GSA 0216.pub - Microsoft Publisher
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GSA 0216.pub - Microsoft Publisher
The Course Board A Publication of the Glenmar Sailing Association Tod Herrick, Editor www.glenmarsailing.org Glenmar SA VOL: 35 Number: 2 February 2016 Boat/US Group Mbr. # GA 81715 S DSC GIN: 033801947 Notice Of Meeting February 23, 2016 Middle River Yacht Club 200 Nanticoke Rd. Essex, MD 21221 Doors open 6:30 Meeting starts: 7:00 Speaker! Greg Kearns From the Commodore: Sailing association (CHESSS) has been working over the last year to get organized. While single-and double-handed racing is part of the charter, safety of short-handed sailing is a primary focus. If interested, there have been several informative discussion threads over the last year on general safety, tethers, techniques, etc. Their web-site is www.chbaysss.org. Most of us are on the water with limited crew aboard at times, so reading other sailors thoughts on safety is certainly time well spent. Upcoming events: General Meeting on Tuesday February 23rd. Don't miss the presentation on the successful efforts to reestablish the osprey population on the Chesapeake! Unless you are driving by large parking lots, the evidence of the last month's snowstorm is gone or fading away rapidly. Most of the hardship is a memory and life is back to normal. As a club, the storm cancelled the January general meeting and postponed the Winter Cruiser's Party. As Tod has mentioned in a previous e-mail, the cruiser's party was a success and we also found time to vote on and pass the GSA 2016 budget. I want express my appreciation and also say THANK YOU!! from Glenmar to Richard and Sandra for opening their home once again to host this annual event. Brett Sorensen Commodore Looking at the calendar, it is amazing how close spring is, with boats beginning to splash into the water in eight short weeks. Even though it may have snowed today, I can see that spring is coming very quickly at our house. Beyond the new buds on the trees and the crocuses starting to show, our new halyards and sheets have arrived, the winter house project list is getting shorter and the spring boat project list is getting longer. Since boatyard visits will be occupying your time by the end of next month, I urge you to take a moment now and send in your membership renewal applications. Jack has informed me that we already have received more than 30 renewals, so we still need to hear from the rest of our members. One of the nuggets I pulled from the cruise scheduling session last Saturday night was that the Safety Cruise has been scheduled again this year. If possible, I encourage both cruisers and racers to participate in the off-water and on-water sessions. Note to the racing skippers: your PHRF certificate states that you have practiced crew recovery techniques. While on the topic of safety, the Chesapeake Short-Handed 1 Vice Commodores Report Past Commodore’s Report: On Tuesday February 23 we will hold our next regular general membership meeting at Middle River Yacht Club. We have a featured speaker scheduled for this meeting, Mr. Greg Kearns. Greg will speak of the topic of Ospreys. Please see the announcement below. Most of Greg’s work has been on the Patuxent River but his knowledge and familiarity with our beloved Osprey know no boundaries. Please consider joining us on Tuesday February 23 for this exciting speaker. Saturday, 6 February 2016, GSA had the Cruisers' Party at the home of Richard and Sandra Allen. The party was postponed a week, due to snow, and, thank God it melted in time! It was very well attended, and according to Dave Fahrmeier, there were 60 GSAers in attendance. Being a Pot Luck, there were lots and lots of great offerings. Somehow, even without a list, we still seem to have a great array of appetizers, salads, entrees and desserts. We even had two kinds of chili; beef and vegetarian! (Maybe we should have a chili cook off sometime in the future.) Ospreys on the Patuxent presented by Greg Kearns Commodore Brett Sorensen, called for a short meeting to hold a vote on the budget. The budget was ratified unanimously. More to come on this subject from our Commodore. Join us to learn about Ospreys, the often-seen “fish hawk” of local rivers and the Chesapeake Bay, with photos by Greg Kearns. His program will cover Osprey biology on the Patuxent River, the provision of nesting platforms, efforts to increase their numbers, his banding program with the public, reintroduction efforts, satellite tracking of migration and other interesting facts .He promises that, “You will be on the edge of your seat as you learn more about this unique species of raptor.” Speaking of our Commodore and his Lady, Terri, they were a very efficient cleanup crew! Attacking the dishes, etc.!! Think they were overqualified and overdressed for the task, but we greatly appreciated their help and all the help of others. Rear Commodore Tod Herrick, brought his computer, and saw to it that we had a slide show going during the party. Finally, it was his time to regale all of us with the trips that he has spent so much time researching and putting together. It sounds like we are going to have another great