Max goes sailing with Cowes Sailability

Cowes Sailability Club is back providing opportunities for adults and young people with disabilities to socialise and engage in invigorating outdoor activities with help from a HIWCF Isle of Wight Community grant. Operating with social distancing measures in place, the charity is offering motorboat trips for people with a wide range of physical and learning disabilities, including wheelchair users.

Max Cockbain Loureiro (pictured) went out on the first boat trip of 2021, along with his mum and stepdad, and thoroughly enjoyed the experience.

“Max has had a tough time recently with lockdown and other issues, so getting out on the water with Cowes Sailability Club literally was a breath of fresh air,” says his mum, Sarah Cockbain. “It was great for him to feel free of the daily restraints of being a wheelchair user and doing an activity that is fully accessible. Our smiles say it all. Thank you Cowes Sailability!”

Cowes Sailability Club charted the wheelchair-accessible motorboat Wetwheels for this excursion, with funding from HIWCF. The grant of £1,849 means Cowes Sailability Club can afford four days’ charter hire, as well as an engine service and new radio for the club’s patrol boat.

“We are so grateful to HIWCF for its support,” says Trish Rooke, Fundraising Officer at Cowes Sailability Club. “It is lovely to be able to offer motorboat trips for disabled people on the Isle of Wight again, especially after so many of them have had a difficult time during the coronavirus pandemic. Being on the water really lifts their spirits and makes them feel positive again.”

Find out more about Cowes Sailability here.

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