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| Jennifer Buchanan / The Herald
(click to enlarge) |
| Clay
Canfield (at wheel), skipper of the Everett Sea Scouts; Barrett Bertran
(center), 21, of Lake Stevens; and Colby Pennington, 19, of Mukilteo
take their boat, a 32-foot ketch, back into port Tuesday. |
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| Jennifer Buchanan / The Herald
(click to enlarge) |
| Anna Pennington (right) shows Barrett Bertran how to tie a knot during a Sea Scout sailing trip Tuesday night. |
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| CONTACT THE HERALD |
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com |
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Published: Thursday, July 24, 2008
Everett Sea Scouts: maritime skills for teens
By Justin Arnold Herald Writer
EVERETT -- Clay Canfield is no Capt. Bligh.
He
has little to fear from a teenage mutiny even though he's the skipper
of the Everett Sea Scouts. As a volunteer, he has helped sustain the
Everett-based program, which introduces teens to various maritime
activities.
"I've always enjoyed sailing and I've always felt
like there is very little mentoring going on in our society," Canfield
said. "I felt that the best contribution I could make is with youth
sailing."
The Sea Scouts, much like their land-based brethren,
instruct teens on a variety of subjects that are useful to any budding
mariner. Canfield has been mentoring teens in basic seamanship for 13
years, teaching them skills that are important on land and sea.
"Lately
I've noticed that most kids feel they need to do everything right all
the time," Canfield said. "I want to see those mistakes, because when
you make a mistake it's not failure, it's an opportunity to learn. It
means they are doing something."
As part of the program,
Canfield is responsible for two vessels -- a 32-foot Mariner ketch
named Mast Confusion and a 24-foot San Juan sloop called Fearless.
Canfield
enjoys the wordplay, which he considers a maritime tradition. The
Scouts refer to themselves as the "Clewless" -- which reflects
Canfield's easygoing humor.
"The clew is the rearmost corner of
the sail and that's the corner you use to control the sail itself,"
Canfield said. "If you don't have that, then you don't have control."
According
to volunteer Georgia Malinsky, Canfield is not only in control but the
anchor that keeps the program from going adrift.
"A great
skipper, very methodical and orderly on how he approaches teaching,"
Malinsky said. "He's always asking for input from the Scouts."
Malinsky,
who is in her fourth year volunteering for the Sea Scouts, praises the
Sea Scouts for its success as a mentoring program and Canfield in
particular.
"He prepares them for life, not just sailing.
Sailing is very interactive and you come away with a complete
experience that you have really learned something," Malinsky said.
"These experiences can take them anywhere in life."
Canfield
plans on making sure the Everett Sea Scout organization does just that.
Sea Scouts often take their skills and experience and use them in the
Navy, Coast Guard and Merchant Marines.
Canfield is looking for more teens to come aboard.
"We
are always looking for new sailors who are interested in high-adventure
programs like Sea Scouts," Canfield said. "We're currently accepting
anyone from 14 to 21 years old who is interested in what we offer --
adventure."
Reporter Justin Arnold: 425-339-3432 or jarnold@heraldnet.com.
More information
For more information on the Everett Sea Scouts, call skipper Clay Canfield at 425-471-6578 or go to www.clewless.3h.com.
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