Big boats, big dreams
- Share via
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- Advice for visitors to the Newport Dunes Marina any time
between today and Sunday: bring some good sunglasses.
The 27th annual Newport In-Water Boat Show is in town and that means
hundreds of gleaming white hulls will be lined up in the water like
multimillion-dollar solar reflectors.
The show features an enormous variety of boats, from gargantuan luxury
yachts to sleek racing cruisers to smaller vessels that could conceivably
be purchased by mere mortals.
Although there will be a large “dry” exhibition area for boats and
boating equipment, the real appeal of the show is that so many vessels
are actually floating in the water, said Art Henry of The Crow’s Nest, a
Newport Beach yacht and ship brokerage that has 16 boats in the show.
“You get them in the natural environment,” Henry said. “It’s a key
factor. This is the best in-the-water show on the West Coast.”
Strolling along the docks past the towering white boats, it’s easy to see
why exhibitors like to display their wares in the water: it’s much easier
for the imagination to leap aboard a floating vessel.
A boat like the Carver 506, with its three staterooms, three “heads” and
fully enclosed fly bridge might seem a little intimidating in a showroom.
And the $700,000 price tag on some Carver boats might prove off-putting
if they weren’t bobbing happily in the bay.
But hop from the dock into the cherrywood kitchen, run a hand along the
taupe “ultra leather” couches, and admire the gleaming “Power Commander”
sign on the boat’s throttle, and the result is inevitably nautical love
at first sight.
Of course, it isn’t easy to maintain a boat in the state of radiant
perfection to which owners aspire. As exhibitors geared up to meet the
public Tuesday, the docks were covered with cans of wood wax, chrome
polish, bleach, acetone and glass cleaner. Laborers scurried to buff,
polish and wipe the boats into a state of nearly divine spotlessness.
For those who are truly passionate about boating, explained Fred
Humphrey, whose Compass Point Yachts company has 14 vessels in the show,
all the effort to make a hull perfectly white or a wooden railing satiny
smooth is actually a form of relaxation.
“It’s not work,” Humphrey said. “Most of the guys that buy these boats
like to come down and tinker on them.”
Some of the boats on display at the show look more tinker-friendly than
others. The 14-footers and 16-footers with outboard engines that are
sitting in the Dunes’ parking lot appear to be the kind of thing that
would respond well to mechanical inquiry.
On the other hand, the Sun Seeker Superhawk 34, a $1.6-million speedster
shaped like a torpedo, would probably not be such an easy machine to tune
on a Sunday afternoon.
But for Steve Besozzi, service manager for The Crow’s Nest, the range of
nautical possibilities on display at the show is the whole point.
“A lot of people come here to dream of something they want to have,”
Besozzi said.
Whether that dream involves a little rubber dinghy or a floating mansion
“all depends on how you think about boating,” he said.
FYI
* WHAT: Newport In-Water Boat Show
* WHEN: Today through Sunday. Weekdays 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturday 10
a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
* WHERE: Newport Dunes Marina
* CALL: (310) 535-9230
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.