Saturday, November 1, 2008

"THE DEDICATION, or One of those Moments that makes Marblehead a very special town." -- THE MARBLEHEAD REPORTER story by Bob Triplett - May 27, 1976



Howdy from Bob Duff,

Marked pages 1 & 2 of this e-mail copy belong down behind the Thornton Clark picture from the newspaper micro film before its marked pages 3 & 4 .  This blog software keeps doing strange things to me.  SORRY!



This has been a  special week for me bringing forth happy little artifacts from past times with the International One Design yachts in Marblehead.  This article by Bob Triplett from the MARBLEHEAD REPORTER - May 1976 says it all quite nicely. 

THE EDWARD ADAMS DIXEY JUNIOR MEMORIAL TREE  belongs to Jill and Tom Hoffman of Franklin Street Marblehead.  Without them there would be no story. 

Click on the clipping to get bigger type.  You can almost recognize me in the dark picture leading the "ragtag parade" with my bagpipes and "the Guest of Honor, Ed Dixey (sic Dixie?) as Triplett wrote.  This and several other photos are dark with the ancient micro film technology of 30+ years ago.  I can send some better copies to you by e-mail, but they are dark.  Just write rduff19@comcast.net.




                             The microfilm is from Marblehead Abbott Public Library where the librarian Chris Evans was fantastic aiding my quest. I wrote the e-mail below (blog software has forced it ABOVE and then BELOW) late last night after we "found" the missing brass plaque.  My recollections were not too far off from what Bob Triplett wrote years ago.

I hasten to point out that I was NOT a "pie eyed piper" as Triplett implied; and though not a great bagpipe player as Tripett says "of questionable talent" , I was the best one around for the parade.  That is the story of my extensive bagpiping life.







































ADDED NOTE IN GREEN
 of 11/05/2008---

I just learned from the MARBLEHEAD CEMETERY  DEPARTMENT at WATERSIDE CEMETERY  that Edward Adams Dixey Junior died on June 26, 2000.  Consequently, I am marking my 2009 calender for a REDEDICATION CEREMONY near that ninth anniversary of Ed's death and the thirty-third anniversary of the initial dedication of THE EDWARD ADAMS DIXEY JUNIOR MEMORIAL TREE  by The Little Harbor Historical Society.  

I have ordered TWO reproduction sets of the brass plaques.  One set will be re-placed on the tree exactly like the originals at the re-dedication ceremony.  The other set, along with the historic originals, will be presented to the Hoffman's friend, Judy Anderson,  for a proposed permanent display at THE MARBLEHEAD HISTORICAL SOCIETY.  Judy will be invited to attend the celebration to accept these treasures.   

 I  am asking here and will do so again in person, that THE REPORTER  newspaper cover this late May/early June 2009 event with a special re-printing of that May 27, 1976 article shown (poorly) above.  I would hope that, as a minimum, they could at least reprint the two pictures of Bob Duff that did not reproduce very well from micro film.   THE REPORTER should cover this re-dedication ceremony.  Maybe we should also invite some other North Shore papers to attend and report.  THE BOSTON GLOBE?  Perhaps these papers could invite the general public to this great occasion! 

 I am certain that Jill and Tom Hoffman will attend since they own the tree.  I will encourage Thornton and Pat Clark to journey to Marblehead from home in Alabama for this important occasion.  I promise dinner for them at the Eastern Yacht Club. 

 I will try to track down Dave Smith and Charlie Hamlin who both made memorable speeches that day.   Current owners of IOD #16 TANGO, Rachel and Ian Morrison and Mickael Best MUST be there so it cannot be on a race day.  Though it has eluded me so far, I will either find the old one or try to write anew the "epic poem" which Bob Tiplett seemed to like and which was received so enthusiastically on that wonderful day in 1976.  


