No, this is not some sort of joke! There really is a
Whortonsville
Yacht and Tractor Club. While yachts and tractors may
seem like strange bedfellows, it was from the interaction of these two
quite different devices and the folks who use them that the WYTC was
conceived.
Located about ten miles down the Neuse
River from Oriental, “The Sailing Capitol of North Carolina”,
the tiny coastal village of Whortonsville was a friendly farming and
fishing community which had been waiting since the dawn of time to be
discovered by the yachting fraternity. That wait officially came to an
end during the mid 1980's when the first sailing enthusiasts took up
permanent residence in this friendly village. These early sailors were
affectionately referred to as “blow boaters”
by the local population who considered them to be a bit “tetched”.
After all, who in their right mind would go
to all the trouble and expense of buying one of those slow and
expensive blow boats, then venture out onto the water for days at a
time and when they came back, they still didn't have any fish!
As the beautiful and protected waters of Broad and Brown Creeks
that border the Whortonsville community continued to attract new
sailors to the area, it became time for an organizational structure to
emerge that embrace both the new comers and
the old timers, and in 1990 the Whortonsville Yacht &
Tractor Club was formed. In the same year, the first JY15 one design
racing fleet in North Carolina was officially chartered under the
burgee of the WYTC and is still active, competitive and growing.
The highlight of the summer season in Whortonsville is the
Summer
Solstice Sailabration which is a handicapped pursuit race that is
held each year on the Saturday closest to the Summer solstice.
2002 marked the twelfth anniversary of this
event which has grown from twelve participants in 1990 to
fifty four participants in 2002. This past year there were three times
as many people at the awards and post race festivities than the entire
population of the community. This is due to the fact that, in addition
to local residents who participate in the Sailabration, many
non-residents who keep their boats at one of the several marinas in
and around Whortonsville come and bring their friends. Whortonsville,
you see, is one of those rare locations on
the planet where the boat population exceeds the number of humans.
Yacht and Tractor Club
members enjoy reciprocal privileges at Yacht and
Tractor Clubs worldwide.