Shalimar teens set sail for daylong adventure
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Lolita Harper
The skies were gray, the wind was cold but the spirit at the Newport
Harbor Yacht club Saturday afternoon was bright and cheery, as
Newport Beach high school sailing teams shared their typical sailing
routine with children from Shalimar Place -- some of whom had never
been on a boat.
Roger Riley, Tom Tupman, the ever-dedicated staffers at Shalimar
Teen Center and high school students from Newport Harbor, Corona del
Mar and Sage Hill high schools worked to introduce 18 “at-risk” Costa
Mesa students to the sport of sailing. The children were at the yacht
club for hours, learning the intricacies of sailing, practicing and
racing.
Although the students live in neighboring cities and are all part
of the same school district, their lives, economic status and
opportunities are completely different.
Newport Harbor High School student Lauren Gautschi, who worked on
the race committee Saturday, said she had been sailing since she was
5 years old. Without passing judgment, or sounding the least bit
snobbish, she admitted it was strange to think the Shalimar kids had
never been on a sailboat before.
“I have just done it for so long, it is kind of weird to think
it’s not just normal for everyone,” Lauren said. “More people should
get into it.”
Costa Mesa resident Adrianna Barrera had never sailed before and
had never been to a yacht club. Yacht club. They are two words that
are known to her only because of the media but never considered it a
family hangout, she said.
“I always wondered what one looked like,” Adrianna said. “It’s
nice.”
Riley, a Shalimar volunteer and yacht club member, said the chasm
that divides the two groups of students, who live just miles from
each other is the reason this event, and others similar, exists.
“We do this to build self worth and esteem in these children,”
Riley said. “To expose them to things they have not experienced --
something challenging. The name of the game is success.”
He has worked for the past three years on similar projects, such
as camp-outs, whale watching tours and community service projects, to
help teach the Shalimar children the positive influence they can have
when they strive for success. Riley also hope to help the kids make
connections for education, jobs and social opportunities, he said.
“We want to brake the mold of that barrier,” Riley said.
The students proved Saturday that it didn’t matter whether their
skin, home life, neighborhoods or accents were different, because it
took teamwork to make the boats glide across the bay.
“These kids just caught on so easily,” said Tupman, who hopes the
event can continue annually. “You wouldn’t believe it, they are just
naturals.”
As Tupman and Riley watched the kids come in from sailing,
numerous yacht club members congratulated them on the event.
“What a super good deal this is,” a passerby said, while shaking
Riley’s hand. “It’s just great and it’s really cool.”
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