Thursday, September 30, 2010

Shepler’s Mackinac Island Ferry Service

Justin Bassett of Walstrom Marine in Harbor Springs, MI provides this Mackinac Island update:


While this story is not directly sail related, it will certainly affect your readers in the Great Lakes, especially those 300 plus sailors that participate in the Mackinac races yearly.

Over the years, Shepler’s Mackinac Island Ferry Service has been the preferred ferry for a majority of the people participating in the Chicago to Mackinac and Port Huron to Mackinac races. This is in part because they provide superior customer service with friendly staff on clean boats, and partly because Chris Shepler was a member of the Heart of America Challenge with Buddy Melges and sailed competitively for a number of years for a few Great Lakes programs, most notably, Bill Alcott and his various Equation yachts.

Sadly, the Shepler family, who has been providing ferry service to Mackinac Island for 65 years and three generations, is in a fight for their survival right now and needs all the help they can. The city of Mackinac Island is considering only renewing one ferry franchise; these franchises currently allow three companies to provide service to and from the island. Essentially, the city is considering buying all of one line’s docks and controlling the service via that one line, forming a city run monopoly.

In a time when the economy here in Michigan is in the toilet, it is unfathomable that a city government would want to run a ferry boat company out of business (and send 150 people to the unemployment line) to create a city run monopoly of the ferry service to the biggest tourist destination Island in Michigan. That should be news for many of your buttheads.

Here are some stories that have appeared recently in region press:

Michigan Live, Michigan Live, Detroit News, Petoskey News Review, and Chicago Tribune

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Flintstone is on Facebook

When BMW Oracle Racing CEO Russell Coutts made the announcement on September 13th that the 34th America's Cup would be for the Facebook generation and not the Flintstone generation, it was cute phrasing but not the best analogy. And he likely offended a huge section of the population that has money.

Here are the demographics from the Scuttlebutt fan page:

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Flying fish

Not sure how common it is, but it sure seemed pretty common to have flying fish boarding parties when offshore sailing. Here is some info on the critters:

FROM Leonardo da Vinci to the Wright brothers and among today’s aircraft designers, there is a fascination in studying the wings of birds, better to understand the mysteries of flight. But there are also more than 60 species of fish that have the ability to take to the air, and new research shows they could have a trick or two to help make aircraft fly more efficiently.

Flying fish can whip their tails back and forth with tremendous speed to propel themselves out of the water. Once airborne, they use long pectoral fins and shorter pelvic fins on the sides of their bodies to create lift, much like the wings of an aircraft. Sometimes the fish fly to escape fast-swimming predators like dolphins and tuna, but they may also take to the air because it is an efficient way to speed up their movement. Whatever the reason, once aloft they can glide for more than 40 seconds, cover 400 metres (1,312 feet) and move at about 70kph (43mph). Read more.

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Coincidence?

All the stars seemed to be getting lined up for the new reality of a multihull America’s Cup in 2013. The latest skyrocket comes from the Extreme Sailing Series, which announced today that their European series of Extreme 40 catamaran events is potentially doubling its schedule in 2011 with events now covering Europe, Middle East, Far East and the USA.

Now in its fourth year, this European circuit has focused on serving commercially run teams since its inception, and while it does not award prize money, organizer OC Group has sought to create spectator friendly events that provide a return on investment for the team sponsors. In 2010, the circuit visited Sete, France (May 27-30), Cowes, UK (July 31- Aug 5), Kiel, Germany (Aug 26-29), Trapani, Italy (Sept 23-26), and Almeria, Spain (Oct 9-12), with the race venue often held in challenging areas that focused more on shore side spectating than traditional racing.

As the only circuit providing large sized multihull racing, the Extreme Sailing Series gained notoriety in 2008 as America’s Cup teams Alinghi and BMW Oracle Racing used the racing to help prepare for the 33rd Match in February 2010. The Extreme 40 was also used more recently by BMW Oracle Racing as they developed their new vision for the 34th America’s Cup.

The 2011 Extreme Sailing Series schedule is not yet announced, but there promises to be 8 to 10 events between March and December. And while Cup teams are required to compete in the three event America’s Cup World Series schedule, which also are not yet announced (but will commence in June), it would be “more than a coincidence” if both these circuits worked together to allow full participation in both.

