Alameda Marina & Harbor News

Sail & Swim in Alameda at Encinal Yacht Club’s Summer Sailstice Celebration on Sat., June 24

If you’re a seasoned sailor or curious about sailing the Bay, you can explore the world of sailing  as Encinal Yacht Club once again hosts Summer Sailstice on Sat., June 24, 2017, from 11am- 5pm at 1251 Pacific Marina in Alameda. It is definitely a family event with lots of fun activities around their famous swimming pool, as well as in the Estuary. Summer Sailstice is a worldwide celebration of sailing. Here’s what’s happening June 24.

At the Docks: Classic boats on display – Tall Ship, Master Mariners; a Small Boat Regattas; Junior Sailing and public boat rides, plus a one-class cruise-in.  The Encinal Docks will be very busy with boaters, racers and all things sail and boating this day.

Small Boat Regatta: Snipes, Mercuries, Columbia 5.5s  See the NORs here.

At the Pool: Life Jacket Races, Boat Building Competition, Gutter Races and live music throughout the day…food and drink will abound.

On the Lawn: Exhibits: Sailing gear, beachwear, Summer Sailstice 2017 tees, hats & burgees

On-the-water Demonstrations: US Coast Guard and Alameda Fire Department, plus a couple of new and interesting exhibitions.

There will be speakers and boating related seminars inside the yacht club.

The Summer Sailstice 2017 prize pool is looking pretty exciting, as they welcome aboard new and long-term supporters who collectively have donated hundreds of prizes for Summer Sailstice participants.

Enter a Summer Sailstice 2017 event and you may win a San Juan Sailing – Weekend Sailing Course! or A One-Week Bareboat Charter With Sunsail!

Many more prizes including sailing school certificates and a $600 voucher from Mantus Anchors. Check out the events across the US and around the globe. Funds raised will go to support the Encinal Sailing Foundation and Encinal Junior Sailing Programs.

Little known fact: Encinal Yacht Club’s Summer Sailstice event is attended by over 2,000 sailing enthusiasts each year.

Looking across the estuary to Oakland from Encinal Yacht Club, Summer Sailstice 2016

By |2017-06-23T10:22:41-07:00June 22nd, 2017|0 Comments

Tackling the World’s Plastic Pollution – One Marina at a Time. Seabin Project Launches Pilot Study.

 It’s ready to go! Our friends at the Seabin Project designed and produced an automated rubbish bin that catches floating rubbish, oil, plastics, fuel and detergents. Seabins will be placed at docks in the world’s marinas as the first step to tackling water pollution. With a passion for protecting our oceans, bays and waterways, On the Bay partnered with Seabin Project in 2015 to shout out about their product. It has been a long time of R&D and building partnerships to help with their pilot study launch today. Their current partners for installation of the V5 ‘pre-series’ units include:

  • La Grande Motte, France
  • Porto Montenegro, Montenegro
  • Port Adriano, Spain
  • Wartsila Corporation – Helsinki, Finland
  • Butterfield Group – Hamilton Princess Marina, Bermuda
  • Safe Harbor Marinas – Cabrillo Isle Marina San Diego, USA

Safe Harbor Marinas manages two SF Bay Area marinas – Ballena Isle Marina in Alameda and Emeryville Marina in Emeryville. It is exciting that Safe Harbor Marinas, the largest owner and operator of marinas in the world, has stepped forward to embrace such an important environmental cause and project. The six pilot partners will each have a ‘pre-series’ V5 Seabin installed in the next few weeks. In the three-month pilot study, all six partners will not only monitor all aspects of the Seabins with the Team at Seabin Project, they will also participate in the implementation of the education, research and development programs. 

Pete Ceclinski, co-founder

“For Seabin Project to enter into the North American market by partnering with the largest owner/operator of marinas in the world, it is pretty spectacular to say the least,” says Pete Ceglinski, Co-Founder and Managing Director at Seabin Project. “Not only does Safe Harbor Marinas hope to use our technology to improve water quality at their marinas, but they also plan to implement our educational programs. This means we could have the opportunity to make a compelling and positive impact on over 60 waterways and harbours across North America over time.”

You can now participate in the video launch of their global pilot study. The Seabin Project should gain a lot of excellent exposure  during the 35th America’s Cup starting next month in Bermuda. Congrats everyone!

