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Bolton Landing No-Octane Regatta to be Held September 28

Bolton Landing No-Octane Regatta to be Held September 28 September 25, 2024
Photo from the 2018 event courtesy Crown Focus Media.
Photo from the 2018 event courtesy Crown Focus Media.

The Bolton Historical Museum’s No-Octane Regatta, a successor to its 2018 Bolton Landing Boats and Boating Festival, will be held Saturday, September 28 from 10 am to 4 pm in Rogers Park.

According to organizers Reuben and Cynde Smith, owners of Tumblehome Boatshop, the on-water event will feature wood boats of the type seen on Lake George 125 years ago – small sailing craft, canvas-covered canoes and rowboats such as Smith and Grangers, Whitehalls and St. Lawrence skiffs – as well as electric launches.

According to Reuben Smith, “In the latter part of the 19th century, people of means began to take time away from the dirty industrial cities to breathe the clean air around Lake George. While some went into the Adirondacks to hunt, fish, and spend time in the deep woods, others chose the more genteel life offered at the resort hotels, or even their own grand ‘camps’. For these folks, going out in a boat was an occasion, and judging from the photos we have, they dressed themselves very nicely. They went out a-courting, or went to an island to sketch, or to play music.

“The typical small boat was the Lake George Rowboat, developed by creative boatbuilders responding to this new form of pleasure boating. 15’ long, and with a lovely wineglass transom and comfortable seatback for the passenger in the stern, these boats were light and easy-to-handle, yet perfectly capable of excursions out on the Lake. The resort hotels on the lake had whole fleets available to their guests.

“Boatbuilders also made fancy versions of these boats, adorning them with carvings or elegant hardware. They developed new methods for building the boats to make them even more special for the discerning buyer, and to separate them from the livery boats.”

The Sept. 28 No-Octane Regatta will not only feature period boats but boating activities and events typical of the era, such as tows led by launches and, of course, races.

Owners of wood boats are invited to bring them to Rogers Park on September 28. “All are welcome,” the organizers state. “We’re looking for any non-motorized powered boat that harkens back to old time boating on Lake George It does not have to be an antique boat; it simply needs to be of the family of boats we would have seen back then.”

“This is a perfect time to dust off the old boats in the rafters of the boathouses around the lake, or just come down to see these boats in action. Who knows, there may even be boats for spectators to hop in and try out,” state the organizers.

 For information, contact Reuben Smith at Tumblehome Boatshop, 518-623-5050.

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