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 HullView of the Snow Row from the beachCoxswain Dave Clayton Notorious Crew launching Winning Warrior crew showing off their golden clamshellsNestingBoats 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.
Left to right: Stone Su, Christopher Dou, Mary Harvey, Ka Seng Soo, Kaiden Yeung, Brian Chen, Nafel Khan, Francesco Siniscalco, and Emmy Chen. Center: Coach Ka Ming Wong
On November 23rd, Village Community Boathouse (VCB) sent two crews and a gig to Fort Point Channel in Boston to compete in the Northeast Regional Youth Open Water Rowing Championships, aka Icebreaker. Hosted by The Hull Lifesaving Museum, the race included more than 250 middle school and high school participants. Beginning with heats in the channel, the event culminated in the Nautical Mile race in the harbor.
Teams came from all over the Northeast, including New York City, New Haven, Avery Point, Boston Harbor, Cape cod, Plymouth, Westport, Lake Champlain, and Maine to race in 30 traditionally built gigs.
VCB’s First Fours (skilled crews in four-oared boats) came in fourth in their category in the heats and second in the Nautical Mile. VCB’s Second Fours came in fourth in the heats, but finished second in the Nautical Mile.
NY Harbor School, who do their on-water programming at the VCB boathouse, sent three crews. They came in first in their categories in the heats and the Nautical Mile.
We are so proud of our NYC high school rowers (VCB and NY Harbor School). Team spirit, small-boat skills, athletics, perseverance, and heart all contributed to their finishing first and second in this highly competitive event.
Special thanks to Ka Ming Wong, VCB High School Rowing Coach/Director for getting the crews to Boston and providing support to the crews on the river. Thanks to Dave Clayton for wrangling boats before, during and after the race. Grateful to Rob Buchanan and Lorne Swarthout for coming to our rescue when the trailer turned over under the Manhattan Bridge. Lee Berman was a great help driving the rig back to Pier 40 on Saturday night after the race. It takes a community!
Golden Clamshell Winners Stone Su, Nafel Khan, Francesco Siniscalco, Andy Lin, Brian Chen, Ka Ming Wong, Andrew Leung, Dave Clayton, Frank Cervi, Don Betts
On Saturday, October 26, the Village Community Boathouse sent race crews to Hull to participate in Head of the Weir. The race is a five and a half-mile open water course starting at the head of the Weir River, traversing Hingham Bay, and ending at Windmill Point. Conditions were particularly favorable for a row that morning, as minimal wind and temperatures in the low 60s made the race feel more like a leisure cruise to take in the changing foliage VCB sent youth and adult crews to Hull. This was the inaugural race for this youth crew since our dominant crew from last year’s race circuit graduated in May. Rowing Lady Moody, a coxed four stretch dory similar to our Warrior, VCB’s youth crew finished second in their category, behind only the professional team from Sound School. A great showing from our amateur crew that would have earned them medals in prior years! VCB’s adult crew was a work in progress that was only assembled in the eleventh hour. Two rowers and a coxswain made the journey up to Hull, where we joined forces with Don Betts, who generously provided the boat for our youth crew to row. Still short a rower going into the coxswains meeting half an hour before the race start, we were prepared to row a short-handed coxed three in Rescue One, a Whitehall gig loaned to us for the race by our generous hosts. A Sound School student joined our ranks and pushed us into the mixed youth/adult category, which proved to be a fortuitous change. VCB’s medley of a mixed crew finished first in that category and brought home more hardware for our trophy case. A good race was had by all! Thanks go out to Don Betts and the Hull Lifesaving Museum for providing boats, and to Sound School for rounding out our mixed crew. Come to Pier 40 on Saturday, November 9 to see our youth crew in action during VCB’s annual youth race!
Adult Crew Pulling HardYouth Crew Getting Some Pointers VCB Youth Crew in Rowing Lady Moody at the Start of the RaceVCB Adult Crew Pulling Over the Finishline at Windmill Point
2019 HEAD OF THE WEIR RACE RESULTS
21 Coxed 4 – Youth Sound School 1st Constitution 0:56:51 13 Coxed 4 – Youth Village Community Boathouse Lady Moody 1:05:05 22 Coxed 4 – Youth LCMM – Rice Memorial HS Ropa 1:11:22 15 Coxed 4 – Mixed Y/A Village Community Boathouse Rescue One 1:16:06 18 Coxed 4 – Adult Cape Cod TSCA Alex McDougall 0:51:55 17 Coxed 4 – Adult Avengers Mighty Herring 0:52:17 20 Coxed 4 – Adult Sound Alumni Joda Jane 0:56:26 12 Coxed 4 – Adult LCMM Adults American Shad 0:58:37 11 Coxed 4 – Adult Dharma Voyage Mariner’s Endeavor 1:00:40 16 Coxed 4 – Adult Ledyard Rowin’ Mike Davis 1:21:45 14 Coxed 4 – Adult Ledyard Rowin’
VCB Crew: David Palsgrove, Dave Clayton, Jackie Chen, Andrew Leung, Melina Tsai, Ka Ming Wong, Annette Grimes
On September 14, a race crew from VCB journeyed to Gloucester, MA to explore uncharted territory and compete in the Gloucester Harbor Race, a three and a half-mile open water event. While this was the eleventh iteration of the race, it is the first time VCB has sent a crew, and it would prove to be a learning experience for us.
