2014 Race Program - Bayview Yacht Club
Transcription
2014 Race Program - Bayview Yacht Club
BURGEE Summer 2014 a public ation of bay v ie w yacht club 2014 Race Program BURGEE The official publication of Bayview Yacht Club Summer 2014 Contents 2 Commodore’s Message 4 Letter from the U.S. Congress 5 2014 Race Committee Welcome COVER: Fast Tango, Velero VII and Legned hit the boat end at the start of the Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race. 6 2014 Straits of Mackinac Society Old Forts 7 2014 Person of the Year 82014 Society of Mackinac Island Old Goats 10 2014 Society of Mackinac Island Double Goats, Society of Grand Rams Honorees 11 Attention Old Goats 12 Looking Back on the Mack 15 Champion of Champions 17 Adventure—My Favorite Noun Publisher: Bayview Yacht Club 100 Clairpointe Detroit, MI 48215 (313) 822-1853 Fax: (313) 822-8020 Email: [email protected] www.byc.com 18 2013 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race Winners 20 2013 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Flag Presentations 28 2014 Blue Water Festival Activities 31 90th Bayview Mackinac Yacht Showcase 43 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Course Map Publications Chair 60 Grand Hotel’s New Musser Suite General Manager 63 Mackinac Race Kids’ Party Assistant Manager 64 Pro-Team Challenge Com. Gregory I. Thomas Mark D. Steffke Kerrie Barno [email protected] 66 Set Sail for Autism 68 2013 Detroit Cup Marketing & Design: Frontier 3 Advertising 72 Charleston Race Week 74 Let’s Get It Together 76 One of Michigan’s Greatest Comeback Stories 15127 Kercheval Grosse Pointe Park, MI 48230 (313) 347-0333 www.frontier3.com 78 Bayview’s Memorial Patio Advertising Director 80 The 2014 Mackinac Mystery Eric Turin (313) 347-0333 x 28 [email protected] Art Direction/Design Lynne Wayne [email protected] 77 Bayview Yacht Club’s Centennial Book Update 84 Race Crossword 85 Word Scramble 89 Race Puzzle Solutions 2014 Summer Burgee /// 1 Commodore Tim Prophit COMMODORE’S Message O n behalf of Bayview Yacht Club, welcome to the 2014 Bell’s Beer BayviewMackinac Race. In our 99 th year of Bayview Yacht Club’s existence, this will be the 90th consecutive running of this Michigan freshwater classic. Our Race starts July 12, 2014, and typically is a 40-60 hour race, but is really a week-long affair for most participants, with festivities in Port Huron before the race, and on Mackinac Island after the race. Once again, our race features two courses, the Acura Shore Course, and the Quantum Sails Cove Island Course. Also, please welcome our sponsors, without whom we wouldn’t be able to run such a wonderful event. A big thanks to our title sponsor, Bell’s Beer; Detroit Acura Dealer Association, sponsor of the Acura Oasis in Port Huron, and the Shore Course; Quantum Sails Design Group, the Official Sail-maker of the 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview-Mackinac Race, and sponsor of the Cove Island Course; Soaring Eagle Casino and Resort; Grand Hotel, the official hotel and host of the Island Awards Party; Tito’s Vodka; Shellback Rum; Shepler’s Ferry; Frankenmuth Aiken Ormond Insurance, who sponsor the ‘kids’ area’; and Barefoot Wines. Thank you for your support! Our other major partner in running this race is the City of Port Huron. Without the support and participation of the City of Port Huron, led by Mayor Pauline Repp, we could not run this race. Thank you, Port Huron! Many of you reading this will be seasoned veterans of this race. Some of you will be newbies. And for some of you, this may be your first experience with our race; please, absorb as much of the experience as you can, and enjoy as much of the Bayview Experience as possible. Even though every single one of the 31 2 ///2014 Summer Burgee previous Port Huron to Mackinac races I’ve sailed in has been special, this one, my 32nd, is extra special, because, as Commodore of Bayview Yacht Club, I get to hand each and every winner their flag at the awards party on the island. That’s better then getting to be Santa Claus. Plus, I get to do it twice, the second time at our awards dinner on September 20, 2014. Doing some quick math, I realize that I’ve done a little over one third of all the Mac races run. Not bad, I think, until I consider sailors like the DeClerq brothers, and Wally Cross, who have well over 40 races in, or Grand Rams such as Fred Kreger, Past Com. Dean Balcirak, and John Tipp, all of whom are still active sailors, or Lee Smith and George Hendrie, who have done 60 Mac Races! I’m still a rookie. But, at 31 Mac races completed, I qualify to be an ‘Old Goat,’ which signifies completion of at least 25 Port Huron to Mackinac races. There are approximately 565 Old Goats; approximately 465 of them still amongst us; they represent over 11,625 years of racing to Mackinac Island. Now that’s commitment. Bayview Yacht Club’s commitment, as we approach our centennial, is to keep this Michigan tradition going strong for at least the next 100 years. Whether this is your first ever Mac Race or your 61st, YOU are what this race is all about. 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview-Mackinac Race Chair Art LeVasseur, his committee of volunteers, and our Club Management and Staff have all been working tirelessly since last year to bring you this year’s race. From the press preview and Pro Team Challenge selection, to the Sailor’s Party hosted by Bayview on June 28th, to the Acura Oasis in Port Huron, to the Awards Party on the island, to the Awards Dinner and Champion of Champions regatta on September 20th, each of these events has been carefully thought out and planned for your maximum enjoyment. In particular, the Acura Oasis, on the Black River in Port Huron, will be open both Thursday and Friday, July 10-11, as part of the Blue Water Festival. The Acura Oasis is open to the public, and I invite each and every one of you to pop in and experience some Bayview hospitality, enjoy one of our sponsor’s beverages, dance to some great music, and really get into the spirit of the Race. And just to make it a little more interesting, this year’s Pro-Team Challenge selections are: TEAM BOAT OWNER Christina with a Sea II Ari Buchanan Tigers Lions Against the Wind Rob Farr Pistons Mostly Harmless Wick Smith Red Wings T1 Ollie Tim Walli/Dave Sturm I’m truly excited that we will continue our efforts for positive community outreach in 2014, as the Bell’s Bayview Mackinac Race, along with our partners Acura and Bell’s Beer, will again help sponsor, promote and support two outstanding initiatives. The first program is Set Sail For Autism, which will demonstrate the capabilities of young adults with autism to learns the skills necessary to perform effectively in the workplace; and the second is The Less Cancer Ride, which features numerous cyclists riding more than 300 miles from Port Huron to Mackinac to raise awareness and key funding for cancer research. I want to thank the Autism Alliance of Michigan, The Autism Society of Macomb, St. Clair, LessCancer.org, and the Bayview staff for their hard work and collaboration to create some really important additions to our race. I am also really excited about a fun new contest that’s coordinated by Acura and features really cool prizes from many of our top partners. The first ever ‘Bayview Tour of Michigan’ contest will give race fans, sailing participants, and the general public a chance to win an incredible prize package including one week’s use of an Acura of choice along with a stay at Grand Hotel as well as at Soaring Eagle Casino Properties, a tour, dinner and VIP concert package of Bell’s Beer facilities in Kalamazoo, and possibly the ultimate prize (which I say with a smile), a four-hour sail on the waters of Lake St. Clair and VIP lunch at Bayview with myself and the crew of Fast Tango. From Kalamazoo to Mt. Pleasant to Mackinac Island to the waters of Lake St. Clair, one lucky winner will certainly get their own unique ‘Tour of Michigan.’ About the cover photo in this issue of the Burgee: This photo was taken at the start of the 2011 Mac race. Although you probably can’t see them, on my boat (Fast Tango), is a longtime Mac racer and friend, Brad ‘Ira’ Swegles, who passed away in early 2012, and on Velero, longtime friend and fierce competitor, the late Past Com. John Barbour. Both these men were dedicated racing sailors, and I miss them dearly. Please remember all our sailing friends who have left us, and cherish their memory, as you make new ones during this year’s race. To all our competitors: welcome, again, to the 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview-Mackinac Race. May your race be safe, memorable, and full of your favorite wind condition. I look forward to seeing all of you on Mackinac Island. See you on the starting line. I plan on nailing my start! Commodore Tim Prophit Whether this is your first ever Mac Race or your 61st, YOU are what this race is all about. 2014 Summer Burgee /// 3 4 ///2014 Summer Burgee 2014 Letter From the U.S. Congress Race Committee 2014 Welcome Ninety Years and Counting By Art LeVasseur, 2014 Race Chairman T he 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race will be the 90th consecutive year sailboats will race up Lake Huron starting north of Port Huron. Over that period, the boats have taken a number of different paths to arrive at Mackinac Island and each presents its own unique challenges. I don’t think any of this year’s participants can say they raced on the original shore course that went south of Bois Blanc and Round Island, but plenty have rounded the former Canadian government buoy off of Cove Island, our own private buoy off of Southhampton, or the national weather service buoy 30 miles off of Alpena. This year’s race features the 204 nautical mile Acura Shore Course along the Michigan shoreline, leaving Bois Blanc and Round Island to port, and the 259 nautical mile Quantum Sails Cove Island Course. The latter course will require the boats to visually round the private buoy we will be setting a few days before the race with a satellite tracker attached to make sure it is the right spot. Like the courses, the weather conditions faced by the fleet vary from year to year. Some years we have had intermittent storms, some years constant breeze, some years sunshine and drifting conditions. But what has been constant for all 90 years is the competition and the camaraderie. Those are the things that those of you who are doing your first race will always cherish. So have fun, be safe, and remember that these are the good old days. u 2014 Summer Burgee /// 5 Straits of Mackinac Society 2014 Old Forts T he Straits of Mackinac Society was founded by Bayview Yacht Club to honor all Mackinac Race Committee personnel who have served the committee for 15 years. Members of the Straits of Mackinac Society are known as ‘Old Forts’: our heroes who have worked in the background with such dedication for so many years deserve proper recognition. Without their untiring efforts there would not be a starting cannon, or any race at all. We wish to thank the many men and women who have served Bayview Yacht Club and the sailing fraternity over the years by honoring them with membership in the Straits of Mackinac Society. u Com. Stuart W. Argo* Erika Baer Barbette Y. Balcirak Richard H. Bridge* Mary Brieden Com. Ralph M. Burton Virginia Burton Alee J. Chapman* Michael Ciaramitaro John R. Colquhoun Patricia Corollo* Mary Cunningham Joseph Dallaire Com C. Jay Deeds Marcia Everingham Com. Ted Everingham Bob Filiatrault George E. Gerow* Dave Gilbert Sylvia Graham 6 ///2014 Summer Burgee Com. Peter R. Griffin Bud Harrison* Ray Hickner Calvin Hughes* Todd Hughes C. Ronald Johnston* Luiz Kahl Frank J. Kerwin* Eric Kommel* Patti Kommel Mary Lynn Konechne Dean M. Koppin Paul Krietsch Anne Lawson Art LeVassuer Frank McBride* Com. Fredrick B. McGregor* Carl T. Mowers JoAnn Niederoest Com. Rob Niederoest Dee Otenbaker Gerald K. Otenbaker* Com. John Pappas Michael Peash Toni Pilzner Charles J. Reader Jr. Kathy Rodgers Karen Rumptz Com. Tim Rumptz Gloria Schappe Com. James Schudel* Lois Sheridan* Robert C. Sheridan* Quentin B. Sickles Gerald Smigelski Betty Smith Dave Smith Gordon W. Smith Lee Smith Patricia A. Smith Grant Stark Marjorie Stark Mark Stark Com. Lynn G. Stedman Jr.* Bill Stetson Com Joseph E. Tapert* Ed Theisen Jr. Com. Greg Thomas John Thompson* Com. Michael A. Thompson Brad Tooman* Lois Trost Ed Weiler Com. John R. Werthmann Com. William Wiard* Bob White Don Wood Claude Worden* *Deceased Race Committee 2014 Person of theYear By Art LeVasseur, 2014 Race Chairman Al Minsterman O ne of the race chairman’s most difficult tasks is to select who should be recognized as the Race Committee Person of the Year at our annual RC Appreciation Party. Normally it is a tough decision because so many people on the committee work very hard to make the race a success and deserve to be honored. However, this year’s honoree merits special recognition. Com. Al Minsterman only recently joined Bayview, but he has worked tirelessly as part of our committee for many years heading up the starting line mark-set team. Al’s dedication to our race is only one of the many things he does for sailing. In addition to his work for us each July, Al is often seen throughout the season setting marks for the DRYA races, towing boats out to the ‘C’ course and setting marks for the off-the-dock races at his ‘other’ club, the Detroit Yacht Club. He even towed my boat into deep water when I ran her hard aground off the St. Jean ramp in the Detroit River several years ago during a race. (I was trying to sneak up the shoreline to stay out of the current but got a little too close.) Al’s work on the committee includes collecting up all of the anchors, lines, marks, and other equipment needed for the starting line area, loading it into his truck, and moving it up to Port Huron a few days before the race. On race day, while the racing crews are sipping coffee, loading last minute supplies and chatting at the dock Al and his crew are already long gone. They were up at the crack of dawn to move the gear from the harbormaster’s shed to the mark-set boat. Typically, Al leaves the dock by 6 a.m. to set up the starting line and spectator zone marks before anyone else arrives. The crew then patrols the starting area to take care of any problems that may develop while the sailboats are starting. Once all of the racers are off and running, Al’s team picks everything up and Al drives it all back down to Bayview before he finally calls it quits for the day. Normally a very thankless job but one, like so many others, that makes the race possible. So this year we are saying a loud “thank you” to Al Minsterman, our 2014 Race Committee Person of the Year. u 2014 Summer Burgee /// 7 Society of Mackinac Island Old Abbott, Kenneth 1976 Adams, Raymond S. 1976 Adams, Winifred A. 1981 Aitken, Com. Daniel J. 1976 Alcott, Bill 1972 Amsler, Com. Robert H. 1979 Anderson, Jerry 1980 Anderson, Thomas 1966 Argo Jr., Stuart 1977 Argo, Com. Stuart W.* 1955 Arnesen, Fred 1965 Backoff, Richard 1969 Baetz, Kenneth A. 1982 Baidas, Robert 1986 Bailey, Robert 1972 Baker, Douglas* 1959 Balcirak, Com. Dean R. 1964 Balcirak, David 1977 Barber, Lynn Howard 1980 Barbier, Roy* 1958 Barbour, Com. John S.* 1965 Barbour, Sloane 1965 Barker, John 1975 Bayer Sr., Com. Charles* 1947 Bayer, Ed* 1955 Bayer, Edwin 1967 Bayer, John 1975 Bayer, Jr., Com. Charles 1967 Becker, Peter 1976 Beebe, Ed* 1955 Benedict, Christopher 1987 Benkert, Com. Lloyd B.* 1936 Bennett, Jim 1985 Bernard, Jack L. 1960 Bertelson, Gene 1963 Best Jr., Jim 1974 Bianco, John J. 1967 Bihlmeyer, Carl 1980 Birdsall, Richard 1972 Blanchard, John 1969 Blunt, John* 1942 Bolla, David 1977 Boyd, Mark H. 1975 Boyle, John D.* 1943 Bradley, Steven 1985 Brand, George* 1960 Breadon, Don* 1925 Breck, Douglas* 1962 Bremer, Com. Bill* 1954 Bremer, Joel* 1961 Bremer, Steven 1967 Bresser, Jerry 1982 Bresser, Patrick 1983 Bresser, William 1982 Bridge, Rick* 1965 Brink, Lawrence R.* 1971 Brown, Kenneth D. 1979 Brune, Al 1981 Bryant, Bob* 1927 Bulin, Jim* 1980 Bunn, Ned 1964 Bunn, Robert 1966 Burkard, Com. John E. 1946 Burkard, Henry* 1943 Burke, Com. John C. 1976 Burke, Marvin* 1970 Burleson, Tom 1974 Burt, Bud* 1934 Burt, R. William 1969 Busch, William 1972 Buse, Philip 1964 Butler, James E.* 1970 Butler, Michael 1976 Goats Cady, Donald 1977 Fleck, Jack* 1945 Jacobs, Jeffrey A. 1983 Carlson, Doug 1982 Fletcher, Allan 1967 Jacoby Sr., Edmond G. 1957 Carlson, Richard 1982 Fornal, Dennis 1979 Jacoby, Edmund G. 1970 Carnaghi, J.P. 1972 Fortune, Peter* 1981 Jamieson, John 1981 Carollo, Joseph* 1965 Francis, William 1978 Jay, Stephen R. 1968 Carr, Michael 1977 Fuchs, Com. Arnold* 1945 Jeffery, Lynn F. 1987 Carrico, David J. 1982 Fuller, Dr. Hugh* 1950 Jeffrey, Lynn F. 1987 Carrier, Eric 1987 Fullerton, Alexander 1975 Jennings, DDS, William "Bill" 1967 Carruthers, Clark E. 1976 Gates II, James R. 1976 Jennings, Dick* 1973 Carter, Clem* 1937 Gatz, Jan A. 1985 Jerome, Leonard* 1925 Cazabon, Michael 1973 Gay, William* 1965 Johns, James 1951 Chapman, Alee* 1955 Gennaro Jr., Anthony 1985 Johnson, Dr. Arthur* 1964 Clark, Chris 1978 Geraghty, Com Brian J. 1979 Johnston Jr., Donald A.* 1946 Clemons, Com. Tom 1973 Gerometta, James 1985 Jones, H. Burton* 1965 Clemons, Scott 1977 Gerow, Fred* 1962 Jones, Warren* 1950 Cliff, Frank 1956 Gerow, George* 1962 Juby III, Charles W. 1986 Clixby, Gerald 1969 Gesell, Henry* 1951 Jurcak, Mark 1983 Clogg, Dick* 1954 Gillespie, Allen 1965 Kalitte, Douglas* 1966 Coates, Richard K. 1982 Gillespie, Jay 1980 Kazerski, Ken 1976 Coggin, Ted* 1929 Girardin, Com. Howard N.* 1939 Keefer, Richard 1967 Conger, Dale 1971 Gleason, Jr., Donald 1971 Keller, James 1973 Conger, Phillip 1971 Gmeiner, Com. Skip 1954 Kelly, Dennis 1974 Connolly, Andrew 1977 Gmeiner, Com. Toot* 1940 Kemp, Jim* 1939 Cooley, James L. 1986 Gmeiner, Doug* 1958 Kern II, Frank 1971 Coolman, Jr., Thomas 1965 Goran, Michael 1978 Kern III, Frank 1971 Cooper III, Winfield L. 1986 Graham, Gary 1980 Kerns, Jim 1965 Cooper, Steve 1966 Grant, Ed* 1969 Kerwin, Frank J.* 1964 Cope, Darrell A. 1979 Gray, Cliff 1953 Keydel, Conrad 1962 Corbett, Rich 1979 Greening III, R.E. Lee 1980 Keydel, Eric 1968 Corneliussen, Paul A. 1980 Greening, Bruce C. 1976 Keydel, Kurt Com.* 1952 Cost, Nick 1975 Gregory, Robert 1975 Keys, Howard 1963 Cotter, Dennis B. 1977 Grow, Com. Richard D. 1957 Kimmel, Com. H. Andrew* 1964 Craig, Mark E. 1987 Hall, D.D.S., Gary E. 1975 Kirkman, Michael E. 1988 Culliton, Dennis 1973 Hands, David 1987 Kirkman, Robert E.* 1983 Cyrul, Gregory A. 1972 Hanson, Com. Thomas J.* 1947 Kirkman, Robert R. 1984 Daoust, James R. 1961 Haras, Lawernece G. 1982 Kleinhardt, Thomas A. 1981 Darbee, William H. 1972 Harrison, Hugh "Bud"* 1973 Koller, Richard P. 1958 Davenport, Bruce 1947 Harthorn, Don 1968 Kolter, Harald 1995 Davey, Doug 1978 Harthorn, Steven V. 1985 Kommel, Eric 1967 Dawson, Peter W.* 1983 Hartingh II, Jo Dan* 1972 Konczalski, Ronald L. 1966 Dawson, Thomas L. 1976 Hartwell, Kenneth Walker 1966 Kostoff, James 1972 Decker, Dale 1976 Harvey, John T. 1986 Kountz, John 1938 Declercq, Alex 1968 Hastings, Wayne 1984 Kraft, Dr. James E. 1981 Declercq, Com. Maurice C. "Maury"* 1949 Hawkinson, Dr. Roy 1969 Kraft, Dr. Paul C. 1981 Deeds, Jay* Hayward, Commodore Chip 1971 Kraft, James F. 1978 Detwiler, Fred 1970 Heglin, Richard T. (Dick) 1959 Kreger, Fred 1952 DeWitt, David A. 1988 Hellenbart, Andrew 1975 Krembel, Frank* 1955 Dewyse, John P. 1972 Henderson, Sr., Com. Jeffrey A. 1977 Krembel, W. B. 1955 Dittus, Ian 1981 Henderson, William H. 1971 Kuhn, Dean J. 1982 Dittus, Richard H.