Clean, Sweet Wind: Sailing with the Last Boatmakers of the Carribean
TAB Books Inc (Verlag)
978-0-07-052679-2 (ISBN)
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A generation ago, before waves of tourism submerged traditional ways, Douglas Pyle spent half a decade sailing his small sloop from island to island in the eastern Caribbean, seeking out native whalers, fishermen, and traders to learn how they built their boats. Clean, Sweet Wind, his story of that time, is as much a portrait of an island people as it is a record of their work upon the sea. In these pages we glimpse a society as vivid as the aquamarine waters of the reefs and the patched sails of graceful boats.As he explored the family traditions of the Antillean seafarers, Pyle found himself admiring one boatbuilder in particular, Haakon Mitchell of Bequia. Mitchell had been a fisherman until an accident cost him a hand; when Pyle met him, he and his sons were building a vessel for inter-island trade. Starting first as an observer, then as a helper, Pyle finally became one of the family, working on the new sloop each day and taking meals with Mitchell and his sons. Their lifelong friendship is a central theme of Clean, Sweet Wind.But this is more than a lyrical evocation of a place and time. In his years among the islands Pyle collected information on all the different boat types sailing at the time. The second half of the book is a journey from Trinidad to the Virgin Islands, with a look at each type.Clean, Sweet Wind captures Antillean speech, beliefs, and hospitality with as faithful an accuracy as it renders the graceful designs of Caribbean boats. The result is both a detailed study of traditional watercraft and one of the finest regional narratives yet written.
Accident put Douglas Pyle in the position to write the story of the boatbuilders and boatbuilding in the island chain of the Lesser Antilles. After finishing his Master's degree and teaching at a college for a year, he went to England to buy a sailboat. He sailed Eider, a lovely 1939 Robart Clark sloop, back across the Atlantic, fetching up in the Virgin Islands in 1968. Short of cash and liking the place, he took a job teaching in St. Croix. He had intended to end his tropical sojourn at summer's end, but curiosity and a strong admiration for local wooden boats and their makers held him. This interest led to his five-year study of the boats and lives of Caribbean islanders and, ultimately, to Clean, Sweet Wind. Today Douglas Pyle is a rancher; he resides in Oklahoma with his wife Nancy Fowler Pyle.
IntroductionOne/Lighting the FlameTwo/Passage to GrenadaThree/Carriacou You GoingFour/Bequia SweetFive/Anguilla Once AgainSix/Make Three an ArkSeven/Launching SkywaveEight/Blows!Nine/Tortola, and the "Next Fella"Ten/The Beach Boats of St. MartinEleven/The Mystery of SabaTwelve/The Quiet of St. EustatiusThirteen/The Lighters of Nevis and St. KittsFourteen/Deceptive St. BartsFifteen/Tranquil MontserratSixteen/Nelson's Royal Navy, Antigua, and BarbudaSeventeen/Guadeloupe, The Saintes, and Le Canot SaintoisEighteen/A Familiar Pattern in DominicaNineteen/The Gommiers and Yoles of MartiniqueTwenty/The Secrets of St. LuciaTwenty-One/Investigating St. VincentTwenty-Two/Trading with RosareneTwenty-Three/The Pirogues of TrinidadTwenty-Four/The Flying Fish Boats and Speightstown Schooners of BarbadosTwenty-Five/Dropping AnchorEpilogue/The Last SchoonerBibliographyIndex
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 16.4.1998 |
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Zusatzinfo | 53 Illustrations, unspecified |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 165 x 236 mm |
Gewicht | 530 g |
Themenwelt | Natur / Technik ► Fahrzeuge / Flugzeuge / Schiffe ► Schiffe |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Geschichte ► Teilgebiete der Geschichte | |
Technik | |
ISBN-10 | 0-07-052679-6 / 0070526796 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-07-052679-2 / 9780070526792 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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