All sailors start somewhere. As a teen I eagerly absorbed National Geographic stories in the late 60s of young Robin Lee Graham sailing single-handed around the world in his tiny boat. I was infatuated. Construction plans in Popular Mechanics lead me to build a sailing dinghy out of cedar ribs and plywood. Like many, I taught myself to sail, reading about the fundamentals in magazines and books. Practical knowledge came from dodging ocean-going ships and tugboats in the Fraser River just south of Vancouver, British Columbia. I was hooked, dreaming grandiose plans of a sailing future. Then life got in the way. Starting a family and career left very little time for recreation. Sailing took a distant back seat, but was always there, waiting to return.
Rudder Failure on the Salish Sea: Lessons From a Close Call
A mid-passage rudder failure on open water taught one novice sailing family that preparation matters—and so does the kindness of strangers at the dock.
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