CAVEAT LECTOR!   See you next week.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

BRAD MARVIN'S 80th BIRTHDAY PARTY & A VERY LITTLE BIT OF GOP POLITICS - October 26, 2008

                                                                

 Howdy from Bob Duff,   
                                    
The above is a rare smiling look at Bradford Marvin - 1928 - present - on the occasion of his 80th birthday celebration.  Most of this blog deals with that party.


I  published this Sunday night with some documents included toward the end.  I checked it today (Monday) and found that blog software had dumped them into cyberspace.  Here I am again reconstructing yesterday's masterpiece.  Hold your applause - please!

This first document ,"NORMAL POSITION - THE FINISH LINE",  will brief you on the racing rule or  the total absence of a current rule, and will outline my position versus my good friend and RC colleague Brad Marvin.  There is another RC member who persisted with him for some time.  They have both gone silent of late.  Click on this and any other image for an expanded view of a rather insignificant old argument.  RC members could see this at the celebration.





This  printed card with the "IC"was on the back of Brad Marvin's birthday portrait shown above.


Another (missing) piece of  "NORMAL POSITION" printing was on the back of  the beautiful glossy photo below of four International One Design yachts flying chutes on a downwind leg during the 2008 Marblehead NOOD Regatta.  It is the same Leighton O'Connor photograph shown above on the first document near Brad's portrait.  Their spinnaker poles are in "Normal Position"which is the whole point of this little exercise. 



 My friend Brad and another colleague objected to a winning IODs performance  because his/her SPINNAKER TACK WAS NOT IN CLOSE PROXIMITY TO THE FITTING ON THE END OF THE IOD POLE.  I immediately contested their stand.  They persisted in this argument for several weeks every time an IOD finished.  Fortunately, no "official protest action" was taken because they were both dead wrong.   These  documents present facts for this  esoteric dispute.  

As we approach election day it seems appropriate to note a little of that stuff endured here in Marblehead.  A good example happened just after Brad Marvin's part last night.  I had discussed some of those party plans with you last week.

You might understand  that we seldom talk politics at the Eastern Yacht Club. There would be no reason for such talk among yacht race friends! Along with several things for this celebration,  I printed 25  cards for each of the 25 dinner guests.  I planned on our playing  the little Japanese "business card"  game taught to us\by Alex Dearborn.  However, a very crowded table and much flowing wine made the game inappropriate for this lively bunch.

 I cautioned all party guests to hang onto their cards since I refuse to print more for Brad's 90th celebration.   Last night the rare smiling picture had been printed of this MIDDLE  CLASS (1950-ha! ha!) HARVARD COLLEGE GRADUATE  with "1928 - 2008" for the eighty years.  Brad pointed out immediately that this format is for a "tombstone" and not for a "living" eighty year old's portrait.  The proper syntax is "1928 to Present".  If  known,  I could have printed yesterday's portrait correctly and then used it again for Brad's ninetieth.  Anyway, the party was a great success for 25 dinner guests topped off by a big sparkler on a vanilla birthday cake. Wish you could all have been there!  

After it all,  I discovered this delightful bumper sticker on the trunk lid of my new golden VW convertible.  I would not have blemished that brand new finish myself, but I agree with its message.  I knew immediately that the lovely Mary Patricia "Pat" Ayer had done the deed. She had done the same for husband  Jim Ayer Readers know Jim's many photographs in my blogs and will recognize him as the maker of those remarkable wooden jigsaw puzzles mentioned here from time to time.

Pat sent a compatible political cartoon which defied my attempt to copy it to the blog.  Sorry about that.  Maybe I can figure out the process before election day when I may have some more TANGO memorabilia to share. 


The next piece of party art  was this lovely photo of 
my old International One Design TANGO #16 shown racing under red and white spinnaker with three others of her own kind.  I love this shot by Leighton O'Connor.  His web site is at the very top of my "FAVORITE YACHTING LINKS" above under Jim Ayer's photo of our race signal boat.  Take a look at Leighton's creative yachting photographs in that hyperlink, "AN EXCITING LOOK AT NOOD 2008.....". You cannot help but be amazed by the beauty which he captures.




