WoodenBoat Books Sailing (and Drawing) Around the Moon Reading about Buckley Smith’s life at his website www.buckleysmith.com, one comes away with the distinct impression of the quintessential free spirit. Born in southern California in 1947, from an early age Smith cultivated twin passions, sailing and art. When he wasn’t building boats or sailing them along
Board changes at the Island Institute
The Island Institute has announced several changes in the membership of its board of trustees. Myron “Sonny” Sprague of Swan’s Island has stepped down after a single term on the board. George W. Cole of New York, a seasonal resident of Isle au Haut, has joined the board, along with Tom Glenn of Atlanta, GA.
Different Commute, Same Experience
To the editor: I read your interesting story about the Swan’s Island ferry and couldn’t help think about riding our Staten Island Ferry. I feel Molly Bryan would feel very much at home. Yes, people read their books, listen to music with their earphones or just meet their friends to catch up on the latest
Nickel smelter worries Newfoundland fishermen
Newfoundland fishermen are worried about plans to construct a nickel smelting plant at Long Harbour on Placentia Bay –and with good reason according to Earle McCurdy, president of the Fish, Food and Allied Workers. The proposal by Voisey’s Bay Nickel Company Limited calls for a six-kilometer pipeline to discharge the “treated” effluent to an area
The Book of Old Houses
Bantam Books, 2008 Headed for Eastport, Packing Heat Sarah Graves’s latest murder mystery, The Book of Old Houses, has a number of corpses, as you might expect, and a host of twists and turns — including a point of view and a narrative of a character other than Eastport’s amateur sleuth Jacobia Tiptree — that
The Boatbuilder’s Apprentice: The Ins and Outs of Building Lapstrake, Carvel, Stitch-and-Glue, Strip-Planked, and Other Wooden Boats
Camden: International Marine/McGraw Hill, 2007 Hardcover, $39.95 “Logical Associations, Interesting Digressions” Greg Rossel is an engaging, talented and funny man who builds boats in Troy, Maine, and teaches at the WoodenBoat School. He also writes regularly about boatbuilding. This book’s origins lie in articles he wrote for WoodenBoat magazine and other publications, including at least
Not Easy
To the editor: As a recent transplant to Maine, and as a contributing writer to the Texas Observer, another small paper in Texas (where my wife and I just moved from), I’m picking up all the local newspapers I can. Yours is now my favorite, and we will probably subscribe for some friends who once
From the Deck: Fog Run
A log book was very useful to a coastwise cruiser before the invention of radar and GPS as a record of courses steered and distances run. Should fog shut down, he can retrace his steps on the chart and at least give a good guess as to his position. Capt. Hugh Williams in 24-foot Helen
Heart Stones
Harry N. Abrams, 2007 When a Heart Like a Stone is a Good Thing Just in time for all the sweethearts you want to wish a Happy Valentine’s Day, Heart Stones is hot off the press. Here, her images — created with a flatbed scanner and computer — portray a fascinating array of classically, and
To Arms!
The “powers that be” seem to ignore polluters and quite frankly, the raping of our waterways, to say nothing of the people who live and work in a working waterfront neighborhood. We are in a crisis situation in Mayport Village, Florida, a working waterfront area. Jaxport (Jacksonville Port Authority) has bought the lion’s share of