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Health & Fitness

Bluewater Boathouse Hosts Garage Sale of the Year

Items From Old Chart House Sold To Local Treasure Hunters

     CORONADO - There are garage sales the world over, but nothing compares to Thursdays and Saturdays in Coronado. The trend began during World War II, when military wives held garage sales to supplement their income. Since then it’s become a tradition, with hoards of garage sale hunters ravaging the island weekly in search of that special deal.

     On Saturday, June 28, some of those treasure hunters found themselves in garage sale heaven. The new owners of the Coronado Boathouse (now Bluewater Boathouse), after a whirlwind remodeling of the restaurant’s interior, realized they had filled several shipping containers with items used to decorate previous incarnations of the structure - Boathouse 1887 and the Coronado Chart House before that.

     In the parking lot it was like a feeding frenzy as Bluewater threw open doors to the shipping containers revealing floor-to-ceiling nautical-themed décor and furniture.

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     The items included chairs, tables, half hulls, ship models and even antiquated urinals from the original Boathouse. The historic photos, framed in exquisite, antique wooden frames, were also part of the merchandise. Some called it the garage sale of the year.

     “We had a list of Coronado residents who had expressed interest in the items,” said Jimmy Ulcickas, founding partner of Bluewater. “To us, many of the items had to go to make way for our new remodel. We quickly recognized the old photos, furniture and ship models carried great emotional cache with residents on the island. We are pleased that they stepped forward and demonstrated that interest when they did.”

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     Ulcickas and his team of designers kept several of the old photos, as well as a selection of the traditional Boathouse chart tables, to be used in later stages of design.

     Alan Hansen was looking for a table he and his wife Janie had particular emotional ties to. “We got married in Western Samoa, and had just returned to Coronado,” said Hansen. “We had dinner at the Chart House our first night back. Serendipitous as it may seem, the table they sat us at just happened to have navigational charts of Western Samoa imbedded in the resin top.” Another man said he was looking for the table he proposed to his wife at.

     “Most of the tables and framed photographs were chipped or damaged,” said Ulcickas. But that didn’t matter to Joe Balla, who worked at the Chart House as a young man (early ‘70s) and now is a successful commercial real estate broker and philanthropist.

     “I couldn’t believe it,” said Balla, who found out about the sale while dining with his family at Bluewater Boathouse the night before. He ended up buying 50 Chart House captains’ chairs, four old resin-top tables and the entire collection of bar stools. He plans to use the sentimental furniture in his conference room in Del Mar; in a Coronado home he is currently remodeling; and in the family condo in Hawaii.

     Some of the tables were constructed and designed by legendary surfer and shaper, Carl Ekstrom. Over the decades, they had become part of the Chart House legend world-over.

     Four antique urinals, believed to have been installed in the original 1887 Boathouse, were saved to be auctioned off later as a benefit to a charity yet to be named. The heavy, porcelain urinals had been used in recent decades as wall hanging flowerpots inside the building.

     The historic landmark, now called Bluewater Boathouse, is one of six nautically themed restaurants famous for their sustainable seafood. They serve up to 40 varieties of seafood and shellfish.

     Bluewater Boathouse opened to the public Friday, June 27, and business has been brisk. They are open daily for lunch and dinner. To make dining reservations call (619) 435-0155. For more information visit www.bluewatergrill.com, or follow Bluewater Grill on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Bluewater-Grill/144948182221242?ref=mf

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