Snow Row 2022

On Saturday, March 5th, Village Community Boathouse sent two crews to the Hull Lifesaving Museum’s 41st annual Snow Row. It was a lovely, spring-like day, not too much wind, not too cold, and the sun was shining- almost ideal conditions. There was a celebratory atmosphere as this odd and diverse community of open water rowers got together on the beach once more after Snow Row and other open water races had been canceled for the past two years.

VCB’s Youth Crew won in their category: Youth Cox-4 Pro. (Pro meaning that they had rowed together before the race.) In fact, the VCB youth crew practiced rowing for the race in the cold off Pier 40 embayment for a month before the race and their hard work paid off. The winning crew rowing Warrior finished the 3 3/4 mile race in 41:41. Warrior was coxed by VCB Youth Program Coordinator, Mary Harvey. The VCB adult crew, rowing Notorious G.I.G, coxed by Dave Clayton, finished second with a time of 44:06.

Winning Warrior Crew: Mary Harvey, Hanson He, Christopher Dou, Emmy Chen, and Abigail Johnson

Notorious Crew: Don Betts, Stone Su, Nafel Kahn, Dave Clayton, and Marcel Dejean

Boat wranglers Marcel, Frank & Dave
Notorious and Warrior nesting on the trailer, heading for Hull
View of the Snow Row from the beach
Coxswain Dave Clayton
Notorious Crew launching
Winning Warrior crew showing off their golden clamshells
Nesting
Boats and crew safely back at Pier 40

Thanks to Frank Cervi for towing and wrangling boats. Many thanks also to the parents of Mary Harvey and Nafel Kahn for transporting VCB’s high school rowers to the race. We are most grateful to Don & Martha Betts for putting us up for the night and to Don for taking an oar.

Winter Boatbuilding At VCB

By

Lorne Swarthout

On Sunday the VCB boatshop was rocking like it was February 2020. Of course, on this second anniversary of the first great 21st century pandemic, everyone was vaxed and boosted and masked. Things are not yet—and may never be—the same. Nonetheless, out there on Pier 40, beneath the roar of the gas heater, a dozen volunteers were hard at work building and repairing boats. They were sanding, planning, gluing, painting and fiber-glassing with focus and camaraderie: it felt like old times.

Our boatshop has been slow to reopen this winter. Like everyone else, we have hunkered down as the blizzard of delta and omicron has swept through our region. Now that it seems the worst is past, we are cautiously putting out the welcome mat on Wednesday and Sunday afternoons for volunteers who want to help refurbish our gallant fleet of Whitehall gigs or lend a hand with a new project, a 14’ Maine peapod.


In addition, on Fridays after school, a clutch of VCB high school rowers are learning new skills as boatbuilders. They are tackling an 8’ Opti row/sail pram which is a continuation of a winter 2020 project. This crew is making good progress and having a good time in the process.

High school (and college) students who are working on the Opti, Fridays
from 4:00 to 6:00.
Drilling holes to mark out the centerboard slot.
Bending some reluctant boards to make the gunwales.
The Notorious G.I.G. is in the shop for its five-year overhaul. It needs to
be scraped and sanded inside and out before we put on three fresh coats
of varnish.
Five years of vigorous rowing have worn down the thole pin blocks,
We replaced the old ones with white oak.
The bilge got a new coat of red paint to match the red sheer strake.
Some people wanted to paint the whole interior, but Sally is very partial
to the all-natural look. (We don’t always agree on everything)
A cracked plank needs to be cut away and patched, backed up with a
butt-block inside and fiberglass outside.
Everyone got together to lay new glass cloth on the keel. Far in the
back, you can see Frank working on the new electric lines.
The Peapod is being built around eleven “molds” that rest on a strongback. Straight and level is important.
The steam box (with the tea kettle) is ready to go. The thin pieces that will
be laminated for the stems need about an hour of hot steam in order
to be flexible enough to go around the form in the back.
Even with the steam, persuading all ten laminations to go where
we want them calls for all hands on deck.
Marking carefully for the next plank.
We are making patterns for each of the five planks. It is an extra step
but it assures a better fit and less chance of wasting expensive wood.
Once in place and attached to the bottom board, the stems need
to be shaped to accept the planks.
The first plank is down! Celebration!
All work and no lunch? Not at VCB.

Rockland youth boating group receives early holiday gift from the Big Apple

knox.villagesoup.com/2021/12/24/rockland-youth-boating-group-receives-early-holiday-gift-from-the-big-apple/By Stephen BettsDecember 24, 2021

Mayor Ed Glasser

ROCKLAND — A Rockland-based organization that teaches maritime skills to young people received a new boat thanks to Manhattan boatbuilders.

