Forsidebilde av showet Maritime Voices

Maritime Voices

Podkast av Jim Heumann

engelsk

Personlige historier og samtaler

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Interviews with the people from Port Townsend, WA and the Olympic Peninsula who have unique and interesting maritime related stories. We interview shipwrights, voyagers, sailmakers, fishers, designers, and more. If you are not familiar with the Pacific Northwest of the United States, the Olympic Peninsula is at the very northwest corner of the lower 48 states. Port Townsend has been a sailing hub since the 1850's and is currently the home to a vibrant community of marine trades people and sailors. The Wooden Boat Festival has been going on in PT for over forty years and has become one of the largest celebrations of wooden boats in the country.

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7 Episoder

episode Margie Abraham cover

Margie Abraham

Margie moved to Port Townsend when she was 3 years old.  There’ve been a lot of changes since then.  She met her life-long best friend Donna, in first grade, at the same time as her future husband Glenn who was in second grade.  In 1962, the Abrahams, the Daubenbergers and the Scheyers ordered 3 Thunderbird sailboats which became the foundation of the nascent sailing and racing culture that Port Townsend is now known for.  Sailing was a family passion.  They cruised extensively and raced competitively, often inviting school friends of their daughter’s to be crew.  Active in the yacht club, the events were legendary.  In this conversation, we sat down with Margie, her daughter Annie and granddaughter Glenna and caught a glimpse into a different time.  I’m Diana Talley.

7. feb. 2024 - 36 min
episode Jim Tolpin cover

Jim Tolpin

Jim Tolpin is a renowned woodworker and author. He grew up in Western Massachusetts, and after getting a degree in geology, found that he preferred working with wood rather than rocks. Early on, he got to know the famous boat builder and designer Budd Macintosh, who became a mentor for both woodworking and writing. Later, he worked at the Penobscot Boat Company in Rockport Maine. He also got to know the founder of Wooden Boat Magazine and wrote a column for them in its early years. After moving to Port Townsend in the late 1970’s, Jim specialized in building one-off custom cabinets and furniture while also working (and living on) boats from time to time. After ten years in Port Townsend, he thought he’d try his hand at writing, and now has written 18 books which have sold close to a million copies. He also wrote articles for many other magazines. Late in his career he has focused on using hand tools. Most recently, he has been rediscovering preindustrial woodworking and design techniques. In addition to these topics, in this interview he discusses what Port Townsend was like in the 70’s and 80’s, his experiences camp-cruising in a 14-foot open boat with his wife Cathy, he gives advice for people entering the trades, talks about the importance of efficiency in making a living in woodworking, and tells us about a hitchhiking dog and much more. My name is Jim Heumann. If you want to learn more, Jim Tolpin posts often on Instagram (@jimtolpin), and has a web site (https://www.byhandandeye.com [https://www.byhandandeye.com/]), and a YouTube channel (@jimtolpin1).

19. jan. 2024 - 1 h 21 min
episode Dick McCurdy cover

Dick McCurdy

Dick McCurdy always just wanted to be on the water. He grew up in Port Townsend, WA, sailing and racing with friends. At the University of Washington he was captain of the sailing team. After finishing graduate school he bought the bare hull of a Cape George 36 sailboat, finished the boat himself with help from friends and sailed it around the world. He then had a ten-year stint on tug boats, working his way up from deckhand to captain. That experience allowed him to transition to becoming a Puget Sound pilot, a position he held for twenty-five years. He still cruises in a 32ft aluminum powerboat. As you might imagine he has a lot of stories! We talk about growing up in Port Townsend, circumnavigating in the 70’s, running tug boats up to Alaska and down to California, what it is like being a pilot, sneaking onto a cruise ship to take a bath, facing down a young man with a machine gun in Egypt, sailing with a parrot, cruising the Red Sea, voyaging with a baby on board, and much more. I’m Jim Heumann – here’s the interview.

10. juli 2023 - 1 h 48 min
episode Bill Nance cover

Bill Nance

Bill Nance is only the second known person to ever sail alone around the world via the three great capes from west to east, which he did between 1962 and 1965. The book, The Circumnavigators, says he was "...one of the boldest and most competent, but least known of the circumnavigators on the tiny 25-foot Cardinal Virtue". In this conversation, we mostly talk about that voyage, the adventures he had and the people he met, but we also cover how he ended up in Port Townsend and a little bit about what he has done since arriving here in 1979. This interview was recorded in April of 2023. I'm Jim Heumann. I conducted most of the interview, but Bill's wife, Marie Dressler, and my wife Karen Sullivan, were also in attendance and you will hear them from time to time as well. Here's the interview.

24. april 2023 - 1 h 43 min
episode Diana Talley cover

Diana Talley

This is Maritime Voices -  I’m your host Jim Heumann. In this interview I will be speaking with Diana Talley. Diana believes that she may hold the world’s record for throwing up at sea after getting pregnant on a 106-day engineless non-stop voyage from Panama to Port Townsend, in a boat without standing headroom. She's been a shipwright, an offshore fisher, a racing sailboat captain, and is now a writer as well as a bit of a rabble rouser with a penchant for getting things done. Diana grew up in Vancouver, Canada, and on Lake Washington in Seattle. She also spent time in Sausalito, California in the 70’s, where she first got interested in boats, but then went back to Washington and settled on Bainbridge Island, where she designed and built her first boat. She earned a living as a commercial fisher, sailing a boat she built herself (and it included a bathtub!) In 1990 Diana moved to Port Townsend where she became a full-time shipwright. In this interview we talk about the “funky boatyard,” what it was like being a woman in the marine trades, racing sailboats, commercial fishing, what Port Townsend was like in the 90’s, offshore voyaging, and more. Here’s the interview.

15. mars 2023 - 1 h 8 min
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