Row Around Manhattan 2015

By
David Shehigian

From RMR 2015

At 645am on the morning of Saturday Aug 1, seven rowing gigs packed with provisions and eager, sunblock slathered oars(wo)men set out for the Village Community Boathouse annual 30-mile circumnavigation of the Island of Manhattan. Normally we conduct this rowing event later in the year but due to this year’s tides our Row Around Manhattan had to be undertaken in the middle of summer. Eyeing the weather forecasts regularly for a week prior to the event, there was growing concern. The temperatures were going to be in the 90s with little to no cloud cover. Further, as is typical at this time of year, 12-15 mph winds were predicted out of the south and west, thanks to the afternoon sea breeze coming off New York Bay. The 6:20am briefing iterated the need for constant hydration of oarspeople, generous use of sunblock, and an easy pace with regular switching out of extra rowers so as to keep crews fresh and avoid heat exhaustion. Further, we reminded the respective coxswains about the appropriate navigation rules of the road, to keep main shipping channels clear, especially in the East and Harlem Rivers, and to avoid the ocean liners leaving their births on the Hudson.

Volunteers had begun arriving at the Boathouse at 4:30am (thx Pablo!) to launch boats so upon conclusion of the briefing we loaded our boats and left Pier 40 on schedule to take advantage of the slack tide down to the Battery. The morning was cool with a nice breeze. The towers of lower Manhattan were quiet and shimmered pale silver. Assembling at the Battery the flotilla awaited the arrival of incoming ferries from Staten and Governor’s Island before proceeding. As the morning sun rose over Brooklyn we were swept up the East River by the cool serene early morning flood tide. We quickly moved north between Long Island City and Roosevelt Island until reaching our first objective, the Socrates Sculpture Park in Astoria, near Hell Gate. Our early arrival there (830am) provided ample time to wander the park, use facilities, shop for coffee at local bodegas, and admire the sculptures.

At 10:45 we pushed off the quickly disappearing Hallet’s Beach and headed across past Mill Rock into the mouth of the Harlem, keeping Randall and Ward Islands to starboard. We caught the tides just right and enjoyed a nice push up this relatively narrow passage. Along the way we encountered numerous chase boats protecting a handful of swimmers who were also stroking their way around Gotham. The sun was beginning to beat down now. The case of 24 water bottles in our bow was being consumed at a good pace. We also encountered a group of kayakers from Long Island City along the Harlem led by VCB friend Ted Gruber. All seven crews remained more or less together as a group as we approached our second destination, Swindler’s Cove at Harlem River Park. Arriving there at Noon, we enjoyed a 90 minute break for lunch and general espirit de corps.

A gig with a few of our seasoned journeyman felt the beach was too crowded so they continued on to stop near Spuyten Duyvil. Though the tides in the Hudson were still at slack, a few of our younger crews at Swindler’s decided they’d like to get a move on to brave the mighty Hudson. The rest followed shortly thereafter awaiting the start of the ebb tide. Ours (The King Tide) was the final boat to leave Swindler’s Cove, assisting the other crews first in shoving off through the thickening mud flat left by the exiting tide. As we crossed beneath the railroad bridge at the exit of the Harlem into the Hudson we were met with a stiff gust which almost stopped our intrepid crew in its tracks. The Hudson was taking no prisoners on this day. We fought the gusty but sustained headwind down past the GW Bridge. It was going to be a long haul. Most other gigs had crossed to the Jersey side to avoid the ocean liners and as we began the same we noticed their large births were empty so we remained on the NY side, eventually running a slalom course through the mooring field at the 79th Street Basin.

The home stretch was grueling against the wind under the searing sun but as we reached midtown the tides began sweeping us more quickly down river. Our crew of tired proud rowers entered the Pier 40 embayment with a relieved chant. All other gigs were home except for the one we saw trailing on the NJ side. There was a great welcome on the dock by friends, family, and fellow rowers. Libation and a feast ensued. Our goal of raising $7000 fell just shy. Sally, our president, thanked all for participating. A great vibe permeated the boathouse. Other volunteers cleaned and stowed boats, and with weeping, cramped hands and big smiles we understood that THIS was a great day.

RMR 2015

Click on the link for slideshow

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City of Water Day 2015

By
Sally Curtis

From COWD 2015

Twenty rowers set off from the Village Community Boathouse on Pier 40 in three Whitehall Gigs on Saturday, 7/18 bound for Governor’s Island to join the 8th annual City of Water Day. The launch was postponed from 7:30 AM until the next slack tide because of a threat of thunderstorms which was unfortunate because they missed the Cardboard Kayak Race.

From 2015-07-18

After securing the boats in the crowded ebayment near pier 101, VCB volunteers spent the day manning the table talking about VCB programs and mission and schmoozing with fellow rowers, paddlers and others from our waterfront community.

From COWD 2015

Rowers and paddlers who had traveled to Governor’s Island by boat were invited by MWA to camp on the island for the night. Setting up camp was challenging for some of us city dwellers.
Rowers: Teresa Wang, Cindy Lin, Eric Chan, Joy Yang, Leo Au-Yeung, Anna Juchnicki, Shana Luo, Rene Moreno, Margaret Ho, Kenneth Chuen, Rebecca Poch, Danielle Dai, Jackie Chen, David Kang, Eric Cerny, Tony Fung, Frank, Deborah and Yee Gee Cheng.

