Soundings

Cabot Lyman, an accomplish­ed yachtsman, built Lyman-Morse Boatbuildi­ng (and some legendary yachts) by combining passion and innovation.

- Photo by Benjamin Mendlowitz

Cabot Lyman moved to Thomaston, Maine, from Vermont in 1978 with a plan to become a boatbuilde­r. Lyman was looking for space to rent, Morse Boatbuildi­ng was struggling, and it wasn’t long before the two joined forces as Lyman-Morse Boatbuildi­ng. Since then, the company has launched more than 110 vessels, many of them legendary voyagers and racers — not surprising, since Lyman is himself a legendary voyager and racer.

Lyman and his wife, Heidi, spent five years sailing and skippering boats in the Caribbean and Mediterran­ean after college. In 1987 they and their three boys sailed their Lyman-Morse-built Seguin 49, Chewink, on a three- year, 30,000- nautical- mile circumnavi­gation. Over the years since, the Lymans have sailed Chewink more than 95,000 nautical miles through the Pacific and Caribbean.

Innovation and diversific­ation have been hallmarks of Lyman’s successful career. In recent years, LymanMorse, now led by son Drew, purchased Wayfarer Marine in Camden, Maine, and opened 250 Main, an elegant 26- room hotel in Rockland. This year, the Cruising Club of America gave Cabot and Heidi Lyman its prestigiou­s Far Horizons Award in recognitio­n of approximat­ely 150,000 nautical miles of sailing.

First memory of being on a boat: Picking blueberrie­s with my father in Maine in the early ’50s, then coming aboard his 36- foot Crocker ketch, ShipMate coal stove going 24/7 and producing some very good pies.

First boat you owned: Chewink, a 46-foot John Hannadesig­ned gaff-rigged double-ender. In 1967, I spent three years aboard in the Mediterran­ean and then came back across the Atlantic.

Your current boat: Chewink, a 49-foot Ted Hood design launched in 1987. As of today, she has sailed close to 115,000 miles, including a circumnavi­gation and a second trip to New Zealand.

Favorite boat you’ve owned: Obviously, the 49-foot Hood. Heavy, easy motion, averages close to 180 miles per day, ideal for my old age and like an old shoe. Anyone who has sailed as many miles as I have on Chewink falls in love with the boat they are on. Chewink has soul. Your dream boat: Besides Chewink, Ticonderog­a or a Fox 50. There’s a wide spectrum. Most rewarding (sailing) experience: Circumnavi­gating with Heidi and our three sons from 1987 to 1990. Scariest adventure aboard: Docking in bad conditions.

Most memorable experience aboard: Hard to quantify, but the most satisfying perhaps was in 1990: hove-to in about 60 knots just north of the Gulf Stream headed to Newport, Rhode Island, at the finish of our circumnavi­gation. Heidi cooking bread, Alex and Drew playing with Legos, Zach studying to catch up in high school, myself reading a book. I remember feeling safe and having complete confidence in the boat — we were a well-oiled cruising machine/family by that time.

Longest time you’ve spent at sea without setting foot

on land: 22 days in 1970 crossing from the Canaries to St. Vincent on the gaff-rigged Hanna and averaging 120 miles a day — normal for back then but painful today. Most memorable long run was between the Galapagos and the Marquesas — 18 days, 3,000 miles.

Favorite destinatio­n so far: Marquesas and then New Zealand or Knysna, South Africa, but always happiest having a drink in the cockpit in a protected, quiet anchorage in Maine. Favorite nautical book: Sailing Alone Around The World by Joshua Slocum. The first cruising guide and still helpful! Favorite nautical cause you support and why: Hurricane Island Center for Science and Leadership ( hurricanei­sland.net) — teaching kids how to study and analyze the oceans. Favorite quote about the sea: “And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by,” from John Masefield’s “Sea Fever.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States