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Yard Tales

Hard work, dedication and patience give boats a second wind and owners a chance to keep cruising the waters at their helm.

Perhaps it’s old age or the aftermath of some misfortunes. Perhaps it’s the yearning for an upgrade or the wish to have something truly unique. Whatever it may be, there comes a time in the life of a boat where a refit is in order. It’s a labor of love that teams boat owners with top-of-the-line shipyards to bring new life to vessels. These are four of their stories.

Asha


When Keith Mortensen bought Asha, a 90-foot Palmer Johnson motoryacht in Palm Beach, Florida, in August 2014, he knew what he wanted. An experienced cruiser, he had taken his 73-foot Outer Reef up and down the East Coast and from The Bahamas to the Canadian Maritimes. Now he was looking for an even larger yacht for longer voyages. Asha seemed just right. In fact, she had already gone around the world. “It was a proven bluewater boat,” Mortensen said.

But Asha, built in 1992, was also in need of a refit. “She was fine if we just wanted a marina queen,” Mortensen said. “But we wanted an expedition yacht. We use the boat.” Mortensen had heard about the major refit that Front Street Shipyard in Belfast, Maine had completed three years ago on Stoneface, a 106-foot Burger built in 1978, and he made some phone calls. Soon, he, too, was headed for Front Street.

Front Street was founded in 2011 by four experienced Maine builders under JB Turner, formerly of Lyman-Morse, on a six-acre property with 1,500 feet of waterfront in downtown Belfast. The yard has grown to become one of the largest yacht facilities in New England, with 110 workers, a 485-ton hoist, a 165-ton Travelift, and the capacity to work on yachts up to 200 feet. In 2013, the Boat Builders and Repairers Association named Front Street the Boatyard of the Year. A custom builder, boatyard, marina, and service facility, Front Street has the capability to do everything—composites, carpentry, metalwork, coating, finishes, fabrication…whatever—which was very appealing to Mortensen.

To prepare Asha for extended cruising, the yard replaced all the hydraulic fittings and hoses, refurbished the shafts, flexible couplings and props, added a stern thruster, rebuilt every single pump, rewired the electrical panel, cleaned and recoated the water tanks, upgraded the electronics, and added redundant systems. To make living aboard more pleasant, Front Street put in a new teak and holly sole in the galley, built a new set of teak spiral stairs, installed new granite countertops in the galley and the master head, new stonework in both showers, a heated tile floor in the master head, varnished the wood headboard and countertops in the owner’s cabin, and updated the appliances.

Asha was at Front Street for six months, and Mortensen drove up from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, every week. “When it was all done, I actually was sorry to be leaving the yard,” he said. “That’s the highest compliment I can give. And the quality of all the work is phenomenal. The boat’s beautiful.”

His advice for other owners thinking of a refit? “Plan on spending more than you think. When you start tearing things apart you don’t know what you’re going to find. But building a new boat from scratch would be far more expensive and it would take at least two years. A refit is faster and less expensive.”

Front Street Shipyard
Belfast, Maine
(207) 930-3740;
frontstreetshipyard.com

 

Laissez Faire 

It’s hard to think about ordering a major refit for a Hinckley. After all, Hinckleys are pretty nice to begin with. But even Hinckleys get old, and after a while an owner might want to update things a bit.

The owner of Laissez Faire, a Hinckley Talaria 40, knew just what he wanted: a boat that didn’t look like and that would be faster than any other Hinckley. The experienced owner knew just where to go: Lyman-Morse Boatbuilding Co. in Thomaston, Maine. Lyman had taken care of all his other boats and had repainted Laissez Faire’s hull a head-turning Awlgrip Vivid Red, with a double white boot stripe in the spring of 2014. But the owner uses his boats, and he wanted to take longer cruises on the Hinckley, perhaps up to the St. Lawrence and the Down East Loop, so he entrusted Lyman with a complete refit.

On the waterfront at the protected top of the St. George River, Lyman-Morse is a well-established Maine stronghold that can do everything from new builds to refits including fabrication, painting, carpentry—just about anything you’d need. With Laissez Faire, the owner’s charge was to upgrade the boat mechanically “from soup to nuts,” said Ted Smith, the Lyman-Morse service manager.

