City of Water Day Memories

1073073_543930845667319_1152431439_o

Volunteer Co-Manager Caroline Walker takes two kids out in the embayment while the rest of their family shared another boat. Photo by Scott Sternbach.

HarborLAB was honored to serve at the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance‘s request as the public kayaking program at the Governors Island center of City of Water Day, the largest annual harbor festival in our region. We enjoyably and safely shared a very busy little dock with New York Outrigger and East River C.R.E.W. (Community Education and Recreation on the Water) rowers. We set 146 members of the public afloat within the protected Pier 101 embayment between 11am and 4pm, despite the happy interruptions of arriving groups of kayakers, stand-up paddle boarders, and canoeists, and a wildly popular and zany cardboard kayak race.

We couldn’t have achieved these good things for the community without the support of our sponsors and allies. At this event we were proud to fly sustainably produced banners that included both our logo  and those of TF Cornerstone, Con Ed, and the United Nations Federal Credit Union.

HarborLAB was represented by two dozen volunteers, students, and supporters. CUNY students, especially LaGuardia Community College, were especially helpful in our estuary and watershed education tent. They also documented the day’s attractions. Our dock was staffed throughout by Daisy Hope Benjamin, an emergency room nurse with child and adult life saving certifications, as an added level of safety. She was also just great company on the dock! The day’s on-water safety and event production, under which we served, was directed for MWA by Ray Fusco, whose professionalism and kindness made this hard work for public benefit a pleasure.

Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance officials described our program variously as “brilliant,” “great,” and “amazing.” Our success follows similar raves at the Clearwater Festival. Though this is our first season, our core volunteers have years of service on the harbor under their belts, or life vests. Founder Erik Baard has a special tie to City of Water Day — he started the Five Borough Harbor Ramble (the first event through which paddlers and rowers touched all boroughs), which MWA aided greatly (special thanks to Carter Craft!). When the MWA asked to adopt the Ramble as its fully-owned signature annual event, Erik joyfully agreed. Since then the MWA has rebranded the event using the title of its excellent documentary, and profoundly grown City of Water Day as no other organization could.

NinaKayaks (1)

Volunteer Co-Manager Danushi Fernando stepped down from the desk to communicate a message to the dock crew while new volunteer (met that day) and teacher Kamala Redd hams it up with her niece. 🙂

1074933_543934119000325_1916887969_o 1074629_543931335667270_872622057_o

A

The day started in Sunnyside, Queens, where our boats are temporarily stored at the private office of Community Board 2 Environmental Chair Dorothy Morehead. Our great innovation of the morning was to heat seal sustainably printed decals to our boats using a blowdryer. Thanks to a Harbor Estuary Program grant for City of Water Day, we rented a box truck to carry boats — we URGENTLY need a trailer (sponsor our purchase of this 16-boat trailer!) and often shuttle boats bit by bit in a HarborLAB Facilities Manager Pat Erickson’s van, but our volunteers had enough work ahead of them. A huge help came from NY Waterway, which sent a special East River Ferry to Hunters Point for HarborLAB to get boats, gear, and volunteers to Governors Island ahead of the crowds.

a

photo (17)

Operation Manager EJ Lee on decal duty.

972246_10151796225549878_983377998_n

ER Nurse Daisy Benjamin brings fantastic precision to her work.

IMG_0345 copy

IMG_0351 copy

Facilities Manager Patricia Erickson with six of our ten Ocean Kayak Malibu 2 XL tandem sit-on-top kayaks.

HarborLAB’s morning crew of volunteers and supporters. Photo by Scott Sternbach.

IMG_9800

On the island, gear was transported to Pier 101 by Ray Fusco’s van. Volunteer Emanuel “Manny” Steier had a creative solution for moving the boats!

HarborLAB

Volunteer Zamira Kamal takes a quick, well-deserved break. Photo by Ana Espinal.

HarborLAB volunteers operated two tents, one of which we brought to the island aboard the ferry. The first held waivers and great safety and stewardship information from  the American Canoe Association (HarborLAB is a Paddle America Club). The second, red canopy was our estuary and watershed education desk. At that table we highlighted CUNY LaGuardia Community College research and provided literature from the Harbor Estuary Program, NY State DEC, NYC DEP, ACA, and other great environmental groups and agencies.

HarborLAB

Volunteer Co-Manager Danushi Fernando and Facilities Manager Patricia Erickson staff the HarborLAB waiver and American Canoe Association information table. Photo by Ana Espinal.

HarborLAB

Photo by Ana Espinal.

HarborLAB

Operations Manager EJ Lee at the education table. Photo by Ana Espinal.

IMG_0476

Teacher David Perrin flanked by EJ Lee and Vernon ShengWuey Ong at the education table.

HarborLAB

HarborLAB’s education table. Photo by Ana Espinal.

