NWY November 2022

Page 68

THE YACHTING LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE - NOVEMBER 2022
AZIMUT 60 FLYBRIDGE

AN OCEAN OF

yachts

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2022 | AZIMUT 55 FLYBRIDGE NEWPORT BEACH 2023 | AZIMUT 60 FLYBRIDGE SEATTLE 2021 | OCEAN ALEXANDER 27E SEATTLE 2023 | AZIMUT 66 MAGELLANO COMING SOON TO OUR DOCKS AlexanderMarineUSA.com SEATTLE | 206.344.8566 NEWPORT BEACH | 949.515.7700 SAN DIEGO | 619.294.2628 FORT LAUDERDALE | 206.963.6543
YACHTING. ELEVATED. 1989 | 67’ HATTERAS | $279,000 JERRY TODD | 206.963.6543 2007 | 36’ HINCKLEY | $449,000 HENRY WOLD | 206.427.7167 2019 | 100’ OCEAN ALEXANDER | $11,400,000 HENRY WOLD | 206.427.7167 2001 | 48’ SEA RAY | $399,000 JERRY WHEELER | 949.375.2323 2019 | 40’ AZIMUT | $783,000 MICHAEL VRBAS | 949.632.1414 2000 | 39’ AZIMUT | $239,000 GREG WILKINSON | 714.331.7131 2020 | 90’ OCEAN ALEXANDER | $8,895,000 GREG WILKINSON | 714.331.7131 2012 | 48’ MARITIMO | $939,000 J.R. YUSE | 206.679.7983 2013 | 48’ SEALINE | $549,000 J.R. YUSE | 206.679.7983 2006 | 57’ MCKINNA | $639,000 JEFF SIHILLING | 619.756.2511 1986 | 52’ HERSHINE | $99,950 JERRY TODD | 206.963.6543 2017 | 35’ REGAL | $339,000 JERRY TODD | 206.963.6543
+1 (206) 209-1920 | www.WorthAvenueYachts.com | Seattle@WorthAvenueYachts.com LAKE UNION PIERS 901 FAIRVIEW AVENUE N., SUITE A180, SEATTLE, WASHINGTON 98109 Industry Leader in Yacht Sales, Charter and New Yacht Construction. *Not For Sale to US Residents While in US Waters HONORÉ 72’ OFFSHORE 2006 SAFARI 80’ Symbol 2002 BRAVISSIMO 60’ RIVA 1982 SIERRA FOX 54’ Offshore 2009Independence 58’ Meridian 2004 PACIFIC SHADOW II 82’ Westport 1982 VOLARE 31’ Tiara 2015 LODESTAR 78’ Ocean Alexander 2011 GOOD LACK* 73’ Sunseeker 2009 JEANNE SEA QUA 72’ Ocean Alexander 2016THE HAPPY BOAT 75’ NORDLUND 2002/2021 GALILEE* 106’ Westport 1995/2015 MAHALO 68’ Hampton 2018 SEA CZAR 68’ Hampton 2012 JOURNEY 48’ Ocean Alexander 1999 DAY TRIPPER 44’ Tiara 2016 MR PARKER 33’ Formula 2004 rascal 27’ C.W. Hood 2007 MARANATHA 87’ Johnson 2007 NEW ADVENTURE 65’ PACIFIC MARINER 2005 Whether looking to purchase or sell a yacht, charter a yacht, or open a conversation about putting your yacht into our charter management fleet, Worth Avenue Yachts is your team with worldwide offices and representation. Find out more about the service, expertise, market analysis and buyer network that makes Worth the first choice for hundreds of owners! YOUR CERTIFIED PROFESSIONAL YACHT BROKERS
206.623.5200 901 Fairview Ave. N, Suite A-150 Seattle, WA 98109 hamptonyachtgroup.com 85’ MCQUEEN 1984 60’ AZIMUT 1984 64’ NORTHERN MARINE 1998 2020 ENDURANCE 658 42’ LINDELL 2017 85’ BROWARD 1981 Robert Fiala 425.765.7850 Ben Johnson 425.508.3101 Pete Sponek 253.720.1917 Keith Walsh 206.931.7705 2017 ENDURANCE 658 46’ OCEAN ALEXANDER 2007 63’ HAMPTON 2008 AVAILABLE AT OUR DOCKS 52’ SUNSEEKER 2008 LOOKING FOR QUALIFIED BROKERS: EMAIL JENNY@HAMPTONYACHTGROUP.COM OR CALL 206.623.5200 52’ MIDNIGHT LACE 1983 31’ ALBIN 1998 63’ NORDLUND 1990 63’ HAMPTON 2008 BEAM: 20’0” STATEROOMS: 4 HEADS: 6
ON THE COVER Fore to aft, inside and out: Get your yacht in ship-shape this offseason with NW Luxe Concierge’s new detailing service, featured in The Current on page 30.
FEATURES DEPARTMENTS 48 54 8 A MORE PERFECT UNION
Vulcan’s new Lake Union Piers project aims to reconnect Seattle to its maritime heart. END OF THE LINE
Peter Marsh follows the long and winding route of one of the Northwest’s last wooden car ferries. 30 PHOTO BY RILEY DAGGS 14 From the Helm 16 Maritime Missives 20 Anchors Away 23 Making Waves: 30 The Current 32 Goods + Gear 36 Arrivals 42 Broker’s Best 64 Expert Take 68 Tight Lines 72 Racing Sheet 76 Sea Fare 80 Port of Call 82 Bon Voyage News + Nautical Notes
YOUR EXCLUSIVE HAMPTON & ENDURANCE PACIFIC NW DEALER 2023 Endurance 870 LRC | 2023 Hampton 650 PH Displacement: 89,500 lbs | Beam: 17’8” Cabins: 3 | Heads: 3 2023 Endurance 590 LRC Displacement: 90,000 lbs | Beam: 18’8”Cabins: 3 | Heads: 2 || 4 Stateroom / 6 Head Layout • New 20’ Beam Forward Galley • Aft Deck & Skylounge Day Heads Open Main Level • Full Crew Quarters 901 FAIRVIEW AVE N #A150 | SEATTLE, WA 98109 SEATTLE@HAMPTONYACHTGROUP.COM | 206.623.5200 | WWW.HAMPTONYACHTGROUP.COM AVAILABLE NOW AT OUR DOCKS
PORTLAND Jim Taylor SEATTLE Matt Maynard • Kevin Blake Jon Heisel • Paul Groesbeck SEATTLE (206) 632-2900 PORTLAND (503) 381-5467 1001 Fairview Ave N | Ste 1200 | Seattle, WA 98109 www.IrwinYachtSales.com EXCLUSIVE OUTER REEF YACHT REPRESENTATIVE 2001 | 54’ Offshore Yachts PH | $719,950 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 New Blackfin Models: • 332 Center Console - Special Order • 302 Dual Console - w/Joystick - On Order • 272 Dual Console - w/Joystick - In Stock • 272 Center Console - w/Joystick - In Stock • 252 Dual Console - Twin Engines - On Order • 252 Center Console - Twin Engines - In Stock • 222 Center Console - 250HP - On Order2022 | 27’ Blackfin 272CC 2022 | 27’ Blackfin 272DC 2022 | 25’ Blackfin 252CC 2018 | 35’ Four Winns Vista 355 | $289,900 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2004 | 41’ Rivolta PT Runner 4.0 | $259,999 Available in Portland (503) 381-5467 2007 | 38’ Sea Ray 380 Sundancer | $199,900 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 1999 | 38’ Sea Ray Sundancer | $129,900 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2011 | 43’ Mikelson Sportfisher | $649,950 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2016 | 33’ Sea Ray 330 Sundancer | $220,000 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2003 | 45’ Sea Ray 450 Express Bridge | $239,000 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2004 | 49’ Meridian Pilothouse | $339,950 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2002 | 70’ Marlow 70-E | $999,950 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2007 | 58’ Ocean Alexander 580 Pilothouse | $1,150,000 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2005 | 62’ Horizon Motoryacht | $849,000 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2007 | 37’ Four Winns 378 Vista | $165,000 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900 2005 | 40’ Formula 400SS | $199,900 Available in Seattle (206) 632-2900
The Northwest’s Premier Yacht Broker Network www.nwyachtnet.com Visit us online to see our large selection of quality sailboats! www.nwyachtnet.com Like Us on Facebook Dealers for new Linssen Dutch built steel Yachts 30’-50’ AMAZING CONDITION AND PEDIGREE $1,500,000 1932 78’ LUXURY MOTOR YACHT “LINMAR” 2000 Nordic Tugs 37 Boathouse kept, B&S Thrusters, Upgraded Electronics $289,000 1929 85’ Hoffar-Beeching (Boeing) Amazing custom yacht, boathouse available $1,299,000 1995 224’ Custom Paddle Wheeler “Emerald Queen” Amazing opportunity, unlimited potential, rated for 2000 passengers $3,900,000 2004 39’ Silverton MY Boathouse Kept, Stunning! $224,950 2007 Meridian 341 Sedan Wide body, Twin 330hp Cummins, One owner $209,000 2020 44’ Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 440 Amazing opportunity, Numerous upgrades $479,000 2009 North Pacific 43 Pilothouse Bow & Stern Thrusters, 2020 Zodiac, Transferable Moorage $349,900 1983 58’ Lien Hwa 58 Pilothouse Same owner since 1997, boathouse kept $299,500 2018 & 2019 Ranger Tugs R-23 Clean and well equipped Starting at $119,900 2013 Sea Ray 410 Sundancer Twin 380hp Cummins w/Zues drives with only 280 hours! $449,000 SOLD 1991 Tollycraft 57 Re-powered w/John Deere diesels, B&S thrusters, AC/Heat $299,900 Tacoma Waterfront 1717 Dock Street Tacoma, WA 98402 253-272-2858 Lake Union Waterfront 1500 Westlake Ave N, Suite 102 Seattle, WA 98109 206-301-9104 Olympia Waterfront 700 Marine Dr. NE, Suite 105 Olympia, WA 98501 360-705-9137 Gig Harbor Office 3019 Judson St. Suite D2 Gig Harbor, WA 98335 253-509-0319 Anacortes Office 910 11th Street, Suite B Anacortes, WA 98221 360-299-3988 SALE PENDING 2004 Meridian 490 Pilothouse Upgraded tender, thrusters, and electronics $349,900 2 TO CHOOSE FROM 2002 Navigator 48 Pilothouse Open floorplan, 360 view from the PH $339,000 2006 Navigator 4800 Classic One owner, Bow thruster, Clean! $449,950 SALE PENDING SALE PENDING
Fleming Yachts offers new & flexible layouts. NEW FLEMING YACHTS available for inspection. Over 30 years of consistent quality from Fleming Yachts. Solid fiberglass hulls, safe Portuguese Bridge with easy to board, low profile, serious cruising designs. NMMA Certified using ABYC standards, great performance & fuel economy and factory & dealer support make the Fleming Yachts difference. New addition for 2022 is the new model Fleming 85! Contact us for the latest Fleming updates. West Coast Dealer for FLEMING 55, 58, 65, 78, 85 FLEMING85FLEMING58 FLEMING65 NEWPORT BEACH SAN DIEGO SEATTLE Lido Yacht Anchorage Safe Harbor Sunroad – Harbor Island Lake Union Piers - Lake Union 717 Lido Park Drive, Suite A, Newport Beach, CA 92663 955 Harbor Island Dr. #112, San Diego, CA 92101 901 Fairview Ave. N., Suite C150, Seattle, WA 98109 (949) 675-8092 | Fax: (949) 673-1037 (619) 222-0626 | Fax: (619) 222-1695 (206) 624-1908 | Fax: (206) 624-3870 WWW.CHUCKHOVEYYACHTS.COM INFO@CHUCKHOVEYYACHTS.COM 44’ TOLLYCRAFT 1992 Twin CAT diesels, Wesmar bow thruster & Yacht Controller system. Multi-boat owner ready for offers! NOW $174,500 72’ HATTERAS 1988 Factory extension provides large salon plus sports cockpit. Full beam master w/dressing room. $695,000 68’ NORDLUND Must see! 3 staterooms. Designed and built for safe and dependable long range cruising and fishing. $1,000,000 53’ ELCO MOTORYACHT 1939 A rare opportunity to own this classic! First time on market in over two decades. $149,999 BOATHOUSE OPTION AVAILABLE FLEMING 55 2006 Standing tall and ready to cruise! $1,350,000 FLEMING 55 1992 Freshwater kept. Many recent updates. $750,000 72’ HELICOPTER LANDING & SUPPORT VESSEL Expansive flight lounge with galley & powder room. Impeccably maintained. $1,585,000 DEALER OF FINE YACHTS 94’ THACKWRAY Private interior combined with safe, easy doublehanded sailing in a tough long range cruiser. $895,000 GORGEOUS CLASSIC 59’ CUSTOM A true motorsailor with lots of interior light, Atlas diesel, immaculate woodwork, modern galley, electronics. $319,000 38’ BAYLINER COCKPIT MY 1990 Two staterooms, 2 heads. Spacious salon & galley. Tastefully updated & ready to cruise. $72,500 46’ VIKING SPORT CRUISER 1996 Extensive updates throughout vessel. Three staterooms, two heads & spacious main salon. $359,000 33’ SEA RAY 1993 This classically styled Sea Ray 330 is waiting for you! Outfitted for year round cruising. $45,000 REDUCED100’ FRIDAY HARBOR END TIE CAN TRANSFER 50’ DEFEVER 1970 Lovingly refit by shipwright owners, CAT diesel + get home & genset. Galley integrated with salon. $155,000 PREMIERDISPLAYSLIPSAVAILABLE FORYOURQUALITYLISTING

HERE COMES THE 2023 RIVIERA 4600 SPORT YACHT PLATINUM EDITION.

