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(HRCS) based in New York City, despite the inherent challenges of its location. Tides on the lower Hudson are fierce, the wind is gusty and fluky, the water is assumed (wrongly these days) to be dangerously polluted and there is a daunting amount of shipping traffic to avoid, including a myriad of ferries plying between Manhattan and New Jersey. Twelve years after establishing a small community boathouse on a pier in Chelsea with a shoestring budget and some donated J/24s, HRCS now runs nine public access programmes teaching STEM through sailing, boatbuilding and navigation. It offers a four-year curriculum to high school students from nine local schools and all five boroughs of the city, teaching practical sailing from April to November and building Optimist dinghies in the winter months. It also runs summer camps, provides affordable sailing for 3,000 to 4,000 adults every year and offers sailing therapy for U.S. Armed Forces veterans. A recent grant from 11th Hour Racing has helped HRCS open its second Sail Academy in the northern Manhattan neighbourhood of Inwood, where an estimated 25 per cent of residents live in poverty. ‘We know that sailing changes lives and it’s helping us to build a more diverse community,’ says HRCS development and communications director Maeve Gately. ‘It was a big decision for us to open in Inwood. We decided we needed to serve the community with the highest needs. When they first come to us, most of the kids can’t swim and have never been on the water. Many of them aren’t even


Top:


Hudson River Community Sailing teach- ing beginners to sail in one of its fleet of J/80s. Above: students


connect with nature, learn to sail on the Chesapeake Bay, and meet new friends they otherwise would not have known. Top right: on the South Side of


Chicago a small group of volunteers run youth boatbuilding courses that provide a lifeline for at-risk children, teaching vocational skills and ecology alongside


STEM subjects and giving students who have never been afloat the chance to do so


aware that they live on an island.’ HRCS is unique for providing all of its sail training – even for complete novices – in high-performance J/80s. ‘We just spend a bit more time helping them to get comfortable,’ Gately says. ‘It’s remarkable how quickly they pick up the concepts and I’m always impressed at how well teenagers respond when you give them responsibility.’ Marine ecology is also part of the programme, with studentsmonitoring water quality. HRCS is starting to see long-term benefits from its outreach


programmes. ‘In 2018 our first round of students graduated from college,’ Gately says. ‘Half of them majored in STEM subjects. One girl graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) with a degree in marine engineering. Others have gone on to maritime academies or into marine trades, and one is working on tall ships.’


At the north end of Chesapeake Bay another sailing centre supported by 11th Hour Racing has a new and challenging mission: create a stress- free environment for students to learn about and explore the waterfront. ‘Most of it has happened in the last two years,’ says Baltimore County Sailing Center’s (BCSC) executive director Rob Deane. ‘We’ve been pushing hard to create programmes for people who wouldn’t normally have any sort of access to the water. That’s what sailing should be all about.’ Alongside many other programmes, BCSC runs sailing, kayaking and fishing courses for children from homeless shelters. ‘These kids sleep 50 to a room and they’re growing up in really tough circumstances,’ Deane says. ‘When I saw the extreme need of the families living there, I knew that no matter how challenging, I just had to do this.’ ‘At first the kids were terrified and we soon realised they didn’t actually know each other, even though they lived in the same place,’ Deane says. ‘Within 30 minutes they were


beginning to interact, playing and enjoying it. Very few people even know the names of some of these kids. When they come to us it’s often the first time they’ve ever felt anyone trust them with anything. And it’s incredible how proud they are of what they’ve learned.’


The Youth Launch Programme is growing rapidly, from 70 kids in total to groups of 30 children per day in 2019. BCSC also runs courses for inner city youth, and some of those kids now work for the organisation. ‘We want to work with more shelters but it is a challenge,’ Deane explains. ‘Because the concept of what we do is completely foreign to them.’ BCSC has also discovered that sailing is a transformative tool to challenge addiction. BCSC includes rehabilitation from drug addiction in its curricula by fostering personal connections to nature. ‘The aim is to help people build inner strength and confidence,’ he says. ‘We’ve had a lot of unexpected successes. Folks struggling with addiction often feel confined and isolated; we take them outside and show them there is an alternative. On weekends, they come here with their children. It’s wonderful to see people reconnecting as a family.’ 11th Hour Racing’s grant programme director Michelle Carnevale estimates that in total, the grants she oversees have helped enrich about 700,000 people’s lives. ‘Breaking down barriers and increasing access to hands-on education and local waterways regardless of economic backgrounds is essential to improving ocean health,’ she says. ‘Getting out on the water connects us to ourselves, to each other and to the world around us, reminding us that we are part of a much bigger story. Building these connections increases people’s quality of life, well-being, and ensures the next generation are strong stewards for the ocean.’ www.11thhourracing.org


q SEAHORSE 81


BALTIMORE COUNTY SAILING CENTER HUDSON RIVER COMMUNITY SAILING


DAVE REARICK/11TH HOUR RACING AMBASSADOR


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