Atlantic Challenge USA is a Chapter of the Traditional Small Craft Association (TSCA)
All Atlantic Challenge USA crew members need to become a TSCA member to participate in our programs and activities. Annual membership in TSCA chapters is $35.00 a year.
The TSCA offers organized, insured on-the-water boating activities for members and their guests. The TSCA has contracted with The Gowrie Group for event liability insurance for all TSCA chapter activities. As part of that effort, we have become organizational members of US Sailing, through which the Gowrie Group offers this exclusive, affordable insurance.
The TSCA works to preserve and continue the living traditions, skills, lore, and legends surrounding working and pleasure watercraft whose origins predate the marine gasoline engine. We encourage the design, construction, and use of these boats, and we embrace the contemporary variants and adaptations of traditional designs. The Traditional Small Craft Association appreciates these boats for what they are—not relics of the past or sterile objects of museum-quality venerability, but vessels that were designed to be used. We happily embrace the use of new materials and construction techniques as well.
All Atlantic Challenge USA crew members need to become a TSCA member to participate in our programs and activities. Annual membership in TSCA chapters is $35.00 a year.
The TSCA offers organized, insured on-the-water boating activities for members and their guests. The TSCA has contracted with The Gowrie Group for event liability insurance for all TSCA chapter activities. As part of that effort, we have become organizational members of US Sailing, through which the Gowrie Group offers this exclusive, affordable insurance.
The TSCA works to preserve and continue the living traditions, skills, lore, and legends surrounding working and pleasure watercraft whose origins predate the marine gasoline engine. We encourage the design, construction, and use of these boats, and we embrace the contemporary variants and adaptations of traditional designs. The Traditional Small Craft Association appreciates these boats for what they are—not relics of the past or sterile objects of museum-quality venerability, but vessels that were designed to be used. We happily embrace the use of new materials and construction techniques as well.