Beyond the Boat

Leroy Lewis

Beyond the Boat shares the stories of the people and communities who keep wooden boats alive — through ownership, seamanship, craftsmanship, education, operations, and stewardship — and how those paths invite others into a living tradition. These are not just stories about boats. They are stories about responsibility: the choice to care for something that must be worked, maintained, taught, and passed along. Each episode explores how wooden boats continue to matter because people choose to carry them forward — and, in doing so, make room for others to step in. Hosted by Leroy Lewis, the podcast centers on lived experience. Some guests are owners. Others are captains, shipwrights, educators, yard workers, volunteers, or operators. What they share is not a title, but a relationship — one that connects craft, seamanship, memory, and community. Together, these voices reveal a world where meaning lives not just in the boat, but beyond it — offering listeners a way to imagine where they might belong. Support & Independence Beyond the Boat is listener-supported, following a public-media model. Support is voluntary, quiet, and never required to listen. Listeners may choose to support the show as: Supporters — contributing occasionallyMembers — offering ongoing monthly supportStewards — individuals or institutions providing deeper, sustaining support aligned with the mission There are no paywalls, no exclusive content, and no calls to action inside episodes.  Note: "Stewards" are "Members" who will be periodically acknowledged for their support. Acknowledgments, when offered, appear only outside the storytelling. Support helps cover production costs and ensures these stories remain independent and freely available.

Episodes

  1. EP# 11 - Not Just Preserving Boats — Preserving Pathways: Aaron LaPointe and Historic Maritime

    MAR 1

    EP# 11 - Not Just Preserving Boats — Preserving Pathways: Aaron LaPointe and Historic Maritime

    Aaron LaPointe grew up around the water—but it was wooden workboats that pulled him in for good. Now he’s the Executive Director of the Historic Maritime Foundation, stewarding a growing fleet of historic vessels and building a hands-on pathway for young people and career-changers to enter the maritime trades. In this conversation, Aaron and host Leroy Lewis talk about the quiet honor of workboat careers, why the “historic” side of tugboating is disappearing even as modern tugging booms, and what it takes—money, community, and stubborn love—to keep big timber boats alive. They dig into Aaron’s personal roots of responsibility, the legacy of his grandfather’s tugboat career, and the foundation’s “history in motion” model: getting these boats off the dock, into people’s hands, and back into the world where they belong. This is an episode about stewardship as privilege, preservation as community work, and the kind of joyful responsibility that makes people show up—again and again—for boats that can’t survive without them. https://www.historicmaritimefoundation.org/ Beyond the Boat is an independent, listener-supported project. Support sustains the listening, but it doesn’t steer the stories. You can help keep the show alive, as a one time Supporter, as a continuous Member, or Steward, at: www.buymeacoffee.com/beyondtheboat Note: "Stewards" are "Members" who will be periodically mentioned outside episode stories. Support is voluntary, there are no paywalls, and the stories are always free to listen to. Have feedback or know someone who should be on the show? Reach me at: BTBoatPodcast@gmail.com

    41 min
  2. EP# 10 - A Poem That Sails: Captains, Crews, and the Work Beyond the Boat

    FEB 23

    EP# 10 - A Poem That Sails: Captains, Crews, and the Work Beyond the Boat

    In this episode of Beyond the Boat, Leroy Lewis talks with Jamie Trost—Senior Captain, manager, and co-owner of the Traverse Tall Ship Company—about what it really means to operate traditional sailing ships in the modern world. Jamie has served on an extraordinary range of vessels—including the Lady Washington—and he describes the unseen reality behind a “simple” day sail: hiring and training crews, balancing maintenance triage with public programs, reading weather like a second language, and delivering an experience that’s exciting without ever compromising safety. Along the way, we explore why tall ships still matter: for most of human history, five to seven knots was the fastest way a person could travel for days on end—and the teamwork required to do that hasn’t changed. These ships don’t just preserve history. They create it—every time a crew learns to work together, and every time a passenger steps aboard and feels what it means to rely on other people. www.tallshipsailing.com, https://www.facebook.com/TraverseTallShipCompany, https://www.instagram.com/schoonermanitou/ Beyond the Boat is an independent, listener-supported project. Support sustains the listening, but it doesn’t steer the stories. You can help keep the show alive, as a one time Supporter, as a continuous Member, or Steward, at: www.buymeacoffee.com/beyondtheboat Note: "Stewards" are "Members" who will be periodically mentioned outside episode stories. Support is voluntary, there are no paywalls, and the stories are always free to listen to. Have feedback or know someone who should be on the show? Reach me at: BTBoatPodcast@gmail.com