The boat was built in 2004, and its twin 440-hp Yanmar diesels had 1,000 hours. “I was worried about the engines running into some issues,” the owner said. “Age wears parts like belts, hoses, fluids, and filters. When that occurs there may be mechanical areas of the engines which suffer but go undetected until they fail.” He also wanted to add 3 knots to the boat’s top speed of 33 knots.

The yard sent the engines to Billings Marine for a rebuild and servicing. Lyman installed larger fuel lines from the tanks to the engines to add rpm. While the engines were out, Lyman gel-coated the bilge, rebuilt the drive shafts, upgraded the air conditioning system, sprayed Micron Extra finish (used mainly on race boats) on the bottom, serviced the Hamilton water jets, repainted the engine boxes, rebuilt the black water system, took all the hardware off the boat for refreshing, installed new vinyl, and put LED lights under the cockpit coaming.

For his part, the owner is more than happy with the results. The boat hit 35.9 knots when it left the yard. “The people at Lyman have always displayed an unlimited degree of expertise and they take huge pride in their work,” he said. “They do a fantastic job.” His advice for other owners? “Get a great yard who you trust to do the work. And don’t cut any corners on the refit. The biggest costs have already been spent anyway, so in the long run you are only hurting yourself.”

Lyman-Morse Boatbuilding Co.
Thomaston, Maine
(207) 354-6904;
lymanmorse.com 

 

Hi-Life 

To a large degree, what happened to Hi-Life, a Wilbur 34, represents every boat owner’s worst nightmare. In the midst of Hurricane Sandy, Hi-Life sank at its dock in Staten Island, New York, its bow pointing up in the air, its stern submerged, resting on the hulls of two other boats that had sunk first.

“It was as dismal a sight as you’d ever want to see,” said John Swedberg, who had bought Hi-Life six years earlier. “The water was muddy and the engine room was awful. The boat sat there for 19 days before it was cleared away. The insurance company declared it a total loss.”

Swedberg and his wife Jean didn’t want to walk away from boating. He had just sold the marina where they kept the boat a few years earlier and had planned to use the Wilber as their retirement boat to fish for stripers and cruise the Jersey Shore and Long Island Sound. And they loved Hi-Life, a classic 1996 Wilbur 34 Downeaster soft-top express with a single 350-hp 3116 Cat diesel. “It was in impeccable shape,” Swedberg said. They could have used the insurance money to buy a new boat, but what they wanted was their old boat put back together again, so they bought Hi-Life back from the insurance company.

The Swedbergs had already attended a Wilbur owners’ rendezvous at the factory in Southwest Harbor, Maine, where they had met Wilbur president John Kachmar, his wife Ingrid, and his father-in-law Lee Wilbur, who started the company in 1979. “I liked all the Wilbur people,” Swedberg said. “I know they build great boats.” In fact, the 34 is Wilbur’s most popular boat having built 71 of them to date.

“The biggest challenge was where to begin,” Kachmar said. The mud and exterior damage was extensive. Just looking in the engine room was a bit overwhelming at first. Every wire, pump and piece of insulation had to come out so we could start fresh. It actually was a fun project once we got the mud out of it.”

The Swedbergs drove up to the factory three times while Hi-Life was being rebuilt. “We loved being part of the process,” Swedberg said. Once they did get the mud out, Wilbur put in new equipment, including a 460-hp Cat C7, tanks, transom, hoses, shaft, prop, canvas, batteries, Awlgrip for the hull, varnish, bulkhead in the engine room, soundproofing, electric panel, and the work list goes on. When the factory was done, Kachmar drove the boat down to Staten Island to deliver it personally to the Swedbergs, who were delighted. “It’s better than when we bought it. John Kachmar has been wonderful to us,” Swedberg said. The day I spoke with the Swedbergs, they had just returned from a Florida vacation and planned to take High-Life out the next day fishing for stripers.

Wilbur Yachts
Southwest Harbor, Maine
(207) 244-5000;
wilburyachts.com

 

Diva 

Chris Ware certainly knew what he was getting into when he bought Diva, a Deerfoot 62, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in November 2012. He’s been sailing since he was five, comes from a sailing family and his uncle is a surveyor. “He went all over the boat,” Ware says. “He even put a camera in the keel.” He found problems, but it wasn’t until Ware and his wife Jenn sailed Diva back home to the Boston area and pulled her out of the water that they realized how bad the problems had become. There was a one-inch hole in the bilge. Time for a refit.