Oh yes, I have almost forgotten Jim McCully's recommendation that I mark my writing with the warning CAVEAT LECTOR.   I have an old Texas friend now retired to Montana, Donald Lee Clark, who knows a bit about writing.  He tells me he feels the same  as Jim.

See you next week.














  

Monday, October 20, 2008

PREPARATION FOR BRAD MARVIN's 80th BIRTHDAY PARTY as of OCTOBER 20, 2008


Howdy from Bob Duff,   





He and "the car" are in this blog today because of a luncheon meeting we had recently where ALEX told us about a little Japanese game he knows.  It is wonderful! I plan to introduce you to that game now as I tell you about plans for BRAD MARVIN's  80th  birthday party coming up this Saturday.

We expect twenty people for dinner.  Many are Brad's relatives that Yacht Race Committee Comrades meet once a year at best.  Suffice it to say that names are sometimes a problem for some of us----that is where I often find myself.   ALEX and his Japanese friends have come to the rescue. This game requires just a little cooperation from most of BRAD's guests. Hopefully, enough will read this blog to get us started Saturday.


It seems that the Japanese ALWAYS present you with a business card at an introduction.  They expected you to return one of your own.  In meetings, when seated, they often place each new card in a circular array positioning  each in the direction of its owner.  This facilitates polite little glimpses  when needed to help "learn" names.  Pretty clever! Everyone wins!   
 

For BRAD's 80th party, I have prepared 20 special "business" cards for each of the 20 guest.  I have arranged seating so that a "place card/business card" packet defines the table.  Here below is a montage of these cards for your review.  You can actually click on the picture for a closer look at some of the identities.

NOTE--until published with this unfriendly software I did not realize how I chopped off the names of BRAD's two children.   If I try to fix it now the whole thing may explode!  AMANDA Elliot M. Terenzio is BRAD's only daughter married to PETER B.   Then, "TACK" Bradford Marvin Jr is BRAD's only son married to MARY PAT.

                       
Also included at each place is this lovely glossy 4 x 6" LEIGHTON O'CONNOR photograph showing my old IOD #16 TANGO with three other magnificent yachts FLYING THEIR SPINNAKERS WITH POLES IN THEIR NORMAL POSITION FOR RACING.  The reverse side of the photo has print explaining yet again for BRAD and SUSIE just what "NORMAL" position is on these racing yachts. 



HAPPY BIRTHDAY BRAD



Tuesday, October 14, 2008

AN IOD BEAUTY after TAKING A MOMENT WITH THE MOUNTAINS-October 14, 2008





Howdy from Bob Duff,




I am a bit late this week and here is a picture suggesting just why. This is a place called THE CATHEDRAL LEDGE near North Conway, New Hampshire.  I visited my son ROB III at his home there this past week with my youngest STEPHEN II.  We had a blast including my first time thrill of seeing THE  CATHEDRAL LEDGE.   I only skied  when coming here years ago and missed all this beauty which was under the snow.


Notice the girl sitting at the far top left.  Then,  look for the two climbers hanging near the picture bottom. They are near the little trees which also cling to life.  They pulled themselves to these incredible heights from the valley floor.  My friend JOEL KINNEY  claims to climb here.  I seriously doubt that he or the others joining him have good sense.  JOEL once described me as "an elderly gentleman" while seeking sympathy in a legal dispute.  I will not put into print the thoughts I have about JOEL's actions in regard to THE CATHEDRAL LEDGDE.  Click on any picture to enlarge your view and solidify my opinion.



Initially  I was planning to include a couple of shots of STEVE performing surgery on a giant Elm tree at ROB's  house.  Alas, this blog of mine defeats me again.   None of those good shots will make it tonight.  STEVE was graduated in Landscape Architecture from URI and has special training and skills for tree work and climbing.  He fantasizes about every tall tree or steeple in New England.   When the steeplejacks rigged the tower on Marblehead's Old North Church  for painting, I feared it might take knotted ropes to keep STEVE from heading out back and doing some moonlight repelling.   