COWD 2015

Click on the photo to view slideshow

Special thanks to Yee Gee Chang and Eric Cerny for doing a great job organizing and coordinating the VCB crews. Thanks also to Maggie Flanagan, Roland Lewis, Louis Kleinman and others at MWA for making City of Water Day a great success.
Photos by Sally Curtis, Ye Gee Cheng & Tony Fung

Row Around Manhattan 8/1/15

From RMR PR

On August 1st, Village Community Boathouse will be rowing around Manhattan to raise money in support of our community and youth rowing and boatbuilding programs in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens. We are a nonprofit organization run entirely by volunteers. While all of our programs are free and open to the public, VCB is 100% volunteer run and dependent on donations and this annual fundraiser to buy equipment, maintain our fleet of traditional wooden boats and to build new boats.
Our goal is to raise $7000. We are asking each rower to raise $100 to participate. If you are an experienced rower, you can sign up and ask your friends and family to sponsor you on a per-mile basis (row is 30 miles long, ask three or four friends for a dollar a mile); if you aren’t experienced or can’t be there, you can help sponsor a rower (We will match you up with a deserving youth rower who needs backing).

Remember, there will be a fun after party with lots of food , drink and good salty company.
Show your support for VCB by clicking on this link: Row Around Manhattan for Village Community Boathouse

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COMMUNITY ROWING

From RMR PR

Free Walk-up-and-Row programs are now running at Pier 40 in Manhattan, Prospect Park and Long Island City. Open to all ages and skill levels at no charge, all you have to do is sign a waiver and put on a pfd.
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COMMUNITY ROWING IN BROOKLYN

From RMR PR

VCB is offering free public rowing in Prospect Park Lake again this summer. The park is surrounded by a large and diverse population that needs more access to on-water recreation.

From 2014-07-20

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YOUTH COMMUNITY ROWING

From RMR PR

By far, our largest constituency consists of high school students. A number of the young people who rowed with VCB as high school students have returned after graduating and taken on leadership roles in our youth programming working with both high school and college rowers.
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BOATBUILDING at Pier 40

From Sheer Plank On

Right now there are two boats under construction and another in the repair bay at the VCB boat shop on Pier 40. High school and college students as well as interested people from the community work together to build our traditional wooden boats.

VCB at Clearwater 2015

By
Becky Olinger

From Clearwater 2015

Clearwater 2015 was a wet one! Friday June 19, I towed the gigs up to Croton Point Park. They would not be unloaded until the following day. The canopy was set up and the cars unloaded. Saturday June 20, 2015 turned out to be rainy and overcast the entire day. With the Help of the Harbor School students and other working waterfront participants the gigs were unloaded. The Harbor School students then went for a row. Upon their return the VCB volunteers also got a chance to get in a row before the start of the festival. We made it back to shore just as the skies opened with rain! Despite the on and off rain all day we took out about 30 people, most of them families. The Harbor School Students did a great job taking out the participants. The VCB volunteers did a great job making sure waivers were signed and rowers fitted with PFD’s. We also explained to the Clearwater Festival goers what our Mission is and what we do in Manhattan at our boathouse. Many People were impressed that we do this in NYC! Several VCB volunteers and Harbor School students were able to try sailing, kayaking and stand up paddle boarding during the weekend. The volunteer dance party Saturday evening was a lot of fun. The band this year was Delhi 2 Dublin and we all did a lot of dancing! The Harbor School kids had a great time.
The rain started later that evening and rained all through the night until early Sunday morning. By 11am -12pm the sun finally came out and it became hot and humid! Our display booth survived the rain and we got out about another 20 people. By about 3pm it was time to load the gigs back onto the trailer with the help of the Harbor School students and other working waterfront participants. Once the gigs were secure, the trailer was moved off to the side and the Harbor School kids departed. Our display booth stayed up and we continued to tell the festival participants about VCB. At about 4pm there was another storm that blew through with heavy rain. It passed and we had sun again. At around 6 we took the display booth down and loaded up the cars and attached the trailer to David’s truck. We then went and enjoyed the last band to play, The Mavericks.
It was a great weekend despite all the rain. Thank you to the VCB volunteers Rene, Margaret, Frank, Max, Brianna and David. Also, a big thank you to the Harbor School students and staff!
Becky

Saturday Rowing in Prospect Park Lake

By
Sally Curtis

From Prospect park Rowing 6/20

Despite the weather which was overcast with intermittent drizzle, we had 72 waivers signed and collected $165 in donations. Thanks to the hard work of our volunteers with a little help from the weather, it was and easy and mellow day.
We need more volunteers for next Saturday, 6/27. If you would like to help out, please sign up on our volunteer spreadsheet.
Here’s a link to the spreadsheet:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Q_AbtP1sr9ewL9f41FPd38VFjEpBbGc5vyzXQWgAtDA/edit?usp=sharing