2013 Members Magazine
Transcription
2013 Members Magazine
2013 summer calendar YC’s Penguins have hung up their skis. The Eagles are dusting off their golf clubs. Our sailors are launching their boats for another season of regattas , Beer Can and Laser races. Over-The-Bottom participants are planning their strategy and hoping that more "dumb luck" will help them win this year. All our TYC members are looking forward to many fun-filled events this summer. And your Board is committed to the success of each and everyone of these TYC events. The traditional “official” opening of the summer season is our Fizz Fling on Saturday, May 25,. Come by the clubhouse for a gin fizz, concocted and served by your board of directors. Help yourself to a great summer lunch buffet catered by Melanie Jackson, and gather ‘round for the Blessing of the Fleet by the Rev. Dr. Chip Larson (a sailor himself) of Tahoe City’s Christ the King Lutheran Church. It's a great way to kick off your TYC summer and catch up on all the news with friends not seen since the end of last summer. the caterer. We will, however, attempt to fill your reservation if there is a waiting list. We appreciate your understanding. Yacht clubs as well as other private clubs everywhere experience membership attrition each year and TYC is no exception. Our Membership committee, chaired by Director Rick Raduziner, has been working on an incentive plan and a number of ways to reach out to more of our Tahoe neighbors. (See page 8). Increasing club membership is crucial to sustaining the Tahoe Yacht Club. I ask every member to take an active role in growing our roster. Invite your friends to our events so they may experience all that the TYC has to offer. Meet me at the club! Be sure to check TYC’s calendar often in Block & Tackle and online at www.tahoeyc. com. Social events like the Fizz, First Fridays, and August’s Big Kahuna, are planned by our Hospitality Committee chaired by Vice Commodore Tom O'Rourke and his wife, Marie, working along with our club manager, Megan Leopard, and staff. And it takes a fleet of volunteers to make these events happen. Please consider volunteering for the committee to host or help put on an event. Like the Fizz Fling, many of our social events require an RSVP for planning. I ask you to please respond as soon as possible and no later than the stated deadline. For catered events, a firm “head count” must be given days before the event to the caterer who, in turn, charges the club based on the number given. If, at the last minute, you decide not to or are unable to attend we must charge you because of our commitment to Founded 1925 Summer Season Hours A May 27 thru September 1 Office: Tuesday through Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Clubhouse: (full bar service) Daily, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. bout now many of you have spring fever and are eagerly awaiting summer’s approach, me included! We just had a beautiful Easter day, and, although there are some late spring snow showers in the forecast, it will be sunny and warm soon! And once again, we have a calendar packed with events from our traditional summer season opening day Fizz Fling on May 27 to August’s Big Kahuna Bash. Summer Staffing Soon I expect that we will be seeing many more of your faces around the clubhouse as everyone breaks into their summer vacations. And you will see a few changes around the clubhouse, and with summer hires, some new faces on staff as well. Veteran staffers include club manager Megan Leopard who will be organizing member events as well as private parties and membership drives and bartenders Edward Torres and Cody Lewis. For onthe-water events, Greg Barraclough returns to set OTB courses and head the Edward Torres and race administration for our Clubmanager Megan Leopard sailing regattas. Los Gatos, Calif., native Victoria Sheldon is one of our new bartenders this year. Her father was commodore of Los Gatos Yacht Club and at the age of three months, Victoria (continued next page) Spectacular views and casual fine dining Lots of fresh fish and Chef Scott Yorkey’s specials Public Pier boat parking Lake Tahoe Webcam & Weather Station at www.jakestahoe.com 780 North Lake Blvd., Boatworks Mall at Tahoe City Marina (530) 583-0188 Greg Barraclough Cody Lewis around the clubhouse (continued) Lower minimum and more ways to use it! I want to remind everybody that the 2013 member minimum runs on the calendar year – January 1, 2013 through December 31, 2013. The board has reduced the Regular Member minimum to $250 (from the previous $300). Once again this year, up to $100 of your minimum can be applied toward social events! You can also use your minimum at the bar, in retail purchases, by renting the club for private events, or toward an advertisement in our Block & Tackle B oatique THE at t y c ! For graduation, Father’s Day, any day, check out the new summer logowear arriving daily and on display in our “Boatique.” This summer, we are getting a new line for men and women with lots of different items: shirts; short and long beach cover- ups; new sandals, fleece jackets and more. Don’t forget all your retail purchases count toward your annual minimum. Special thanks to our “buyer,” Sports Tahoe’s Mickey Gregory. Joyce Drechsler was made first member. Now she is working on her EMT and rafting guide certificates while attending Sierra College for transfer credentials toward her BS degree. With sailing, snowboarding, backpacking and fishing as favorite hobbies, Tahoe was the place for her to settle, surrounded by nature while still close to family. Now happy to be part of the TYC family, Victoria, who Victoria Sheldon raced with her father aboard their 38-ft. Refiki sailboat named Grace, hopes to join a crew on our Wednesday night Beer Cans. Next time you are in town, come meet Victoria and her friendly smile. Club Event Reservations and Cancellation Policy We have a busy and fun calendar set up for this coming summer, so please join us for your favorite events! To better serve you and ease confusion, please follow these procedures when making a reservation for our club events: • Make your reservations by providing your name and all names of guests you are hosting on your club account. You can make reservations with Megan through e-mail (clubmanager@tahoeyc.com) or by phone (530.581.4700). • If you plan to have guests who you will NOT be hosting, have them call the office to make their reservation and make arrangements for payment. • TYC’s cancellation policy is as follows: o Reservations may be cancelled without charge through email or by phone BEFORE the event’s reservation deadline. o You will be charged the full event fee for your reservation if you are a "no show" or have cancelled your reservation AFTER the reservation deadline. Please know that, when we have a late cancellation, we’ll try to sell the reservation to another member to avoid charges. We strive to maintain accurate counts for events and to accommodate as many members as possible. Your assistance with these procedures will help us in accomplishing these goals. Thank you for your understanding and support! NEW fireplace mantle and bookcase Special thanks to Director Keith Mason for his carpentry talent in creating a fireplace mantle on the bar side of our fireplace that actually looks like it’s always been there. It’s a perfect showcase for TYC trophies and photos. Coming soon: a new 80-inch flat screen TV above the mantle. Stop in soon and take a look! Your WI FI hot spot seven days a week! Having trouble with slow (or no) internet at the lake? TYC is your WI FI hot spot to relax with a cup of coffee or cool libation and beautiful view while checking your e-mail anytime the clubhouse is open. Please support our advertisers I want to ask all members to please consider our Block & Tackle advertisers when needing a new service or product. And mention that you saw their ad in our publications. This will encourage them to continue advertising and supporting our magazine! Last year we gained 17 new memberships and this year we lost 24 members. So far this spring, we have approved three new members/applicants. It's natural that we will always have attrition with members due to many different life reasons. We need to create a positive inflow to bolster our ranks. More members = more fun. More Members = TYC financial stability. More Members = opportunities to make new friends. à 2013 Membership Incentive - TYC’s board of directors has approved a reduced initiation fee of $1,000 for 2013. A trial membership is no longer an option. à Membership Appeal Letter - 1,200 direct mail pieces have been sent to a select demographic of property owners within the Tahoe basin. à Membership Package - The member- ship package has been streamlined to Brad & Tamara Drian Jim & Phyllis Plugge Crystal Bay, Nev. Regular Membership approved December 2012. Sponsors: Vern & Pat Lucas; Seconders, Dick & Nileta Morton The Plugges have been members