Добавить новость

Спасатель Щетинин дал рекомендации, как действовать при виде тонущего человека

Голос Мордора: Удачи вам, клопы!

Более полусотни мастеров представили свои изделия на «Янтарных выходных»

В Финляндии стартуют военные учения возле границы с РФ

News in English


Новости сегодня

Новости от TheMoneytizer

People and personalities

There are some truly amazing people out there on the water. We at Points East feel blessed to have met such a wide group of diverse, helpful, funny, and, on occasion, catankerous folk that make up the New England marine community.

The post People and personalities appeared first on Points East Magazine.

Dinghy drift social hour, in which pvc pipe has been creatively used to deliver both cocktails and hors d’oeuvres. New friends are easy to make in the liveaboard life. Photo courtesy Mike Camarata

There are some truly amazing people out there on the water. We at Points East feel blessed to have met such a wide group of diverse, helpful, funny, and, on occasion, catankerous folk that make up the New England marine community.


A day on the Harraseeket River

A day on the Harraseeket River

By James Rudolph “I used to clean this stuff off the bottom of boats. There’s not an inch of this that isn’t alive. There’s worms, eels, crabs. It would get in my beard and I could just feel it moving.On an overcast and unseasonably warm
Read More
The mayor of the marina is gone

The mayor of the marina is gone

By Randy Randall Some people you meet in this life leave a lasting impression. I suppose the grizzled waterfront character is a stereotype, and people coming to the marina or boatyard are not surprised when they run into such a bard roaming the docks. These
Read More

Boating beyond your prime

When my wife Marcia and I were boat hunting a few years back, we encountered a flotilla of men and women in their 70s and 80s who were hanging up their dock lines because of bum knees or bad balance or failing vision – not
Read More
A new boat for Diana

A new boat for Diana

I promised I’d buy a bigger boat, with a standing-headroom cabin, if she survived a summer cruising on my J/24. She not only endured, she thrived. The ball was in my court. Big time!
Read More
The liveaboard life

The liveaboard life

By Mike Camarata For Points East I am a full-time liveaboard. I am also a snowbird. I have been called plenty of other names, but we’ll stick with those two for now. A liveaboard is a person who owns a boat and – wait for
Read More
A fairy tale for grownups

A fairy tale for grownups

By David Roper For Points East Once upon a time there was a man who felt that his life was a canvas painted in various shades of gray. His job lacked challenge, his friends were dull, and his girl didn’t cast her eyes down and
Read More
My first big deal

My first big deal

There are two kinds of salesmen. There is the lonely, bespectacled, data-driven geek with the mathematical model that demonstrates the inevitable causal relationship between the promotional dollars invested and the widgets sold. Then there’s the Irishman. The Irishman can walk into a room of strangers
Read More
Snapshot of a small Maine business

Snapshot of a small Maine business

In total, Ray Trombley has spent 30 years making his living on the Maine coast. His career has taken him from digging clams to selling them wholesale at the establishment he owns – Casco Bay Shellfish in Brunswick, Maine.
Read More
Sailing way into the past

Sailing way into the past

“We’re getting to be antiques,” I whispered to Elsa, as I collapsed into the cockpit after dropping the old Herreshoff anchor 50 yards off a nearly abandoned fisherman’s wharf. It was the end of a brisk fall solo sail, a late cruise, as I was
Read More
Caveat venditor – let the seller beware

Caveat venditor – let the seller beware

Over the years, I’ve sold lots of stuff on the internet. Everything from Swedish cars to antique rototillers and, for the most part, the transactions have been fairly straightforward. Goodbye baby bike trailer – don’t let the door hit you on the way out –
Read More
Captain Bumblebee to the rescue

Captain Bumblebee to the rescue

By Ralph B. Pears My hapless cruising companion of many years, affectionately known as “Captain Bumblebee” because of his fondness for a yellow and black rugby shirt, was someone who was always prepared to lend a helping hand. You could always depend on him to
Read More
Life’s a beach . . . or is it?

Life’s a beach . . . or is it?

By David Roper In these times of COVID-19, statistics show that many people are virtually escaping to paradise via YouTube. If you Google “Sail to Paradise,” you’ll get 40,300,000 hits. As of today, there are 1,300,000,000 YouTube videos out there, movies from every imaginable category.
Read More
My own sailing legacy

My own sailing legacy

I married this man because, well, sailing was part of his fabric, and I was determined it would be part of mine, too. Little did I know then that I also had a magic boating key to pass on to my family.
Read More
Privateer end game

Privateer end game

By Capt. Michael L. Martel For Points East I peer through the chain-link fence, fingers grasping the rusty wire, feeling like I’m on the outside of a detention center. The gate is locked. Inside is a sad collection of old and derelict boats. Some of
Read More
A shipyard burned, a treasure lost

