BSSC caps season
Juliet Fluty and the Trash to Treasure mural, made of collected trash such as bottle caps, ropes, buttons and plastic cutlery. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
The Mizzen program painting inside the Center. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
Audrey Aragon and the Mako, the one cardboard boat that succeeded in floating. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
Pauline Dion with BSSC’s two fixed keel boats in the background. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
The Mizzen program in a tent at the Boothbay Harbor shipyard. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
Juliet Fluty and the Trash to Treasure mural, made of collected trash such as bottle caps, ropes, buttons and plastic cutlery. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
The Mizzen program painting inside the Center. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
Audrey Aragon and the Mako, the one cardboard boat that succeeded in floating. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
Pauline Dion with BSSC’s two fixed keel boats in the background. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay Register
The Mizzen program in a tent at the Boothbay Harbor shipyard. LILLY CURTIS/Boothbay RegisterDespite the troubles the pandemic has brought, this summer has brought many memorable events. Juliet Fluty, a sailing and science instructor,0 designed the Center’s Trash Treasure artwork during the Tracking Trash session. “It was fun to design. We talked about, like, plastics that were trashed and where it goes. Most of the stuff here is stuff that kids brought in themselves from home or literally picked up.”
Audrey Aragon, a sailing and science instructor said, “We assist the principal instructors who already have plans for us. So we just hope the kids enjoy the activities. And they always do. This week we’ve been doing Color Wars, where the camp is split into two groups. It’s been awesome.”
Sheyenne Upham, 8, who has attended the program for four years, described making her own boat out of cardboard and duct tape. “It was like the Titanic, it sank and we had to haul it out of the water. I like to swim so it was OK swimming back with the boat.” Excitement over this self-made boating excursion was emphasized by Iilya Sanborn, 8. “I’ve learned how to ride a boat, which I did not know last year. But building boats was really fun, too.”
Aragon added, “They had one or two hours to make those boats. And, like, out of literally just cardboard and paint and duct tape they were able to make one that floated. That was super exciting.”
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