You are browsing the archive for 2011.

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by Alan

ABYC Chartroom Festive Season Trading Hours

21 December 2011 in Chartroom Restaurant

The Chartroom Restaurant will trade as follows after Christmas 2011:

  • 27 December to 29 December – Lunch ONLY
  • 30 December to 2 January – CLOSED

The ABYC New Year Bash on 31 December is being hosted by the Veranda Vikings – contact Phil Stunden or Ian Bancroft for more information.

Entrance will cost R30.00 per head to cover music provided by Triple M and you are encouraged to bring your own Picnic or Braai provisions.

There is a booking list in the bar or you may pay on the day.

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by Alan

New ABYC T-Shirts

22 November 2011 in House

You may have noticed our esteemed bar stuff wearing some snazzy new T-Shirts.

Of course, if you are anything like me you wouldn’t have enquired after snagging yourself a shirt or two – a man has to concentrate on the delights of a certain golden brew you know!

Ordering a shirt or two is easy enough, though:

  1. Ask your favourite tipple deliverer for one to fit for size,
  2. Place order on list in bar or at office,
  3. PAY,
  4. Cut off is 30 November,
  5. Wait 10 days for delivery,
  6. Wear with PRIDE.
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by Alan

A Knotty Question

14 November 2011 in Sailing School

The sailing school this past weekend (12 November) saw 25 aspirant sailors popping down to ABYC to learn more about what we have to offer.

The first person to answer all the following questions correctly will score 6 cokes from young Ronnie Baer.

Test your Knot Knowledge

Identify the three knots above and describe where each is used.
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by Alan

Sailing School

28 October 2011 in Sailing

ABYC members and interested parties are invited to attend a meeting of all persons interested in taking part and resurrecting the ABYC Sailing School. With the Quaggas fixed (and being fixed) we are now able to extend our offering and hope to increase the membership by offering sail training to schoolkids, youth and adults.

Should you have any friends (lucky you) that wish to learn how to sail please come along with them to a (hopefully) quick chin wag on Monday 31 October at 5:30 pm in the Chartroom Restaurant.

Ronnie Baer and myself will be the points of contact.

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by Alan

FITS – Warwick Owen Celebrates Publication of his Book

1 September 2011 in House

Pour yourself a long cool drink and read on about how a love of rum, camaraderie, life and our city culminated in a fun book.

One of the Algoa Bay Yacht Club ‘Teak Deck’ and Rum Club stalwarts, Warwick ‘Dog’ Owen, has just published a book of 22 short stories, FITS. FITS is edited by fellow old Muirite, Neville Ross and with witty cartoons by another old Muir boy, Derrick Nesbit. And, if three Old Muir boys in the same room and publication were not enough, Warwick added layout expert (and old Muirite) Derek Potgieter to the mix as well.

Fun In The Sun is an apt title for the emergence of Spring 2011 and for an author with such an eternally sunny disposition.

FITS invites you to go back to a better time – one when the only admonishment from your parents was to be back home before the sun went down, a time when you were free to explore and discover on your own time and own turf, a time when the pressures of technology only surfaced when your torch failed you whilst you were fishing, at night, on the river, alone.

Neville Ross captures the essence of FITS in his well written foreword:

This book is a witty and down-to-earth account of incidents and adventures that celebrate the life of the author. It takes the reader back into the 50?s, an era devoid of drugs, hijackers, terrorists, suicide bombers and the like. The ozone layer and global warming were phrases waiting to be used and understood.The story continues into what could be called the latter years describing, in satirical detail, names, places, events and people. The reader would probably have to be knowledgeable of the jargon and slang that prevailed some 50 plus years ago, but as one reads, the simple innocence and gentleness of those times is revealed.

The vivid description of cinema or bioscope attendance in the 50ties with dense smoke and standing rendition of God Save the King, at the end, is classic and a wonderful glimpse of life in those times.

Picture a group of friends striving to find identity in their adolescence years and maturing to be successful retirees in a world vastly different, the only catalyst being the ‘slow’ march of time affording the ability to adjust, adapt and accept.

Being part of many of these humorous happenings makes me able to appreciate these events with fond memories.

The relentless and driven character of the author is also noted depicting someone whose swansongs are ‘just do it’ and ‘give something back’ and who practices  those dogmas in his everyday life, striving to be a valuable individual in society.

Neville Ross

I asked Warwick what his life influences were; “My parents, the nuns, really strong and faithful good mates, some great bosses that believed in me,  learning about the demon grog, life on the street and learning to be streetwise on the factory floor. Especially my wife Lyn and our daughter Megan for the encouragement and keeping me and my volatile personality in check.”

Warwick is well known as the guy who is the driving force behind the establishment of the Due North Rum Club which meets and celebrates the now defunct naval tradition of the Rum Tot. Whilst having fun this tight group of comrades also manage to give back to the sport of sailing and mankind in general.

It was Warwick’s questing mind that led him to begin corresponding with Charles Tobias of Pussers Rum which was to prove the tipping point to publication of FITS when Charles wrote as follows; “What a hell’uva writer you are! You can really write – and how much I enjoyed your narratives! I hope to meet you down there one day – and soon – and to spend a night sinking a few tots and gamming about all of those old drinking holes and the time you spent in them. And your father must have been a great dad! I can tell from the way you write about him. I’ve saved what you’ve written, so when we meet I’ll have a copy in my pocket.”

Of course the abiding wish of the Rum Club is that the original rum as drunk by British Navvies, Pussers, will be freely available in South Africa soon. The only thing is that I still struggle with is getting my head around the name, Pussers, and the pronunciation in a South African context.