of the North Lake Tahoe community for a number of years and through their local church, Saint Francis of Assisi in Incline Village, became friends with several TYC’ers. Jim, a retired VP of marketing, and Phyllis had been members of several yacht clubs in other places were they resided so it was only a matter of time until they joined TYC. The couple are looking forward to the club’s social events, and the Concours d’Elegance, while sailor Jim, who is currently between boats, hopes to crew this summer. Tahoe City, Calif. Regular Membership approved April 2013. Sponsor: Dan Hauserman; Seconder, Rick Raduziner Brad, a real estate investor, and Tamara, along with children Ali, 14 and Nick 12, recently relocated to Lake Tahoe after buying a home here this past year. They will also be adding a 22-ft Four Winns to the TYC fleet with their new membership. Brad is interested in racing sail boats and thought TYC was the best way to get started. The couple is also interested in wine-tasting events and social events. Elaine Lamb Annapolis, Md. Young Adult Membership approved Sponsor: Rick Raduziner; Seconder, Dan Hauserman Elaine, a nurse practitioner, is relocating to the Reno/Tahoe area in July from Annapolis, Maryland, where she is a member of the Severn Sailing Association. She is an active dinghy and keelboat sailor on the Chesapeake Bay and owns a 14-ft. Laser and Jet14. In addition to TYC’s keelboat and Laser regattas, Elaine is interested in joining our Penguin Ski group. Tom & Martha Hughes Sacramento/Homewood, Calif. Regular Membership Tom and Martha have been members of TYC since 1979 and we are happy to have them back after a short hiatus! Tom owns a Toyota dealership in Yuba City and enjoys antique cars. Martha, an avid bridge and dominoes player, enjoys gardening. The couple, who are also Friend members of the Tahoe Maritime Museum, enjoy spending time with their three children and seven grandchildren at their Hurricane Bay lake home and with their boat, Sr. Crisis, a 2003 25-ft. Chris-Craft launch. make it smaller and to reduce mailing costs. These packages are to be distributed to several sites around Lake Tahoe including but not limited to boat dealerships, marinas and other appropriate locations. à Email blast to lakefront owners - We have created an email blast appeal letter that is being sent to lakefront HOA condominium complexes. We have had a positive response to include it in their next e-mail to their members or allow us to provide a printed insert into their next mail-out piece. If you have direct access to any HOA president or board member, please let Megan Leopard or me know so that we can contact them. 2013 t a h o e y a c h t c l u b MeMbership roster Address, phone numbers, emails, boat ownerships…please check your listing in the new 2013 Roster. The information printed is what is on file and/or supplied by you on this year’s membership renewal form. Let us know of any additions/ corrections or make your changes directly online through the secure “Members Login” at www.tahoeyc.com. Extra copies of the Roster are available at the clubhouse for your use only and must not, under any circumstances, be loaned to nonmembers or used as a mailing/solicitation list. à Website - Our new TYC promotional video, along with a member application, is now available to be accessed directly from our homepage at www.tahoeyc.com. Please direct your friends to our website to learn about us. à New Member appreciation party - Our New Member appreciation Party will be held on August 2, 2013 in conjunction with the First Friday cocktail party. All new members from 2012/13 will receive two free drinks on the house. As you can see, we have a lot in the works. I want to extend a big “thank you” to Clubmanager Megan and General Manager Mariana for their assistance in executing our ambitious plan. At this time we need additional Membership Committee members. If you are interested in contributing a little time for the benefit of our club, please contact me. I look forward to seeing you at the club. P.S. Don’t forget that any member who sponsors a new regular member gets their minimum waived the following year! Fizz Fling B l e ssi n g the Fleet and of Saturday, May 25, 2013 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Clubhouse A selection of “First Friday” hors d’oeuvres by May Hospitality Hostess Jeanie MacAulay. By tradition, the 2013 summer season is kicked off with an invitation from Commodore Dick and Nileta Morton to join them for gin fizzes, prepared and served by the club’s flag officers and directors, along with a catered light lunch buffet by Melanie Jackson. The Mortons’ pastor, Chip Larson of Tahoe City’s Christ the King Lutheran Church and a sailor himself, will be our guest to offer a blessing for fair winds and safety on the waters. Dress, also be tradition, is natty and nautical “black tie” so be creative; there’s a prize for “best dressed.” After a one-year hiatus, the TYC-sponsored North Tahoe Rowing Regatta is back, scheduled this year for Saturday, June 15. Since we missed last year, we’re hoping for a record turn-out this year. That means we’ll need chase boats, as usual. Staff Commodore Rich Stout and Navy Blue From Sue Campbell have already agreed to serve again as the committee boat, which means we will need four more volunteers. 10 Photo courtesy North Tahoe Rowing Regatta Being a chase boat for the regatta is a unique experience. We rise before dawn to start the race before the Lake gets choppy, which means spending a very tranquil morning watching the scullers row by. If you think you might be interested, please e-mail Sue Campbell at suecampbell21@aol.com. The clubhouse is the place to be the First Friday of every month – a great time to meet new members, visit with old friends and find out who’s back in town and around for the summer. No reservations needed for this casual cocktail party with great drink specials and hosted appetizers, prepared each month by a member Hospitality Hostess volunteer. Just stop in, perhaps on your way to dinner, and enjoy this fun perk of being a TYC member. Starting at 5 p.m. We are also looking for members willing to house a rower or two Though most of our rowers choose to stay at the Crown Motel in Kings Beach where the race begins and ends, a few do request housing every year. So if you have a spare bedroom in your Tahoe home, please consider offering it up to our dedicated rowers. Please let Mariana know, if you are interested. So be on the look-out for our rower guests. There will be a pre-race dinner and meeting held at the club on Friday evening, June 14, so if you’re around, feel free to drop by and offer them encouragement. The race is spectacular but also a lot of hard work. SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 1 JUNE 2013 2 3 4 LASER RACE 5 6 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 10 8 FIRST FRIDAY Cocktail Party - 5 pm First Shape: 1800 11 LASER RACE 12 13 14 LASER MASTER PACIFIC COAST CHAMPIONSHIPS First Shape: 1800 12th annual NT ROWING REGATTA Dinner @ TYC 6 pm Father’s Day LASER MASTER PACIFIC COAST CHAMPIONSHIPS 17 18 LASER RACE 19 20 First Day of Summer OTB Launch Party BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 21 First Shape: 1800 - 5:30 pm ACBS Woodie Whoopie 23 24 LASER RACE 30 First Shape: 1800 - 6 pm 15 Flag Day BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 16 BEER & FOOD TASTING hosted hors d'oeuvres PICYA Delegates Meeting Vallejo Yacht Club 9 7 25 26 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 27 28 Regatta Kings Beach – 7 am 22 OTB #1 8:30 am registration Tahoe City Marina Southern Crossing Tahoe Windjammers YC 29 Annual TYC FAMILY PICNIC Catered lunch and games on the Ehrman Mansion lawn, Sugar Pine Point State Park - 11 am to 2 pm EAGLES Golf #1 1pm - Brockway Potluck after at TYC GAR WOODS Regatta First Shape: 1500 It’s a red-white-and-blue weekend on the sprawling lawn of the Ehrman Mansion at Sugar Pine Point State Park with a picnic geared for members, your kids and grandkids, friends too. The picnic is catered — this year by the Crest Cafe — and the games planned — two-legged races, hula hoops, watermelon eating contests and more — and, of course, lots of prizes for the kids. Watch your e-mail for picnic RSVP information; make your reservtions and remember to bring a blanket or lawn chairs to enjoy this lazy summer afternoon as the boats drift by. (With work proceeding on the rebuild of the Sugar Pine pier, destroyed in a 2011 winter storm, it will be a whole lot easier to come to the picnic by boat this year! Ship-to-shore TYC tender available.) 