Jack’s Boats
To delve into the history of the Huddle family and the four custom Jarrett Bay boats they’ve commissioned, is to take a journey from the company’s very beginnings and discover some of the underpinnings of Jarrett Bay and Bluewater’s explosive growth and success throughout the last thirty years.
A Budding Relationship
During the construction of this first boat, as well as the subsequent builds, Jack and his son Harris became frequent visitors at the Jarrett Bay shop, stopping by to inspect the progress almost daily on their way home from a work-site or the marina. Randy remembers, “Building a boat for Jack was a lot of fun because he was always very involved. He was quite resourceful and always willing to drop by with any type of materials or tools that might be helpful to us. He was a born leader and just had a way about him, that we just always wanted to do the very best we could for him.”
Not only were Jack’s fingerprints all over his first boat that Randy and team built, but they extended onto many facets of the company’s boat building operations throughout the years. Upon his many visits, Jack became familiar with the various detractors of the group’s first facility, such as a leaky roof and the dirt floor. He felt they could do better, offered his help, and eventually persuaded Randy to scout some possible new locations. They zeroed in on some land in Marshallberg, NC which Jack purchased, and on which his company Trader Construction built several buildings. He then rented this new 60’ x 80’ building to Randy for the same low rate Jarrett Bay was paying back in Williston. Over time they added on, and Mr. Huddle acquired more land around the area, about three acres all-told, as well as a travel lift, so his tenants could start to make this arrangement more profitable by servicing others’ boats. After a few years, Jarrett Bay was able to buy the property from him—primarily because Jack gave them a sweetheart of a deal. Later in the company’s history, he was also instrumental in helping to develop the parcel that has become Jarrett Bay’s sprawling 175 acre marine industrial park on the ICW in Beaufort.
…the seeds of Jack and Randy’s friendship were being scattered along the Gulf Stream’s many winding weed lines…
The evolution of construction techniques, design and materials across the four boats is something to marvel; from the original plank-on-frame construction of hull 5, the cold-molded process used on hull 20 and 40, to today’s space-aged closed cell composites used throughout the topsides, cabin and bridge of hull 59. But as Harris explains, the common thread is the level of craftsmanship and superior ride found in every Jarrett Bay. “I’ve ridden on other boats that just feel heavy and hard to turn. Jarrett Bays are lighter, and the ride is so soft and maneuverable, slicing through wave after wave.” Adding, “Their craftsmanship is just unreal. People don’t walk by the 64’ on the docks, they stop and stare.”
This newest Builder’s Choice (the first to be commissioned by Harris after Jack’s passing) stays simple in some ways, but in the grand scheme of things, represents a dramatic change in styling from Jack’s first boat. Much as he would have done, the Huddle family collaborated frequently on layout decisions and interior appointments, and even found a way for Jack to posthumously leave his mark, by engraving the salon coffee table with his signature.
From the beautifully contrasting toe rail to custom hardtop, the grace and precision found on Builder’s Choice instantly make it a perfect example of Jarrett Bay’s impressive construction acumen. Finished in a shimmery Alexseal Atlantic Blue topcoat, her hull combines advancements such as prop tunnels and underwater exhaust with the dependability and ease of maintenance of conventional shaft propulsion. The massive Cat C32s propel her to a top speed of 43 knots and a cruising speed in the 34- 37 knot range; ensuring she is as fast and capable as she is beautiful. Randy adds, “On each of the boats, the technology and finish has surely gotten better and better, but the 64’ would just blow Jack away with all its features. At the end of the day though, the only thing he would care about is catching fish.”
And catch they have over many years. Despite Big Jack’s relentless pursuit of meatfish, Harris recalls the excitement when his dad caught his first billfish, “We were fishing the Big Rock, I think the first year we had the 43’, when he caught his first marlin. He was definitely excited after that and we all had a really great time together that day.” In 2001, the team weighed a 545.3 lbs. blue during the Pirate’s Cove Big Game Tournament with Jack aboard. JC also cites a more recent memory when they released several blue marlin to kick off the 2015 Swansboro Memorial Day tournament. “It was a day that boosted my confidence in my skills and reminded us all of Big Jack. It was a great way to start not only the summer, but also the last season of fishing on the 55’, and honoring my granddad.”
Family First
As Jack and Randy’s relationship grew throughout the years, so did Randy’s stature as a boat builder and leader in the sport fishing community. Not only is Randy now overseeing several multimillion dollar businesses such as Jarrett Bay and Bluewater Yacht Sales, he has become a leading philanthropist at NC State University and is known far and wide as the voice of Big Rock tournament radio. For the Huddles, their life-long relationship with Jarrett Bay hasn’t been all about business or even fishing, but about helping build something larger and being there to help celebrate one another’s successes. Randy explains, “I often explain to people that Jack was a second father to me. He did things for me that no one would do for anyone, unless they were kinfolk.” Harris replies, “Our loyalty to Jarrett Bay started with Jack and Randy and now our family is keeping the tradition going. Randy helps us out and we help him out.”
For all the craftsmen at Jarrett Bay, the 64’ Builder’s Choice is a highly functioning piece of art to be supremely proud of, and even sentimental about, after leaving the facility. Jarrett Bay new construction foreman Gary Davis may have said it best, “Delivering a boat we’ve worked on dayin and day-out, for years, is like walking your daughter down the aisle.” But as in all quality relationships, the Jarrett Bay team knows the bride will eventually return home–perhaps often–just as the Huddle family has proven to.
After taking delivering of the 64, the Huddles cut chase to Florida, where it debuted in the Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show and wintered in Palm Beach at Sailfish Marina. The family took frequent short trips through the Winter and into Spring 2016, and enjoyed bloodying the new decks for the first time with a large dolphin, “a meatfish, just like Big Jack would have wanted,” reported JC. From Florida, the boat will move back to her home waters of North Carolina in the spring, and prepare for the tournament season, fishing many of the NC Governor’s Cup events such as Swansboro and Hatteras Village, before the Big Rock, Barta, Pirate’s Cove and Virginia Beach tournaments.