ANNUAL MEETING:
Please mark your calendar. Our annual class meeting is on Saturday, November 8, 2008 at West River Sailing
Club with a potluck dinner and speaker.
I will send out more details later.
CAPTAIN DICK HARTGE REGATTA: Once again Robin Hartge put together
our final race of the season. Sunday, September
28th we held the annual Dick
Hartge Regatta honoring the founder and builder of our classic
sailboats.
It was not an
auspicious beginning that morning; with light rain and very, little wind as we
made preparations for the one-day event.
Elsie Whitman and Robin’s sister Sharon Solberg managed the crash boat. My powerboat, Jenny Girl was the committee boat with my wife Judy, Laurence and
Susanna Hartge as race committee members and Carolynn De Tessieres as the “flag
lady”. I’ve been hearing that the Jenny Girl committee boat always has a
great time while we’re living through the accompanying tensions of racing.
We postponed the start until about 11:30, when
a slight breeze came in from the southwest.
There were 11 Chesapeake 20s on the start line, one of our best turnouts
of the year: Osprey, Kit, Gracie,
Endeavor, Picardy, Stormy, Aurora, Serenade, Contrary, Spirit and America
(four glass boats, one cold molded and six classic woodies as Jane Hartge calls
them.)
In the first
race, it was challenging whether to go left or right, trying to find a whisper
of wind. Bob Blomquist in Gracie found the right winds with Robin
Hartge in Spirit, second and Roger
Link in Osprey, third. The wind continued to build slowly and the second
race had better racing. Roger Link came
in first with Peter Bell in Kit,
second and Carole McCullough, third. We had
excellent wind for races three and four.
In the third race we adjusted the weather mark to the left as the wind
backed. Roger Link tried a port tack
start with several starboard boats bearing down on him: he did a 720 and still won
the race. As the wind filled in from the
southwest, dark clouds appeared on the horizon.
The weather mark was off the point to West River and the fastest route
was to go right in the stronger breeze and close reach to the mark. Downwind for all four races resulted in place
changes as wind oscillated back and forth, left and right. We finished the last race just in time to sail
back to the club and put the boats away during a torrential downpour.
After the
racing, Ruth Hartge (along with Glenda Blomquist and other generous souls) put
on a grand meal with chili and other goodies and, of course, beer and
wine. Robin and Laurence Hartge
officiated at the award ceremony in which Laurence talked about his uncle,
Captain Dick Hartge who had dedicated his life to building good looking
sailboats.
My cousin,
Barry Blalock drove all the way from Dayton, Ohio for his first race (he loved
it) and another cousin, Doug Logan and nephew, Alex De Tessieres also crewed on
Stormy and Picardy. Lorenzo Dialti still
with us from Italy introduced us to another exchange officer at the Academy from
Great Britain, Ian Hotchins, whom we hope will be joining us next year.
Many thanks
to Ruth and Robin and all those that helped put on another successful Hartge
Cup. See attached pictures.
RESULTS CAPTAIN DICK
HARTGE REGATTA 2008
Position
|
Skipper
Crew
|
Race 1
|
Race 2
|
Race 3
|
Race 4
|
Total
|
1
|
Roger Link
Roger MacArthur
|
3
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
6
|
2
|
Peter Bell
Mary Bell
|
5
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
11
|
3
|
Bob Blomquist
Charlie Phiples
|
1
|
3
|
8
|
3
|
15
|
4
|
Clay Taylor
Sally Sachse
|
7
|
4
|
4
|
4
|
19
|
5
|
Robin Hartge
Ron Tate
|
2
|
6
|
6
|
7
|
21
|
6
|
Ted Weihe
Alex DeTessieres
Barry Blalock
|
6
|
9
|
5
|
5
|
25
|
7
|
Ari Schragger
Doug Logan
|
4
|
7
|
9
|
8
|
28
|
8
|
Jay Addison
Matt Dyer
|
10
|
5
|
7
|
8
|
30
|
9
|
Carole McCullough
Tab Tesnau
|
9
|
8
|
3
|
DNF/12
|
32
|
10
|
Andrew Resnick
Molly Winans
|
8
|
11
|
11
|
10
|
40
|
11
|
Lorenzo Dialti
Joelle Williams
Ian Hotchins
|
11
|
10
|
10
|
9
|
40
|
PASSING OF HELEN ORME: Last week, Helen Orme died at 83 at her home
at Blue Water Marina off Rhode River.
Helen was the wife and crew for Bobby Orme, one of our Chesapeake 20
pioneers. This summer she gave me their racing
scrap book and several half model Chesapeake 20 awards. The models will be part of the Chesapeake 20
display at the Annapolis Maritime Museum when it is completed. In our interview, she told me that Bobby was raised
in the Washington D.C. and was an outstanding football player. They were part of the C-20 fleet as pre-World
War II members of the Potomac River Sailing Association and Corinthian Yacht
Club. They owned four Chesapeake 20s,
all named Blue Water (including Spirit and America now raced by Robin Hartge and Carole McCullough,
respectively). The scrap book added racing
records from the early 1940s, to our archives which are currently being put online.
Bobby and Helen
moved to Rhode River to own and manage the Blue Water Marina. She said that the move to Rhode River made
them “outsiders” and they had to prove their racing prowess against Buddy
Hartge, Billy Heintz and others at West River.
They frequently towed Chesapeake 20s behind their wooden buy boat. Once they sailed Blue Water from Rhode River to Washington D.C. for the President’s
Cup. The trip took five days. Bobby was known to take young men under his
wing including launching Willie Keyworth’s career, now the director of the
Annapolis North Sails loft. They also
restored several 20s over the years, including Gay Lady, now owned by Billy Crandall’s daughter, Shannon. Attached
are early pictures (1941) of Helen and Bobby with Blue Water and towing behind their buy boat.