Clean Wake: Small Boats, Real Help, and Stronger Communities
For the Seven Seas Cruising Association (SSCA), Clean Wake begins with a simple idea: cruisers should leave a place better than they found it.
Clean Wake is one of SSCA’s most cherished traditions. It reflects respect for others, respect for the environment, and care for the communities that welcome cruising boats. It is the belief that those who follow in our wake should be warmly welcomed because cruisers before them acted with kindness, responsibility, and practical help.
That does not always mean a large program, a formal mission, or a major shipment. Often it means small boats, small crews, and practical help matched to real local needs.
Across the Bahamas, Honduras, the Bay Islands, Guatemala, and the Rio Dulce, SSCA members, cruising hosts, local partners, visiting boats, HopeFleet contacts, and community volunteers are showing what Clean Wake can become.
A cruising boat may carry school supplies, eyeglasses, hygiene items, medical supplies, tools, sewing materials, sports equipment, or other donated goods. Another boat may help identify a local need. A marina, host, teacher, clinic, church, or community leader may help make sure donations reach the right people.
This is where SSCA can make a real difference.
SSCA already has the people, the routes, the communication channels, the local knowledge, and the cruising-host network. Clean Wake gives that goodwill a name and a structure. It helps turn scattered individual acts of kindness into a visible community effort.
SSCA collaborates with HopeFleet because it recognized, while the idea was still young, the possibility that this developing organization could make a real difference.
The seed of HopeFleet grew from hurricane-response work after Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas. SSCA encouraged the effort as it formed and offered assistance as HopeFleet developed its working configuration. Today, HopeFleet helps connect boats, donations, and communities with practical needs.
SSCA also thanks SSCA Commodores Rick and Julie Peterson of SV Believe. Their early belief in HopeFleet helped open the door to the collaboration now connecting SSCA cruisers, HopeFleet, and community-support projects across cruising regions.
That collaboration fits naturally with Clean Wake. SSCA brings a cruising community, communication channels, local hosts, and member boats. HopeFleet brings a mission-focused donation and delivery model. Together, the two efforts can help match real needs with real boats and real people willing to help.
The current SSCA Clean Wake page highlights humanitarian and environmental projects, including the HopeFleet partnership, Bay Islands support in Honduras, and Friends of Rio Dulce Guatemala. Learn more at ssca.org/cleanwake.
The Bahamas Gathering is one strong example. Each year in March, cruising boats gather at Black Point in the Bahamas for an almost week-long celebration of play, friendship, and community support. The event brings cruisers and the local community together through shared activities, beach clean-up, school support, and donations for children.
Cruisers donate school supplies, sports equipment, and other useful items that encourage education, healthy activity, and friendship between visiting boats and the community that welcomes them. HopeFleet also supported the Bahamas effort this year, showing how the same model can work across cruising regions: identify real local needs, match donations to those needs, and use the cruising network to help deliver support.
Black Point shows why Clean Wake matters. It is not only about giving things. It is about building trust, showing up year after year, and strengthening the relationship between cruisers and the communities that make cruising possible.
The Rio Dulce area of Guatemala offers another important example. Each hurricane season, a significant number of cruisers congregate there, creating a large seasonal community with deep local ties. Many cruisers, local residents, businesses, marinas, and volunteer groups already support schools, families, river communities, animal-care efforts, medical needs, and practical local projects.
Groups such as Friends of the Rio Dulce, local volunteers, marina communities, SSCA cruising hosts, and visiting boats all form part of the larger picture: cruisers and host communities working together in many ways, through many relationships, and with many hands.
Bill and JoAnne Harris, SSCA Cruising Hosts aboard SV ULTRA, have helped with Clean Wake-style outreach in Honduras and the Bay Islands, including practical community support and donation coordination. Their work is one example of how SSCA hosts and member boats can help connect cruiser goodwill with local needs.
Clean Wake works best when credit is shared, needs are locally guided, and support flows through trusted people already connected to the community.
A boat heading south may be able to carry one box. A cruiser already in the Rio Dulce may know a school, clinic, or local project. A cruising host in Honduras may know which supplies are actually useful. A marina may provide a collection point. A local volunteer may know the families or community groups most in need. No single boat has to do everything.
The strength is in the network.
SSCA’s ClubExpress system can also become part of that structure. A Clean Wake page, forum, or project listing can help members see current needs, active projects, donation requests, delivery opportunities, and contact points. It can help match boats with supplies and communities with support.
That is especially important as SSCA considers several Clean Wake prospects. These projects do not need to be large to matter. In many cruising areas, a small boat with a little extra space can carry something valuable. A few members sharing information can solve a local problem. A modest grant can help turn a good idea into an organized project.
The SSCA Foundation can encourage this work through small grants, project support, and recognition of member-led efforts. Grants do not replace volunteer spirit. They can strengthen it by helping cover practical costs, supporting local partners, and giving cruisers confidence that their efforts are part of a larger SSCA mission.
Clean Wake is not about one boat, one group, or one project taking credit.
It is about many boats, many hands, and many quiet acts of help becoming part of a visible SSCA culture. It honors the old cruising tradition of helping where you can, carrying what you can, and sharing what you know.
For SSCA, Clean Wake can become both a service project and a community bridge: cruisers helping cruisers, cruisers helping host communities, and SSCA helping organize the goodwill already present in the fleet.
Small boats can do real work.
A single box can matter.
A single contact can open a door.
A clean wake is not only what we leave behind in the water. It is what we leave behind in the communities that welcome us.
Join SSCA at Black Point again in March 2027 and be part of the Clean Wake tradition: friendship, beach clean-up, school and sports donations, and practical support for the community that welcomes the cruising fleet.
You can also visit SSCA at the Annapolis U.S. Sailboat Show in October 2026 to learn more about Clean Wake, HopeFleet cooperation, SSCA Foundation grant opportunities, and ways small boats can help host communities throughout the cruising world.
Clean Wake connects SSCA cruisers, cruising hosts, local partners, and the SSCA Foundation with practical, locally guided community support.
HopeFleet helps strengthen that work by matching donations, supplies, and delivery opportunities to specific needs in cruising communities.
Learn more:
SSCA Clean Wake:
ssca.org/cleanwake
SSCA: ssca.org
HopeFleet:
hopefleet.org