Y2A BY ELLEN BIRRELL SEASONALITY, A CARIBBEAN REALITY Youth to Adult — “Y2A” — is a series of articles celebrating sailing’s role in youth development for <strong>Caribbean</strong> children. MARCH <strong>2019</strong> CARIBBEAN COMPASS PAGE 20 MOVING FORWARD CARIBBEAN Coming up on my submission deadline for the <strong>March</strong> issue of <strong>Caribbean</strong> <strong>Compass</strong>, I have three articles in the works. One features the formation and ongoing development of the Carlos Aguilar Match Races in St. Thomas, one concerns Cercle Nautique de Schoelcher (CNS) in Martinique, launching a new outreach fall event called “Open Doors”, and lastly, one regarding youth marine-environmental work in Culebra, Puerto Rico. Nearly daily I check for replies from contact persons who can give me the real meat for “their” article. Neither Googling, websites, e-mail, Facebook, WhatsApp or Skype are yielding results. Even the <strong>Compass</strong> editor’s excellent idea of featuring my Grenadian friend Kevin Banfield failed, for he is consumed in Grenada Sailing Week. What’s a writer to do? As I was crying on the shoulder of CSA president Alison Sly-Adams, she replied, “Keep the faith, Ellen — it is a busy time of year, as you know, and I think there is another big event coming up on Martinique, right?” Sharing our 40-foot sloop of a home, my partner Jim Hutchins replies, “You know that ‘Y2A’ is successful when everyone is too busy sailing to respond!” The lightbulb came on. “Voila!” as my Martinique colleague Oliver Rene-Corail might say. Why not highlight how crazy-busy things get in the winter in the <strong>Caribbean</strong>? For Oliver, president of League Voile de Martinique (Martinique Sailing Association) and CNS, he is one busy man. Though non-<strong>Caribbean</strong> folks may envy what they perceive as the easy-going <strong>Caribbean</strong> life, getting things accomplished in a place where the tides of seasonality, language, and often technology and geography create real challenges. There is this thing called the sea that separates the islands of the <strong>Caribbean</strong>. Imagine that. January through <strong>March</strong>, the height of <strong>Caribbean</strong> big-boat racing season, brings to light an interesting dilemma for those who choose to live and/or have livelihoods in the marine sector, local or foreign. They have to make “weigh” while the sun shines — particularly here in the <strong>Caribbean</strong>, where it is not just racing season but tourism and cruising are in Sock It To Me mode. <strong>Caribbean</strong> livelihoods become really intense January through <strong>March</strong>. For those in Bequia — through April’s Bequia Easter Regatta! Mark Theron, Board Member and Sailing Development Chair for the CSA, runs a distillery business on Nevis. In his “spare time”, he gathered support and founded a Member National Authority for World Sailing/Olympic Sailing Development for St. Kitts & Nevis. As he’s trying to fit in supporting sailing development while meeting demands as a business owner, father, husband and sailor, Mark’s e-mails are sometimes apologetic for having had to miss electronic meeting discussions. “I might be a little challenged this afternoon. Will do my best to make meeting.” Even other writers who are a wealth of information and connectivity, such as Carol Bareuther, are very busy covering the innumerable events and happenings of the season. Thus, hard to reach. Oh, and by the way, the prolific Carol also works as a registered dietician, too. No moss is growing under her feet! All in this busy season together — Ellen Birrell, Dick Neville and Dylan Penn at work on the 2017 BVI Regatta Race Committee Anguilla Racing More technology. More expertise. More service. The same sailmaking team St. Maarten Sails and Canvas N.V has teamed up with Ullman Sails Biminis and Dodgers Cushions Upholstery General canvas work Opposite Island Water World +1(721) 544-5231 / +1(721) 520-6484 rgilders@ullmansails.com / admin@stmaartensails.com www.stmaartensails.com (This is starting to sound like a Fatty Goodlander rant, which is a high compliment — and a real stretch from a typical “Y2A” delivery. When I ran the idea of an article about seasonality by <strong>Compass</strong> Editor Sally Erdle, she said, “I love it — it’s real!”) See <strong>Caribbean</strong> <strong>Compass</strong>’ annual calendar of events at www.caribbeancompass.com/ online/jan_dec_<strong>2019</strong>.pdf, listing the numerous regattas and other happenings that are keeping everyone so busy. The <strong>Caribbean</strong> Sailing Association also keeps up a regional calendar, currently all the way through 2023, at www.caribbean-sailiing.com. Local festivals and traditional sailing events also crowd the scene during peak season. Seasonality from Different Perspectives Snowbirds who have nested permanently in the <strong>Caribbean</strong> may say from time to time, “I miss the changing seasons.” But, for me, Nature’s seasons during my formative years in coastal southern California, like in the <strong>Caribbean</strong>, changed little. Only by the blossoming of certain fruits, flowers and trees, watching the hills turn from green in winter to brown in summer, longer summer days/longer winter nights, and a maximum shift of ten or 20 degrees Fahrenheit marked the changing seasons. I didn’t know a wool suit until I moved to northern Utah as an adult. But, I knew full well the tourism season in coastal southern California because the streets and beaches swelled with local and foreign tourists July through August, returning in the other months to relative quiet places of periodic fog and the Pacific’s constant cool ocean breezes. Further to the subject of seasonality, I was once employed to keep occupancy levels high year round for a ski resort that “made their hay” December through <strong>March</strong> — only. This has distinct parallels to the challenges that businesses face in the <strong>Caribbean</strong>. To know <strong>Caribbean</strong> tourism, cruising and big-boat racing seasonality, is to know and accept life here. Here’s to that life that we choose — this life we love! Ellen Birrell attributes her opportunity to cruise the <strong>Caribbean</strong> aboard S/V Boldly Go to life skills built in childhood. Believing swimming and sailing are essentials for island youth, she supports Learn to Sail and competitive junior sailing, and serves on sailing development for <strong>Caribbean</strong> Sailing Association. See https://caribbean-sailing.com/ sailing-development/the-future-of-caribbean-sailing.
MARCH <strong>2019</strong> CARIBBEAN COMPASS PAGE 21