| The
Sea Scouts program just may be the best-kept secret in
Boy Scouts. Where else do kids get to cruise the blue
Pacific to the Farallon Islands and up local rivers to
Sacramento and Napa, all while commanding their own
82-foot ship?
While having loads of fun, kids learn how to safely
navigate and maintain not only the troop's ship, the SSS
Challenger, but also operate sailboats, powerboats and
other small watercraft.
No boating background is required, just a strong
desire to learn and a willingness to operate as a team.
Everything else is taught.
"The kids run the boats, the older people just direct
you and tell you what to do," says Ryan Bray of
Campbell, a Sea Scout who has been with the ship a year.
In addition, the scouts do all of the cooking, as well
as routine maintenance like checking the engine, while
on their two-hour watch. But parents need not worry—an
adult skipper is aboard and everything is under control.
"On the first day, my parents were a little iffy, but
they came and met our skipper and after that they were
very comfortable. They love it, too," says Kyle Northend
of San Jose.
The skipper, Layne Davis, is a sergeant with the Los
GatosMonte Sereno Police Department. He has been
running the ship since 1994 and has been involved in Sea
Scouts since 1978.
The SSS Challenger, a former Coast Guard vessel,
carried its crew to the Coast Guard station at Yerba
Buena Island for the annual Safety at Sea weekend last
October. After working a full evening doing community
service at the Haunted Forest in Los Gatos, the scouts
set sail from their berth in Redwood City late that
evening, arriving at 2 a.m. The weekend was
stunning—unusually warm, but crystal clear with a
beautiful view from the shadow of the Bay Bridge. The
water was so still it looked like glass.
One of the first activities was a water rescue
exercise where the scouts got into what's called a
"gumpy suit." It's specifically designed to keep someone
afloat and on their back in the event they are
unconscious when falling into the water, preventing
drowning. "It's a little constricting when you jump into
the water—all the pressure gets sucked out," says Grant
Hendricks of Sunnyvale. Getting out proved just as
difficult. Most landed like beached whales, and they
were greeted with lots of laughter and cheers.
Their ship looked inordinately clean, the result of a
"haul out" last summer during which the ship received a
thorough overhaul, as well as an ultrasound check of the
bottom followed by the welding of new steel on any thin
portions. This is in addition to the routine painting
done every year. The process took six weeks and occurred
at Moss Landing.
Needless to say, it's not cheap running the group—the
annual cost is about $25,000. This year was a little
more expensive because of the haul out, says Skipper
Davis. They raise money through dues—$15 a quarter—as
well as through fundraisers like working at a Christmas
tree lot carrying out trees for customers.
A division of the Boy Scouts of America, Sea Scouts
was founded in the United States in 1912—two years after
Boy Scouts were founded—and offers both girls and boys
an aquatic alternative to the outdoor experience. Kids
come to the program for myriad reasons, including those
who are from traditional scouting programs and looking
for something different.
"In Boy Scouts, basically we'd load everything into a
backpack, hike 2 miles into the woods and then it
rained," says eighth-grader Cassidy Cannizzaro of Los
Gatos. He's been with the ship nine months and is really
enjoying the experience—not to mention the comforts of a
heated bunk on the ship.
There are ranks similar to those in Boy Scouts but
with different names—apprentice, ordinary, able and,
ultimately, quartermaster, the highest rank and the
equivalent to Eagle Scout. Dan Kroman, a junior officer
on the ship, achieved the rank of quartermaster and for
his project built a 30-foot stairway for the public
works department to get up a hill in Los Gatos.
The older boys are responsible for the younger ones
and take the job very seriously. Matt Hendricks is the
ship's boatswain, comparable to being president and in
charge of all the kids on the ship. He is a senior at
Oak Grove High School in San Jose and will be joining
the Coast Guard after graduation. Usually Hendricks has
around 16 to 20 kids under his command.
"They are so young and don't know a lot of the stuff,
so they need someone to guide them," he explains. He
keeps on eye on the group, as there's a tendency for
them to goof off a bit, he says.
