Kim’s  Part
             
              Readers know that we occupy a small niche within the broader boating  spectrum.  We’re seldom serious racers or  sport fishermen, nor are we typically found in yacht clubs or aboard jet skis.  Sometimes this makes us a lonely and  scattered minority.   
            Happily,  there are an ever-expanding number and variety of gatherings for such like-minded  boat people.  Events such as the  Kokopelli Cruise in the west and the Mid-Atlantic Small Craft Festival in the  east are examples.  Here’s one to add to  the list: the HAVASU POCKET CRUISERS’ CONVENTION (HPCC), also known as “Sail  Havasu”.  This is an annual, week-long  event, held each February on Lake Havasu, in the Mojave desert, on the Arizona-California  border. https://www.sailhavasu.com 
            
    
            “HPCC”  is the brainchild of Sean Mulligan, sailor and native son of Lake Havasu City,  Arizona.  Sailing on Lake Havasu used to  be a lonely affair, before Sean hatched the idea to invite sailors to gather in  February for this group event.  Completing  its fifth year in 2012, HPCC has grown from a small gathering to almost 400 sailors  and 184 boats in 2012.  This year crews came  from 26 states, four Canadian provinces, and several countries overseas.  Most trailered their boats, a few from  thousands of miles away.  Some flew in  and found a spot crewing on others’ boats. Representatives of three sailing publications  were present (Sailing, Good Old Boat,  and Small Craft Advisor), so Dan and  I nominated ourselves as correspondents. 
            No  small part of the appeal of the event is that it’s held in February, when the  home waters of many participants may be frozen solid, or close to it.  What sailor from northern climes wouldn’t  want to get away and go sailing for a week during what is appropriately called,  back home, “the dead of winter?”  By comparison, Lake Havasu is paradise in  February, the flip side of being sometimes the hottest place in the western  hemisphere during summer.  It’s not quite  the Caribbean, but it’s pretty darn nice: you can drive there, you can bring  your own boat, and you can hang out for what passes for cheap these days.  
            Even  for a southern California guy like me, accustomed to living near Disneyland, Lake  Havasu has a “Land of Oz” quality about it.   A big blue reservoir in the middle of the Mohave desert, the product of  a giant 1930s government water project, would be strange enough.  Add to that the personal vision of mid-20th  century entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch   (think chainsaws and outboard motors) who was determined to build a city  on its vacant shoreline, where summer temperatures exceed 120F.   Then  there’s Havasu’s best known landmark, the London Bridge.  To establish an icon for his fledgling city, in  1968 McCulloch bought an historic, but obsolete stone-arch bridge from the city  of London which was scheduled for demolition.   It was disassembled, moved to the Arizona desert, and reassembled.  Only after it was in place was a canal dug  from the lake, under the bridge, in order that it might cross some water.  A city of 53,000 has grown up around it.  A waterfront hotel at the foot of the bridge, with  King Arthur-themed décor, is the home base of the HPCC.  Add to that, pink mountains on the horizon, consistent  blue skies, knockout sunrises and sunsets . . . like I said: Oz. 
            It  must be acknowledged that many HPCC-goers may never have heard of a  “messabout.” They are trailer-sailors, leaning mostly toward nice, shiny, production  fiberglass boats in the 15 to 25 foot range, with familiar brand names, like  West Wight Potter, Montgomery, Compac, MacGregor and Catalina. They mostly stay  in nice hotels and tie up at night in nice marinas.  They are cousins of the messabouters; perhaps  not quite siblings.  I prefer  camp-cruising in my wooden boat, but I was willing to give HPCC a try for the  spectacle of so many “cousins” gathered in one place.  
            It’s  impossible to summarize all the experiences worth mentioning, but I’ll share a  few moments that hopefully reveal the “vibe” of HPCC : 
            I  attended with Dan Rogers, who had been at one of the early HPCCs four years  before.  Dan had since moved far away,  but flew in for this event, and crewed on my boat.  While checking in at HPCC headquarters, organizer  Sean instantly recognized  Dan, remembered his name and his boat’s name, and commented about how the two  of them had “kicked butt” way back then.  