11 re you tired of the restaurant runs and slow cruises around the Lake? Then join your friends at the Tahoe Yacht Club for an exciting adventure using your power boat in an Over-the-Bottom Season Series event. Members without a power boat are welcome, too. We will even help you get started. Ride along with an experienced OTB’er or invite an experienced OTB’er to ride along in your boat for an event. (Read on for a more detailed description of an OTB.) Club members are still talking about the 2012 OTB Season Series when, in the final event, Bill Mann and his experienced crew in Sweet & Sour pulled out the victory by a single second over Harvey Rogers’ boat, Where’s Harvey. Mike Simmons in Above Water won the 2011 Season Series and as is the tradition, hosted the 2012 Awards Luncheon at “Playtime,” Kay Turner’s beautiful West Shore home, following the final event. tions for each event. (See schedule on opposite page.) We anticipate the 2013 OTB Season will be equally challenging and fun for all. Greg Barraclough will again be setting the courses and providing devious and intriguing instruc- Note that for 2013 we have arranged to finish one event at Gar Woods and another at Chambers Landing, in addition to returning to a favorite – the West Shore Café in Homewood. OTB #3 is scheduled for a Sunday which is also a first. All TYC power boaters are invited and encouraged to participate in the OTBs. All types of craft – wood, fiberglass, or metal – can participate. No specialized equipment is required and speeds are not excessive. However, many skippers believe that a GPS and a stopwatch are useful. History has proved that a successful performance in an OTB requires limited navigational knowledge, some boat handling skills and, most importantly, a whole lot of luck! Typically, 15 to 20 boats have participated in 12 Over-The-Bottom 2012 Summer Series an OTB, but the more the better! For example, several years ago we had more than 60 boats participate in the OTB during Wooden Boat Week. In recent years, participating boats ranged in size from the 16-ft. wooden Tingle, a 1959 Century Resorter owned by Becky Arnold, to the 33-ft. Beauty and the Beach, a 2002 Formula owned by TYC Director Keith and Susie Mason. Some skippers have participated single handed, but most find one or two additional crew to be helpful. It is up to the skipper as to how many additional passengers participate. Remember, in addition to being challenging, the event is intended to be fun! At the morning registration before each event, skippers and crew receive instructions to follow a prescribed course including direction, speed and timing. Each boat attempts to follow the same course, departing at one minute intervals, with the objective to match the mark time set by the TYC staff in the club’s mark boat. skipper and a crew member) to the season series award luncheon (at least a $60 value). Signing up for the Series of five rallys is a better deal than paying $30 for each individual event, assuming that the boater participates in three or more OTBs. Additional lunch tickets for crew, as well as skippers who do not sign up for the season series will be available for an estimated $30-35 each. Lunch tickets must be purchased at the clubhouse in advance of the final Over-The-Bottom event (OTB #5), on Saturday, Aug. 24. Along the course there are multiple check points where the crew will pick up a playing card, which is used to form a poker hand at the end of the rally. Only boats which attempt to follow the prescribed OTB course will be considered for awards for the event. The Season Series winner is determined after the final event, based on each participant’s gross cumulative time off the mark time for their best three of the five events. Members and crew are welcome to participate in one or more OTB events. Many participate in three or more to qualify for the Season Series and additional awards. Last year, 23 boats participated in the OTBs with 15 qualifying for the Season Series. Please contact any member of the Power Boat Committee if you have questions and especially if you are interested in participating but may need an experienced crew member to help initially. Committee members are Roger McGee, chairman, (415) 533-5164 or rcmcgee@aol.com; Becky Arnold; Director Bill Mann; Wendy Poore; Mike Simmons; and Staff Commodore Andy Wagner. The cost for the Season Series will be $100 per boat which includes two tickets (for the 2013 OVER-THE-B0TTOM SEASON SERIES Event Date Location Registration Launch Party Friday, June 21 Tahoe Yacht Club 5:30 p.m. Clubhouse Tahoe City Marina/ TYC (finish) Chambers Landing 8:30 a.m. on the water 8:30 a.m. on the water Gar Woods 8:30 a.m. on the water 8:30 a.m. on the water OTB #1 Saturday, June 22 OTB #2 Saturday, July 6 OTB #3 Sunday, July 28 OTB #4 Saturday, Aug. 3 West Shore Café Boat Week OTB* Monday, Aug. 12 Sugar Pine PointAdvanced Registration OTB #5 & Awards Luncheon Saturday, Aug. 24 Meeks Bay (tentative) 8:30 a.m. on the water * All power boats are invited, but wooden boats will be given priority. Sign up in advance with Concours d’Elegance social events or with the TYC staff. This event is not part of the OTB Season Series. 13 T his year we are going to try something new, and I think it will be fun and exciting. We are bringing together two of Lake Tahoe’s oldest institutions — Tahoe Yacht Club, established in 1925 as the Tahoe Power Boat Club, and Old Brockway Golf Course, established in 1924 and the home of the first Bing Crosby Golf Tournament (1934-35). Lane Lewis, Old Brockway’s owner since the ’80s, has refurbished the restaurant and clubhouse and there are great old pictures dating back to the original Crosby. Throughout the clubhouse, you’ll also find pictures of other celebraties including Dean Martin, Phil Harris and Frank Sinatra who were regulars on the course when Sinatra owned the near-by CalNeva Resort in the fifties and sixties. The rational for this change is that I cannot get the competitive rates I have had in the past at the other courses. So we are going to work closely with Brockway to make these fun golfing events on this historic Kings Beach course designed by renowned Scottish architect John Duncan Dunn. Private or group lessons can also be arranged with Brian Eilders or Garrett Cook. New at Brockway this year are two Bocce Ball courts. I have had a discussion with Vice Commodore Tom O’Rourke and we might combine a bocce ball tournament with the golf tournament. This would bring out non-golfers as well. Dates for the Eagles Golf will be the last Fridays of May, June, July and August (May 31, June 28, July 26, August 30). Tee times will be 1 p.m. for those who will be playing 18 holes and 1:45 p.m. for those who will be playing 9 holes. At the end of each event, we will meet back at Tahoe Yacht Club for a potluck and awards. We have an application with Wolfedales to enter their Bocce Ball league for the summer. The games are played on Thursday starting at 6 p.m. with the starting times changing each week as we work through the rotation. Anyone interested please contact: 14 More information will be provided, as we get closer to each event. Bring your spouse, children, grandkids or friends and join us for our golfing events and a “hole” lot of fun. I (continued on page 20) Wovoka Lakefront Estate ~ sold for $20,900,000, Feb., 2013 Bill Dietz, Principal Broker, CA Lic #01431063 ~ NV Lic #B.0027100 Tahoe Luxury Properties is a premier, full-service real estate agency representing the most exceptional collection of luxury real estate and vacation rental homes throughout North Lake Tahoe, CA & NV. 800.581.8828 tluxp.com 15 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 1 2 3 4 Independence Day 5 6 Watch the FIRST FRIDAY Cocktail Party LASER RACE BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 First Shape: 1800 Tahoe City FIREWORKS (at dusk) from the comfort of your clubhouse! 7 8 9 LASER RACE Spring Series Awards Party TRANS-TAHOE AWARDS LUNCH First Shape: 1800 LASER RACE 17 13 First Shape: 1700 18 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 Clubhouse 11:30 am 12 Warm-up Race - 8 pm 16 ACBS Woodie Whoopie TRANS-TAHOE WEEKEND First Shape: 1800 PICYA Delegates Meeting Bridge Marina Yacht Club 15 11 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 14 10 - 5 pm OTB #2 8:30 am registration Chambers Landing 50TH ANNUAL Skippers’ Meeting: 1000 First Shape: 1200 19 20 BEER TASTING & FOOD PAIRING TENNIS SOCIAL ACBS Woodie Whoopie 22 Crusin’ EDGEWOOD RUMGATTA 23 LASER RACE 24 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 First Shape: 1800 - meet 9:30 am Tahoe City Marina Sign-in - 9 am 6 pm COMMODORES' CRUISE to Emerald Bay - Picnic at 5 pm 21 TRANS-TAHOE REGATTA 25 26 EAGLES Golf #2 1pm - Brockway Potluck and awards after at TYC Board Meeting Clubhouse - 10 am 27 SUNNYSIDE REGATTA First Shape: 1800 South Tahoe Wooden Boat Classic - Tahoe Keys Marina 28 29 OTB #3 8:30 am registration Gar Woods LASER RACE First Shape: 1800 ACBS Annual Picnic and Show Awards 30 31 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 JULY (continued) Join fellow members at the club for a cozy, front row seat for the Tahoe City fireworks, starting at dusk (approx. 9 p.m.), and the show from South Shore, too. No charge; the bar will be staffed and snacks set out for munching. Or come in earlier and watch the hundreds of boats gather for the big show. Call in early and order a pizza or full dinner from Dockside 700. 