The older boys exude a quiet maturity, no doubt
because of the experience. "Some kids my age do whatever
they want and don't care about the rules or other
people, but I credit the program with giving me a sense
of responsibility," says Hendricks.
Brad Latigue, a graduate of Leigh High School, will
be joining the Coast Guard this month and will be
training at Cape May, N.J. He's been with the ship two
years and was assigned to assist the younger crewmembers
during a hypothermia demonstration. This exercise
involved sticking one's hand in a bucket of ice water
and grabbing pennies from the bottom. It's not easy and
kids learned just how incapacitating cold water can be.
The expressions on their faces said it all.
One activity pitting boys against girls was the fire
hose contest, an especially welcome respite from the
heat. It was similar to a tug of war contest during
which approximately six kids on each side held a fire
hose and attempted to push a ball in the middle to the
opposing side, using the force of the fire hose. Kailey
Elliott, a seventh-grader from Los Gatos, liked this
activity best and confessed it was a lot more fun
getting the boys wet than winning the contest.
"My brother was in Sea Scouts and it sounded like a
lot of fun because they went on cruises and swam," she
explains. She's been in the group a year and enjoys the
socializing as well. She finds the experience of working
as a team with shipmates also helps her in sports.
Her ship, the Morning Star, is also docked in Redwood
City, and the group accepts girls from all over the
Peninsula, with most of the crew coming from Los Gatos.
It's half the size of the Challenger, but big enough for
the seven girls who participated in the weekend event.
The Morning Star served as the admiral's gig on the USS
Midway, a Navy legend that was recently refurbished in
Oakland.
They average between five and eight girls on each
excursion and learn everything their male counterparts
do. Davis was in charge of the crew before handing it
over last July to Tess Herman, whose day job is running
the molecular genetics lab at Children's Hospital in
Oakland.
It's easy to lose sight of the serious nature of
boating, but during the weekend activities kids are
reminded of this very important fact. The damage control
drainage exercise involved a leaky boat with holes on
the bottom filling up with water. There is an assortment
of rags, wedges and wooden plugs to be used to stop the
leaks.
"It's fun, like a sinking boat," says 13-year-old
Alex Gillette, a student at Fisher Middle School in Los
Gatos. He quickly learned that rags weren't all that
effective and stoppers were the way to go.
"If you don't work as a team, nothing works because
we had to ask some people to hammer and others to hold
the stoppers."
In the event an emergency happens at sea, their
training from the weekend would help them respond
appropriately—for example, how to properly use a flare
in order to sound a warning. And there was the
pyrotechnic exercise, showing everyone the proper use of
a fire extinguisher, which actually involves a very
specific technique; the extinguisher should be pointed
at the fire's base. They also learned what type of
extinguisher should be used for the different types of
fires.
The SSS Challenger was purchased in Southern
California, where it was berthed at a naval beach near
Santa Barbara. The crew traveled every weekend to work
on the ship from February to May of 1998. It was
finished on Memorial Day Weekend and, while the crew was
at a competition in Alameda, the adult members went down
to bring it up north. They hit a severe windstorm and it
took 42 hours to make it back. Of the nine on board,
only two weren't seasick—the skipper, Davis, who never
gets sick, says Kroman, and a 75-year-old Naval veteran.
The boat hit 20-foot waves and everyone took turns
with six-hour watches while the Coast Guard monitored
them the whole time. Needless to say, the Challenger was
the talk of the day.
The boys have never encountered anything quite like
that. But it can get a little blustery on the Bay, and
the ship can get knocked around some, says ninth-grader
Andrew Alexander of Saratoga, who is also in the Boy
Scouts and is working on his Eagle project.
"We've encountered a lot of wind. Sometimes it's a
little crazy, but you get your sea legs and balance
yourself out," he says. It can get pretty cold, too,
especially while on watch at night, but he loves
cruising and going places.
Alexander fondly remembers a cruise to Napa last
year—dazzled by the lights of San Francisco and the
rowdy sounds emerging from Pac Bell Park. Yes, he just
heard the Rolling Stones concert, and he had the best
seat in the Bay Area. |