As  an excuse to share the experience and spectacle of a lot of boats on the water  at the same time and place, several casual “races” were held.  This, despite the participants’ little  interest or experience with serious racing, and the absurdity of handicapping  such a diverse fleet.  As a friend once  explained about such events, “It’s not  really a race; it’s a pageant.”  Most  participants needed an introduction or at least a refresher on even the most  basic elements of a sail race, so we got a briefing, which boiled down the  hundreds of racing rules to: 1) Avoid hitting anything with your boat; 2)  starboard tack has right of way; 3) inside boat with overlap has right of way  at the mark; 4) round all marks to port; 5) PFDs required; 6) Let courtesy and  common sense prevail.   
            Key  West Race Week is a large, prestigious big-boat sailing regatta held each  January that draws elite boats and crews from all over.  A messabouter would avoid it like the Plague.   HPCC is like Key West Race Week (KWRW)  for non-racing trailer-sailors.  HPCC’s “racing”  is somewhere between an homage to and  a satire of KWRW.  Most messabouters  would be glad to be there. Both events have websites, sponsors, vendor booths,  social events, seminars, logo hats and shirts, and so on.  Except almost everything about HPCC is small,  especially the money. There’s no entry fee.   Oh, and there are more boats at HPCC than at KWRW. 
            Dan and I raced, but we knew we weren’t doing well  to windward.  We still wanted to know how  we scored, and checked the results the next day, only to find that we had no  score, because no one knew how to handicap my one-of-a-kind boat.  If I wanted a score, I was asked to select a  comparable one-design class, with a known Portsmouth number (standard  handicapping index). We found one on the reference list. Sean plugged it in the  computer, and we scored in the middle of the fleet, as expected.  Such informality is not the way things are  done at the yacht club. 
            Nelson  hauled his MacGregor 25 all the way from San Antonio, Texas. On the final leg  of the race he flew a giant Texas flag instead of a mainsail.  It hindered his racing, but he definitely got  noticed. Later, back on the beach, he substituted a normal sized American flag  until sundown.  I was there at the time,  in full messabout mode, that is, observing and talking about and trying out  boats with whomever was around.   Nelson came  by, tapped me on the shoulder, and asked if I would help him take down the  flag, and headed toward his boat without waiting for my reply.  He had no way of knowing, but I’m a Boy Scout  leader who knows that a guy needs help to properly strike the colors, so I  followed.  Nelson emerged from the  MacGregor’s cabin with a trumpet.  I took  my position at the base of the mast.  As  he played taps, I lowered the flag slowly, like we learn in Scouting.  A dozen or so people scattered around the  cove stopped what they were doing and gave proper attention. John told me he  does that to honor his deceased father who flew with the Flying Tigers in WWII  in Asia.  
            Howard  Rice is a highly accomplished small boat sailor, including such things as  rounding Cape Horn in a canoe.  He  attended HPCC, travelling from his home in Micronesia, in the Pacific, to be a  seminar presenter.  Everyone, including  Howard, expected him to talk about his sailing exploits.  But when the time came, Howard asked the  indulgence of the audience to speak about his other passion, which is his work  in Micronesia, planning for environmentally sustainable development in that poor  nation. It was a risky move for an audience on vacation, but Howard received  lots of positive feedback. 
            While  the overwhelming majority of HPCC boats are production pocket cruisers, tied  neatly in their marina slips, there was enough diversity at the margins to make  things interesting to a messabouter like me. One guy converted his Compac 16 to  a gaff cutter rig, with bow sprit.  Another converted an old West Wight Potter  into a motor-sailer. There was a group of trimarans.  Mike Monies, Texas 200 and Everglades  Challenge veteran, brought his home-built Welsford-design “Scamp.”  There were a smattering of San Francisco  Pelicans, my 1955 Joe Dobler sloop, a Goat Island Skiff, a Bolger Nymph (tender  to a Peep Hen), and a Klepper folding tandem kayak with a sail rig.  There are beach-berth alternatives to the  marinas.  If you’re a hardy camper, you  can sleep aboard, instead of hotel accommodations.  There’s a pre-opening overnight event for  camp-cruisers. 
            Dates  for HPCC 2013 have already been set. Many of those at HPCC 2012 have already  booked their return trip.  It’s a year  away, but Dan and I intend to join them. 
            
