MANY WAYS TO SUPPORT LATITUDE 38
Sailing is awesome. You can support the magazine and the sailing community with a story, a photo, a subscription, or a contribution. Learn how below!
As we adapt to shifting winds of journalism we're asking for your direct financial support or any of the other ways to contribute listed below. If you have the ability, enjoy sailing and the work of Latitude 38, your contributions will help and be greatly appreciated.
Yes, I'd like to support Latitude 38 with a contribution:
More ways to support Latitude 38:
Subscribe
Have Latitude 38 delivered to your home: Subscribe for yourself or as a gift to a friend.
Sign Up for Our Sailing Newsletter: 'Lectronic Latitude
Advertise in our Display or Classified Ad sections. When you do you reach the world's greatest sailors:
We love our advertisers. You can help by patronizing the advertisers in Latitude 38 or become one of them! Click here to see the advertisers to supporting our current edition or to become an advertiser email [email protected].
Place a Classified Ad here. Place a FREE Classified with photos for boats or gear priced under $1,000 here.
Send Your Story:
Whether sailing the Bay, cruising the Channel Islands or Mexico or circumnavigating the globe, if you are a West Coast sailor, our readers would appreciate hearing your story. Editorial contributions are welcome for your comments in Letters to the Editor or Sightings, Changes, Features and 'Lectronic Latitude. You can read our Writer's Guidelines here or just email you story and photos to [email protected].
Send Your Best Shot to Sailagram:
Email your sailing photos to: [email protected].
Suggestions:
Got a suggestion on what we can do better? We love ideas to help improve our offerings, especially from folks who have the skills and/or ability to help us find the solution. We're constantly working to improve our website, magazine, crew list, events, distribution and all other aspects of serving our West Coast sailing audience. If you have a thought regarding what we can do better you can contribute it here.
See you on the water.
Subscribe to Latitude 38. Delivered to your door every month.
'Lectronic Latitude
We Won’t Be Coming Back
Doublehanded ‘soul sailors’ Jonathan and Rebecca of Serenity. If the couple look a little rough, it’s because the photo was taken with a cheeseball Android phone in dim light.Talion©2016Latitude 38 Media, LLC Doublehanders Jonathan and Rebecca Mote of the Corona del Mar-based Jeanneau 42DS Serendipity were among the handful of soul sailors who sailed the…
Autopilot ‘On Watch’ Yields Disaster
After dawn broke, Nacar 1’s crew realized that the rig had been damaged, further threatening the crew and passengers. As seen here, the mast eventually came down as the big cat wallowed in the punishing surf. © 2016 Emma Tryon If your boat is equipped with an autopilot, you know what a valuable resource this…
One Last Record in 2015
Just one last record before 2015 expired. Phaedo3©Latitude 38 Media, LLC Lloyd Thornburg’s MOD70 Phaedo3 broke one last record in 2015 by setting a new time of 1 hour and 5 minutes for rounding the Caribbean island of St. Barth on New Year’s Eve. With a maximum speed of 39 knots and rarely going below…
Sailing for a Future
The crew of this MacGregor 65 is defying the odds. © SailFuture What does society do with young people convicted of breaking the law? Locking them up in Juvenile Hall is one answer. SailFuture has another idea. They offer youth offenders a way out. During a five-month sailing Odyssey, eight youths live and work aboard…
Science Lesson from the Bilge
Earlier this month we introduced ‘Lec Lat readers to the curious, perfectly square crystals that we found growing in our boat’s bilge. We assumed they were salt crystals, of course, as there’d been a pinhole leak down there around a through-hull fastening. But we had no idea what made these bilge gemstones form into such…