16 Lagunitas, founded in 1993 and one of the fastest-growing craft breweries in the U.S., is known for iconoclastic interpretations of traditional beer styles (and irreverent packaging). Their flagship IPA has been consistently the best selling India Pale Ale in California. Pair that with some pretty fine food by Tahoe City’s Wolfdale’s Cuisine Unique and you’re in for a great evening. $30 per person; RSVP by Tuesday, July 16. The Commodores’ Cruise to Emerald Bay has been a TYC tradition since the ’60s but it’s not just for commodores. ALL members (and their guests) are invited to join in the fun of this picnic on the Vikingsholm beach. Boat in or come by car and hike down the Vikingsholm trail. And if you need to hitch a ride, give the club a call. There’s no charge, no reservations needed. TYC provides the traditional “Commodores’ corn-on-the-cob,” a grill for cooking, and a boatload of beverages. On your list to bring: your food for the evening, plates and utensils, and a blanket or camp chairs (in case all the picnic tables are taken). The Tahoe Yacht Club Tennis Social, a summer tradition since 1990, is scheduled this year for Saturday July 20. All level of players, women and men, are encouraged to come and have a great time at our annual Tennis Round Robin on North Shore courts. We will gather at the TYC at 9:15 a.m. and play will begin at 10 a.m. Lunch and prizes will follow, back at the club (for players and guests) at the conclusion of the matches, about 1 p.m. Registration forms, available at the clubhouse, must be received along with payment by Saturday July 13. Questions? Contact Tennis Social chair Kelsey Ferris or call Mariana at the club, (530) 581-4700. Join us for a fun day of social tennis and a wonderful lunch catered by Melanie Jackson. Pack a picnic lunch and head “south” with Staff Commodore Stacy and the Conner crew to Edgewood Tahoe where Tahoe Celebrity Golf alumni battle it out in the final round of the 24th annual American Century Golf Championship, televised nationally starting at 12 pm PDT. We’ll anchor off to party and serve hosted rum drinks from our committee boat and if you want, we’ll take you ashore for a closer look at the course. No charge or reservations needed. To see who’s playing, go to tahoecelebritygolf. com. (As for “Rumgatta,” the name’s a holdover from years back when a rum distillery sponsored a wet-and-wild TYC cruising event to the east shore.) 17 ack-to-back below average snowfall years have us entering the summer with much lower lake levels and bigger launching challenges but where there’s a will, there’s a way! Be extra careful this year though. Especially for those of you whose boats have a keel on the bottom. Rocks usually win! This article was written in April at which time it feels like summer is coming early so if that is still the case, let’s get out there! 2012 was a great sailing year, even though it was a cold and late start, and it looks like the 2013 sailing season is shaping up nicely, too. Here is what’s new: 1. The Laser Masters Pacific Coast Championships are being hosted by TYC on June 15-16. Registration is open to all sailors, 35 years of age and older. 2. We have implemented a new online event registration system allowing participants in all our sailing events to register, pay and sign waivers online. Look for the link on the homepage of the TYC website. at www. tahoeyc.com. 3. We are pleased to be offering a Racing Rules presentation by John Siegel on May 22. One week prior to the first Beer Can races. 4. Our “Buddy Boat” program is thriving. Throughout the summer we will have two Lasers and at least one Sunfish at the Lake Forest boat ramp. This is a free member benefit for you. You can check out the sail bags at the TYC. 18 First up this season is the Laser Fleet, TYC’s largest and longest standing fleet of boats. It is not uncommon to see 15 to 20-plus boats on Monday nights. TYC has both a Standard Fleet and Radial Fleet. The Laser Radial is the same boat but with a smaller sail for less experienced or lighter weight sailors. It is perfect for those learning to sail or for those a bit overpowered when it is windy. There is great support each Monday at the boat ramp where experienced skippers are always willing to share their knowledge and help you along the path of becoming a better sailor. to Gary and Lynn Redelberger for their efforts on this event. The seven-week Spring Series begins Memorial Day and the Summer Series begins July 8. After the races each Monday, nightly awards are given out at one of the sponsoring restaurants. Many thanks to Jake’s, Sunnyside and Hacienda Del Lago for their continued support and awards. The Wednesday night Beer Can series is always a summer highlight and sailors are often heard saying “it just doesn’t get much better than this. Beer Can Racing gets going on May 29 this year with the races starting at 6 p.m. Like the Lasers, there will also be both a Spring and Summer Series. This year Tahoe Yacht Club is happy to have been chosen to host the Laser Masters Pacific Coast Championships. Top notch sailors from throughout the West will congregate for epic one-design fleet racing. This is an excellent on water spectator sport. The Laser season concludes with the Kip LarRieu Memorial Laser Fleet Championships and campout at Stampede Reservoir the weekend of September 7–8. Thanks to board member Rick Raduziner for organizing the Laser series and championships. There will be three classes of racing. Division One consists of the fastest boats we have. Division 2 is for medium fast boats with PHRF ratings (handicaps to level the playing field) between 57 and 87. Last, but not least is Division 3, the largest division, consisting of boats with PHRF ratings of 90 or more. It is a fun time along with some of the most competitive racing of the summer. If you are not a sailor and/or haven’t been to the club after the races, you should check it out. Kudos The Erik Arnold Memorial Restaurant Race Series is back and this year will consist of three races, all starting at 3 p.m. on Saturdays. The races will be run using a pursuit format where the PHRF rating is factored in before the start. The highest rated PHRF (or slowest) boat starts first and lowest PHRF (fastest) starts last. The idea is that all boats will cross the finish line at the same time and this makes for a very exciting race for everyone! Course details and start times are emailed out prior to race day. The venues are Gar Woods Regatta on June 29, Sunnyside Regatta on July 27, and Jake’s Regatta on August 17. Each of the regattas are held in front of the sponsoring restaurant, making for good views for spectators and a quick dinghy ride in for the awards parties immediately following each event. This year will be the 50th anniversary running of the event. Thank you, Bill Briner, for getting it started in the early ’60s. This unique distance race offers a bit of everything and is sure to again attract boats of all shapes and sizes including a large Corsair trimaran class for a 20-35 mile race (depending on wind conditions and boat type). There will be a warmup race Friday, July 12, followed by the all-day race on Saturday, July 13, and awards lunch on Sunday at noon. Jim and Lynn Mullen and family have put this event together since summer of 2005. It is no easy task. Thank you so much for your incredible dedication, organization and skill. Your efforts are remarkable and very much appreciated. As you can see, there will be many exciting events. If you are looking to crew on a boat or are a boat owner looking for crew, feel free to contact me and I will spread the word. Also, we are often looking for help in running races so if you know of someone with sailing or race organization skills, please let us know. We just may need them. 19 50 th TRANS TAHOE Regatta On Saturday, July 13, Tahoe Yacht Club will celebrate the 50th running of the club’s feature race across Lake Tahoe and honor three sailors who helped make it happened. 