Competitors in this race row in six oared pilot gigs, a notable departure from the four-oared Whitehalls based in Pier 40. These traditionally built boats feature solid wood planking and solid wood oars, totaling to a craft more than double the weight of our sturdy Whitehalls. Fortunately, we had a brief practice session in King Tide — our own lapstrake plank Cornish pilot gig — to give us an idea of what to expect.
Two groups of VCB rowers arrived in Gloucester Friday afternoon and evening and were welcomed into the home of our Gloucester Gig Rower (GGR) host. Situated within walking distance of Plum Cove Beach, we were advised that this was a popular spot to view sunset, and indeed it was! On Saturday morning, the crew woke early to help GGR taxi their gigs from their pier to the race site at Niles Beach. Under the watchful eye of a GGR coxswain, we followed the long-stroke ideal for pilot gigs, but unfamiliar to us in Whitehalls. After this welcome practice row, there was race strategy to be discussed.
Fortunately, we were assigned to the third heat, so we were able to watch the first two groups launch. One of our rowers was a former GGR and recruited one of their racing coaches to give us a few pointers. After some deliberation and spirited discussion, we decided to adopt a stoke pace that was a compromise of our familiar Whitehall stroke and the new pilot gig stroke we had just learned.
When our turn to race came, we were assigned to the Annie B., a beautiful blue and orange pilot gig named after the founder of GGR. The race featured an on-water start, so we boarded our craft and eagerly waited for the starter’s pistol to sound and send us on our way. The wind was considerable and all boats in this heat rowed to stay in place, lest one of us prematurely cross the starting line and force a reset.
After the pistol sounded, we rowed southwest hard into a headwind, alongside another gig and with one chasing our tail. There wasn’t much separation in the pack as we raced towards the Dog Bar, a view tower at the end of a jetty protecting Gloucester Harbor from the pounding waves of the Atlantic. The two sharp turns in front of Dog Bar broke apart the pack, as none of the coxswains wanted to come into contact with the racecourse markers and take a time penalty. We slowed to take the turns single file and ended up as the second boat of three.
With about one-third of the racecourse behind us, we finally had the wind at our backs. How were we doing on time? None of us could tell you. Time has a habit of ceasing to exist during races, lost in the consistent stroke and words of encouragement shouted by the coxswain.
The final boat behind us on the course crept closer as we both stroked on towards Ten Pound Island. Our cox decided it was time to push for some separation before we went into the last turn north of this island to avoid being stuck on the outside of two turning gigs there. “Power ten!” he shouted. Then twenty. Then thirty. After we reached forty, one of our crew shouted “Unlimited power!” and was met with laughter from the crew. This plan worked, and we were able to reach the turn first and maintain the lead to the finish line.
Overall, VCB finished third in the men’s category and brought home a new medal for the trophy case. Not bad for fifteen minutes of practice. One might even say we did well, considering that our GGR coach told us it could take up to a year for new rowers to perfect the longer pilot gig stroke.
VCB High School Rowing Crew – Winners of the Golden Clamshells Sophia Day, Mark Winter, Yoshio Ohno, Ciaran Diep, Lucien Eckert
It was a beautiful day on Saturday, March 9th for the 40th annual Snow Row in Hull, Mass. sponsored by The Hull Lifesaving Museum. VCB sent two crews – one youth and one adult rowing Pete Seeger and David Thorleif Heim (DTH), the new cedar-strip built gig. DTH, fresh out of the shop, suffered a few dings and scratches in her nearly perfect hull trailering and racing.
The VCB High School Rowing Crew in Pete Seeger came in first in their class – Youth Coxed-4 Pro. The pro category is distinguished from amateur by having practiced rowing together at least once. The adult crew did not do as well. However, DTH finished the race relatively unscathed which is noteworthy because of the LeMans-style start of the Snow Row – Rowers must run down to bow-on-the-beach boats, launch and then do a 180-degree turn to start. Lots of opportunities for collisions. The best part is the incredible array of wooden rowing craft. VCB’s DTH got lots of attention.
Towing Crew with Stacked Gigs Ready To Leave Pier 40 Crews Enjoying Breakfast at the Olympia Diner in Braintree Before the RaceYouth Crew in Pete SeegerAdult Crew in DTH Andrew Leung Jackie Chen,Marcel Dejean, Frank Cervi, and Dave ClaytonDTH and Pete Back Home in the Pier 40 Boathouse