All in a name
- Share via
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Mayflower. Queen Mary. A certain Titanic comes to
mind.
For centuries, the names of famous ships have come to symbolize their
bearer’s stories. And while many of the 400-plus boats in this year’s
54th annual Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race probably won’t
find their way into history books, their names all come with a story.
Take Doug and Sandy Mills’ 35-foot Elan, for example, the couple’s
second boat that carries the name.
When the couple bought the first Elan, they researched the name and
decided to keep it instead of re-christening the boat.
“Elan means style and sophistication -- class,” said Sandy Mills. Add
an accent mark and you get “moose” in French.
“We loved it,” Mills said. “Some races we do with style and
sophistication and class, and some like a moose.”
When they got a new boat five years ago, they took the name with them.
Literally.
“We had the name taken off the old boat,” Sandy Mills said, adding
that as frequent racers, the couple wanted to keep the name.
Unlike vanity license plates -- new car owners interested in a
“Balboa” plate would have to settle for “Balboa5” -- boat names can be
duplicated. It’s the Department of Motor Vehicles registration numbers,
which are required for any sailboat that’s longer than 8 feet, that can
only be given out once per state.
As a result, there are several Duffy electric boats with the name “All
Charged Up” and “Charge It” skippering around Newport Harbor, said Gary
Cranes, a vice president of the Newport Beach-based boat building
company.
“There’s nothing preventing people from having the same name,” he
said, adding that the company keeps track of its boat names to encourage
variety.
Not that there’s a lack of names to choose from. A quick surfing
session on the Internet pops up dozens of Web sites devoted to helping
boat owners pick the right name. Bookstores carry a list of titles
devoted to the subject.
But then again, it is a bit like naming a child and totally up to the
owner’s imagination.
Sure, there are the all-time nautical theme favorites, represented in
the race by such boats as Windrose, Sea Dancer and Ed Quesada’s Sirena.
Quesada, the co-owner of a discount marine store in Newport Beach,
said he’d always liked the name, which means “mermaid” in Spanish.
“It’s easy to say on the radio,” he said. “And you can use it both in
English and Spanish, if you’re cruising down to Mexico.”
Others -- such as It’s OK, Cheap Sunglasses and Ouch! -- are among the
wackier ones that are fit to print.
And then there’s Jeffrey Cohen’s Mental Floss, a 31-foot trimaran. The
fact that Cohen’s a dentist had little to do with settling on the name.
“It’s actually a lyric from a Jimmy Buffet song,” Cohen said, adding
that his kids had made the decision.
Asked whether he considered sailing to be a form of mental flossing,
Cohen laughed.
“It cleans out everything between the ears,” he said.
FUN FACT
While boats that spend most of their time in California must be
registered within 120 days of entering the state, there’s one exception
to the rule. That’s if the ships are exclusively used for racing. But
then they’re only allowed in the water for races and tuneups, and it’s
probably worth the $9 registration fee and $5 annual renewal fee to keep
them wet all of the time.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.