PHOTO COURTESY OF RIVIERA

Wave of the Future

This issue of Northwest Yachting is filled with both poignant farewells and future plans, a combination that feels fitting for the month of November as we wind down from a busy 2022 boating season and start to ramp up for more on-water adventures in 2023.

This past summer, many of us were saddened to learn the 1924 wooden car ferry, Tourist No.2, had sank off the coast of Astoria. Well-loved in the Seattle area from her days as an Argosy cruiser (known then under the name M.V. Kirkland), her end was no “ferry tale.” However, our friend Peter Marsh has crafted a loving goodbye to the vessel on pages 54-61 as he examines the long and winding history of this Northwest treasure. Shifting our focus back to the horizon, there’s also much to be excited about. Beginning on page 48, Randy Woods takes an inside look at one of the year’s most anticipated developments: the reimagining of the old Chandler’s Cove Marina on Lake Union in Seattle as Lake Union Piers. With this project, Vulcan Real Estate seeks to reconnect the lake to the downtown core and draw more people to the shores of our maritime hub.

The changeover to 2023 just ahead also means new yachts, and this month’s Arrivals (pages 36-39) include two new-to-the-Northwest models, as well as fresh services like NW Luxe Concierge’s new yacht detailing service found in The Current on page 30. Mark Yuasa will have you feeling crabby in the best possible way as he outlines crabbing season (page 68); we chronicle all the offseason upgrades happening at area marinas in Making Waves beginning on page 23; and finally, on pages 64-65, boatwright Tom Jacobs of The Center for Wooden Boats takes us inside the boatshop for a look at a restoration effort that is set to conclude by the time those glorious spring boating months come back around again.

Until next month,

Kate Calamusa Editor Say hi: kate@nwyachting.com

CRUISE ALONG WITH US ONLINE: Visit our website at: nwyachting.com facebook.com/NorthwestYachting instagram.com/nwyachting

Publisher & Advertising Sales Michelle Zeasman-Gibbon

Associate Publisher

Michelle DeRouen michelled@nwyachting.com 206.445.5453

Editor Kate Calamusa

Creative D irector Lou Maxon

Advertising D esign Christin Couvreux

Advertising Sales Craig Perry craig@nwyachting.com 206.391.6431

New Advertising Sales Inquiries 206.789.8116

Columnists

Lori Eastes

James O. Fraioli Doug Hansen Andrew Hoge Randy Woods Mark Yuasa

Copy Editor

Seanna Browder

Facilities Maurice McPherson

Office Mascot Pearl

General Inquiries: 206.789.8116

Published monthly by SKT Publishers, Inc. 7342 15th Ave. NW, Seattle, WA 98117

14 AT THE HELM [ EDITOR’S LETTER ]
©2022 Northwest Yachting. All rights reserved. Any use of Northwest Yachting materials, without the expressed written permission of the Publisher is specifically prohibited. While we welcome letters and photos, we cannot be held responsible for unsolicited materials. Views expressed by individual Northwest Yachting contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the magazine.
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MARITIME MISSIVES

[ GETTIN’ SOCIAL ] Parks & Rec

Our October issue story on the Recreational Boating Association of Washington received raves online; we were honored to help spread the word about this awesome local organization.

@Dorothy Dubia: Nice article. Thanks to the current leadership of RBAW for your efforts to raise the group’s impact and image.

@Recreational Boating Association of Washington: As a boater, and now a member of the RBAW Board, I am so proud of our legacy as well as the bold partnerships we

]

History Lesson

This month’s feature about the long and varied history of the Tourist No.2 ferry beginning on page 54 was inspired by our friend Peter Marsh’s own eyewitness account of her sinking off the coast of Astoria this past summer. As he wrote in an email following the event: “I was going to wait a while before producing another local story, but I couldn’t avoid covering the last days of the Tourist No.2, the last Astoria ferry that was built in 1924. Watching the old ferry sink just a few feet from shore, then see it crushed by a demolition team, gave me no choice but to put some of my past research of the boat to use to explain how this all came about.” While it was certainly not the ending any of us would have wished for the beloved vessel, we hope Marsh’s stirring story and the beautiful send-off illustration by Tavis Coburn helps to bid her a fond farewell.

PLYING THE WATERS IN 1925.

[ SNAPSHOTS, MAIL, AND ON THE WATER TALES FROM OUR EXTENDED CREW—YOU! ] 16
[ INSIDER TAKE
1110 12TH STREET | ANACORTES, WASHINGTON 98221 | PHONE: (206) 775-7808 15 LOCATIONS WORLDWIDE SEEKING NEW LISTINGS – CALL FOR A CUSTOM MARKETING PLAN EXCEEDING EXPECTATIONS SINCE 1970 GALATI YACHTS .COM 2012 Sunseeker 40M | $15,900,000 Nick 941.720.1321 1994 Oceanco 126 Raised Pilothouse | $3,495,000 Nick 941.720.1321 1982 Broward 98 Motor Yacht | $850,000 Steve 619.405.5044 2014 Ferretti Yachts F800 | $3,250,000 Chad 949.566.3355 2022 Viking 72 C | $7,995,000 | Nick 941.720.1321 2017 Viking 72 EB C | $5,795,000 | Will 443.610.2861 2021 Viking 62 C | $5,725,000 Ian 562.505.3502 2013 Sabre 48 Salon Express | $859,500 Geoff 949.510.4073 2005 Pershing 76 MY | $1,045,000 Nick 941.720.1321 2011 Viking 70 EB | $3,595,000 | Nick 941.720.1321 2016 Viking 70 C | $4,195,000 | Michael 941.725.2782 1999 West Bay 58 Pilot House | $749,000 Chad 949.566.3355 1997 Symbol 47 Motor Yacht | $149,000 Geoff 949.510.4073 2008 Titan 75 SB | $1,895,000 Darin 619.944.2817 2000 Hatteras 70 C | $899,900 Brett 949.456.6412 2018 Prestige 560 FB | $1,340,000 Chad 949.566.3355 2013 Grand Banks 46SX Eastbay | $815,500 Geoff 949.510.4073 2006 Viking 74 C $2,395,000 | Darin 619.944.2817 2006 Viking 74 C | $2,495,000 | Nick 941.720.1321 2005 Viking 74 EB | $2,150,000 | Jim 941.228.0530 2003 Ferretti Yachts 680 MY | $889,000 Chad 949.566.3355 2015 Viking 52 SC | $1,599,000 Chad 949.566.3355 2001 Custom 85 Bruce Roberts Waverunner | $1,450,000 Joe 714.336.1460 2010 Viking 82 Enclosed SB | $4,750,000 Brad 562.755.2725 SHOP ALL OF OUR LISTINGS WORLDWIDE AT GALATIYACHTS.COM
48’ CUSTOM SPRAGUE 2006 - Great custom steel long-distance offshore vessel, designed & built for the NW, bow thruster, stabilizers. Contact Dan Wood. 83’ BURGER 1967 - Once in a lifetime special vessel, kept in state of the art boathouse, cared for by knowledgeable yachtsman, fresh paint. Contact Dan Wood. 74’ HORIZON V74 2011 - Enclosed bridge, 3 staterooms plus crew, captain-maintained, boat is painted, CAT power, 20’ 6” beam. Contact Dan Wood. 36’ GRAND BANKS CLASSIC 1973 - Lots of upgrades, always well maintained, extremely clean, recently cruised for 75 days, must see! Vic Parcells. 48’ HATTERAS MOTORYACHT 1981 - Live aboard moorage available, 3 staterooms, huge aft stateroom & aft deck, 6V92 mains, new generator, fresh water kept. Contact Dan Wood. 36’ CHRIS-CRAFT CORVETTE 1954 - Restored, all-original, a joy to run. Everything works, true head-turner, just gorgeous. Contact Vic Parcells. 43’ PRINCESS FLYBRIDGE 2018 - Factory ordered with all the options by multiple Princess owner, extremely well cared for, long list of equipment. Contact Dan Wood. 52’ MIDNIGHT LACE 2005 - Twin CAT C-9, heat/ac, Webasto,
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98’ VERSILCRAFT SUPER CHALLENGER 1987 MARAD waiver. Captain-maintained full-time, constant upgrades through the years. Contact Dan Wood. NEW LISTING NEW LISTING SAN DIEGOSEATTLE NEWPORT BEACH For instant listing updates, follow us on social media! SEATTLE OFFICE (206) 625-1580 WWW.CROWSNESTYACHTS.COM Each Crow’s Nest Yachts office is independently owned & operated.
WWW.EPYACHTS.COM | 206.587.0660 | INFO@EPYACHTS.COM 1419 NE BOAT ST. STE 100 SEATTLE, WA 98105 66’ BELIZE SEDAN 2019 | $2,995,000 42’ LINDELL 2018 | $995,000 70’ HOLLAND RPH 2002 | $1,450,000 68’ CUSTOM WILLIAM BREES 1999| $795,000 58’ WEST BAY SONSHIP 2002 | $949,000 57’ RIVIERA EB 2017 | $1,795,000 56’ MARITIMO 2010 | $975,000 51’ SEA RAY SUNDANCER 2014 | $779,000 50’ RIVIERA EB 2014 | $1,195,000 50’ RIVIERA 505 SUV 2023

ANCHORS AWAY

]

NOVEMBER 11

NORTHWEST SEAPORT CHANTEY SING

Aboard the Steamer Virginia V at Lake Union Park in Seattle Gather aboard the newly restored 1922 Virginia V steamship for a free sea chantey sing-along hosted by the fine folks of Northwest Seaport, a local non-profit dedicated to preserving historic vessels and keeping the seafaring spirit alive and well.

More info: nwseaport.org

NOVEMBER 25

CHRISTMAS SHIP FESTIVAL OPENING NIGHT

Pier 55 on the Seattle Waterfront Kick off the holiday season with Argosy Cruises as they celebrate the beginning of the 72nd annual Christmas Ship™ Festival. Santa will lead the countdown to light up the Christmas Ship™ with hundreds of shimmery lights and signal the start of the 17-day festival. This year’s Opening Night festivities include two sailings plus a new opening night event that includes photo ops with Santa, hot beverages and snacks, plus giveaways all on the dock.

More info: argosycruises.com/christmas-shipfestival-schedule/

NOVEMBER 11-12

MARINE SYSTEMS: A LESSON IN TROUBLESHOOTING & TRIAGE

Northwest Maritime Center in Port Townsend

Join Matt Steverson, an experienced sailor and marine systems expert, for a weekend-long workshop that gives an overview of the basic systems of a boat, how they work, and what to do when they don’t. Marine electrical, marine plumb ing, steering and controls, hydraulics, heating, and propulsion will all be covered through hands-on learning. Be sure to register ahead on the website to secure your spot (course fee is $179).

More info: nwmaritime.org/events/

>> Do you have an event you’d like to share? Need help spreading the word? You can now submit events on our website for publication consideration online and in print. Go to nwyachting.com/events for more details.

