C_B_2015_05_

(Wang) #1
Giacomo de
Stefano: “the
ruling is ignorant,
violent and
absurd”

22 CLASSIC BOAT MAY 2015

TELL TALES


Venice, one of the world’s spiritual homes of rowing, has banned navigation by seemingly all
human-powered craft – including rowing boats. A new law passed on 1 March excludes “joles,
dragon boats, rowing boats, pedal boats, canoes, kayaks and windsurfs” from many of the city’s
canals including the Grand. Andrea Bedin of the the Italian Canoe and Kayak Federation said: “It
is no longer possible to go from one area of the city to another... Nobody considered contacting
us for our take on it, although we represent 14 associations with 1,000 members in Venice.”
Venice resident Giacomo de Stefano (CB’s 2013 Person of the Year), is involved with a legal
challenge against the ruling, which he describes as “ignorant, violent and absurd... the excuse is that
last year a German tourist was killed on a gondola by a vaporetto.” Gondolas are exempt from the ban.
René Seindal, a Dane who operates kayak tours of Venice, has some good maps on his website,
rene.seindal.dk, detailing the restrictions and the legal challenge headed by kayak club Arcobaleno.

The biennial Australian Wooden Boat Festival this February was as big, if not bigger, than the record set in 2013, reports
Kathy Mansfield. The crowds were stupendous, the weather perfect after a rather unsettled summer in Tasmania, and the
boats were mind-boggling in number and variety. Boats had set off months before – one couple sailed 1,800 miles to be
there. Fortunately they arrived well before the show: the Tall Ships Endeavour and James Craig were caught by bad
storms, one of them breaking a spar, and sadly had to turn back.

VENICE
No rowing please, we’re Venetian

HOBART, TASMANIA
Record Aussie wooden boat fest

WORD OF^
THE MONTH
Dead-men
“The reef or gasket-ends
carelessly left dangling
under the yard when the
sail is furled, instead of
being tucked in.”
Sailor’s Word Book 1867

Britain’s
oldest yacht
on the move
The 1791-built Peggy (TTs
passim), thought to be
Britain’s, if not the
world’s, oldest sailing
yacht (she’s 26ft
6in/8.1m, clinker-built
and schooner-rigged) has
been moved from the
Nautical Museum in
Castletown to a
storage unit in Douglas
by her guardian,
Manx National Heritage,
to be “stabilised,
examined and
conserved”.

Sail-trading
ship to visit
Falmouth
The engineless, wooden
trading schooner Tres
Hombres will put into
Falmouth, Cornwall this
summer to offload cargo. For
a week starting 1 May, there
will be opportunities to visit
the ship, taste her cargo of
rum and chocolate and learn
more about trading under sail
in the 21st century. See
newdawntraders.com.

KATHY MANSFIIELD

C/0 ROSE PARRY MANX NATIONAL HERITAGE

CB323 TT 22.indd 22 24/03/2015 12:53

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