It’s with a heavy heart that the Scale Boat Division of the San Diego Argonauts invites you to remember David Alvarez, our beloved Scale Vice Commodore.
Date: May 6, 2017
Time: 10:00am
Location: San Diego Model Yacht Pond
Please bring a boat to run and a story to share about this incredible guy.
If you’d like to help plan the service, please meet at the Pond this Saturday morning, April 29th and talk with Mark Weber.
Mark Weber is thinning down his fleet of RC tugboats. Feel free to e-mail him if you’re interested. All boats are in San Diego.
Tug #1: Seaport Tugboat with Lots of Upgrades SOLD
Asking Price: $130.00
Runs great on 6-7.4v. 6v battery included.
Radio: You supply a transmitter & receiver, and the rest is ready to run.
Length: 24″
Width: 6″
Upgrades: I gutted and significantly upgrade the original toy boat.
Deck: The deck has been stripped down, filled, and simplified.
Towing: I added a custom towing bit that I 3D printed. It’s bolted to the deck via big strong washers and can be used for towing.
Pushing: I outfitted the front with an array of fun tires that I salvaged from various toys.
Fire monitor: I created a custom fire monitor system that includes a brass nozzle, water pickup, filter and a receiver controlled switch. It sprays about 5-6 feet.
Motor: New low RPM motor, perfect for tugboats. ESC included with Anderson Powerpole connectors. I’ll knock $20 off the asking price if you don’t want this ESC.
Prop & Shaft: I put in a new prop shaft, stuffing tube, and 3 blade prop. I was able to fit this nicely to the existing kort nozzle for good power.
Servo: Includes a modern steering servo.
I had a lot of fun overhauling and upgrading this boat. I’m happy to pass it along. It would be perfect for someone who wants a retrieval boat or a great tugboat to enjoy with the kids.
Tug #2: Springer Push Tug SOLD
Asking Price: $100.00
Runs great on 6-12v. 6v battery included.
Radio: You supply a transmitter & receiver, and the rest is ready to run.
Length: 19″
Width: 7.5″
Upgrades:
Cabin: I replaced the previously heavy cabin with this light weight one. This makes it a ton more stable in the water. You can paint this cabin to your taste or keep it as is.
Pushing: This design is perfect for retrieving other boats by pushing them into short.
Motor: New 12V motor has plenty of power. ESC included with Anderson Powerpole connectors.
Prop & Shaft: Good power through the kort nozzle.
Servo: Includes a modern steering servo.
Lights. Navigation lights can be powered by attached 3V battery pack with a male JST connector.
Here’s a tough little boat that can be handy for pushing in another boat.
For sale is a fiberglass tugboat kit called the “Carol Moran.” Scale is 1/48.
You can check details on the Scale Shipyard website such as original costs of this kit. Lee Upshaw makes some of the best hulls on the market. Most orders from Lee take time for him to create. This is a real gem that’s ready to ship.
On December 10, 2016 the Task Force 96 / The 8th Fleet and members of the San Diego Argonauts Scale Boat Division held it’s run of 1:96 scale RC model ships in memory of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Come see the San Diego Argonauts’ lighted remote controlled model boats! We’ll be kicking off the Christmas season with our own Model Boat Parade of Lights around the San Diego Model Boat Pond. Public is welcome. Bring a chair. Enjoy the lights.
If you have a scale model boat, start working on your lights. Be sure to bring a warm sweater, a hot beverage, and a great camera. This is going to be another beautiful event!
Our past Model Boat Parade of Lights were each an incredible success. This year, the San Diego Argonauts will be hosting another mini Parade of Lights at the San Diego Model Boat Pond on
In case you’re new to the mini Parade of Lights, here’s a video from January 2015:
(Edit December 22, 2016)
On December 14, we had 20+ boats in the water and about 100 spectators! What an awesome event. Thanks David Manley for putting together this video filmed from the bow of his RC scale model yacht.
Ken Taylor ventured on to the wine dark seas and sailed his Francis Barkley, a Canadian Ferry. She barely made a wake as she slipped through the velvety seas that day.
The pond started the day in quiet splendor, but the waters were soon wake tossed by a torpedo armed cruiser and a variety of civilian craft of every berth and beam.
It was a fine day for a cruise on Jarod Black’s beautiful Carnival’s Festivale. Of course, on every cruise it always helps to have a little muscle that’s “got your 6” steaming with you.