[ RENDEZVOUS, OPEN HOUSES + OTHER SPECIAL EVENTS SET TO EMBARK SOON
20
Elliott Bay Marina 2601 West Marina Place, Suite D Seattle, Washington 98199 Phone: 206.285.9563 Email: info@elliottbayyachtsales.com Web: www.elliottbayyachtsales.com 48’ Townsend 42’ Lien Hwa 32’ Grand Banks 40’ Hunter 32’ Nauticat E lliott B ay y acht S alES B rokEragE t Eam Paul Jenkins Bill O’Brien Mark Lindeman 206.793.3529 206.849.8497 253.851.4497 P owErBoatS 65’ Cheoy Lee PH MY ’00 $795,000 50’ Ocean Alexander PH Mk I ’78... $199,000 47’ Townsend Motorsailor ’03 $350,000 47’ Lien Hwa MK III ’87 ................$179,000 42’ Lien Hwa ’88 $120,000 38’ Eastbay ’00 ............................ $275,000 38’ Ocean Alexander ’86 $135,000 32’ Grand Banks Sedan ’88 $89,500 30’ Skipjack FB ’11 $265,000 28’ Albin ’06 $125,000 S ailBoatS 44’ Worldcruiser Schooner ‘79 $275,000 41’ CMS Cutter ‘78 $120,000 41’ Beneteau ’00 ........................... $95,000 40’ Hunter ’13 $185,000 38’ Sabre ’10 ............................... $260,000 32’ Nauticat ‘00 $187,500 38’ Eastbay “Premier Cru” 30’ Skipjack “Jackie II” 52’ Tayana 41’ CMS “Sand Dollar” 38’ Sabre “Umbria” 65’ Cheoy Lee “Happiness”
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MAKING WAVES

Makeover Continues: Port of Everett Working to Upgrade Fuel Dock Facilities

As the busiest boating months have bid us adieu, the Port of Everett is making the best of the quieter months ahead as the Port Commission recently awarded a $2 million construction contract to Glacier Environmental Services to replace the Port’s upland underground fuel tanks that service the marina fuel dock.

This is one of many upgrades coming to the burgeoning Port facilities, which have undergone a significant transformation over the past couple of years. The work, which began in mid-September, represents the first phase of a two-part project to upgrade the Port’s aging fuel dock facility that not only supports Everett’s boating community, but also fuels national defense.

“The Port of Everett is a great partner and supporter of our national defense mission,” said Captain Josh Menzel, commanding officer of Naval Station Everett. “We rely on their fuel dock to refuel security boats and other small vessels. Improvements to the fuel dock improves access for boats used by security, divers, ship maintenance, and reserve units. This is especially important in times of emergency. We greatly appreciate the Port as our neighbor and strategic partner.”

The Port of Everett is the largest public marina on the West Coast with 2,300 slips and 5,000 lineal feet of guest moorage. Thousands of slipholders, visiting boaters, a range of recreational and commercial fishermen, tourism operators, and commercial vessels like the Hat Island Ferry also fuel up here. The U.S. Coast Guard, City of Everett Police and

Fire Departments, Snohomish County Sheriff’s and tribal partners will also benefit from an upgraded fuel dock, stated the Port Commission, which also refuels their vessels at the marina to support critical emergency response in the area.

“We are excited to get this fuel dock project underway to enhance this critical asset and better meet our growing facility demands here at the Marina,” said Jeff Lindhout, Port of Everett’s Chief of Marina Operations.

“Over the past two decades, we have invested more than $120 million in marina recapitalization and upgrades, and we will continue to do so to ensure Everett continues to be the boater’s choice.”

This project involves the installation of two new 30,000-gallon underground tanks—one for diesel, the other for gas—in the Central Marina parking lot, followed by the removal of the existing gas and diesel tanks.

The second phase of the project, to take place next summer, includes dock relocation and reconfiguration to enhance the layout for vessels fueling up.

In its current location at Central A-Dock, strong currents often create challenges when refueling at low tide. The work will thus include the demolition of Central A- and B-Docks. A new 500-foot dock will be built east of the current location. The existing fuel dock will remain open for the duration of the project. It will be demolished and removed once the new facility is operational. The Marina will be working directly with slipholders in the area on relocation plans during this work.

For more information on the latest developments visit: portofeverett.com.

23
[ NAUTICAL NEWS + NOTES ]
[ CONSTRUCTION ZONE ] Marina
PHOTO COURTESY OF PORT OF EVERETT

MAKING WAVES

Point Hudson Marina in Port Townsend Closed for Jetty Replacement

In another instance of important offseason maintenance work, the popular Point Hudson in Port Townsend is currently closed through early 2023 as the Port works to replace the two jetties that protect the entrance to the marina.

The jetties were originally built in 1934, when the U.S. government constructed an immigration and quarantine center on site that later became a U.S. Coast Guard station. (At that same time, the government also built the iconic white-washed buildings that make up the historic landscape surrounding the marina.) In recent years, the deterioration of the 88-year-old jetties has threatened safety of the marina, with its 50 boater slips, as winter storms combined with king tides have allowed rising waters to surge through the marina.

The Port of Port Townsend Commission sought voter approval in 2019 for an Industrial Develop ment District (IDD) levy to help fund the rebuild of the jetties. Voters agreed and those funds have been used to leverage millions in other dollars from various entities now earmarked as part of the estimated $16.2 million construction cost of replacing both jetties over two years.

The construction currently underway is being guided by Orion Marine Contractors of Tacoma and the marina is only accessible to vessels coming into the SEA Marine haulout.

At a groundbreaking ceremony at the edge of the marina held September 14, Port Executive Director Eron Berg credited strong teamwork and assis tance from many government entities for bringing

the project to fruition. Behind him, a barged crane from Orion had already started its work.

The work on the north jetty is expected to be completed by March 1, 2023. In September 2023, after the Wooden Boat Festival, the south jetty (closest to downtown Port Townsend) is scheduled for rebuild.

The marina will again close until the work is done; completion is expected by March 1, 2024.

For the latest details on the jetty replacement, go to: portofpt.com

[ NAUTICAL NEWS + NOTES ]
[ MORE MARINA UPGRADES ]
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BENETEAU GRAN TURISMO 32 2023 The new Gran Turismo 32 is designed to optimize time on board with spacious living space. Natural light and ventilation are a priority on board. With a zip wake dynamic trim control system, challenging navigation becomes second nature. The GT32 design is true to her line with some innovative touches, with a large built-in sun mattress and optional sun awning. Twin Mercury 300 Verado JPO Engines. FEATURES: • AIR STEP Hull • Retractable Canopy • Spacious forward sun lounger, lifting backrests 65' CUSTOM 1959 | DE ANZA III $379,000 $1,435,160 $939,000 SEATTLE, WA SEATTLE, WA SEATTLE, WA 44 CABO 2012 | FLYING CLOUD48' BENETEAU 2024 | ON ORDER ARRIVING | FALL 2023 DENISON SEATTLE | 206-686-5400 | DenisonYachting.com
844.692.2487 SEATTLEYACHTS.COM WASHINGTON CALIFORNIA FLORIDA MARYLAND CANADA PHILIPPINES 2024 Endurance 658L COMING SOON! LIVE THE ADVENTURE SEA BEYOND
2019 KingFisher 3425 $430,000 Justin Parkins 208.755.1437 2012 Salish Sea IS48 $995,000 Martin Snyder 206.423.1302 2003 Meridian 540 $475,000 Sarah Burleson 425.870.3154 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 SELL YOUR BOAT! LIST WITH US! 2001 Symbol 66 PH $695,000 Martin Snyder 206.423.1302 2024 Northwest 63 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 2022 Excess 11 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 2024 Northern Marine 64 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 2023 Nimbus T11 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 2019 Tartan 395 $549,000 Rob Fuller 207.233.8846 2024 Endurance 658L Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 2022 Northern Marine 57 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 IN STOCK 2017 Nordic Tug 40 $750,000 Jeff Gleckler 360.202.2290 2022 Hanse 458 Seattle Yachts 844.692.2487 ARRIVING SOON IN STOCK IN STOCK IN BUILD IN BUILD IN BUILD 2009 Tartan 5300 $925,000 Rob Fuller 207.233.8846

MAKING WAVES

Over 60 Sailors, 30-Plus Boats Set Sail for the 17th Annual Norm Blanchard W.O.O.D. Regatta

Good breeze, bright skies, beautiful boats: All in all, this year’s Norm Blanchard W.O.O.D. (Wood Open & One Design) Regatta held on September 24 was one for the books, as The Center for Wooden Boat’s annual event welcomed over 60 sailors and 30-plus boats to Lake Union for a day of racing and celebration. One of the few wood-focused racing events in the area, the full day of racing is named in homage to Norm Blanchard, a local boatbuilder who deeply influenced the history of Lake Union, as the Blanchard Boat Company turned out more than 2,000 boats in 60-plus years over the course of the past century. The highly coveted designs continue to inspire many wooden boat aficionados today.

(Case in point: see this month’s Expert Take on pages 64-65 for an inside look at the current restoration underway at CWB on three Blanchard Junior Knockabouts.)

During this year’s event, which spanned across four races, five Norm Blanchard-built boats that are over 70 years old participated, as did eight other vessels from CWB’s own fleet. Sailors and spectators alike came together in the name of community as over 150 gathered for the races and a post-event barbecue.

Part of CWB’s mission is to create further access to the water, so sailors of all skill levels were welcomed in the regatta, whether as part of a crew or skippering their own vessel. “The fleet was diverse, ranging from 8 to 32 feet across Pelicans, Thunderbirds, Lightnings, and El Toros, with sailors ages 10 to 70+, bringing decades of experience or as brand new SailNOW grads,” wrote CWB in a recap. “The 2022 Regatta was one great, wonderful adventure.”

For more details on CWB, and to keep an eye out for information on next year’s regatta, visit: cwb.org

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[ NAUTICAL NEWS + NOTES ]
[ REGATTA RECAP ] PHOTO BY ANNA COUMOU

ITS ONLY LIMITATION IS

IMAGINATION

With trans-oceanic range, superb seakeeping ability, and a dedication to liveability, a Krogen will effortlessly take you on your next adventure. Whether you’re considering a trek through the Caribbean, exploring the Inside Passage, undertaking a Scandinavian adventure, or explor ing the Sea of Cortez, Kadey-Krogen’s exclusive Pure Full Displacement hull is a masterpiece of blue water hull design that will ensure these long passages are safe and comfortable. Moreover, what sets every Krogen apart are the unrivaled comfort and attention to the details that will fully embrace you once a crossing is complete and it’s time to explore your new destination. What are you waiting for?

The Krogen 48 AE heads out for another adventure.
YOUR
999 N. Northlake Way, Ste 210, Seattle, WA 98103 n +1.206.769.5728 n yourcrew@kadeykrogen.com n kadeykrogen.com 1996 TOLLYCRAFT 48 CPMY Highlights include updated electronics, stabilizers, and 2-staterooms. 2021 KROGEN 52 Exceptional long-distance cruiser with fresh contemporary interior. Ready to go! 1987 KROGEN 42 One of the best 42s available. 700 hrs SMOH. Stabilizers, thrusters, and more.
SELECT BROKERAGE LISTINGS

THE CURRENT

Detail Oriented

Seattle’s NW Luxe Concierge takes the drudgery out of boat maintenance with their yacht detailing service.

Joe Holberg and Christina DiRocco know a thing or ninety-two about yachts. Before launching NW Luxe Concierge last year—a Seattle-based customized lifestyle concierge firm that offers everything from home management and personal assistance to chef services—the duo spent years at sea managing the day-to-day on both private and charter yachts of all shapes and sizes.

“The inception of NW Luxe stemmed from the idea that time is the most precious commodity we all have,” explains DiRocco. “And after being in the service and yachting industries for so long, we realized we could help busy individuals reclaim a lot of that time by having them relegate tedious life tasks to us.”

