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    • Highfield RIB Featured in Southern Boating

      World’s #1 Aluminum Tender

      HIGHFIELD, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, is the leading builder of aluminum-hulled RIBs. Performance and strength are the key features of every HIGHFIELD RIB.  Their advanced hull designs and Italian-influenced interior styling, keep alive the reputation of a dry-riding, seaworthy and stable craft that can handle rough conditions, as well as please the discerning eye.

      Highfield 

      Highfield RIB

      Available with up to twin 150-hp outboard power for breathtaking performance, the stylish Highfield Sport 800 (26′ 7″ LOA, 9′ 6″ beam) is equally suited to serving as a primary boat and a tender to a large luxury yacht. Highfield Boats’ rugged aluminum hull with a 26-degree deadrise provides a safe and stable ride in rough water. The Sport 800 can hold up to 15 passengers, and its multiple seating configurations offer comfort and space for the entire family. The aft cockpit has plenty of space and features a large removable table and handy refrigerator under the aft-facing seat, enough for six to dine comfortably. The rear seat folds over to form an aft sunpad, complementing the large sundeck in the bow. A standard hardtop provides both shade and sleek styling. highfieldnorthamerica.com

      From RIBs Buyer’s Guide, American Boatbuilders, and More, Southern Boating

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    • Packing Gland, Tools & November Seminar – Captain Chris

      Ask Captain Chris about Virtual Consulting!
      Captain Chris Yacht Services
      I have some questions about adjusting a packing gland.  Can I send you a pic of the packing gland in my boat? Sure! See how we helped Bob with his DIY maintenance here. 
       
      This note from Ingrid shares the value she gained with her times spent with Captain Chris. Read what this single handed boat owner thinks is important.
      Are you wondering which tools of the trade are essential to have aboard your cruising boat? Ask Captain Chris what tools of the trade will be helpful….and why. Read more here
      Registration OPEN Fall Seminars!
      Cruising 101 FUNdamentals – This comprehensive seminar will open your eyes to the life of a cruiser and all the essentials you and your crew need to master before you leave the dock. Our 2-day seminars cover Crew and Vessel Communication, Safety, Trip Planning, Navigation, Anchoring, Provisioning, Knots … (read more and discover dates……)

      Introduction to Boat Systems – Captain Chris will take the mystery out of maintenance in our Introduction to Boat Systems Seminar. If fuel filters, impellers & bilge pumps aren’t in your everyday comfort zone then it’s time to learn how to DIY.  Click here   to book a seat in this essential class of what to know before you go! or ASK CAPTAIN CHRIS 772-205-1859

       
      Yes, we offer FREE videos on YouTube. As we cruise around the waterways and boatyards we see interesting things to video, narrate and post on YouTube so check out this short article on how to see thousands (yup, thousands) of these little gems….click here for FREE!
       
      Spare Parts List – Be prepared and DIY!
       
       
      Tell us what you’d like to learn more about. Chris@CaptainChrisYachtServices.com
       
      Streaming Training Videos – Rent or Own Docking, Anchoring, Navigation, Locking, Fuel Filters to Galley Tips and MORE!
       
       
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      Copyright © 2024 Captain Chris Yacht Services, All rights reserved.
      You are receiving this e-newsletter because you opted in at a nautical event or through our web site.

      Our mailing address is:

      Captain Chris Yacht Services

      2845 Citrus Place

      Vero Beach, FL 32968

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    • What the Numbers Say About BoatUS

      BoatUS

      BoatUS is the leading advocate for boating safety in the US and A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR!

      In the following report, the significant value of membership in BoatUS for all boaters reflects their many years of serving, listening and acting on behalf of boat owners and boat operators.  CRUISERS NET would encourage all nonmembers to consider the resourceful value of being a member in BoatUS. 

      Click here for  What the Numbers Say About BoatUS

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    • Good Words for Belhaven Marina, Belhaven, NC, AICW MM 135, Pungo River


      Belhaven Marina sits on the northern shore of Pantego Creek south of the Alligator River – Pungo River Canal and is A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR!