20 As the story is told, the inspi- ration for the Trans Tahoe came over a few drinks at Sunnyside and talk about sailing the big Transpac (the Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu, the longest of the two oldest ocean races). According to Bill Briner, “Someone piped up ‘Why don’t we start our own?’ and so we did.” From four boats in 1963 — racing from Sunnyside to the first mark at Sugar Pine Point, across to Sand Harbor and back — the Trans Tahoe grew to become the largest sailing regatta on Lake Tahoe and one of the club’s premier events of the summer season. On Saturday, July 13, Tahoe Yacht Club celebrates the 50th anniversary of the club’s largest sail event. As its founder, Staff Commodore Briner (1981), will be honored during the weekend as the Fleet Admiral of the Trans Tahoe. In addition, honors will also go during the weekend to the late Jake Obexer II and Eric Conner for their contributions to the success of the club’s Trans Tahoe invitational regatta and sailboat racing on Lake Tahoe. Trans Tahoe weekend events, beginning on July 12, include a warm-up race followed by a “welcome aboard” party at TYC on Friday night, the Trans Tahoe race itself on Saturday, and awards luncheon at the clubhouse on Sunday. The course—approximately 30 nautical miles —will go from Tahoe City to Sugar Pine Point, and then across the Lake to Glenbrook on the East Shore. The return is to Sugar Pine Point and then to Tahoe City. Most boats finish before dark, but in years past, several have come in just before midnight, the deadline for finishing. At the awards ceremony on Sunday, trophies will be awarded to winners of each class of boat entered and to the overall winners. Scores are based on a PHRF handicap system that considers the relative speeds of boat types that have different sailing characteristics. The overall winner of the keelboat divisions receives the Eric Conner trophy, named for the late TYC Vice Commodore who served as club race chairman for many years until his tragic death in 2004. The Jake Obexer trophy (right) goes to the highest finishing boat owned by a TYC member. Meanwhile the winner of the cruising division—for boats that do not fly spinnaker sails—is awarded the Hellman perpetual trophy, named in memory of TYC sailor, Staff Commodore Raymond Hellman (1974-75). In the 2012 Trans Tahoe, the 41-ft. J/125 August Ice (pictured opposite page), owned by TYC member Dick Ferris, won both the Conner and Obexer trophies, finishing the 31-nautical mile course in 4 hours:20 minutes. Under the performance handicap system used by TYC, the difference in time between August Ice and second place finisher Racer X, a Farr 36 skippered by Gary Redelberger, was 3 minutes:27 seconds. The early Trans Tahoe races did much to dispel the myth that sailing Lake Tahoe, while certainly challenging, was too dangerous because it was not possible to see the “dark line.” Although collisions were not unheard of, and the “Man Overboard Trophy” was awarded more often than not, the races continued to grow in popularity, peaking in the late ’70s with up to 120 participants in a year co-chaired by Greg Dorland and John Utter. “In those days,” Utter recalled, “we had probably 40 or more trailor-able boats; a whole cadry of J’s and Moores that would come up from the Bay for the Trans Tahoe. Back then, it was easier to secure moorings for the traveling boats, generously provided by our west shore marinas, along with spare buoys made available by TYC members.” Coerced by Commodore Les Bartlet (1978-79), Utter took on the Trans Tahoe chairmanship, a job he held for nearly 20 years, in addition to serving as commodore in 1985. As the regatta (continued next page) In 1975. Commodore Ray Hellmann announced the establishment of a perpetual trophy in memory of Jacob P. Obexer II, (grandson of Tahoe boating pioneer, J.P. Obexer) who had recently lost his life in a tragic marina accident at the age of 27. From an accompanying newspaper article: “In just a few years, along with a mere handful of others, Jake brought the sport of sailing on Lake Tahoe from a colorful, but relatively rare phenomenon, to a leading participation sport. The three-foot trophy, which resides at the corner of the clubhouse fireplace, is awarded to the TYC-member boat taking first place overall in the annual Trans Tahoe Regatta. Inscribed plaques at the base of the ship’s compass date back to 1968 Trans Tahoe winner Charles Crawford in Extra Dry. 21 (continued) headed into its third decade, the 29 to 30-mile length of the early races remained pretty much the same, but there were changes afloat. By 1983, the regatta had moved from its original late summer dates when the winds go soft, to the second weekend in July, the date often coinciding with a full moon. With no time limit in those early days, the latter was appreciated by unlucky sailors who didn’t cross the finish line until “o’dark-hundred” the following day. [Last year’s last boat to finish came in at 10:27 p.m., comfortably before the midnight deadline.] In the early days there was also little inspection of boats and few rules. When it was realized that some of the boats were “souped up,” that changed too, and the PHRF point system was adopted. By 1993, TYC’s members magazine reported a “new dimension” added to Trans Tahoe weekend by organizers Utter, Vice Commodore Michael Rosenauer and Director/Sail Chair Rich Stout: a Sock Hop for skippers and crew on Friday evening with barbecue on the Homewood Green (then the location of the TYC summer clubhouse). And the good news from Obexer’s Jim Lane: “We’ll have some significant improvements in launching facilities…to handle any boat that wishes to sail.” And from Homewood High & Dry, an enthusiastic prediction of a harbor water depth of six to eight feet. Water depth and weather have always been concerns for the Trans Tahoe, but ways were found to launch in low water years and “we’ve been very lucky,” Utter recalls. “We’ve had to shorten courses but only reschedule one or two that I can remember due to weather.” One of those was in 1999 when Eric Conner wrote in Block & Tackle: “For only the second time in its 36-year history, the Trans Tahoe Regatta was forced to cancel on its scheduled day, Saturday, July 10. Unlike the first weatherforced postponement in 1996 because of galeforce winds, this year’s reason was the total lack of wind.” Twenty-seven of the 43 yachts originally registered for the 1999 regatta, sponsored by Red Tale Ale, returned for the rescheduled August 28 running, which finally got underway some two-and-a-half hours after its posted start time because of, you guessed it, a no wind situation. In 2009, it was the opposite: 38 boats started but only nine finished when 40-knot winds from an unpredicted mountain storm hit the fleet about three hours after its start. Refinements in courses, ratings, and classes have been made. In 1995, with the relocation of the club, it was logical to move the start and finish from the west shore to within view of the clubhouse in Tahoe City. Through it all, the Trans Tahoe invitational regatta has maintained its 50 year focus, to provide a fun and challenging yachting event for members and non-members alike. Come out and join the Trans Tahoe spectator fleet TYC members and friends are welcome to join the spectator fleet to watch the racing. In view of this being the 50th anniversary of the Trans Tahoe, the race committee will organize a boat parade of woodies and other motor craft to encourage our sailing fleet. Watch for more information at www.tahoeyc.com. 22 23 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY AUGUST THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 1 2 3 FIRST FRIDAY Cocktail Party - 5 pm OTB #4 8:30 am registration West Shore Café hosted hors d'oeuvres BIG KAHUNA BASH - 6 pm 4 5 6 LASER RACE 7 8 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 First Shape: 1800 12 LASER RACE 13 First Shape: 1800 Ladies' Luncheon Woodie OTB tba -11:30 am Sugar Pine Pt. - 9 am Men's Grill Sponsors Dinner Homewood - 12 noon 18 Crusin’ RASCALS IN PARADISE tba - 6 pm 19 14 BEER CAN RACE Opening Night Gala 15 Awards - 6 pm 16 First Shape: 1500 Picnic and Show Tahoe Yacht Club - 6:30 pm 20 LASER RACE 21 22 23 24 First Shape: 1800 followed by Awards Luncheon tba ACBS Woodie Whoopie 26 27 LASER RACE 28 29 BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 followed by BEER CAN “BALL” Awards Dinner - 8 pm (continued) Big Kahuna Bash The Rascals cruise is back, led by Staff Commodoress Bruce and Donna Block. Meet on the water in front of the club at 10 a.m. to get your progressive cruising “instructions” and order a cool drink. Then follow the clues to the “secret” destination for a delicious catered Sunday lunch. Watch for RSVP information. TYC’s Big Kahuna kicks off the Saturday before Boat Week with catered island pupus to desserts by Melanie Jackson, a no-host bar with plenty of specials, live music by Jo Mama for dancing and more! Don’t miss the party of the summer AND the fastest “sell out.” Space is limited so get your name on the reservation list NOW! OTB #5 8:30 am registration Tahoe City Marina BEER CAN RACE First Shape: 1800 17 SUNNYSIDE REGATTA Mahogany Magic First Shape: 1800 24 41ST ANNUAL CONCOURS D’ELEGANCE Sierra Boat Company 10 am - 4:30 pm 9 am to Roar Off - 4:30 pm Exhibitors' BBQ and First Shape: 1800 - meet 10 am Tahoe City Marina 25 10 WOODEN BOAT WEEK West Shore Café - 6 pm PICYA Delegates Meeting Pittsburg Yacht Club 11 9 30 EAGLES Golf #3 31 ANNUAL 1pm - Brockway MEETING OF THE Potluck and awards MEMBERSHIP after at TYC - 2 pm End-of-Summer Season Party - tba 2013 Marque Class: the collection of ALAN FURTH Tahoe Yacht Club will again be sponsoring the exciting Over-the-Bottom power boat event during Wooden Boat Week, returning to beautiful Sugar Pine Point State Park. On-thewater activity will