* 1981 Hendrie, George 1947 Kunick, Frank A. 1955 Donaldson, Lawrence 1974 Hendrie, Jack* 1948 Kuschnerus, Hans 1963 Dooley, Michael J. 1986 Henk, Michael J 1986 La Riviere, Com. Timothy P. 1987 Dorian, Gretchen 1967 Henry, Joseph* 1958 LaBute, Timothy W. 1984 Drake, Joe* 1953 Henry, William 1963 Lady, Paul 1978 Duarte, David D. 1979 Hinsby, Floyd* 1952 Lang, Brian R. 1978 DuBay, Phillip D. 1987 Hohn, Kurt 1981 Lang, Donald 1978 Dudek, Ralph* 1963 Hollerbach, Marc 1964 Larivee, Terry 1982 Duker, Robert 1976 Hollerbach, N. H. "Holly"* 1945 Lattie Jr., Lyndon J. 1980 DuMouchelle, Elizabeth 1974 Holley, Dan E. 1988 Lattie, David L. 1976 DuMouchelle, Ernest 1963 Holmes, Gary 1984 Lawrence, Mike 1957 Dundas, James 1981 Holstein, Donald 1977 Lazarz, Sherman F. 1979 Dunn, Gregory R. 1972 Hopp Jr., John* 1954 Leinweber, Roy* 1951 Ecclestone, Llwyd 1953 Hubbell, Peter 1975 Leone, Gerry* 1942 Elledge, Michael 1981 Hudnut, James 1965 LeVasseur, Arthur 1982 Elmer, Charlie 1981 Hudnut, Jr., James H. 1967 Lewand, Kevin M. 1985 Ely, Ed 1971 Huebner, Ted 1974 Lewis, Perry 1972 Eno, Charles* 1968 Hughes, Shawn 1982 Libcke, J. Robert 1976 Farnsworth, Com. Ted* 1927 Hulsey, Paul 1982 Liebert, Patrick 1976 Feldman, Michael J. 1969 Huneke, Richard 1981 Light, Sheldon N 1986 Ferry, Frank X 1981 Hunter, Dave* 1951 Lightbody, James 1958 Fick, Jr., Alvin D. 1981 Hura, Douglas "Doug" 1960 Lindeman, Lou (Bud) 1979 Fitzsimons, Com. Chas* 1954 Irland, Peter L. 1970 Lootens, Richard 1964 Flaska, Kenneth 1974 Jacobs, Clare* 1937 Lowry, T.K.* 1966 8 ///2014 Summer Burgee Founded to honor those distinguished sailors who have completed 25 Bayview Mackinac races. Lundy, Curtis 1972 O'Niel III, Com. Phillip 1977 Schostak, Jerome* 1964 Lyden, Earl 1972 O'Niel Jr., Com. Philip 1977 Schram, Ken 1980 Lynch, Com. William J. 1971 O'Rourke, William "Bill" 1985 Schroeder, Jr., Gerald* 1971 Lyon, George* 1964 Orr, Jr., Robert B. 1972 Schuch, John 1962 Lyons, Edward 1966 Oswald, Com. Lawrence J. 1972 Schudel, Com. James* 1956 Lyons, Frank 1972 Otenbaker, David 1982 Schultes, John 1974 Macklem, Avery* 1939 Otrompke, Jack 1962 Schultes, Michael 1969 MacLaren, David P. 1971 Padilla, Com. Daniel W. 1976 Schultz, Al* 1947 Maier, Jeff 1974 Palm, Edward B. 1957 Schwall, Lynn A. 1980 Maier, Robert* 1956 Pappas, Com. John 1958 Schwandt, Kent T. 1974 Mainwaring, Herb* 1960 Pappas, James 1984 Scott, Michael G. 1975 Thompson, Stu C. 1986 Maiorano, Jerry 1975 Patterson, Thomas 1981 Seckett, James W. 1954 Thoreson, Robert E.* 1963 Marsh, Marv* 1952 Pearce, Kevin 1979 Sellers, Bob 1956 Thorpe, Com. William P.* 1971 Marsh, Richard A. 1964 Pearson, Brian 1964 Shalagowski, Randy A. 1982 Tipp, John 1963 Marshall, Dale 1972 Peseski, Michael J. 1979 Shaw, James F. 1973 Tompkins, Charles 1964 Martin, Bill 1965 Peseski, Vin 1972 Shelagowski, Randy A. 1982 Tompkins, John 1969 Martin, Sally 1976 Peseski, William M. 1980 Sheppard, John 1974 Toti, Edward* 1953 Mattingly, David 1975 Peters, Richard R. 1967 Sheppard, Steven 1977 Trost IV, John 1972 Mayer, John 1954 Petersen V, P. Eric 1976 Sheridon, Richard 1946 Trost, John* 1944 McCarthy, Gene T. 1959 Petersen, Larry 1984 Sheridon, Sherry 1946 Trull, Dick 1949 McCormack, Andy 1958 Pettitt, Stuart 1970 Sherry, Ron 1979 Tulupman, Ted 1981 McCoy, Bill 1963 Petzold, Thomas* 1930 Shinske, F. James 1968 Turek, Tom J. 1969 McCrindle, Mark E. 1980 Pfeff, Pete O. 1977 Shorey, Fred* 1964 Turner, Keith R.* 1963 McCroskey, Jr., George B. 1964 Piku, Frank 1966 Shumaker, Tom 1965 Uznis, George M. 1964 McDonald, Michael 1976 Pinney, Sr., Mark W. 1968 Sickels, Quent 1950 Vallad, John 1951 McGraw, Com. William* 1963 Ploghoft, Milton E. 1946 Sidenstecker, Bill 1970 Van Tol, Paul R. 1976 McMath, Com. Trent* 1928 Pokorny, Dr. Paul* 1973 Siudara, Leonard 1976 Van, George* 1929 McVeety, John A. 1978 Popowich, Stanley 1975 Sloss, Com. David* 1932 VandeVusse, Bruce 1986 Meach, Jerry 1981 Porte, Philip J. 1986 Smith, Don* 1962 Vermet, Edward 1980 Meagher, Dennis 1989 Pouliot, Reid Royce 1981 Smith, Dr. Ian 1962 Vigrass, H. Thomas 1972 Meier, Com. Thomas R. 1970 Pouliot, Russ* 1925 Smith, Lee 1952 Vigrass, Terry 1974 Mihalich, Dr. Steve 1946 Priebe, Com. Ray* 1933 Smith, Patrick* 1962 Vogel, Roger 1972 Miller, Candice 1970 Prophit, Com. Malcolm "Tim" 1983 Smith, Robert H. 1979 Vogler, James M. 1987 Miller, Com. John* 1933 Puddiford, Com. Stan* 1926 Smith, Wick 1971 Wagner, William R.* 1973 Miller, Mark 1984 Purcell, Miles 1983 Smyth, Ed* 1976 Wake, Douglas* 1960 Miller, Sr., Com. Bill 1933 Quincy, Kenneth T. 1983 Snider, Don* 1954 Wake, Maggie* 1960 Mistele, Henry 1965 Ranks, Richard 1979 Snow, Paul G. 1975 Waldrup, Dean 1985 Moak, Jr., Robert 1987 Rasmussen, Kenneth 1948 Snyder, George* 1926 Wall, Robert 1968 Moak, Sr., Robert E. 1977 Redmann, Judy 1981 Somes, Com. Jon M. 1969 Walsh, Jr., Clune 1950 Moll, Doug 1977 Reese, E. James 1983 Somes, Fred* 1952 Ware, John 1962 Mondry, Gene* 1957 Reichelsdorfer, Peter W. 1951 Soutar, Larry 1972 Warner, Gary 1967 Morison, Ayers* 1966 Reid, Jim* 1946 Sparagowski, Gary* 1977 Warnke, Hans G.* 1952 Morison, Ayers, Jr.* 1966 Reidsma, Jay 1983 Srigley, Tom R. 1968 Warrick, Com. W.* 1952 Morlan, Andrew 1987 Reinheimer, Herbert 1965 Stapleton, Barbara 1972 Wehby, Daniel W. 1988 Morlan, Christopher 1982 Replogle, David S. 1965 Stapleton, Jim 1985 Weiss, James 1966 Morlan, Gordon E. 1981 Reynolds, Syd* 1947 Stephens, Greg 1985 Weitzmann, Jim* 1957 Morphew, James P. 1986 Richards, Paul 1978 Stetson, Bill 1959 Welch, James 1978 Morrison, Kenneth W. 1973 Richards, Ralph 1970 Stieber, Jr., Donald A. "Chip" 1976 Welch, Michael J. 1972 Mosher, George 1953 Riley, Todd 1972 Stocker, Terry 1969 Wenzler, Peter J. 1979 Mosher, William A. 1978 Ritchie, Mark Albert 1983 Stodgell, Chic* 1927 White, Tom 1978 Motschall, Jim 1983 Ritter, Thomas C. 1985 Stofflett, John 1975 White, William A. 1984 Muench, Jr., Nils* 1968 Roadstrum, Robert* 1925 Stormes, Ben 1971 Whitehead, George* 1947 Nadeau Sr., John 1972 Robbins, Daniel M. 1969 Stormes, Chuck 1979 Wiesen, Robert J. 1975 Nadeau, Sam 1980 Robbins, John D. 1978 Streit, Gerald 1963 Wiley, Earl* 1960 Nadeau, Steve 1987 Robinson, Robbie 1947 Stridiron, William 1983 Wilhelm, Fred P. 1970 Nagel, Com. William* 1928 Roehrs, Timothy 1987 Stromberg, John S. 1985 Wilhelm, Fred R. 1975 Nagel, Mark 1980 Rose, A. Duane 1979 Stuart, Bob 1968 Williams, David H. 1975 Nedeau, Sam 1980 Rossio, Richard C. 1985 Swart, Clark* 1934 Williams, Thomas G. 1980 Nedeau, Sr, John 1950 Rossio, Ronald J. 1984 Synowiec, Dan R. 1975 Williamson, Com. Perc* 1925 Neesley, Bob* 1937 Ruhland, Patrick. J. 1980 Synowiec, Richard 1978 Wilson, Carlisle* 1945 Neesley, Jr., Robert 1955 Rummel, John 1945 Szalkowski, Ted 1973 Wing, Harry 1982 Nevins, Les* 1926 Rumon, Richard A. 1978 Tapert, Com. Mike* 1947 Wittliff, John* 1979 Niederer, Bruce 1983 Rupp, Maynard 1977 Taylor, Norbert* 1941 Witton, Frank 1958 Niederoest, Com. Robert J. 1968 Russie, Laurie 1983 Tenkel, Frank 1969 Worden, Claude 1974 Noah, Bill* 1937 Sackett, Jim 1974 Tenkel, Scott E. 1986 Wunsch, Com. Ed* 1935 Noakes, W.C. 1977 Saph, Val 1973 Thoma, Richard 1977 Yackness, Irvin* 1954 Nutt, Michael J. 1979 Savage, Matt 1976 Thomas, Al* 1939 Yackness, June* 1966 Nutter, Robert 1985 Sbach, Elmer "Sonny" 1972 Thomas, Com. Gregory I 1971 Young, Steve* 1974 O'Connor, Donald 1987 Schappe, R. Scott 1977 Thomas, L. Murray* 1971 Youngblood, Thomas 1979 Odendahl, Richard 1984 Schappe, Robert H. 1977 Thompson, Com. Michael A. 1958 Zanella, Michael R. 1983 OGawa, Andrew S. 1972 Schappe, Stephen P. 1981 Thompson, Kevin 1973 Zyskowski, Phil 1985 O'Laughlin, Dugan* 1971 Schmidt, Russell A. 1976 Thompson, Mark A. 1969 Ongena, Christopher C. 1987 Scholfield, Charles E. (Win) 1983 Thompson, Sandra K. 1961 *Deceased 2014 Summer Burgee /// 9 Society of Mackinac Island Double Goats Distinguished sailors who have completed a minimum of 25 Bayview Mackinac and 25 Chicago Mackinac Races DOUBLE GOAT HONOR ROLL Sailor Members of Both The Society of Mackinac Island Old Goats, Detroit and The Island Goats Sailing Society, Chicago Society of Grand Rams T he Society of Grand Rams was founded to honor those distinguished sailors who have completed 50 Bayview Mackinac Races. Having sailed 50 or more Mackinac Races requires more than one hundred twenty days on the water and some fourteen thousand miles of sailing. They have likely endured more than one hundred thunder storms and suffered through five hundred or more watch changes. 10 ///2014 Summer Burgee William D. Alcott Thomas E. Anderson John D. Boyle Lawrence R. Brink Richard J. Corbett Al Declercq Michael J. Feldman Alvin D. Fick Jr. George S. Hendrie Jr. Marc Hollerbach Richard Jennings Mark G. Jurcak Fred W. Kreger Perry Lewis Louis H. Lindeman E. Earl Lyden William C. Martin Gene T. McCarthy George B. McCroskey Jr. Michael A. McDonald Andy McCormack Thomas R. Meier Nils L. Muench John L. Nedeau Sr. Samuel P. Nedeau Robert K. Nutter Andrew S. OGawa J. Stuart Pettitt Mark W. Pinney Sr. Thomas C. Ritter Peter W. Reichelsdorfer Ronald J. Sherry Paul G. Snow Ted Szalkowski George M. Uznis George E. Van William R. Wagner Robert J. Wiesen Honorees Roadstrum, Bobby,* 1925 Van, George E. Sr.,* 1929 Leone, Gerry,*1942 Bayer, Com. Charles M.,* 1947 Hendrie, George, 1947 Rasmussen, Ken, 1948 Nedeau, John Sr., 1950 Kreger, Fred, 1952 Smith, Lee, 1952 Grow, Com. Rick, 1957 Pappas, Com. John, 1958 Tipp, John W., 1963 Balcirak, Com. Dean R., 1964 Attention OLD GOATS By Ray Adams, BYC Old Goats Committee Chairman T he Old Goats are having a GROUP PHOTO taken on Mackinac Island on the grounds of Grand Hotel before the flags are presented. Look for the Large Old Goats Banner located somewhere near the bandstand. We will gather near the Banner. Listen for the announcement from the stage. •Remember, the deadline for new Old Goat applications is September 1. They can be obtained from the BYC office or online. Look for the Old Goats pull-down tab under the sailing heading at byc.com. •There are now 10 different items available for sale on the New Old Goats Merchandise Order Form. The form is also available online at byc.com. Bayview Old Goat and Grand Ram Merchandise •There is a Cocktail Party for new BYC Mackinac Old Goats on the day of the Mackinac Awards Party held at Bayview in September at 5 p.m. upstairs in the Regatta Room. •We are planning a Fall Old Goats Luncheon before the snowbirds fly South. It will be held at noon on Thursday, October 16 at Bayview. Three Grand Rams will share their stories and experiences with all in attendance. •The Old Goats Roast, held in the spring, is not just for Old Goats, it’s for family, friends, and crew mates as well as Old Goats. Did You Know? •We had 36 new Old Goat members inducted in 2013. Polo Shirt - $40 available in white or navy Hat - $20 Steve Nadeau First Mack Race Inducted May 9, 2012 Lapel Pin - $5 Old Goat or Grand Ram Blazer Patch - $35 8x10 Old Goat or Grand Ram Plaque on black piano board - $50 Flag - $25 Coffee Mug - $15 Bayview Old Goat & Grand Ram Merchandise Order Form Description Quantity Polo Shirt in White r S Polo Shirt in Navy r S rM rM rL rL r XL r XL r XXL r XXL r XXXL r XXXL Lapel Pin Price 40 40 $ $ Hat $ •There are over 465 living Old Goats. Old Goat Blazer Patch $ •There are nine living BYC Mackinac Grand Rams. Grand Ram Blazer Patch $ Old Goat Plaque - List First Race ________ $ •There are 38 Double Old Goats. Grand Ram Plaque - List First Race ________ $ •There are 10 Nanny Goats. Flag $ •You do not have to be a member of Bayview Yacht Club to be an Old Goat. Coffee Mug $ 35 50 Address __________________________________________________________ •The Old Goats continually update their Master Mailing List to include all changes in address, email, and phone numbers. r Check •There are 10 members of the Old Goats Committee. •The Old Goats have a mascot. u 20 50 •There are a large number of Old Goats and even Grand Rams that continue to race Mackinac Races every year. ____________________________________________________ Phone ___________________ Email __________________________________ r Credit Card 5 35 Name ____________________________________________________________ City, State, Zip Total $ r Member Charge 25 15 Order Total 6% Tax *Office/Shipping TOTAL Member No. ______ Credit Card No. ___________________________________ Exp Date _________ Questions? Ship To (if different) ________________________________________________ Email: [email protected] or call 313-822-1853. Ship Address ______________________________________________________ *Call office to make arrangements for pick up/pricing. Ship City, State, Zip ________________________________________________ Bayview Yacht Club 100 Clairpointe Street, Detroit, Michigan 48215 313-822-1853 www.byc.com 11 Looking Back on the Mack My mother probably wrote this memoir in 1988 when she was 70. I made a few grammatical and spelling corrections and, in one spot, invented half a sentence that was illegible. I contributed all the photographs. I don’t recall seeing this essay before January, 2014, but perhaps someone else besides Mom had seen it previously. She continued her interest in sailboat racing after she wrote this but not as an active racer competing in the Macks. She died in 2012 at age 93. A remarkable woman! ~ Scott Wake By Maggie Wake, a Female Crew T his year for the first time in three-tenths of a century Doug and I will not be making the Bayview Mackinac Race. This is a big change for us because for twenty-nine years our entire summer has been planned around it: from May to mid-July Doug would buy new sails, make boat repairs, adjust the rigging and sharpen up the crew while I would plan, prepare and freeze meals; then would come the few short exciting days of actual racing; the last months would be spent either basking in glory or wallowing in dismal despair, depending on the race results. We eventually became Mackinac Race participants because Doug became interested in sailing at the age of fifteen. He and a friend bought an old life boat off a freighter his friend’s grandfather had skippered. They repaired it, ‘borrowed’ a nearby flagpole for a mast and fashioned some makeshift sails. They sailed on Lake Erie out of Trenton because they didn’t know you could sail big boats on Lake St. Clair. Doug has loved sailing ever since then and he is good at it. I suppose there was a time when he was ‘only’ crew, but he has been captain and skipper ever since I have known him. He is probably the best light-air helmsman on the Great Lakes. I came to the sport of sailing about half a century 12 ///2014 Summer Burgee ago as an “if you can’t beat ‘em join ‘em” move. Doug refused to play tennis but convinced me to plunk down a few dollars of my hard-earned money (I was a psychologist at Ypsilanti and he was a medical student at U. of M.) to purchase a canoe which he then converted into a sailboat by building a mast and a leeboard (he never got around to building the starboard one), having me sew up a cotton lateen sail and using a paddle as rudder. Although we invariably tipped over if anyone else went with us, the two of us could sail it just fine. We even spent our honeymoon on it, transporting food, supplies, tent and all with no mishap. During this early period I received my basic sailing instruction. There were startling things to learn as, for example, that a ‘sheet’ is not necessarily a piece of bedding, a ‘tack’ is not always a small nail used to fasten carpets and a ‘line’ is not something your boyfriend gives you as a shortcut to achieving his amorous objectives. Also firmly imbedded in my mind at that time was the fact that there can only be one captain to a boat. Personally, I opted for (or really was forced into through inferior qualifications) the role of Doug’s crew, but much later our children, all four of them, eventually solved the dilemma by captaining vessels of their own, whether large (Brian’s Morgan 41) or small (Mary Ann’s sunfish and windsurfer). The plot thickened and my training quickened when Doug became interested in racing. Fortunately for me, Doug is one of the few men (Connie Cost is another) who want their wives to be part of the crew. Our first few years in big boats (in Thistles we did better) could conservatively be called disastrous. We bought an ‘old clunker’ full of dry rot and with a fragile mast that self-destructed if it blew over fifteen. We competed against beautiful custom boats such as Orient and Redhead. Needless to say, it was a time of great excitement on the few occasions on which we took next-to-last instead of last. In spite of our discouragement, we soon became firmly committed to racing. At first we sailed out of Crescent Sail Yacht Club. Doug belonged to Bayview but those were the days when the fellows spent a lot of time at Bayview but wives and children were thoughtfully protected from the nefarious conditions that then existed. We raced twelve Mackinacs under the Crescent burgee, moved to Bayview with Velero III, a C & C 39, and really felt it was home base when we bought Velero IV, an Erickson 46, from the redoubtable Doc Murphy. By then things were better for the female sex at Bayview; no longer were they excluded from the awards banquet as had been the case the first two times Velero I won her class when women, crew or not, were excluded. Of course, those were the days when only a few women such as Doris Sarns on Revelry and Susan Fisher and her girl crew made the Mackinac trek. I hear now that as of 1989 it is possible for women to be elected to Bayview membership! How times have changed. Well, anyway, to get back to sailing, when we got into long-distance racing in big boats I found that there were more amazing things to learn. Take, for instance, use of the sink. Non-racing girls, I’ll bet you thought a sink was for getting a drink and for washing dishes. Wrong! A sink is to store assorted pieces of equipment which might have to be used later and must stand upright or be coddled in other ways in the meantime, for storing scraps of sandpaper and used paint brushes waiting to be thrown out and for receiving the thousands (it seems like that many) of pop and beer cans that come hurtling down from the cockpit from time to time. As for getting a drink, the tanks either are empty after the first day of the Mack because water makes your boat heavy or yields such terrible tasting water that it is non-potable, while they say (those who are not doing it) dishes can readily be done in a pail of water drawn up from Lake Huron by rope. And girls, I’ll bet you may have thought also that the head (boat bathroom) was a comfy spot to which to retire now and then for a pleasant > 2014 Summer Burgee /// 1 3 Looking Back on the Mack sojour n, perhaps with a magazine and/or a cigarette. Wrong! If you are male you never use the head at all except during the infrequent more-than-one-day race like the Mackinac when it absolutely cannot be avoided. If you are female, likewise the head is used only when absolutely necessary. Getting to the head and back can be the most hazardous part of sailing. I find, for example, that on our NA-40 a trip to the head takes on the average about twenty minutes exclusive of the time needed to perform the function(s) for which it is intended and involves a number of difficult and dangerous steps. First, one must clutch the grab rail and perambulate carefully over the two to six headsails laid out on the cabin sole (best place for boat trim) and struggle to move them far enough from the head door to get it open. Next, one must remove all the pails, scrub brushes and extra spinnakers conveniently stored in the head by non-users. Third, the two head valves must be opened, which entails kneeling on the floor, inserting one’s head and shoulders into the under-the-sink cupboard and groping about under the anchor rode to find them while the boat performs gyrations that would make a carnival ride owner proud; hopefully, one finds that the last occasional user has not fastened them so tightly that a hammer is required for opening, in which case one must pick up more sails from the starboard bunk to get at where tools are stored. Then comes the gymnastic problem of positioning oneself in the right place at the right time: one either leans way back and hopes that the contents remain at a reasonable level if on the starboard tack or leans forward, braces ones feet against the wall and holds the door shut (the lock is always broken) if on port. Lastly, one must pump twenty-six times, close the valves, restore pails, sails et al to their assigned spots and mountain-climb back exhausted to where one began. I liked Gaboon best of all our boats because the life rails were so positioned that my head trips could be as infrequent as the males’. As can be deduced by those readers who may still be with me, long-distance racing such as the Mack can be daunting. I really admire sailors like ‘Old Goats’ Bobby Roadstrom and Doc Carlyle Wilson who have capably sailed so many Macks under so many conditions. In racing, sticking tenaciously to one’s assigned tasks for a long period of time is a basic requirement. 