But at this point we were dealing with a great big tree.   This giant Elm next to ROB's house was inviting varmints such as squirrels, etc. into the attic causing a mess.  The Elm's great big limb also threatened winter damage to the house.  Solution?  Call in MACDUFF!  STEVE, that is! 


We were completely amazed at STEVE's performance.  He dressed with an array of equipment and ropes to make an astronaut blush.  Spurs adorned his feet like a fighting rooster.  He moved with grace and quiet confidence.  He whipped straight up the tree to a high fork for the leverage needed to control many small limbs and the big one which was about six inches in diameter.   It all came drifting (or banging) down for stacking  like firewood.  


I labeled him "ARBORIST", but STEVE says he must pass a rigorous examination before even his father is allowed to call him "ARBORIST".  Until he takes this examination making it appropriate to call STEPHEN BOVELLE DUFF II an "ARBORIST", please call STEVE anyway  at 1-781-631-0033 if you need tree work.  E-mail rduff19@comcast.net.  I will not tell anyone that he is not yet a licensed "ARBORIST"unless they ask!   Meanwhile, I may bring up this subject again in the future.   Also, trained Landscape Architects make rather nice plans if you find yourself interested in something other than an "ARBORIST". 

Saturday night we joined a raucous bunch of frustrated skiers at WILDCAT MOUNTAIN buying lift tickets for the winter and watching some outrageous "Hot Dog" ski movies.  ROB III claims he skis that way all the time.  I must tell you that he (and today's ski equipment) has come a long way since our first run together on ZOOMER CHAIR at CANNON MOUNTAIN when he was just two.  Here he is teaching skiing this winter at WILDCAT.  He must have had a pretty good instructor himself. 


Now that we have dealt with New Hampshire mountains,  here we have LEIGHTON  O'CONNOR's beautiful photograph of TERI & HERB MOTLEY's IOD #49 KUNGSORMEN.  With one of her crew concentrating on the spinnaker laundry,  HERB, TERI and the rest have her heading up wind.  There are blue and white chutes ranging down on her bow during this 2008 Marblehead NOOD Regatta race.  I trust that the red, white & blue chutes of  other International One Designs are far behind like they often were when I crewed #49 with "BIG DON" MACINTOSH in the good old days. 
  


# 49 showed a 6,7 & 8th in the NOOD scores I scanned.  A side issue for  MOTLEYS is the spelling of the yacht name.  MRA has it as "KUNGSORMEN" with an "M" where the NOOD  shows "KUNGSORNEN" with the "N".  LEIGHTON  O'CONNOR has picked up the "M" and it is shown that way in the IOD web site which erroneously shows TANGO as wood.  Is it "M" or "N",  TERI HERB?  


Check out some of LEIGHTON's sites to keep your sailing juices flowing as we plunge into winter:







I will be visiting LEIGHTON a great deal between now and Spring!  See you again next week!


Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Week-Long Job Trying to Join "IWEB" with BLOGGER Stuff - October 6, 2008

Howdy from Bob Duff,
 
If you have followed earlier DUFFSTUFF, you may recall my problems with this software, particularly about inserting and placing photographs within text.   In my regular APPLE schooling I am learning "IWEB"  for "real" web sites similar to what the "big boys" do. 

I attempted this week to bring together that IWEB software and the stuff I have used to date in BLOGSPOT.  I began with one yacht photo followed by three nice pictures of Marblehead's Old North Church Steeple taken by Ulrike Welsch.

  Click this hyperlink for information about Uli's book:

         http://www.amazon.com/Marblehead-Ulrike-Welsch/dp/1889833169

The IWEB software marriage did not work!  To recover,  I have loaded the three steeple pictures by Uli in the old "unfriendly" way.  I then included my own steeple shot plus the yacht photo.  It sequenced  last when I wanted it first.  I just cannot go back tonight to figure a revised approach.

