BTW, the reason I ask is that I belong to a yachting association and am trying to figure out what kinds of programs to put together
Rick, my son was recently looking into a yacht club membership. He did not grow up sailing and is interested in learning to sail. He's close to his grandfather who has sailed the world and at 81 has given up sailing just when my son might have some time to learn from him. My father lives a mile from me in the mountains, my son lives in DC. What he found about yacht clubs was a cooperative network among clubs that allowed for the use of facilities and club boats at other cooperating clubs across the country. He liked how that sounded and was poised to get his membership. I'm sorry but, his mother and I talked him out of it because he's just out of school and working a new job. He was, is, not fully settled in and has no savings nor a fleshed out plan to start getting any. We both felt he would enjoy a yacht club membership once he was more financially stable.
I was impressed with the fleet sharing program. I could also see something working kind of like renting a ryder van where you rent the vehicle at one location (club) and drop it off at another.
The sailing trend around here - as far as I can see - is, the more things change,...
Tom, my experience includes growing up on the water in Florida, sailing to Maine where I spent the Summer of '76 on Hurricane Island, moving to NH in '78 and traveling back and forth many times since then. I can tell you that as strong as the boating community is in Florida and any where else, state-side I've been, there is no place with the maritime heritage and identity like Down East. I've commented before about noticing the lack of masts in the bays and harbors around Miami in recent years. The Gulf coast is better but nothing like the forest of spars I grew up seeing. During a recent trip to Mount Desert Island, I can say sailing is still strong but, I only saw three private sailboats from the top of Catallac mountain and the Bubbles over looking the Cranberries. It was a beautiful early fall day too. There should have been a dozen. Camden, I'm sure, sees no shortage of sail powered crafts. However, where there use to be a dozen sailboats waiting for moorings in the rest of the country, there are now dozens of powerboats.
I'm not sure I care to have more people into sailing. I'm into it and that seems enough. However, I would like to see less people into powerboats. Sailors are different, they are more thoughtful and engaged with their world than powerboaters. It's probably a good thing those people don't take up sailing. I don't really know but I like that I doing run into a sailor everytime I turn around, it keeps sailing special.
But then, when people ask about what it's like to move from Florida to rural NH, I tell them it's awful, the summers are short, the winters are long, cold and hard to drive in. They would hate it here. There are no stores, nothing to do, it takes over 3 hours just to get to Boston. They should stay where they are and be grateful they don't live here.

- Will (Dragonfly)