              
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                Beach scene at the hotel.  I thought my yellow boat would stand out in a crowd.  Here we see four out of five boats in a row are yellow. | 
               
             
            
              
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                Nelson from San Antonio knows how to stand out in a crowd of sailboats. | 
               
             
            
              
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                Some real messabout boats: a Storer “Goat Island Skiff” and a Welsford “Scamp” | 
               
             
            
              
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                The author’s boat a 1956 18 ft. Dobler camp-cruiser | 
               
             
            
              
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                Dan adjusts the rigging on a friend’s just-launched stretched Bolger Nymph. | 
               
             
            
              
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                Lake Havasu is a pretty nice place. | 
               
             
            
              
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                The "Parade of Sail" was event for all sailors to sail under the London Bridge and out the channel to the open lake. | 
               
             
            
            
              
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                Mike Monies and the famed Red Scamp. | 
               
             
            
              
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                Sailing Klepper kayak with RC model boat and London Bridge in background. | 
               
             
            
              
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                West Wight Potter as Motor-Sailer. | 
               
             
            
              
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                Some guys also built a boat during the week. | 
               
             
            
              
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                Montgomery 15, converted to a gaff cutter. | 
               
             
            
              
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                 Some character boats lend spice to the common masses. | 
               
             
            
              
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                The docks at the London Bridge Resort; just part of the fleet. | 
               
             
            
              
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                HPCC boats and London Bridge of the desert. | 
               
             
            
GUZZINTAS
            Dan’s  Part
            Well,  you see; it’s like this.  I was absent the day they taught math in  school.  Mustabin.  At least, on the day they taught the part about  sumpthin’ and sumpthin’ else EQUALS sumpthin’ else.  That part.  It’s  the thing, as I learned later on in life, that makes up the guzzintas.   But, certainly, you—my better educated brothers and sisters—know what the  guzzintas are.  You do, don’t ya?  OK, it goes like this, “two  guzzinta four, twice…”  Guzzintas. 
            When  it comes to money and time, there’s a slightly different equation.  That  one is called the LOTTA GUZZINTA.  And, I just came back from a short trip  that required one of those calculations.   
            Let’s  see now.  If you take five commercial airliners and their aggregate TEN  take offs and landings and layovers, add about 10 hours of driving—some of that  in the dark and freezing rain, three nights in a motel, add in restaurant meals  in several towns along the way, a couple-three hours of rigging, un-rigging,  launching, loading, and wading around in 50 degree water—some of that in the  pre-dawn darkness.  Multiply by the coefficient of unbridled enthusiasm.   Subtract for the variable constant factor of jet lag and disturbed sleep  schedules.  And, this all equals about 3 hours sailing time.  Another  one of those LOTTA GUZZINTA equations, I’d say. 
            It  probably wasn’t so much the day that I missed out on a mathematical education  that led me to this calculus, so much as the day that I missed Common Sense  Class.  Now, that would have been a good one to show up for. 
            What  this is all about.  My friend and fellow SCUZBUM, Kim, and I started  “planning” to attend the annual Lake Havasu Pocket Cruiser Convention way back  last fall.  I had gone to this event a few years ago when it was in its  infancy.  That year, we pretty much did an overnight sail and held a group  dinner.  A nice event, but nothing like what it has grown to become.   Kim went a bit later on.  But, between us, we figured “a couple days there  will be about right.”  And, like I said, last fall when this conversation  began, most anything seemed “reasonable.” 
            Well,  that would be flat out wrong.  Wrong with a capital “R”!  Yep, you  could say that we simply blew it.  This premier event in the small boat  sailing world has simply become a “happening” that should consume the better  part of a week, or more, PLUS travel time.  Some folks are  arriving—NOW—weeks in advance.  And, they’re coming from all over the  place.  I mean, from ALL OVER THE PLACE. 
            And,  the organizer, Bosun Mulligan has simply gone all out in establishing a venue  chock full of speakers, presentations, group meals, commercial venders, and  SAILING EVENTS.  Well, Bosun allows his humans, Sean and his wife, Jo, to  do some of the microphone work from time to time.  But, that dog is most  certainly the brains behind the outfit.  He told me so. 
            And,  the measly two days on scene that Kim and I were quite certain would “be enough  for us,” only scratched the surface of the delightful stuff we could still be  doing down in Arizona.  At Lake Havasu.  But, now, I’m already back  here in the snowy and cold NW.  It’s supposed to snow about half a foot  more over the next day or so, for that matter.  I could be having a ball  down in Arizona with my new bud, Bosun the dog.  Heck, my own dog is named  Bosun, as well.  And, he insists that I should have taken him along.   Too.  And we should’a stayed for the whole thing.  And taken  Lady Bug.  And, sailed with the fleet all over that snow-free lake.   And, even won some races. 
            Yep,  we shoulda’ planned this one a lot better.  We just didn’t count up all  the guzzintas. 
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