 The American Yacht Club P.O. Box 1360 Newburyport, MA 01950 December 2008 AYC Items For Sale Hats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 13.00 AYC Pins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 5.00 Decals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 2.00 Burgee – Small . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 20.00 Burgee – Large . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 25.00 Heavy Knit Shirts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 35.00 Collared AYC Shirt Navy with Red & White Trim M, L, XL, XXL Pique Shirts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 25.00 Collared AYC Shirt Slate Blue Collar with Navy Trim S,M Please notify Pam Mertinooke if you are interested in any of these items. 978-388-4515 A few AYC Clip-On Blazer Crests, to be worn only on a Navy Blue Blazer, are available for $10.00 each. E-mail Eric at: eric.vas@comcast.net Issue 10 American Yacht Club P.O. Box 1360 Newburyport MA 01950 Organized 1885, Incorporated 1890 Please send all digital* Sailorgram submissions to sailorgram@americanyachtclub.org Send all physical** Sailorgram submissions to: Jim Grenier, 5 Folly Mill Road, Salisbury, MA 01952 Due date is the 5th of each month. Sailorgram will only be published when there is enough material to warrant it. * Copy submissions must be in .txt, .rtf, or .doc format; image formats must be .jpg, .gif, or .tif; images should be min. 150 dpi at 5x7 size. ** All written matter must be typewritten; images can be photos, drawings, or other flat artwork. Artwork can only be returned if provided with a self-addressed and stamped envelope.