Which is why DiRocco and Holberg are ready to cast off with a new service built especially for busy boaters: yacht detailing and maintenance. The pair can tick off pre-voyage tasks—such as cleaning vents, checking components, and taking inventory—as well as analyze wear and tear spots, tackle deep cleaning,

recommend vendors to make repairs onboard, lend expertise on appropriate maritime cleaning products, or even help organize spaces such as the galley to make life on board smooth sailing. These assistants can be incorporated into a larger home maintenance or personal assistance package (services are booked by the hour; clients can then choose where to allot those hours between home and boat), or you can simply book vessel upkeep. One additional available perk: Holberg, a trained Culinary Arts Program and pastry chef who received additional schooling in France, can be booked for private dinner parties on board. “I think a lot of boat owners underestimate how much time it takes to really upkeep a boat or are overwhelmed by the idea of it,” concludes DiRocco. “Our goal is to lend our expertise so that the maintenance side no longer limits the time you get to be out on the water.” For more information on NW Luxe Concierge’s services or to book a free consultation, go to: nwluxeconcierge.com

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[ HOP ON BOARD WITH THESE FRESH FIXATIONS FROM OUR LOG BOOK ]

GOODS + GEAR

Give a Shuck About Women in Aquaculture

Oyster farming has always been an important cog in the Northwest’s thriving aquaculture industry. Now, you can show your support for training more women of color to take up careers in the shellfish business with these creative, limited-edition T-shirts. Featuring “Girls Like to Shuck” artwork, showing two hands opening a bivalve with an oyster knife, the crew-neck shirts are a collaboration between Taylor Shellfish Farms and Vancouver, British Columbia-based Fanny Bay Oysters. In this “Girls That Shuck” fundraiser, $10 from the sale of every shirt will be donated to Minorities in Aquaculture, a nonprofit group that helps educate women of color about careers in the industry. $22.00 for tee; $28.50 for ¾-sleeve // taylorshellfishfarms.com

Stick Your Neck Out with a Helly Hansen Scarf

As we head toward the 50th anniversary of The Ocean Race, a grueling, six-month-long, round-theworld test of wills, Helly Hansen is offering this exclusive infinity scarf to stay toasty on those cold mornings, whether you’re moored in Puget Sound or out cruising on a blue water adventure. As the official clothing supplier of The Ocean Race (set to shove off from Alicante, Spain, in January), HH has been a sponsor of the world’s toughest and longest sporting event every year since its inception in 1973. This unisex, navy, Polartec neck warmer features The Ocean Race logo as well as a world map showing the route to all nine ports the racers will visit during the 2023 journey. It’s a great way to cheer the teams on in style. $16 // hellyhansen.com

You Cannot Escape This Attractive Black Hole Tote

What can hold more stuff than a black hole?

Perhaps consider Patagonia’s Black Hole gear tote. This roomy, 61-liter bag is able to pack in all the gear you need for your next boating excursion, from a change of clothes to binoculars to nautical charts to lunch supplies. Made with abrasion- and waterresistant, 100% postconsumer-recycled-ripstoppolyester, this tote is feather light but super strong, with reinforced nylon handles sturdy enough to defy gravity. The bag also features an exterior zippered packet for valuables and many elastic loopholes to hold small items on the outside. It looks great, too, with colorful trout artwork against a black background. $119 // rei.com

[ SMART GADGETS AND STYLISH PRODUCTS THAT REALLY FLOAT OUR BOAT ]
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Columbia’s Slack Water Sneaker Grips Decks Tight

It may look like an ordinary mesh sneaker, meant for a casual stroll in town. But don’t let its sophisticated looks fool you—this Slack Water footwear from Columbia can take the punishment of any sturdy boat shoe. Constructed with an antimicrobialtreated footbed, a Techlite EVA midsole, and an Omni-Grip outsole with razor siping, the sneakers keep a firm grip on slick docks and provide plenty of shock absorption for climbing deck ladders. The shoe only weighs about 8 ounces, so you’ll hardly feel like you’re wearing them, even after a long day on your feet. Plus, the versatile low-top silhouette allows you to wear them back on land with most outfits. $47.98 // columbia.com

ROKK Out with This Wireless Nest Charger

These days, you need a smartphone to control just about everything on board, so a charger that can handle multiple phones without the deck-clogging mess of power cords is a nautical necessity. This waterproof ROKK IPX6 nest charger from Scanstrut will do the trick, with the ability to recharge several phones wirelessly at once, just by placing them in the 7” x 3.5” tray. Built with a rubberized mat and rounded corners to prevent snagging, the 12/24V, Qi-certified IPX6 ensures your phone will stay put and protected, even on heaving decks. The unit also comes with four mounting screws, allowing you to attach the charger to consoles, seating, cabinetry, or any place you want to keep your phone secure. $85 // Available from Fish eries Supply in Seattle, fisheriessupply.com

Don’t Toss It, Aquaseal It

Tired of tossing out water-resistant gear that develops cracks over time? With Aquaseal NEO Cement, small holes and abrasions can be repaired in a jiffy, keeping older equipment as good as new. The black contact cement is formulated to permanently seal most synthetic fabrics, surfaces, and neoprene items, including waders, booties, gloves, and spray skirts. The cement cures in 20 to 30 minutes, providing a tight but flexible bond, allowing your gear to bend and stretch naturally while retaining its watertight properties. The compact, 1.5-ounce tube can be tucked in tackle boxes, backpacks, or fishing jackets, ensuring you can make instant repairs on the go.

$7.49

// westmarine.com 33
OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY Twin Cummins 380 HP diesels with 419 hours, generator, air conditioning/reverse cycle heating, new walker bay dinghy and power davit system, full galley equipped, two staterooms, one head, anchor windlass with anchor kit, satellite TV, fleur night vision, oil change system and much more! Sale Price $649,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 2012 SABRE 42 SALON EXPRESS Twin Cummins 370 HP diesels, transferable Anacortes moorage, generator, bimini top with full enclosure, lower helm, up galley, ice maker, dinghy with davit, two staterooms with two heads with separate showers, clean and ready to go! 1998 MAXUM 4600 SEDAN Twin 5.7 Ltr. MerCruiser engines with 135 hours, bimini top with full enclosure, Raymarine C-120 radar/gps plotter/fish finder, anchor windlass with anchor kit, set up for fishing with two scotty electric downriggers, microwave, 2 burner stove, transom staples, enclosed head with shower, clean and shiny! Sale Price $65,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 1987 BAYLINER 4588 PILOTHOUSE Twin 220 HP Hino diesels, full electronics, newer dinghy with outboard, upgraded heads, ice maker, bimini top, diesel furnace, generator, new bottom paint and zincs, boat is ready to go! Sale Price $109,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 WWW.BOYNTONYACHTS.COM 206.949.6866 • DAVE@BOYNTONYACHTS.COM • EXPERIENCED SERVICE, QUALITY BOATS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF MY 37 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN THE YACHT BUSINESS, WHETHER BUYING OR SELLING OWNER DAVE BOYNTON 1999 CARVER 530 PILOTHOUSE Twin Cummins 450 HP, bow and stern thrusters, satellite TV ant, air conditioning/heating, generator, water maker, inverter, upgraded interior, full electronics, full bridge enclosure, ice maker, anchor windlass with anchor kit, three staterooms, two heads with two separate showers, excellent condition! Sale Price $349,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 PREMIERE BROKERAGE MOORAGE AVAILABLE IN EVERETT FOR SELECT YACHTS 50 TO 70 FEET 2000 NAVIGATOR 53 PILOTHOUSE Twin Volvo 370 HP diesels, bow and stern thrusters, watermaker, air conditioning/reverse cycle heating, diesel furnace, inverter, generator, new upholstery, newer carpets, full electronics, 3 staterooms, two heads, vacuflush toilets, bimini top, anchor windlass with anchor kit, 3 burner stove with oven, big refrigerator and much more! Sale Price $349,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 Twin 480 HP Cummins diesels, V drive system with joy stick and bow thruster control, generator, air conditioning heating, dinghy with davit, Raymarine electronics, two staterooms with two heads with separate showers, bimini top, up galley with tons of storage, transom built in BBQ center, and lots more! Sale Price $695,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 2016 SEA RAY 400 FLY 2005 BAYLINER 325 SUNBRIDGE 2000 BAYLINER 5788 PILOTHOUSE Twin MAN 610 HP diesels, bow thruster, diesel heat, air conditioning, new electronics, new Seadec decking, new upholstery on bridge, new bimini top, inverter, generator, dinghy with console and outboard, washer/dryer, ice maker, full galley equipped and much more! Sale Price $449,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866 Sale Price $155,000 Call Dave Boynton at 206-949-6866
As an independent agent, we represent many companies and are able to find the coverage that best meets your specific needs. CHRIS GIBBON Cell: 206-949-8381 Office: 253-473-3010 chrisg@fournierinsurance.com MARINE YACHT HOME AUTO BUSINESS LIFE Serving the Puget Sound Since 1977 fournierinsurance.com

ARRIVALS

2023 Riviera 4600 Sport Yacht

Platinum Edition

Coming soon to Emerald Pacific Yachts, Riviera’s much anticipated new Sport Yacht is speedy, sleek, and stunning.

Making its Pacific Northwest debut next month as it arrives at Emerald Pacific Yachts in a sleek all-white hull, the new Riviera 4600 Sport Yacht Platinum Edition is powered with upgraded twin 600hp Volvo engines for an extra kick. A collaboration between Riviera and 4D Designs, this Aussie stunner is dripping with swanky appointments and customized options, including premium

fabrics, high-gloss walnut cabinetry, and plush stateroom carpeting. The Riviera Platinum package features a hardtop with two electric sunroofs and a targa arch. Even when it’s at anchor, the 4600 looks like it’s in motion.

The 4600 makes a memorable entrance from the cockpit, which includes a swim platform large enough to handle tenders up

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[ NOVEMBER 2022 ]

to 9 feet long. The hi-lo swim platform can be raised hydraulically to three positions, and a garage under the cockpit can stow a wide range of water sports equipment. The cockpit also has a luxurious portside wrap-around lounge with cushioned seating, and is equipped with an icebox, a folding table, a barbecue grill, an ice maker, and a sink.

Entering via a sliding glass door, visitors will find an airy salon with an inviting, U-shaped settee surrounding a polished timber dining table with space for up to six people. Guests can find further entertainment choices via an electric-lift 43” TV built into the dash forward on the starboard side. Aft of the settee to port is a galley with a dual-element electric cooktop, a combination microwave oven, and a grill. Opposite, another benchtop space houses a liquor cabinet, a 40-gallon refrigerator, and a 13-gallon freezer. The foredeck provides room for sun worshippers with triple sun pads and adjustable headrests.

Immediately forward of the galley, the helm includes twin leather and Alcantara sports seats facing a dash equipped with a tilt-adjustable sports wheel. Comprehensive Volvo Penta engine controls include a joystick and C-zone control panel. The electronics package features a full suite of Garmin devices, such as an AIS 800 Transceiver, a GMI 20 multifunction display, two 10” glass bridge screens, and a 4kW 72 NM open-array radar.

Belowdecks, the three-stateroom option features accommodations bathed in natural daylight streaming through super wide windows that run nearly the length of the boat. The full-beam owner’s suite amidships includes an oversize, centerline queen bed, with bedside tables and a chaise lounge to port. The en suite head is set forward on the starboard side. The VIP guest stateroom forward includes an island double bed and a head located aft to starboard that can be used either as an en suite or as a day head. The pullman berth port cabin can be replaced by an optional lower deck lounge or space for a clothes washer/dryer.

Specs & Info

LOA 50’3”

15’5”

Tankage (Fuel/Fresh/Black)

555 gal. / 164 gal. / 40 gal.

Engines

Twin Volvo 600hp

Contact

Emerald Pacific Yachts Seattle, WA 206.587.0660 info@epyachts.com epyachts.com

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Beam
Draft 4’3”

ARRIVALS

Summit

Motoryacht

38 Kadey-Krogen introduces the Summit 54 to the Northwest; a high quality cruiser that can go the distance in style.
[ NOVEMBER 2022 ]
54

Seattle welcomed Kadey-Krogen Yachts a few months ago to its new office in Fremont. Now the Florida-based yacht maker is returning the hospitality with its latest flagship boat, the Summit 54, debuting in the Northwest. A joint effort by Kadey-Krogen and naval architect Michael Peters, the 54 is designed for luxurious, high quality cruising and nonstop entertainment options.

Coming aboard from the aft swim platform with teak decking, visitors are greeted two steps up by a comfortable cockpit seating area, with upholstered seating and barstools around a handcrafted teak table. A grilling station allows for the making and serving of meals in a covered open-air space.

To starboard on the aft deck, ladder stairs lead you up to the flybridge, providing excellent 360˚ views from the spacious settee and another teak table to port. A nearby beverage refrigerator provides extra refreshments for guests. The flybridge helm is slightly offset to starboard to make room for twin helm chairs.

The foredeck, accessed by wide side-decks, includes bow seating, a reclining sun pad lounge, and an optional canopy, making it an ideal social gathering spot, day or night. A Fusion marine audio system also coordinates musical selections to speakers in the aft deck, salon, foredeck, and flybridge, making sure the party can keep going on every part of the boat.

