Archive for the ‘Places and Events’ Category

Davis/Reagan Race

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

In the year 1878, there was great rivalry between the New England coastal cities of Portland and Boston.  In those days, the best rowers raced for prize money.  Michael Davis of Portland had already defeated one famous Boston rower, George Faulkner, on the Charles River in front of 30,000 cheering spectators.  When a race was arranged between Davis and Boston’s best rower Patrick Reagan, the excitement was comparable to a championship prizefight.  A neutral location was needed, and Silver Lake, about thirty miles south of Boston was chosen.  A special train was chartered to help transport the rowers and thousands of spectators from Boston to Silver Lake, and it was crammed full with fans from both cities.

The race was 2 miles out to a stake, around the stake, then back to the starting line.  Stake races were popular in those days, because the spectators could see both the start and the finish.  Davis won by a large margin, and the results were challenged with a claim that Reagan was fouled at the turning stake.  Fights broke out, but eventually the bets were paid.  Reagan had bet all his family’s assets on the race and was now broke.  Sick with exhaustion from the race and with the knowledge that his family lost everything, he was carried back to the train.

That evening the train filled with passengers including Reagan headed back to Boston, while Davis stayed behind, celebrating his victory with friends and admirers.  An open switch at a sidetrack caused the returning train to derail.  Railroad employees on a freight train waiting on the sidetrack saw the accident happen and sped off toward Boston to get help.  To get more speed, they unhitched their freight cars.  The unhitched cars rolled back down the tracks, smashing into the derailed train, compounding the disaster.  Reagan and 18 other passengers were killed, and more than 190 others injured, making it the worst train disaster in New England history.

WoodenBoat Show, Mystic, CT

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Row Zilla at Mystic Seaport, CT in 2008.

Row Zilla at Mystic Seaport, CT in 2008.

We were in the WoodenBoat Show in Mystic, CT in 2008 with a small tent set up on land and our 18 ft. rowing boat Row Zilla in the water.  What a beautiful setting.

We were there again this year (June 26 – 28, 2009) with the same arrangement, but with our 16-1/2 ft. Heart Throb in the water.  We are planning on exhibiting again next year.

This is the best boat show around for wooden boat lovers and is located on the grounds of the fabulous Mystic Seaport.  The seaport is a recreation of a 19th century village, featuring tall ships and other historic vessels that you can climb aboard and explore.

One of the main features at the seaport is the whaling ship Charles W. Morgan.  The 105 foot wooden whaling ship’s last voyage was out of New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1920 and returning in 1921.  She is presently being restored at the seaport for active sailing (to be used for research on whales), and is expected to be ready in 2013.

World’s largest rowing regatta

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Rowing in Finland

Rowing in Finland

Olympic style rowers may consider the Head of the Charles Regatta held in Cambridge Massachusetts to be the world’s largest rowing regatta, with over 7,000 rowers participating. But the Sulkava Rowing Race held in Sulkava Finland is the world’s biggest rowing competition and has over 11,000 rowers participating. The event lasts for three days and includes the Finnish National Championships. This race has become the largest festival in Finland. The days are long, the nights are short, and the food and drink are plentiful.

Finland has produced many great athletes including possibly the greatest Olympic rower of all, Perrti Kaarppinen (three time Olympic champion at single sculls). But popular rowing in Finland is not your typical Olympic style rowing. The boats used in the Sulkava Race must be made of wood, must be lap strake construction, and must conform to traditional Finnish designs. There are three main classes of boats: (1) singles with one rower; (2) change boats (boats having one rower and one paddler who change places during the race). A good team can change places in less than 3 seconds; and (3) long boats with 14 rowers and a cox. All oars must be made of wood and are non-feathering. The racing takes place in Lake Saimaa, and the races are approximately 10 km, 60 km and 70 km in length. The 70 km races include camping overnight on one of the islands. Mixed teams of men and women are not permitted, but teams of the opposite sex may compete against each other.

www.suursoudut.net/eng/default.asp