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Calling All Sailor Chicks

A few years ago, we wrote about a judgment-free Facebook group called Women Who Sail. Since that 2015 Lectronic Latitude article, the group has grown from an impressive 6,000 members to an astonishing 14,575 — all women who sail, want to sail or have sailed. You don’t even have to sail — all female boaters are welcome, no matter their vessel of choice.

Women Who Sail provides the opportunity for women around the world to connect, in person and over the interwebs.

© 2018 Katrina Liana

Can’t figure out how to sand the inside slats on your teak cockpit grate? Searching for the best solution for heating your boat? Looking for a reputable charter outfit in Croatia? All of these questions have been asked and answered in WWS, all by women who know exactly what they’re talking about.

If you’re looking for answers that don’t make you feel like an idiot, the kind ladies at WWS will have them.

© 2018 Sherie Munday

But the fun doesn’t stop with that group. Nearly 40 ‘subgroups’ have been started since Charlotte Kaufman created WWS in 2011. Many are topic-focused — healthy living, LGBTQ sailors, splicing, cooking, writing — but most are location-based, such as the San Francisco Bay Area ‘chapter’.

Two such regional groups that southbound cruisers should check out are WWS Pacific Coast Americas and WWS Latitude 28 (Guaymas/San Carlos). These smaller subgroups are a great way for sailor chicks to keep in touch, plan cruise-outs or meet-ups, and share local knowledge — weather, tides, local service providers and so on.

But a separate subgroup isn’t required to coordinate an event. Just last month, dozens of women gathered at Marina Riviera Nayarit in La Cruz to discuss all things sailing. Among the attendees was solo circumnavigator Jeanne Socrates. Socrates was forced to scrap her latest attempt to become the oldest person to solo circumnavigate nonstop when she fell off a ladder and injured her neck shortly before she was to set off from Victoria, BC. Looking chuffed without her ever-present neck brace, Jeanne told attendees she wasn’t going to let a little thing like gravity get in the way of her goals. It appears she’s once again planning for an October departure aboard her Najad 380 Nereida.

Jeanne Socrates and Doña de Mallorca (not this writer) were guests of honor at the La Cruz gathering of Women Who Sail.

© Katrina Liana

Whether you’re new to boating or a seasoned sailor, Women Who Sail offers something for everyone. Except dudes. They still need not apply.

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The weather gods have been kind to San Francisco Bay this winter. Besides a few blustery days and the odd raindrop or two it’s been pretty pleasant sailing all winter when there’s been enough wind to sail.