Inside the salon/galley area, warm walnut wood tones contrast with white Silestone countertops. Huge wraparound windows provide plenty of natural light, rain or shine. The versatile galley features not only a U-shaped settee and hi-lo teak table forward to port, but also a breakfast nook to starboard. The stainless steel appliance options include a refrigerator/freezer, a convection microwave oven, cooktop, ice maker, and dishwasher.

Head a few steps up from the salon to see the forward helm, providing clear views in all directions from the dual helm seats. The console is made of fine walnut with a raised wedge, allowing generous room for the suite of electronic engine controls, including an optional joystick control system, a Dockmake wireless remote docking system, and Zipwake dynamic trim controls. The suede-covered, stainless steel wheel adds another touch of nautical class.

The owner’s stateroom is located amidships at the widest part of the boat (about 15 feet), giving you plenty of room to walk around the queen berth. Other master perks include the en suite head with cabinetry, a TV, and a vanity/ desk. The VIP stateroom at the bow is almost as large as the master, with reading lights, a TV, and en suite access to the guest head with a stall glass shower. The guest stateroom comes with a full berth, a desk, and a washer and dryer, but it can also be converted into a convenient office space.

Twin Cummins QSB6.7 engines provide a combined 1,084hp to move this palace on the water at a surprisingly fuel-efficient pace. The Summit 54 has a 330-nautical mile range at 23 knots. Not bad!

Specs & Info

LOA

Tankage (Fuel/Fresh/Black)

750 gals. / 215 gals. / 100 gals.

Engines

Twin Cummins 1,084hp QSB6.7s

Contact Summit MotorYachts

Kadey-Krogen Seattle

Jonathan Cooper

206.769.5728

jonathan@kadeykrogen.com summitmotoryachts.com

58’5” Beam 15’10” Draft 3’7”
39

HIGHFIELD BOATS ARE THE #1 RIB IN NORTH AMERICA, AND THEIR GOOD LOOKS ARE AT HOME VIRTUALLY ANYWHERE.

Which is fortunate, because we also build them to take you pretty much everywhere. Every hull is made from high-tensile, marine grade aluminum and is over-built and tested to excel in the planet’s toughest conditions. It’s why we’re #1, and why you’ll have the confidence going places others simply can’t. highfieldnorthamerica.com

HULL CONSTRUCTION
ITS LOOKS SAY YOU’VE ARRIVED; THE CONSTRUCTION SAYS YOU’LL GO ANYWHERE.
The GT console Kit can be added to any Classic 340 to 380 Open RIB The FCT console helm can be added to any Classic 310 to 380 Open RIB GUYER BOATWORKS Ferndale, WA 360-298-4662 hugh@guyerboatworks.com guyerboatworks.com FRESH AIR DINGHY REPAIR Anacortes, WA 360-305-0838 adam@freshairwa.com WAYPOINT MARINE GROUP Seattle, WA 206-284-0200 inflatables@wpmarine.com waypointmarinegroup.com INFLATABLE BOATS OF IDAHO Boise, ID 208-519-4981 inflatableboatsofidaho@gmail.com inflatableboatsofidaho.com NORTHWEST INFLATABLE BOATS Portland, OR 503-283-5510 nwiboats@gmail.com nwinflatables.com 8’ 6” 9’ 6” 10’ 2” 11’ 2” 11’ 10” Length 12’ 6” 5’ 7” 5’ 7” 5’ 7” 5’ 7” 5’ 7” Beam 5’ 7” 119 lbs 130 lbs 137 lbs 157 lbs 165 lbs Weight 183 lbs 3+1 4 5 6 6 Max People 7 794 lbs 1058 lbs 1213 lbs 1215 lbs 1237 lbs Max Payload 1404 lbs 15 hp 20 hp 20 hp 25 hp 30 hp Max HP 30 hp portable portable portable portable portable portable Fuel Tank CL 260 CL 290 CL 310 CL 340 CL 360 Model CL 380 CLASSIC RANGE SPORT 300/330/360 SPORT 360 SPORT 300 6 Max People 4 5 1398 lbs Max Payload 1023 lbs 1211 lbs 40 hp Max HP 30 hp 30 hpSPORT 330 11’ 11” 9’ 10” 11’ 0” Length 6’ 0” 6’ 0” 6’ 0” Beam 473 lbs 385 lbs 439 lbs Weight*Model * weight includes boat plus console Fuel Tank portable 6.3 gal 6.3 gal SPORT 390/420/460 Model SPORT 390 SPORT 420 Length 12’ 10” 13’ 11” 15’ 1” Beam 6’ 4” 6’ 9” 6’ 10” Weight 497 lbs 681 lbs 731 lbs Max People 7 8 9 Max Payload 1579 lbs 1744 lbs 2011 lbs Max HP 60 hp 70 hp 90 hpSPORT 460 Fuel Tank 11.6 gal 11.6 gal 6.3 gal CLASSIC CONSOLES GT and FCT-7 NORTH AMERICAS #1RIB BOAT BRAND VISIT YOUR CLOSEST DEALER FOR MORE INFO

BROKER’S BEST

Mariner 35 Seville Sedan Flybridge Trawler

Looking for a well-kept flybridge trawler? Then, Waterline Boats has just the vessel for you.

This lightly used, well-cared-for flybridge trawler from Mariner Yachts International can accommodate six people with three double berths, one cabin, and one head with a separate shower. Built in 2008, the yacht includes holly, golden teak, and teak veneer wood in the floors, paneling, and cabinetry throughout. Key features of the Mariner Seville are the covered side decks, which provide easy movement around the exterior, as well as added visibility for docking or anchoring.

Entry can be made from the two side doors of the covered cockpit or the transom door from the swim step astern. Heading through the sliding door to the salon, the first noticeable elements are the large side windows which flood the interior with natural light and can be opened for extra ventilation. An L-shaped settee and teak fold-out dining table is located to port. The pullman-type settee also converts into a double bed.

[ NOVEMBER 2022 ]
42

A curved staircase leads you from the cockpit to the open-air flybridge, with a full suite of navigation equipment, plus a custom-made convertible double helm bench. L-shaped seating is located aft, along with an inflatable aluminum Southern Pacific RIB with a Honda 4hp outboard, secured with a manual davit on the top deck. When the dinghy is not in use, it is covered in flexible solar panels to help power some of the yacht’s equipment.

Navigation equipment at both helm stations feature bow-thruster controls, an ICOM IC-M504 VHF transceiver, a Raymarine E120 radar, a Garmin GMI 10 depth sounder, two Ritchie com passes (3” at the lower helm, 2” in flybridge), Ray marine E120 and E80 GPS, and Raymarine ST6002 autopilot. For entertainment, the yacht also includes AM-FM radio, a Sony CDX-GT10M TV, a Viore flat-screen monitor, and a DVD player.

The galley to port has plenty of counter space, a three-burner propane stove, an oven, and a forward-facing stainless steel sink. On top of the counter aft of the helm station is a microwave with a refrigerator underneath.

The single forward cabin, located four steps belowdecks, includes a queen-size berth and a hatch that opens to the deck above. The head and shower are separated into port and starboard compartments. Heat is provided via Espar hydronic forced air.

The boat is powered by a 230hp Cummins QSB5.9 diesel engine from 2006, with about 2,500 hours of use. The maximum speed is about 9 knots, with a cruising speed slightly slower at 8.2 knots. The four-blade prop produces lots of torque with no vibration, and the custom-made rudder is larger than the original to improve maneuverability and lateral stability at slower speeds.

Specs & Info

LOA 35’0” Beam 13’9” Draft 3’6”

Tankage (Fuel/Fresh/Black)

300 gal. / 140 gal. / 30 gal.

Engines

Cummins 230hp QSB5.9 Diesel

Contact Waterline Boats

Seattle, WA Dave Carlson 206.282.0110

43
boats@waterlineboats.com waterlineboats.com

BROKER’S

BEST [ NOVEMBER 2022 ]
44

2011 Ocean Alexander 74

Having recently completed numerous upgrades and maintenance, this exceptional Ocean Alexander 74 is the definition of turn-key, ready to take you and your guests to the next destination in style. The three spacious staterooms aboard Lodestar can accommodate up to six guests and is spectacularly suited for entertaining.

The vessel features three generous staterooms, plus crew quarters for two, as well as many luxurious interior features throughout. The aft deck offers comfortable seating for eight at the large adjustable hi-gloss teak table, stainless steel sink, and retractable aft deck engine and thruster controls. She also boasts wide, covered side decks for easy transition from bow to stern and full walkaround access to the large bow area as well. Boarding gates are located port and starboard.

A set of double, stainless steel automatic sliding doors provide access to a spacious and comfortable salon that houses a large, custom-made, L-shaped settee with custom storage, large teak hi-lo table, and two comfortable chairs. To port, she features a complete entertainment center with a large LCD TV on a retractable lift. Starboard side of the salon offers a wet bar, glass storage, and refrigerator with icemaker.

Going forward, there is a convenient day head with sink, and then forward of that is a handy pantry tucked under the stairway to the flybridge. The U-shaped galley offers all the necessary amenities including a trash compactor and dishwasher. Forward from the galley is a helm station equipped with all new FURUNO electronics, as well as an adjustable STIDD helm chair. Nearby, the convenient dinette area contains extra storage and chart drawer.

A starboard side companionway then leads to Lodestars’s lower foyer, with a custom onyx floor, and three staterooms and en suite heads. The full-beam owner’s stateroom offers a king-size berth with storage and nightstands. There is a large cedar-lined, walk-in closet to port with shelving and a safe. This airy and incredibly light stateroom also offers a full entertainment system, and an additional closet and chest of drawers located both port and starboard. The VIP and guest staterooms also have en suite full heads with granite floors.

The spacious flybridge is a real star, featuring a centerline helm with all new electronics and two helm seats, plus luxurious L-shaped seating, two teak tables, and a wet bar area all to keep guests well situated throughout any cruise.

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A MORE PERFECT UNION

Interesting development: Vulcan’s new Lake Union Piers project aims to reconnect Seattle to its maritime heart.

49
49

The story of a city, even one as relatively young as Seattle, can often be read through its geography. The many deep waterways and thick forests around Puget Sound all but assured that Seattle would become a timber and maritime hub after settlers first began carving street grids into Salish territory 170 years ago.

THE PROMENADE WILL FEATURE SPECTACULAR LAKEFRONT VIEWS AND ACCESS TO AN ARRAY OF LEISURE ACTIVITIES ALONG THE SHORELINE.

50
ALTOURA RENDERINGS COURTESY OF VULCAN REAL ESTATE/MILLER-HULL

WITH

VIEWS, THIS HUB WILL BE ANCHORED BY A MODERN, LIGHT-FILLED DINING DESTINATION AND AN ADJOINING PEDESTRIAN

THAT BOASTS EXPANSIVE SEATING PLATFORMS.

51
270°
TERRACE
“We want to celebrate these buildings for the next 50 to 75 years, and we felt Lake Union Piers really links all the elements together.” Kiki Gram, senior development manager at Vulcan

Back when it was very much an industrial waterway in the early 20th century, Lake Union was encircled with businesses, includ ing boat builders, sawmills, a Boeing seaplane hangar, a cement plant, and a coal gasification plant. By mid-century, the focus of the lake began to shift towards more recreational uses, which led to Gas Works Park, the Center for Wooden Boats, and the Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI).

Today, another chapter to the lake’s evolving story is being written by Vulcan Real Estate, the owner since 2000 of much of the land in the tech-heavy South Lake Union neighborhood. The project, called Lake Union Piers, is nearing completion of its first phase this year and is slated to be fully completed by the end of 2023.

The scope of the project is broad, ambitious, and inspiring; the development will cover 8.3 acres of prime lakefront real estate and encompass 60,000 square feet of commercial space. The four main buildings on the property—one of which contains the still-operating Daniel’s Broiler restaurant— will remain intact but be heavily modified with new roofs,

modern exterior finishes, more energy-efficient infrastructure, improved outdoor lighting, seismic upgrades, and expanded outdoor seating.

The driving purpose behind the Lake Union Piers design is to eliminate barriers from the rest of the city, said Kiki Gram, senior development manager at Vulcan. Visitors from downtown used to have to navigate the infamous “Mercer Mess” traffic, then go through a patchwork of parking lots, streetcar tracks, and cement curbs just to get to the lake.