These fine craft thought that they could impetuously rule the high seas with no serious challenge until a ship of a completely different scale appeared on the horizon.
Although she’s in the early stages of a complete refit, Mark Shaw’s massive U.S.S. California could send lots of hurt arcing over to these smaller giants of the waves.
Of course liners and even warships require a little tug now and again so our Mark Weber readies his powerhouse tug boat. However, even if they did indeed need a tow, the docks were taken over by a battle wagon and a heavy cruiser. The behemoth has new motors and engine controls and a new steering gear. The ship is probably already 150 pounds lighter than in her vacuum tube remote days. Even in her current shape, she’s a grand old lady who could still dish it out. When she’s back in fighting shape we owe Mark a great big re-christening party!
Also on patrol that day was Jeff Sparksworthy’s ever morphing rescue barge on her last cruise before going in for major overhaul. It’s scheduled for new props, improved steering, and festive lighting on its light ship tower.
November 12, 2016 –
Our fleet of amphibians was bolstered considerably this week by the appearance of an entire squadron of ducks. They kept better formation than most of the captains on the briny deep that day.
Don Johnson’s fireboat was called into action to stave off the flotilla of waterfowl that were suddenly blockading our fair shores. Ron Tindall’s valiant little barge tug was called in to deal with the duck born hazmat situation. The cleanup fees will be considerable this month (but Ron just spends all his time and money on new boats).
After nearing completion of the nasty hazmat business, the big guns arrived to “keep the sea lanes clear.”
Rob Wood’s Bismarck sailed in with an escort destroyer only to be faced down by a millionaire in his steam yacht and a savvy tug boat captain.
Our precious sovereignty was saved by our plucky old salts, but the gosh darn ducks got away again!
November 26, 2016 –
It was another glorious day on the model boat basin that was graced by sleek (and one not so sleek) warships. Those two destroyers had a very ungainly fore bearer, the U.S.S. Monitor with its distinctive revolving turret.
These little “tin cans” had a fraction of the Monitor’s 8 inches of iron, but they packed a far larger punch and could steam circles around the Civil War relic.
The exploits of brave little escorts like those of “Taffy 3” gave the U.S. Navy one of its finest hours when these ships repelled a crushingly larger Japanese Task Force intent on disrupting the U.S. liberation of the Philippines in WWII.
Well mates, they said it couldn’t be done, but some intrepid Argonauts forsook their usual watery hole and helped staff a booth at the San Diego Maker Faire in Balboa Park to help promote the Argonauts and the Western Warship Combat Club.
Hundreds of amazed adult visitors and their busy handed children showed up to marvel at the diversity and durability of the craft on display and to try their hand at Rob Wood’s gunnery range. The only near constant lament was the fact that we didn’t have the battle pool this year to allow the bloodthirsty little blighters to send ships to Davey Jones’ Locker.
Among the hands on deck were Mark Weber, Ron Tindall, Jarod Black, Little-Big-Dave, Rob Wood, Jeff Sparksworthy, Mark Shaw, and whoever else I forgot to mention.
One of the main goals of the effort was to engender the next generation of Argonauts without having to get involved in any Shanghai-shenanigans.
October 15, 2016 – Beginner Day at the Pond
Many a hearty thanks goes out to Rob Wood and some fellow Western Warshipers and Argonauts for putting together a fun-filled, hands-on day at the pond for young would be skippers. The recruiting efforts made at the prior week’s Maker Faire seemed to have paid off in spades in that the average age at the pond went way down while the average IQ almost certainly went up.
A baker’s dozen or so of enthusiastic young seamen and seawomen tried their hands on the tillers of some generously provided loaner boats to see what life was like looking out on the pond’s calming waters instead of a smart phone or computer game. Hopefully the magic of remote control will hijack their young minds and they’ll begin to torment their parents to get them a starter boat.
In the meantime, perhaps the club should consider making this an advertised and scheduled monthly event to try to keep the momentum going. After all, there’s nothing to be gained by being a dying breed of old salts and surely we can scare up a few old scows and tugs for the young ones to navigate. There is perhaps no greater joy than being able to share your skills, interests, knowledge, and afflictions (I mean hobbies) with the next generation of water sprites.