14 ///2014 Summer Burgee The Bayview Mackinac, for instance, can take from one and a half to five days depending on conditions and the size of your boat. We won our class and took sixth overall one year when we finished Wednesday afternoon—and that was on the old course. But tenacity is only the beginning of the test of racing stamina. In light air frustration tolerance is important: your boat can sit for hours in the same spot while your dander escalates as you watch other boats a short distance away but still in view making two or three knots and your position slipping from ‘in the hunt’ to maybe last. It is inconvenience tolerance that is important in heavy air: on a heavy air race one never takes care of any necessary human function such as eating, sleeping, eliminating or even getting warm or talking when it is convenient for you but only when it is convenient for the trim and advancement of your boat. I remember on a Mackinac a few years back how great it was after we all had been sitting on the rail in the rain for the entire race and had gone without food for seven or eight hours when John Barbour finally ducked below for an instant and, coming up with a can of tuna fish in one hand and a can of corned beef hash and some spoons in the other, inquired, “Well, which do you want, cat food or dog food?” We wolfed them both! Fortunately, however, the gratifications of Mackinac racing greatly outweigh its difficulties. Once you have sailed a few Mackinacs you will have a store of nostalgic memories that will stay with you forever. I’ll close now by giving some samples of the kind of flashbacks that come to me from time to time. A ‘nightmare’ flashback is that we are in the Straights getting our first whiff of the Island, positive that we are first in our class although still an hour from arrival and we hear the ship’s radio announce: “Bayview Race Committee, Bayview Race Committee, this is the yacht Disruption.” (Another year it was Crisis and another, Blind Mellon.) “We are approximately five minutes from the finish.” There goes another first place flag again! A flashback that illustrates how engrossed you can be in a race and how shocked you can be to find that there is still a real world out there is the time we were jolted out of our Mackinac “tunnel vision” by learning through WJR that there was a race riot in Detroit and our friend Gene Mondry’s Highland Park store was being looted. How unsettling and how unlike the togetherness we crew were experiencing! Another particularly graphic memory of the same kind is of the time part way through our Mackinac trip when we were sitting on deck on a beautiful starry night gazing at a gorgeous almost full moon and learned, again through WJR, that there Champion of Champions I was an astronaut walking on that very moon at that very time! Unbelievable! The best of all memories for Doug and me are not the wins, although they were most welcome (we have been in the Winner’s Circle for fifteen out of our twenty-nine races on our own boats with six thirds, two seconds and seven firsts) but those of the warm and lasting friendships that have evolved during the camaraderie that is an integral part of being a Mackinac crew. On a racing sailboat, nothing about you is hidden after a few days of twenty-four hour confinement together: everyone knows everything about you so there is no reason to pretend. Yet closely-knit crews such as ours have been over the years are willing to accept you as you are: they appreciate your strong points (although rarely if ever mentioning this to you) and make up for your weak ones. Being on a racing sailboat crew is like being on a football team or in a symphony orchestra because what you do together is better and more satisfying than anything you could do yourself. What you are and what you produce together makes up a whole that is greater than its parts. Doug and I will always remember with gratitude partners Howard Boston and Hank Burkard and “crew boss” John Barbour, without whom our racing would never have got off the ground. We cherish, too, the memories of talented contemporaries who have sailed with us over the years such as ‘Big’ Stu Argo, Fred Arcari, Don Criner, Hank Gesell, Frank Hill, Fred Kreger, Herb Mainwaring, Frank Piku, Chick Stodgell, Dick Trull and George E. Van. We think often and fondly of the ‘younger generation’ who have crewed with us, some for only a few races but many for years, some relatively unknown but others who comprise the current ‘rock star’ roster. We feel like ‘mom’ and ‘pop’ not only to our own sailing children Lewie, Brian, Mary Ann and Patti but also to all of the following: ‘Little’ Stu Argo, Catherine Arnold, Rick Arcari, Skip Boston, Phil and Dave Bertelson, John Burkard, Nici Cost, Mike Feldman, Dennis Fornal, Marc Hollerbach, Jim Keller, Andy Kimmel, Dave and Kris Klein, John Kucharczyk, Cliff Lanzinger, David Lattie, Tom Lowry, Jack Mormon, Spike Neesly, Rus Nutter, Bob Royer, John Schuch, Greg Short, Mike and Sandy Thompson, Bill Thorpe, George Uznis, John Uznis, John Wake, Todd Wake, Timmy Woodhouse and my Etchells helmsman Billy Z. Our happy and eventful hours with these sailing friends will be long and warmly remembered no matter how many miles and years we may be apart. Long live the Mackinac! u n winter 2009, Com. Burton created a new event; a Mac race Champion of Champions. The idea was to get the winners of each of the Mac race classes together in one-design boats, and see who was the ‘best of the best.’ As you may know, Com. Burton has had a long, successful sailing career in one-design racing, so this was an idea that had great appeal to him. And what better way to determine the best of the best than a one-design competition in our Club boats? Each winner of their class in the 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race will receive an invitation to compete in the Champion of Champions regatta, held in Bayview’s fleer of Ultimate 20s, on the Detroit River, right in front of the Club. This will take place the same day as the awards dinner, September 20, 2014. The winner will have their named engraved on the Carter Sales Trophy, and receive a ‘keeper’ plaque as well. Everyone who has participated in past versions has loved the concept of a Champion of Champions event for our Mackinac Race. I expect that this will grow into another great Bayview tradition. u Congratulations to Bill Alcott and the crew of Equation for winning the 2013 Champion of Champions. Previous winners: 2012 Paul Lee Genesis 2011 Paul Lee Genesis 2010 Tim Prophit Fast Tango 2014 Summer Burgee /// 1 5 2014 Summer Burgee /// 1 7 ad·ven·ture My Favorite Noun By Nicole Neely ad·ven·ture 1. an exciting or very unusual experience. 2. participation in exciting undertakings or enterprises: the spirit of adventure. 3. a bold, usually risky undertaking; hazardous action of uncertain outcome. I remember as if it was yesterday. A week in July during the summer of 1996. We loaded up the kayaks to explore the ‘Jewels of Lake Superior.’ Twenty-one islands consisting of beaches, magnificent cliffs, and sea caves of the Apostle Islands. Halfway through the week my Mom called to report her year-long battle with cancer had taken a major turn for the worse. It was a tough sight to behold that evening as the all-consuming image of the sun began to set, knowing what it portrayed in my life. The following morning as the first glimpse of the sun’s rays began to breach the horizon, my eyes locked onto the silhouette of a sailboat far in the distance. As my gaze stayed with that boat, my thoughts drifted to the reality of “once again ... life will be embarking on an extreme shift in course.” Maybe it was just a distraction, but the thought crossed my mind ...”What would it be like ... to sail ... to explore? What sort of adventure could such a vessel allow to unfold in my life?’ Little did I know that someday those questions would be answered. In the weeks that followed a memorable moment was shared. While looking in my Mom’s tearful eyes she flashed her amazing smile and in a struggling voice, said, “I read something that made me think of you — ‘life is either a daring adventure or nothing’ (Helen Keller) — that is how I see you live Nikki. Don’t ever let anyone break your spirit. You need to live it and share it.” The ensuing years after Mom’s death opened up a new take on life. A sense of freedom developed ... no matter how bad the circumstances. Choices were made ... Determination to live life fully ... Exploring the depths at the core of all of us, albeit different in many ways, was that passion for adventure. Adventure in the unknown. After multiple medical issues tried to sideline me year after year ... I found myself spending weeks carving the enormous stretches of whitewater through some of the most impressive mountain landscapes in the Canadian Rockies. Treasured time gunk-holing the barrier islands off Florida’s Gulf Coast. And eventually cycling numerous shorelines, exploring stunning terrain, and engaging wits with some of the most fascinating characters along the way. Over the course of time I was finally introduced to sailboat racing, Bayview Yacht Club, and the famed Mackinac Race. This race fit the definition. My favorite noun. And these people knew how to live it. Facing the unknown is guaranteed. The inherent danger of sailing long distances is recognized. Part of the adventure is learning and applying the specialized skills required for success. For some, success is enhancing one’s own skills, and for others, it’s the battle against the competition. For most, it’s the commitment to execute your best as a team and overcome the challenges the unpredictable environment of Lake Huron presents. A mental endurance race. Pure sailing. Sailors exude a spirit of adventure and the deep camaraderie that develops while racing offshore is lasting. A forever impact. It’s a chance to leave issues ashore and experience the freedom that comes with facing the unknown head on. It’s only then, after the race, that we can step back and consider why we put limits on the ‘Mackinac Race’ of our lives. u The Bayview Mackinac Race, always a remarkable experience. Apostle Islands BC rafting 2013 Winners Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race Cove Island Course GL 70 Class USA 50045 Details USA 25168 Stripes USA 70 Evolution Harrison Twp., MI Ann Arbor, MI Sheboygan, WI J120 Class USA 52318 Sledge Hammer USA 25363 Flyin’ Irish USA 25900 Perversion Buffalo, NY Grosse Pointe Park, MI Grosse Pointe Park, MI PHRF A Class USA 482 Talisma USA 84002 Denali^2 USA 52575 Defiance West Bloomfield, MI Harbor Springs, MI Oak Park, IL PHRF B Class USA 52774 Courtesan USA 77 Dolphin USA 4215 Tsunami Bloomfield Hills, MI Bay City, MI Bloomfield Hills, MI PHRF C Class USA 12 Kashmir USA 25 Unplugged USA 32718 Screaming O Traverse City, MI Farmington Hills, MI South Range, WI Multihull Class USA 24 Cheeky T 1 Ollie USA 82946 Lucky Strike Marine City, MI Bay City, MI Harbor Springs, MI Future Mackinac Race Dates Bayview Yacht Club Chicago Yacht Club Port Huron - Mackinac Race Chicago - Mackinac Race 2014............ July 12����������������������������������������� July 19 2015............ July 18����������������������������������������� July 11 2016............ July 16����������������������������������������� July 23 2017............ July 22����������������������������������������� July 15 2018............ July 14����������������������������������������� July 21 18 ///2014 Summer Burgee Shore Course Beneteau First 36.7 Class Legend USA 90 USA 25524 Grizzly USA 61367 Gail Force Sterling Heights, MI Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Grosse Pointe, MI CC 35 Class CAN 4151 Mystery USA 5290 Tir Na Nog USA 5232 Walloon Point Edward, Ont Grand Blanc, MI Harbor Springs, MI J105 Class USA 617 Pterodactyl USA 123 Good Lookin’ USA 406 Snake Oil Lake Angelus, MI Crosswell, MI Kingston, MI Level 126 Class USA 23756 Shape USA 21827 Tar Baby USA 15056 Avatar Flint, MI Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Grosse Pointe Park, MI Level 35 Class USA 42968 Mr. Bill’s Wild Ride Harrison Twp., MI USA 42763 Major Detail Port Huron, MI USA 40937 Time Machine Ann Arbor, MI NA40 Class USA 15004 Fast Tango USA 15044 Velero VII USA 15011 Sundance Grosse Pointe, MI Grosse Pointe, MI Grosse Pointe Shores, MI PHRF D Class NZL 9159 Karma Police USA 7145 Vortices USA 1007 Power Trip Grosse Pointe Park, MI Plymouth, MI Troy, MI PHRF E Class USA 20119 Aristeia USA 25580 Sagitta USA 35427 Epic Grosse Pointe Park, MI Grosse Pointe Park, MI West Bloomfield, MI PHRF F Class USA 25208 Shenanigan USA 40301 Rum USA 15240 Genesis Grosse Ile, MI Fort Gratiot, MI Farmington Hills, MI PHRF G Class USA 15370 Eliminator USA 52858 Opus Dei Ariel USA 137 Grosse Pointe Park, MI Hixson, TN Sandusky, OH PHRF H Class USA 15634 Sleeping Tiger USA 15482 Wind Stalker USA 5362 Alliance Novi, MI Grosse Pointe Park, MI Rochester Hills, MI Turbo Class USA 323 Equation USA 1948 Il Mostro USA 28686 Windquest St. Clair Shores, MI Chicago, IL Macatawa, MI Cruising A Class SA 25668 Mostly Harmless Grosse Pointe Woods, MI USA 5119 Wind Toy IV Grosse Pointe Woods, MI USA 49 Dos Mas Madison Heights, MI Cruising B Class USA 25141 Knot Yours too Ira, MI USA 25664 Pirate Clarkston, MI Plymouth, MI USA 15152 Limerick Overall Finishes - All Divisions Division I - Cove Island USA 52318 Sledge Hammer USA 25363 Flyin’ Irish USA 50045 Details Tom Lewin William Bresser Lance Smotherman Division II - Shore Course USA 323 Equation USA 1948 Il Mostro NZL 9159 Karma Police Bill Alcott, Ed Palm,Tom Anderson Turbo Peter Thornton Turbo Kenneth Flaska PHRF D J120 J120 GL 70 Division III - Shore Course Cruising USA 25668 Mostly Harmless Wick Smith Robert Bunn USA 5119 Wind Toy IV Dos Mas Gary H Gonzalez USA 49 Cruising A Cruising A Cruising A Cruising C Class USA 397 Yare USA 77 Bazinga! Whirlwind USA 193 Troy, MI Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Tawas City, MI Double Handed Class USA 69138 Patriot USA 51170 Flyswatter USA 60611 nosurprise Division IV - Shore Course Double Handed Lyndon Lattie USA 69138 Patriot USA 51170 Flyswatter Mark Pirie USA 60611 nosurprise David Irish Double Handed Double Handed Double Handed Grand Blanc, MI Charlevoix, MI Harbor Springs, MI Division V - Cove Island Multihull USA 24 Cheeky Rick Warner T 1 Ollie Tim Walli USA 82946 Lucky Strike Fred Ball Multihull Multihull Multihull Join Us for the National Sailing Hall of Fame Induction DETROIT YACHT CLUB • OCTOBER 28, 2014 www.nshof.org H 2014 Summer Burgee /// 1 9 20 2013 Flag Presentations Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race Winners First Division I—Cove Island Cove Island—Great Lakes 70s Cove Island — J 120 Cove Island—Multihull Second Third 2014 Summer Burgee /// 2 1 Photography by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com First Cove Island—PHRF A Cove Island—PHRF B Cove Island—PHRF C Overall Division II—Shore Course Second Third 22 2013 Flag Presentations Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race Winners First Shore Course—Beneteau First 36.7 Shore Course—C&C 35 Shore Course—Double Handed Shore Course—J105 Second Third 2014 Summer Burgee /// 2 3 Photography by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com First Shore Course—Level 35 Shore Course—Level 126 Shore Course—NA40 Shore Course—Turbo Second Third 24 2013 Flag Presentations Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race Winners First Shore Course—PHRF D Shore Course —PHRF E Shore Course—PHRF F Shore Course—PHRF G Second Third 2014 Summer Burgee /// 2 5 Photography by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com First Shore Course—PHRF H Division III—Shore Course-PHRF Cruising Shore Course PHRF Cruising—Cruising A Shore Course PHRF Cruising—Cruising B Second Third 26 2013 Flag Presentations Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race Winners First Second Third Shore Course PHRF Cruising—Cruising C Grand Ram—John Tipp Shore Course PHRF Cruising—Cruising C Shore Course Racing—Turbo Cove Island—1st Monohull to Finish Cove Island—J 120 Division I—Cove Island Division I—Cove Island Cove Island—Great Lakes 70s Grand Ram—Lee Smith Division III—Shore Course-PHRF Cruising Shore Course PHRF Cruising—Cruising A Shore Course Cruising—Cruising A Division III—Shore Course-PHRF Cruising Yacht Club Challenge Grand Ram—Com. Dean Balcirak Shore Course—PHRF E Cove Island—Great Lakes 70s Yacht Club Challenge Division I—Cove Island 2014 Summer Burgee /// 2 7 Photography by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com Pickle Boat Yacht Club Challenge Grand Ram—George Hendrie Jr. 28 2014 Summer Burgee /// 2 9 30 ///2014 Summer Burgee 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Yachts, Divisions and Classes listed are preliminary as of June 9, 2014 2014 Summer Burgee /// 3 1 Absolute Accipiter Advantage Sail #: USA 16826 Type: 1982 Peterson 37 (37’) Owner: Donald Hinckfoot, Art Mason Home Port: Macomb Twp., MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 40 Type: 1996 F-25c Trimaran (27’) Owner: Mark Cadotte Home Port: Midland, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division V - Cove Island Multihull Class: Multihull Sail #: USA 35007 Type: 1987 First Class 12 Beneteau (39’1) Owner: John Vermeulen Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division III - Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Affirmed Against The Wind Albacore Sail #: USA 43940 Type: 1992 Tripp 36 (36’) Owner: Jason Geisz Home Port: Birmingham, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Class: PHRF C Alida Sail #: USA 263 Type: 1968 Cal 36 (35’6) Owner: William Harmon Home Port: Detroit, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 12352 Type: 1973 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Robert Farr Home Port: Beverly Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Class: CC 35 Alliance Sail #: USA 5362 Type: 1973 Islander (36’) Owner: Tom Day Home Port: Rochester Hills, MI Yacht Club: Albatross Yacht Club Class: PHRF G 32 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Sail #: USA 422 Type: 1946 S&S Pilot 33 (33’) Owner: Richard Marsh Home Port: Beverly Hills, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Anemone Anxioly tic Sail #: USA 127 Type: 1981 Ontario 32 (32’) Owner: Douglas Lowe Home Port: Leonard, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division III - Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: CAN 416 Type: 2008 Hanse 370 (37’) Owner: Michael Poulter Home Port: London, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division III - Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Aonbharr Ariel Ariel Sail #: USA 40301 Type: 1983 Soverel 33-2 (33’) Owner: Jody Smith, James Cole Home Port: Port Huron, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 137 Type: 1990 Swan (36’) Owner: George Steinemann Home Port: Sandusky, OH Yacht Club: Catawba Island Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 148 Type: 1981 Tartan (33’) Owner: Mark W. Aitken Home Port: Macomb Twp., MI Yacht Club: Edison Boat Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Audacious Avatar Avatar Sail #: USA 140 Type: 1978 Tartan Ten (33’) Owner: Lease Schock Home Port: Sandusky, OH Yacht Club: Sandusky Sailing Club Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Sail #: USA 15056 Type: 1980 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: Gordon and Andrew Morlan Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 25379 Type: 1997 Tartan 4100 CB TM (41’) Owner: Joseph Moceri Home Port: Oakland Township, MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Bad Habits Bad Medicine Bananas Bazinga! Sail #: USA 51405 Type: 2000 Beneteau First 40.7 (39’4) Owner: Mark Hanke Home Port: Franklin, MI Yacht Club: CLYC Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: USA 5551 Type: 1984 S2 10.3 (34’) Owner: Tony Kus Home Port: East Tawas, MI Yacht Club: Tawas Bay Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 21813 Type: 1978 NA 40 (40) Owner: Ted Tulupman Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: T 77 Type: 1987 Tartan 34-2 (34’) Owner: Michael Fozo Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Farms Boat Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 3 3 Ben Jammin Big Storm Blitz Sail #: USA 43076 Type: 1980 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: James A. Rapelje Home Port: Macomb Twp., MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 70 Type: 1999 Corsair F-28 (28’5) Owner: James Frederick Home Port: Port Clinton, OH Yacht Club: Put-in-Bay Yacht Club Division: Division V - Cove Island Multihull Class: Multihull Sail #: USA 31377 Type: 1982 Peterson 43 (42’3) Owner: Larry Soutar Home Port: Oxford, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Boomerang Brandilee Bushwacker Sail #: USA 40864 Type: 1985 S2 9.1 (29’10) Owner: Matthew Schriner Home Port: Macomb Twp., MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 40740 Type: 1985 X-402 (40’) Owner: Steve Nadeau Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 25467 Type: 2000 Beneteau First 40.7 (39’4) Owner: Gerald and Frances Anderson Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Port Huron Yacht Club Class: PHRF C Camelot Capers Sail #: USA 25459 Type: 1979 Tartan 33 (33’9) Owner: Ronald L. Konczalski Home Port: Grosse Ile, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Ile Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 92 Type: 2013 J 111 (36’5) Owner: Don Hudak Home Port: Mentor, OH Yacht Club: Mentor Harbor Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B 34 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Cara Jeannette Sail #: USA 25499 Type: 2003 Beneteau 42 (41’8) Owner: James Godsey Home Port: Dayton, OH Yacht Club: Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase Carinthia Sail #: USA 25497 Type: 1998 J 120 (40’) Owner: Frank Kern Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: J120 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Carrera Challwa Cheek y Sail #: USA 52772 Type: 2006 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Rod Spearin Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club/Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Sail #: USA 90 Type: 2012 J 111 (36’) Owner: German Fuchs Silva Home Port: St. Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Yacht Club Peruano Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 24 Type: 1996 F-31 Modified (33’) Owner: Rick Warner Home Port: Marine City, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club/Emeryville Yacht lub Division: Division V - Cove Island Multihull Class: Multihull Chico 2 Chippewa Sail #: USA 35009 Type: 1998 1D35 (35’) Owner: Jim Weyand Home Port: Livonia, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 345 Type: 1968 Tartan (34’) Owner: Bob and Pam Wall Home Port: Algonac, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF H Christina with a Sea II Clannach Sail #: USA 361 Type: 2002 Beneteau Oceanis 361 (36’) Owner: Doug Phares Home Port: Sandusky, OH Yacht Club: Sandusky Sailing Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Color Me Gone Sail #: USA 34852 Type: 1986 30 Mirage SX (30’) Owner: Michael Hearsch Home Port: Novi, MI Yacht Club: Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 25683 Type: 2010 Beneteau 49.5 (49’5) Owner: Ari Buchanan Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Consigliere Contender Sail #: USA 15066 Type: 1979 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: Brad D’Arcangelo Home Port: Toledo, OH Yacht Club: North Cape Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 15560 Type: 1973 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Gary Graham Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: CC 35 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 3 5 Conundrum Courage Courtesan Sail #: USA 32866 Type: 1984 J 30 (29’10) Owner: Donald King Home Port: Oxford, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 5224 Type: 1970 Morgan 35 (35’) Owner: Spencer Channell Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 52774 Type: 1997 Farr 49 (49’) Owner: Dane Christy, Brad Kimmel Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Deadmans Flat Yatch Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF A Covert Crazy Train Cygnus Sail #: USA 33599 Type: 1984 C&C 41 (40’2) Owner: William Ryzyi Home Port: Washington, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht lub Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Sail #: USA 25981 Type: 1988 Olson 911 SE (29’11) Owner: Kevin Flood Home Port: Clinton Twp., MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 5231 Type: 1970 C&C 35 Mk1 (35’) Owner: Chris Greensmith Home Port: Sarnia, Ont Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Days End Deborah Cay Defiance Defiant Sail #: USA 25589 Type: 1996 Catalina 320 (32’) Owner: Charles Blaty, Russell Martinak Home Port: Farmington Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 8976 Type: 1976 Nautor Swan 44 SS (44’) Owner: Windham, Joel Bremer Home Port: Laporte, IN Yacht Club: Michigan City Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 52575 Type: 2002 JV 66 (66’) Owner: Dale Smirl Home Port: Oak Park, IL Yacht Club: Chicago Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 15790 Type: 1971 Morgan 27 (27’) Owner: Frank (Pete) Fitzpatrick Home Port: St. Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G 36 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Delphinus Denali Denali^2 Sail #: USA 35064 Type: 1999 Sabre 402 (40’) Owner: Stephen Polk Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 97363 Type: 1988 Nelson/Marek 68 (66’8) Owner: Rick Hennig Home Port: Franksville, WI Yacht Club: Racine Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 84002 Type: 2012 Carkeek HPR 40 (40’) Owner: William McKinley Home Port: Harbor Springs, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Little Traverse Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF A Desire Details Doc Escape Sail #: USA 25175 Type: 1980 C&C 32 (31’5) Owner: Michael Clow, Kathy Pitus Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: NSSC/AYC Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 50045 Type: 1985 SC70 (68’) Owner: Lance Smotherman Home Port: Harrison Twp., MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: GL 70 Sail #: USA 8255 Type: 1990 Canadian Sailcraft (CS) (33’6) Owner: Phillip Dean Home Port: Saginaw, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Dolphin Dos Mas Sail #: USA 77 Type: 1973 Mull (54’) Owner: Larry Ruhland Home Port: Bay City, MI Yacht Club: Tawas Bay Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: USA 49 Type: 2001 J 42 (42’) Owner: Gary Gonzalez Home Port: Pontiac, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Double Jeopardy Eagle One Sail #: USA 31 Type: 1978 Tartan 10 (33’) Owner: Sean Murphy Home Port: Detroit, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 126 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase Sail #: USA 22077 Type: 1980 S&S 46 (46’) Owner: Timothy P. LaRiviere Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF E — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 3 7 Eliminator En Pointe Engager Sail #: USA 15370 Type: 1975 C&C 35 Mk-II (35’) Owner: P. Van Tol, B. Vandevusse Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 93096 Type: 2000 Dehler 39 (39’) Owner: Frank and Jennifer Kups Home Port: Shaker, OH Yacht Club: Lakeside Yacht Club Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 25412 Type: 1999 Beneteau First 40.7 (39’3) Owner: Paul Latham Home Port: Marysville, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Epic Equation Equinox Sail #: USA 35427 Type: 1996 Beneteau 42s7 (41’6) Owner: Ray and Winnie Adams Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Sail #: USA 323 Type: 2007 STP Farr 65 (65’) Owner: Alcott, Anderson Home Port: St. Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 25586 Type: 1987 Hunter 31 (31’) Owner: John Demers Home Port: St. Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Escape Plan Euphoria Evolution Falcon Sail #: CAN 54356 Type: 1992 Goman Express 35 (35’) Owner: Kevin McKee Home Port: Sudbury, ONT Yacht Club: Little Current Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 30352 Type: 1981 Catalina C-38 SD (38’) Owner: Joey Baker Home Port: Macomb, MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: USA 70 Type: 1988 SC70 (68’) Owner: Kohle, Reichelsdorfer Home Port: Sheboygan, WI Yacht Club: Sheboygan Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 43828 Type: 1985 J 35 (35’) Owner: Bayer, Bayer, Barnes Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 35 38 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Fast Tango Firewater Flyer Sail #: USA 15004 Type: 1978 NA 40 (39’8) Owner: Tim Prophit Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: CAN 4207 Type: 1972 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Andrew Hellenbart Home Port: Tecumseh, ONT Yacht Club: South Port Sailing Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 32871 Type: 1984 C&C 41 (41’) Owner: Jeff Clark Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Flyin’ Irish Freedom FreeWay Sail #: USA 25363 Type: 1996 J 120 (40’) Owner: William Bresser Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club/Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: J120 Sail #: USA 659 Type: 1988 Hunter Legend 37 (37’) Owner: James Cooper Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 10211 Type: 1972 Morgan (42’) Owner: Doug Carlson Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club/Grosse Pointe Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A FUNTECH Racing Sail #: USA 5455 Type: 1997 J 120 (40’) Owner: Charlie Hess Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: J120 Gail Force Gale Runner Gauntlet Sail #: USA 61367 Type: 2003 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Robert Duker Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Club/Edison Boat Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Sail #: USA 34412 Type: 1985 C&C 29-2 (28’6) Owner: Larry Fair Home Port: Fort Gratiot, MI Yacht Club: GLSS Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Sail #: USA 18188 Type: 1978 Kaufman 44 (44’) Owner: Guy Hiestand Home Port: Grand Rapids, MI Yacht Club: Macatawa Bay Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF E 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 3 9 Genesis Sail #: USA 15240 Type: 1980 Peterson/Islander 40 (39’7) Owner: Paul Lee Home Port: Farmington Hills, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Good Lookin’ Sail #: USA 123 Type: 1996 J 105 (34’6) Owner: Mark Denuyl, Dean Walsh Home Port: Crosswell, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Hibernia Sail #: USA 25627 Type: 2008 Beneteau 40 (40’) Owner: Greg DeGrazia Home Port: Birmingham, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: USA 40167 Type: 1984 Cayenne 41 (41’) Owner: Bill and Susanne Thomas Home Port: Milford, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 410 Type: 1987 Nonsuch 30 (30’) Owner: Robert Wood Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Griffin Grizzly Sail #: USA 69311 Type: 1986 J 35 (35’) Owner: Huneke, Levin Home Port: Okemos, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Sail #: USA 25524 Type: 2004 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Charles M. Bayer Jr. Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Home Brewed Sail #: USA 2299 Type: 1981 Catalina (30’) Owner: Ronald and Robert Henderson Home Port: Chesterfield Twp./Armada, MI Yacht Club: Clinton River Catalina Association Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C 40 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Glory George Hot Ticket Il Mostro Sail #: USA 25328 Type: 1995 J 120 (40’) Owner: Mike and Bob Kirkman Home Port: Novi, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: J120 Sail #: USA 1948 Type: 2008 Volvo 70 (70’) Owner: Peter Thornton Home Port: Chicago, IL Yacht Club: Chicago Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Indigo Irish Mist Irresistible too Sail #: USA 40456 Type: 1985 Farr 34 (33’10) Owner: Sebastian Emery Scheibert Home Port: Sanford, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 6846 Type: 1969 Morgan 41 CB (41’) Owner: David Spiers Home Port: Rochester Hills, MI Yacht Club: Edison Boat Club/Deadman’s Flat Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: CAN 152 Type: 2001 J 120 (40’) Owner: Gerald and Joanne Hines Home Port: Sarnia, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: J120 Iteru Its a Zoo Jalapeno Sail #: CAN 54391 Type: 1989 C&C 37+ (39’6) Owner: Martin Benson Home Port: Watford, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 15057 Type: 1980 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: James F. Shaw Home Port: Fort Gratiot, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 25503 Type: 2003 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Dave Parkes Home Port: Rochester Hills, MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club/Doublehanded Sailing Association Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Jayhawker Jeans Just Chill Kazuri Sail #: USA 50666 Type: 1998 J 120 (40) Owner: Dave Sandlin Home Port: Sterling Heights, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: J120 Sail #: CAN 33 Type: 1989 Andrews 30 (30’) Owner: Tim Bechard Home Port: Sarnia, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 5249 Type: 1972 C&C 39 (39’6) Owner: David Greene Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: CAN 602 Type: 2006 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Stuart Bletcher Home Port: Bracebridge, ONT Yacht Club: Midland Bay Sailing Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 4 1 Kismet Knee Deep Knot Last Sail #: USA 25455 Type: 1984 Catalina (30’) Owner: Art Poppert Home Port: Farmington Hills, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: USA 25006 Type: 1985 J 34 (34’) Owner: Brett Langolf Home Port: Bexley, OH Yacht Club: Sandusky Sailing Club/Deadman’s Flat Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 15535 Type: 1978 Ranger 30 (30’) Owner: Steve Bayless Home Port: Port Huron, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Knot Yours Too Kohatsu La Buena Vida Sail #: USA 25141 Type: 1988 Catalina 38 (38’) Owner: Glen Drabant Home Port: Ira, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: USA 78 Type: 1995 J 92 (30’) Owner: John Stromberg Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 79 Type: 2003 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: William Gilbride Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Last Run Sail #: USA 25677 Type: 1985 C&C 37 (37’7) Owner: Richard Van Houdt Home Port: Cheboygan, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Le Faucon Sail #: USA 41523 Type: 1986 Beneteau First 345 (34’6) Owner: Joseph Jaeger Home Port: Ann Arbor, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F 42 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Leading Edge Sail #: USA 15019 Type: 1978 NA 40 (40’) Owner: Mark and Sue Bevins Home Port: Washington, MI Yacht Club: Cresent Sailing Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF E Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase Legend Sail #: USA 90 Type: 2003 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Dan Shriner Home Port: Sterling Heights, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 43 Leaves all other SUVs in it’s wake. DetroitAcuraDealers.com Proud Sponsor 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Libert y Limerick Sail #: USA 25656 Type: 1985 Beneteau First 42 (42’) Owner: Robert Bert Home Port: North Street, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club/Deadman’s Flat Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 15152 Type: 1983 S2 10.3 (34’) Owner: Darrell Cope, Kevin Pearce Home Port: Plymouth, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Madrugada Majic Star Major Detail Sail #: USA 60409 Type: 2006 Pacer 42 (42’4) Owner: Richard Corbett Home Port: Michiana Shores, IN Yacht Club: Michigan City Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Sail #: USA 15025 Type: 1979 NA 40 (40’) Owner: John Rummel Home Port: Sterling Heights, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: NA40 Sail #: USA 42763 Type: 1988 J 35 (35’) Owner: William Vogan Home Port: Port Huron, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Manitou Sail #: USA 143 Type: 2004 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: John Burke Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Margaret Rintoul IV Sail #: KA 3928 Type: 1984 Frers 50 (49’7) Owner: Amien Carter Home Port: Saginaw, MI Yacht Club: Tawas Bay Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Luck y Strike Sail #: USA 82946 Type: 1985 Multihull (49’11) Owner: Fred Ball Home Port: Harbor Springs, MI Yacht Club: Little Traverse Yacht Club Division: Division V Cove Island Multihull Class: Multihull Mattali McRags Sail #: USA 104 Type: 1984 C&C 37 (37’7) Owner: Scott Jones Home Port: Port Huron, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 44529 Type: 2010 Catalina (44’5) Owner: Larry Peters Home Port: Bay City, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 4 7 Michella Mind Trick Miriah Sail #: USA 42492 Type: 1988 C&C 37+ (40’) Owner: Miguel Gambetta Home Port: Chesterton, IN Yacht Club: Michigan City Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: CAN 23834 Type: 1980 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: Derek Jackson Home Port: Point Edward, Ontario Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 25341 Type: 1984 Jeanneau (33’) Owner: Michael Mahar Home Port: St. Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Momentum Mostly Harmless Mr. Bill’s Wild Ride Sail #: USA 25668 Type: Beneteau (42’) Owner: Warwick Smith Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 42968 Type: 1990 J 35 (35’) Owner: Bill Wildner Jr. Home Port: Harrison Twp., MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Sail #: USA 15342 Type: 1979 Tartan (37’) Owner: R. A. Romer Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Mystery Mystic 3 Natalie J Nauti Boys Sail #: CAN 4151 Type: 1971 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: S. Jay, C. Carruthers Home Port: Point Edward, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 43881 Type: 1993 Dobroth (41’) Owner: Fred Wilhelm Home Port: Harrison Twp., MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club/Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: USA 5252 Type: 2006 TransPac 52 (52’) Owner: Phil and Sharon O’Niel Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/STC Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 25329 Type: 1996 J 120 (40’) Owner: Ed Vermet, John Hughes Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: J120 48 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Night Moves No Rebase Northern Spy Sail #: USA 25999 Type: 1998 J 120 (40’) Owner: Henry Mistele Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: J120 Sail #: USA 22391 Type: 1978 Tartan 10 (33’) Owner: Linda and Ralph Richards Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 25475 Type: 2001 Beneteau First 40.7 (39’4) Owner: John Steigenga Home Port: Huntington Woods, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Notso EZ Money Ollie Opus Dei Sail #: T 1 Type: 1984 Gougeon (35’) Owner: Tim Walli, Dave Sturm Home Port: Bay City, MI Yacht Club: Saginaw Bay Yacht Racing Association Division: Division V Cove Island Multihull Class: Multihull Sail #: USA 52858 Type: 1980 Olson (30’) Owner: Chris Cyrul Home Port: Hixson, TN Yacht Club: Privateer Yacht Club Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Sail #: USA 25669 Type: 2007 Dehler 44 SQ (44’11) Owner: Michael Medwid Home Port: Commerce Twp., MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF B Oriana Sail #: USA 3792 Type: 1978 Islander (36’1) Owner: Peter Wollschlaeger Home Port: Okemos, MI Yacht Club: Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Outlet Xpress Sail #: USA 41046 Type: 1986 Express 37 (37’) Owner: Ken Block Home Port: Richmond Hts., OH Yacht Club: Edgewater Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF C Paki Numu Panache Sail #: USA 418 Type: 1987 Hinterholler Nonsuch (30’) Owner: Matthew Wenzler Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: CAN 41 Type: 1983 Mirage (33’) Owner: Dean McEachen Home Port: Point Edward, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 4 9 Pandemonium Pandora Papa Gaucho II Sail #: US 40741 Type: 1986 Santana 30/30 (29’11) Owner: Matt, Laura and Jason Troy Home Port: Port Huron, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 25531 Type: 2001 Bauermeister 31 (31’) Owner: Todd Riley Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 40205 Type: 1985 J 35 (35’) Owner: Keith Stauber Home Port: Duluth, MN Yacht Club: Duluth Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Passinthru Passion Patriot Sail #: USA 150551 Type: 1979 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: Matt Sealy, Eric Slack Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 0000 Type: Owner: Peter Murray Home Port: Stuart, FL Yacht Club: Division: Division V Cove Island Multihull Class: Multihull Sail #: USA 51678 Type: 2002 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Ken Sharpe Home Port: Clinton Twp., MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/North Star Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Patriot Pendragon Pendragon Perception Sail #: USA 69138 Type: 1982 J 29 (29’) Owner: Lyndon Lattie Jr. Home Port: Grand Blanc, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Sail #: USA 26226 Type: 1978 Contessa (43’) Owner: Gregory Thomas, John Trost Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF C Sail #: USA 60360 Type: 1988 Elite 364 (36’) Owner: Chris Gerkin Home Port: Harrison Twp., MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: USA 76 Type: 1976 Pearson 365 (36’5) Owner: John Sack Home Port: Southfield, MI Yacht Club: Keen’s Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C 50 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Perversion Phoenix Phoenix Sail #: USA 25900 Type: 1999 J 120 (40’) Owner: Dennis Dettmer Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: J120 Sail #: 251 Type: 2005 J 109 (35’) Owner: William Hamilton Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 15351 Type: 1974 Ranger 37 (37’) Owner: John S. Gabriel Home Port: Farmington Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division III - Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Pirate Power Trip Praeceptor Sail #: USA 25664 Type: 1992 Moorings 405 (39’9) Owner: Jeff Henderson Home Port: Clarkston, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/North Star Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: USA 1007 Type: 2003 Synergy 1000 (32’9) Owner: Paul and James Kraft Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 13106 Type: 1973 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Theodore Mayer Home Port: St. Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Promotion Pterodact yl Ragtime Rascal Sail #: USA 50996 Type: 1991 Frers 50 (50’) Owner: Tim Schley Home Port: Fraser, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: USA 617 Type: 2003 J 105 (34’6) Owner: Mark Symonds Home Port: Lake Angelus, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: J105 Sail #: CAN 32756 Type: 1984 J 35 (35’) Owner: Allan Schmidt Home Port: Sarnia, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 35 Sail #: CAN 34850 Type: 1985 Abbott 36 (36’) Owner: Jamie Guggisberg Home Port: Point Edward, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 5 1 Regardless Relentless Resolute Sail #: USA 5133 Type: 1970 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Daniel Padilla Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 56565 Type: 2000 Schock 40 (40’) Owner: Mark Hagan Home Port: Traverse City, MI Yacht Club: Grand Traverse Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 15219 Type: 1980 Catalina (38’) Owner: R. Perry Smith Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Resolute Revelry Rowdy Sail #: USA 93335 Type: 2004 C&C 110 (36’4) Owner: Gregg Remer Home Port: South Lyon, MI Yacht Club: Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 25670 Type: 2007 Beneteau 343 (35’5) Owner: Bill Snyder Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: USA 42418 Type: 1989 Thomas 35 (35’) Owner: Val A. Saph Home Port: Marine City, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Rum Kist Rush Sagamore Sagitta Sail #: USA 17 Type: 2007 Beneteau 10r (32’5) Owner: Harry Bloom Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 32272 Type: 1984 Evelyn (32’) Owner: Rush Racing Syndicate Home Port: Bay City, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 77984 Type: 1983 NM 68 (68’) Owner: Bob Zeman, Laura and Tone Martin Home Port: Chicago, IL Yacht Club: Chicago Yacht Club/St. Petersburg Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 25580 Type: 1990 J 44 (44’) Owner: Jon Somes, Larry Oswald Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF C 52 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Say Uncle Sea Questered Sea Wise Sail #: USA 117 Type: 1997 Henderson 30 (30’) Owner: Kevin Lemonds Home Port: Grosse Ile, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Ile Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 52976 Type: 1985 Beneteau First 38 (38’) Owner: Brian Renn Home Port: Cincinnati, OH Yacht Club: Vermilion Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising B Sail #: USA 952 Type: 1967 Bristol (27’) Owner: Charles Weiss Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Seagoing Send in the Clowns Seraphim Sail #: USA 26601 Type: 1979 NA 40 (39’10) Owner: John Seago Home Port: Grosse Pointe Shores, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Pointe Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 61024 Type: 1982 Pretorien 35 (35’) Owner: Karim Botros Home Port: Independence, OH Yacht Club: Edgewater Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Sail #: USA 25458 Type: 2000 J 105 (34’) Owner: Terry Timm Home Port: Ann Arbor,MI Yacht Club: North Cape Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Serenit y Shape Shenanigan Shillelagh Sail #: USA 15473 Type: 1976 Tartan 30 C (30’) Owner: Carl Sommers Home Port: Presque Isle, MI Yacht Club: Port Clinton Yatcht Club Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Sail #: USA 23756 Type: 1979 Santana 35 (35’) Owner: Win Cooper III, Chris Benedict Home Port: Flint, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club/Mackinac Island Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 25208 Type: 1988 J 33 (33’) Owner: Dick and Dan Synowiec Home Port: Grosse Ile, MI Yacht Club: Ford Yacht Club/North Cape Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 5451 Type: 1971 Tartan 30C (30’) Owner: George L. Mulqueen III Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 5 3 Siochail Slainte Sleeping Tiger Sail #: USA 10380 Type: 1971 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Brian Geraghty Home Port: Grosse Pointe Shores, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 332 Type: 1987 Catalina (34’6) Owner: Joseph Kar Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: USA 15634 Type: 1986 Sabre 34 Mk 2 (34’2) Owner: John Harvey Home Port: Novi, MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Snake Oil Snipe SØhest Sail #: USA 406 Type: 2001 J 105 (34’5) Owner: Don Harthorn Home Port: Kingston, MI Yacht Club: Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 25326 Type: 1991 Thomas 35 (35’) Owner: Dennis Meagher Home Port: Roseville, MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Sail #: USA 52754 Type: 2007 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Jerry Somalski, Grant Hilger Home Port: Freeland, MI Yacht Club: Saginaw Bay Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Solution Sorceress Special-K Spirit Sail #: USA 40025 Type: 1998 Farr 40 OD (40’8) Owner: William Francis Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Grosse Pointe Sail Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: 34433 Type: 1986 X-102 (32’9) Owner: Vigrass, Beeler Home Port: Port Huron, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 25232 Type: 1989 J 35 (35’) Owner: Melia Carter Home Port: Saginaw, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Racing Association Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 35 Sail #: CAN 16541 Type: 1973 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Jim Bennett Home Port: Sarnia, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: CC 35 54 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Stargazer Steelin’ Gold Stella Maris Sail #: USA 3839 Type: 1993 Beneteau 38s5 (38’3) Owner: Dr. Marc Rosenthal Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: Albatross Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF F Sail #: USA 25161 Type: 1988 J 35 (35’) Owner: W. White, W. Mosher Home Port: Fort Gratiot, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Level 35 Sail #: USA 15266 Type: 1972 Morgan (38’) Owner: Jim Hudnut Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club/Lake Shore Sail Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF G Stripes Surface Tension Talisman Sail #: USA 25168 Type: 1986 SC70 (68’) Owner: Bill Martin Home Port: Ann Arbor, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 64986 Type: 1995 Nelson/Marek (36’) Owner: Jeffrey Schaefer Home Port: Elm Grove, WI Yacht Club: Racine Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: USA 482 Type: 2004 Botin/Carkeek 58 (58’) Owner: Bruce Aikens Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Class: PHRF A Tar Baby Tara TAZ Sail #: USA 21827 Type: 1978 Tartan 10 (33’) Owner: Don Lang Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 126 Sail #: USA 25680 Type: 1988 Tartan 40 (40’15) Owner: Walt Payerl Home Port: Chardon, OH Yacht Club: Mentor Harbor Yachting Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 31126 Type: 1981 Tartan 10 (33’) Owner: Hanson Bratton Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase Time Machine Sail #: USA 40937 Type: 1986 J 35 (35’) Owner: Robert Gordenker Home Port: Ann Arbor, MI Yacht Club: North Cape Yacht Club/Albatross Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 35 — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 5 5 Tir Na Nog Titan To Life Sail #: USA 5290 Type: 1971 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Steven Sheppard Home Port: Grand Blanc, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 25633 Type: 1985 C&C 41 (41’) Owner: Aitken, Schultes, Dumouchelle Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF C Sail #: CAN 54392 Type: 2009 Killing-Daniells 50 (50’) Owner: John Daniells Home Port: Midland, ONT Yacht Club: Midland Bay Sailing Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF B Traitor Trick Shot Turn The Page Sail #: CAN 5166 Type: 1972 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: David R. Keys Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 25079 Type: 1987 Mirage 338 (33’4) Owner: Joseph Shotwell Home Port: Bay City, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 791 Type: 1979 O’Day 28 (28’) Owner: Larry Walters Home Port: Cadillac, MI Yacht Club: Albatross Yacht Club Division: Division III - Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Twisted Underdog Unplugged Vanguard Sail #: USA 32998 Type: 1984 J/N 40 (40’) Owner: Rentaboat Ltd. Home Port: Bay City, MI Yacht Club: Bay City Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF C Sail #: CAN 4605 Type: 1970 C&C 35 MK1 (35’) Owner: Cameron Paine Home Port: Windsor, ONT Yacht Club: South Port Sailing Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 25 Type: 2011 J 111 (36’6) Owner: Tim Clayson Home Port: Farmington Hills, MI Yacht Club: PHYC/Bark Shanty Sail Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF B Sail #: USA 35999 Type: 1994 Mumm 36 (36’) Owner: Michael Goran Home Port: Bloomfield Hills, MI Yacht Club: Great Lakes Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF C 56 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Vanquish Velero VII Victrix Sail #: USA 79 Type: 2006 J 100 (33’) Owner: Don Fick Home Port: Harrison Twp., MI Yacht Club: Division: Division IV Shore Course Double Handed Class: Double Handed Sail #: USA 15044 Type: 1978 NA 40 (40’) Owner: Katie Leigh Barbour, J. Sammy Barbour Home Port: Grosse Pointe, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF E Sail #: USA 25439 Type: 1999 J 120 (40) Owner: Curtis Kime Home Port: Grosse Pointe Park, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: J120 Viper Walloon War Chant Sail #: USA 25622 Type: 2007 Flying Tiger 10M (33) Owner: Roger Pollack Home Port: Canton, MI Yacht Club: Grosse Ile Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 5232 Type: 1970 C&C 35 MK1 (35) Owner: R. Grow, T. Hughes, C.Grow, B.Grow Home Port: Harbor Springs, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: CC 35 Sail #: USA 51793 Type: 2002 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Reid Stromberg Home Port: Fort Gratiot, MI Yacht Club: Port Huron Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 Wasabi Wavelength Sail #: USA 909 Type: 2002 Catalilna 320 (32) Owner: Chas. Gabor Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: USA 25129 Type: 1981 Pearson Flyer (29’11) Owner: Chris Delling Home Port: Sterling Heights, MI Yacht Club: Albatross Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G Weather Edge III Whiplash Sail #: USA 25628 Type: 2008 Beneteau First 36.7 (36’) Owner: Colton Weatherston Home Port: Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Beneteau First 36.7 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase Sail #: USA 97481 Type: 1988 J 35 (35’) Owner: Gregg Whipple Home Port: Grand Blanc, MI Yacht Club: Tawas Bay Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: Level 35 — 2014 Summer Burgee /// 5 7 90 Yacht Showcase th 2014 Whirlwind Wicked-R Wind of Change Sail #: USA 193 Type: 1990 Mirage (34’6) Owner: Leo Chartier Home Port: Tawas City, MI Yacht Club: Tawas Bay Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: CAN 18 Type: 2007 Beneteau 10R (34’) Owner: Ron Bildfell Home Port: Point Edward, ONT Yacht Club: Sarnia Yacht Club Division: Division II - Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 461 Type: 1998 Open 40 (40’) Owner: George Lewis Home Port: Valley City, OH Yacht Club: St. Martin Yacht Club Division: Division I - Cove Island Class: PHRF B Wind Toy IV Windancer Windquest Windseeker Sail #: USA 5119 Type: 1970 Morgan 42 (42’) Owner: Rob Bunn Home Port: Grosse Pointe Woods, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 52701 Type: 1988 SC70 (68’) Owner: Brien Baker Home Port: Saint Clair Shores, MI Yacht Club: Detroit Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 28686 Type: 2002 Max Z86 (86’) Owner: Doug and Dick DeVos Home Port: Macatawa, MI Yacht Club: Macatawa Bay Yacht Club Division: Division I Cove Island Class: PHRF A Sail #: USA 10102 Type: 2013 C&C 101 (33’) Owner: Eric Vermandere Home Port: Shelby Twp., MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF D Windshadow Xcessive Yare Zubenelgenubi Sail #: USA 416 Type: 2001 J 105 (34’6) Owner: Jim Murphy Home Port: West Bloomfield, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF D Sail #: USA 51 Type: 2001 C&C 110 (36’) Owner: Warren Roosen Home Port: Chesterfield Twp., MI Yacht Club: North Star Sail Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising A Sail #: USA 397 Type: 1963 S&S (35’) Owner: John Tipp Home Port: Troy, MI Yacht Club: Bayview Yacht Club Division: Division III Shore Course Cruising Class: Cruising C Sail #: USA 5333 Type: 1967 Cal 30 (30’) Owner: Eric and Conrad Keydel Home Port: Brighton, MI Yacht Club: Crescent Sail Yacht Club Division: Division II Shore Course Class: PHRF G 58 ///2014 Summer Burgee — 90 t h Bay view/ Mackinac Yacht Showcase 2014 Summer Burgee /// 5 9 Grand Hotel’s F or years, Dan Musser III, President of Grand Hotel, and his late father, Grand Hotel Chairman, R.D. Musser Jr. discussed adding suites to the lake side of the fourth floor. “My father and I had talked about making this addition for about 20 years and it is finally happening,” said Grand Hotel President Musser. “I am pleased to be able to start the project this year and to name it in his honor.” Appropriately it will be called the Musser Suite, named after R.D. Musser Jr. It is Grand Hotel’s only one-bedroom suite and the first step in a plan to add six additional two-bedroom suites to the historic hotel over the next three years as part of the Cupola Suites project. When the project is completed, Grand Hotel’s roofline will look very similar to when it opened in 1887, incorporating dormers along the roof. It is the latest example of working to maintain a sense of continuity and timelessness at Grand Hotel, while at the same time adjusting to changes in the world around it by making improvements and adding amenities for guests to enjoy. Grand Hotel decorator Carleton Varney, president of the New York-based Dorothy Draper Co. Inc., who has been working with the family since 1979, said the suite “is styled to be one of the finest decorated projects of my career.” Varney said memorabilia Mr. Musser accumulated through the years has been used for wall art and appointments. It is one of the most unique spaces in the hotel. Upon entering the room, you face an entryway with a wet bar. Up steps and to the right is a large parlor with a beautiful view of the Straits of Mackinac and Mackinac Bridge. To the left of the entryway is a