A shipyard burned, a treasure lost

A fire destroyed George W. Zachorne Jr. & Sons Boatbuilders, in Wickford, R.I., but more was ruined than structure, boats, tools and precious artifacts. A way of life was snuffed out, too.
Read More
The Snow Goose

The Snow Goose

Guest Perspective By Randy Randall For Points East Snow Goose was a Marblehead cruiser designed by Eldridge-McGinnis and built in the late ’50s at Marblehead Boatyard on the Biddeford side of the Saco River in Maine. My dad owned the boat for over 20 years,
Read More
A fortuitous meeting

A fortuitous meeting

Guest Perspective By Dave Tew For Points East In 1975 I was a senior in college, and trying to figure out what to do with my life. At the time, the Western Electric Corp. offered a program in which they evaluated and sponsored soon-to-be-graduating college
Read More
Where there’s a will . . .

Where there’s a will . . .

Wickford, Rhode Island, has always had more interesting characters than I can shake a stick at. Plenty of interesting stories abound there, as well. Not too long ago there was a distinguished older gentleman who was very active in community affairs, politics, and the yacht
Read More
Cruising with Diana, Part II

Cruising with Diana, Part II

On their first short cruises as a couple (see “Cruising with Diana, Part 1,” December 2019), it was two boat-lengths forward/one back for Mark and Diana as they set courses – often divergent – to perceived common grounds on which they might sail constructively, as
Read More
Hurricane Dorian and the “dream wedding”

Hurricane Dorian and the “dream wedding”

The last big weekend of the year promised a full house at the Oceanic Hotel. A two-day island wedding extravaganza was also on the schedule.
Read More
Our first boat: Lessons Learned

Our first boat: Lessons Learned

After we sold Gannet, our 30-foot 1969 Pearson Coaster, last spring, we reflected fondly on the 24 years we owned her, during which she taught us how to cruise the coast of Maine.
Read More
Finding Minnie

Finding Minnie

By Pam Humbert For Points East It’s been almost 30 years since my mom called to talk about their big move, and the fate of one of the family’s small sailboats. “There’s some interest from Barry down the road for the Minifish,” she said. Her
Read More
A view from the top (of the bridge)

A view from the top (of the bridge)

As experienced boaters know, there is much more to an outing than packing a picnic basket, picking out a destination, and heading out into the wide blue yonder. A good captain should have a lot on his or her mind: One must consider the weather,
Read More
After the boys (and girls) of summer have gone

After the boys (and girls) of summer have gone

The title of this piece is obviously a riff on the signature line from Don Henley’s “The Boys of Summer,” a song that doesn’t get too much airplay anymore, but that all these years later (it was originally released in 1984) still affects me when
Read More
My ‘mermaids’ are real

My ‘mermaids’ are real

Throughout human history, tales have been spun about marine creatures with torsos of women and lower bodies of fish. Called “mermaids,” they traditionally are associated with shipwrecks and rescues at sea, and their positive image has been portrayed in books, paintings, music, and movies for
Read More
Lessons learned from a lame duck

Lessons learned from a lame duck

By Christopher Birch For Points East Not every marina has a duck house, but, lucky for me, mine does. I’m thinking now of a certain duck that once lived there. She had a bad starboard wing and a bad port leg. When she walked, she
Read More
The marine hardware guy next door

The marine hardware guy next door

One of the many compelling things about the WoodenBoat Show at Mystic Seaport, which this year took place June 28-30, is the number of interesting personalities you encounter while walking around there. The boats are beautiful, of course, but the men and women who build
Read More
The freedom to be Warren River Boatworks

The freedom to be Warren River Boatworks

By Capt. Michael L. Martel For Points East Paul Dennis loves boats. He especially loves sailboats, and one type in particular, with which he’s had a long-standing affair. The humble and soft-spoken man has no qualms admitting it – he loves the often-unconvential-looking sailboats built
Read More
Ladies, does this sound familiar?

Ladies, does this sound familiar?

Guest perspective/Capt. Laura Tecce Surely, many long-suffering spouses have heard this: “No one talk to me while I’m docking.” (But, if you can’t talk to him, how are you supposed to know what he’s doing or where he’s going?) Or how about this: “Throw the
Read More
Heartfelt issues: Straining under load

Heartfelt issues: Straining under load

Last summer I wrote a column about First-World problems and a bumblebee. Well, really it was about an engine that would struggle under load, making a sound not unlike a person choking to death. I dared not throttle up when that happened; hence, I ran
Read More
Optimism, Catboat Bob, and Mrs. Crabby

Optimism, Catboat Bob, and Mrs. Crabby

By Jack Farrell Points East We’re five miles out of Portsmouth on an early summer freight run to Star Island. The fine bow of my Royall Lowell-designed Utopia slices through the two-foot chop with grace and power. Ten feet back at the helm, bits of
Read More
Pixie dust and promises