sailing season, thank you Tod. Greg Kearns, a Maryland National Capital Park & Planning Commission Park Naturalist for over 30 years at Patuxent River Park in Croom, MD, is an accomplished photographer, worldwide traveler, leader of eco-tours both here and abroad, expert birder, licensed bird bander, as well as a renowned authority on Ospreys, Sora Rails (an elusive bird of the marshes), and wetland ecology at Jug Bay on the Patuxent River. Sandra Allen Past Commodore Greg was named Conservationist of the Year by the MD Dept. of Natural Resources in 2006 for his work and the restoration of the wild rice marshes at Jug Bay, which has been recognized as one of the best wetland restorations in MD. Jug Bay is a component of Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve (CBNERR) under NOAA, and the most beautiful natural area in Prince George’s County. Enthusiastic and knowledgeable, Greg is a popular speaker who has presented many other nature programs in the past for numerous environmental organizations throughout the region and abroad. Please review your contact information! It’s important that I have up-to-date e-mail addresses so you keep getting the mailings from your club. Additionally, if you would like to receive mail in more than one address, please send the address to me so I can include your address. We now have the ability to send emails to multiple addresses. Please email those addresses and/or corrections to me at: [email protected] and I will update them. I hope to see you at our next membership meeting. Paul Rybczynski Vice Commodore Tod Herrick, Communications Officer 2 Rear Commodore’s Report: Please remember that Glenmar Cruisers communicate on Channel 71 on the vhf radio. We make cruise announcements and updates at 10:00, 2:00pm, as well as at the destination. Please listen to the radio for important updates. We will also provide notices via cell when possible. This is most true when it becomes necessary to cancel a cruise due to expected weather. For this reason, it is very important for anyone interested in joining a cruise to RSVP the Cruise Captain whose contact information is provided. It is also a matter of safety as we keep the radio on until all expected boats arrive at the destination. So it’s not just common courtesy! What a fabulous night! An exceptional turnout for an exceptional time! Those of you who attended know exactly what I mean. Those of you who didn’t, well – there’s always next year. I am referring to the Cruiser’s Winter Party at the wonderful home of the Allens. The weather cooperated and it was not too cold. Much of the snow had melted so parking was as good as it was going to get. Thanks to the Allens for being such gracious hosts and opening up their wonderful home! Everybody brought such wonderful food. We had Moroccan Empanadas, Two types of chili; vegetable and meat, pork ribs, wings, salads, pasta and a ton of cakes, brownies and other sinful delectables. We had about 55-60 people attending and the room was abuzz with vibrant conversation. Our Board was well represented with the Commodore, Vice Commodore, Portsmouth Fleet Captain and Member-at-Large in attendance. Commodore Brett Sorensen conducted a brief meeting so we could ratify the 2016 budget which was done so unanimously. Several new members were introduced and welcomed into the club including: Steve and Sherry Sersen, Randy and Dene Dulin, as well as Paul and Rose who are in process of completing their paperwork. We introduced John Flanagan, Commodore from Havre de Grace Yacht Club who is looking to coordinate some cruises with his club’s new cruising fleet. Bill Lammeree, Portsmouth Fleet Captain, spoke of a combined Portsmouth Fleet and Cruising Fleet cruise where we meet up at a creek, socialize and break bread together. We could sail about on thistles and other small boat and generally enjoy each other’s company. The cruisers would share some open deck space for the Portsmouth racers to camp out on and be prepared to offer a tow back to the home port should the wind die. Most importantly, there would be communication between the sailors along so that all would be safe. The cruisers welcomed this idea with suggestions and ideas so look forward to more details as summer gets closer. I also want to thank the small army of people who pitched in to help clean up and with the dishes. It was most appreciated! A party like this takes a great deal of work and planning so I am very happy when people chip in and help where needed. Let’s be in touch and keep in mind that despite the cold and damp weather at present, the groundhog predicts a short winter. It will soon be time to prep boats for splash in! Tod Herrick Rear Commodore I presented the proposed Family Cruise which was enthusiastically received (see Cruise listed elsewhere in Course Board—page 6). People seem pleased to have a more local trip this year as many do not have the time available for such an extended trip down the Bay. With 2 weeks close and a destination that is close, people have the freedom to pick and choose which part of the cruise they like. While people have always had the option to join and leave the cruise at will, as they fold it around other activities, a