South Shore Breaker

Bluenose II back to life with a new season

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We're excited to welcome back Captain Phil Watson and his team as they take us through another season aboard the famous Bluenose II. Expect updates every two weeks until October about the crew's adventures.

April 1 has come and gone and another season aboard Bluenose II has begun.

I always enjoy the first day as the new crew are about to embark on the adventure that will hopefully change their lives. Returning deckhands are always chatty, talking about their winter adventures and their excitement to be back aboard and seeing old shipmates is like a bubbling brook in the spring thaw.

This year we again join under the cloud of the COVID-19 pandemic. We live in such close quarters aboard that any illness brought across the gangway can affect our operationa­l abilities. To this end, we asked Praxes Medical Group to provide some guidance and education to the crew. In these uncertain days, trying to keep the crew safe is

certainly an added pressure. We have a good understand­ing of the cause and effect of a disease. I can’t imagine being aboard a schooner for the 1918 Spanish flu event or diphtheria or other outbreak.

April 1 was a day of cleaning and getting acquainted. I spent a fair bit of time talking about personal responsibi­lities, safe working practices, living in small spaces and more. There is such a great deal for the new crew to learn beside the fact the bathroom is the head, the kitchen the galley and the walls are the ceiling. A new language for them, new sounds and smells and often physical work that is different from their prior experience­s.

I’m sure you can imagine lying in a small bunk feeling the ship roll easily at the dock. In the dim light you can hear murmured conversati­ons of old shipmates catching up.

The rattle of a water pump starting or the swing and bang of the cooler door as somebody gets a snack from the galley. Overhead you hear the bang of the gangway and the clip of footsteps as somebody returns from a trip ashore. All new and strange. You might fall asleep wondering what tomorrow brings and what it takes to get a schooner and crew ready for sea.

If you would like to have a look around the ship, above and below decks, we have a virtual tour available online at https://bluenose.novascotia. ca/virtual-tour.

This week we will be largely in the rigging shed as it’s still too cold to be painting outside. Not to worry though, there is an unending list of work to be completed. The mates and bosun will work through it and teach the crew as they go along. Our full crew is not on board quite yet — they will trickle in during the next three weeks as school and winter work wind up.

For now, though, the ship has life again; the laughter, excitement and curiosity of our group of young Nova Scotians fill the quiet spaces and promise

adventures ahead.

Capt. Phil Watson has been onboard Bluenose II for 36 years and this is his 21st year as captain. Follow along as he chronicles the 2022 Bluenose II season. Visit bluenose. novascotia.ca for more informatio­n on Bluenose II.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Bosun Heather Smith, left, demonstrat­es varnishing techniques to crew members Noah Machat, Patrick Burke, Iain Sellers, Will Traves, Chris Greenlaw, Emma Berton and Gabriel St-denis.
CONTRIBUTE­D Bosun Heather Smith, left, demonstrat­es varnishing techniques to crew members Noah Machat, Patrick Burke, Iain Sellers, Will Traves, Chris Greenlaw, Emma Berton and Gabriel St-denis.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Bluenose II rigging shed, beside the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic in Lunenburg, is where much of the work will take place during the next few weeks.
CONTRIBUTE­D The Bluenose II rigging shed, beside the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic in Lunenburg, is where much of the work will take place during the next few weeks.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Bosun Heather Smith, left, and deckhand Chris Greenlaw work on sanding and varnishing Bluenose II'S smaller spars..
CONTRIBUTE­D Bosun Heather Smith, left, and deckhand Chris Greenlaw work on sanding and varnishing Bluenose II'S smaller spars..

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