“One of our goals was to upgrade these buildings and reconnect the indoors with the outdoors,” Gram explains. “The main emphasis is on making connections between the adjacent sites and tying them into the Cheshiahud Loop trail around the lake.”

Sketches and renderings of the development from Seattle-based project architect Miller Hull show how open-air plazas stretching between the renovated buildings will create 5,700 square feet of welcoming space to encourage more pedestrian traffic.

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RENOVATED STOREFRONTS, MODERN SEATING, AND FLEXIBLE OPEN SPACE WILL MAKE THE CENTRAL LAKEFRONT PLAZA AN IDEAL OPEN-AIR GATHERING PLACE.

The new dining, shopping, and entertainment choices will also give boaters arriving at the marina more reasons to leave their vessels.

Case in point: The first eatery to emerge from the construction tenting was the Lakeside restaurant from Waterways Cruises and Events that opened its doors this past summer in the space that formerly housed the Seattle Kraken team store. The polished dining room and accompanying waterfront patio boast views that are rivaled only by the food emerging from the kitchen, which include curated cocktails, chef-driven prix fixe meals, and even order ahead for charcuterie picnic boxes built specifically with boaters in mind.

As exhibited by Lakeside and others, Seattle restaurants in general are undergoing a post-Covid renaissance in outdoor seating development, which should also benefit Lake Union Piers. Current designs include a combination of up to 8,000 square feet of new outdoor dining patios, some of which will have 270˚ views of the lake.

“Even in the winter, we still think it’ll be a big draw,” said Robert Arron, Vulcan’s senior director of real estate marketing and leasing. “A lot of these restaurants have figured out how to make patios comfortable in cold weather with heat lamps,” he added. “These buildings could become an exceptional destination. It literally is the center of the city.”

change that since it’s so important to have spaces for the yacht brokers,” said Arron. “But we’ll be converting some existing space to more daily use moorage, which should add about 12 more slips.”

However, one important tenet that will not change are the tenants themselves, Vulcan says, demonstrating Lake Union Piers’ tight relationship with the region’s boating community. Many of Seattle’s top yachting brokerages are located on the property, including Hampton Yacht Group, Worth Avenue Yachts, Chuck Hovey Yachts, and Silver Seas Yachts. During renovations, the offices for these businesses, as well the Northwest Yacht Brokers Association (NYBA) headquarters, were moved to a nearby temporary location but will be moving back to their originals spaces this fall. Formerly known for decades as Chandler’s Cove, this southeast corner of Lake Union is particularly synonymous with the Boats Afloat Show, NYBA’s twice-a-year exhibition that continue on in this location, with the next show scheduled for April 2023.

The adoption of the new Lake Union Piers name, however, was not taken lightly.

“It was really big decision, and it took a long time to make given the familiarity of the Chandler’s Cove name,” Gram said. “But we want to celebrate these buildings for the next 50 to 75 years, and we felt Lake Union Piers really links all the elements together. It got a lot of support from the tenants.”

ALTOURA RENDERINGS COURTESY OF VULCAN REAL ESTATE/ MILLER-HULL

Some of the most noticeable improvements in the Lake Union Piers project will be seen on the west side of the property, adjacent to MOHAI and the Center for Wooden Boats, Gram said. “We will be converting some of it to green space in between the two properties and adding bench seating, newly planted trees, and public art,” she said. While it is de-emphasizing the acres of asphalt on the property, Vulcan said it is sensitive to the needs of car access in the neighborhood. “It’s been a delicate balancing act to create more open spaces that can be used for events and also preserve the existing parking lots for restaurants and retailers,” Gram said. “We did reduce parking space a little bit, but not a lot.”

Vulcan will be adding more electrical connections to the piers and making deck improvements to the existing marina, as well, slipping in a few extra dock spots. “The marina is still zoned mostly for commercial yacht sales, and we didn’t want to

In recent years, Arron said Vulcan has also signed on some newer maritime tenants to Lake Union Piers, including boat rental company Boatsetter and the aforementioned Waterways Cruises and Events. There is also talk of adding a winery operation with a tasting room— something every yacht enthusiast would surely enjoy—and Vulcan expects to start announcing signed tenants in the next month or two before the start of the new year.

“We do a lot more complex office projects with clients like Amazon or Google,” Arron concludes. “But this project, even though it’s a little smaller in square footage, is as meaningful and important to us as anything else because it’s such a significant site.”

>To follow along with the latest details on the Lake Union Piers construction and development, visit: lakeunionpiers.com.

>

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END LINE OF THE

PETER

54
MARSH EXPLORES THE
LONG AND WINDING ROUTE OF TOURIST
NO.2., ONE OF THE
NORTHWEST’S
LAST
WOODEN
CAR
FERRIES.
END LINE 55 THE SEND-OFF WE WISH SHE’D HAD: ILLUSTRATOR TAVIS COBURN HELPS US BID ADIEU TO TOURIST NO.2
56

For visitors to Seattle or residents who’ve never seen the city from the water, a trip on a tour boat is the quickest and easiest way to appreciate the beauty of the shoreline and the important part traditional ferry boats played in its growth. In the late 1800s, before all the bridges and roads were built, there were so many small ferries buzzing back and forth on Puget Sound that they were known as the “mosquito fleet.”

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THIS PAGE: TOURIST NO.2 MOORED AT PIER 39 IN 2019. OPPOSITE: INTERIOR DETAILS AND CRUISING UNDER THE ASTORIA-MEGLER BRIDGE. EXTERIOR PHOTOS COURTESY OF TOURIST NO.2 FACEBOOK GROUP; INTERIOR BY ZACH HEIDSTAND.

It was an inglorious farewell, after a decade long effort to save her, but Tourist No.2 left behind a fascinating life story that was in many ways stranger than fiction—and well worth retelling. In simple numbers, the grand old dame served 40 years on the Columbia River, followed by 50 years on Puget Sound, before making one final trip back to her birthplace in Astoria in a vain attempt to find a safe “retirement home.”

This was where the Tourist No.2 had been stoutly built by the Evans yard in 1924 with a flat-bottomed hull so it could carry 22 cars to Washington and back across the shallows and sandbanks of the river. The ferry soldiered on through the war years working for the U.S. Army guarding the river’s entrance. It went back to civilian life in 1946 and put in another 20 years of routine ferry work. This route was based on the Oregon side, so was not affected when the Washington State Department of Transportation bought all the major ferry lines in the state in 1951 and formed the state ferry system. (WSDOT passed the responsibility for the five shortest routes to the counties, including the shortest route of all, 30 miles upstream from Astoria connecting Puget Island, Washington, with Westport, Oregon.)

Tourist No.2 chugged along for another 20 years until the post-war transport boom finally reached the coast and the four-mile-long bridge over the Columbia was opened, closing the last gap in the coastal Highway 101. That was the end of the local ferry line and its three tugs went their different ways. The newest steel boat ended up in Vietnam, and the Tourist No.2 also got another chance. It had been well maintained, so Pierce County in Washington state decided to give it another chance running the Steilacoom to Anderson Island route, where it would be a definite improvement over the

wooden ferry built in 1916 with a capacity of just nine cars.

Re-named the Islander, with the upper deck raised to allow tall trucks on board, it served on the South Sound for an incredible 30 years without incident. The county finally got a new 200’ steel ferry in 1997. It was named the Christine Anderson and coincidentally was also built in Oregon—at Nichols Brothers’ short-lived yard in St. Johns, Portland. (I saw and wrote about that at the time, but it is only now that I have learned it replaced the old Astoria ferry.) This time it really looked like the end of the line for the old wooden boat, now nearing 75 years old.

The only use for the hull was probably moving construction equipment or gravel around the islands. But yet again the ferry was thrown a lifeline by Kevin Clark, then CEO of Argosy Cruises, which was based in Kirkland at that time, but now works out of Pier 55 and 54 on the Seattle downtown waterfront. He saw real potential in the boat and bought it for $50,000. Then, Argosy spent a year to clean, repair, and convert it into a sightseeing vessel, adding two full service bars, a galley, and 12-foot floor-to-ceiling windows following a design provided by Seattle’s own Jonathan Quinn Barnett, who in the ensuing years moved up into the exclusive world of superyacht design.

It cost well over $500,000 to re-launch the re-named M.V. Kirkland and this effort was rewarded by the boat being added to the Washington Heritage Register and National Register of Historic Places. Its new career took it around Lake Washington and occasionally into Lake Union, hosting private parties, weddings, and special events for the next 15 years. For the third time in its long life, the boat became a local favorite to everyone who

58
Only a handful of these historic vessels are still afloat, and unfortunately, one of them, the former Astoria car ferry Tourist No.2 launched in 1924, came to an ill-fated end this past summer when she sank on the Astoria waterfront.

ALSO KNOWN AS M.V. KIRKLAND FROM ITS YEARS WITH ARGOSY CRUISES, TOURIST NO.2 SLIPPED INTO THE SEA IN LATE JULY DESPITE A HERCULEAN RESCUE EFFORT.

HISTORIC PHOTOS COURTESY OF ARGOSY CRUISES; SINKING PHOTO BY PETER MARSH.
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saw it brightening up the scene, especially at night when it was lit up during Argosy’s Christmas Ship™ Festival. Indeed, there must be a few of our readers who recall a trip on the M.V. Kirkland when it was “Seattle’s favorite party boat.”

Throughout its career in the Seattle area, the Kirkland Reporter kept track of the boat it called “an icon on their waterfront.” That publication’s last story on the vessel in 2008 recalled that she made a cameo appearance on ABC’s “The Bachelor,” was featured in a centerfold shot within 425 magazine, and was already popular on social media. To the Argosy employees and many residents of Kirkland, the boat felt like a community member. Luckily for us, the Reporter consistently reported on the boat, especially when the original wooden hull had to be dry-docked every two years for the Coast Guard safety inspection for passenger vessels.

This usually required the replacement of a few rotten planks and frames with clear-grain, old-growth Douglas fir. Argosy kept a stockpile of this lumber for future use, but the haul out and skilled labor cost $70,000 to $100,000 because most local shipyards had quit working on traditional wooden boats. Steel is not only more durable and relatively easy to repair, it is also fire-resistant, and it was an electrical fire in the engine room early on August 28, 2010, that finally brought the Kirkland to another change of course.

More than 50 firefighters responded quickly to the pier and the fire was almost out within 30 minutes. Most of the damage was below deck and out of sight, but there was smoke damage throughout the boat. Predictably, the end result was the historic vessel being declared a total loss. Three days later, it was towed from Lake Washington by the 51’ Dixie to the Ship Canal where it was put up for sale. (That tug also has a long history: launched in 1951 for work at Kettle Falls behind the Grand Coulee Dam, then heading to the coast. Over the last 20 years, Fremont Tug has invested a lot of effort in rebuilding and updating it to continue working inside the Ballard Locks.)

Argosy had to move on and began building a fleet of modern steel cruising boats, but still had regrets about selling the Kirkland. “The boat has been a labor of love for this company and a source of pride for us and the community,” said Clark. “I am open to any opportunities to see it find another mission. It would pain me to see

it sent to a salvage company for disposal,” he admitted. “We are continuing to leave no stone unturned." (My recommendation would have been to haul it on shore and turn it into a restaurant or salesroom, but that would have involved finding a suitable site, organizing haulage from a slipway, gaining planning permission etc. all of which would require vision and deep pockets.)

Unfortunately, that is not the way the world of historic ship preservation works, and turning the boat into an office would have been anathema to a real antique boat enthusiast like Christian Lint, who became the boat’s last owner in 2010. He already had experience with old boats picked up at bargain prices and he quickly demonstrated his talent for it by repairing the electric circuits sufficiently to get the Kirkland’s engine running and moving it to Bremerton. Over the next few years, he tried renting it out at the dockside for private events, which did not require the same level of Coast Guard licensing.

His long-term plan was to act as caretaker and sell it to anyone who recognized its historical value— a rather vague financial concept. By 2016, having reportedly resisted offers to turn the “Tourist No.2 into a floating casino, strip club, or cannabis bar,” Lint determined that the aging ferry’s best hope was a risky move down the coast back to Astoria to join in the 50th birthday celebration of the bridge in 2016. He hoped a group of local fans would develop a non-profit organization to buy the boat and preserve it.

The boat was moored at the east end of town and became the center of attention. A team of volunteers began cleaning up the boat, patching the roofing, and holding fundraising events. The ferry group raised more than $160,000, which may have been enough to buy the boat, but left nothing for the restoration—estimated at anywhere from $500,000, according to Lint, to as high as $3 million by an expert in preservation.