SIDENOTE: The events for the America’s Cup World Series in 2011 will use a new BMW Oracle Racing designed AC45 wing powered one design catamaran. Why was the much more affordable Extreme 40 not chosen instead? Apparently, the Extreme 40s were part of the early plan but it was found they could not sufficiently handle the upper wind range (events are to be sailed in 3-33 knots), and could not support wings without extending the bows.


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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Newport, RI

Photographer Christophe Launay, a frequent Scuttlebutt contributer, shares some images and descriptions from his recent trip to Newport, RI:















Newport is a city on Aquidneck Island in Newport County, Rhode Island, United States, about 30 miles (48 km) south of Providence. Known as a New England summer resort and for the famous Newport Mansions. A major 18th century port city, Newport now contains among the highest number of surviving colonial buildings of any city in the United States. Newport was known for being the city of some of the "Summer White Houses" during the administrations of Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.

The restoration of the 1885 schooner yacht Coronet is an historic preservation project conducted on the campus of the International Yacht restoration School (IYRS)in Newport, Coronet is one of the oldest and largest schooner yachts in the world.

Harbour Court, overlooking Newport Harbour, is the New York Yacht Club's on-the-water clubhouse. Founded in 1844, it is one of the world's most distinguished and influential yachting institutions. Membership in the club is by invitation only.


Click here for additional images.

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Sunday, September 12, 2010

Top ten

TOP TEN THINGS TO SAY WHEN CAUGHT SLEEPING AT YOUR DESK

10. "They told me at the blood bank this might happen."

9. "This is just a 15 minute power-nap like they raved about in that time management course you sent me to."

8. "Whew! Guess I left the top off the White Out. You probably got here just in time!"

7. "I wasn't sleeping! I was meditating on the mission statement and envisioning a new paradigm."

6. "I was testing my keyboard for drool resistance."

5. "I was doing a highly specific Yoga exercise to relieve work-related stress. Are you discriminatory toward people who practice Yoga?"

4. "Why did you interrupt me? I had almost figured out a solution to our biggest problem."

3. "The coffee machine is broken..."

2. "Someone must've put decaf in the wrong pot."

And the #1 Excuse

1. " ... in Jesus' name. Amen."


Credit to the Count for this top ten list.

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Wednesday, September 08, 2010

America's Cup at Oracle OpenWorld 2010


The annual Oracle OpenWorld gathering is the world's largest and most important conference for Oracle technologists, business users, and partners. A real "kumbaya" for the techies, but not likely the place to share sea stories and Mount Gay rum drinkies. Or maybe it is.

This year’s conference in San Francisco, CA will also feature Oracle CEO Larry Ellison’s latest acquisition, the America’s Cup. The opportunity to meet and greet with the Cup along with Tom Ehman, Ian "Fresh" Burns, and others from the BMW Oracle Racing team will be on September 19th at 7:45 p.m, the 20th and 21st at 10:15 a.m. and 3 p.m., and the 22nd at 10:15 a.m.

Normally you'd have to pay $75 to get into the "Discover" portion of Oracle Openworld 2010, which gives you access to OpenWorld, JavaOne and Oracle Develop. But the team is offering free admission to the event exclusively for readers of Latitude 38 and Scuttlebutt so sailors get a shot at seeing the Cup as well. To get your free admission, you need to do the following:

Go to http://www.eventreg.com/oracle/openworld2010/sanfrancisco/attendee

Then select "Discover" on the home page. On the login page you'll need to enter an email address, create a username and password and enter the code: ODS10. Then you'll fill out your contact info, and complete a short survey asking you about a bunch of things that were over our heads - we just checked "n/a" on all of them. Then you're good to go. If all the stuff on the surveys makes sense to you, then you'll probably want to stay for the other stuff!

Thanks to Latitude 38 and BMW Oracle Racing for the details.


Additional information added Sept. 16, 2010:

The America's Cup Pavilion provides an exciting showcase for the BMW ORACLE Racing Experience and the recently won, coveted America's Cup, the oldest trophy in international sport and sailing's pinnacle event. Oracle OpenWorld, JavaOne, and Oracle Develop attendees can view the America's Cup as well as a scale model of the winning yacht, USA 17, which will be on display daily. Periodically throughout the conference, BMW ORACLE Racing team members will be onsite to sign autographs for attendees. Stop by for a morning show and daily panel discussions hosted by BMW ORACLE Racing's Tom Ehman to learn about teamwork and technology. Sail in between sessions to lounge in comfortable seats and watch dynamic videos playing on LCD screens throughout the experience. Shop for technical sailing gear and fashion apparel from SLAM (official outfitter for BMW ORACLE Racing) at an exclusive retail shop.

