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Ahoy
by Guest Columnist David Beede
simplicityboats@clmg.com

Life as Spectator Sport   

     Music and boats share a lot of parallels for me it seems. I recall after getting into music as a kid, I began to play guitar and write songs, yet I was very uninspired by the popular music at the time (Of course now that it's "retro" I enjoy it.) Then I went to my first folk festival in Boone North Carolina and was surrounded by dulcimers, and banjos and hammered dulcimers, and music that had been made up and sung and passed along for hundreds of years, and it changed my life. I began making music and building musical instruments for the next 20ish years.
    Similarly, my first wooden boat festival was a balm to my fiberglass tortured soul! Same kind of feeling of coming home. 
(Caution, here come the ranting part.)
    Our culture has this nasty habit of taking many of the activities of life that used to be participated in regularly by everyday folks and turning them into spectator sports. You are either a "musician" or you are the audience. We do the same with sports, humor, dancing, storytelling and lately I've come to see boating embodies the same dynamics. There was a time, I'm told, (See Howard Chapelle's American Small Sailing Craft) in communities in proximity to water, that it was not so un-common for ordinary folks to fasten some planks together and make a skiff and get out on the water. ('Twas almost the equivalent of teenagers getting their drivers license these days.) Today, if most of the magazine on store shelves are to be believed, boating is an eclection of fiberglass, and gel coat and stainless steel and teak bright work and expensive electronics, available primarily to the moneyed elite.

"Don't try this at home folks! We're the professionals here. Just leave it all to us, and get out your credit cards."

Nothing pleases me more than to see people overcome this cultural programming and pick up an instrument and start playing music, or writing songs - or better yet - borrow some tools and make an instrument and learn to play it, or a boat and learn to sail it. A more hands on approach to life results in more interested, interesting and fulfilled human beings with all that that implies to a community. (end of rant.) So get your hands dirty.    As the T-shirts at the community boat building event said:

Just Build It!

(evolved from an email to a friend)   David J. Beede

 

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