    57 min
  3. EP# - 9, More Than a Charter: Stewardship, Alaska, and the Long Way Around

    FEB 12

    EP# - 9, More Than a Charter: Stewardship, Alaska, and the Long Way Around

    In 1931, an elegant 87-foot motor yacht was designed by Callis and built in San Pedro, California as Holiday for William Morris Jr. of the William Morris Talent Agency. She cruised the West Coast from Mexico to Alaska and hosted dockside gatherings filled with actors, musicians, and cultural figures of the era—her teak decks and mahogany salon reflecting a time when craftsmanship meant pride in artistry. Over the decades, that same yacht lived many lives. Purchased by a Seattle family, commandeered during World War II as U.S. Navy picket ship Q-136, later serving the federal prison system, and eventually donated to the Bellingham Sea Scouts—where she was renamed Discovery. Today, Discovery is owned and operated by Ben Swanson, who grew up aboard wooden boats and followed Alaska north long before it became a destination brand. In this episode, Ben shares how a childhood on the water shaped his instincts, how independence came through conflict and hard-earned authority, and why he chose stewardship over scale. We talk about the unseen labor required to run a wooden vessel, the judgment calls made in remote waters, and how small-group voyages turn guests into lifelong friends. This is a conversation about responsibility, patience, legacy—and what it means to carry not just people, but history, forward. https://alaskacharters.com/ Beyond the Boat is an independent, listener-supported project. Support sustains the listening, but it doesn’t steer the stories. You can help keep the show alive, as a one time Supporter, as a continuous Member, or Steward, at: www.buymeacoffee.com/beyondtheboat Note: "Stewards" are "Members" who will be periodically mentioned outside episode stories. Support is voluntary, there are no paywalls, and the stories are always free to listen to. Have feedback or know someone who should be on the show? Reach me at: BTBoatPodcast@gmail.com

    55 min
  4. EP #5 - Tracing 85 Years Afloat: Jim & Margie Paynton and Their 1940 Chris-Craft

    11/18/2025

    EP #5 - Tracing 85 Years Afloat: Jim & Margie Paynton and Their 1940 Chris-Craft

    In this episode of Beyond the Boat, Leroy Lewis sits down with Jim and Margie Paynton to follow the 85-year life of their 1940, 42-foot Chris-Craft double-cabin enclosed-bridge cruiser. One of just 31 hulls built, the boat is still in its original configuration and still running on her original gas engines—now in the care of only her fifth owners. Jim and Margie share how they tracked down the families of all four previous owners, from Great Lakes cruisers with meticulous logbooks to an inventive Seattle bioengineer who owned the boat for nearly three decades. They recount her journey from Algonac, Michigan, to the Great Lakes, onto a railcar west to Puget Sound, involvement with the Classic Yacht Association, and into a life of family cruising from Olympia to Desolation Sound and Princess Louisa. Check out their website to learn more about Marine: http://www.maranee.com/ Beyond the Boat is an independent, listener-supported project. Support sustains the listening, but it doesn’t steer the stories. You can help keep the show alive, as a one time Supporter, as a continuous Member, or Steward, at: www.buymeacoffee.com/beyondtheboat Note: "Stewards" are "Members" who will be periodically mentioned outside episode stories. Support is voluntary, there are no paywalls, and the stories are always free to listen to. Have feedback or know someone who should be on the show? Reach me at: BTBoatPodcast@gmail.com

    38 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Beyond the Boat shares the stories of the people and communities who keep wooden boats alive — through ownership, seamanship, craftsmanship, education, operations, and stewardship — and how those paths invite others into a living tradition. These are not just stories about boats. They are stories about responsibility: the choice to care for something that must be worked, maintained, taught, and passed along. Each episode explores how wooden boats continue to matter because people choose to carry them forward — and, in doing so, make room for others to step in. Hosted by Leroy Lewis, the podcast centers on lived experience. Some guests are owners. Others are captains, shipwrights, educators, yard workers, volunteers, or operators. What they share is not a title, but a relationship — one that connects craft, seamanship, memory, and community. Together, these voices reveal a world where meaning lives not just in the boat, but beyond it — offering listeners a way to imagine where they might belong. Support & Independence Beyond the Boat is listener-supported, following a public-media model. Support is voluntary, quiet, and never required to listen. Listeners may choose to support the show as: Supporters — contributing occasionallyMembers — offering ongoing monthly supportStewards — individuals or institutions providing deeper, sustaining support aligned with the mission There are no paywalls, no exclusive content, and no calls to action inside episodes.  Note: "Stewards" are "Members" who will be periodically acknowledged for their support. Acknowledgments, when offered, appear only outside the storytelling. Support helps cover production costs and ensures these stories remain independent and freely available.