A fast, flush-deck performance cruiser with a long waterline and fairly narrow beam, Diva had already completed a three-year circumnavigation. Launched in 1986, she was one of four Deerfoot 62s built at the Scania yard in Finland. Two had stainless steel keels; two (including Diva) had mild steel keels. The Deerfoot line was conceived by Steve Dashew; Diva was designed by Ulf Rogeberg of Denmark. Ware learned that Diva’s mild steel keel sister ship had already been repaired by Hodgdon Yacht Services in Southport, Maine, just outside Boothbay Harbor. “They knew the boat,” Ware said, “so we had a level of comfort. Plus we saw the capabilities and the scope of the yard.”

Hodgdon is indeed capable. Founded in 1816, it claims to be the oldest boat builder in the U.S. and has built everything from tenders to megayachts. In June 2014, it took over the Boothbay Region Boatyard in Southport and Wotton’s Wharf in Boothbay Harbor and added them to its existing shipyard to East Boothbay. A new division, Hodgdon Yacht Services at the Southport yard, expanded into the refit and service business. Sandy Spaulding, the former president of Hinckley Yachts, now runs it.

Diva was a big and complicated project,” Spaulding said. “We had to ship the lead for the keel from Massachusetts and work with the naval architect in Denmark, and give the boat a major systems upgrade.” John Vinal, service manager for Hodgdon Yacht Services, explained that the keel had developed corrosion, which affected the fuel and water systems. Rogeberg designed a stainless steel replacement keel to keep fuel and water in the casing but moved the 10,000 pounds of lead ballast outside of it, a complex process. “With plumbing fittings for the fuel and water system on top of the keel’s casing, there was a total of 63 through-hull penetrations that had to line up to lower the hull onto the casing,” Vinal said and added that nearly every system on the boat received some sort of maintenance work. Hodgdon also added 1,000 amp hours to the battery bank, peeled the whole bottom to reduce condensation and spruced up the rigging.

Once Hodgdon was done, the Wares sailed Diva back to Massachusetts at the end of May, ready for summer cruising. “But this is just stage three of a five-stage project,” Ware said. Next up is an engine refit and after that the interior.

Hodgdon Yacht Services
Southport, Maine
(207) 633-2970;
hodgdonyachtservice.com 

 

By Peter A. Janssen – Southern Boating Magazine, August 2015

 

Casa de Campo, Dominican Republic

Cruise to Culture and Charisma

Stretching more than four miles along the southeast coast of Hispaniola, and nestled among Cuba, The Bahamas, Turks and Caicos, and Puerto Rico, Casa de Campo—a 7,000-acre luxury resort in the Dominican Republic—presents a veritable paradise for cruisers. An esteemed member of the Leading Hotels in the World group, Casa de Campo models itself as “a house in the country”—only quite a bit larger—and renowned Italian architect, designer and sailor Gianfranco Fini’s innovative styling can be seen throughout the grounds. Countless amenities and activities for cruisers include 63 holes of golf— the ever-popular “Teeth of the Dog” golf course is consistently ranked by the pros as one of the world’s best—and with average year-round temperatures ranging from 84-88 degrees, playing 18 on any of the four picturesque golf courses is a real treat. If golf isn’t your game of choice, however, options include an 18-court tennis club, horseback riding, shooting range, and fitness center with Turkish bath and sauna. But the true pièce de résistance for cruisers and fisherman is the impressive Casa de Campo Marina. It’s situated perfectly for easy access to the beautiful surrounding waters from which blue marlin is the predominant catch, as evidenced by a staggering 400-plus blue marlin release count among 18 fishing boats over 61 days last year. Seasoned mariners with the right means will find the voyage to be a feasible venture, especially when armed with the latest copy of A Cruising Guide to the Dominican Republic—Fifth Edition by Frank Virgintino (a free PDF download is available at freecruisingguides.com), and certainly well worth the trek at the other end.