cruise that is local makes it easier to do! At the meeting, I spoke of various options for the cruise. To help me plan and tailor this to your wants, please take a short time to complete a survey on line. This is not, I promise, as complicated as the primary elections we are now in the middle of! The survey can be found by clicking this link: (please cut and paste into your browser if it doesn’t work for you) https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/B22FJWH Elsewhere in the Course Board (page 5) you will find the tentative schedule of cruises developed that night. There are some things that have not yet been worked out so please keep watching the Course Board for updates! If you would like to lead us on a cruise, please contact me and I will make it happen! 3 PHRF Fleet Captain’s Report Try to do this race this year. It is a navigational challenge and racing at night is the best! Well, here we are a month closer to the race season. Hope you’ve made your list for boat preparations and have your crew lined up. Don’t forget to renew your PHRF certificate – the online application form is up and running. The discounted certificate fee will end on February 29th this year, so get hopping. Renew your CBYRA and US Sailing memberships too! You gotta try this - a new cocktail called the Tuaca Mule!! It is Fleet Captain tested and approved, even Mrs. Fleet Captain liked it! Here’s the recipe: 2 oz. Tuaca Liqueur; 4 to 6 oz. Ginger Beer; 1 wedge of lime; Ice If you have not heard already, the Solomon’s Island race format is changing this year. It will no longer finish at Solomon’s Island. It will start on Saturday evening instead of Friday evening. Renamed as the EYC Boomerang (gee, we used to have one of those) the race will start and finish in the Severn River. The course will use government buoys in the bay and will be about the same length, 44 or 54 nautical miles, depending on which class you are in. The party will be at EYC on Sunday morning. I’m sure this change has come about after the disconnect with the Screwpile Regatta a couple of years ago. However, this is a good change for us northern bay racers, the ride home after the party will be a lot shorter! Tuaca is an Italian liqueur with vanilla and orange flavors, the ginger beer makes it quite refreshing. Don’t worry, this is not replacing my Mount Gay rum. It’s just another arrow in the quiver. If you want to get brave, try Red Bull and Fireball. Another fav when you gotta stay up late! Get those boats ready and see you on the water soon. Glenn Harvey, PHRF Fleet Captain that damn red boat… From the December 2015 issue of Chesapeake Bay Magazine. Check out who’s on the left; our very own Jay Irwin! Next time, Jay, give us some credit! Seriously, congrats. 4 Cruising Calendar Date Destination Captain May 21 Southern Bay – June 2 Clem Gathwright June 4 – TBA June 5 Greg & Donna Bincarowsky May 28 – May 30 “Safety Cruise” July 2 – July 17 Family Cruise Ken Mercer Tod & Anne Herrick Meg and Tom Conners Sept 3 – Labor Day Weekend Cruise Sept 5 Siobhan Fahrmeier Oct 1 – Oct 2 Brett Sorensen Oct 1 – Oct 2 Fells Point Fun Festival Cruise Commodore’s Cruise [email protected] (410) 561-3796 [email protected] (410) 303-0635 Aug 12 – Pyrates and Wenches Cruise Jack Janos Aug 14 Aug 20 – Grandchildren’s Cruise Aug 21 Contact Info [email protected] (717) 757-6814 [email protected] (717) 507-6184 [email protected] (410) 527-0726 [email protected] (717) 614-7269 [email protected] (410) 236-1635 [email protected] (443) 299-8306 5 6 Sun 7/3 Sat 7/2 Date Swan Creek / Rock Hall Worton Creek Destination Sat 7/9 Bodkin Cr. Rhode River Fri 7/15 Eagle Cove Skipjack Cove Resort Varies 0 26 15.7 0 6 13.2 16 23 6.6 Varies 0 5.2 3 0 1.2 2.6 3.2 4.6 4.4 1.3 2.2 4 0 2.8 Raftup party Raftup Revision Date: 2/7/2016 Cocktail party on the beach Shopping Group cookout Dinner ashore (Spinnakers?) Beach Cookout Cocktail Party Swimming off sunken Island Concert in the Park (Marina) Rural Anchorage Pleasant Anchorage 4th of July Parade (Marina?) Fireworks (Marina?) Comments Varies Corn Roast Time Miles River Draw Bridge opens on signal 6am – 6pm Kent Narrows Draw Bridge opens on signal on the hour and half hour from 6am – 9pm. No openings after 9pm 16 Sun 7/17 Home Port 15 Sat 7/16 Eagle Cove 14 13 Thurs 7/14 Churn Cr. 12 Wed 7/13 Georgetown 11 Tue 7/12 Georgetown 10 Mon 7/11 Turner Cr 9 Sun 7/10 Worton 8 Fri 7/8 6 Thurs 7/7 St. Mikes <Grocery Shopping> 22 20 7 Tilghman Cr 11 Tue 7/5 0 14.3 Varies Distance 5 Wed 7/6 Miles River* (beyond St. Mikes, past bascule bridge) 4 3 Mon 7/4 Swan Creek / Rock Hall 2 1 Day Proposed Summer 2016 Cruise Oh For Memories By Jay Irwin Boy how time moves on. I had planned to write to the Course Board to thank the club for recognizing that some of us had been in the club for fifty some years, I for one appreciate the recognition. Here I am reading the Course Board and not a thank you on paper yet. The big surprise came at the December party which has the advantage of knowing you’ll be seeing old friends such as at the gathering of the corn roast. Do you remember, recall the time, or what were their names? Is how many of the conversations start when old friends rejoin at