be followed by live music, a no-host bar, and terrific picnic buffet lunch by Men Wielding Fire. The award ceremony follows lunch. Bring chairs and picnic blankets to be comfortable beneath the majestic sugar pines. There will be a prize for the best costumes and decorations in the “Old Tahoe” theme. Sign up for the OTB with the other Concours social events or directly with the TYC staff. (Priority will be given to wooden boats.) Boat entry fee is $125 which includes lunch for captain and first mate; additional lunches can be purchased for $35 per person. Contact Roger McGee (rcmcgee1@aol.com) or Mariana Dye (gm@tahoeyc.com) with questions. TYC continues the tradition of a potluck picnic with barbecue grill provided, hosted wine and beer, and at dusk, a slide show of all the fun we had during Wooden Boat Week. Bring all the fixin’s for your dinner plus a dish to share and folding chairs for the show. Reserve online at www.laketahoeconcours. com or call (530) 581-4700; $30 per person. In it’s 40 year history, Tahoe Yacht Club Foundation’s Concours has featured boats by manufacturer; by years—20s, 30s, 40s; gentlemen’s racers, sedans and cruisers, blonde decks to fiberglass. But this year will be a “first” when the 2013 Marque Class showcases the boats of one man: Alan Furth, a life-long Tahoephile, TYC member and consumate collector. Elegant, eclectic and rare, these boats are sure to be a crowd pleaser for the 41st annual Concours d’Elegance, set to show Friday, Aug. 9, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and from 9 a.m. until our “Roar Off” parade at 4 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 10, at Sierra Boat Company in Carnelian Bay. With more than 90 boats in his collection before his death in 1993, Furth was likely one of the most well-respected and largest wooden boat collections in the hobby. Pictured above is just a sampling: the gracefully proportioned Canadienne, a 1952 Greavette 24-ft. Streamliner; Oski III, a one-of-a-kind 30-ft. Stevens Brothers specially designed as a crew coaching launch for the University of California; and the Jerry Daly, a rare 1933 38-ft. Anderson & Cristofani pilot boat from the Bay. Alan was one of the most renown boat collectors in the world and, amazingly, he kept the vast majority of his collection at Tahoe. After his passing, most of these boats were sold and have since been scattered all over the county. We’re honored to feature Alan’s collection as the Marque Class, which will bring many of these classics home. Also returning to the show will be Terry Fiest of Orlando, Florida, as chief judge for the fourth year. Terry, who served as a Concours lead judge for seven years prior, is also a veteran ACBS judge and chairman of the Mt. Dora (Florida) Antique Boat Festival. The results of his Concours judging team’s work will be announced Friday night, Aug. 9, at the Exhibitors’ Barbecue in the Sierra Boat courtyard. The Foundation is also pleased to welcome Tahoe Luxury Properties, specializing in exceptional year-round vacation rental homes and premier real estate listings, as presenting sponsor of the 2013 show. (continued) 25 Ahoy fellow boaters … Thinking of buying or selling a slip? Please call or e-mail for available sizes and pricing or for any of your Tahoe real estate needs. Capt. Jim Courcier - Realtor 530-233-9000 Cell 800-477-5570 x121 jim@jimcourcier.com www.jimcourcier.com (continued) Social Events and Personal Sponsorships On the social side, the 2013 Marque class inspires an “Old Tahoe” theme for our Opening Night Gala, Thursday, Aug. 8, at the West Shore Café. It’s usually an early sellout for this night of great food, wine and music so don’t wait too long to make your reservations! The Men’s Grill at Turners’ “Playtime,” and Ladies’ Fashion Show Luncheon/Fashion Show by Sports Tahoe (location tba) are scheduled for Sunday, Aug. 11, both with catering by Melanie Jackson. And wrapping up the “week” is the fun Mahogany Magic potluck and slide show on Tuesday, Aug. 13 (see previous page for details). Personal sponsorships (at graduated levels) include the by-invitationonly Sponsors’ Dinner on August 12, marina VIP Lounge and reserved VIP Parking for both days of the show. It’s our way of saying thank you for helping TYC Foundation present this wonderful event and, hopefully, realize a financial surplus so we can help other marine related 501(c)3 organizations around Lake Tahoe. Please consider a sponsorship this summer when making your reservations. For Concours information and reservations, visit: www.LakeTahoeConcours.com 26 e are planning an exciting summer program for our Jr. Sailors (adults, too) with fundraising efforts showing good results to support our program. During the 2012 season we were able to repair the hull of our Boston Whaler 17' to enhance our safety and teaching capabilities at a cost of $4,000. Due to the rigors of safety boat operations, with extensive stopping and starting, the 90 hp. Mercury engine on our most recent used Whaler was also replaced, with help from California Department of Boating & Waterways and TYC Foundation supporters, with a new 75 hp. Evinrude ($7,700). We were also able to replace two of our oldest Pico sailboats that were over 13 years old and getting to the point of no repair. Our members’ fund raiser brought in over $1,500 with another $ 1,000 pledged. With the support of our TYC Foundation, Stout Foundation (Stout Family), The Odyssey Foundation (Roberts Family) the ABM Charitable Trust (Ferris Family) and our safety partner, Calif. Dept. of Boating & Waterways, we are well on our way to achieving even more of our goals for 2013. Some of the highlights of 2012 that we can all be proud of include: • establishment of the TYC Jr. Laser Radial team in addition to our Pico Team; • eight Laser Radial sailors and seven Pico sailors competed in eight-week race series; and • receiving PICYA’s Condon Award for distinguished and selfless promotion of youth sailing in 2012. In addition, we established a relationship with San Francisco Maritime and took our team to the Bay in August to sail on the tall ship, Alma. We also got to stay on the tall ship Balclutha and experience a very different aspect of maritime history and hands-on learning. Our plan is to return this summer for more hands-on training with SF Maritime. Thanks to Madeline Eustis, SF Maritime Director of Education for making this happen! Some of the summer programs for 2013 include women’s sailing clinics, adult sailing classes, and a U.S. Sailing Power Boat Safety in early June. (See the TCPUD Summer Recreation schedule for exact dates.) Our plans for this summer include expanding the number of our Jr. Sail team members in both Pico and Laser Radial boats to compete in the race series in conjunction with our TYC Laser fleet races. We also plan to attend some Jr. events in the Bay Area Youth Series and are looking at putting on a Laser Radial Jr. regatta sometime in the near future at TYC. Hayden Hauserman, and Drew McMillan are our full time staff for summer. New talent coming on board for the summer including Program coordinator, Peter Brewster, a US Sailing, Level 2 Coach, and an extremely talented and experienced sailor who will be a great asset to our program. This very strong group is the result of having an effective Jr. Instructor Program that trains most of our future instructors from our own TYC member/student base. A number of our Jr. Instructors are attending the Level 1 US Sailing Instructor training at Richmond Yacht Club, Inverness Yacht Club and Stanford University this spring. When Jrs. turn 16 yrs. old, they are eligible to be trained in US Sailing instructor courses and can work in the program. When they turn 18, they become fully certified US. Sailing Instructors. Many thanks again to Sarah Obexer Fields and all the great Obexer’s staff, including Darren Kramer and Jim Lane, for their continuing support. Their strong community support is a major asset to our Jr. Sail program. Tahoe Community Sailing program and the TYC Jr. Sailing Program are coming back with a very strong team of instructors and coaches for 2013. Bryce Griffith, Zack Thomas, 27 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Labor Day FIRST FRIDAY Cocktail Party - 5 pm LASER FLEET CHAMPIONSHIPS Stampede Reservoir 8 9 10 LASER FLEET CHAMPIONSHIPS Stampede Reservoir 16 12 13 14 20 21 Club returns to winter* hours on Labor Day weekend. PICYA Delegates Meeting Oakland Yacht Club 15 11 17 Visit www.tahoeyc.com 19 for hours18and events update. *Book the clubhouse for your holi- 22 Autumnal Equinox 23 24 day party or other special occasion for just the $300 cleaning fee (which applies toward your minimum). As a member, the rental fee is waived. 