Above is the tower in the dead of Winter.   Next left below is Fall with the beautiful golden leaves. Next is a Summer shot of the steeple from Gerry Island in Little Harbor.  It shows a bit of  Ted Hood's former boat yard.  The expensive homes in the background sit on land where Ted built fancy racing yachts.  He allowed us "charity cases" to store our racing yachts there in the winter.   He named us that because we do-it-yourself boaters generated very little revenue for the yard.

I took the last tower shot for early Autumn from an attic window about four stories above our back yard.  Clearly, we live adjacent to gardens in the back area of the church and steeple.  If you look closely at that photo, you will see the steeplejack preparing everything for the frigid blasts of winter coming soon.  Click on the picture for an enlarged view.

My son Stephen Duff trained in college as a Landscape Architect, but he loves to climb things like big trees, towers and steeples.  He worked happily for a time as a steeplejack climbing many  old steeples all around New England.  He says that this man painting on Old North would be insulted if I called him a "painter" even though that is what he does while repelling himself on the steeple.  Per Steve, that would be like calling a "rag shaker" (sailor) a "stink potter" (motor boater).  It is just not done
  
The steeple built in 1824/5  by members of the Goodwin family, rings its big bell each Sunday morning to summon 'Headers to Congregational Church services.  It also tolls loud and long on July 4th and on George Washington's "real" birthday February 22nd.  That makes "sleeping-in" a little troublesome for folks here in the area called "down town"!  We "foreigners" (not born in Marblehead for several generations) are prone to call it simply "old town".

George Washington spent time in Marblehead in those early days of the U.S.  Saint Michael's Episcopal Church nearby claims that George worshiped there in what is now my church built 1714.

One wag suggests that if he worshipped at St. Michael's, it is possible that George Washington slept there during the sermon!



By some miracle I can begin typing here next to the steeple pictures.

It is time for talk of yachts and the very exciting one-design J105s.

We had seventeen of these beauties racing with us in the July 2008 Marblehead Race Week and NOOD Regatta.  Leighton O'Connor got this great NOOD picture of my very own orthopedic surgeon Dr. Steven Hollis and crew on his J-105 SIROCCO.  I hope my DOC will be pleased that Leighton did not show them NUDE in the NOOD!  Ugggh!
Knowing that I am  on the race committee Signal Boat, Dr. Hollis always cautions me with "SIROCCO IS NOT OVER  EARLY AT THE START! " We did not catch him a single time in the few J-105  starts we ran for them.


To see many many more of Leighton's pictures click:

http://leightonoc.smugmug.com/gallery/
56900614_WMR98/16/351115864_DM3RX#351115864
_DM3RX

Try copy/paste to your browser if you have the same problem as I have today. Call if you need coaching at 781/631-0033.  I'll try!  Also let me know about any problems.   I can send this or other links to you via e-mail.  

The following is a special link just for SIROCCO interests:

http://leightonoc.smugmug.com/search/
index.mg?searchWords=SIROCCO&searchType=InUser&Nick
Name=leightonoc&x=7&y=6

Looking closely there, you will see Ward Blogget, Peter Frisch and their crew sneaking into the J-105 limelight by virtue of their matching SIROCCO yacht name.  Protest anyone?

Or you can go to the link below and do a search by any boat name....

http://leightonoc.smugmug.com/


Consider coming back to DUFFSTUFF again soon.  Sometime in the future,  I will publish a great IOD spinnaker picture from Leighton.  It shows my beloved IOD TANGO #16 with POMPANO #45 and ELECTRA #2.  It could settle an old argument  about a racing rules which keeps cropping up on the ETO.  Brad Marvin is my somewhat stubborn adversary.  He could abandon his position based upon evidence in that photograph.
 