The gift boat, a Whitehall Gig, is a model of the traditional four-oared 19th century boat used to ferry ship captains from their moorings to land, according to an account in a Manhattan neighborhood paper “Our Town.”

The Manhattan organization, Village Community Boat House, offers free rowing from Pier 40 in Hudson River Park. In the winter, the boathouse stays open so its skilled boatbuilders can teach the craft to others for free, according to Our Town. This year the builders realized they needed to make more room in the boathouse before they could build another boat. So, they decided to donate a vessel to some worthy seafarers.

Some of the people associated with the Village Community Boat House visited Rockland and were familiar with Station Maine, which teaches young people how to sail and row in Rockland Harbor. The Manhattan organization contacted Station Maine and agreed to donate the boat to the Rockland organization led by Muriel Curtis.

Ed Glaser of Rockland agreed to volunteer his services and haul the boat back to Rockland.

Village Community did an internet search and when its members realized the volunteer driver was also Rockland’s mayor, they organized an informal ceremony on Dec. 19. The group tried to persuade the New York City mayor to attend, but were not successful.

According to Our Town, Boathouse President Sally Curtis said “We’re like a family that has to give away a beloved pet. We wanted to be sure it would be well cared for and used to help folks, especially young people, get out on the water.”

Curtis posted on Station Maine’s Facebook page about the donation of the 25-foot long boat.

“These are amazing, stable little boats that have been seen in New York Harbor for more than a century. We are so fortunate to have good neighbors to the south who think of us and offer us their support. We’re also grateful to Ed Glaser for hauling GML (yes, that’s her name) all the way from New York City.”

Station Maine teaches maritime skills such as sailing and rowing at no cost to the participants.

Glaser is a captain, and served as harbor master for Rockland for 12 years before he was elected to the City Council.

The boat arrived in Rockland on Dec. 20.

A Manhattan-Made Boat Heads to Maine . 

http://www.otdowntown.com/news/a-manhattan-made-boat-heads-to-maine-CG1910411

A Manhattan-Made Boat Heads to Maine

| 21 DEC 2021 | 05:04

In summer, The Village Community Boat House offers free rowing from Pier 40 in Hudson River Park. Come winter the boathouse stays open so that its skilled boatbuilders can teach the craft to others, (also for free). This year the builders realized that they needed to make more room in the boathouse before they could build another boat. So they decided to donate a vessel to some worthy seafarers.

The gift boat, a Whitehall Gig, is a model of the traditional four-oared 19th century boat used to ferry ship captains from their moorings over to the Whitehall Street pier. Boats from the Village Community Boat House are so esteemed in the rowing world that the chosen recipient, Station Maine, sent the town’s mayor to receive the gift.

On Sunday December 19, Mayor Ed Glaser of Rockland took possession in an informal riverside ceremony. Members of the Village Community Boathouse gave the Gig a fresh coat of paint — black and white with a yellow racing stripe —and a champagne sendoff. But the crowd wasn’t in an entirely celebratory mood.

“We’re like a family that has to give away a beloved pet,” said boathouse President Sally Curtis. “We wanted to be sure it would be well cared for and used to help folks, especially young people, get out on the water.”

Lorne Swarthart, head of the boat-building program, was pleased that the boat he’d been rowing and repainting for 20 years would go to Station Maine. The nonprofit club has an innovative and entirely free youth seamanship program.

When Mayor Ed Glaser arrived with his borrowed boat trailer, VCB founding member Ruth Lindner was glad to see that “Mayor Ed knows his way around a boat house.” In a speech, Glaser said that before becoming Rockland’s mayor he’d been its Harbormaster for 13 years. “I’ve done enough amateur boat building in my life to appreciate professional craftsmanship like this.”

Then he hitched the 25-foot boat to his truck and headed north. If you’re in Maine this summer keep an eye out for a 19th century Hudson River Gig in Rockland’s 21st century harbor.

http://www.westsidespirit.com/news/a-manhattan-made-boat-heads-to-maine-CG1910411

 http://www.chelseanewsny.com/news/a-manhattan-made-boat-heads-to-maine-CG1910411

Winter Boatbuilding Update

by Lorne Swarthout

December 23rd: Seven students showed up this afternoon, three who came last week and four additional. Two of those were alums, Stone and Nafel, two were first-timers. We got the sides on the Opti and began work on the dagger board case.
It was a happy crew.

Sunday, January 2nd, 2022: We worked with a small crew of four on Sunday, but we made some progress on both our projects. We primed the bilge of the gig and we steam bent one batch of stems. We also began to layout the bottom of the peapod.
Stay safe everyone