When asked why people should rush out and add FITS to their book collection Warwick said; “The book is all about my mates and I growing up, attending great schools -  Materadmirabilis Convent and Muir College, Uitenhage – in the 50?s with lots of satirical short stories of our life experiences in Uitenhage along with our forays to Port Elizabeth pubs. What Fun we had in the Sun!”

The FITS first edition is available exclusively from Fogarty’s Bookshop @ R160.00 including VAT.

 

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by Alan

Prizegiving Photographs

29 August 2011 in House

Excellent prize giving photo’s of everyone available on CD @R20 each.

Available in bar or contact Lee Godwin 079 0402 456.

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by Alan

ABYC Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-08-28

28 August 2011 in House

  • When I read this headline: http://t.co/a6rsiCa my heart did skip a beat for the 2011 Lipton Cup Sailors currently in Mossel Bay. #

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Slip Sliding Away

24 August 2011 in Regattas

Things just don’t seem to be going too well for the ABYC Lipton Cup Team who have slipped to 16th position in the 19 boat fleet after today’s racing with a 15th place.

Rob Archibald and Andrew Ward sailing for Redhouse Yacht Club had a steaming day with their best result yet – a 4th on the sausage course after being the first boat to round the top mark.

The report by Mathew Thomas below comes from the Lipton Cup web site:

Today, the weather gods must have decided that the majority of the crews hadn’t bathed properly as the heavens opened and the sailors were subjected to a nearly constant downpour for the duration of today’s racing. With two of the three compulsory courses sailed, today’s race course was the final required course, the “sausage”, sailed in SW winds that varied between 6 and 12 knots, with gusts around 15kts.

Right from the start of today’s racing it was a tight battle up front with Rob Archibald, sailing Redhouse Yacht Club’s Orion, first at the top mark, followed by Luke Wagner on PYC Element and Ricky Robinson on RNYC’s Orion B2G2, followed closely by defending Champion Greg Davis on KYC Colorpress, followed by Guido Verhovert on RCYC’s Ells Teeth, Neil Malan on UCT Maverick and Andrea Giovannini & Markus Progli on FBYC’s Team Intasure Marine Insurance.

With the sailors being pummelled by numerous rain squalls and nearly constant rain, it was tight racing that saw the front pack closely bunched around the course as the fought to keep ahead of the yachts behind them, while at the same time trying to pass the yachts ahead of them.  By the end of the race, Ricky Robinson, on RNYC’s Orion B2G2, had managed to work his way into second place, just behind Rob Archibald on Redhouse Yacht Club’s Orion, who had lead from the start. Defending champion, Greg Davis on Knysna Yacht Club’s Colorpress was 3rd.

This epic battle continued till the end, with Colorpress trying to out manouver Orion B2G2, but it was False Bay Yacht Club’s Team Intasure Marine Insurance, sailed by Andrea Giovannini & Markus Progli, who managed to pass everyone and ended up finishing 1st. Ricky Robinson, on Orion B2G2, finished 2nd, Greg Davis, on Colorpress, 3rd and Rob Archibald, on Orion, 4th.

With their win today, this has moved Team Intasure Marine Insurance into 3rd place behind Colorpress and Orion B2G2 who are tied for first place.

Rob and Andrew are lying 8th Overall with the top three places being claimed by:

  1. Knysna Yacht Club
  2. Royal Natal Yacht Club
  3. False Bay Yacht Club
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by Alan

Kiss of Death for AON Challenger

23 August 2011 in Regattas

The 2011 Lipton Cup is being sailed in Mossel Bay this week.

Results after Day 2 – ABYC’s AON Challenger is lying 15th with a 14th in the first race and an OCS in the second. Unfortunately an OCS is like the kiss of death in the Lipton as there are NO discards.

Rob Archibald and Andrew Ward on RYC Challenger – Orion are in 9th place with a 10th and an 8th.

Joint first on 5 points apiece are Theeewater Sports Club and hosts Knysna Yacht Club.

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by Alan

SAS Membership Renewal Procedure for the 2011/2012 Sailing Season

16 August 2011 in SAS

  1. Yacht Clubs will still issue accounts and members will still pay clubs exactly as in the past.
  2. The member can then log into the database via the SAS website to complete his/her details and get his/her user name and password.
  3. Once the member has done that, the regional administrator will then firstly confirm that SAS has received the membership money and then validate the membership.
  4. It is at this stage that the administrator completes the date field to indicate from when to when the membership is valid. This date must always be in line with the member’s club financial period as in the past. The administrator also completes the type of membership to correspond with the amount received from the member. The administrator will further ensure that all family members are linked on the database.
  5. Only once the membership has been validated by the regional administrator will the member be able to log in again and print his/her own membership card which will have his/her photo on if it was uploaded onto the system by the member.
  6. Where members don’t have access to the internet, the clubs will have to provide the regional administrator with the minimum details required for it to be captured under the bulk processing facility of the database. Minimum details being name, surname, date of birth and an e-mail address.
  7. In cases where members can’t print their own cards the clubs can be given access to allow them to print the cards, alternatively the regional office can download and e-mail the cards to the club.
  8. It is important to note that nothing has changed as far the way of working with the membership fees to the way it was done last season. Proper records must still be kept by the Clubs of how the payment to SAS is made up.
  9. The only difference this season are the cards – if members want their cards, SAS need the information first.

SAS appreciate the assistance of all our members in this regard and hope that everybody will see the benefit of a well managed member’s database.

The local SAS Representative is Anton Vivier.

Contact Anton as follows:

  • Tel: 041 365 0720
  • Mobile: 083 456 4812
  • Fax: 0866 717 517
  • e-mail: msb[at]mweb.co.za