Pixie dust and promises

I conjured memories of Dad, Uncle Al and the sailboats that followed in their wakes, and saw their unmistakable influences sprinkled like magical powder on my past, present and future. And I recalled my vows to them.
Read More

Capt. Bumblebee and the stadium blanket

Guest perspective/Ralph Pears Over the course of 30 years, during which time I frequently sailed in company with the ill-fated Capt. Bumblebee, so-named by my children because of his fondness for a yellow and black rugby shirt, he was always ready to come to the
Read More
Farewell, Capt. Lou

Farewell, Capt. Lou

Although I’ve written many stories for Points East and other boating publications, the Capt. Lou series has generated, by far, the most interest. Readers have gone out of their way to contact me about them. If they knew Lou personally, or of him, they’d say,
Read More

The misadventures of Capt. Bumblebee

Guest perspective/Ralph Pears Whenever sailors get together and have a few drinks, their talk invariably turns to the adventures they’ve had aboard boats. Sometimes these stories involve dangerous conditions and overcoming difficult situations. Other times they focus on the reminiscences of beautiful journeys, or the
Read More
The young guns of the Mayflower II

The young guns of the Mayflower II

It’s always neat when what you assume about a given situation is wrong, but in a way that leaves you hopeful about the current state of things. Take last fall, for example, when I checked in on the progress being made on the Mayflower II,
Read More
The advantage of being petite

The advantage of being petite

Guest perspective/Marilyn Pond Brigham I’ve always considered myself fortunate to be small. That is, as a short person, I’ve always felt – contrary to the tongue-in-cheek sentiments of that famous song from the ’70s – like I’ve had many great reasons to live! Have there
Read More
The day President Bush stopped at Marston’s Marina

The day President Bush stopped at Marston’s Marina

With the recent passing of our 41st president, George Herbert Walker Bush, I’m reminded of the time he visited our little marina aboard one of his boats. This happened back in the ’90s, but my memory of the event is vivid even today.
Read More
Black Flags, Blue Waters

Black Flags, Blue Waters

An interview of the author of “Black Flags, Blue Waters: The Epic History of America’s Most Notorious Pirates” by Eric Jay Dolin, Liveright Publishing Corp., W.W. Norton & Co., 416 pages, hardcover: $29.95.
Read More
Six simple machines

Six simple machines

The tools we use today all descend from a few common origins.
Read More
What ever happened to Roger? – Part II

What ever happened to Roger? – Part II

Guest Perspective: Roger LongAs related in the first part of this story , I fell in love with cruising narrow waterways and a woman with a delicate stomach.
Read More
What ever happened to Roger Long?

What ever happened to Roger Long?

Guest perspective/Roger Long A few Points East readers from the single-digit years of this century may remember accounts of cruising in my 32-foot Endeavour, Strider. I once had the honor of being on the masthead of this magazine as a contributor, but slipped quietly from
Read More
How I met E.B. White

How I met E.B. White

Guest perspectve/Charles Sutton My roommate at Cornell University for two years, starting back in 1948, was Joel White (1930-1997), son of E. B. White, most famous for his books “Charlotte’s Web” and “Stuart Little,” humorous articles in “The New Yorker” magazine, and for his wife,
Read More

True class in the J Class

Guest perspective/Greg Coppa Many years ago, I had the good fortune to receive a press pass to the America’s Cup Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony, sponsored by the Herreshoff Marine Museum of Bristol, R.I. Inducted were a photographer (Morris Rosenfeld), a noted British yacht designer
Read More
The secret life of a bridge tender

The secret life of a bridge tender

Guest perspective: Greg Jones I am a bridge tender. Some call bridge tenders America’s first line of defense, ever-vigilant monitors of the nation’s maritime lifeline. Some. Maybe. Maybe our mothers, who long ago despaired of us becoming doctors or lawyers. Others are, necessarily, less flattering.
Read More
Thank you, cruising friends

Thank you, cruising friends

Guest perspective/Russ Roth Two years ago we made a decision to repower our sailboat, Skiya (see Points East, August 2015). This spring I needed to be repowered. Last June, Marty and I left our mooring in Portsmouth Harbor on our yearly migration to our mooring
Read More

‘It’s Thursday.’ ‘Me, too; let’s get a drink’

Guest perspective/Lauren E. Storck In the U.S. alone, there are 50 million of us with some hearing loss or deafness. That’s one in five people of all ages, on average. If you are so challenged, these three thoughts are important: 1. No shame is warranted
Read More
Where is Tasmania?

Where is Tasmania?