      Click Here To View the NC Cruisers Net Marina Directory Listing for Belhaven Marina

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window Zoomed To the Location of Belhaven Marina

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    • Another Happy New HIGHFIELD Owner

      World’s #1 Aluminum Tender

      HIGHFIELD, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, is the leading builder of aluminum-hulled RIBs. Performance and strength are the key features of every HIGHFIELD RIB.  Their advanced hull designs and Italian-influenced interior styling, keep alive the reputation of a dry-riding, seaworthy and stable craft that can handle rough conditions, as well as please the discerning eye.

       

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    • RARE 4 night stay Pink Bungalow for 2 people – Staniel Cay and Makers Air

       Welcome to the Staniel Cay Yacht Club, your own paradise in the middle of the beautiful Exumas.

      staniel

      Makers Air and Staniel Cay Yacht Club,  A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, offer convenient flights to the Bahamas.

       

       
       
       
       

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    • Quite a Legacy – Janice Anne Wheeler

      Thank you very much for your interest and your loyalty. Enjoy the latest from Steadfast!

        

      Share SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE

      Message Janice Anne Wheeler

       


      QUITE A LEGACY

      It is an honor to be living alongside the Chesapeake Bay’s Watermen.

      JUN 24
       
       
       
       
       

      READ IN APP

       

      Docked in our steamy summer environs, I cannot resist telling you about Tilghman Island and the legacy of the Watermen that have plied the Chesapeake Bay’s bounty for generations. STEADFAST lays at the creaking T-dock on the very channel that takes nine workboats from our yard to their hunting grounds each morning. These hardy individuals are constantly SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE; so this post begins a multi-part series about these hard-working people and a lifestyle that may change just enough to be jeopardized. Not by choice, but by circumstance.

        

      STEADFAST’s spars tower above the workboats of Severn Marine Services.

      The locals here have a compelling, distinctive, low-volume accent that blends words together while remaining perfectly understandable as long as you are paying attention. “I got you.” Is the best term for “yes” that I have ever heard and it is prevalent here. Tilghman is an unusual, supportive, close-knit place, a step back in time where things are simpler and people toil very long hours for uncertain pay. They rarely quit and they don’t judge.

      On Saturday, from my shady pilothouse, I watched her rumble by, just as I have so many other days over the course of the last four summers, but this time the name struck a chord, and my brain started writing a story, as it does every time an opportunity presents itself that I cannot resist. I snapped some photos and the young man at the helm raised both his eyebrows and his hand in casual greeting. I smiled and went to ask permission, but he disappeared quickly at the end of his long, hot workweek.

      Aptly named, LEGACY returns from a ten-hour day hunting blue crab. Boats much like her have harvested these waters for generations.

      His classic 36-foot deadrise style workboat was built by David “Bunky” Miller (God rest his soul) more as a Yacht than a workboat in 1983. Long story short, she sank and was headed for the scrap yard when the Miller family decided that was not the right thing to do. To them, she was already a piece of history, so they clearly told the owner, “No, no, no, don’t junk our legacy.” And LEGACY she became.

      Bunky Miller was eighty years old when he refit LEGACY into the rugged but sleek working boat that she always should have been. But what then? The vessel had an unclear future that soon came into focus. There was a sixteen-year-old on the island that showed an impressive interest in working on the water; it was decided that youngster would rent her for one summer and then they would all go from there. Five years later, Severn Cummings is serious, committed, successful owner and docks LEGACY just four slips down from the son of the boatbuilder, another David Miller, now age 60.

      Severn Cummings expertly pilots LEGACY into her home slip. Docking contests are great entertainment; if you ever have a chance to watch one, do it.

      “The whole story has a resurrection element,” David told me, “We wanted the traditions to continue. You know.” Severn had not yet learned all the things David’s grandfather had taught him when he was just a child, so when the summer crab season ended and oyster began, David kept Severn under his wing and taught him dredging, culling and the intricacies of making a living during the winter season around Tilghman Island. “I’ve never regretted that decision. Severn was the right choice.” he declared proudly. If taken care of, that workboat will last his entire career on the water. That’s how they’re built and we’ve learned a lot about that.

