(Annapolis, MD)- Nick Hayes recently wrote a nice story for Spinsheet.com regarding how new families to sailing got involved in the sport.
Nick is famous for his bestselling book “Saving Sailing” and has been
an advocate for family sailing and innovative learning programs through
speaking and writing for SpinSheet and other sailing publications.
“Taji Jacobs saw a Facebook post about a new kind of sailing program,
discussed it with the family over dinner, and they decided to give it a
try.
Taji was always on the lookout for fun outdoor activities that might be
done as a family. Her daughter Adi was nine, fearless, fiery, and loved
the feeling of fast. Adi’s happiest day was hitting the required height
for the Anaconda roller coaster at the theme park.
Daud was 13, mildly asthmatic, quick, bright, and the technical guru of
the family. He hadn’t yet met a school subject he couldn’t ace or a
computer game he couldn’t master. Mom was convinced that he needed fresh
air.
Taji’s husband Paul often reminisced about sailing with childhood
neighbors who car-topped a Phantom to a Northwoods campsite a couple of
summers.
Taji thought sailing might be fun for everyone, though she was a bit
apprehensive herself. Would she feel scared? What if she didn’t
understand the lingo and made a mistake that caused trouble? Would the
kids think it was boring? Would Paul be interested? She researched
carefully.
The sailing school supplied life jackets and highly trained sailing
instructors, watched the weather, and boasted a durable safety record.
Check.
The school’s class flyer said that kids would drive a sailboat on the first day, if they wanted to. Check.
Dads and moms chatting on Facebook used surprising adjectives such as calming, thrilling, inspiring. Check.
The first lesson was like nothing the family had ever experienced. They
were met in the parking lot by a confident, articulate counselor named
Janelle who handed out sunscreen and raved about the glorious weather
and the fact that they’d get wet, but be safe.
Janelle made certain that nobody was wearing cotton or carrying a
cellphone in an open pocket. They left them in the car. Everyone picked a
lifejacket from a rack in a shed and learned how to secure it
correctly. They walked down the dock, where five sailboats with luffing
mainsails and furled jibs were held firm by five high school kids, ready
to help with boarding and shoving off.
Janelle pulled Paul aside and handed him a waterproof digital camera on a
lanyard, suggesting that he “might start snapping now. Your daughter is
going to drive.” She then demonstrated safe boarding and helped the
whole family to places in the cockpit. She explained how the boom was
just above head and that sitting was safest. She showed how cleats cleat
and winches winch.
For a few moments, she focused on Daud, explaining that he was going to
be the one in charge of speed and comfort and offered basic instructions
on when to ease or trim the mainsheet based on the heel of the boat.
She used her weight to demonstrate. Taji would have two lines to manage:
the green one that unfurled the jib, and the blue one that sheeted it.
Paul was already camera happy. Adi, of course, would be at the helm. The
kids on the dock helped them cast off.
Janelle
pointed to a place for Adi to aim the bow. As Adi turned down, Janelle
nudged Daud to ease the mainsheet, talked Taji through the signals from
the jib, and kept a knee near the tiller, though Adi seemed not to need
her help. Janelle gave clear instructions and explained why with each
one, even as she pointed out things they shouldn’t miss: the graceful
wooden classic yacht moored nearby, other families sailing, the red and
green markers telling them where to and where not to sail, and their own
grins.
The boat accelerated as they came into more wind, and a ribbon of cool
spray came over the bow as it parted the choppy waves outside of the
mooring area. The dousing was surprising at first so they screeched and
then laughed.
Paul seemed transported back to a different time and place and giggled
like a teenager. Daud was already working up sail angles and curves and
the leverage created by purchase between blocks. Numbers blasted through
his brain. Adi was getting the hang of helping the boat to ride the
waves while holding a straight line. The kids seemed in sync.
Janelle suggested that the family huddle so she could take their picture
in front of the bay lighthouse, seen from the water side. This was a
special sight, she said, that only sailors can see, “like the backside
of the moon to an astronaut.” Taji noted that they had gone from the car
to an all new world in 60 minutes. She couldn’t wait to return.
Everyone traded places. Paul drove, Taji trimmed main, Adi trimmed jibs, and Daud figured out the video setting on the camera.
That night, the Jacobs family combined the best shots into a highlights
reel, complete with captions and a rocking soundtrack. Daud posted it on
Youtube and shared it on the sailing school’s Facebook page and his
own. Taji sent it to her parent group.
The next Sunday afternoon the Chen family from down the street joined
the Jacobs family at sailing school. Janelle’s co-counselor Everett met
the Chens — three kids, their mom, and her partner — in the parking lot
with sunscreen and a camera. Janelle and the Jacobs family sailed clear
across the bay to a sheltered harbor to swim and dig in mud and write an
exciting new chapter called sailing school in the family adventure.”
Thanks for contribution from Spinsheet.com and Nick Hayes.