Student casts off for Hawaii
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Marisa O’Neil
Before Wednesday morning, Back Bay High School junior Jorge Alvarez
had been out to sea only once -- on a whale-watching trip in the
third grade.
Now, the 17-year-old is part of a crew sailing a replica 1812 ship
on a roughly two-week voyage to Hawaii. He and four other students
will be swabbing decks, hoisting sails, keeping an eye on the seas
and learning about history while they bond on the high seas.
“I’m looking forward to learning everything and teaching people
about my experience,” Jorge said. “It’s not something you do every
day, sailing from Newport Beach to Hawaii.”
The Lido Junior Sailing Foundation is sponsoring Jorge’s trip,
which would usually cost $2,800. Capt. Rick Barbarossa, director of
operations for the Defense of Freedom Foundation, which operates the
Lynx, said they wanted to offer the trip to someone who would
otherwise never have the chance to sail to Hawaii.
The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce Education Committee
contacted Back Bay High School to find a student who would be willing
to take on the challenge. Career center job coach Anne Younglove said
she knew that Jorge -- who has turned his life around since coming to
the alternative school -- was the one to pick.
“Jorge’s name kept coming up,” she said. “It’s his attitude,
involvement in school, attendance, grades. He’s a real contributor.”
Jorge will be journaling his experiences on the boat to share with
other students in the fall, Younglove said. Those will include
four-hour watches -- including one from midnight to 4 a.m. -- as well
as swabbing decks, hoisting sails and even climbing to the top of a
90-foot-high mast.
The ship is a close replica of one used to defend American seas
against the British during the War of 1812, said Woodson K. Woods,
executive director for the Lynx. While it does have some modern
necessities like navigation systems, sailing on it isn’t too far off
from an authentic experience.
“This is one of the greatest educational experiences of a
lifetime,” Woods said. “They’ll learn history, mathematics through
navigation, and they’ll learn to drop the ‘I.’ This is a crew of
‘We.’”
The crew’s first assignment Wednesday morning before setting sail
was stowing the ship’s four carronades, or small cannons.
Below deck, students and the nine crew members staked their claims
on bunks, little curtained cubbyholes around a wood-paneled dining
area. Food and provisions filled nearly every available space and
hidden storage area, ready for the long trip.
And Jorge, too, was ready for his first sailing expedition, lest
the seas get too rough.
“I’ve got some [motion sickness] pills, and I’ve got the patches,”
he said.
The Lynx is expected to arrive in Hawaii about July 1. Students
will fly back on July 10.
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