I interviewed Lint while writing a story for a local publication and found him to be a fascinating charac ter who could tell exciting sea stories—especially to anyone who showed interest in his boats.

However, I had also learned from experience that the expression “a hole in the water you throw money into” was coined to warn sailors about the perils of owning old wooden boats like this. The ferry truly fit the bill— it needed a steady stream of labor and money to stay

60

afloat, and I declined the invitation to join the Astoria Ferry Group. As the months slipped by, the immensity of the task eventually wore the ferry fans out, leaving Lint and the boat back at square one. He listed the boat on Craigslist for $225,000—presumably his idea of the “historical value”—and checked along Astoria’s three-mile waterfront searching for a spot where he could moor without charge. (This was a skill I imagine he had perfected over the years.)

He found an empty submerged lot on the downtown waterfront at the end of Sixth Street where a dozen steel pilings had been driven for a condo project that had also ran out of funds. This was where the Tourist No.2 spent its last two years, with a “for sale” sign inside one of the tall car-deck windows. This was illegal of course, but Lint knew that none of the people and agencies with some responsibility for it would be in a rush to start eviction proceedings. I passed the boat at least once a week while biking along the Riverwalk, and like everyone else, I assumed that Lint or one of his crew was checking the pumps regularly.

Or not. All seemed well until this past summer, when a leak must have opened up in the heavy planking below the waterline. It appeared as if the small wind turbine and solar panel on the roof were unable to keep up with the load from the pump. Within hours on that fateful day of July 27, the Tourist No.2 had heeled onto its side, with water lapping across the car deck until the chine (corner) of the hull touched the bottom. Soon, a workboat and a crane barge were alongside with the crews assessing the situation. Fuel oil was leaking out and spreading along the shore, so a boom was laid around the wreck and attempts were made to close off the fuel tank vents. For the next week, the ferry slowly slid further below the water until only the top of the funnel was visible at high tide.

Who has jurisdiction over derelicts is a continuing issue all over the West Coast, but because of the immediate emergency, Oregon’s Department of State Lands had taken the lead and found funds to pay for the clean-up. On August 4, the salvage contractor attempted to refloat the hull with a crane barge, but divers found it was too far gone to withstand the strain of a being hoisted in one piece. It was now self-evident that the boat’s luck had finally run out, although there were still some local fans insisting it be should be given one more chance. Lint was conspicuously absent.

Bruce Jones, the Mayor of Astoria and former commander of US Coast Guard Sector Columbia, began putting out reports on the situation online.

On August 6 he wrote: “Yesterday divers pumped 125 gallons of diesel from the fuel tank, emptying it, and removed 5 cubic yards of fuel-soaked absorbent material, 3x5 gallon containers of motor oil, propane tanks, paint, other assorted hazardous waste, and fuel-soaked life jackets and other materials.”

By August 10, the subcontractor Advanced American Construction arrived with a barge loaded with enough pontoons to completely encircle the wreck. Then the crane barge went to work with its heavy claw and the once proud little ship was quickly reduced to a pile of crushed lumber on the cargo barge’s deck. After almost a century on the waters of the Pacific Northwest, the remarkable life of the wooden car ferry Tourist No.2 came to an abrupt and very public halt. Ironically this all happened just eight blocks from the ferry’s original berth at the old ferry dock on 14th St. where it had plied its trade across the Columbia back in 1924. “This was a sad ending to a historic vessel, but unfortunately, her fate was sealed many years ago when the extensive, expensive hull maintenance that old wooden boats require was not performed regularly,” explained Mayor Jones in his final report.

This should have brought this sorry saga to an end, but the plot took another unexpected and truly tragic turn in Portland on August 30. It appears that while his ferry was being demolished, Christian Lint was avoiding the spotlight and continuing to live on another of his craft at a moorage on Marine Drive near the Portland Expo Center. During an altercation with prowlers who targeted his pickup truck, Lint was struck by a semi-truck and killed.

As for Tourist No.2, its final destination was the regional landfill in Arlington, Oregon, a hamlet 225 miles away on the east side of the Columbia Gorge that also takes the garbage from cities like Seattle and Portland. Though it was not the end anyone would have imagined or wanted, this boat will continue to be remembered by the many people who rode on it, admired it at the dock, or watched it gallantly plying its way across waterways of the Northwest. We all bid it a fond adieu.

61

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EXPERT TAKE

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INTERVIEW BY KATE CALAMUSA / PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE CENTER FOR WOODEN BOATS

Talking Shop

The Center is restoring these three small sloops, built right here in Seattle during the Depression, for its fleet. How did you personally get involved with this project and in boat building?

My first introduction to the Center was actually as a tenant [at the North Lake boatshop]. I had a Dragon Class sailboat that I was going to restore and rented space to do so. It really wasn’t much of a shop when I started, but as I brought in tools and started working, it became more of a working shop. Josh Anderson [CWB executive director] took notice and asked me if I’d like a job as a boatwright working to restore some of their old fleet…and I gladly accepted. My work on boats stems from my background, which is in fact in carpentry; I was a general contractor for about 25 years. About 10 years ago though, I stepped back from houses, looking for something more interesting. I wanted to get back to really building again, putting the tools back in my hand, working with wood. I started reading about boats and wooden boats, then started buying up my own projects to work on. It all started falling into place from there.

What kind of shape were the vessels in when you started? And why did you decide to work on all three simultaneously rather than one at a time?

The Center had been wanting to do some maintenance on these Blanchards for some time, and we really didn’t know how much work they needed until we started to pull them apart. We thought about doing them in a series, one at a time, but then realized that we were most likely going to be making similar fixes with similar tools and that it would be easier to do them simultaneously. This is where the volunteers were critical— they worked to carefully pull the boats apart without losing their shape. Once we did so, we realized the work was going to be far more extensive than we thought as they all needed fixes to structural components. In the end it will probably take 6 to 8 months per boat. We’re still in the middle of the restoration at this point. We’ve replaced the “back bones”, so to speak; there’s a new keel, stem, a forefoot among the three. One needed a new transom, which I always think of as the spine of the boat. There isn’t a part of it that isn’t endlessly challenging, but there also isn’t a part of it that isn’t endlessly fun.

Did any fun details emerge as you were pulling them apart?

There was a surprising find within one boat! After we pulled off the decking and got a look at the interior of the hull, we noticed that someone had mounted an old name plate on the inside of the

transom—she was Sarah S at some point in her history. It’s kind of a mystery of when she was known under that name, and a cool detail that will definitely stay with the boat.

What challenges have presented themselves during the restoration?

Wood itself is obviously quite important when it comes to these old boats and we’ve had challenges sourcing the right wood. I ended up going down to a mill in Oregon to source the white oak we needed [for framing] and was able to have them mill the right cuts. Another challenging, but really satisfying, project was lamination process of the yellow cedar we used on the decking. These pieces go across the beam of the boat and hold up the deck, and as you go fore and aft, they don’t sit perfectly straight, and are instead curved. Normally you would use arched wood, but we had some great Alaskan cedar in the shop and thought to cut those into strips and then clamp them to the form to get the same effect. It’s a little more laborious than using an arched piece, but actually in the end you ended up getting a stronger beam out of it, and the layers of epoxy that are applied help make it even more water tight.

Tell me about the vibe inside the boatshop: What draws people to volunteer? Why do you love it?

We get a whole range of people with different skill sets in the shop; some have carpentry skills, some do not. But the common thread is that everyone here is really into these boats. They’ve sailed them, they want to play a part in restoring them. And they have such a willingness to do anything that needs to be done; they’ll get in there, lay on the ground to make fixes, strip paint. Really everyone involved with CWB is united by a love of wooden boats and their history. And for me, personally, I love wood. I just love the properties of the different species, how each kind is best suited to a particular use or type of cut. You have to know a lot about the wood you are using, and that knowledge is fun to have. Wood has such a practical function in a boat, it’s a living organism that continues out at sea. These boats have a real heart and soul and bringing them back to life is very fun.

ABOUT THE EXPERT: Tom Jacobs and the team in the North Lake Boatshop expect to have the three Blanchards ready to set sail in spring 2023, when they will rejoin the growing CWB fleet. For more details on the project, visit: cwb.org.

65
Boatwright TOM JACOBS takes NWY inside the boatshop for a look at the restoration of three Blanchard Junior Knockabouts—the largest such effort by The Center for Wooden Boats in years.
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TIGHT LINES

Feeling Crabby

Despite the dreary weather this time of year, a certain population of enthusiasts sure are feeling “crabulous.” It’s Dungeness time. Always an exciting time of year, this fervor is buoyed by the fact that winter recre ational crabbing is open daily now through December 31 in several spots in the Northwest.

Get your traps ready and set sail: Current open areas include the Strait of Juan de Fuca east of the Bonilla-Tatoosh line to the Partridge PointPoint Wilson line (Marine Areas 4, 5, and 6); the San Juan Islands (Marine Area 7); the eastern side of Whidbey Island (Marine Areas 8-1 and 8-2); northern Puget Sound/Admiralty Inlet (Marine Area 9); and Hood Canal north of a line projected true east from Ayock Point (Marine Area 12).

All the crab openings set by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) shellfish managers are based on sport crab harvest estimates that use catch record card information from the summer season and the winter season expectations. Therefore, central and southcentral Puget Sound (Areas 10 and 11) will remain closed due to uncertainties related to the amount estimated to be taken in the summer recreational fishery. Managers will re-evaluate the harvest estimates from Marine Areas 10 and 11 after the catch record card reporting period closes to determine if enough quota remains to allow a winter fishery. Hood Canal (Area 12) south of a line projected true east from Ayock Point and southern Puget Sound (Area 13) will remain closed for the remainder of 2022 due to a low Dungeness crab population.

One important note: be sure to fill out your catch cards to help the state manage the crab fishery in the seasons to come. “It is important that crabbers return their catch record cards at the end of the season in order to help us better understand and manage this fishery,” said Don Velasquez, a WDFW shellfish manager. “Only about 50 percent of crabbers record their catch at the end of the season, and this information is critical for setting future seasons. We need those catch record cards returned or reported online, whether or not you caught any crab, to determine levels of sustainable catch and set harvest seasons.”

Know Before You Go:

• The daily limit per person in all open marine areas is five for Dungeness crabs, six for red rock crabs, and six for Tanner crabs. All Dungeness crab retained must be recorded on a winter catch record card. Be sure to fill out your crab catch cards immediately after landing crabs and prior to re-setting your traps.

• Dungeness crab must measure at least 6 ¼ inches at the widest point of the shell just in front of the rearmost point or tips. The most accurate way to measure a crab is a plastic caliper crab gauge available at most sporting goods stores. Red rock crab must measure at least 5 inches.

• Pots or traps are the most popular way to catch crabs and are usually set from 10 to 60 feet deep but sometimes up to 100 feet or more. Ring nets require more frequent checking as bait can be taken away by crabs, unlike pots that trap crab via the one-way entry points.

• Depending on the crab trap and water conditions such as strong tidal influences or currents, it is wise to add additional weight (10 to 20 pounds) to keep it stable on the sea floor. Some crabbers will put a brick inside the cage, while others like to lash rebar or fishing weights (try to avoid lead weights) to the bottom of the trap.

• For the mainline to the crab pot, many opt for the inexpensive yellow quarter-inch poly line or leaded line. The yellow line floats and can be an issue especially in areas where there’s a lot of boat traffic. These lines can get tangled in a boat’s prop or cut off so be sure to clip a weight to the line to pull it under the surface. Leaded lines are more expensive, but they sink properly and are easy to coil after you get it in the boat.

• Be sure your crab pots are clearly marked on the surface of the water and visible with a half red, half white crab buoy. As part of the regulations, you must write your name and address on the buoy. To make your buoy stand out from the others, be sure to attach a unique brightly colored flag or shiny mylar colored ribbons that will help you easily locate your pot.

• The best bait options are salmon or fish carcasses and heads as well as squid, clams, chicken, or turkey parts. It is always good to add storebought liquid attractants to create a scent line to lure crabs to the traps.

• Wading shorelines with a dip-net during slack tides is another fun way to catch crab. Just be sure to bring mesh bag to carry your bounty.

• Before making plans, go to the WDFW website for regulations and other rules at: wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/shellfishing-regulations/crab. Best of luck and I’ll see you on the water very soon!

Mark Yuasa is a Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Communications Manager, and longtime fishing and outdoor writer.