      On Sunday I was on lookout again, and I caught the young Waterman at the last second as he pulled his rugged new pickup out of the dusty boatyard. I am the (nice but) eccentric sailboat lady, and played the part in full as I thudded, barefoot, wild-haired and sarong-clad, down the dock, hailing his rear-view mirror. He thankfully stepped on the brakes, rolled down the window and allowed that he didn’t think I could possibly be waving at him. He spoke quietly as I picked my way across the hundred-degree gravel, those eyebrows raised once again.

      When I reached the driver’s side his expression plainly asked why on earth I would be flagging him down. “I’m a writer,” I told him (while we have greeted one another for years, it didn’t get much more personal than that). “I’ve published articles and was taking pictures of you yesterday….and I’d like to tell the story of you and your boat. The LEGACY of her.” I halted, which I don’t usually do. “That’s fine. None of that bothers me,” he told me directly. Well-adjusted, intelligent individuals meet your eyes when you speak to them, they answer quickly and honestly; they are decisive and, especially Watermen raised here, efficient. “That would be fine,” he nodded. “I’ll get in touch.”

      Nothing bothers him much, I thought to myself as I turned back to the dock. Severn may just be one of those people who have the ability to take things as they come, and he’s learned some hard lessons lately, losing friends and seeing others injured beyond the imagination.

        

      A peaceful evening scene, a flurry of activity at 4am.

      The diesels awaken me around 4am these long early summer days, and only a little later as the sun takes its journey back south. Voices carry remarkably over water, especially on calm mornings and at times I can hear rough voices over a crackling VHF radio. Sometimes I step up in the darkness and watch the silhouettes move in comfortable, longstanding routine, running lights on, readying for the day. The conversations are limited, almost non-existent, as they work toward a universal mission, to make a living and spend another day on the water, the legacy of their island. The legacy of this entire region, really. Many of the members of Severn’s generation have opted for regular hours, consistent pay and benefits: mechanics, firemen, landscapers. He did not.

      I step over the predictably-placed dock lines while they are gone and the boats come back each day in a perfectly choreographed routine that varies only with the other traffic on this hundred-foot-wide slice of the Chesapeake Bay called Knapp’s Narrows. The channel separates Tilghman Island from the rest of the world; drawbridge clearance is just twelve feet. As I write this I can hear the clanging of the warning bell that indicates another raising; it’s just part of the deal here, you’re probably going to have to stop at the bridge, going one way or another. The most important thing here are the Watermen, and it doesn’t matter to those who respect them how long it takes for them to do what they do. It’s an understandable choice.

        

      Knapp’s Narrows Drawbridge connects Tilghman Island to the rest of the world.

      Only on Sundays do the boats stay in. The government mandates six day weeks or many of these strong people would start at 4am on that day, too; it’s not truly a day of rest, it is maintenance, refueling, baiting the trot lines, making sure that at 4am tomorrow all is well. Last fall I had the unforgettable opportunity to go out on LADY ALISON and I will always savor the memory. That story will be published soon. I wrote that one because I know this life is a heritage, a legacy, a tradition, that is disappearing; mansions are replacing farmhouses and the cost of living rises quickly as this beautiful place is ‘discovered’ by the ‘new people.’ It is a lament that will show itself as this series progresses.

      For now, I’m honored to be close to these long running traditions, which began with wooden sailing vessels just like the one below that still sits at the dock down-island, one of just a few left. These Skipjack Buy Boats used to meet the smaller sailing workboats out on the water back in the day.

      I hope you’re as fascinated as I am with the LEGACY of these Watermen; there are many more characters yet to be met!

      If you enjoyed this, please click the little heart as that encourages others to seek out my work. As always, I read & reply to all comments and so appreciate you following along!

        

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      Message Janice Anne Wheeler

      SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE has become a challenging obsession that connects me to new and interesting people every day! Be one of them and please become a subscriber.

       

       

      Share SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE

      Message Janice Anne Wheeler

        

      THANK YOU AGAIN FOR JOINING US ABOARD Steadfast !

       
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      © 2024 Janice Anne Wheeler
      548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104

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