Guest perspective/Randy Randall The marina business in winter is not much fun. The river’s frozen over, the snow-covered docks look like giant loaves of white bread, and the mooring balls are gripped fast in the ice. It’s all very depressing, and spring seems a long
Read More

Meet Rockland’s new harbormaster

Hank Garfield “This is one of the busiest and most eclectic harbors in Maine,” the man himself declares. On a rare warm day in early May, Matt Ripley, the new Rockland harbormaster, stands outside his office looking out at a placid and mostly empty piece
Read More
Live aboard? Why not?

Live aboard? Why not?

The timing was right for the semi-retired couple and although there have been some challenges, they wouldn\'t have it any other way.
Read More
No better friend than Capt. Lou

No better friend than Capt. Lou

Greg Coppa Capt. Lou’s loyalty to friends in Wickford, R.I., and beyond, is renowned. Some time ago, his longtime and eccentric buddy, G.I. Joe, passed away. G.I. Joe – who was never called “Joe” but always “G.I. Joe” by the Captain – lived and died
Read More
Riding the wave

Riding the wave

Capt. Dave Marciano, with his 38-foot Hard Merchandise out of Gloucester, Mass., is a highliner on National Geographic Channel\'s \"Wicked Tuna,\" but family, not fishing, is what makes it all work.
Read More

Blanche DuBois (circa 1985)

Of all the 1,100-plus lakes in New Hampshire, including Lake Winnipesaukee (which is actually more like a mini inland-sea) none is more entrancing than Lake Sunapee. It is 11 mile

Читайте на 123ru.net


Новости 24/7 DirectAdvert - доход для вашего сайта



Частные объявления в Вашем городе, в Вашем регионе и в России



Smi24.net — ежеминутные новости с ежедневным архивом. Только у нас — все главные новости дня без политической цензуры. "123 Новости" — абсолютно все точки зрения, трезвая аналитика, цивилизованные споры и обсуждения без взаимных обвинений и оскорблений. Помните, что не у всех точка зрения совпадает с Вашей. Уважайте мнение других, даже если Вы отстаиваете свой взгляд и свою позицию. Smi24.net — облегчённая версия старейшего обозревателя новостей 123ru.net. Мы не навязываем Вам своё видение, мы даём Вам срез событий дня без цензуры и без купюр. Новости, какие они есть —онлайн с поминутным архивом по всем городам и регионам России, Украины, Белоруссии и Абхазии. Smi24.net — живые новости в живом эфире! Быстрый поиск от Smi24.net — это не только возможность первым узнать, но и преимущество сообщить срочные новости мгновенно на любом языке мира и быть услышанным тут же. В любую минуту Вы можете добавить свою новость - здесь.




Новости от наших партнёров в Вашем городе

Ria.city

В мире: Болгария душит симпатии к России насилием и арестами

Спасатель Щетинин дал рекомендации, как действовать при виде тонущего человека

Более 160 млрд руб. вложили недропользователи в геологоразведку на территории Якутии за 4 года

Более полусотни мастеров представили свои изделия на «Янтарных выходных»

Музыкальные новости

Звезда НХЛ Панарин признался, что «не вытягивает» цены и налоги в Петербурге

«Спартак» проиграл в первом матче РПЛ под руководством тренера Станковича

Владислав Овчинский: жители дома на Радужной улице начали переезд в новостройку по программе реновации

Астролог Янко составила подробный гороскоп для знаков зодиака до конца 2024 года

Новости России

Какие блюда опасно заказывать на дом: исследования и рекомендации

Более полусотни мастеров представили свои изделия на «Янтарных выходных»

Якушев поздравил металлургов УрФО с профессиональным праздником

Песков о выходе Байдена из гонки: для Кремля в приоритете достижение целей СВО

Экология в России и мире

Кутюрная коллекция Chanel осень-зима 2024

Ростовский ЭРЗ Желдорреммаш в 4,2 раза увеличил объем ремонта электровозов серии 2ЭС5К «Ермак».

Продвижение Музыки. Раскрутка Музыки. Продвижение Песни. Раскрутка Песни.

На «Атомайз» состоялась первая в России цифровая секьюритизация портфеля кредитов

Спорт в России и мире

Паес и Амритрадж введены в Зал теннисной славы в Ньюпорте

Рафаэль Надаль вышел в финал турнира в Бостаде

Теннисистка Мария Шарапова снялась без макияжа и укладки

Шнайдер прошла в финал турнира WTA в Будапеште

Moscow.media

Чиновника-уголовника подозревают в растрате более 220 млн рублей

Готовность моста через Каму – 80%

О нем написана книга: проект внедрения Итилиум номинирован на конкурс «1С:Проект года»

На мосту в створе улицы Мясищева ведется гидроизоляция











Топ новостей на этот час

Rss.plus






Якушев поздравил металлургов УрФО с профессиональным праздником

Более полусотни мастеров представили свои изделия на «Янтарных выходных»

Голос Мордора: Удачи вам, клопы!

«Человек — не хищник»: что такое модная карнивор-диета и можно ли ее соблюдать