Mac
Allen of Jamestown, NC pulled up to the Town Dock last Saturday
morning on "Kuheli", a Halberg-Rassy 35. He was in
town to pick up a new mainsail because his old one blew out
off of Montauk, Long Island a few weeks ago while he returning
to Matthews Point Marina from Marthas Vineyard.
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Mac
Allen in the salon of SV Kuheli
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Just inside
the companionway of "Kuheli" there are a two framed
photographs. On many a sail boat these might be pictures of
the sailboat itself. But the boats shown here are tough working
vessels, one a tug, the other a stout fishing boat. They offer
an explanation for why Mac made the recent trip to New England;
both boats are connected to an old sea captain named Roy Campbell.of
Marthas Vineyard.
The fishing boat is an Eastern dragger named the "Roann",
which Roy had built in 1947 and named for himself and his wife
Annie. Mac says that over the next 15 years, Roy "spent
more time on that boat than he did on land." Then, in the
early '60s when Annie was diagnosed with cancer, Roy changed
that ratio. He ended his fishing and started running a tugboat
out of Vineyard Haven. It was named "Whitefoot" and
is the boat in the other photo on "Kuheli".
Thats how Mac met Roy. In the mid-70s, just a few
years out of high school here in North Carolina, Mac went to
work for him.
It was a small crew: Just the cook, Roy and Mac. From Vineyard
Haven, the Whitefoot kept busy handling equipment for the oceanographers
at Woods Hole, meeting Navy subs halfway to Bermuda to help
test sonar, even towing tall ships in to harbors in the Bicentennial
year. There were rougher times too. In August of 1979, Mac recalls
the "Whitefoot" chugged to a spot east of Long Island
where it was supposed to rendezvous with a Japanese long-line
fishing boat. Instead, the tug and crew weathered a three day
storm with 45 foot seas and 80 mile an hour winds. Later, Mac
figured it was the same storm system that had wreaked havoc
and killed many racers in the notorious Fastnet sailboat race
around the UK. "But back then," says Mac, " I
wasnt paying attention to yacht stuff".
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"Kuheli"
at the Town Dock
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He does
now and the three years of working on the tug with Roy Campbell
have stuck with him. Asked if it ever was so harrowing out there
that he feared for his life, Mac says no. Roy, he says, taught
him to always be prepared for the sea to "take what comes
and do the things you have to do.. Its the same way I
run a sailboat off shore now".
It was to see his mentor that Mac went off shore a few weeks
ago. The tug boat has a new owner and name -- "Weatherbird"
--- and its home port is now Beaufort, NC but Roy Campbell still
lives on Marthas Vineyard. He's in his early 90's and
dealing with Parkinson's. Mac visited with him during the week
he was there.
Crewing on the trip to the Vineyard was Macs 10 year old
son, Kiron who was making his first off-shore passage. He wasnt
just along for the ride, but was pressed in to service, says
Mac, standing watches with another member of the crew. Indeed,
one of the first things that Mac mentions about the trip, was
that Kiron was along and did so well. But then, the boy and
the boat go way, way back. Mac says that he and his wife Sushmita
took Kiron on board "Kuheli" when he was only two
weeks old, hanging his cradle just above the salon, not far
from those photos of Roy Campbells "Whitefoot"
and "Roann".
On the way back from the Vineyard, Mac stopped to see Roy Campbells
"Roann" in real life at the Mystic Seaport in Connecticut
where the 55 year old boat is now part of the dockside collection.
After tying up nearby for the night, Mac left Mystic on a Tuesday.
Then, off Long Island, " I got knocked around a bit. I
had the main sheeted too flat and too tight and it just ripped."
Sailing only under jib, and with a helpful wind, Kuheli pulled
in to Cape May, NJ on a Thursday night and made time on the
ICW that Mac says, "I thought wasnt possible",
arriving at Matthews Point Marina 76 hours later.
Mac, who
lives near High Point and works for a biotech firm, says he
tries to get off shore once a year. He talks about taking the
boat "down Hiway 76 (meridian) to Green Turtle Cay"
perhaps next year. But he adds that his trip this summer to
the Vineyard where sailboats vie for limited space, (and pay
dearly for moorings and slips) "makes you appreciate the
anchorages around North Carolina" where you can still drop
the anchor.
On his recent trip to Oriental, Mac didn't anchor out but tied
up "Kuheli" (a girl's name in Bengali that loosely
translates as "Misty") at the Town Dock because he
was getting a new main from Wally Chapins Oriental Sailmakers.
On Sunday morning, he put the sail to use for the first time
as he tried a maneuver you rarely see anymore in Oriental, or
any harbor. Mac raised sail at theTown Dock and then sailed
off.....
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"Kuheli"
departs Oriental.....
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