Kid stuff?

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Bob R.

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Jun 5, 2004
161
Marlow-Hunter 40 Pasadena, MD
Inland Cat Lake George

I first caught the sailing bug when I about 15 years old (41 years ago) when was trying to get to know a girl 2 cottages down from my aunt and uncle's on Lake George on the Indiana/Michigan state line had a 14-ft Inland Cat sailboat. (See November issue of Sailing Magazine for a 2-pg article on the 50th anniversary of the Inland Cat sailboat!) We used to race together in the Saturday club regattas, but I think I fell in love with the sailboat instead of the girl. I convinced my dad to buy a sailboat, but we couldn't find and Inland Cat for sale, so we bought a 12-ft Starcraft sailboat. Too slow and not competitive with the Inland Cat's on the lake so we eventually traded it in for a 14-ft Hobie Cat. The Hobie Cat was a lot faster and frequently capsized when we got reckless with it. I was back to Lake George this summer for the first time since I was a teenager. My brothers and sister and I rented a cottage for a week and relived our childhood. There are still a lot of Inland Cat's on the lake and I spent most of the week trying to find one to rent...no luck renting but still enjoyed watching.
 
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Sonia

When did I learn to sail?

I learned to sail on Lake Geneva, Wisconsin when I was in high school. A friend had a Sail Fish. It was only meant for 2 but sometimes 6 or 7 would be on it. You couldn't hardly see the deck, but we sure had fun. We would go to the middle of the Lake and tip it over then someone on shore would call the Water Safety Patrol. They would come and tell us to quit doing that. We didn't use life jackets that I remember. I bought my first sailboat for $250 and now 4 sailboats later, I have a Hunter 26. I sail it on the Gulf of Mexico. My brother races and is a sailmaker.
 
Jun 27, 2004
122
Hunter 25.5 Cocoa Beach, FL
On 8/9/89, at the age of 32

With virtually no boating experience I awoke from a dream I didn't remember with a compulsion to sail.
 
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Becky

Fell in love...

My husband took me for my first sail just over 30 years ago. I was engaged to someone else and Jim took his then girlfriend and my fiancee and I sailing for the first time for all of us (except himself). I was the only one of the three that thouroughly loved it. The rest is history. We were soon married and have enjoyed sailing together ever since.
 
May 25, 2004
99
Catalina 27 Carlyle Lake
there's a lesson to be learned here ...

Periodically, we see on this board someone bemoaning the dirth of youth in our beloved sport. Reading the answers here, the solution is simple .... buy an old sunfish and a good lifejacket, invest in some swimming lessons if necessary, locate a protected body of water, and let kids, water, and boat mix. Do all that early in life, before video games become too ingrained. I took my then 12 year old grandson on my C27. He declined another opportunity. Put him on a little dinghy and left him alone, and off he went!! When I was perhaps 10, we lived on a little 5-acre pond, and my buddy and I, inspired by an old B&W movie, rigged a jon boat with a wooden pole upon which we could raise a square sail made from an old army tarp. We'd sail downwind, then row back and do it over. The next year, dad bought a 12 ft telstar sloop that became "mine", and had the grace and good sense to point me to the lake and let me experiment on my own. Then like many of you, I was the little kid who crewed lightnings and scows on light air days. Then snipes in college. 48 years later, still doin' it !!!! Tom Carlyle Lake
 
Aug 3, 2007
59
Catalina 22 Milwaukee WI
NEWBIES

My wife and I bought a 12foot barnett butterfly this july. we loved it. In august we bought a Catalina 22. I believe we are hooked in the wonderful sport of sailing.
 
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Glenn

Started sailing

I started at age 25, my son was not born yet so my wife and I raced Flying Juniors on Galveston Bay for about 4 years. Did not return to sailing until 4 years ago when we bought our C30. Now at 61, I am looking forward to many years of sailing, still on Galveston Bay, maybe beyond, who knows.
 
