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At Rocking the Boat, Kids Build Boats and Boats Build Kids

At Rocking the Boat, Kids Build Boats and Boats Build KidsThe boats are small, but they have big names. There is Tenacity. There is Triumph. Audacity, launched this spring, is the 30th vessel to come out of the workshop. The 14-foot Whitehall rowboat — a common sight in New York Harbor two centuries ago — was built from a 265-year-old white oak that grew in the New York Botanical Garden before it blew down in a storm last August. Audacity is a luxury model, complete with hand-carved footrests and built-in storage. Painted on the bow is a shark’s mouth zig-zagged with huge teeth.

Yet the most unusual thing about the boat may be who made it: a group of kids in the South Bronx, NY. They are part of Rocking the Boat, a small and unusual organization in Hunts Point that teaches local teenagers how to build traditional boats by hand, in the process teaching them about teamwork, potential, achievement and much more. Daniel Martinez Patino, 18, remembers being nervous when he joined the organization — especially about introducing himself to a group. Today, he is more outgoing. “I feel comfortable and loved.” Patino says. “I feel like I met another side of myself, one that I never knew existed. Now, all I dream about is sailing.” Rocking the Boat started in 1998 with a dozen students and the plans for one boat. Today, it serves 3,000 people a year. “We started off using wooden boats as a way of turning kids onto their own possibilities,” says Adam Green, Rocking the Boat’s founder and executive director. “To help them stand out in their own minds. Connect what they were doing in school to real life. That hasn’t changed at all.”

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Young Mariners Foundation Students Help Save Two Lives!

Young Mariners Foundation Students Help Save Two Lives!A group of students in the Young Mariners Foundation’s (previously known as Stamford Sailing Foundation) after-school program have put the skills they learned in the American Red Cross Basic Aid Training (B.A.T.) course to good use by saving two lives.

In January, Kathy Biehl, a staff member at Toquam School in Stamford, CT, was eating lunch with students from the Young Mariners program when she began choking. While Mekhi Robinson ran to notify the school nurse, Alexander Jean-Noel and Markese Bryan helped Biehl dislodge the food in her throat, thereby saving her life. The next day, Julia Medbury, another Young Mariner, started choking during lunch with friends at school. She calmly stood up and began giving herself abdominal thrusts as she had just learned and was able to immediately clear her airway.

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Safety at Sea Seminar for Junior Sailors Grows

Safety at Sea Seminar for Junior Sailors Grows

The StormTrysail Foundation, in partnership with the Larchmont Yacht Club and Junior Sailing Association of Long Island Sound, held its 14th Annual Junior Safety at Sea Seminar on Friday, July 16 at the end of Larchmont Junior RaceWeek. Two hundred and ten junior sailors from 20 clubs attended. The clubs in attendance were: American, Beach Point, Black Rock, Cedar Point, Cold Spring Harbor, Huguenot, Indian Harbor, Larchmont YC,Manhasset Bay, Noroton, Norwalk, Pequot, PortWashington, Riverside, Sea Cliff, Seawanhaka Corinthian, and Stamford. And for the first time, there were juniors representing the Larchmont Shore Club, Orienta Beach Club, and the Young Mariners (formerly Stamford Sailing Foundation).

During these 14 years, over 2,800 juniors and their instructors have received training at Larchmont, and another 1,000 in Newport, RI, Annapolis,MD, and Raritan Bay, NJ. StormTrysail Safety at Sea Chairman Richard duMoulin explained: “The StormTrysail Foundation was created by the StormTrysail Club to support and expand the Junior Safety-at-Sea Program and the Intercollegiate Offshore Regatta.We believe that big boat sailing provides juniors an exciting challenge and the opportunity for a lifetime for adventures and great friendships. But we want them to do it safely.”

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Boston College Wins ICSA/Gill National Championship

Boston College Wins ICSA/Gill National ChampionshipIn winning the Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association/Gill National Championship for the first time, the Boston College Eagles became the sixth team to win all three spring collegiate sailing championships (the ICSA Women’s Nationals, ICSA/APS Team Race Nationals and the ICSA/Gill National Championship), along with Navy, Old Dominion, Tufts, St. Mary’s and Harvard. Light air prevailed for the National Championship, which was held May 25 to June 3 on Lake Mendota in Madison, WI. “The conditions made it a tiny bit anticlimactic, but it feels good,” said BC Head Coach Greg Wilkinson.
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Break the Traditional Mold! Be an All-Around Sailor

Break the Traditional Mold! Be an All-Around SailorLast month, we interviewed Windsurfing Task Force member Nevin Sayre about windsurfing for junior sailors in the USA (Youth Windsurfing Gets a Reboot, May 2010). Ned Crossley, a US SAILING certified Windsurfing Instructor Trainer, says clubs and sailing centers can develop better sailors by integrating this exciting sport into their programs.