Saturday, September 27, 2008

A BRIEF (UNOFFICIAL) RETROSPECTIVE ON TED HOOD'S IOD #47 - PRINCESS - SEPTEMBER 27, 2008

Howdy from Bob Duff,



This memorable view of an International One Design wooden bottom brings back a swarm of fond memories for those of us who started our sailing lives in the "good old days" when men were men and racing yachts were just wood - beautiful wood!  We can tell a lot of tales.  Here I am trying to tell some of them on my fancy MacBook Pro computer which never was made of wood.  







These recent pictures may be the last glimps of what things were like in the beginning for many of us who started in those primitive days - this is Ted Hood's once dominant 1939 Marblehead International One Design - IOD - #47 - PRINCESS.   She waits patiently for miraculous restoration magic to be performed by Marblehead's Bruce Dyson.  She will look "just like she came off of the freighter from Norway years ago".  That was the oft heard comment late this summer when Sara and Ken Drewry's #33 SMALL HOTEL came back racing after new owner Lori Bate had her restored  by Bruce's genius!


Below is PRINCESS  again from her port side.  Click on this picture (or any of them) for an enlarged view.  Notice especially the horizontal length of the 10 hole chain plate showing above the covering board.  I will present other pictures and comparisons to the stainless steel chain plates we salvaged from 1936 TANGO #16 when she sank and we converted her on a new glass hull.  I will some "fascinating" details of IOD chain plates in  future issues of this blog.  Come back again to DUFFSTUFF!  Meanwhile, I have asked past World Commodore Thornton Clark for more  remembrances to share with you about this whole era .

NOTE AS OF OCTOBER 8, 2008---My good friend  Jim Ayer just called to correct my original text saying "starboard" where the pictures are of PRINCESS's "port" side.  I just fixed it.  It is always pleasant to find that anybody reads my DUFFSTUFF.  This little bloop reminds me of my ex-wife  when I was rowing her in a dinghy some years ago.  She faced forward and I faced aft rowing.  She said "Row to Port!".  I did!  Then she said typically, "NO STUPID! ---MY PORT!".   Believe me despite that little story, she is an excellent sailboat racer!



















 Long before I got here, oft told tales  say that Ted & PRINCESS dominated races even without the use of HOOD's narrow panel sails.  Brad Marvin (Commodore of PLEON YACHT CLUB in the late thirties) reports that Ted was so feared by the other IOD skippers that they refused to allow the customary annual purchase of sails to ever be granted to Hood's Sail Loft.  Brad says they went to a  place he calls "OMAR THE TENT MAKER" for mainsails to prevent Ted from "cheating" if he made sails for the whole fleet. 



 Historically since 1936/1939 one sail each year is bought for each boat in the entire fleet from the same sailmaker in an attempt to maintain near perfect one-design racing conditions.  It has worked rather well, but many aggressive sail makers have avoided IODs since they must usually sail  with a competitor's product.  There have been some exceptions - not very many.   IOD is an interesting sail   market!  Hood's loft did make a lot of sails for us some years back.  I just retrieved a HOOD JIB from my attic and gave it to a friend for a storm sail on his Bristol 35.5.  The sail felt like new despite its age.


Going on with the tales, rumors are that Ted was pressured to sell PRINCESS away from Marblehead because she was thought to be "a super boat".  She went away to the Great Lakes. Years later, she has ended up back here in the condition shown by these pictures.  Ted's nephew Chris Hood owns her now and is behind the restoration move.  No stranger to the IOD, Chris owned and raced IOD MISTRESS(?) #3 which was later sold into the racing fleet in Northeast Harbor Maine.  I also have heard that Chris built all 13 of the identical glass IODs which seeded the new racing fleet on Nantucket  Island Massachusetts.  As to the "super boat" label for  PRINCESS,  most of us think we know that it was something other than the boat!  It will be most interesting to see how she performs on the racing circuit in the twenty-first century. 