Schedule of Events

America's Cup Pavilion/BMW ORACLE Racing Experience
Sunday: 7:45 p.m. - 9:45 p.m.
Monday: 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday: 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday: 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Thursday: 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

America's Cup and USA 17 Model Viewing
Sunday: 7:45 p.m. - 9:45 p.m.
Monday - Wednesday: 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

America's Cup Morning Shows and Panels
Sunday: 7:35 p.m. - 8:05 p.m.
Monday/Tuesday: 10:15 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.; 3:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday: 10:15 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

BMW Oracle Racing Team Autographs
Sunday: 8:05 p.m. - 9:05 p.m.
Monday/Tuesday: 10:45 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.; 3:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday: 10:45 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.

BMW Oracle Racing Team Q&A Sessions
Monday - Wednesday: 1:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.

Slam Retail
Sunday: 12:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Monday/Tuesday: 10:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday: 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Thursday: 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

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Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Blonde Brits hold key to success



Boat Show season is just around the corner, which might be why Scuttlebutt World Headquarters received this bit of PR from the Exposure promotion company. This UK group believes the marine industry can do better to improve the return on their marketing investment, particularly at Boat Shows. While SWH has not closely reviewed their services, we did find a few images on their website that might reflect their ideas:

Mandy Oakshott, founder and Director of Hampshire based Exposure:

“Every time I walk around a Boat Show or marine exhibition, it frustrates me to see the money companies are wasting”. Claims Oakshott “Time and time again you walk past stands and see disinterested and apathetic staff, mostly untrained promotional staff drawn from somewhere within the company ranks, to “man the stand” for a shift during a trade event. The individuals might be good at what they do within their company but many are not trained in promotion and you can see their sense of unease engaging with the public. Not only is it a waste of money, time and effort, but if you are not generating leads or making sales, why exhibit in the first place? Perhaps the worst culprits are the small owner-managed businesses. For example the talented small boat builder who pays thousands of pounds for his stand to display his range of fine wooden boats who will just sit there on his stool, reminiscing about “the good old days” with like-minded passers-by. It is incomprehensible that you would not want to spend every second of the show, on your feet, engaging with passes-by, generating leads and trying to win business.

“None of us really like to engage in conversations with exhibitors at shows, in fact, many of us actively try to avoid contact completely. It is in your interest, and for the success of your company, that you engage with as many people as possible and convert those leads into sales. Members of a professional promotions team have the training and skills to do that for you.

“The main reasons businesses employ a professional promotions team like Exposure are primarily market research, product promotion, data capture, lead generation and increasing their brand awareness within the sector. We work closely with clients helping them to set realistic objectives against which they can evaluate the true cost of their attendance at a trade event. And ultimately that benchmark must be sales. Follow-up is as important, if not more so, than the exhibition itself and you can only do that by setting aside time and having a comprehensive set of leads to pursue.

“I have been running Hampshire’s only promotional company for 5 years now and I regularly provide trained promotional girls to major companies across a range of business sectors, but of them all, I think the marine industry needs the biggest change in its attitude. We are in a recession and times are tough. It is now that businesses must be looking at every aspect of their business to gain a competitive edge and if a business decides to exhibit at a trade show, then using professional promotion at the show must be a priority to gain that advantage.

“There is so much more exhibitors can do to improve their presence and capitalise on their investment that it would be foolhardy to ignore the possibilities.”

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When Grand Prix Sailing Was New (and a Little Scary)

Yachting author and historian John Rousmaniere reviews Bill Barton’s new book, The Legend of Imp: The Magical Yacht that Rocked the Sailing World:

“I used up my fourth life racing sailboats,” says Bill Barton. He could spend his next five lives looking back to his time in one of the most successful boats in the early years of modern grand prix ocean racing. Now he’s written an entertaining, provocative book that’s part-memoir, part-history. The Legend of Imp: The Magical Yacht that Rocked the Sailing World will appeal to anyone fascinated by our sport’s development, or, for that matter, anybody who likes good sea stories, of which there are a great many here.

