Each of the 30+ gondola operations in the U.S. have their own protocols.
Here in Newport I've noticed that nobody likes to touch a bridge.
Newport Harbor has four gondola operations currently, and we all tend to pass under bridges without making contact.
Sure, the occasional high-tide scenario finds me performing an impromptu bench-press in order to get the tail of the boat under a low bridge, but otherwise my hands remain on the remo.
Stefano began rowing with us a while back, and I noticed that he stopped under a bridge and grabbed hold of it - taking time to really concentrate on his song.

It makes perfect sense:
For years I've told my passengers that
"any good gondolier knows that the acoustics under a bridge are almost as good as those of a shower".
As for singing, what can you do about the cars, which cross the bridge in the photos?
ReplyDelete(Maybe lobby for a law to make hybrids mandatory by 2015 in California? Some say they roll dangerously quiet.)
We don't really hear the cars on the Newport Blvd. bridge. Now and then a big freight truck will rumble over, and we'll hear that, but it's never a problem for our singing.
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ReplyDeletetend to use anything I can to make my job easier. I'll grab the wall, the bridge, kick off a boat, dock or wall. Especially if there is wind. Maybe it means I need to work on my oar work, maybe I'm just lazy.
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