Meanwhile, Bruce Dyson ( former sailmaker as is his winning IOD crew Norm Cressy) reports that Ted Hood is baffled as to why anyone would want to restore his old boat!  See you next week.     

Monday, September 22, 2008

ADDITIONAL MARBLEHEAD MUSINGS OF THE MOMENT - SEPTEMBER 22, 2008

Howdy from Bob Duff,



My computers (three of them right now) are playing tricks on me. My Internet access and e-mail have been down for a few days. Comcast just got me back up on only this DELL. I am putting out this blog issue using what resources are here.





I bought my own camera this week and have pictures of an old special place for IOD TANGO in Ted Hood's Marblehead Little Harbor Boat Yard. However, the Dell computer does not yet accept my little photo transfers. My MacBook Pro took them graciously for review and you may enjoy them later on. They must wait for more technical breakthroughs before I can show them to you.




Meanwhile, I am stealing three shots from Ulrika Welsch's wonderful book "MARBLEHEAD" which you may purchase via her web site identified below. Above here is a shot of the old boat yard from Gerry Island in the middle of our Little Harbor. Those multi-million dollar town houses in the background have been built where some really great racing yachts were once built and where TANGO spent several winters and springs along with quite a few other smaller racing yachts. I will get into more of those stories in the weeks ahead. The church tower in the background above is just below my old house on High Street. Its G.D. bell rings into my bedroom window as a call to church on Sunday mornings. I am usually already at Episcopal church/choir a few blocks away. However, I do sputter and curse a little when I try to sleep on a Sunday past 10 AM.




Before leaving Little Harbor tonight, I must point out that the "town father's" refused Ted permission to dredge the harbor for more of the big yachts which wanted to come here and spend lots of money in our little town. Consequently Ted took his several yachting businesses to Newport, Rhode Island where the new Little Harbor Boat Yard has generated a lot of money, jobs and employment for hundreds of people. What price quaint beauty?





Next below, Ule captured a fleet of International One Design yachts reaching out on a triangular course with the wind over the starboard (right) side. As you might expect, I suggest that my TANGO #16 is way out in front of these laggards. The triangle course is used infrequently these days with starts going directly into the wind on a windward/leeward/windward/leeward course to finish with legs one nautical mile or so each.




The other picture below is ole Duff lighting the candles on the antique chandelier at St. Michael's Episcopal Church. It was built in 1714. I sang Russian Bass here and lit candles for years to get away from that G.D. loud bell at Old North Church Sunday mornings. Incidentally, our Old North is not the one in Boston where Paul Revere saw the lanterns. Paul did make OUR bell which the Yankees broke celebrating on July 4th 1776.





Sorry for the blog bugs! They will not let me type below the pictures, but I can paste the info on Ulrika's book inviting you to see more of her wonderful work.



Photographs by Ulrike Welsch

Published by Commonwealth Editions, 2000
ISBN 1-889833-16-9
© 2000 Ulrike Welsch

" . . . Marblehead is infinitely more than a historic town by the ocean. It has always been defined as much by its nonconformity and independence as by its natural beauty and preoccupation with the sea . . . "

Hardcover, 10x10", 128 pages, 127 Color Photos

authographed for $29.95

free shipping within the continental U.S.A.

(MA residents add 5% sales tax)

As to popular demand the book has been re-printed and is again available!

Tel/Fax in U.S.A.: 781-631-1641

E-mail:ulrikefotos@comcast.net







Saturday, September 13, 2008

MORE MARBLEHEAD MUSINGS OF THE MOMENT -SEPTEMBER 13, 2008


Howdy from Bob Duff Saturday September 13, 2008,



As I write this just now some IODs are coming in from racing the Corinthian Yacht Club Fall Series. I neglected to mention it last Saturday since Brad Marvin and I and the rest of EYC-RC are now on the beach for this year. The series continues for two more Saturdays with very small participation.  IOD results along with those for the Etchells are available via the link provided above for MRA-FALL Series Racing Scores-2008  under FAVORITE YACHTING LINKS (MORE). 




