Miami Herald (Sunday)

Pandemic didn’t stop this year’s Orange Bowl regatta

- BY DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com

Dozens of white sails dotted Biscayne Bay underneath gray overcast skies Wednesday morning for the final day of the annual Orange Bowl Internatio­nal Youth Regatta.

There was a small craft wind warning as teams of 14- to 18-year-olds used their strength and skills to maintain their courses riding single-sailor Laser class vessels on rough seas.

“These kids that are racing this are developing their skills and following their passions and are out here competing in these tough conditions,” said Harry Horgan, founder of Shake-A-Leg, a Miami nonprofit that teaches adults and children with disabiliti­es how to sail.

Capsized boats were common sights during the races, followed by the young racers adeptly maneuverin­g themselves in the water to right their overturned crafts.

Shake-A-Leg Miami co-sponsors the annual five-day event, which has been held for almost 50 years, with the Coral Reef Yacht Club in Coconut Grove. Organizers say it regularly features more than 700 youth sailors ages 8 to 18 from more than 20 countries. Many past participan­ts have become well-known in the internatio­nal competitiv­e sailing scene, organizers say.

About 60 Laser boats competed in Wednesday’s race, down from about 140 last year, but organizers anticipate­d the drop because of the pandemic.

For the Clifton family from Annapolis, Maryland, the regatta was a continuati­on of a sailing tradition going back to when dad Tip Clifton, 56, was a boy. This week, his oldest daughter, Mac, a junior at the University of Miami studying biomedical engineerin­g, coached her younger sister, Sarah Grace, 18, who raced in a Laser in her first Orange Bowl regatta.

“It was really cool to sail somewhere that is so different than where we’re used to. We usually sail Maryland and the [Chesapeake] Bay, which is a lot different from here. There are just some great waves, which is really fun. It was definitely really windy, but it was really exciting surfing the waves,” Sarah Grace said.

“We don’t have this,” her mother, Robyn, said. “If it does blow this hard, they usually just cancel the regatta.”

The Cliftons travel to Florida often, but haven’t participat­ed in the Orange Bowl regatta before because it coincides with the Christmas and New Year’s holidays. But, with the pandemic forcing most of their extended family to celebrate via Zoom, they figured they could make the trip and still virtually see their loved ones.

“We have a huge family, so we would never give that up for Orange Bowl, but we said, ‘Hey, we can Zoom from Florida,’” Robyn said.

The Cliftons drove to Florida with their vessels in tow, which included 16year-old son Tad’s 420, a faster two-person, two-sail boat. They then rented a catamaran when they got to Miami, and are staying at the Shake-A-Leg marina on Bayshore Drive in Coconut Grove, home base for the regatta.

“We looked like the ‘Beverly Hillbillie­s,’” Robyn said.

PRAISE FOR SHAKE-A-LEG

What makes the Orange Bowl regatta stand out from other races for the veteran competitiv­e boating family is Shake-A-Leg’s organizati­on.

“Shake-A-Leg has just been amazing. Again, this is my first year doing Lasers,” Sarah Grace said. “And, this is, again, very windy, and very different. There’s stress, but fun stress. Shake-A-Leg, everybody was very encouragin­g and welcoming, and always so helpful.”

“It’s clear they have a staff who’s used to taking care of folks and getting them out of the water, and we’re just experienci­ng the benefit of that for them hosting the Laser regatta this year,” said Tip Clifton.

While the racers in the

Orange Bowl generally do not have physical disabiliti­es, Tip, who sailed Orange Bowl regattas in his youth, is appreciati­ve of those who do. He survived pancreatic cancer almost seven years ago, which left him with some balance and spacial difficulti­es, and unable to sail anymore.

Eldest daughter Mac also knows something about living with challenges. For her, it’s post-traumatic stress.

Also helping Mac with her condition is Hobie Cat, her 2-year-old service dog, who responds to commands in boating lingo. For instance, “capsize” means roll over, “dock it” means sit, and “mayday” is if Mac is having a panic attack.

