Length (in Feet)
Year

CY Publisher Greg Nicoll at the Helm of a C&C 34

Our publisher, Greg Nicoll, caught in this snapshot

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Galley Guys Connect with Friends Both Old and New, at Rawley Resort

Imagine our surprise when we saw Stavebank II tied at the docks in Port Severn! This historic Canadian yacht had been the “slipmate” to John Armstrong’s boat…      

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CY Snapshots – PCYC with Rotary Event

Canadian Yachting’s John Armstrong at the Port Credit Yacht Clubs annual Rotary of Mississauga handicapped children’s event…

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CY Snapshots – Kimmirut, Nunavut

Kimmirut is a community in the Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada….

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CY Snapshot: Killbear Provincial Park – August 2016

CY Snapshots feature photos sent in by readers who are excited to share their moment with you…

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Salted Caramel Apple Crumble

Easy, quick, tasty…..ticks all the boxes….give it a try!

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From the Helm of Adamant 1 – Installment 2 – North Channel – August 9 2016

Currently sailing at 6.5 kn enroute to Thessalon…

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Easy One Pot Dinner and Boat Bread

These two galley-friendly recipes were provided by Lynn Lortie from the galley of Adamant 1 as Lynn and her husband, Pat, set out for their second Great Loop adventure and three years of sailing on their home made vessel…

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From the Helm of Adamant 1 – Installment 1 – July 2016

Adamant 1 has finally shipped her dock lines and is on her way. The last three months have been full of activity for us. We have installed all new electronics…

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CY Snapshot: 2016 Jeanneau Leader 40 Sea Trial

Canadian Yachting’s John Armstrong visited Jeanneau Americas office in Annapolis Maryland

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Awesome Pasta Salad and Watermelon Margaritas

A couple of delicious summer recipes to help keep you out of the galley as much as possible and in the sunshine…

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CY Snapshots

John Armstrong from Canadian Yachting along with Mickey Baratz and John Kozak at the Port Credit Yacht Club’s annual Sail Past

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Entertaining Onboard: CY Evening Cruise with Club Carnivore

On a gorgeous sunny May evening recently, the Canadian Yachting staff were treated to an evening sail aboard Lynn and Pat Lortie’s Adamant 1, complete with delicious snacks and Lynn’s custom audio soundtrack, which may have taken us back a few years…

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Cheddar-and-Onion Smashed Burgers

A recipe of perfection when heading out for a weekend cruise…easy to prepare and delicious…

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Value of Volunteers

It is always an interesting dilemma when crossing into another country; what exactly should one say to a Border Official?

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Dark ’n Stormy – Gosling’s rum and Bermuda

Bermuda is the host country for the 35th America’s Cup, set to take place in 2017, a competition for the oldest trophy in international sport (dates back to 1851) that features the fastest boats and the best sailors in the world…    

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The Galley Guys: On the Loose in Holland

Our boat for this trip was a Vision 1503 / 3 cabin, an upscale luxury canal boat designed exclusively for Le Boat for use on rivers and canals. Capt. John had great fun manoeuvring the boat with the joystick steering and bow thruster…    

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Mark Mattson – Spearheading the Ripple Effect across Canada

Mark Mattson is a man of gentle demeanor but don’t be fooled by his calm, cool collectedness. This man moves mountains, lakes and rivers to make sure Canadians will be able to swim, drink and fish anywhere in Canada from coast to coast to coast. Like many of us, Mattson’s love of the water and boating started at an early age. And during his career as a criminal lawyer, Mattson had an opportunity to work on a case with the Ministry of the Environment that whet his appetite for wanting to protect Canadian waters. This and a chance meeting with Waterkeeper Alliance President Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. during a case involving Hydro Quebec fueled his appetite, and in 1995 Mattson left Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP to form the Environment Bureau of Investigation (EBI). 