 Last Saturday Jennifer and Greg Mancusi-Ungaro with (I think) Margaret (age 6) and Eleanor(8) in #2 ELECTRA beat SMALL HOTEL, TANGO and RHYTHM.   Looking backward, the Mancusi-Ungaros took this picture of TANGO to make their point with me about my beloved IOD at that moment.  Come on Rachel & Ian Morrison, get her going!  Click on the photo for a larger view of Tinker's Island and the hazy view of the Boston Skyline as Tropical Storm Hanna was giving us a little scare.




As reported last week, most all IODs should defer to TANGO since she and Thornton Clark set the stage for many of the new boats that followed. TANGO (the first conversion) was hull #108 on the "new" glass numbering system starting at #101 (Jim Bishop-Long Island).  ELECTRA is hull #109 despite keeping her original Long Island Fleet sail numbers.  The whole history of conversion from old wood to new glass would be fun to research and document. 




 I am fairly certain that Bermuda's wooden boats have all been converted with the probable exception of Stanhope Joel's #1.  She was maintained immaculately since 1939  like many of the "gold platers" in Northeast Harbor, Maine.  That #1 was raced most successfully in my day by Archie Hooper.  Archie had more than one of the "keeper" cups which went with the King(?) Bermuda Gold Cup raced each year.  I hope that my stumbling words evoke comments, corrections and extensions for our common knowledge.




Speaking of that, Thornton Clark corrected some of my comments last week as follows:

"There are very few corrections.  Peter Mimno had ridden down to the American Yacht Club with me in the new Jaguar to examine the boat before I bought it, so were well aware of the color.   We went through radar at 135mph because we were late for the meeting with the owner, but managed to get away with out a ticket (that, however, is another long story)."




" It took us all night and part of the morning to get through Long Island Sound.  When we exited Long Island Sound, I think it was Tom Brennan who kept looking at a mark just off to starboard that did not show on our chart.  Only when it began to rise did we discover that we had a submarine alongside."



"We sailed into Newport, making a stop before heading on into Buzzards Bay."




  "It is illegal, and I don't know if the control officers on the west as you enter the Cape Cod Canal just didn't see us in the dark, but we did not have a working engine and had to sail through the canal.  Stopped early the next morning at that small harbor on the starboard side just before you enter Massachusetts Bay to fix the jammed main halyard."



"Had a beautiful beam reach from there to Marblehead.  Dick Kirk, now deceased, was on board and I think Dick Fleming was also.  I believe there was one more, so will ask and let you know."



I have to leave at 5:30 tomorrow morning for an Alabama Scenic River Trail meeting in the Delta near Mobile, so will have to get back to you later."

"Thornton"

editor's note - - contact in Montgomery, AL -
 thorntonclark@aol.com - 334-396-4656



That beautiful black Jaguar brings up memories of its own.  TANGO, in her wooden glory, had a black bottom which got a lot of attention.  Debbie, Thornton, Phil Somerby and I spent many hours smoothing her with black wet sandpaper.  Our son Rob (Robin) Duff (probably 4 years)  was with us and his baby sister Allison at Hood's boat yard where they spent the early years of youth.  Robin, always helpful, volunteered to help us wet sand the black bottom paint.  You probably see where this is going.  Yes, his efforts were soundly rejected by us all.  Being a DUFF,  he gathered up sufficient rejected black sand paper and did a beautiful job on the gleaming black hood of Thornton's Jaguar.




I am gaining enthusiasm for keeping with this TANGO story a bit longer.  I do have some nice pictures of our building the new converted glass TANGO.  Also some other little stories which may amuse you. 



The new link to BLUEJACKET SHIP/BOAT/HALF MODELS caught my eye.  I offer it here for your perusal.  See you next week.