bedroom which features a dormer and seating area with walls covered in malachite and green wall covering and a white, tassel-design, wooden carved bed trimmed with soft lilac. The Lilac Festival has always been a highlight of the summer season on Mackinac and for the Musser Suite, all the lilac colors have been incorporated, from deep purple to lavender and white. The carpeting was custom-woven in Connemara, Ireland, and is a rich cream, scarlet red, aubergine and chartreuse open plaid. Furnishings in the suite are a medley of French designs and combine the luxury that the Grand has always offered its guests – damask walls, custom-designed carpets, crystal fixtures – with the simplicity and comfort of today, along with the beauty of color that Mr. Musser has always said represents the Mackinac Island style. Prior to the hotel’s 128th season opening this year, Ellen Creager, travel The Musser Suite — A Grand Addition 60 ///2014 Summer Burgee editor from the Detroit Free Press, and WJR morning show host Paul W. Smith were the first guests to stay and experience the suite. The Musser Suite can be booked by calling 1-800-33GRAND. Prices start at $1,185 per night, based on double occupancy. You can also get a firsthand view of what it is like to stay in their newest suite by visiting grandhotel.com. u First One-Bedroom Suite 2014 Summer Burgee /// 6 1 Mackinac Race Kids’ Party Photography by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com By Dan Aitken I n 2012, Kerrie Barno approached me with an idea for a kid-friendly event at the Mackinac Race Awards. She wanted to know if Aitken-Ormond Insurance would be interested in being a sponsor. We thought that was a wonderful idea! I approached one of our long-standing insurance carriers we work with to see if they would be onboard to assist us with sponsoring the event. Frankenmuth Insurance was delighted to be a partner with us! The first year of the kids’ party included face painting along with arts and crafts. Last year we had a very popular kite flying contest and the kids had a ball! Thank you to Grand Hotel and their staff for their assistance in coordinating the events with us. The Bayview Mackinac Race Awards are now a fun-filled family event for kids of all ages! While parents are having a great time celebrating their victories on the water, their sons, daughters, grandchildren, nieces, and nephews are enjoying their time on the island as well. Hopefully, when these children grow up they will understand the legacy of the Bayview Mackinac Race that we have all experienced and will be encouraged to participate on the water as well. u 2014 Summer Burgee /// 6 3 Photo by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com Photo by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com Epic Crew on Field at Comerica Park, September 8, 2010. (photo courtesy of Bill Eisner) Pro-Team Challenge A New Dimension Adds Excitement to the Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race F Winning skippers from last four years. L-r: Ray Adams, Brian Smith, Larry Smith, Michael Medwid, Dick Synowiec, Dan Synowiec. (photo courtesy of Bill Eisner) 64 Kids with Bill Harrington, DSBA President, Vicki Foley, 2012 Red Wing winning Notso Ez Money skipper, Mike Medwid, and radio voice of the Detroit Red Wings, Ken Kal. (photo courtesy of Bill Eisner) By Bill Harrington our years ago, around March-April of 2010, Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association Vice President, Jim Rein and I were invited to Bayview Yacht Club to talk about creating some media exposure for the Mackinac Race. Having raced in 20 Mackinacs previously with Bob Thoreson’s Valkyrie, I was quite familiar with the race and the media exposure it already received. So I was pretty well stumped as to what else could be done to generate more interest and exposure. Following the meeting, I went home and mentally just sat on meeting the challenge for four to five days. I just had no new creative thoughts. It’s been said that racing sailboats is like standing under a cold shower and tearing up $100 bills (probably $1,000 bills today). So one morning I was taking a warm shower, tearing up nothing, and it just hit me. What if each of the pro-teams – Detroit Pistons, Lions, Tigers and Red Wings, could ‘sponsor’ a crew/boat. All of the boats have a rating to create equality. So, if the teams were to participate, there could be a ‘race within a race.’ There would be no money involved. The pro teams would provide the crews of the selected boats with team shirts, hats and a flag. The specific team boat crew that won the Pro-Team Challenge Race would then be hosted and recognized by the professional team at one of their games. It could work! The next step was to solicit the teams. It was at this time that Karen Davidson had the Detroit Pistons on the block. I thought that if any team was not going to participate, it might be the Pistons. So I called Kevin Grigg, their VP of Communications. Kevin said “absolutely the Pistons were in.” The Tigers, Lions and Red Wings enthusiastically jumped right in also. Now we had to present the concept to Bayview. Since they had plenty to do with running the Mackinac Race, they wouldn’t have to take on the task of organizing and managing the Pro-Team Challenge. The Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association would take care of all the details. So, they were in. All that was necessary was to put the names of the boats in a bowl and a Pistons, Lions, Tigers and Red Wings team representative would draw their team boat. Shenanigan crew at Ford Field with DSBA’s Bill Harrington and Jim Rein, Lions play-by-play voice, Dan Miller, Bayview Commodore, Kent Colpaert, and Race Chairman, Carl Bihlmeyer. Kids with Dave Rozema. (photo courtesy of Bob Benko)) Notso Ez Money crew at Red Wing game with Greg Thomas, Jeff Henderson, DSBA’s Bill Harrington, and Red Wing great, Darren McCarty. In June of 2010, at the Bayview Mackinac Press Event, the teams drew their boats. Rebel 3 by James Hunter for the Lions; George by Eli Zaret for the Pistons; Surprise by Ken Daniels for the Red Wings and Epic by Reno Bertoia for the Tigers. Next we had to tell the boat skippers. I put in a call to each of them, “Hi Mr. Adams (Epic). This is Bill Harrington of the Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association. Your yacht, Epic and your crew have been selected to represent the Detroit Tigers in the Mackinac Race.” Ray Adams, “Who are you? What’s this all about. What about the Tigers?” This happened with each of the skippers. There was a moderate degree of, yeh, right. The reality of the event didn’t sink in until the boxes of hats, shirts and flag were delivered to each of their homes. The night before/morning of the race in Port Huron, Tigers’ mascot, Paws, visited the Epic crew; The Pistons Dance Team visited their yacht George; radio voice of the Red Wings, Ken Kal shared some beers with Surprise; Lions Hall of Famer, Lem Barney visited Rebel 3. Year one got off on a positive note. At the end of the race, Epic, the Tiger boat won the Pro-Team Challenge. On September 8, the Tigers hosted the Epic crew and guests at a game and in an on-field award ceremony (pic). Year two, the Red Wings boat Sorcery won. Year three, Red Wings boat Notso Ez Money won. And year four, Shenanigan, the Lions boat won. The Pistons are looking for their first win. On Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at the race press event, the Pro-Team Challenge recognized the winning skippers from the first four years. The mascots Paws, Roary and Hooper were on hand. And Jim Brandstatter (Lions), Dave Rozema (Tigers), Ken Kal (Red Wings), and Rick Mahorn (Pistons) selected their 2014 boats. Pistons PA announcer John Mason introduced them to musical fanfare. As one of the previous participating skippers said, “This is good for the whole sporting community. It adds pleasure and interest in the race. We’re very happy to be representing one of Detroit’s Pro Teams.” Rick Mahorn was hoping for a good draw! Word is he got it with the yacht, Mostly Harmless. Note: The 68 year old Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association is made up of those personalities and voices that bring the action and excitement of the State of Michigan’s professional and collegiate sports into fans’ homes and automobiles. Bill Harrington is an Officer and Marketing Director for the DSBA. u 2014 Pistons, Lions, Red Wings and Tigers Pro-Team Challenge team representatives. L-r: Rick Mahorn, Roary, Jim Brandstatter, Hooper, Heather Garey, Ken Kal, Paws, Dave Rozema. (photo courtesy of Bill Eisner) 65 Set Sailfor Autism A Mothers Experience Set Sail for Autism is fast approaching, and we encourage the entire sailing community to support this effort. Set Sail for Autism presents a unique opportunity for families affected by autism to experience the Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Yacht Race, demonstrate the capabilities of young adults with autism to learn the skills to necessary to perform effectively in the workplace, raise awareness of autism within the sailing community, and raise money to support the important work of both the Autism Alliance of Michigan, and Autism Society Macomb/St Clair. Photo by: Martin Chumiecki, Photoelement.com 66 ///2014 Summer Burgee Jenny, the mother of one of the ASD crew members for the 2013 Set Sail for Autism event, wrote the following article. M y name is Jenny, and last year my son Brogan and I were asked to be a part of an amazing opportunity. Brogan was one of two young men with autism selected to sail back from Mackinac Island to Port Huron as part of the crew on one of the boats that had raced in the 2013 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Race. We were the first families to have this incredible experience as part of Set Sail for Autism. When I first heard about the opportunity, I admit I was apprehensive and anxious for what may lie ahead. That said, I knew this chance was too great to pass up. It was an opportunity for not just my son to learn all the skills associated with sailing, but also to raise awareness of and counteract the common misconception that individuals with autism do not have the skills to perform certain challenging tasks. A few weeks prior to the sail, we met Nick, the other young man chosen to participate, and his father Andy. The four of us then met our Captain Paul Latham and his First Mate Dan Collins, and we began our training to become part of the crew of Engager. Paul and Dan were incredibly patient and knowledgeable and allowed us all to voice any concerns and ask questions, and gave us the tools to understand what to expect on our three-day voyage. We reconnected in Mackinac after the Big Race and set sail. Brogan and Nick were asked to untie the ropes, and just like that, we were off. Brogan and Dan often checked our navigation and Paul asked the young men to perform a variety of tasks during our first leg, which was from Mackinac to Presque Isle. We all had the chance to take turns manning the wheel and making sure we were on target for our port. Additionally, Nick and Brogan assisted in putting up the sails and had to wrap them properly once we were in port. How you can help: That night at dinner, we shared stories about our amazing first day on the water and prepared for day two. The weather was beautiful, but the captain informed us that storms were approaching in two days. He made the decision that we should change our plan and travel nonstop to Port Huron to avoid any bad conditions. This meant we would sail through the night on day two. Those next 24 hours were incredible and when we truly felt we became a crew. When you are on Saginaw Bay when land drifts further and further away from the horizon, you really rely on each other. At times it was just our boat and maybe one other in the distance. We shared stories and got to know each other. Nick and Brogan asked poignant questions of all of us and interacted with everyone. Nick even asked each of us what our future life looks like. As a parent of a child with autism, seeing this type of engagement and interaction is incredibly moving and touching. It was a beautiful experience I will cherish forever. I was so proud of both Brogan and Nick for their hard work and was inspired by Paul, his wife Dorothy, and Dan for having the courage and faith to allow us to take this trip with them. I would encourage parents, teachers and business owners to follow their lead and set expectations high for these incredible individuals with autism. In doing so, together we can set sail for a brighter future. u • Attend the Pat Dailey Concert on July 10 from 7-10 p.m. at the Acheson Seaway Terminal. Fun loving music in a spectacular setting on the St. Clair River with prime viewing of fireworks. Tickets are $35.00. For tickets, contact Vinomondo Winery 810-385-4062. • Encourage families affected by autism to join us on July 12 from 9:00 a.m.-noon, and experience the start of the 2014 Bell’s Beer Bayview Mackinac Yacht Race in a secure viewing area on the Black River. Private parking, Water Taxi rides, food, and refreshments. Contact Jerry Keller 810-434-0777. • Encourage Captains sailing in the race to consider bringing one or two young adults with autism to join them on the return trip from Mackinac. It will be a wonderful experience for all involved, and help demonstrate the untapped potential of many adults with autism. • Encourage families you know affected by autism to consider crewing one of the sail boats, returning from Mackinac. The trip back would begin on Wednesday, July 16. For additional information, contact Tom Riopelle 248-758-8770. 2014 Summer Burgee /// 6 7 2013 Detroit Cup August 21-25 www.detroitcup.com T By The Detroit Cup Committee he 2013 Detroit Cup was an exciting stop for international sailors competing in the second stop of the US Grand Slam Match Race Series. www.usamatchracing.com The effort and coordination of the Club employees and volunteers was spectacular. Match racing events are not easy to conduct and require as many volunteers and umpires as there are competitors participating in the event. The effort that it takes to pull these events off at a high level is not easy … and Bayview certainly delivered in 2013. PVS Chemicals was once again a very generous sponsor to both the Detroit Cup and Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Detroit fleet race. www.bbbsdetroit.org. John Nicholson, Vice President of PVS Chemicals, presented a generous donation on behalf of Bayview Yacht Club to the Big Brothers Big Sisters foundation during the opening ceremony. Below is final press release and results of the event: Gilmour Wins the 2013 Detroit Cup Sunday, August 25, 2013 – Detroit, MI – In an exciting SemiFinal and Final series of racing on the final day of competition, David Gilmour and his Team Gilmour crew of Luke Payne and Peter Nicholas have won the 2013 Detroit Cup, the second stop on the ISAF Grade 2 US Grand Slam series. The West Australiabased team made a blitzkrieg run through the field of 12 teams from three countries, losing only two matches throughout the four days of competition at the host venue of Bayview Yacht Club. “We’re hoping this will start some momentum for us going into the remaining Grand Slam events,” said Gilmour, whose ninth place in the first event in Chicago did not get him 68 ///2014 Summer Burgee August 21-25 2013 Detroit Cup The Detroit Cup Committee extends a large thank you to PVS Chemicals and Legal Copy Services for supporting the 2014 Detroit Cup. off to a fast start to the series of four events. Two more events remain in this series in the next two weeks: the Knickerbocker Cup in Manhasset Bay, NY later this week, followed by the Oakcliff International the following week in Oyster Bay, NY. The Detroit area today delivered perfect sunny skies and a building southwesterly breeze that topped 15 knots in the Finals, allowing race managers to complete their entire format of a first-to-three point Semi-Final and Final rounds. Semi-Final action started with local Bayview-based Chris Van Tol up against Auckland-based Chris Steele, where Steele’s match race prowess overcame Van Tol’s knowledge of the Ultimate 20s and the currents of the venue to win 3-0. The other Semi-Final featured new Bayview member and Detroit Cup qualifier winner Matt Graham facing Gilmour. Despite some strong attempts, the Aussie team dominated the young local team in every match to go to through on a 3-0 score to face the Kiwis in a Down Under Final. By finding a favorable shift on the left side, Gilmour took the lead and never looked back in Match 1 to take the first point in the series. In Match 2, it looked like Steele would be in trouble when Gilmour drew a penalty on the Kiwis in the pre-start, but Steele fought back hard and pinned Gilmour against the pin end of the start, with the Aussies hooking the mark in the strong current and earning themselves an offsetting penalty as well as having to re-round the mark to start several lengths behind All tied up, Match 3 started badly for Gilmour who got a penalty in the pre-start, but was saved when a timing error by the race committee prompted a re-start to the match. Gilmour and team then fought hard in the building breeze to get another strong start off Steele, connecting the shifts to gain in the building breeze to win – score 2-1. In Match 4, Gilmour again got the start they wanted at the pin, with Steele forced to a late tack at the signal boat to give the Aussies just enough lead to make the first cross and once again play the shifts beautifully to extend throughout the match. Winner of the Grand Slam series receives an invitation to the Grade 1 2014 Congressional Cup in Long Beach, as well as an invitation to the only US event on the Alpari World Match Racing Tour, the Chicago Match Cup. u The effort and coordination of the Club employees and volunteers was spectacular. 2014 Summer Burgee /// 6 9 August 21-25 2013 Detroit Cup results 70 ///2014 Summer Burgee www.detroitcup.com 71 Above: All three boats had BYC ties. Charleston Race Week Todd and Brynn Jones ‘Post Party.’ 72 ///2014 Summer Burgee Todd and Brynn Jones ‘Pre Party.’ A large group of BYC Members made their way down to Charleston, South Carolina to complete in Charleston Race Week. It’s easy to see why this Regatta was US Sailing 2013’s OneDesign Regatta of the Year. Charleston pulls out all the stops. Warm weather, competitive racing and wonderful Southern Hospitality. For those of you who have considered attending, I recommend you go. Of course, no event would be complete without adding some BYC flavor, and this we did. Friday after racing, BYC hosted a Dock Party and we did it up ‘Jerome’ Style. Here is a list of the members that attended (sorry if I missed anyone): Com. Chuck Bayer Jr., Gov. Todd Jones, Com. Peter Griffin and Paul Hulsey on Chuck Bayer’s J70 Grizzly. Lance Smotherman and Alex Hume on Lance Smotherman’s Melges 20 Details Com. Hanson Bratton, Com. Karl Kuspa, Gov. Hans Brieden and Nancy Kuspa on Hanson Bratton’s Tartan 10 Taz Bill McKinley, George “Bear” Peet and David La Mere on Bill McKinley’s Carkeek 40 Denali Marc Steyn, Greg Semack and his daughters on Marc Steyn’s Melges 24 Vapor Trail Bora Gulari on the Carkeek 40 Spookie Tyler Black on the Carkeek 40 Decision Greg McCliment on the Melges 24 Gnarly Rucca Trish Smotherman, Com. and Karen Rumptz on Race Committee Brynn Jones, Sue Griffin and Joan Bayer enjoying the warm weather. u Dave La Mere driving Denali out to race Bora is a much better tactician Taz being passed on the ride home. Denali’s secret weapon. Bora Gulari doing his thing as Tactician of Spookey. Sunfish swimming around the ocean course. Com. Bratton and Com. Kuspa on the way to racing 2014 Summer Burgee /// 7 3 Let’s get it together By Frank Kern, J/120 fleet captain and owner of Carinthia since 1998 A s many have noticed at Bayview, there has been a major renovation of the North Harbor Dock. The history of this area of the Club was originally where younger members and non-member sailboat owners kept their yachts on non-Bayview property. This was because it was a little cheaper than along ‘spar shed row.’ Later on, because of the remoteness to the rest of the Club, they would have regular races among themselves, with the winner getting a free barrel of beer. In 1940 the Lagoonatic Association was formed with a trophy for this annual race. As time went on the association became inactive and the North Harbor Lagoon was purchased by Bayview. Flash forward to 1998. A building fire at Aggressive Marine destroyed a number of sailboats. During that winter, to fulfill their desire to race and cruise, a search for a one-design boat was commenced. It was narrowed down to the J Boats J/120 as an ideal candidate. Five owners purchased new J/120s and the Detroit One-Design class was born. From the beginning, the owners were unfamiliar with the boat, and with each other. Sprit boats were not as common as today and there was a big learning curve on how to sail them. The J/120 owners requested that Bayview let them dock their boats together. As time went on they found that with the commonality of racing, socializing soon followed. There were winter parties, help for owners short on crew, an annual Great Lakes trophy, and an agreement to sail certain regattas as a one-design class. Regattas have been raced in Harbor Springs, Chicago to Mackinac Race, and PHYC Lake Huron International. Certainly the 2010 NOOD tragedy brought the owners and crew closer together. In the winter of 2013, the board approved the renovation of the North Harbor dock. To keep costs down, the J/120 class agreed to supply most of the labor to tear out the old docks and install the new docks. Past Com. Hanson Bratton did the design work and installed the steel work to widen the dock from four to twelve feet. 74 ///2014 Summer Burgee The J/120 Bayview fleet has continued to grow, with seven sailboats docked next to each other, and an eighth one coming down from Lake Superior. With the enjoyment and competitiveness of the fleet, we have continued to have many more J/120s in the Great Lakes that come together for major events. It is very common to have seven or eight boats on the line for the weekly Windsor Yacht Club night series and a good one-design turnout on the weekends. Being a very social group, we welcome all sailors to come visit us before or after a race. Even better, just come up to us before a race and we can find a spot for you to sail. Once you try it, we think you will be back. After all, we have to keep that Lagoonatic tradition alive. u 2014 Summer Burgee /// 7 5 Discover One of Michigan’s Greatest Comeback Stories Bernida: A Michigan Sailing Legend L uke’s grandfather told him all about the racing sailboat, Bernida, that won the very first sailing race that stretched from Port Huron to Mackinac Island in 1925. But as race rules and sailing trends changed, Bernida was forgotten — until Bernida turned up in Luke’s hometown of Mackinac Island! Shipbuilders on Mackinac Island worked to return the boat to its former racing glory. Luke wanted to help too, and donated half of his allowance to the cause every week. Finally, Bernida was ready to sail the Mackinac Race again — 85 years later! Will she have what it takes to win once more? Luke will be there to find out! About the authors. A sailmaker and competitive sailor, Al Declercq purchased Bernida with the dream of racing her again in the Bayview Mackinac Race. Tom Ervin is the author of seven books, including two others about the Bayview and Chicago Mackinac races. Gloria Whelan is an award-winning author of children’s books. Her picture books with Sleeping Bear Press include Mackinac Bridge: The Story of the Five-Mile Poem (a 2007 Michigan Notable Book) and Friend on Freedom River (a Jefferson Cup honor book). All three authors live in Michigan. Illustrator David Miles spends his days tackling children’s books and other illustration projects while enjoying the quiet life with his wife, Carrie, and his plucky dachshund, Clover, in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Bernida: A Michigan Sailing Legend is available at the following locations: Bayview Yacht Club, Doyle Sails Detroit, Horizon Books Traverse City, Island Bookstore Mackinac Island/City, Barnes and Noble Grosse Pointe/Port Huron. Ages 6-8. u 76 ///2014 Summer Burgee Centennial Book Update July 2014 B ayview Yacht Club will complete its first 100 years in 2015. The celebration of the centennial will highlight the rich history of the sport of sailing by Bayview members, crews, and boats. A committee, chaired by Commodore Jon Somes, has been working with the Board to provide an interesting and informative celebration. The history of the Club will be documented in the publication of a 128page coffee table book. The centennial book will be one of many ways the Club will be enjoying the centennial and its contents are targeted to stimulate discussion about what Bayview has been, what it is today, and how it can be made more enjoyable for members in the future. While the sport of sailing is the main focus of the Club today, the Club was founded in 1915 by four men, all interested in boating, but none of whom might be called a sailor in that inaugural year. The history of the Club starts in Detroit, then spreads, not only in the Michigan area, but to the Atlantic Ocean, then around the world. The team that is collecting the content for this book has a wide variety of resources to draw from. Their task has been to go through a great deal of material to give a concise and interesting story of our history. The material available has been given or loaned to the Club by many members and friends. This material consists of articles, rosters, race results and more, and much of it resides in the Club archives located in the Dockhouse. Much credit also goes to the members in the past who chronicled events and also memorialized the history of the Club in reports, articles and historical retrospectives. Much material was used by the team for this book from earlier authors, especially to accurately convey early history. This book will tell the story of Bayview Yacht Club with chapters devoted to topics that can be explored individually as your interest dictates. You can explore how the Club and its strong reputation of sailing developed over the decades or, in a different chapter, see how the Clubhouse was built over the years and the history that is still on the walls. The first draft of the book has been submitted to the publisher for review, but there is still room for another interesting story or unique document chronicling Club history. There are many members who have contributed to this book as chapter editors or researchers. If you have a story or interesting document that you believe should be included in the book, please contact any of the committee members listed below, and you will be directed to the appropriate chapter editor. It should be mentioned that Com. John Barbour was an original committee member and strong contributor to the book. u Centennial Committee: Com. Jon Somes, Chairman Com. Ted Everingham Com. Brian Geraghty Brad Kimmel 2014 Summer Burgee /// 7 7 78 ///2014 Summer Burgee Makes a great gift! Honor a Special Event— races won, anniversaries, births, graduations, and much more. 2014 Summer Burgee /// 7 9 80 ///2014 Summer Burgee The 2014 By Taggart McHugh Mackinac Mystery I t was November last when they first put it together. The plan. Sure, it wasn’t winning the old fashioned way—through hard work—but then maybe the ends justified the means. Friends? With friends like that, who needs enemies? There was really no one moment, no instant, it just came together over time. And November was when it launched. Take him down, spit him out, and assume his command. They were a ménage a trois, and when the lights went out and they were by themselves, they schemed. Ostensibly beholden to a larger group, they were far from that. The group was weak. It needed to be controlled. It was there to be controlled. He had no way of knowing it was coming. He had mistakenly assumed a brotherhood. He was so wrong. They needed a name and they chose one: The Cabal. The Commodore loved being Commodore. They called him Tim, although that was not his real name. He came to sailboat racing as an adult, found his way to Bayview Yacht Club after learning of its single-minded focus, soon excelled at the sport and then looked for other ways to devote his energy and time. He volunteered. He was elected. He became exactly what a Board Member should be—his every thought was for the good of the Club and the sport, he listened to and cherished other points of view, and he sought out the recollections and advice of those who had gone before him. He had learned, with some disappointment, that there were others whose motivations were power and glory for themselves. He wasn’t shy of letting them know what he thought, and perhaps that had left him exposed. The Commodore’s Dinner was certainly the classiest yearly event sponsored by Bayview Yacht Club and quite possibly the only one that had any class at all. A tradition of many, many years, it celebrated the Club, the office of Commodore, and the productive and symbiotic relationship we had with the other clubs of the Detroit Regional Yacht-Racing Association. It was a tradition to be revered, not removed. And so it was when Commodore Tim opened his email and saw the note: The Commodore’s Dinner will be your last! It was signed The Cabal. He didn’t think much of it. As legendary as some of the men of Bayview were, it had its share of cowards. Those that hulked in the shadows and displayed their cowardice in various ways. Anonymous letters, secret cliques, hidden agendas and selfish motives. Bayview had survived them before and it would survive them again. It was just a matter of putting them in the past. Tim recalled the last Board Meeting and the vehemence with which three members had spoken out against the dinner. A vote had been taken and they had lost. “It’s too expensive,” they cajoled. Of course, they had lost sight. It seemed, to them, that the purpose of Bayview was to make money, perhaps like some hedge fund but more like a lemonade stand. Lost was the notion that Bayview actually sold a product, and that product was member satisfaction. Of course, that was a concept that had seemed easily lost on recent Boards, caught up as they were with personal aggrandizement. The Club had for whatever reason started to elect members who had spent precious little time at the Club, had never volunteered in any significant way, and surely did not understand what Bayview was all about. They cast aside the thoughts and lessons from those who had gone before, perhaps determined to make the same mistakes that had already been made and surely were there to be learned from. But learn they did not. Tim was so looking forward to the Commodore’s Dinner. By the time the night arrived he had long since forgotten about the threatening email. While Tim certainly recognized the issues that surrounded the Board and its apparent unwillingness to take the interests of the members to heart, he perhaps naively deduced that talk was their long suit and that productive action was in precious rare supply. He figure the email to be a prank. He had never figured so poorly before. The evening began swimmingly. The guests arrived on time, the Emcee introduced Tim in glowing terms and he was welcomed. It seemed that the only people who were not glowing as Tim spoke of his vision for the Club were Vince Corn and his brother, Rory. They were referred to by the members with their initials: VC and RC. As Tim spoke, they cast furtive glances at each other and their best friend, Manute Dreamy. A tall man, he had gigantic hands, which also gave him his nickname: Hands. The Chef, although new, did what he had soon became both famous and beloved for. He prepared an exquisite meal, with the staff presenting it quietly, professionally and to perfection. Tim had requested Cherries Jubilee for desert, owing to an overwhelming fondness for cherries, and he could not wait. Chef had promised that the presentation would be beyond compare. The crowd oohed and aahed as the gigantic service platform was wheeled into the Mackinac Room. A six-Sterno heat pack kept the sauce warm, cherries everywhere, waiting for the moment that the nearby pitcher of brandy would be poured over the mound of delight, a spark struck, and the creation jumped to life. A world record Jubilee! As Chef poured the brandy, Hands stood and started to make his way out of the room. As Chef lifted the Bic to start the show, Hands paced deliberately down the center of the room. As Chef struck the lighter, Hands was right next to him. It was at the moment that VC abruptly moved his chair back. The chair interrupted the path of the strutting Hands, causing him to move quickly to his right, where he collided with the cart. As the flames reached their maximum height, the cart lifted, teetered, and began a painful collapse onto the Commodore’s table! Tim was quick. He saw what was happening and immediately appreciated the possible consequences. At a minimum, horrible burns to himself and the guests at this table. At worst, harm to the other guests and the Club lost. A historic structure filled with historic artifacts, it would burn like tinder. Calamity was coming! Action preceded thought. Tim leapt from his chair and dove towards the cart. If he could only stop it from reaching the point where its righting moment was overcome and capsize inevitable, he could stop it from going over. He quickly recalled the lessons in naval architecture he had learned from in those adult sailing classes at the DYC so long ago: Where RM is the righting moment, GZ is the righting arm and is the displacement. Because the vessel displacement is constant, common practice is to simply graph the righting arm vs the angle of heel. The righting arm: the horizontal distance between the lines of buoyancy and gravity. This formula only works at small angles of heel …. He dove across the table, sending wine glasses, silverware and china flying, spinning his hat backwards through the process. A clear field of vision was going to be important here. The guests at his table reeled back in horror, knocking their chairs backwards. As he slid on his chest, he swung his legs out, around and in front. His break dancing days on that old piece of cardboard were paying off. By the time he was at the other side of the table and adjacent to the cart, he was up on the back of his thighs with his legs up in front, his hands thrusting him forward. His tattoos groaned as his arm muscles bulged. He threw his right leg up on to the side of the cart, halting its progress, but unfortunately not the progress of the giant tureen of flaming cherries on top. His left leg dropped to the floor, he bent it, and then he launched his entire body upward, grasping the tureen with both arms. The quick movement caused the ankle to bend sideways and pop. He stopped the massive tureen from falling but now had to worry about it cascading the other way. He hooked his feet under the bottom shelf of the cart and held on for dear life. His left ankle screamed in pain. The tureen teetered now the opposite way, endangering those at the adjacent table. Sauce was flying but as soon as it dispersed the alcohol in it was consumed and it fell harmlessly about. Tim tugged and stopped the turneen’s advance. Finally, after what had seemed like hours but was only a few seconds, it stabilized. Calamity was averted. The guests applauded. Hands and VC left early. Tim perceived the event as totally accidental. He never connected it with the email. He never perceived how, had the flaming liquid cascaded down on the table and the people sitting at it, it surely would have been the last Commodore’s Dinner. It just never crossed his mind. ~ It was a few days later, still early spring, as Com. Tim limped through his first tour of the Bayview yard to suck up the sights, think spring, and perform a visual assessment of what his boat would need before she went into the water. Hobbled, he noted that the boat was an old girl but was holding up pretty well. A North American 40 designed by Dick Carter and built by Morgan Yachts in the late 70s, she of course needed constant care and maintenance. And that is exactly what he gave her. Over the years he had installed new stringers, completely re-built the mast, bolstered the winch pads and lovingly removed the green spot where he had hit the buoy. He attended to the boat’s every need. Tim was slowly walking around his boat’s hull, leaning forward and inspecting the bottom with great care, making a mental note of the work that was required and the materials and tools that would be necessary to do it. They yard was quiet but even if it wasn’t it made no difference—he was full focus on that hull as he tapped it with a sounding hammer to detect any soft or wet spots. As such, he was later not sure if no sound was made or if he just hadn’t paid attention. One thing was for sure, however, and that was that he was almost killed. It was a sense, really, just a thought that occurred in his mind: Look up! He did and before he could appreciate what he was seeing he saw the sky go dark. He hurled himself where he knew he would be safe from something falling from above, under the protection of his bilious IOR hull. There was a chain holding the boat-stands together and he nearly choked himself on that, tossing his body underneath while he spun his head to get away from the chain. His right ankle landed on a broken two by four, causing it to crumble and twist, and he fell heavily against the keel. As he did he looked out and saw no less than ten two by twelve planks, each at least ten feet in length, as they crashed horizontally to the ground. Had they landed on him, he surely would have been killed. As soon as he was sure that nothing else was coming from above, he limped forward, one ankle swollen and the other in process, still under the protective cover of the hull, and darted over underneath the hull of a nearby boat. He dragged himself forward under that boat, and although never articulated in his mind, an innate sense told him to stay under cover, whispering that this was no accident. He looked back and saw that it had to be no less The Commodore’s Dinner will be your last! It was signed The Cabal. 