FROM FLOUR SACKS TO NORTH SAILS
FROM FLOUR SACKS TO NORTH SAILS
Dave Courtney's Journey To Sailing

There are few men in this world who are as genuine and as hard working as Dave Courtney. From humble beginnings, Dave has never forgotten where he comes from or meaning of hard work or the importance of giving back. Growing up on Woody Island, Newfoundland, Dave was the son of a lumberjack and homemaker who believed in using everything – nothing went to waste. His mom sewed his first set of sails out of flour sacks and the rudder was a piece of wood from the forest. Dave began sailing at the young age of 4 with his earliest memory being the wooden boats hand-made by his father out of pine from the lumber yard. They were "probably 30, 35 inch models and they were generally schooner models. " Dave shares. His father hand carved each boat – nothing fancy – just enough to have some room to sit, put in a mast or a rudder. He recalls, "He
"The other kids in my generation that lived in cities, were playing with little dinky toys and building roads and cars and trucks. We didn't have any of that, so what we would play with was just a piece of wood chopped out in shape of a boat."His first boat was a punt, as they are called in Newfoundland, which he bought for $10 and was similar to a rowboat. "It was built out of just timbers, timbers and plank. Almost everybody in Newfoundland had at least two or three." He spent that entire winter in his parent's basement cleaning it up, smoothing it down and painting it. In his younger years, no one really taught tactics or strategies or general basics of sailing to Dave and his friends.; "Nobody showed us how to not tip it over or not rip the sail and the mast, and everything straight out of it, so we used to put the sail up and kind of drift downwind." Many people assumed they were just kids on the beach having fun, it wasn't like today when it comes to teaching kids sailing. He recalls, "I had an outboard motor, I had a boat, I had sails. So I would motor upwind, and sail downwind....I didn't know I could sail upwind."


I had no goal that I was going to be 60 years old sailing an Archer boat, it was nothing like that, I just wanted to go sailing.When Dave arrived with the sail inventory that came with Aarrow at the loft, Hugh and Joel began a thorough inspection of what was usable and what needed some TLC. From this, Hugh and Dave began working on the sail plan for the boat – what were his goals, where he want to sail, etc... The North Sails mainsail that came with the boat was well loved however we a good face lift from Kid and Joel, she was good to go for another season. This lead to a new Profurl furler and 3Di Raw furling jib with battens. Dave had an amazing season on the water with the new jib, finishing 4th in the single handed division for the Lake Ontario 300 and 2nd in the LOSHRS series to name a few. Reflecting on how he got into sailing Dave shares, "In hindsight, I didn't know it then when it was happening, but in hindsight, I made efforts and did things and went places to look at boats and to stick myself in a place where I could go sailing even when I didn't know what sailing was going to do for me." Now a 15 year participant of the Lake Ontario 300, Susan Hood Trophy Race and LOSHRS series, Dave has given back to sailing in a way most people couldn't imagine. He focuses on the Great lakes Single Handed Society which helps solo sailors on the lake, his company Access Abilities sponsors the sail give-away for the LOSHRS series every year, which the North Sails Toronto teamed up with them to do this year; not to mention the countless hours he puts in to helping those on the dock or race committee. Here’s what I, along with most of the people who know Dave, love about him: his spirit. One who is always laughing, sharing the latest story from sailing that weekend, seeing how you’re doing and inquiring how your latest boat project is going. He’s the first to offer his help and the last to leave an event. His mind is always tinkering, thinking of ways to bring more people into sailing, to give back to the community or gain that extra knot of speed. His desire for adventure and to be better is infectious.