October 22, 2016 – Maiden Voyages
This last Saturday we were honored to be at the maiden voyage of Mr. Jack Chidgey’s 96 scale U.S.S. Missouri as it was lugged into the pond for ballasting and trial runs by Jack’s son and some hardy mates. Although the superstructure was left safely at home, the pond was graced by the distinctive lines of this fine old Iowa Class Battlewagon.
Jack – shown at the far right has been working on this kit since the 1990s and is justifiably proud of the old gal.
She rode well in the waves once several tons of iron was added as ballast until a slight overheating issue on the ESC forced him to go back to the hobby store.
Also on the pond for its “second maiden voyage” (we’ll give Ron the facts of life talk later) was the wonderfully fast PT Boat owned by Ron Tindall. The boat had a bigger wake than most battleships – reinforcing the suspicion that Ron likes fast women (I mean boats).
Also present (on what may be a near maiden voyage) is Mark Weber’s powerful tug Pogo (originally built by Robert Schimmel) that was recently refitted with twin belt drive motors with the help of Mark Shaw who knows a thing or two about having a belt from his days in the Navy.
Mark Shaw also stepped up to the plate to fix a couple of minor issues with the wiring of Jack’s Missouri’s motors. Next week Mark promises to have his 1/12 scale (just kidding…1/60ish scale) U.S.S. California down at the pond for a flotation, steering, and engine test. Someone needs to bring a little bottle of champagne and we’ll need about 6 of you rusty old tars to get it from the truck to the pond.
Another example of a cross-over maiden voyage is pictured here with the Gardner’s trying their hands at real (I mean powered) boats, proving that there is life before and after sail. They seem to be enjoying the fact that you can run a powered boat directly into the wind. We’ll have to carefully inspect their Santa Barbara next week to see if they have snuck in an auxiliary motor!
“Give me a fast ship and a good crew for I intend to go in harm’s way” – J.P. Jones
This weekend things really heated up at the pond with the appearance of an entire fleet of dreadnaughts and cruisers. If we had had an aircraft carrier and a submarine, we could have held war games!
Also showing its fearsome visage was Dave Manley’s Yamato – which always scares the rust out of our scuppers!
And last, but not least, here’s a little humor to brighten these waterlogged pages now that you’ve suffered sufficiently.
2016 IOM National Championship (October 7-9, 2016)
Mission Bay Model Yacht Pond in San Diego, CA
By Bob Wells
Initially slated for Boise; the venue moved to San Diego where more participation was assured at this bucket list venue that is a more convenient travel destination. And San Diego came through again with 80-degree sunny weather for our 2016 Nationals on the venerable Model Yacht Pond custom built by Parks in the middle of Mission Bay. It could not be more convenient for radio sailors and the pond aligns so well with the dependable onshore breeze. Plus, the host San Diego Argonauts pride themselves on running a first class full service regatta, which this time featured individual custom sandwiches, lots of giveaways, and an excellent catered barbeque Saturday at the venue after racing. This time a club newbie, Bob Hirsch, stepped up as organizer to handle registrations and the many details. The tell of a good organizer is it all works seamlessly with no sign of panic, so good job Bob. PRO Freddie Rocha entertained and cajoled as only he does between races, and his professional race management is a huge contribution to the class. Let’s just say Freddie doesn’t need artificial amplification to be heard. Assisting on the scoring and heat boards was the highly competent Elaine Brown, imported from Oz for race management for this event.
Thursday practice was so much fun visiting and checking out the new kit. I’ve seen the pictures, but this was my first time with Zvonko’s proto Kantun 2 and Tim Brown’s AKA proto, and clearly they are heading in a similar “wider and shallower with mast a little aft” direction. What a treat to talk with the designers about their protos, and both have just started production. George Pedrick has habitually been an early purchaser of Ian Vickers’ designs recently, and on cue he provided my first view of the new V10. His wife Gene now sails his V9, so we got to see them side by side. I can see the subtle differences when George points them out, but it seems more like a V9.3 to me. Safe to say IOM design development is not stagnant in 2016. The overall quality of all the boats and the preparation of them is high too. Well the exception is maybe Toshi’s Micro Brew 5, where the hull is ultra-smooth but too many sanding sessions left the soft paint he prefers thin to non-existent. Not the usual Toshi standard, and his no apology excuse is that his shop time is all directed to his new MB6.