25 26 ACBS 12th Annual Boat Show Coeur d’Alene Resort, Idaho 27 28 OKTOBERFEST CELEBRATION - 6 pm 29 30 SEPTEMBER Around 1990, more and more owners and crews started noticing it was actually cheaper to drag the boat to the Bay and to remain prepared for any number of weekend events. The Berkeley Midwinters were the initial challenge of choice, happening once a month for four months. Other opportunities to race the boats existed such that one could flee the incessant snow for a short respite in 60 degree weather. ot many years have passed since the overwhelming majority of those who participate in TYC’s summer racing season simply pushed their steed to the back of the lot, tossed the sails in the garage loft, put the outboard on a rack next to the bikes, and used the mast as the center section for a makeshift snow hovel. The boats were left to winter’s mix of pine needles and snow, only to reappear when the lifts quit turning. 28 Historical analysis demonstrates that TYC members have found the podium in virtually every regatta, having gained multiple and repeated top honors in midwinter regattas hosted by Berkeley, Sausalito, Golden Gate, and Corinthian Yacht Clubs. They have also won offshore contests including but not limited to the Crewed Lightship and Crewed Farallon Races. TYC boats have elevated the Club’s reputation from one with a light air 90-day existence to a force with which to be reckoned on the racecourse. Nobody can deny that this 12-month dedication has also increased the level of racing at Tahoe. Boats will be hoisting new state-ofthe-art sails, have reworked masts for modern halyards and have faired, fast bottoms. Those who spent the winter sailing will be ahead of the (re)learning curve. Those who took the winter off will be up to speed and prepared to contest the Trans Tahoe podium and looking to do well on both the weekends as well as on Wednesday evenings. TYC racing is every bit as good as that found at any Club. TYC members simply have two magnificent venues upon which to follow their passion year around. Keith Mason W ith the Gin Fizz Fling and Cinco de Mayo parties already established, our staff has been busy the month of April meeting with caterers planning fun events such as the June 30 family picnic at Sugar Pine Point and the Big Kahuna during August’s boat week. It does take that much advance planning to insure we have the right people working to insure your pleasure. Future parties will see some new creative ventures mixed with established venues such as the wine tasting in April coupled with a members’ art show and sale with part of the procedes of the show going to TYC. Our TYC Kids’ Day pictures say it all: busy hands at the craft and train tables, bubbles to blow, ring toss, egg hunt inside and out and more. Thank you to all who have planned and hosted our social events during the past year! If you are interested in joining our Hospitality committee, please email Megan at clubmanager@ tahoeyc.com or call (530) 581-4700. 29 The plot: The year was 1938 with war looming on the horizon. German rocket scientist Werner Von Boom was found dead in his compartment and the plans for his rocket missing. Who murdered him and why was for the audience “passengers” to figure out during dinner. TYC’s McPotluck is all about food, all-you-can-eat, and a vote for the favorite. This year’s winners: Best Salad Nileta Morton (broccoli salad); Best Entree - Nancy Cunningham (corned beef with all the trimmings) and Best Dessert Lynn Mullen’s cookies 30 First Fridays Special thanks to all out FIRST FRIDAY Hosts during the past year: Fritzi Briner Margaret Holiday Marie & Tom O’Rourke Carol Cunha Pat Landgraf Rick Raduziner Nancy Cunningham Jeanie MacAuley Linda Schwoob Fran Gerhardy Susie Mason Sue Stout Linda Greifenstein Nileta & Dick Morton In January, Tahoe author/historian Mark McLaughlin, returned for a show-and-tell of stories from Tahoe’s winters past. TYC welcomed Peter Goin, University of Nevada Reno professor of photography and videography, on April 6. Goin shared photos (and stereotypes) illustrating how Lake Tahoe was essentially defined and described from the ‘water view,’ and how even early boating dress and hats of the day influenced fashion history. 31 J.R. KRAUSS LTD. SHORELINE CONSTRUCTION, NEW OR REPAIRS, BOATLIFTS, ADJUSTABLE CATWALKS CA LIC #580291 NV LIC #40421 (530) 362-1161 jrkrauss.com A Tall Tree full service Tree compAny • FREE Estimates • Hazard Tree Removals • Defensible Space • Stump Grinding • Crane Jobs • Spikeless Pruning & Trimming Locally Owned & Operated Over 15 Years Experience in Tahoe Reliable & Economical Licensed, Insured & Bonded Call Tim Rantz (530) 525-1013 ATallTree.com License # 915362 32 After three years of construction, the newly expanded Tahoe City Marina is now complete with the very best in recreation, dining and shopping in Tahoe City. The opening of the public pier, in conjunction with the opening of the Lakeside Trail and new North Lake Tahoe Water Shuttle all contributed to increased public access, making the Marina the gateway to the Lake for locals and visitors alike. On-the-water amenities include 81 newlyconstructed slips, 161 privately-owned slips, 41 buoys with a buoy valet service, two fuel docks offering regular and diesel gasoline, and the public pier. Buoy and slip rentals are available on an annual, seasonal, monthly, weekly or daily basis, depending on availability. Guest Buoy & Guest Slip Parking: To allow for easy access to our shops, concessions and downtown Tahoe City, the marina provides several day-use guest buoys and slips. Guest parking is filled on a first-come, first-serve basis and there is a two-hour time limit. To inquire about availability, ask any dock attendant for assistance. TYC Member Reimbursement: If you are a Tahoe Yacht Club member and rent an annual slip on the expansion side of the marina, you will receive a $500 reimbursement for your membership. If interested in renting a slip, contact the TCM administrative office at (530) 583-1039. Marina Services include indoor winter storage, forklift and travelift launching, pumpouts, professional detailing by Ken Manuel of Auto Purity and boat repair service provided by A & M Marine, the Altitude Specialists. Dockside 700 Restaurant & Double Dog Deli offers lakefront dining and gourmet grab&-go food. In addition to TYC, tenants and concessionaires on the property also include Sports Tahoe, Alpine Home, Tahoe Marine Supply, Tahoe Canvas, Tahoe Sailing Charters, Lake Tahoe Parasailing, Tahoe City Kayak, and the Center for Spiritual Living TahoeTruckee. Check out each of these businesses on your next trip to the Marina. Powerboat Rentals (weather permitting) are available from Memorial Day to mid-September: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., seven days a week (No overnight rentals). Early and late summer: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., seven days a week around the Tahoe boaters who cross the state line into Nevada waters this summer will to be required to display a Nevada aquatic invasive species (AIS) decal, in addition to their inspection and Tahoe AIS decal issued through TRPA. The decal requirement, which went into effect as of January 1, 2013, includes in and outof-state motorized watercraft as well as most paddle-craft, such as canoes and kayaks. Watercraft that are capable of retaining water are required to display the decal. Paddlecraft, such as stand-up paddle boards and float tubes are exempt from the decal requirement. Purchase of the decal is based on a calendar year with the cost falling into four categories: Resident non-motorized watercraft: $5 Resident motorized watercraft: $10 Nonresident non-motorized watercraft: $10 Nonresident motorized watercraft: $20 Decals can be purchased online (with service fee) at www.ndowlicensing.com or by call- Lake ing (866) 703-4605. They also are available at Nevada Department of Wildlife offices in Reno, Fallon, Elko, Winnemucca, Las Vegas, Henderson and Ely. The decal requirement, established to prevent the spread of harmful aquatic species threatening Nevada’s waterways, supports AIS monitoring and analysis, provides AIS prevention through outreach and education, and provides seasonal watercraft inspections and decontamination stations. The AIS decal also supports enforcement of AIS prevention laws. Note: The Nevada State Legislature is currently (2013) reviewing a bill (AB128) that includes also includes language that would exempt California registered watercraft specifically operating at Lake Tahoe or Topaz Lake. The exemption would only apply to registered watercraft not paddle-craft. Meanwhile, the Nevada AIS decal requirement is the law! Many aquatic invasive species, including quagga and zebra mussels, have been transferred from one body of water to another through contaminated watercraft. Remember to always clean, drain and dry. Creative American Cuisine in a 1930s Tahoe log cabin The North Lake Tahoe Water Shuttle, a pilot program that ran last summer from August through September, will be up and running for summer 2013r beginning June 27 with four stops along the North and West shores. The 30-ft. “dock hopping” boat which carries 12 passengers and up to eight bikes and a