Casa de Campo Marina (casadecampo.com.do) and the Casa de Campo Yacht Club (CCYC) opened their doors in November 2001 and changed Casa de Campo’s culture by attracting a whole new clientele. Architect Gianfranco Fini and business partner Piero Giacosa—now the president of Casa de Campo Marina —approached Casa de Campo’s owners with their vision to develop a marina in a once abandoned area of the grounds, driven by the duo’s passion for the area. “I sail [to] other islands and admire their beauty, but there is always something missing in them. That something is the human warmth that [Casa de Campo] offers in such abundance,” recalls Fini.

Today, the marina’s 22-plus-acres offer 370 slips for yachts up to 250 feet, a stately, two-story colonial-style yacht club with pillared terraces designed to conjure up an atmosphere of days gone by, a 10,000-square-foot boatyard with a 120-ton Travelift, more than 60 shops, a residential community, plus the necessary government authorities to accommodate international check-ins.

Casa de Campo Marina’s Director-General José Gonzalvo works hard to make the CCYC attractive to all visitors whether they’re yacht owners, captains or crew. Guest safety is taken seriously as well. Security is tight from the outside, a welcome feature for cruisers bringing their expensive toys to the locale—and Casa de Campo Marina Marketing Manager, Vilma Nuñez asserts that the marina is one of the few in the world where you can “leave your boat open and not have to worry about anybody [who doesn’t have access] getting into your boat.”

Casa de Campo Marina was specifically designed with the mariner in mind according to Fini. “I have always designed my architectural creations and houses [by] relating to my clients, trying to understand their tastes, their backgrounds,” notes Fini. “When you are designing a marina, you have to be able to construct a mental picture of the ideal situation that a [yachtsman] would like to experience, basing your work on his tastes and preferences.” The result? A paradisiacal Mediterranean marina similar to a quaint European fishing village, but on a much larger scale. In the heart of Casa de Campo Marina, the village’s Piazza Portofino is an interesting Mediterranean and Caribbean blend. The village itself brings a distinct European flavor, forming a horseshoe complete with restaurants, cafés and bars, and longer-term residences overlooking the plaza.

Outside the marina, you can explore the rest of Casa de Campo via resort-supplied golf cart. Popular Altos de Chavón, a 16th-century village replica, offers a dramatic view of the Chavón River and part of the Dye Fore golf course (designed by famous golf course architect, Pete Dye). Cobblestone lanes, beautiful fountains, shade trees, and colorful flowers set the tone throughout the village as you pass by art galleries, museums, the Pope John Paul II-consecrated Church of St. Stanislaus, School of Design Altos de Chavón, and the open-air, 5,000-seat, Frank Sinatra-inaugurated amphitheater.

After exploring Altos de Chavón, go to Minitas Beach—a private white sand beach—to windsurf, snorkel, kayak, paddleboard, or just bask in the Caribbean sun. Catch your breath at Beach Club by Le Cirque for lunch or dinner with a relaxing view of the Caribbean Sea. Or, maybe you want to go horseback riding in fields with fantastic mountain views where bulls and buffalo roam freely. Later, enjoy a nice meal at one of the fine restaurants on location, such as Chinois Restaurant, a Pan-Asian bistro in Piazza Portofino. (Try the lemonade!) Of course, there are a number of great dining options throughout Casa de Campo, whether at the marina, near the hotel lobby, in Altos de Chavón, or at La Casita on Paseo del Mar, which features superb Spanish fare.

Make sure you save an evening and return to Altos de Chavón for dancing and live music. Perhaps a local will even teach you how to merengue. As a farewell to the Dominican Republic, I did just that, where I met Javier—who I wanted to adopt as my grandfather immediately. Dressed in black suspenders, a red bow tie, red spats, and red-rimmed fedora, Javier seemed closer to 45 years old than 85. Not one to leave anyone out, he happily—and patiently—danced with two novice ladies at a time, encouraging and praising them with skilled direction and a permanent but genuine smile on his face, eliminating any trepidation merengue beginners might have. (Don’t worry, gentlemen—pretty young women will do the same thing for you, too!)

Between Casa de Campo’s 370-slip marina, stunning architecture, award-winning golf courses, charming Altos de Chavón village, and other endless ways to have your own tropical adventure, you too can live out Mark Twain’s vision to “explore, dream and discover,” as I did, at one of the Caribbean’s foremost luxury resorts.

By Laura Dunn, Southern Boating July 2013

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