Mar 28, 2007
211
Hunter 33' Cherubini Biloxi Back Bay,MS
Sweet 16

met hubby many moons ago when I had just turned 16 and we bought an itty bitty sailboat together. Spent time re-doing her bottom and top and loved every minute of her on the lake in Beltzville, Pa. B/Seadance
 
Jun 26, 2007
6
- - Green Bay, WI
I started young

It all started about 18 years ago when I went sailing only 3 days old. I grew up sailing with my family on our Hunter 28.5 and loved every minute of it. I enjoy racing with another member of our sailing club every Tuesday night durning the summer. I was born into a sailing family and it became a huge part of my life. I look forward to many more years of sailing on Green Bay.
 

Tim R.

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May 27, 2004
3,626
Caliber 40 Long Range Cruiser Portland, Maine
Home build Dinghy

My dad and I built our first boat when I was about 7(early 70s). It was one of 6 British Mirrors imported by my dad and 5 of his friends. Next on to more excitement and spent quite a few years windsurfing while also sailing dinghys such as sunfish, lasers, odays, etc. Eventually moved up to a Hobie 16 and then a San Juan 21. The San Juan was the first boat I had on Casco bay and decided to move up to a Pearson 28 to extend our timeont he boat. Eventually sold the Pearsona nd now have an Ericson 35. I remember as a kid rigging sails to bikes, skateboards, ice skates, rafts or anything else that might get pushed by the wind. BTW, my boat to get around as a kid was a 1969 12 ft. alumacraft with Johnson 6hp. We painted it red, white and blue and is still at my camp. People come up to me and tell me how there was a boat just like it when they were a kid on the lake and I tell them it is the same boat. Tim R.
 
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gop711

Started at 12

I started sailing on Biscayne Bay in Miami on an 8'pram in 1960. Stop sailing her at about 3 years latter. It was my dream to buy a sailboat and take off after college. Instead I wound up in middle Ga. raising hogs and then got in the mining industry, go figure. After 9/11 I decided it was now or never to get back in sailing, so 37 years after sailing the pram I bought a C22 then a C25 and I am still dreaming. Hope to make the dream come true once I retire. Greg
 
Jan 24, 2005
4,881
Oday 222 Dighton, Ma.
The sailing bug bit me in my thirties

I was in my thirties when the sailing bug bit me. It was during the gas shortages back in the mid 1970s. I had always had factory built power boats made of wood. I started out with a canoe. I knew absolutely nothing about sailing. So, I went to the public library and drew out some books on sailing and learned the fundamentals. Then I made the biggest mistake of my life. I let this guy talk me into buying a brand new fiberglass racing day sailer. It was fast, but it sure was tender. Consequently, I was out on the lake sailing it one day, and I broke the cardinal rule of sailing a centerboard day sailer. In my case, this particular boat had twin centerboards. I tied the main sheet to the tiller. That's a big No No. Well, it seemed like a good idea at the time, except a strong gust of wind suddenly came up and blew her right over as I was standing on the bow. What a revolting development that turned out to be. In the chaos, I lost my British Seagull engine, and I felt like an idiot in the process. "We all learn by our mistakes," so the man says. I look back now and laugh, because I'm still leaving my tiller and walking to the bow under sail or power. The only difference is, I have a 22 foot Keel centerboard cabin sloop with an autopilot. Have I learned anything through the years? No--except you can't teach an old dog new tricks. Ahoy! Joe
 