The NoR set aside Friday morning for compliance check, which per usual was headed by Commodore Mike Eldred with IOM Class Secretary Bruce Andersen again assisting him. It is amazing how quickly they could weigh all our batteries, our keels, weigh our boats all-up ready to sail, and float test them. Only 1-rigs were weighed, because you don’t need a 2-rig here. It helps that we mostly all know the drill. All “eventually” passed and we were ready to sail on time, but the wind took a little longer to develop. Unfortunately, some registered skippers did not compete. To name a few: Organizer Bob Hirsch felt pressured to be available for handling the little demands that kept happening, and Bahamian Stan Wallace had Hurricane Mathew to deal with (he’s fine).
Racing was great, but you have to accept shifty conditions that, “no matter where you are on the course, somebody has better wind than you” (thanks for that John Ebey). The prevailing onshore wind is straight down the narrow-ish rectangular pond with many NW and SW shifts and holes. The skippers job is simple to define; find the shifts and pressure, and to transition efficiently as the wind varies. Not so simple in execution. Mackey says, “This is one of the most difficult venues to sail well at”. Friday I thought it best to hug the south shore most of the time for big gains from that narrow band of better pressure with upwind lifts and downwind headers. Saturday and Sunday, the wind was more square and you used the whole course, but always you searched for shifts and/or pressure. The experienced guys that know this venue have an early advantage, which diminishes as the regatta moves on. Nobody gets it right all the time, and in every leg positions change until you cross the line. And damn those fickle shifts and lulls just before the finish line and weather mark that so affect your outcome! I very much like the challenge of sailing here.
No surprise it was a strong field augmented by skippers from BRA, CRO, and Oz. Everybody but our winner spent some time in B fleet, and some top skippers found themselves fighting to get out of C. Congratulations to our winner, 2009 World Champion Zvonko Jelacic from CRO, who separated himself from the leaders on the last day. From past performance Zvonko was the easy pick for this one, but after two days he was in 2nd just behind John Ebey, who was sailing exceptionally well. USA guys Gary Boell, Craig Mackey, Mark Golison, and Bobby Flack were also all still in the hunt after day 2. The last day Zvonko maintained his consistency to pull away from the pack for the win. Golison made his move with all firsts and 2nds on the last four races and Mackey nearly matched him on those races. They finished tied with Golison getting 2nd on countback. Ebey and his beautifully prepared Fusion finished a few points out for a close 4th. It was nice for a change to see a young guy, Bobby Flack, in top five.
As it should be, those racing quietly focused on the business at hand and spoke only to make a needed hail, then as soon as the race is over the friendly banter resumes. This is the environment I like to race in, absent the distraction of sea lawyers arguing about rule violations in the control area. Sure we missed some sailing time for a couple of protests, but this was a cleanly sailed regatta. Some of the credit for this goes to the observer system the USA class instituted about five years ago, thanks Freddie. All who participated were winners on this great weekend, and it was smiles all around as we packed to depart.
Of course a big IOM event is also very social. Under the shade of the oak trees the pond is a great place to hang out and meet old friends and make new ones. My old friends now include Zvonko and Tim and Elaine Brown from overseas. One of my new friends is Michel Roure from New Jersey, where he sails every Saturday he can at Central Park MYC. He also hopes to form a new sailing club at my Parsippany Lake, NJ. Born in France, he purchased a Brazilian Britpop and picked it up in Foster City last year after Brazil’s Pedro Stier chartered it for Worlds. A nice way to get a new boat that is properly tuned. Worlds is where the very French Michel was hooked by the friendly atmosphere of our international community. Now Michel has purchased another Britpop from Denis Astbury for his Father’s 86th birthday. Sadly, Pedro passed unexpectedly this year, and Michel carries the name Pedro gave the boat, Alforria, in his honor.
Every time I sail here there is always a contingent of Argonaut club members watching and cheering when their boys do well. Friends and significant others are hanging out too, or seeing the sights and shopping. After three IOM regatta visits to San Diego, I don’t think my wife has seen a single heat yet. She does see a lot of San Diego though so we’re both happy. What a great weekend and what a great class. We left with a strong desire to return soon and stay longer. 2017 Midwinters maybe?
Summary of the 2016 IOM National Championship:
Class: IOM
Date: October 7-9, 2016 (3 days racing)
Location: Mission Bay Model Yacht Pond in San Diego, CA
Host Club: San Diego Argonauts Model Yacht Club
Entries: 39
Winds: light – upper middle of 1-rig
Races Completed: 15 (three heats per race).
