Skaneateles Antique and Classic Boat Show
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Antique and Classic Boat Show Celebrates 30th Year in Skaneateles, 46 Years Overall New This Year: A Free Parking Shuttle
Oh, the places they have been. The stories they could tell. And soon, these storied boats of yesteryear will be docking in Skaneateles.
The Antique and Classic Boat Show, now in its 46th year, returns to Clift Park July 26-28. The hours are 3 p.m. to dusk Friday, 9 a.m. to dusk Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free.
The show, hosted by the Finger Lakes Chapter (FLC) of the Antique and Classic Boat Society and the Skaneateles Area Chamber of Commerce Foundation, draws exhibitors from New York state, the East Coast, the Midwest, and Canada. About 10,000 visitors attend each year.
“The show has gone from state parks to canal-side villages to broad lakes and busy ports,” says FLC boat show committee chair Paul Garrett. “Thirty years ago, we came to Skaneateles and made this quaint, colonial-style village our boat show home.”
Dick Sherwood, then-president of FLC, describes Skaneateles as “a venue that fits the tone of the event perfectly.”
“We found a home here. And we’ve worked to make the show better every year since,” says Arnie Rubenstein, who served as committee chair in 1994 and for eight years afterward.
(Fun fact: The Community Docks, as well as the former docks—both owned by the Skaneateles Area Chamber of Commerce Foundation—resulted from this move.)
Visitors to the show will be able to view and meet the owners of some 80 runabouts, launches, sailboats, canoes, rowing craft, and race boats, many restored to their original condition. The names are legendary: Gar Wood, Chris-Craft, Century.
Among the land displays will be Bella, a double-ended rowing craft believed to have been built in the late 1800s or early 1900s and owned by Noah Taylor, and Puller, a Pulling Boat (similar to an Adirondack Guideboat, but heavier) built in 1916 by the Skaneateles Boat and Canoe Co. and owned by Steve Shehadi. Puller spent 50 years in Minnesota and another 27 in northern Michigan before being returned to Skaneateles a few months ago. It is one of four boats, along with a trailer full of outboard motors and a trailer full of inboards and steam engines, that Shehadi will be exhibiting.
“The Antique and Classic Boat Show offers non-stop splendor, set against the backdrop of Skaneateles’ fine boutiques, galleries, and restaurants,” says Hilary Fenner, executive director of the Skaneateles Area Chamber of Commerce. “We can’t wait to welcome you!”
Highlights of the weekend include:
- Boat parade, led by the Skaneateles Fire Department, starting at 3:15 p.m. Saturday.
- Performances by the Skaneateles Community Band, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday; the Diana Jacobs Band, noon to 3 p.m. Saturday; and the Soda Ash 6, 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sunday.
- Display of model antique boats by the Syracuse Model Boat Club, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
- Guided village bus tours, presented by the Skaneateles Historical Society, 10:30 a.m., noon and 1:30 p.m. Saturday.
- Youth judging competition, 10:30 a.m. Saturday.
- There are opportunities for children to paint toy wooden boats from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, and a McClurg Building Corner kids activity, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday.
- Photo-shoot and spectator cruise aboard the Judge Ben Wiles, 10 a.m. Sunday. The Judge will leave from the Mid-Lakes Navigation dock in Clift Park and make a slow tour of the north end of Skaneateles Lake while exhibiting boats, making random passes, and providing opportunities for action shots. Tickets are $17/adults, $7/children 12 and under.
- Raffle drawings, 1:30 p.m. Sunday. Prizes include a spa package from Mirbeau Inn & Spa, REV Theatre tickets, a gift basket from the Skaneateles Brewery, a Visit Syracuse gift basket, a wooden boat filled with lottery tickets, and much, much more.
On Saturday morning, the boats will be judged into 35 categories. Throughout the weekend, visitors will vote for the highly coveted People’s Choice Award, sponsored by Doug’s Fish Fry, which will be presented at 1:45 p.m. Sunday.
This year, the Staging Awards will recognize the best-staged displays in the water and on land. Members of the Skaneateles Area Chamber of Commerce Foundation will judge the entries on Saturday morning, and the winners will be announced on Saturday afternoon.
“Our planning committee has so much fun staging this show that we wanted to recognize exhibitors for their staging efforts,” says Fenner.
This year’s poster combines photos taken by FLC members Wendy Bates and Elaine Sherwood Jakubowski. Posters are $10 on sale at the show and at the Skaneateles Area Chamber of Commerce, 22 Jordan St.
Before the show, Bella will be displayed at M&T Bank in Skaneateles starting July 1. An FLC couple who admired and wanted to encourage Taylor's passion for the hobby gave Bella to Taylor when he was just 15. In 2015, the year it was first shown after Taylor had refinished it, Bella won its first award at the Skaneateles Show, followed by a second award at the Clayton Boat Show.
M&T Bank is the show’s presenting sponsor. Contributing sponsors include the Sherwood Inn, Beak & Skiff/1911, Brinson Marine, Doug’s Fish Fry, The Savage Homestead, Finger Lakes Insurance Agency, Valentine’s Pizza and Deli, Jacobs Press, Mirbeau Inn & Spa, Skaneateles Festival, Skaneateles Suites, SECNY Federal Credit Union and The REV Theatre Company. Media sponsors are Group M Communications, FLX Local Media, and WRVO Public Media.
Paid parking is available in the municipal lot (accessed through Genesee or State streets), where parking is 75 cents an hour, and all-day parking is $6. Free parking is available in the Austin Park Pavilion lot at the corner of Jordan and Austin Streets and in the lower gravel lot of Skaneateles High School across Leitch Avenue.
A free shuttle—new this year—will run between these two lots and the municipal lot. Support from FLC and the Skaneateles Area Chamber of Commerce Foundation makes the shuttle possible.
For more information, go to skaneateles.com or facebook.com/