Volvo fleet flies into Newport, RI


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RI Future Sailing Correspondent Roberto Bessin was at Ft. Weatherill State Park in Jamestown to see Team SCA enter Narragansett Bay after a 5,000 mile sail from Brazil – the sixth leg in this year’s Volvo Ocean Race, which made port in Newport last night and this morning.

SCA, the only all-women boat competing in bi-annual race, brought up the rear, finishing at about 10am. Dongfeng, a team made up of Chinese and French sailors, finished almost exactly 12 hours earlier. They beat Team Abu Dabi by only 3 minutes, in an exciting night of sailing that saw hundreds of boaters welcome them to Rhode Island. Team Almevidica, captained and partially crewed by Rhode Islanders, finished 5th of 6 at 3am.

volvo_sca_castle hill
Team SCA passes Castle Hill Lighthouse in Newport, as it enters the West Passage of Narragansett Bay. (Roberto Bessin)
You can see the coast of Block Island behind Team SCA in this one. (Photo by Roberto Bessin.
You can see the coast of Block Island behind SCA’s 65-foot sailboat in this picture. (Roberto Bessin)
Team SCA passes Hammersmith Farm, the former Kennedy estate in Newport, as a helicopter flies overhead. (Photo by Roberto Bessin)
SCA passes Hammersmith Farm, the former Kennedy estate in Newport, as a helicopter flies overhead. (Roberto Bessin)
The six remaining boats - one crashed into a reef in the middle of the ocean - docked at Ft. Adams in Newport, where an entire temporary "village" has been created for the 12 day event. (Photo by Roberto Bessin)
The six remaining boats – one crashed into a reef in the middle of the ocean – are docked at Ft. Adams in Newport, where an entire temporary “village” has been created for the 12 day event. (Roberto Bessin)
(Roberto Bessin)
Team Abu Dabi’s boat, with the state-owned tall ship Oliver Hazard Perry to her stern (Roberto Bessin)
Team Alvimedica's boat in gorgeous Newport Harbor. (Roberto Bessin)
Team Alvimedica’s boat in gorgeous Newport Harbor. (Roberto Bessin)
The six competing Volvo boats and the Oliver Hazard Perry at Ft. Adams in Newport, RI. (Roberto Bessin)
The six competing Volvo boats and the Oliver Hazard Perry at Ft. Adams in Newport, RI. (Roberto Bessin)

Sailing with Governor Chafee


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Friday afternoon was the kind of weather that lets Rhode Island lay claim to some of the best sailing on the planet. It was warm but not hot. It was mostly sunny but ample clouds for shade. And and there was a good, stiff breeze blowing in from the north. And although the House Finance Committee had unveiled and passed its budget proposal less than 24 hours earlier, Governor Linc Chafee was not at the State House. He was heeling his sailboat, Swift, up Narragansett Bay into a 10-knot headwind.

chafee sail smile

Chafee isn’t running for reelection, and doesn’t seem to regret the decision. In election years, “the boat stays ‘on the hard’ as they say,” he told me as he took me for a cruise aboard his 33-foot J100. While we sailed he said repeatedly that he’s staying focused on his final months as governor, but he mentioned maybe hiring a headhunter once he’s out of office, and said he isn’t opposed to doing something overseas. I told him he should help bring the America’s Cup back to Newport. He’s got not only the money and the name recognition, but few love the water as much as Linc Chafee.

chafee keeling

Chafee lives in the beach community of Potowomut and his home is right next to a CRMC public right-of-way and popular neighborhood beach on Greenwich Bay, where he can often be seen paddleboarding in the early mornings. He keeps his sailboat – a bigger version of one of the most popular racing sailboats ever built, the J24 – in Dutch Harbor, the mooring field on the west side of Jamestown that can be seen when looking south from the bridge. The cove is flanked by colonial era farms and pastures, a beach or two, several salt marshes and Dutch Island. I once asked Chafee to go surfing with me, but because we agree that Dutch Harbor is just about the most beautiful place in New England, we decided to go sailing instead.

We talked a lot about the highlights of being governor. Chafee boasted of making the state more tolerant and of leading Rhode Island out of a long recession. He said he feels vindicated that the House budget suggests lowering the corporate tax and implementing combined reporting, “bold” moves he suggested in 2012. Central Falls’ recovery, he said, was his highlight as governor.

When I asked him to define his legacy in one word he said:

Several times we discussed his relationship with the media, he seems to have strong feelings about it. He made a point of saying there’s been a lack of media support for social justice issues.

Chafee’s 61 years old, and has been a city councilor, a mayor, a senator and now the governor. He wouldn’t say he was done with politics, and seemed to like the idea of perhaps running for Warwick school committee some day. He told me he may make an endorsement in the governor’s campaign, but didn’t tell me for whom. Instead of pressing him, I asked what young Linc Chafee was like.

When we got back to his mooring in Dutch Harbor, I asked him if he might be interested in buying the Providence Journal.

chafee sail smile2