Jun 15, 2004
18
Rebel - woodland hills, Utah
Learned from books

I became interested in sailing when I read Arthur Ransome's books during free reading time when I was in the third grade. By the time I was twelve, I would rig a sail on any small boat that I could use, whether it was suitable for sailing or not. I learned a lot about sailing by putting a sail on canoes, prams, and rowboats. One summer when I was a teenager, some kind folks in upstate New York took me out in their Thistle and taught me how to handle a jib. The first boat I actually owned was a Sabot that I bought when I was about 30 years old. Shortly thereafter I was employed as an aaquatics instructor at a Boy Scout summer camp where I taught canoeing and sailing as I was more skilled at handling either craft than any of the other staff memebers. We left the Sabot with a friend when we moved to the upper Chesapeake Bay area in 1982 and, with help from my father, acquired a South Coast 21. We sailed this boat whenever we could find the time and enough wind. We sold the South Coast when we went to California in 1994. We retired to Utah in 1998. About two years later, a gentle afternoon breeze on the mountain where we live, reminded me that I missed sailing. Since sailboats are rare in Utah, I began following the offerings on eBay. I acquired a Snipe, then a Lido 14. When I bought a Rebel 16 from some friends that were anxious to recover at least part of their investment, we sold the Snipe and Lido 14. I am still teaching Scouts how to sail and introduce people to sailing every time the opportunity arises. I have never had a formal sailing lesson. However, I have read many books and articles on sailing and I am stll learning after 55 years of sailing. All of this is the result of reading Arthur Ransome's books when I had spare time for reading in third grade. I had forgotten the name of the book's author and I was pleased to see it in several of the posts this week.
 
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Rick Knorr

Thank you Disneyland!

When I was 23 a friend and I were tossing a frisbee in the Disneyland Hotel parking lot. We went in to use the facilities and went out the back door where there was a lagoon that happened to have a bunch of Cal and Ranger boats on display. We started looking at them and we both got hooked on the idea of sailing. We read anything and everything we could find on sailing, and attended a few shows & seminars. I finally bought a little 13'4" boat called a "Voyager". She was a little cruising boat built in Sussex England with twin keels and tons of room (for her sie) down below - 2 large quarter berths and a lot of storage area. One 20 minute sailing lesson came with the boat, after that we were on our own. The little boat taught us how to sail, and after she did we sailed her up & down the California coast, cruising between Long Beach & Dana point for about a year and a half, sometimes staying on board for up to 2 or 3 weeks at a time. I then ordered a Catalina 22 new and moved onto her and sailed her all over the SoCal coast from the mid 70's to the mid 80's. I currently live on a C27 and have thoroughly enjoyed her for many years. I don't really see getting another boat since the 27 is just about the pefect size for me as she is easy to handle by myself, not to expensive for slip fee, live aboard bribe, maintenance, etc., and has a good turn of speed (wanna race?), not to mention that she has everything (mast, sails boom, running and standing rigging) new in the last two years. Ultimately, I can't imagine a life without sailing.
 
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Cap'n Ron

12

I usually avoid 'club' type linear activities like this, but we can all learn something here. I was 12 when I first started sailing, eight years old when learning navigation on Chris my dad had in Richardson's bay. Life-jackets, irrespective of the golden catch-all name, will NOT save your life in these latitudes. People will not open their minds, nor change opinions when faced by obvious glaringly lucid facts. 1) people die of exposure (hypothermia) loss of body heat, that is the real killer. IN the future an explsure suit or a wet-suit with body boyancy will be mandated by the USCG. They have not 'caught up' with many scientific studies. 2) folks do NOT die from hitting their head then drowning, that has as much validity as the ol wives tale, "don't go swimming after eating, you'll get a stomache cramp and drown" no fact, all fiction. Yes, some do get hit by the boom, then fall overboard with concussion, many awake when they hit that cold water tho~ and these are quite rare. Worrying about hitting your head, sure its possible, is tantamount to carrying a co-pilot with you in a car for fear of having a feinting spell, this happens more oft than one would expect too. 3)The 'Suspenders' life jacket-harness combos that West Marine sells, have great life saving potential from the protection provided by the harness to be clipped into the mother-ship. This is for: He that hath ears, let him hear...
 
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SailboatOwners.com

Final results

Final results for the Quick Quiz ending December 2, 2007: My sailing experience started: 42% As a kid sailing with family/friends 30% As an activity with my wife/kids 22% In high school or college 09% After I retired
 
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