HarborLAB

Photo by Ana Espinal.

a

Down on the ramp, dock, and water our volunteers had a blast despite the pressures of managing crowds and coordinating safe sharing of the embayment. It helped that NY Outrigger and East River C.R.E.W. are both friendly, community-spirited, and highly competent groups. Working shoulder-to-shoulder with them was a privilege.

_MG_2383

A beautiful East River C.R.E.W. boat captained by Mary Nell Hawk.

photo (24)

Volunteers Omar Barrios, Daisy Benjamin, and Danushi Fernando sharing a laugh on the dock.

photo (21)

Steve Sanford on safety patrol in the MetroBoat, HarborLAB Founder Erik Baard’s mass transit and estuary “brain child” with Folbot (http://folbot.wordpress.com/tag/metroboat/).

HarborLAB

HarborLAB Board Member Scott Sternbach, CUNY LaGuardia Community College photo director, on safety patrol in his own boat. Photo by Ana Espinal.

1012371_10151571081987572_1724938390_n

Erik Baard managed kayak group arrivals during program hours to keep the dock from getting dangerously crowded. Here he holds HarborLAB boats out on the water while LIC Community Boathouse (also founded by Erik Baard), Yonkers Paddling and Rowing Club, and Sebago Canoe Club boats arrived in one flotilla.

IMG_9955

“Boat Hill” fills in as paddling groups arrive.

photo (22)

CUNY students and HarborLAB volunteers George Blandino-Ripley and Ana Espinal.

IMG_2353

_MG_2294

_MG_2386    _MG_2288

The go-go Greenpointers of the North Brooklyn Boat Club who impressed us all with determination and filled us with envy that they got to take a swim. Photo by Scott Sternbach.

The go-go Greenpointers of the North Brooklyn Boat Club who impressed us all with determination and filled us with envy that they got to take a swim. Photo by Scott Sternbach.

1003176_10152101599339616_814570363_n

Part of the afternoon HarborLAB crew. Yes, a bunch of us pulled double shifts!

_MG_2407

Even a hose shower was a blessing.

IMG_9895

Students and volunteers enjoyed exploring the island, which is rich in art. Photo by Daniel Cassady.

_MG_2412

At least half of us camped over on the island.

_MG_2415

Sunrise over Brooklyn. Time to go home.

_MG_2421

Daniel Cassady and the rest of the crew carried boats down for an early launch.

TF Cornerstone Paddles!

_MG_0328 copy

Before we got underway, a THANK YOU to TF Cornerstone! Photo by Scott Sternbach.

  tfc2

HarborLAB is tremendously thankful to TF Cornerstone for its sponsorship of our fleet and programs. TF Cornerstone was our first large sponsor and we wouldn’t have a fleet without this support. THANK YOU, TF Cornerstone!

A

We’ve had the pleasure of taking its LIC waterfront residents on two special paddles — first a Summer Solstice sunset tour and then a fun Ice Cream Float — a paddle to view the skyline and then pop over to the Brooklyn Ice Cream Factory by kayak. We started and ended at neighborhood restaurants, Anable Basin Sailing Bar and Grill and Water’s Edge. The residents were great company, and we were delighted to discover that among them were innovative educators and environmental professionals! We look forward to more adventures launching right from the TF Cornerstone towers’ East River reflections!

_MG_0339 copy

_MG_0384 copy (1) (1)

_MG_0354 copy

P__4075

Paddling back after the solstice sunset. Photo by EJ Lee.

943419_10151664451190350_731906434_n

Paddling past the soon-to-be-active HarborLAB launch. Photo by EJ Lee.

1012322_10151768353634878_517072984_n

HarborLAB boats tied up to the Manhattan Avenue launch for an Ice Cream Float. Photo by Erik Baard.

1005732_10151768331969878_246277801_n

Part of the HarborLAB fleet arrayed. Thank you TF Cornerstone!

1004755_10151741161865350_788048336_n

Caroline Walker towing boats back to Hallets Cove, Astoria after the Ice Cream Float with TF Cornerstone residents. Thank you Caroline and TF Cornerstone!

Memorial Day Volunteer Paddling Orientation.

HarborLAB paddling past the skyline in a panorama by Manny Steier.

HarborLAB paddling past the skyline in a panorama by Manny Steier.

HarborLAB had a fantastic volunteer and CUNY student paddling orientation on Memorial Day, which included launch site evaluations. We have much work to do and are grateful to those who’ve already helped us achieve so much. The kayaks are great, and the weather was perfect for a little Roosevelt Island circumnavigation. Rounding the Four Freedoms monument seemed to be a fitting commemoration of the honored fallen, who committed themselves to our freedoms of speech and worship, and to freeing us from want and fear.

HarborLAB is especially grateful to TF Cornerstone (growing neighborhood development in background) for being its first top-tier sponsor!


HarborLAB is especially grateful to TF Cornerstone (growing neighborhood development in background) for being its first top-tier sponsor! Photo by EJ Lee.

Photo by EJ Lee.

Photo by EJ Lee

We’re busy scheduling service days throughout the region. Stay tuned for summer programming for the general public!