Get your motor running
Andrew Edwards
The summertime theft of a boat motor left disabled sailing students
stranded onshore, but thanks to community donations, a new engine is
ready to go.
Sailing Fascination is a Newport Beach-based group that offers
sailing classes for students with various disabilities. Tom Tolbert,
one of Sailing Fascination’s volunteer directors, found out a new
motor arrived Thursday, allowing the sailing classes to resume next
year.
“We’re just happy to be able to redo this,” Tolbert said. Before
the theft, Tolbert and Sailing Fascination students used Fascination
2 -- a J-24 sailboat -- for cruises around Newport Harbor. The
program took two weeks off in late July, and Tolbert learned that the
boat’s engine had been stolen after he came back from the break.
Getting donations to replace the engine took less time than
ordering the new model, Tolbert said. Tolbert’s group had received
about $2,600 by the beginning of September but ended up on a waiting
list for the engine, a 9.9-horsepower model with electric start.
At one point, Tolbert said Sailing Fascination was in 90th place
on a waiting list and did not expect to get an engine until next
year. That changed Monday, when he received a call from Mercury
Marine, the Wisconsin company that built the motor, informing him
that the replacement had been shipped out.
“It was a real big relief,” Tolbert said.
One of the larger donors, Tolbert said, was a men’s group from
Mariner’s Church in Irvine that contributed about $1,600.
A member of the men’s group, Mark Hogan, said he learned of
Tolbert’s need after his father-in-law met Tolbert at the Fashion
Island food court.
Hogan relayed the problem to his group, and a member immediately
pledged to make a donation, Hogan said. That member wished to remain
anonymous.
“It was one of those ones where it was the right thing to do,”
Hogan said. “There was no hesitation on my part. There was no
hesitation on his part.”
Tolbert survived a cerebellar aneurysm in 1994 and became a
student at Sailing Fascination a few years later, after his recovery.
When not on the water, Tolbert sells long-term-care insurance, but
his supervisor, Craig Matesky, who donated $250 toward the new
engine, said sailing is Tolbert’s passion.
“When he goes out there every Tuesday, when he’s done with the
sailing, his attitude is sky-high,” Matesky said.
For more information on Sailing Fascination, call (949) 640-1678.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.