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Gather up your traps and take note of MARK YUASA’s best tips and tricks for snapping up some Dungeness this season.
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RACING SHEET

Return of the Regatta

DOUG HANSEN recaps the Tasar World Championship’s triumphant return to the Northwest and the excellent showing by our local sailors.

Nine years ago, the Tasar World Championship regatta made its way to the Pacific Northwest and was hosted by the Columbia Gorge Racing Association at Cascade Locks. Since then, the event has moved around the globe, from the U.S. to Australia, Europe, and Japan, but finally, at the tail end of September, it found its way back to Cascadia.

This time it was the Seattle Yacht Club that played host, and the week of September 17-25 was blocked out for the racing. The regatta was originally scheduled for the summer of 2021, however due to an abundance of uncertainty, the regatta was pushed out to 2022 and thanks to an amazing team of SYC volunteers, the whole show went smoothly!

The Tasar vessel was originally conceived as a simple two-person dinghy, designed as a solid racing boat for a couple or a parent and kid combo. Now nearly fifty years old, a couple minor updates have been made to the rigging and sails but the fundamentals of the boat have remained true. With major fleets in Australia, Japan, the U.S., and of course the Pacific Northwest, the boat has created a truly welcoming international community around itself. The Pacific Northwest fleet has long been a cornerstone in the Tasar community, and while some regions boast larger numbers, I doubt any has the pedigree and on-the-water success that the PNW holds.

The regatta got underway with a short practice race on Monday afternoon and the stage was set for a beautiful week of racing in wind and sunshine. That’s not always a guarantee, with the fickle weather and convergence zone caused by the Puget Sound’s proximity to a whole pile of different mountains, but it looked like the fleet was set up for success. It was certainly a week to remember, with steady winds and over a dozen races on the scoreboard at the end of it. It really gave the best of what Puget Sound has to offer.

As the dust settled at the end of the week, local sailors Dalton and Lindsay Bergan were on the top of the list after what was an absolute masterclass in starts and tactics. Their scorecard was impressive, and their

consistency bordered on the absurd. They tacked up 6 first-place finishes out of the total thirteen races, sailing against a fleet stacked full of world champions, Olympic medalists, and globally recognized racers. The pair won cleanly even before calculating the two discarded scores for the series, in their case a still-impressive 7th and 18th early on in the series. After the final scores were tallied up to include the throw-outs, the Bergans took the win by nine points. On the second step of the podium stood the previously reigning world champions Jonathan and Libby McKee of Seattle, who kept the Bergans honest all week long. This win brings Lindsay and Dalton Bergan into the growing list of Seattle-based Tasar World Champions, bringing our local fleet up to a total of four, not bad for our little Northwest sailing scene.

The leaderboard is certainly full of familiar names, from lifelong racers holding “grand master” status to a number of junior teams that are well on track to becoming household names in the sport themselves. Perhaps the coolest thing about the fleet was their ability to continue to sail over the past several years without much in the way of interruption. Being a fairly simple two-person boat, crewed mostly by significant others, it was a fantastic way to get out on the water while others were not, especially during the early days of 2020. Thanks to an overarching “get out on the water and sail the boat” approach, the local fleet’s dedication over the past few years definitely showed in this year’s performance.

Now that the major international events are finally coming back into fashion, we can expect to see more in the works for the Northwest sailing scene. Rumors are abounding about major events for the J24 one design fleet, as well as some potential for a major college regatta along with a several other one design fleets submitting bids to host championships. Only time will tell as we see pen put to paper and plans taking shape, but it is certainly a fun time to be a sailor on Puget Sound and there is sure to be an abundance of opportunities to see how we continue to measure up against the rest of the world.

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SEA FARE

76

Pumpkin Spice

Nutty, chocolaty, and decadent, this pumpkin bread pudding from JAMES O. FRAIOLI will provide extra coziness on a chilly fall day.

With summer in our rearview mirror, the days darken and our shadows grow. Reaching for one of my preferred fall cookbooks, New Native Kitchen: Celebrating Modern Recipes of the American Indian, which I co-wrote with Chef Freddie Bitsoie, I’m compelled to share a comforting recipe inspired by rich Indigenous cuisine and fresh flavors. This autumn dessert represents and celebrates a thriving culture that remains a current, present, and relevant part of the Pacific Northwest. Warm, nourishing dishes like this decadent bread pudding are integral to maintaining wellness throughout the cooler months while offering a snapshot of just how easy and accessible Native American cooking can be.

Pumpkin Bread Pudding

Indigenousrecipesdidincludelightlysweetened,spiced,androastedsquash,butpumpkin

breadsorpiesdidn’texistintraditionalNative Americanrecipes.If you’reinterestedinapumpkindessert,trythisnutty,chocolaty,decadentbreadpuddingasadeliciousalternativeto the expected holiday pie.

Serves 6 to 8

1 loaf Pumpkin Bread, recipe follows, cut into 1 ½ inch cubes

3 tablespoons unsalted butter

4 eggs, beaten

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

¾ cup sugar

4 cups whole milk

1 cup chocolate chips

Pumpkin Bread

Makes 1 loaf

1½ cups flour

½ teaspoon salt

1 cup sugar

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 cup pumpkin purée

½ cup oil

2 eggs, beaten

½ teaspoon nutmeg

½ teaspoon cinnamon

½ teaspoon allspice

½ cup chopped walnuts

2 tablespoons unsalted butter

Grease a 9-inch square baking dish with the butter. Arrange the diced pumpkin bread evenly on the bottom and set aside.

In a mixing bowl, whisk the eggs, salt, vanilla, and sugar until well incorporated. Set aside.

In a small saucepot over medium heat, bring the milk to a heavy simmer. Once simmering, slowly whisk the hot milk into the egg mixture. (Note: Whisk slowly; if you add the hot milk all at once, the eggs will curdle.) Slowly pour into the greased pan, over the diced pumpkin bread. Make sure all the bread is soaked with the mixture. Sprinkle the chocolate

chips evenly over the top. Transfer to the refrigerator and let set for about 2 hours.

When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 350°F.

Prepare a water bath, which is used to keep baked items very moist, by filling a baking or oven-proof pan that’s larger than the 9-inch square with hot water. Slowly place the square inside the larger pan. Carefully transfer to the oven and bake until cooked through, about 45 to 50 minutes. Remove from the oven and serve warm.

Preheat the oven to 350°F.

Sift the flour, salt, sugar, and baking soda into a mixing bowl. In another bowl, add ¼ cup water, the pumpkin purée, oil, eggs, nutmeg, cinnamon, and allspice. Mix well to combine. Now whisk the floursalt-sugar mixture into the pumpkin mixture. Then stir in the walnuts.

Grease a standard loaf pan (8 ½ x 4½ x 2 ½ inches) with the butter. Pour the mixture into the pan and place on a sheet pan. Transfer to the oven and bake until cooked through, about 50 to 60 minutes. Remove from the oven and let cool.

A James Beard Award–winning cookbook and cocktail author with more than 40 published titles to his credit, Fraioli’s books have been featured on Ellen and the Food Network, and in Vogue, People, Forbes, the Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times. He resides in Bellevue, but keeps his sportfishing boat (a 28-foot Albin) in beautiful Anacortes, the gateway to his beloved San Juan Islands. Have a cookbook idea or project in mind? Email james@culinarybookcreations.com.

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PORT OF CALL

Arabian Opulence

Experience the opulent lifestyle and stunning scenery of the Persian Gulf during a private yacht vacation spent cruising around the Arabian Peninsula in the Middle East. This unique adventure boasts scenic coastlines dotted with some of the most astounding buildings in the world, as well as a captivating blend of history dating back to 1580 A.D. and the fascinating influence of Islamic culture. Plus, with near-constant sunshine and warm temps year-round, there is no bad time to set sail.

Day 1: Dubai

Located on the coast of the United Arab Emirates, Dubai is one of the most renowned cities in the world. Known for its modern architecture, luxury shopping, and lively nightlife, Dubai is a bucket list destination for travel enthusiasts. The vast variety of offerings from this futuristic city means you will be busy indulging in once-in-a-lifetime activities, like visiting the tallest building in the word, the Burj Khalifa, which stands at more than 160 stories tall and features an observation deck that is sure to amaze. Another signature sight is the Palm Islands, the three artificial islands—Palm Jumeirah, Deira Islands, and Palm Jebel Ali—are formed

in the shape of a palm tree topped with a crescent. With luxurious hotels, beautiful boardwalks, bustling beach clubs, and a plethora of extraordinary experiences, your time will be well spent in this port of call.

Day 2: Muscat

After appreciating the unparalleled beauty of Dubai, depart for Muscat, the capital of Oman. As one of the oldest cities in the Middle East, you’d do well to explore the historic harbor before touring the Sultan’s primary palace and visiting the Grand Mosque. The many architectural influences from India, Portugal, Iran, and Western countries provide a unique mix of buildings like none other in the world. Finish your afternoon by snorkeling in the brilliant blue waters along the coast.

Day 3: Fujairah

Continue your epic journey by cruising to Fujairah. This destination is ideal for lounging on the peaceful beaches or in sun-drenched leisure aboard your yacht. Head to land where you can see the Fujairah Fort, the oldest fort in the UAE and for many centuries the only stone building

80
Dubai, Muscat, Abu Dhabi: Lap in luxury with a city-by-city cruise of the many gems found on the Arabian Peninsula.

along the coast. Before departing for your next stop, Abu Dhabi, be sure to see the Khor Fakken waterfall. This 43-meter-tall waterfall opened in 2020 and provides the perfect backdrop for photos.

Day 4: Abu Dhabi

Your next destination will be one of the most sophisticated and wealthiest destinations in the world. Once docked in Yas Marina, you can walk the route of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Continue your walking tour along the glimmering Corniche Road that follows the beach and stretches along the coastline, then spend some additional time exploring the nearby chic shops, luxurious bars, and upscale dining establishments. A trip to Abu Dhabi wouldn’t be complete without visiting Ferrari World, a massive indoor theme park.

Day 5: Bahrain

Depart next for Bahrain, a small island located just off the Peninsula in the scenic Persian Gulf. Featuring 33 natural and artificial atolls, the stunning scenery and oceanfront will leave you amazed. Spend your time on the

water enjoying your yacht’s water toys. The capital city of Manama boasts glamourous and modern Arabian styling. Walking through the craft mar kets admiring the colorful creations is a not-to-be-missed pastime here.

Day 6: Dubai

Complete your luxurious yacht vacation by returning to Dubai. Spend your last moments seeking a thrilling desert adventure in the Arabian Desert. Local outfitters Red Dune Safari can make this quick day trip one to remember, setting you up for dune cycling, sandboarding, or dune bashing. End your epic adventure by riding a camel into the sunset before returning home.

Lori Eastes is thrilled to be on the team at Worth Avenue Yachts because chartering private yacht vacations combines everything she loves: party planning, travel, and boats. With a background in hospitality, Lori is committed to providing an unparalleled experience for her clients. To chat with Lori about making your yacht vacation a reality, give her a call at 206.209.1920.

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BON VOYAGE

“THE GOAL IS NOT
TO SAIL
THE BOAT, BUT
RATHER TO
HELP THE BOAT
SAIL
HERSELF.”
-
John
Rousmanier
A
PEEK INSIDE THE CENTER
FOR
WOODEN BOATS’ NORTH LAKE BOATSHOP,
WHERE THE TEAM HAS BEEN
BUSY ON THE RESTORATIONS OF THREE ALMOST-CENTURY-OLD BLANCHARD JUNIOR KNOCKABOUTS. FOR MORE ON THIS PROJECT, SEE THIS MONTH’S EXPERT TAKE ON PAGES 64-65.
PHOTO
COURTESY OF THE CENTER FOR WOODEN BOATS 82

Discover the world with Worth Avenue Yachts. Our dedicated charter team will guide you through the incredible destinations ready to book for your next vacation.

Chartering your private yacht is the most effective way to maximize return on your luxury investment. Charter income can offset the costs of ownership, such as maintenance, running costs and crew salaries.

Our team of experts is standing by to assist you in legally chartering your yacht in the Pacific Northwest and beyond. If you are interested in putting your existing yacht into a charter program or purchasing a yacht to earn a charter income, contact our team today

(206) 209-1920

-
SUMMERTIME II 116’ (35.36m) | Hatteras | 1997 / 2022 Chartering in the Pacific Northwest 8 Guests in 4 Staterooms LET US TAKE YOU THERE
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