Summer 2016 | Sea Island Life Magazine Spring/Summer 2016 | Page 27

The Yacht Club is now home to six charter boats. Rogers adds, “In June 1928, the Brunswick News stated that the ship ‘is equipped with every modern convenience and appointment.’ ” She reads the amenities listed in the periodical: telephones, handsome furnishings, promenade decks on each floor and a roof garden. Rogers then directs her attention to a black-and-white photo of past New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker and his wife fishing on Sea Island at The Cloister, where another dock has stood for generations. “The thing that’s interesting about it is they’re so dressed up. He has on a coat and tie … and they’re holding a string of fish,” Rogers describes. Though the original yacht club was demolished in the 1970s, guests and members still frequent the current Yacht Club located at The Cloister for summer fun, especially fishing. It’s a tradition that has played an integral role in Sea Island’s appeal to guests throughout history. Today, Sea Island’s dock is home base to six charter boats that stay busy taking guests on fishing trips. Michael Kennedy, the director of recreation at Sea Island, keeps tabs on the number of guests who fish during their visits. Former New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker with his wife at Sea Island Sea Island visitors enjoy crabbing off the dock. “We’re probably seeing close to 8,000 people across our dock a year, ” he says. The dock’s proximity to the salt marsh is just one of the many reasons that it is an exceptional base for fishing operations. “Our water is really nutrient rich, and with that we have an incredible fishery,” Kennedy says. “It’s almost like a nursery for the Atlantic Ocean, ... so when you add natural beauty along with great fishing, it’s [a] win-win.” Over the years, the fishing program has evolved to accommodate new interest from anglers. While the staff used to schedule mostly six- and eight-hour fishing trips in the past, they have hosted more and more first-timers, who want to try the sport for a shorter window of time. Now, around 70 percent of the trips Kennedy’s team plans are short ones designed with the guests’ desires in mind. “If they want to go look for dolphins and fish for an hour, we’ll do that,” Kennedy says. “If they want to