Harbor Heritage Regatta 2015
Click Here to Purchase your Entry and Party Tickets
We have paused the movie to give you time to sign up….don’t miss the party of the summer…Tickets and Entry still available!
Official Notice Board
From Paul DeCapua:
In an effort to do the very best job we can in scoring individual races and the Series, I’d like to ask that if you intend to race in a division other than the boat was initially registered, please let us know ahead of time (preferably by noon on race day). You can do this by:
I appreciate your support and look forward to seeing you out on the water…and at the post-race party afterwards.
Paul DeCapua
BCYC
The BYC Harbor20 MidSummer Regatta is this Sunday, July 12th. This is a High Point event.
Tomorrow (Wednesday, July 1st) is the last day for the discounted early-bird registration for the Harbor Heritage Regatta. Details here. Sign up here.
The NHYC Twilight Series begin this Thursday. Official Notice Board.
For sale is a 2010 Schock Harbor 20 in good condition. Hull number 303. Only cosmetic blemishes. Original owner. 6hp outboard gas engine. All controls within cockpit. Pattison sails. Seat cushions. Dodger. Full main sail and cockpit cover and jib sock.
Asking $20,000 or best offer.
Call Craig. 510-339-9573
The boat and I are located in Oakland, CA, near San Francisco.
The 2015 Leukemia Cup has been changed to a Harbor 20 High Point event by the H20 Fleet 1 Board of Directors. The Harbor 20 races are scheduled for June 7th.
The Official Race Board is open and entries being accepted.
Harbor Heritage Regatta & Summer Party
August 16, 2015 – LIYC
THINK – SUMMER – PARTY
Sisters in rolled up jeans Perhaps one of the things which most characterizes the 1950’s was the strong element of conservatism and anticommunist feeling which ran throughout much of society. One of the best indicators of the conservative frame of mind was the addition of the phrase “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance. Religion was seen as an indicator of anti-communism. Fifties clothing was conservative. Men wore gray flannel suits and women wore dresses with pinched in waists and high heels. French fashion designers such as Dior, Chanel and Givenchy were popular and copied in America. Families worked together, played together and vacationed together at family themed entertainment areas like national parks and the new Disneyland. Gender roles were strongly held, girls played with Barbie dolls and Dale Evans gear, boys with Roy Rogers and Davy Crockett paraphernalia. Drive-in movies became popular for families and teens. Cars were seen as an indicator of prosperity and cool-ness. Highways were built to take people quickly from one place to another, bypassing small towns and helping to create central marketing areas or shopping malls such as Sharpstown Mall, Gulfgate Mall and Meyerland Plaza in Houston.
Fashion successes were Bill Blass and his blue jeans, poodle skirts made of felt and decorated with sequins and poodle appliqués, ponytails for girls, and flat tops and crew cuts for guys. Saddle shoes and blue suede loafers were popular. Teenagers were defined as a separate generation and were represented by James Dean who wore blue jeans in Rebel Without a Cause and created a fashion and attitude sensation. Activities we liked were flying saucer watching, and watching and dancing to Dick Clark’s American Bandstand. Fad hits with kids were toys like hula-hoops and Hop along Cassidy guns and western gear, Davy Crockett coonskin hats and silly putty