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Plastic Pickup in Paradise

We hear about the plastic problem in our oceans all the time. Scientists on the media talk to us about an island of trash the size of Texas that’s formed in the mid Pacific. They show us pictures of turtles caught in six ring beer holders, dolphins caught in nets and dead seabirds washed up with their stomachs full of broken down micro plastics.  For me, it wasn’t until the problem arrived, wind ravaged and sun worn, strewn across my doorstep that that the magnitude of what those scientists were trying to tell us was realized. The beaches on Haida Gwaii have always been a magnet for the flotsam and jetsam that circles the Pacific. The archipelago sits off shore from the mainland and reaches out into the currents and wild winds of open ocean. Some beaches collect the debris and display it for a while and then it’s simply swept back into the sea to continue its journey, but some beaches here hold on to the debris and do not let it go. 

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Irish Beef Stew – Perfect for a Cold Fall Day

Thick beef stew you can make in any galley, over a campfire or at home.  Good eaten from a bowl or poured over biscuits. Substitute lamb and voila!…Irish stew!!…    

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Krates Marina – Life In A Lifestyle Marina

This spring one of the largest privately owned marinas in the entire country changed ownership and with that change came a change in direction, taking a 550 slip working marina that dates back to the depression, and converting it into a lifestyle marina…    

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The Galley Guys Have Been Busssssssy…

…well one of them has anyway.      

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Strolling in Cobourg, ON

Oh sure…boaters love to go boating, but some also like to, you guessed it: stroll. One of the great things about boating the north shore of Lake Ontario is pulling into Cobourg Harbour to tie up for a visit and walk about town in a leisurely or idle manner…

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Sharon Green’s The Pursuit of “Ultimate Sailing”

An artist is able to visualize their thoughts and interpretations through their mind’s eye to produce objects of great beauty through their hands. Others visualize them through a lens to produce masterful photographs. This often requires great patience, a great deal of waiting, planning, and often frustration when the “shot” they wanted didn’t work out as they had anticipated. When we sit down to enjoy the Ultimate Sailing calendar every month, we don’t see this part of Sharon Green’s work. As she herself has said, ”My greatest satisfaction comes when it all connects – the anticipation, organization, high-powered yachts sailed by stellar crews, and epic conditions – and combines to create a thrilling photograph. The pursuit of ‘Ultimate Sailing’ never grows old. Three decades and I still love the challenge of creating memorable images for my clients and the calendar.” Sharon started sailing with her dad, Don Green, when she was seven years old, on the family’s 21-foot Bluenose sloop. Later, when Don got a C&C 35, Sharon and her brother talked him into letting the junior sailors race it, and soon Don ended up with a very reliable and victorious young crew. 

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A Prairie Boys Voyage

My early reading about sailing explorers and fur trading voyageurs gave me a desire to travel by water. As a boy growing up in Gladstone, Manitoba, I constructed a rather poorly built raft. I planned to journey down the Whitemud River to Lake Manitoba. I managed to get a half a mile downstream before my raft disintegrated and plunged me into the river. I emerged cold and wet but determined to do better in my water-borne travels. Our family cottage was at Delta Beach at the south end of Lake Manitoba. A neighbour had an old wooden “Lightning” anchored in three feet of water. My younger brother Bryan and I would climb into it and pretended we sailed the seven seas, even though the boat never moved, other than up and down with the waves. In my early teen’s we lived on the shore of Lake Killarney in Southern Manitoba. Bryan and I had a canoe. We would paddle upwind, then hang an old bed-sheet between the paddles and sail downwind.

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Innovation: What’s New and What’s Old

It’s great when you come up with a new product that could make a genuine difference in the marine market… but it is equally vital that the innovator is able to share the innovation with the widest audience possible. One of the best ways to get the news of your Innovation out is by entering the annual DAME Competition – Design Award METS. The world’s number one international design competition for new marine equipment and accessories held at METS, the Marine Equipment and Trade Show that runs annually in Amsterdam, has enormous industry prestige and a worldwide commercial impact.

