
Brendan Sailing Featured on the Homepage of the Capital Gazette
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By Brian Jeffries
One of the first lessons kids at Brendan’s Sailing camp learn is what to do if your boat capsizes.
“It’s important for us to show the kids what to do if they fall in the water,” said Diane Sullivan, a trainer
for the program for children with learning differences. “They see that it’s shallow and we also show
them exactly what do to bring the sailboat back to upright.”
James P. Moldoon started the program nearly 40 years ago after seeing his son, who was dyslexic,
struggling in school but able to operate a sailboat perfectly. He thought that learning to sail might also
help other kids navigate life and build social skills, teamwork and leadership.
“The first time we saw the success it really made us want to help some of these kids,” said Moldoon. “The system kind of steps on them even though it doesn’t want to. So we just want to help and make more people aware.”
That son, Jim Muldoon Jr., became a successful sailor at a young age on Muldoon’s racing yacht, the Donnybrook.

Named after the Irish monk, St. Brendan the Navigator, the two-week program offers instruction and team building. The campers get to showcase their newly learned nautical skills during the program’s annual Parents’ Sail at Annapolis Sailing School.
This year’s Parents’ Sail took place Friday afternoon on choppy water.
“I think the sense of confidence that comes with learning a new skill, especially when it ends with taking a parent out on their own, is immeasurable,” said Bethesda’s Natalya Bah. whose son Mamadou Bah, 11, is participating in the camp for the first time. “I’m thrilled to have him get the chance to meet and interact with kids he wouldn’t have met otherwise.”
Julie Castro decided to stay on shore as her two sons, Owen, 18 and Eli, 12, sailed the course.
“It’s been great for them,” said Castro, of Gaithersburg. “Neither of my boys get excited about a lot of stuff so just the fact that they have been into this as much as they are is a testament to the program.”
Owen, who will attend the University of Maryland, Baltimore County in the fall, has already started talking about pursuing sailing through school and coming back to camp next year as an instructor, Castro said. “This has gone from being something to do for a couple weeks to being a thing for him, and I’m so grateful,” Castro said.


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