Scoring System: 2014 HMS
Regatta Committee & Valuable Assistants: Organizer & Registration – Bob Hirsh; PRO, Buoy Boat & Scorekeeper – Fred Rocha; Race Officer: Elaine Brown (AUS); Measurements – Mike Eldred, Bruce Andersen; Food – Mark Halberg; Volunteers – Bob Williams and Rich Rogers.
2016 IOM National Championship – Results after 15 races with 2 throw-outs:
Position
Skipper
Sail #
City
Hull
Score
1
Zvonko Jelacic
35
Split, CRO
Kantun 2 Proto
34.0
2
Mark Golison
55
California, USA
V9
59.0
3
Craig Mackey
29
California, USA
britPOP!
59.0
4
John Ebey
93
California, USA
FUSION
62.0
5
Bobby Flack
96
Michigan, USA
britPOP!
71.0
6
Gary Boell
71
California, USA
NITRO
96.0
7
George Pedrick
50
California, USA
V10
101.0
8
Kelly Martin
77
Washington, USA
V8
111.3
9
Ken Campbell
181
California, USA
V8
114.5
10
Jerry Brower
42
Washington, USA
V9
116.0
11
Steve Toschi
94
California, USA
Micro Brew 5
124.0
12
Gabriel Mueller
58
Rio Grande do Sul, BRA
britPOP!
137.0
13
Pedro Loureiro
88
Rio Grande do Sul, BRA
britPOP!
142.0
14
Baron Bremer
81
Florida, USA
britPOP!
144.0
15
Chris Sullivan
62
California, USA
britPOP!
149.0
16
Jon Elmaleh
2
New York, USA
New Road 2
172.0
17
Tim Brown
07
Gold Coast, AUS
AKA
181.0
18
Bob Wells
7
Washington, USA
Kantun S
192.0
19
Stephan Cohen
28
California, USA
britPOP!
196.0
20
Denis Rogers
43
California, USA
britPOP!
218.0
21
Bruce Andersen
16
Idaho, USA
britPOP!
258.0
22
Scott McConnell
21
Washington, USA
Kantun S
259.0
23
Michel Roure
18
New Jersey, USA
britPOP!
263.0
24
Joe Damico
86
Washington, USA
britPOP!
271.0
25
Larry Stiles
64
Washington, USA
britPOP!
277.0
26
Barry Donaher
47
Utah, USA
FUSION
293.0
27
Terrance Heyns
13
California, USA
Pikanto
318.0
28
Gene Harris
57
California, USA
V9
321.0
29
David Jensen
68
Washington, USA
V9
334.0
30
Mike Eldred
39
California, USA
V8
339.0
31
Jim McCaa
36
Washington, USA
Kantun S
347.0
32
Glen Murray
59
California, USA
MB5 (Woody)
348.0
33
Steve Washburn
155
California, USA
V8
354.0
34
Kurt Wells
737
California, USA
britPOP!
396.0
35
David Woodward
54
California, USA
Goth
397.0
36
Ben Reeve
136
California, USA
Tempest
413.0
37
Thomas Respess
90
California, USA
Micro Brew 4
427.0
The ‘Bob Wells’ Rule: It is never good when they revise the Sis with a rule named after you… On the first day everybody wanted to sail along the south (or far shore) for the big gains, but my tired eyes were making it very difficult even though the distance wasn’t far. In the upwind congestion I was afraid I would hit someone and downwind I struggled with trim and steering – all due to my vision limitations. Maybe it was the afternoon glare and/or the boats were in shade there, but I was sailing embarrassingly poorly with no confidence.
Then I see Boells go to the south shore to release his grounded boat, and I recognize that I would see much better from that shore. After confirming that was in the control area, I sailed from the far shore my next races and I could see perfectly! What a joy. I could hear the starting tape (barely) and the few hails that went my way, and for the first time I’m sailing at the front of the fleet in a B and then in an A heat. Take away my other issues on those races with my topping lift snagging on my new carbon spreaders, and I would have had my best finishes of the regatta. Next Jerry Brower joined me for the A heat and he much preferred it too – he was in 2nd until a pile-up at the leeward mark left him DFL. For the record, Jerry said afterwards it was caused by the limited visibility from the skippers on the north shore, and if they shared his closer vantage point it would have been a clean rounding for all.