such meeting? Looking back remembering the time spent working for the club planning summer cruses, race committeeing, teaching sailing, putting together regattas, rebuilding the steelhull committee boat Glenmar, (SS Crab Crusher) or just being around when needed. All involvement sure opened a lot of doors leading to more long term friends, chances to sail on multiple boats, and expanding my nautical knowledge. Fifty years, boy has boating changed. There was no fiberglass, standing rigging was plow-steel wire, hank on sails, sails and running rigging were cotton which had to be dried thoroughly before stowing. My outer head stay was mast head rigged; the inner head stay three quarter rigged with a Pelican hook for fast release so the outer jib could pass across the deck when tacking. My main’s luff was thirty nine feet with a keel stepped spar of solid wood which had to be lowered and painted. No mast head light, wind speed and direction was not read from sophisticated electronics but from a dowel or pig sticker run to the masthead with a burgee, wind sock, or racing flag on to find the apparent wind. The Mary G my first boat had a spoon bow but a boomkin, for you young ins it’s a spar off the stern like a bowsprit to hold the back stay clear of the main, old school booms extended pass the stern, boomkims saved the need for running back stays. A goosewing jibe is an accidental flying jibe allowing the boom to rise vertical catching the back stay; not good. As most boats of that time she had inside ballast of lead bars; the Variant a fifty two foot schooner which I skippered for Dr. Rigler had pig iron sash weights stacked in her bilge, Seaweed a schooner berthed next to her had beach rocks; first plan don’t take any knock downs. The Mary G was a centerboarder which meant the trunk that housed the board ran down the center of the cabin and stood about three feet. No auto bilge pumps, a hand Navy life pump was mounted on the trunk to discharge directly into the trunk. Marine metals of the day were iron, galvanize, bronze, and top of the line silicon bronze, stainless not on the scene yet. No air conditioning or refrigeration but you could buy good block ice for the ice box. Boats before World War two which was what we were buying had oil lamps cabin and running, gas engines, and like the Mary G no winches, halyard or sheets. No radio’s or depth finders. Maintenance; boy here’s where the two worlds part! No wax, polish, or advantage of a travel lift. Boats were hauled out on a railway; then slid over on planks off the railway; first 7 hauled last launched. Red lead paint, white lead seam caulk, brushes four inch for bottoms no rollers. Every couple of years the haul had to be wooded down (burn the old paint off) repay all seams, fair, then primer and paint. Looking back being a Glenmar member had so many advantages; the wife and I had our own social world, and the children had theirs. While cruising, the children could run, rather sail, all over the anchorage day or night; explore, or just hang out in one of the cockpits. Free to walk into town. Here again Glenmar had its own way of organizing itself. Somewhere at some time the children of Glenmar learned that the older children had the reasonability to include the younger ones in all activities, picking up trash to go ashore, delivering ice, dink racing, or going to town. The towns even recognized the order and reasonability the children had. Hell, one time they were sent into town on a treasure hunt for things that we felt they would never find. Well they needed a parking ticket, the police gave them one for illegal parking a shopping cart with a child in it, and they needed a certain type light bulb so the fire station found them one. It goes on and on. Families’ come and go, Kids grow up then bring their children but the commemoratory is cut in stone. The Coast Guard was your only contact, they did it all, law, safety, towing, no SeaTow, or Marine Police. Under the Good Samaritan act, you could tow a disabled vessel off the bottom or home. What is it you show when texting? Because I’m smiling we still have the same old well ballasted Glenmar and Commodore Sandra Allen that will hand deliver the fifty year achievement award to two dedicated old salts that couldn’t make the party. Jay Irwin 38’ Slip for rent, Bowleys Marina, C-066. Gated marina with key code access, WI-FI internet access at slip, pool, pavilions, mobile pump-out, marine mechanical services onsite. Great view of the Independence Day fireworks! $2,500 annual, 4/2016 ~ 3/2017. Slip is also available for purchase. Please contact Todd Roesner, 410-960-6504 or [email protected]. . I want to sell my next to last boat—“Sensei”. “Sensei”, 1982 S-2 6.7 Grand Slam. Main, Jib, 150 Genoa, roller furling, Spinnaker (North Sails), sail cover, Balto- Plate bottom, 5hp, 4 stroke Honda, cushions, dry storage to 5/1, insured to 7/2016. LOA: 22’, LWL 18.75”; Beam 8’; Draft-10” – 4.25’; Disp. 2,200 / ballast: 775lb. Asking: $4,200 Contact: Gene Nuth, 410-426-2035; [email protected] or Dave Bell @ c-410-227-9448 8 9 PHOENIX, MD 21131 PO BOX 202 GLENMAR SAILING ASSOCIATION Classified Ad Rates Members: Free Non-Members: $15/mo or $25/3 mos.