After months of rumors, We can finally talk about Melges’s new boat, The Melges 15. Melges debut’d the boat on May 19th via Facebook and the Melges newsletter. The press release came out at 11 AM on 5/19/20 with a video and pictures, giving us a good look at the boat and how she sails.
The Melges 15 comes in two configurations: The M15 One Design with an asymmetric spinnaker and the Melges Club with a Main and Jib configuration. The asymmetric comes in 4 colors: Hot Pink, Neon Yellow, Red, Blue. The dolly, from Dynamic Dollies and Racks, is custom to the boat and gives you a wide variety of configurations depending on your water access. Option include: 40″ carbon tiller extension, racing sheets, custom sail numbers, full deck cover, bottom cover, rudder/tiller bag and a mast bag. Trailers are available as well. Single, double or triple. Boats can be stacked for transport as well. Pricing starts at $ 11,900.00 
ECS’s first demo boat will arrive at the end of July. We are taking orders for the new Melges 15 at this time. Details and contact for purchase is on our website page. We will also be offering demo’s of the boat at our sailing center in Kitty Hawk, NC. Part of our “Try before you buy,” program. Please contact us for more details or to schedule a demo.
East Coast Sailboats, Inc. is the US Distributor for Topper/Topaz Sailboats and dealer for multiple brands such as Hobie Cat, Nacra Sports and Fun Catamarans, Melges Performance Sailboats, RS Sailing, O’Pen Skiff, World Wide Sailor Prams and Flying Scot (Boats, Parts and accessories) . Our goal is to maximize a sailor’s time on the water at the best possible value. We focus our effort towards promoting the sport of sailing by working through individual sailors, sailing clubs, sailing schools, and a network of dealers across the US, Hawaii, and the Caribbean. East Coast Sailboats also operates as Sail OBX, a day sail and sunset cruise captained charter operation using a Maine Cat 38 sailing catamaran.
sailing program with 65 sailors from ages 6 to 16. SHYC now seeks a 



I didn’t grow up in a “yacht club family” or have weekend cookouts and clam bakes. I can say, satisfactorily and proudly, I did not grow up as a “yacht club kid”. I did, however, have the
unmistakable fortune to learn how to sail at the Mystic Seaport, on a very small river, where the wind did donuts all day, and if you capsized you would sink up to your knees in mud and were most likely to go home stinking with the famous aroma of “Mystic Mud” well into the evening (ever after scrubbing relentlessly in the shower). This brings us to the first forgotten beginner sailboat: the Dyer Dhow, aka Bath Tub. The Dyer Dhow indeed earned her nickname “bath tub” for a darn good reason: It looks like one, it floats like one, and well, it sinks like one. These are not little boats you can right yourself after capsizing. It requires an immense amount of effort from your coach. Firstly, getting the sailor out of the water and into the launch, then awkwardly heaving the bow onto the gunwale of the launch, and then begin to bail, and bail and bail. After all this heaving and hauling, the sailor is set back into the bathtub, free to go and capsize once again, and so the perpetual motion goes on, great upper body workout when you have 50 bathtubs out and about.
long-time childhood friend of mine and I taught sailing in Noank, CT, one of the cutest hidden towns on the East Coast, full of fresh lobster rolls and salty local fishermen. Our floating docks were anchored in the harbor in Fisher Island Sound, every morning packing the kids into the launch boats and ferrying out after the morning brief. The great perk from these boats was they were amazingly easy to take care of. Kids loved them, as summer sailing was all about being with your friends, being free, smelling like sunscreen seven days a week, and not having a care in the world. Smooth flared gunwales made hiking easy and comfortable. It was the perfect summer sailing fun boat.
Sparkman, leader of Sparkman & Stephens. The restoration of a Blue Jay is a project accountable of me falling in love with the smell of epoxy and varnish. My Uncle had an old wooden Blue Jay sitting in his garage, calmly waiting to be restored. I was to be his apprentice. With wood, comes rot, with rot comes inevitable holes, and there was a lot of rot – hence the extensive application and use of epoxy. We started restoring Yankee in February, when temperatures in Connecticut typically do not rise above 20 degrees Fahrenheit. I soon came to find that the chemical reaction which occurs when mixing epoxy is heat, lovely wood smelling heat in your frigid hands. I was hooked. The hull and rig were stripped of all hardware, naked and ready to be hand sanded. Low and behold, after months of sanding, priming, sanding, priming, sanding, painting and varnishing, Yankee was looking quite majestic and handsome once again. With a fresh glossy red hull, and a clean off-white for deck and inside, she was rejuvenated to her original beauty.
While the present-day youth sailing scene is heavily invested in Opti’s, 420’s, FJ’s, and Laser’s, there still exists niche pockets of dinghy sailing centered on appreciation of tradition, pure fun, and history. If there is one prominent common denominator with the Dyer Dow, JY 15, and Blue Jay, it’s versatility. Dyer Dows are great beginner boats and can allow for a simple and straightforward introduction into sailing basics. It can also be towed as a tender, used for picnics to the beach, and general putzing around with no nonsense. If you’re looking for an easy to rig, simple and comfortable design, that can be used for racing and also family activities, the JY 15 and Blue Jay are a great match. Quite simply, the enjoyment of sailing comes in all shapes and forms, all ability levels, and all ages. Whatever your goal is in sailing, we can all appreciate the simple solitude of being one with the ocean and the wind, and always having fun.
the spring season, she responded,
One of the Captains on the
past 3.5 years working towards my senior spring season, though, having it taken it away is pretty devastating. I am excited to see where my team goes next year, though!


When first hearing about the suspension of the season, Sam said, “Of course, it wasn’t a large surprise given the constant press around the coronavirus.” Given that it wasn’t a surprise to him that much, Sam continued, “the actual events affected over the next few weeks aren’t huge ones, but we understood that this suspension could very easily turn into the end of our entire season, similar to the situation in ICSA.”