In 1977 the green-striped 40-foot Imp, hailing from San Francisco Bay, won nearly half her races, including the Fastnet, and was top boat in ocean racing’s two most competitive series – the Southern Ocean Racing Conference and the Admiral’s Cup, the sport’s unofficial world championship. Everything came together in Imp, says Barton, who describes her campaign as “an alchemical oven, through the heat of design changes and technological advances, and through the crucible of competition and challenges by nature, transforming our elemental matter and melding it into pure gold.”

Imp was designed by New Zealander Ron Holland, one of the hot race-boat designers of that day, and was built light and rigid in Florida by Holland’s brother-in-law, Gary Carlin. Her highly innovative structure was more like a race car’s than a typical boat’s, with an internal metal tubular frame supporting a thin shell of a hull. All was supervised by the boat’s owner, David Allen, whom Barton describes as “the planner and organizer extraordinaire who left no stones unturned.” Allen was not new to the game, having campaigned widely in his Mull-designed, New Zealand-built downwind flyer Improbable. A Marin County real estate developer, he was as unique as his boats – impish yet humble, driven by what Barton calls a “warrior attitude and code,” and also a man of spiritual conviction. In one of his many nicely told anecdotes, Barton tells of coming below in the middle of the night during a wet, raw Admiral’s Cup race and finding Allen standing at the chart table. “No, we weren’t lost, as I feared. He wasn’t straining at the chart but rather was calmly reading his Christian Science lesson for the day, and he happily shared it, pushing the book toward me. ‘Here, you’ll like this.’”

No less remarkable is Imp’s skipper. “A good sailor is always anticipating the unexpected,” writes Barton, “and our captain, Skip Allan, was a master. Aboard Imp, we trusted Skip and responded along with his keen instincts, which improved our own.” Allan had already won the Transpac, the Congressional Cup, the Admiral’s Cup, and much more. In that pre-professionalism era, he raced as an amateur and worked as a boatbuilder and delivery skipper. Grand prix boats – even the experimental 40-foot Imp – routinely crossed oceans on their own bottoms to get to starting lines. (For more about this great sailor, see Scuttlebutt 2675.)

Bill Barton, our chronicler, came out to San Francisco from Rye, N.Y., as an aimless MBA hoping to find a calling and do some sailing. An aggressive competitor, he’d already gained the rough-weather experience that’s much prized on the Bay in the brutal 1972 Bermuda Race, and so he’s recruited to Imp’s mostly Bay-area crew. Barton tells his many war stories vividly and persuasively, with considerable humor and attention to detail about the racing, the weather, and his shipmates (Skip Allan expresses relief after tense moments by yelling “doggies!”). The ebullience ends at the start of the last race Barton sailed in Imp. “This is the hardest chapter to write,” he tells us in the first line of his very edgy story of the killer 1979 Fastnet Race storm. The boat handles the appalling conditions with only a few problems, but another storm intrudes dramatically when a panicky shipmate awakens Barton and says he can’t take it anymore and is harboring thoughts of suicide. By now Barton has made the reader aware that he has found his calling as a clinical psychologist. Setting aside Bill the sail-trimmer, he puts on his professional face as Dr. Barton and begins a full-on, successful intervention.

More troubling behavior arises after the finish. Even as the death toll mounts, a few race finishers get caught up in publicly telling stories about how easily they had managed. Barton comes down hard on this “annoying disconnect.” (To add a personal note, when David Allen, of all people, cheerfully told me he’d never had a better sail, the only sense I could make of it was that feelings of vulnerability can silence our better angels.) Barton himself was so stressed out by the storm that for weeks he was unable to think about it without throwing up. Extensive psychological counseling kept PTSD at bay (he was not alone).

Today, Imp is approaching age 35 and still winning silver, and Bill Barton is still racing hard and has written this unusual and engaging book, which he published himself at a high standard with 130 illustrations and a cover painted by Jim DeWitt of Imp and her confident crew under sail. The Legend of Imp: The Magical Yacht that Rocked the Sailing World is available at http://www.implegend.com.

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Thursday, September 02, 2010

Sailing and Golf

Here are a couple videos with PUMA Ocean Racing skipper Ken Read, and 95.9 WATD's Goldie Bounce Golf host Liza Churchill. From watching these videos we learned that:

- Technology allows anybody to be an online media person, and
- Kenny has time to sit with blonde girls



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