81 than 500 pound of lumber that had fallen from the sky. There was no way he would have survived had it struck him. He looked around to see if there was any other information to be gleaned, and he noted that while the wood could surely not have fallen from the sky, it most assuredly could have fallen from the Tartan Ten that stood next to his boat. In fact, that was the only place it could have come from. ~ A plan like this took time. A series of events had to be staged to attain the goal. Sure, some would succeed and some would fail, but it was the final result that was important. They knew that some would fail. Indeed, that was part of the plan. For it was the fear that was being generated, fostered and grown that would get them what they wanted. It was fear that was their tool. ~ Mark didn’t know what to say. He had been the General Manager of Bayview Yacht Club for many years, and he had seen and heard things that no one would believe, but perhaps this was the strangest. “Someone’s trying to kill me,” Tim exclaimed, his face flushed and the veins on his neck sticking out. “Maybe we could attribute the Cherries Jubilee thing to coincidence or accident, but 500 pounds of lumber tumbling off a Tartan Ten only a few days later takes us beyond coincidence. It had to be deliberate!” “Well,” said Mark. He dragged out the word while his thoughts caught up, chuckling to himself about the way that Tim had limped stiff-legged into his office. “I suppose you could be right, but it seems to me that it is just as possible that it was coincidence. I mean, it sure looked like it was just a quirk when VC slid his chair in front of Hands, and it sure looked like Hands did his best to get out of the way. How could someone choreograph that? And the lumber, if you are right, had to be pushed and you admitted that you didn’t see anyone else around. I think you are making something out of nothing.” “Who stores 500 pounds of lumber on a boat?” Tim exclaimed. “You’ll never convince me that was an accident.” ~ Stepping the mast was always a cross between work and pleasure. An arduous and time consuming task, what with lifting the heavy metal pole, dropping it in place, securing the stays and tuning the rig, it also meant that sailing was right around the corner. Winters were long around here and this one seemed longer than usual. Tim couldn’t wait to get out on the lake. As was the norm, he took the opportunity to inspect the rig and rigging with meticulous detail. Every square inch was eye-balled, looking for the smallest hint of wear and tear, anything that might need some TLC before the long run for > 82 the season championship began. One couldn’t win if they were sitting at the dock. At first, it looked like a small battle-inflicted wound on the forestay, perhaps a nick, perhaps a ding. Upon closer inspection, it revealed its true origin: there were definite saw marks, the fine teeth of a hacksaw leaving its signature. What was even more unusual is that the cut, two thirds of the way through the stainless steel rod, was underneath where the head foil usually covered, at the very top of the mast, where it would surely not be seen once that rig was stepped. Only someone with Tim’s dedication would have even bothered to remove the head foil to inspect underneath it. Simply put, it was impossible for that mast to stay up for an entire season. It would come down, and if the conditions were bad, calamity and mayhem would ensue. He felt the need to tell and show someone the cut. He yanked his head sideways, hoping to find someone in the area to share his outrage with, only managing to knock his right eye against the freshly installed spreader. The impact caused him to see stars and he immediately felt the swelling begin. ~ “Mark,” Tim yelled, his eyes bugging out and the tattoo of Iggy Pop on his neck assuming gross proportions. “This is horse manure! Someone is trying to get me, and as General Manager of this Club, you have to do something! Someone is trying to kill me! What is it going to take to convince you? Do you have to actually have my bleeding head on your desk?” Mark had seen some strange things, the least of which was the Commodore limping on grapefruit sized ankles with a hideously swollen and closed right eye. He thought back in his mind to when one member had accused Tim of bringing dynamite into the Club, and then there the time Com. LaRiviere was convinced someone was shooting at him while he idled in an Adirondack at the finish line. Once a discredited PR hack tried to frame the sitting Commodore for the murder of famed mystery writer Taggart McHugh. Yes, Mark had seen it all, and it appeared that he was seeing it again. His experience told him that there was only one thing to do in these instances: Get Prosecutor John involved. Tim and Mark sat in Mark’s office as Prosecutor John arrived. John had worked in the Wayne County Prosecutor’s office for nearly 30 years. An accomplished trial lawyer and formidable advocate from the start, he was soon assigned the most difficult and troubling cases, those where the evidence assembled by police investigators was perhaps not sufficient to convict but where the crimes were so heinous and the guilt so obvious that something had to be done. This dearth of evidence caused John to begin conducting his own investigations to supplement the evidence. The result was an impressive conviction rate. This process, cultivated over years, had resulted in John becoming one of the most gifted investigators of his time. Tim ran down the facts for John. “I don’t know,” said John. “This sounds like a tempest in a teapot. So we had a weird incident at the Commodore’s Dinner, easily explained away as an accident, and then some lumber fell off a boat. Those boats “If we are going to get these guys, we have to set a trap. And I think I have just the right one in mind …” sit out there all winter, the sun beats down, water freezes and thaws, and lanyards rot. I don’t see anything to be suspicious of.” Tim then suddenly recalled the email and its signatory, The Cabal. He hadn’t thought of it since it had been received, but the idea of Prosecutor John blowing him off caused him to search his mind for something else to support his cause. He told John about it. “Does that seem like a coincidence? I’m told that the Commodore’s Dinner is going to be my last, and then it almost is as a result of two ‘coincidences.’ I’m not buying that and you shouldn’t either.” John reluctantly agreed that the email did indeed add a strange twist to the story, and more to calm Tim down than for any other reason, he suggested they go take a look at the crime scenes. There was nothing to be seen relating to the Cherries Jubilee incident, so off to the triangle they went. “Whose Tartan Ten is that?” he inquired. Mark told him that is was VC’s. “Where did all that lumber come from?” Neither Tim nor Mark knew, so John began inspecting it with this battle trained eyes. “There are holes in it, as if it were lashed to something. And these distinctive black marks, there are everywhere.” He took his penknife and scraped at one of the marks. Whatever it was, it easily separated from the wood. He drew the knife close to his eyes and studied the sample. He touched it with his finger. Finally, he grabbed a nearby pack of matches, struck one, and held the flame to the back mass. It immediately melted and belched a dark black smoke. “Its rubber,” he concluded. “Whatever left these marks was made of rubber. And whatever it was, it struck the wood over and over. A light went on in Mark’s eyes. He knew where the lumber came from. “Some members made a hockey rink in the West Harbor over the winter. After a few of their pucks slid under docks or out into the river, they decided they needed some boards. They found a bunch of two by tens, drilled holes in them and lashed them to the pilings. They then banged their rubber pucks on them all winter long.” “Who made this rink?” John asked. Mark recalled all too vividly. It was VC, RC and Hands. ~ “Maybe they are The Cabal, exclaimed Tim. “After all, they were there when we had all the talk about canceling the Commodore’s Dinner. Two of them actually knocked over the Jubilee tureen, they made the rink, and the timbers fell off of one of their boats. This has to be more than a coincidence.” “I don’t know,” retorted John. It makes sense, but there is no way we have enough evidence to convict. This is all just circumstantial. We need something better.” “Mark,” he asked. “Do you have the tapes from the yard cameras? Maybe we can see something there.” The three of them stared at the screen, examining the tape frame by frame. Tim’s head was cocked to the left, his useless right eye being moved in favor of the working right one. There was Hands, pushing each board up to VC and RC, who were up on the Tartan Ten, grabbing and stacking them as they came. When they were all neatly stacked, they appeared to lash them together into one neat bundle. “There just isn’t enough evidence,” sighed John. “If we are going to get these guys, we have to set a trap. And I think I have just the right one in mind …” ~ They had to be pulled in. Whoever was doing this clearly had a plan, but John knew from keen experience that planners were also opportunists. When presented with something that was not part of the plan in the first place but fit with its goal, they invariably grabbed it. “Here is what we will do,” announced John. “Pain and mayhem is part of their game. Everything they have done has that goal in mind. ~ The Bayview One-Design Regatta, or BOD, was the next time that it was known that VC, RC and Hands would all be on the premises at the same time. Tim, as Commodore and as was customary, would be handing out the awards Sunday precisely at 1500 hours. It was announced early that, instead of the usual presentation under the tent, they would be made at the hoist against the backdrop of the yard crew hauling the competitor’s boats. Having teamed up with a press manager that specialized in publicizing regattas, 83 it was explained that this new and different photo opportunity would give the event some panache held by no other. Of course, this meant that rigs and hulls would be swinging over the head of the Commodore. This would be a tasty morsel for those who wanted to hurt him. John knew for a certainty that they would act. ~ The crowd gathered near Conner Creek, sprits high. The sun was hot and the yard was active. The event had been an overwhelming success. People were everywhere and the music had just been silenced. A Tartan Ten was in the slings, slowly being pulled out of the water, as Tim stood at the edge of the water on top of some stacked ten by ten boat blocks and prepared to present the awards. He began with the Warhorse Class, the one he had raced in. It had been highly competitive. Three races Saturday and two Sunday, all in moderate breeze, had been a test of skill. He was more than a little surprised that third place and been won by an NA 40 new to the area and sailing out of Grande Pointe Yacht Club. It had an unusual name, Dark Illuminati. The Tartan Ten was now high out of the water as the crane began its slow turn to set it on its waiting trailer. Cameras snapped as their owners took advantage of the rare sight, a Commodore with grotesquely swollen ankles adorned with white knee socks, a lemon colored and sized eye outlined by a popsicle salesman’s hat, and a Tartan Ten swinging in the background. This was precious. Inside, Mark and John stood in front of an array of monitors, watching the crowd from every angle. Easy to spot were the powerful RC and the tall Hands as they stood next to the crane. VC, short in stature, was harder to locate save for the fact that RC and Hands kept looking his way as he stood just far enough away from the elevated Commodore. Tim announced the third place boat in the Warhorse Class. Dark Illuminati. As was customary after identifying the boat, he read their home club and prepared to announce the owner’s name. Just then, a curious sense of foreboding overwhelmed him, as if he knew something bad was about to happen. He panicked and immediately started looking desperately around the yard, trying to find someholding the lumber in place had been cut clean through in two thing to calm him. He saw VC, RC and Hands places and almost through in the looking at him expectantly. Just then, he heard a other. All that was needed was a shout. “Look out!” He turned his head to see the little vibration to cause it to yield Tartan Ten swinging toward him, slowly increasing and the wood to fall. Tim tapits speed as it arced along its path. The knot ping his hull with that sounding holding the hull steady had slipped. This was bad. hammer no doubt did that.” It was going to hit him. In a move driven more by “What about the headstay,” reaction than deliberation, he hurled himself off asked Mark. the stacked blocks and away from the pendulous “I looked at that too,” John said. “That wasn’t path of the boat. Owing to his mangled ankles, Tim’s headstay. The yard guys accidentally put the he had nothing that approached acceleration and wrong mast on Tim’s boat. It turns out that mast it looked clearly like the dark hull would strike had been stored in the yard since that fire of years him. He stumbled. The keel reached him. As he ago burned its original hull. All the real culprits had buckled towards the asphalt drive below, it missed to do was change the markings on the mast so him by a fraction of an inch. He tumbled down on when the yard guys came they grabbed the wrong his knees, the pain seared. His hands landed hard one. Because that mast had been used for salvage, as his arms collapsed, his head swinging violently someone years ago had tried to cut the stay to toward a nearby boat stand. It struck him squarely take the foil but gave up when they couldn’t get on his left eye as he rolled slowly over, finally his through the stainless steel.” frenzied journey over. He lay on his back as the “What about the swinging Tartan Ten hull that yard crew brought the hull under control. The almost got him,” asked Mark. “I saw RC tie the crowd stared in stunned silence over what they knot that came loose. You can’t blame that on had just witnessed. ~ anyone else!” Tim walked stiff legged into Mark’s office. Blood “Oh yes I can,” retorted John. “I can and will. trickled from the corner of his left eye as it slowly I interviewed RC and it turns out he doesn’t know swelled. His knees now as damaged as his ankles, how to tie a bowline. He asked the guy standing it was all he could do to teeter back and forth on next to him, who told him that the rabbit goes the stiff appendages. He picked small stones out of down the hole, around the roots and back up his mangled hands. He hurt and it showed. through the hole. That is the recipe for a knot that “Mark,” Tim pleaded. “Save me! This is nuts! slips.” I can’t go on like this.” John had walked out to “Who told him that?” inquired Tim. He was the yard to inspect whatever there was to be having a hard time dismissing VC, RC and Hands inspected, leaving Mark to respond to the Comas the prime suspects. modore alone. “The guy who owned the boat next to the “I hate to say this,” he told Tim. “But this just Tartan Ten,” said John. “After the Jubilee incident, has to be the handiwork of VC, RC and Hands.” I figure that they heard that Tim was exasperated. “Why?” exclaimed Tim. “What makes you They probably just thought that if they just kept think that? John said that the evidence up the pressure, they could take against them was all circumstantial.” “I don’t his mind off of preparing for the “First of all,” Mark responded, “they summer racing season. They just know,” said were provably present in some way or wanted to beat him. I don’t think the other at almost every incident. It Mark. “It they had a plan to hurt him with was the movement of VC’s chair and that falling lumber. They were just Hands’ dance that caused the Jubilee to seems to me hoping to damage his boat. Anyoverturn. They put together the ice rink, that this is a thing to keep him slow. And that disassembled it and stored the lumber mast, again just to make him slow. on VC’s boat. While we have no way whole lot of The poorly tied knot? Again, just of knowing who sawed your headstay, an opportunity seized to rattle the speculation.” it was certainly accessible to them all Commodore after RC indicated that winter. And they were certainly there when that he didn’t know how to tie a bowline. That’s what knot slipped. In fact, when we were studying the these guys were—opportunists.” videotape of the yard just before the hull went “I don’t know,” said Mark. “It seems to me that wild, I actually saw RC tying the knot. I think he this is a whole lot of speculation.” used a slipknot.” “They made a mistake,” responded John. “You’re wrong,” said John. He had just walked “Naming their boat Dark Illuminati was the givethrough the door after his trip to the yard. “It away. Anyone who read comic books knows that wasn’t them at all.” the Dark Illuminati was a group of villains and “Then who was it,” demanded Tim. former villains featured in Marvel comic books “I just confronted the real culprits and under the years ago. True fans know that they were often harsh light of my cross-examination. The Cherries referred to by another name: The Cabal. As soon Jubilee thing, I believe, was just an accident. When as I heard the name of that boat announced as the these guys heard about it, however, I think they third place winner in the Warhorse class, I recalled launched a plan.” the email that had been put together. Since the “They owned the boat that was stored next email had been sent to Tim’s BYC email address, to the Tartan Ten all winter. When I studied the I asked Mark if he could trace it, which of course videotapes of the lumber falling, there was no one he could, but only partially. It turns out that the in sight, but I clearly saw the only ladder in the yard sending email address came from someone who leaned against that boat and muddy foot prints registered a boat for the Mackinac Race. These leading from its deck to the deck of the Tartan guys are registered. And wouldn’t you know it, that was the boat stored next to VC’s Tartan Ten. > Ten. If you looked close, you could see that the line Continues on page 85 Race Crossword Fun With Good Old Boats By Mary Kinnunen peninsulaxwords.com 84 ///2014 Summer Burgee See page 89 for Puzzle Solutions Word Scramble Mackinac 2014 Continued from page 83 Mackinac Mystery When I confronted the owners with the evidence, they denied everything but admitted that they wanted to win a Mackinac Race and knew Tim was the guy to beat. I think they only wanted to scare him, not hurt him. Despite their denials, they have agreed to withdraw from the race and the Club.” “Tim,” he said, trying to hide a smile that seemed to overcome him every time he tried he looked at the swollen, bruised and mangled ~ man. “It’s over.” Tim felt as if the weight of the world had been lifted off his shoulders. All the drama, pain and anxiety behind him, he could once again focus on getting his boat ready for the Mackinac. He had to sit on his backside, straight legged, to wash the deck. His puffy eyes almost touched the inside of his sunglasses. He held the sponge in his bandaged hands, moving it back and forth from his shoulders, his elbows too stiff to bend. He was at peace. His phone chimed the receipt of a new email. He gingerly pulled it out of his pocket and looked at the screen. He gasped when he saw it. “They got the wrong guys. We are alive and well, and soon you will not be. There is no place to hide.” It was signed. The Cabal. ~ The people, places and events in this story are purely fictional, and any similarity to real people, places or events is entirely coincidental. u 2014 Summer Burgee /// 8 5 86 ///2014 Summer Burgee 2014 Summer Burgee /// 8 7 88 ///2014 Summer Burgee Puzzle Solutions from pages 84-85 Local. Personal. Insurance. Personal // Commercial // Marine Your future room is waiting for you… 2015 Bayview to Mackinac Overall Winner The overall winner will receive a VIP carriage ride EW to the Grand Hotel, a one night stay in 2016 inside N the Presidential Suite, sponsored by VanTol Insurance Group and a celebration dinner with their crew. More details to follow in 2015… Christopher VanTol [email protected] 586.772.0650 44 1st Street, Mt. Clemens, Mi 48043 www.vantolins.com 2014 Summer Burgee /// 8 9 HERE’S TO THE 90TH RACE TO LAST CALL. WE’RE PROUD TO SPONSOR THE BAYVIEW MACKINAC RACE. JULY 12, 2014