Deck the hulls
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Bryce Alderton
Imagine turning your sailboat into a Christmas tree.
Bill Hartge did, and his lighted creation, a 36-foot sailboat will set
sail for this year’s Boat Parade and 39th annual Cruise of Lights in
Huntington Harbour.
It was his friend and former racing crew member Pat Taylor, who came
up with the idea to turn the boat into a Christmas tree this year. He
helped Hartge to install 24 strands of lights that attach at the top of
the mast and stream down through small loops just above the deck of the
boat, creating the Christmas tree image.
“I always have help,” Hartge said of preparations for the events.
The Boat Parade, which is put on by residents for residents, will be
held Dec. 8th and 9th. This is the time when harbor residents get
together to view the decorated homes and boats in the harbor prior to the
cruise, which begins on Dec. 13.
“[The parade] gives a hometown community feel and a party,” said
Lucinda Prewitt with the Huntington Harbour Philharmonic Society, the
organization that stages the cruise each year. “It gives residents their
time to talk and have Christmas parties on their boats. They get all
excited about decorating their homes, and they leave all their
decorations up.”
The Cruise of Lights runs from Dec. 13 through Dec. 22, and gives
visitors an opportunity to view the decorated homes in the harbor on a
narrated boat tour.
Since its inception in 1963, the cruise has generated more than $2
million for the Philharmonic Society of Orange County’s youth music
programs, and attracts more than 20,000 visitors a year.
Hartge has seen hundreds of thousands of visitors some through over
the years. He has lived in Huntington Harbour for 37 years, and has
decorated his boat for the festivities for 25 years.
But it’s not the decorating contest or winning an award that inspires
Hartge to participate in the parade and cruise.
Hartge and wife Jana have two children, five grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren, and they all get to see the lights.
“I take them all at various times throughout the [parade,]” Hartge
said. “I don’t enter these things to win, I just want to participate and
take friends and family out for a cruise. I have a lot of fun doing it
and the boat parade gives us a lot of opportunities to see what other
boats look like that are also in the parade.”
In past years he’s created images of the Red Baron and Snoopy on his
boats, but this year in keeping with the theme of the parade and cruise,
“Holidays on Parade,” he went with the tree.
Decorated boats will be judged in categories such as best display of
originality, most effective use of lights, most religious, best tribute
to theme, most whimsical, most beautiful, design excellence, sweepstakes,
best tribute to the holiday season, most traditional, most contemporary,
judges special trophy, best animation, best commercial and best of yacht
clubs.
They will be judged Saturday night Dec. 8, with trophies being
presented to the winners at a brunch on Sunday Dec. 9 at the Huntington
Harbour Yacht Club, 3821 Warner Ave.
Harbor homes were judged Wednesday night in some of the same
categories as boats. Condominium and townhomes were judged for best group
entry and best individual entry.
The cruise runs nightly at 6, 7, and 8 p.m. Dec. 13-22. Adults are $10
Mondays through Thursdays, $12 Fridays through Sundays. Children ages
2-12 are $6 every night. Special family nights are Dec. 13 and 17, with
reduced rates of $9.50 for adults and $5.50 for children.
Spectators can meet at the Huntington Harbour Mall on Algonquin Street
to be shuttled to the docks.
* BRYCE ALDERTON is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected]
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