Racing ended for the day and the race committee quietly informed me there would be no more sailing from the south shore, and the official announcement came at the next day’s skipper’s meeting. Initially the concern was ‘unfair advantage’, but after I explained anybody could be there it was agreed that
wasn’t a problem. The official reason to restrict access to the south shore is ‘a communication problem’. So be it.
The next two days’ fewer boats sail along the south shore and my vision was acceptable upwind. Downwind I still struggled with trim and steering at the often preferred south shore though, and I’d say I lost 3-4 boats per leg simple due to vision limitations. After the regatta Zvonko volunteered he noticed my struggles with vision downwind, where too often my sails weren’t powered up or my steering direction was crap. He also gave me a tip: position myself either in front or behind my boat so I can see more of the sails. That should help…
The reason I’m spending so much time on this is I would like the San Diego Argonauts to consider putting the south shore back into the control area. Try it, the radio sailing quality will be better in my not so humble opinion. And you’ll get a nice workout from all the walking to the north side to visit and check the heat board. I can work off the nice lunches you provide.
On June 25th, 2016 a motley crew of Captains, First Mates, and Able Bodied Seapersons dared the submerged shoals, sandbars, shore batteries, volcanoes, and other obstacles to compete in the San Diego Argonauts’ Scale Boat Regatta at and in San Diego’s Vacation Island model boat pond. Water locked landlubbers came all the way from Huntington Beach, Riverside, and San Bernardino for the chance to test their piloting skills in the salty brine of our pond. They were joined by a throng of spectators and other scale builders who were either sodium-averse or hydrophobic, but who nonetheless captured the imaginations on many a would be tar or future modeler. In addition, Rob Wood of the near maniacal sect of battle pond enthusiasts was there to lend a hand and to try to induce other boaters to join his cult of like-minded sailors who actually plan on sinking their boats.
The awards, although rigged like a schooner, went to the following old salts:
In the Best of Class, the winners in each class are:
Military – 1st place Mike Rivera, 2nd place Martin Bunch, 3rd place Jimmy Hawkins.
In Workboats – 1st place Mike Rivera, 2nd place Tony G., 3rd place Frank Azucena.
In Pleasure Crafts – 1st place Dave Manley; 2nd place Armando, 3rd place Dave Ender
In Navigation the winners were:
24″ or less – 1st place Ron Tindall.
36″ or less – 1st place Ron Tindall and 2nd place Art Grunow.
In 36″or more – 1st place Mark Weber; 2nd place Armando, and 3rd place Armando (who this writer assumed everyone knew this fine gentleman’s last name).
The BEST of SHOW went to Mr. Tony G. (who, wishing to dodge the paparazzi and gold diggers, refused to provide last name).
The whole affair was deemed a smashing success – in no small part to the efforts of Rosemary Kapler who catered the event – knowing full well how cranky hungry sailors can be. The only complaint was that the grog was watered down.
Additional logistics were provided by the future president of the Argonauts, young Master Dave Kaplar, who helped the old salts rinse off (and he cleaned their boats too!). Jeff Sparksworthy and Vice Commodore David Alvarez ran the registration table and carefully cooked the scorekeeping books, as well as selling tickets, and making award plaques.
Special thanks are due to Rob Wood, Martin Bunch, David Manley, and Don Johnson for heading the judging. Thousands were raised in bribes alone! Another big, calloused hand goes to galley slave Ron Tindall for rowing while Mark Weber set up islands and to Don Johnson for bringing them in.
We all deeply appreciate the continued support of John at Discount Hobby Warehouse and we all need to thank Jimmie Hawkins for his mystery raffle prize. Other donors include Mike Rivera’s for tools, Martin Bunch for kits, and Don Johnson for motors. A shout of “thanks” goes to all of the other named and anonymous prize donors.
The event seems to grow like a barnacle and yet to somehow get better every year, due in great part to the “all hands on deck” attitude of the scale division and to the support of our fellow obsessives in the sail division. We even had some people crossing the once dangerous taboo between sail and motor driven groups. Perhaps we should have a shellback ceremony next year to welcome them to this side of the equator. Some intrepid sailors even made a mad dash to run their boats through the obstacle course under sail, although their comments can’t be printed in a family publication.
The Argonauts are looking forward to making next year’s regatta bigger and better with more entries, a submarine class, and a special category of heaviest AND ugliest boat to placate a certain obnoxious amateur builder.
Thanks to all who worked at and attended our event and my apologies to any and all who expected the full truth and nothing but the truth in this press release.