What is an all-around sailor? Can you rig, sail all points of sailing, and tack and jibe a:

___ Laser?
___ Keelboat with spinnaker?
___ Optimist?
___ Windsurfer?
___ Catamaran?

If you can check all of the above then you are an all-around sailor, like the all-around gymnast that works every event or the decathlete in track & field. If you think you can basically sail all ten of the Olympic one-design classes but are unable to sail a windsurfer, then you’re immediately astern because Men’s and Women’s Windsurfing comprise 20% of the Olympic sailing events.

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LISOT Sailors Excel at Opti US Team Trials

LISOT Sailors Excel at Opti US Team TrialsLarchmont YC’s Harry Koeppel Qualifies for Worlds; Noroton YC’s Megan Grapengeter-Rudnick is Top Girl in the US.

For the fifth year in a row and six of the past seven years, LISOT (Long Island Sound Optimist Team) has a sailor on the USA World Optimist Team! And for the fifth year in a row, LISOT is also home to the top female Optimist sailor in the United States.

After 13 windy and grueling races over four days at the USODA (United States Optimist Dinghy Association) Team Trials, hosted by Texas Corinthian Yacht Club in Houston, TX. Harry Koeppel (Larchmont YC) finished fifth and qualified for the 5-sailor USA World Team, a mere two points out of third place in the 185-boat fleet.

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Junior Sailing Opportunities

Junior Sailing OpportunitiesGrowing up on the water or near the water has so many advantages, but sailing is at the top of the list. There are countless programs for the younger sailor or potential sailor. If your child is competitive, the junior dinghy racing programs are ideal. Most yacht clubs feature Optimist racing as an excellent starting point for children from 8 or 9 years old. In addition to the tried-andtrue Optis, Blue Jays, 420s, Lasers and Sunfish, a growing number of programs are offering the 9-foot O’pen Bic planing singlehander, the 13’9” Pixel doublehander, and windsurfing, primarily using the Bic Techno 293 One Design.

There are also programs that focus on destination sailing and provide a low-key (non-competitive) environment. The key to having your child gain a great learning experience begins with knowing their goals and what your level of parental involvement will be. A one-week sailing camp is an ideal starting point to gauge a child’s interest. The junior programs at most yacht clubs require a 6-week commitment and either renting the boat or purchasing a dinghy for your child. Whichever sailing program you choose, the goal should be a safe, fun learning environment with a focus on the basics: tacking, jibing, trimming the sails and above all, sportsmanship.

Wendy van Breems is the Marketing Director of Sound Sailing Center in Norwalk, CT. For more information about their US SAILING certified instruction (from Intro to Sailing to Ocean Sailing), visit soundsailingcenter.com

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Youth Windsurfing Gets a Reboot

Youth Windsurfing Gets a RebootAn interview with Nevin Sayre

Not since 1992 has a windsurfer representing the United States won an Olympic medal, when Mike Gebhardt won the silver medal in Barcelona, Spain. In 1984, the inaugural year for Men’s Olympic Windsurfing, Scott Steele won a silver medal in Los Angeles, and Gebhardt won the bronze medal in Seoul, South Korea in 1988. Women’s Windsurfing became an Olympic sport in 1992, and to date no American woman has won an Olympic Windsurfing medal.

During his coverage of the 2008 Olympic Regatta in Qingdao, China, Gary Jobson (now President of US SAILING) stated that the USA needs to reboot its sailboard program. Indeed, a 5-person team known as the Windsurfing Task Force had been formed earlier that year at US SAILING’s spring meeting in Providence, RI with a goal of “developing talent & depth for the 2012 Olympic Quad and a medal at the 2016 Olympics.”

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Sailing, Surfing, Empanadas and Car-Diving: Opti Racing in Argentina

Sailing, Surfing, Empanadas and Car-Diving: Opti Racing in Argentina

I competed in two International Optimist regattas in February, which were hosted by the Yacht Club Argentino and Club Náutico Mar del Plata in Mar del Plata, Argentina. ...

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New US Sailing Development Team

Several regional sailors are among the 48 named to the 2010 US Sailing Development Team (USSDT), a new youth pipeline team supported by US SAILING’s Olympic Sailing Com...
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Orange Bowl: The regatta where everyone in the world unites

Orange Bowl: The regatta where everyone in the world unitesWhen school vacation starts in late December, most families from around Long Island Sound are home by the fireplace or skiing in Vermont. But not mine. Since I was 9, we...
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