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Old Salts and Sea Salts

The old sea salt expression; “Over the transom”  can generally mean one of two things; we have lost something overboard, or something arrived unannounced.  Most often if something arrives unnannounced, we just toss it back into the sea, however, sometimes the object can prove to be a real treasure.  So, another boating cookbook arrived at our door without any advance warning and the choices were; to chuck it overboard, park it on the shelf with our other boating cookbooks, or crack it open and see if it was really something special.  Wow, we were hooked like a salmon! Sea Salt: Recipes from the West Coast Galley by Alison Malone Eathorne, Hilary Malone and Lorna Malone with photography by Christina Symons and published by Harbour Publishing, instantly came to life.

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Western Exposure

It is never the ‘same old, same old’ if you keep moving, laughing and making friends. And over the years, the Galley Guys have made many friends, laughed way too much and probably drank a little too much wine. One of our great friends, Frank Leffelaar, is a Dutch expat who has made the study and enjoyment of the foods and wines of British Columbia his mission in life. Frank is an avid sailor and has taken part in many Galley Guy adventures. On this year’s sailing trip, with Frank as cruise director, we seemed to spend a little bit more time on food and wine than hardcore cruising. I’m not really sure what ‘hardcore cruising’ is, but I have heard that some cruisers use that freeze-dried stuff. Not on this trip…only great menu with perfectly paired wines.  

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Snapshots from Miami 2015

Snapshots from the Miami 2015 International Boat show…    

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Hot Cocoa Cookies

If you are ready to start your Holiday baking or just plain need a great chocolate fix these decadent cookies might be the thing for you…      

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Teriyaki Salmon with Sriracha Cream Sauce

An easy salmon dish with homemade teriyaki sauce and a Sriracha cream sauce that will knock your socks off!    

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Creamy Tomato Tortellini Soup with Pesto

Soup season is in full swing and this Tomato Tortellini Soup with Pesto is just the recipe to warm your belly.  Any recipe that lends itself to a slow cooker and very little prep is a galley recipe for sure.  This dish combines comfort on cool fall days with ease of preparation and surprisingly terrific taste.

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Shrimp Zucchini Pasta Puttanesca

This flavour-infused pasta dish is terrific for any season.  It takes a little bit of prep time but is a one-dish meal with a clever combination of flavours and textures that satisfies hunger as well as palate.  Easily created in any galley kitchen and upsize as needed to suit the size of your crowd.

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Hearty Skillet Lasagna

As the season’s evenings grow cooler boaters will be looking for heartier galley meals to extend their boating season.  This skillet lasagna hits all of the highlights; it is easy to make, the flavour is top notch, hearty enough to add some heat to a cool evening on board and the one dish feature makes clean up easy.

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End of Summer Shrimp Stew

Cooler days and cooler nights make everyone want to prepare something warm and comforting… This yummy stew can be made easily and quickly with ingredients kept on hand and in a galley with minimal facilities.

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Breakfast Enchiladas Onboard

This is a simple recipe too.  The only challenging part is rolling up the tortillas without spilling any precious filling. I also like that it can be baked right away or refrigerated overnight.

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Chicken Souvlaki with Tzatziki Sauce

This recipe is great for a make-ahead easy yet satisfying on board meal.  You can use chicken or pork or both if you like.  The tzatziki recipe is also a simple one but if time and ingredients are an issue you can buy a good prepared sauce to accompany your souvlaki.

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Fruit Infused Water Recipes

Fruit Infused water is a top notch way to stay hydrated and have deliciously refreshing drinks ready when you are on board.  They are a great alternative to alcoholic beverages and there are countless ways to dress them up and switch up the flavours to suit anyone’s taste. 

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Double-Stacked Juicy Lucy Burgers

If you can get your mouth around this burger it is well worth the effort.  Easy but perfect and best enjoyed sitting in a comfy spot on your boat with a fun group of friends and/or family and a cool beverage in your other hand.

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