Still Shaking After All These YearsA visit to Shake-A-Leg Miami leaves the crew of Ocean Watch impressed with the facilities, staff, and wide-ranging programs. "Herb's Watch" from our November 25, 2009, CW Reckonings.
Nov 19, 2009 By Herb McCormick (More articles by this author)
Unfortunately, at that point I knew far more than I wanted to know about spinal-cord injuries. A couple of years earlier, one of my best friends in the world, Jack "Jack Mack" McKenna, was in a diving accident that left him a quadriplegic. I was a few feet away from him when it happened. All this came back to me very recently when Ocean Watch called in Miami on our ongoing voyage Around the Americas (www.aroundtheamericas.org). The crew was invited to the remarkable facilities of a group called Shake-A-Leg Miami, right on Biscayne Bay. Both skipper Mark Schrader and I spoke to a couple of groups of youngsters that day. The executive director of the organization introduced me and even invoked the name of Jack Mack. The director's name? Harry Horgan. I could write a book instead of a blog about all this, and maybe someday I will. But for the time being, I'll stick to the salient facts. The saddest thing about spinal-cord injuries is that young, active people largely incur them, "kids" in the prime of their youth. Harry and Jack could've felt sorry for themselves; I reckon I would've. Instead, Harry formed Shake-A-Leg to help folks overcome devastating injuries and physical disabilities, largely through sailing. Jack Mack and I even sailed in one of the early Shake-A-Leg regattas, and I did a piece in Cruising World about it. In Harry's introduction the other day, he mentioned all that. I have to admit, it got pretty misty there for a minute. Several years ago, Harry and his wife, Susie, moved to Miami and continued the work they'd started in Rhode Island all those years ago. Today, Shake-A-Leg Miami is a far grander, more ambitious, and far-reaching institution than the one Harry originally conceived. Frankly, we on Ocean Watch were astonished and impressed with the facilities, staff, and wide-ranging programs that are all part of the association today. In these challenging economic times, fundraising is always a challenge for non-profit organizations, and I'd urge everyone who might have the means and be moved to contribute to visit Shake-A-Leg Miami's website (www.shakealegmiami.org) for more information on their goals, facilities, and programs for young people in South Florida. The Around the Americas voyage is meant to be a voyage of discovery. In Miami, it was wonderful to discover a pair of old friends, Harry and Susie, doing so well.
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