wheelchair., provides dock service to Tahoe Vista (Captain Jon’s), Carnelian Bay (Gar Woods), Tahoe City Marina, and Homewood (West Shore Cafe). Westbound service begins at 8 am; east bound at 9:22 a.m. Adults prices are $10 one way/$20 round trip; children, 10 and under, $7/$14. If you’d like to avoid the daytime raffic to the club, your favorite restaurant, shopping or farmer’s market, check the schedule at www. northlaketahoewatershuttle.com or call (530) 581-8797. Fred McElroy O 775 850 7133 C 775 742 1966 fmcelroy@dicksonrealty.com www.fredmcelroy.com the soule domain Best Place to take a date 15 years in a row! Stateline Road, next to Tahoe Biltmore, Crystal Bay Dinner from 6 p.m. 530.546.7529 souledomain.com Reservations requested Your Trusted Real Estate Advisor Property Management/General Brokerage Sales Northern Nevada 33 Move to paradise with everything you could wish for, just 2 hours from Lake Tahoe — all for $200,000 to $650,000 for a beautiful wellbuilt home. HOA dues only $104/mo. and Kaiser is 5 minutes away. Call or e-mail me — Rick Bradley, 22-year Tahoe Yacht Club member #53 — about moving to Del Webb’s 10-year-old Sun City - Lincoln Hills, between Roseville and Rocklin. oceanic Y A C Rick Peterson, CYBA Senior Broker Direct: 415-599-5506 rick@oceanicyachts.com H T S 308 Harbor Drive Sausalito, CA 94965 www.oceanicyachts.com New Sales - International Brokerage - Custom Builds Specializing in the Buying & Selling of Motor Yachts to 165 ft. Dealers for Grand Banks and Sunseeker Yachts RICK BRADLEY REALTOR® E-Mail: rickwbrad@msn.com 916.408.0431 Home/Office 916.666.0314 Cell 916.786.5287 Fax RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE Owned and Operated by NRT LLC. Roseville Office 2270 Douglas Blvd., Suite 120 Roseville, CA 95661 DRE # 01874661 LAND & SHOREZONE CONSULTANTS PROJECT GUIDANCE & STRATEGIES REGULATORY ADVISORS & AGENTS (530) 581-1640 or (775) 832-9300 · www.aganconsulting.com Reno Printing Print and Mail Full Mailing Services Variable Imaging Digital Printing Master Plumber - 30 years Business Forms Stationary Packages Brochures Newsletters Publications Commercial Printing Full Bindery Facility CALL US TODAY! 775.322.4200 info@renoprinting.com 34 joined because he has always been fascinated with all things “nautical.” He was pleased to learn the Coast Guard Auxiliary offered many opportunities for classes about boating and sailing. He also discovered it was another way of helping others. Although Bill wears many hats with the Auxiliary, he most enjoys working with the enlisted Coast Guard at Station Tahoe in Lake Forest. He gets a great deal of satisfaction helping the young recruits polish their skills to become qualified crewmen and ultimately help make Lake Tahoe waters safer. When Diana Kincade was asked about her interest in the Auxiliary she explained: “I joined on the encouragement of a girlfriend who was in our flotilla. I was living on our sailboat cruising the Caribbean seven months of the year, and in Tahoe for the summer. When I saw how irresponsible some recreational boaters were on the Lake, I felt I could be useful teaching boating safety classes. I also wanted to be on the water during the summer months, so shortly became boat crew.” Division 11, (also known as the Sierra Division), includes beautiful Lake Tahoe, Pyramid Lake, Topaz Lake and Lake Lahonton. We have about 100 members that are divided into three flotillas. Flotilla 01 is on the north shore of Lake Tahoe, Flotilla 04 is in South Lake Tahoe, and Flotilla 03 meets in Reno but includes Sparks, Carson City and the surrounding area. M any boaters on Lake Tahoe experience first-hand the need for education among our boating community. If you have a love of the Nevada and California inland waters and have time to devote, the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary may be a perfect fit. There are as many reasons to join as there are members. When Vic Beelik, former commander of the South Shore Flotilla, was asked way he joined, the avid sailor stated: “I became aware of the importance and quick reaction of the Coast Guard when they came to our aid about 500 miles from Honolulu when we were sailing the Transpac Los Angeles to Honolulu race when our 72-ft. boat was taking on water faster than we were able to pump and bail. Later, when Vic took a coastal navigation training class from the Coast Guard Auxiliary he was impressed with the organization that supports the USCG and decided to join. Vic has been an Auxillary member for 20 years now and a naturalized citizen giving back to the country that has given him so much. The Coast Guard Auxiliary, was created by an act of Congress in 1939. is the uniformed volunteer arm of the United States Coast Guard. Membership can be a very rewarding experience for anyone interested in volunteering in an organization that supports the Coast Guard in nearly all of the service’s missions including water safety. There are many benefits to membership including fellowship and seamanship education. Boat ownership is not a requirement. Some of the disciplines that members participate in are: boat crew and coxswain training, vessel examiner, aids to navigation verifier, instructor, computers, radio communications, finance, and public affairs. For membership information or to find information about our meetings, please visit our website: www.northtahoecgaux.com Bill Stolz, a retired fire battalion chief for the City of Reno, said he PO Box 3334, Incline Village, Nevada 89450 35 Wine Events orty-five TYC members and their guests enjoyed a fabulous wine pairing dinner on Saturday, March 23 at the clubhouse. Certified Sommelier — and only 28 years old — Brendan Tierney introduced us to some of Landmark Vineyards finest varietals. He used the event to showcase wines that Landmark specialize and brought some vintages that are not available to the public. Wolfdale’s Douglas Dales enjoyed the challenge of pairing foods with two chardonnays, a grenache, and a pinot. Douglas carried the fusion theme he is so well known for throughout the courses. Spring rolls, mushroom goat cheese tarts, and oysters on the half shell kicked off the evening with Overlook chardonnay. He paired the Estate Grenache with fresh spring pea soup and crispy prosciutto. A family-style salad of fresh mozzarella and roasted red endive followed with a limited production Lorenzo chardonnay. And for the entrée, Douglas served roasted pheasant which was paired with a 2010 Grand Detour pinot. Brendan and Douglas shared insights on the wine and food with us during the courses. And Brendan spoke about the requirements of becoming a sommelier. Wonderful food and wine mixed with some education made for a great evening. Thanks so much to Landmark and Wolfdale’s. We added a little flare to our wine tasting on April 20. TYC members Fritzi Briner, Margaret Twomey, June Phillips, Roy Dryer, Steve Lapkin, Marie O’Rourke, and Jamie Casey exhibited some of their paintings, sculptures, photographs and jewelry. Sarah Reynaud of Regal Wine Company poured five varietals from Opolo Vineyards, a small coastal winery located in Paso Robles. We tasted a sparkling wine, a Spanish varietal white wine named Albarino, a merlot, a tight zinfandel, and a nice petit syrah. 36 Members brought wonderful appetizers to enjoy with the wine, art, and conversation. A very nice evening indeed. Don’t forget to pick up your wine orders at Uncorked! Your suggestions welcome for fall and spring calendar The fall/spring calendar will be set in September. If you have any suggestions for wineries or dinner ideas please pass them on to me. All input is greatly appreciated. 37 Keith Mason . Sponsored by the North Lake Tahoe Resort Association, SnowFest provides a venue for fundraising and educational events for many of the area’s non-profit organizations.The parade is one of nearly 100 events held throughout the ten days of the annual event. Mt. Rose and Diamond Peak. However, attendance was one of our smallest in years due to the threat of storms on our events. One thing about Sierra weather, especially Lake Tahoe, you don’t know the type of day until the morning of the event. Those who went by this theory enjoyed some great skiing and bright sun. While the major snow falls predicted for Fridays didn’t happen, our new alternate SaturdaySunday days had the largest attendance. l T his was one of the strangest years since we started the Penguin ski program. Early snow, three months of extreme cold and freeze, snow at the mountain higher elevations, rain at the lake level, storms at the end of each week and an early spring. Despite the weather, we held most of our ski days scheduled for Squaw Valley, Alpine, Homewood, 38 Next year we might revamp the program to overcome the weather predictions so attendance will be better. We also need more Penguin input for next year. Thanks to the dedicated work of our on the hill leaders who showed up regardless of weather and gave the Penguins some great skiing. 39 40