By |2017-05-10T09:14:38-07:00May 4th, 2017|0 Comments

Feel Good at this Bakery

img_2155boatOn their way down the coast to the warm shores of Baja California, Georgina and Joel Peterson returned to one of their old haunts – Alameda on the Bay. And this time, it was by boat. They motored down from Seattle, having to take two days shelter at one point during a turbulent storm, and finally arrived and tied up at a guest berth off the Nob Hill parking lot near Alameda’s Fruitvale Bridge. (Always a good policy to tie up next to a gourmet market!) It had been years since they last lived in Alameda, so much of the city was new to them.

img_2236breadWhen asked if they had discovered a restaurant they really liked, Georgina immediately said, “I found Feel Good Bakery. They have great bread and pastries!” So we sauntered down to both bakeries, one in the Alameda Marketplace on Park and the other in Encinal Shopping Center on Encinal at High. Feel Good Bakery’s sourdough bread has been a highlight of the Petersons’s stay in Alameda.

Besides their classic European-style breads and sourdoughs, Feel Good Bakery makes three pizzas daily, one for everyone – cheese, img_2230pizzavegetarian and pepperoni. Their Holiday Stollen is excellent – not too sweet and perfectly spiced.  For those who love sweets, there are Danish with fresh fruit, cupcakes, cakes, tarts and cookies. They bake muffins and scones and even cheese sticks that change daily.  Feel Good Bakery bakes with organic locally-sourced ingredients, all non-GMO. Flour, nuts, fruit and cheeses come from local vendors who also are committed to producing the highest quality product they can.

img_2232andy-gina Andy Manakitivipart has been working for Feel  Good Bakery since Aug. 2016 and splits his time between the two stores.  “I do cashiering and pastries and am enrolled in a two year certification program in Baking at Laney College.” What inspired Andy to start baking? “I used to work at Tucker’s Ice Cream and Henry was a baker and he got me into baking.”

Jessica Perez, on the other hand, is currently a full-time retail associate. She img_2237jessicaworks at both stores also, explaining that it works best for the company that employees understand how both bakery locations operate.   “On my down time I hang with the bakers. I like to shape the dough. But it is really hard! The great thing about working here is that you don’t have to stay in one job. If you want to learn something else, you can.” Jessica seems to love her job and has been here for two years.

General Manager Julien Wagner chimed in, “We proudly employ 58 people.  I think they appreciate that we value them as much as our customers.  We value their opinions and suggestions for making the bakery a better place to work and a better place to shop.” Feel Good Bakery takes pride in using only the best, natural and locally sourced ingredients.  “Since everything is made by hand it has that human touch you rarely find anymore.”

Upon completion of his schooling, Julien traveled and then worked at Delfina in San Francisco as pastry chef. Wanting to get back into baking breads, Julien started working at Feel Good Bakery in October of 2007. “I was immediately drawn to the intimacy of the bakery, the quality of the ingredients and owner Rick Kellner’s respect of boulangerie tradition. Feel Good Bakery has given me the opportunity to explore, learn and develop my passion as a baker. I’ve loved bakeries since I was a boy growing up in Paris.  I’ve always loved the smell and the sounds of the bakery. The sweet smell of the baguettes baking or the crackling of the crust as they cool on the rack.  The buttery chocolaty smells of the chocolate croissants.  These are the things that awaken childhood memories and for just that moment I can be transported back in time to relive that joy.”

They make over 300 loaves a day during the week and as many as 650 on Saturdays. Their Farmers Market locations are on their website. If you follow them on their social media, you can take advantage of all the sales and deals.img_2235scrap-dough

On our way out, we learned another interesting thing about this bakery. Raw dough cannot be tossed into the garbage as it may explode due to the yeast. So scraps of overworked dough are rolled together and baked in the oven before disposal. Excess food is donated to homeless shelters and the company focuses on waste reduction, recycling and composting whatever cannot be donated.

Store Hours for Feel Good Bakery:

1650 Park St., Alameda Marketplace 510-864-2733

Monday – Friday: 7am – 8pm
Saturday: 8am – 8pm
Sunday: 8am – 7pm

3215 Encinal Ave., Encinal Shopping Center 510-263-9439

Monday – Friday: 7am – 8pm
Saturday and Sunday: 8am – 8 pm

Seasonal Special Fruit Tart

Seasonal Special Fruit Tart

How Feel Good Bakery came about

Rick Kellner moved to the San Francisco Bay Area and realized that though there were lots of excellent bakeries, no one seemed to be baking small-batch, hand-crafted, European-style breads. So in 2002 he started baking in his apartment in San Francisco and in 2004 opened Feel Good Bakery on Park St. in Alameda’s Marketplace. He opened his second location in 2016 in the Encinal Shopping Center.

The Petersons will be thinking of their bakery find as they continue down the coast with a freezer full of Feel Good Bakery breads. And bags of their crostini.

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By |2016-12-02T12:49:10-08:00December 2nd, 2016|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

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