funck m \ M\ -1 EAGER FOR THE SURF, sailboats ai Outing BY SUSAN USHER After a week of sporadic thundershowers and hovering gray clouds, morning broke fair and bright Sunday?a perfect day for sailing. Sun rays tapdanced on the surf, adding a sparkle to glassy seas broken only occasionally by a low whitecap. Each time a teasing wave rolled gently to shore, the three beached Hobie catamarans or "cats" shivered in anticipation, thoroughbreds eager to run. Eagerness was evident also in the light step and quick moves of the eight crew members?two instructors and six students from Camp United Methodist Church in Shallotte. Two hours behind their informal schedule, the boats pu.sneu oil trom tne west end of Ocean Isle Beach at 11:30 a.m., bound for Battery Island, an Audubon Society sanctuary across from the Southport waterfront. Riggings adjusted, a wind indicator added to one vessel and mainsheets to another and they were off. First in the water were instructor Bobby Williamson and students Tonya Russ and Krissi Smith. In quick succession they were followed into the surf by students Steve Scarborough and Rob Waples and then a second instructor, Freddie Mintz, and students Karen Pittman and Mary Beth Russ. Right behind them, in a "chase boat" were Mr. and Mrs. Price Thomas of Holdcn Beach, available for help if any problems arose. It was a "graduation" day of sorts for the si* .students, who had completed a summer-long sailing class offered through their church cuniniufiity. The class was part of a activity-packed summer with programs for children and youths of all ages in the church, coordinated by a summer intern. A sailing class was proposed by Mintz, and Williamson agreed to help out. "I felt like the kids didn't have enough to do in the summer," said Mintz, a Shallotte native and avid sailor. "When I was a boy I would liave given anything to learn to sail. "1 love it enough I wanted to share it." Williamson's mutual love of sailing may come naturally. His grandfather, Horton F. Milliken of fSw'"* r' - i ** f- X. * TRAPEZINC keeps Scarborough and other crew mem be catamaran in case of a slip-up. The Sandfiddler Lii is coming into The Depot! * sr the k ?. \ ft \ . SI AFf PHOTOS Bv SUSAN USHER id crcw arc almost ready for launching. I Celebrated i Shallotte, and great-grandfather, the late Captain A.A. Milliken, both sailed the commercial vessels that Shallotte merchants relied upon for for merchandise. The boats, with names like the George Slover and the Chaneey T., plied the rivers and also ventured "outside" to the Atlantic Ocean for the trip to Wilmington, N.C., or points south. With the paving of the main roads, the necessity for the sailing boats vanished?and with it the boats themselves. Williamson says he'd like to see a revival of local in/ . w .... r- ^ ? ^ & sSP TAKING HER OUT...and soon they're s **. ' ' f,r* rs attached to the MINT/, reviews crew assignments as V Rats and Rob Maples stand by. i Tfl&tYdur mi tod ttolKTiONTbA 1/ you re setf-em picked - - . i f*2* yM^ -ir? Fc^- '' :'*^ .Vr>^*^" * ^?9^*rV ' larv Krfh Huu Vriul