(Milwaukee, WI)- “‘Sailing
for Good’ and ‘Sailing, for Good,’ are what keeps us coming back,” so
says Milwaukee-based sailor Nick Hayes (who sometimes sails on J/30s on
Lake Michigan with family & friends). Nick continues his commentary on “why”:
“I'll admit to obsessing about why we sail. What drives us to be cold,
wet and often bored, and yet still go sailing? Is it the camaraderie?
The challenge? The adventure? The competition? Promoters and advocates
will often boil it down to the premise that sailors sail because it is
fun, and, by inference, don’t sail when it’s not. Logic would suggest
that as long as sailing is fun, more people will do it, but the numbers
don’t support it. We all know that sailing can be a blast, but search
Google trends for the word “sailing” and you’ll see that sailing
struggles for relevance in the online world. Offline, I would suggest,
sailing is far more than just fun; many are Sailing for Good.
It’s one of the most significant trends in sailing. What is Sailing for Good? I see at least four adaptations on the theme.
The most apparent: the merging of cause-fundraising with a sailing race,
regatta or rally. These events are everywhere boats and crews gather.
For example, sailors have raised more than $50 million dollars to help
find a cure for Leukemia while sailing in regattas held all over the
country. In my town, thoughtful sailors got together a decade ago to
create a fun fall race called Louie’s Last Regatta to raise money for a
local pediatric hospital. Louie’s has since grown into a year-round
spectacle of sailor parties that raises more money for the hospital than
any other independently organized event. At clubs all over the country,
sailors pass the hat at parties for good local causes like youth
fleets, sailing schools and school trips. After a hurricane slammed
Haiti, sailing clubs rallied to send donated sails to the Red Cross to
be used as roofs for temporary shelters. It’s widely assumed that the
more free rum available at one of these events, the more money will be
raised. Call this “Sailing for Feel-Good.”
Another adaptation: The idea that teaching sailing is, in fact, the
teaching of many other vital life skills, and can therefore be good in
ways more meaningful than fun. It’s an old idea that is catching on in
modern, substantive ways. What was once a path on which a mentor might
set a crooked kid straight is now a widespread movement. Youth sailing
schools will often say that they’re in the business of leadership or
resilience training. Sailing organizations teach from lesson plans
integrated with subjects like physics, climatology, and biology.
Colleges are expanding their extracurricular sailing teams owing to the
life-skills taught by travel and teamwork. Some call it “expeditionary
learning,” but we might also call it “Sailing for Social Good.” Read more here at SAILING Magazine.net