“He actually realizes before I realize if I’m going to have an anxiety attack or a panic attack so he can kind of let me know so I can get myself out of there. He’s very well trained,” Mac said.

The Fedderson family traveled from Charlotte, North Carolina, so their son, Nicholas, 14, could race his Laser. It was his first Orange Bowl and the first year he sailed his

Laser competitiv­ely, his father, Christophe­r Fedderson, said as he watched the race.

“I think it’s a great event for all the kids here to really have fun, compete and really enjoy sailing. I think the yacht club is doing a really great job organizing it, and Shake-ALeg’s presence and support. We’ll be back next year,” Fedderson said.

Brooke Schmelz, 17, and Ashley Abboud, 16, came down from Monmouth County, New Jersey, to race 420s in the regatta. While Schmelz is an experience­d racer, the Orange Bowl was her first regatta in the 420 vessel class. Abboud is a rookie to the sport, with about a month’s worth of competitiv­e experience.

Like the Cliftons, they found the sailing conditions of South Florida quite different from their home turf.

“Where we practice is more of a river,” Schmelz said. “So, it’s a lot shiftier, and the difference in pressure is a lot bigger. So, it’s kind of nice to come down here and have consistent wind.”

Shake-A-Leg started from tragedy. Horgan was 22 in 1980, living in Newport, Rhode Island, when he fell out of a truck and broke his back, which left him in a wheelchair for the rest of his life. After the accident, he was looking for a way to make himself, and others with disabiliti­es, more independen­t.

“It was, ‘whatever you want to do, we want to help you do,’ and, everybody wanted to go sailing since we were in Newport,” said Horgan, who grew up sailing. “Water has always been an appeal to me, and I really, to this day, believe there is healing that goes on.”

A boat builder built a boat that was wheelchair accessible, and Horgan built the program around it, starting in Rhode Island in 1986. The organizati­on moved to Miami in 1990. It has operated out of its Coconut Grove waterfront property ever since through a special lease with the city of Miami.

CAN-DO ATTITUDE

In that time, it has become home to many sailing programs for children and adults with physical and developmen­tal disabiliti­es. It also has programs for wounded veterans.

“Shake-A-Leg is about get up and do it, and don’t wait for someone to do it for you,” Horgan said.

The group also offers sailing lessons and other water-based activities for those who are able-bodied.

Pre-pandemic, the program’s summer camps saw as many as 400 kids a day, including 100 who are not disabled and volunteer as mentors. Horgan said that is what makes the relationsh­ip with the Orange Bowl regatta special, since racers are teenagers, and many past participan­ts become Shake-A-Leg mentors.

“They would become friends with the kids with disabiliti­es and role models, and that bond is so important because kids with disabiliti­es tend not to be social,” Horgan said. “High school kids are learning compassion and empathy, and it becomes second nature for them to work with kids with disabiliti­es and to find a way.”

Dozens of boats set sail for the annual Orange Bowl Regatta in Biscayne Bay. The race was organized by a group that teaches disabled people how to sail.

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Sailors maneuver their Lasers while racing during the last day of the 2020 Orange Bowl Internatio­nal Youth Regatta on Biscayne Bay out of Shake-A-Leg Miami’s marina in Coconut Grove on Wednesday.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Sailors maneuver their Lasers while racing during the last day of the 2020 Orange Bowl Internatio­nal Youth Regatta on Biscayne Bay out of Shake-A-Leg Miami’s marina in Coconut Grove on Wednesday.
 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? A sailor wheels her laser toward the ramp during the last day of the 2020 Orange Bowl Internatio­nal Youth Regatta on Biscayne Bay out of Shake-A-Leg Miami's marina in Coconut Grove on Wednesday.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com A sailor wheels her laser toward the ramp during the last day of the 2020 Orange Bowl Internatio­nal Youth Regatta on Biscayne Bay out of Shake-A-Leg Miami's marina in Coconut Grove on Wednesday.

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